TI7E OMAJU SUNDAY DEE: OCTOBER 15, 1911. 1 1 i! "What Basis Will Serve to Determine the Foot Ball Championship BT MOSTT. CHICAGO. Oct. 14 Som W limn already bn played r h various 'eotlag elvn. and, la many canes. It I possible to get a line on the relative letraagth of different team. Fcrn weeks from today the 1111 season will be hls- orf, and it ought to be posaible to eav. Thla team ) eastern champion, that ne ia western champion; thla on li leouTirn champion; that one I the chem- Inataad, thara will be squabbling, arga- rr.ant end Idle chatter, with no change ref reaching a daclalon. Thara win ba no champlona. It waa evar thua ever alnca tha Inter- toi:glat ga.ua becam unlvenally doptad. Yal, Harvard and Princeton, tha self tylad "big three' ehlldUhly refuaes to st Pennsylvania. At a reault the east rn title mutt rema.fi a mooted question. Arkansas teUa Vanderbllt: "Tou mui 3ly In tny yard." The ene-wer la, ' You irauit pliy In y yard." They don't Tlay in the aouthern supremacy Is 4 think for debate. But, wore than these instances of rtabyiam Is tha condition that exiet be mnn The Western Conference and the h.nl"erlty of Michlom. The trouble there flegam five years ago with petty differ ianres over tha eligibility rules and cul Iminated in Michigan's expulsion from Itncmbership In tha conference which has j never been patched up, and accordingly lMJth!an. the generally aciaov.dged i peer of weatem coii in the gr.diron sport, goea through tha stejon without meeting any of tha blcger confeience ' teams Mineaota, Chicago or V,'i.',rj n, I This is deeply to ba regretted, at weft. !rn foot ball fans could anjoy nothing i mora than a aflohlaen-Chloajro. Mich'.-jgan-Jfinneeota or a Mlohlgnn-Wlaconsln I game. Not even Tele or Harvard op- poelng Michigan eeuld equal any of th" combination as an attraction In tha .weet But tha big fact tn the rate la that 'if Michigan should meat ona or two ol I these teams thsra would ba a western as natters stand, Instead ot I having a champion tha west will Uava lan argument one which cannot ba it I tied. As tn tha paat years, every far fetched argument poenlble will ba brought Into play and It will ba ona of those things, spoken thuslyi "Every man la ! entitled, to his own opinion." j There are two ways that Michigan atrngih can ba compared with tha eon jfrenre teams both unsatlsfaotory. One lis throurh tha medium of the score made against Nebraska by Michigan and Min nesota. Minnesota clones with the 1 other big conference teams. But this win result In a faulty conclusion, be cause Michigan meeta tha Cornhuskers a", tha tall-end of tha aeaeon, November SS. when both teams are expected to be ln prima ahapa. whereas Minnesota face Nebraska next Saturday too early for either team to show Us proper form. The other system should give a eom w het better reeult, but la ever more "beat-around-the-bueh." That la through the ' balancing of the MlolUgan-Coinc',l and Chicago-Cornell results. Tha Wol verine battle with tha eaaternora on No vember 13, and Chicago takes them on 'one week later. Cornell should be about as strong for one game as fur the other, while neither of the western teams can give alible for poor form because of the 'data when they play. Then again cornea I the secondary comparison of then scoros with Chlcago'a record In the conference j games. Nowher ia there a way to get 'anything better than a second degree 'comparison between Michigan and Wis consin. Without bringing up the question aa to , who should be blamed for this situation, 'it can be sold with emphasis that the condition an It exist Is a rank Injustice to Michigan and that it should be rem edied by next year at the latest. Whichever of the conference teama dote beet against the other tm-mbere of i thla childishly autocratic body will be able to boast the meaningless, but never theless high-sounding title ot "Confer. .nra Champions." All Michigan can aay la that tt played good foot ball and made better scores. If indeed that happens to ba so. Tha pity of it la that 'Michigan is undoubtedly on tha foot ball map so ,far aa tha ability of her gridiron repre sentatives are concerned and could possl !bly thrash any one of the conference con. 'tenders. Last Saturday's gama with Caea and today' tussle with the Mlehl lifan' Agglre showed that Coach "Hurry jt'p" Tost has a bunch of fine material, and ba Is the very person to whip It into .'the strong-scoring machine Invariably (turned out by the Ann Arbor Institution. Michigan's campaign la feeing watched Imora closely that that of any other team In the country, outside of Yale, Harvard and Princetvjf.. Thl 1 btcause of he fart thst Michigan meat Vanderbllt. probably the mongrst aouthern um, and Syracuse, Cornell and Pennsylvania, all worthy missionaries of the east it la truly a peculiar schedule when a team plays all but on of Its important gainea S-gainst teams from other euds of the country. Next Saturday's game with Ohio Btete does uot amount to mate thin a practice eepston. but the following w-ck the big ones begin to come. Vanderbllt visits Ann Arbor on October Ti, Hyi acune . on November 4. Cornell on the llth and Y'ennjryivanle on ' the 1Mb,, and the TVolverlnee Journey to Lincoln for the Ne braska conflict on the Kth. Verily, It Is a 'hard route to' travel. To emerge creditably irom such a serlee Lot ordeaJ nieani that Michigan will have to play foot ball uf the first caliber and that not only will Yost need a good 'eleven, but a good twenty or thirty. nr i there will be m,n laid up, particularly whan It goes Into such fracases as these 'will be. j Yost saa he has the men to do the jdetda. He haa lofct Penbrook. the All-lAniM-lcan guard. But he has already 4e 'velored a good successor for the big fel llow id K rhler. a giant eoihomor. who u eligible this vtsr tor the tn.t time Ihe rti-t of his outfit is well bale need ; with a scintillating star hers and there ' to provide sensation fr the Altchlg.nl 'rooters. Takltig the squad aa a whole, tt ' i in Yuet'a own Uim, a "bully" one and. j aa said btfor e. It la to be regretted that .t Michigan doa not get a shot at the con ference contenders fr th championship. I CANADIAN WOMAN GOLFER COMES TO UNITED STATES OTTAWA. Out . Oct It M'sa Dorothy Campbell, the most prominent woman i go:fcr In the world today, will leave Canada and move eiihrr to Philadelphia or New York. Mus Campbell ia bolder ' trf the ffciHh. American sud Ciuluo thin Tli Merit nt Mho Has the Goods la t're Oq Who Lets th Public Know li Ikiouf Adverting la Th Be. A atudv of Captain Arthur Howe of Tale on the gridiron. The picture on the left ehnwa Howe's position In the bark field awaiting the moment when the cen ter will put the ball tn play. Cnacher find difficulty In training men not to give the play away by shifting their po sition or letting- their ''CH waver after Eastern Teams Show Form Il W. !. I'.t It ! SWOHTH. NHW YOHK. Oct. H Two montha ago fml ball critics were predicting that the big elevens would not mraaure up to the standard this fall, bat tho . early game acoroa have upset tha dope. It begins to look new as though all tha leading col leges would be represented by teams every bit aa good as last year's aggrega tion. While no team sticks up prominently above the others, Ilka Harvard a did last seaaon, tha material seems to be above th average and evenly spread out over the field. I am speaking only of the east ern teams, as I haven't received any re l)Gi t from th,wiern colleges. Whn the material so scattored It assures close and hotly contested struggles with an open question aa tn which team will carry off top honora. Tho early games furnlthed evidence that the teama are going about their de velopment with a more clearlv defined Idea of what policy ia the best, to follow. A aeason'a work under tha new rulee hu given the coaehea and the players more ground . to work on. They ran make move with mora certainty ot results than they could a year ago. Confidence and conalatcncy supplanta the chaotic and er ratic. .And now that th ru'es have been di gested harmony will . rul In all the campa. Yale probably suffered more than any other team last season In th Inconsistency among the coache. each and every on of wh:n had a different 'da aa to lion- tho gam should, be played under tha new code. Hut new Yal I going along on a more aubsun i!l baala. s, It la much too early to obtain a reliable line on th ultimata strength of thy team. Not until the last of th month can one get a true line. Only the harder gntif, tne oner that ome two or threw weeks an.-, will lest the systems SJtd material In the games played so far. leng runs, field goala and forward passes have been used frely, and the play ha tmen more varied than ever be for. . Bncause of the fact that th penalty Is lees severe the forward pas will be tha big method this year Th producing powr ao far has ben excellent, but. a said before, the teams aro ao evenly matched early In the sraaon and tha acorea to dat enow noth ing. Ther Is on team that 'mutt be watchSd closely by th big fellows this season and that la Brown. The Providence eleven, which walloped Yale SI to 0 lest fall made a heap of the revised rules', and with a corking collection of material, cprackllng may lead a team to victory over buth Harvard and Yale. Whll Brow u s losses w ere sever both In ths line and the back field through graduation, Coach Robinson ha been fa vored with aome corking new talent While many of th best player at Provl dene colleg are not eligible to play on lh varsity team, they will forn! a great scrub team. And a acrub tram ran work wondeie with th first eleven Th fact that Brown belt Tale lat seaaon baa cured Brown ot th minor college attttud. Into which It fell back because of repeated beating. Today It figur every bit as good aa Yale. Har vard and Pennsylvania. It will go Into the big gam conflos.it tht It i the bet ter tem, and confidence In foot ball eounta for mora than In any other branch of sport, not excepting bace ball or box- ! In. Harvard has never been beaten by brown.' but the Crluucn haa been very lucky In ome of th battles In which it outplayed only to win by a fluke. When th team meet on October the odda will probably be even, although niny will wager on the Cambridge team because of the Jinx tt bold on Ibe Brow nonlsns. On October tl Brown rlashee wuh Pennsy and I look for It to revenge for latt season's beating But on Novem ber It Brown and Yal will met In what should b on of th gresteet, if not tho j-jtrrzrjejuSrjriArjz the signal Is given and before the rsy starts. The defensive eleven watch the hack field like hawks for the alightemt move of hand or foot., or a glance of tha eya often gives a clue to the coming Play. In the middle plrture Howe Is f.hown punting the ball, a branch of the game greateat, struggle of the year. The coaches at New Haven will give their team special preparation for (his gsme In hopes of wiping out the 110 trim ming. Just keep an eie on Brown this season. Tale Is going to have a pretty nifty back field. Bellly, Phllbln. Spalding. C'huroh and Anderson have also . ehown marked promise. The line men have not shown up so well, but the New Havenltea have an abundance of material to Delect from. At Princeton the back field figures to he one of ths best tho Tigers ever had, but th line men. Ilk Yale, need a lot of development. Big Roper la highly pleased with hi back field, however. IWltt. Baker. Pendleton, lawyer and Hart are five corkers. It is not unlikely that with such . a wealth of first-class men behind the line that Captain, Hart may-be shifted to tackle position. "In that case Pendleton will be tho regular fullback. , ... Harvard a lino haa done all that has been aaked of It to date, and behind the line they have a combination that Boston critic proclaim the greatest machine in th country. Kendell. Frothlngham, Mor plson and Campbell are the men Harvard followers are expecting to create all kinds of sensatione (his fall. Pennsylvania . 1 having a heap of trouble with a light Una. but the back field looka to . be satisfactory. Coach Smith believes that accuracy In onslde klcka and forward pasaes is th main thing to master, and Is drilling his can didal in thla department most thor oughly. Cornell has an excellent set ot 'offensive men In Hawkins at rltcht half. O'Connor at left half and Underbill at fullback. Th Itbtcana' defense lias not been quit up to the standard, however. At Dartmouth, trsnk Cavanaugh seems to be having all n il of troutle. He ha Llewellyn. Morke. Tiudlev. Dana and liogfcett behind th line., but his defense will need a lot of bolstering up for the big game. SHRUBB BEGINS WORK TRAINING HIS RUNNERS CAMBRIDGE. Mass.. Oct. 14 -Al Shrubb, th proferrlonal distance runner, w ho ia coaching the Harvard cross-country tem again this season, began work with his men on the stadium track th other dey. There were about thirty candi date. Including moat of laet year a men. headed bv Caiptain P. R. Withlngton of the varsity track team, who is Harvard's beat creas-country man as well. With lngton will ba In I'Jiarge or the distance work and th fall training of the regular track men, who will hold their games on November 1. will be In charge of Trainer Donovan and V P. Rantiey. the Harvard middle distance runner. War Tiot Profeoref A raall number of men aympatbixara took part . In the suffrwlet parade In New York City, among thera several mmber of the faculty of Teachers' col lege. Ona of there professors had th honor of leading th male contingent and of carrying a banner. "Did you notice." he asked a friend afterward, "what the lnscnrtion was on that banner thev gave me to carrv'.' No, rented his friend, "vou car rled It as if you were afraid aome one wnuiq otcipher it." "It read, chuckled the professor. "The men vous why not wT" bucceoa Mag. lu. Maslaajs of aa Old Sport. : We're pretty middling successful ao long aa we can Keep m woiiu irom diti'ovw Ing our failure. . , If hadea really 1 paved with good in ttniions then the going ought to b pretty gooa mere. ' Th man who haa nvr worn the fringe never know th fun of getting a new Yesterday la salted deep down in the uarrei out tomorrow remains to b cured Worry seem a mighty foolish thing ou re vuiiin an oia, oia cenio. tiry tiiiri wttn sunken grsvee. There as much difference between rroklness and course aa theie 1 between cr.aik and ch New lork voi'ld. lW!iv': :IV?WwwVl In which he excels snd which will figure largely In Yale's play this year. A punt means the dropping ' of the ball aid kicking It before It touches the ground. The ball lx kicked with the Instep and not with the too and requires jcreat skill and coolness to exeuuje successfully with the enemy -charging to block the ball. 4 Can the Battler Come Back By W. W. NAUOHTO.Y. BAN FRANCISCO. Cl., Oct H.-For all that he is loaded down to tho guards with hope that springs eternal In the human breast,. Battling Nelson must be gin to realise he will never cOrhe back.' If. however, that affair with Young Baylor did not convlnv tho Norseman that fighter. Ilk other beings, have their limitations, the only conclusion Is that Nelson ia a monomomaniac on the nub Ject of remaining young. What Is helping to fool Nelson In re gard to iila chances of regaining th championship Is that hi chlefett ast-et. to-wlt. his durability, Is the last of all hla fighting fortifications that Is going to show signs of wear and tear. So. far the Dan la as much of a marvel of en durance as he was when scoring his big gest ring victories.. For that matter If he were to quit right now he would be remembered a a champion who had never been knocked out, as the term In geuerally "understood. '"Knocked out of time" he certainly waa by Owen Moran, but th"re was never a fraction of an In stant, even when the' time keepers were calling their loudest, that bis brain wa not telegraphing hla legs to do tlielr duty to place themselves firmly beneath his body and enable him to stand erect. . What I mean la that Nelson did not lose consclousneas entirely, even In th Moran "knockout." and I guess that was th nearest he ever came .to btlng ren dered completely hors-du-combat. Whin the buffetlngs he haa taken and ' th knockdowns he has suffered are con sidered, .it is really wonderful . to think that he haa never been sent to the land of dreams. . '.-. As I have said, his ability to assimilate punishment remains Intact or practically .so, nut endurance alone never, made .a man champion . of the world and that Nelson had to bjcu up his durability has desotcd him. While neer a marvel at timing, countering or judging distance, Nelaon alwa ttrove,to give blow tor blow. Even it while thus engsged h took five-punches for -every one he re turned, h did well, for his assimilative powers enabled him -to- shake off -th effects of the punches which came his way. To put It tn another wy, If Nel aon countered successfully one out of a possible five times, he was no worse punlnhed than hla adversary. Possibly that waa one of' the anglee th Battler figured from. There were tlmee when thl desire to punch Blmultaneoutly with hla opponent brought satiefaetorv result early In the fight. In the open air contest, with Jimmy Britt at Colma. the Battler had the titter- tat Idea In hi head when the bove went tp tho center for the opening round. Iirltt. who was both a shifty and tpccdv fighting opponent. In a few second let go his lsft hook it landed, but as it did the Fattier' left shot In with a bent arm movement and the glove tore a' small strip of sktn from Brltt's nose. A neater and mot timely coon'er waa never seen Of court. Nelson did not have similar luck every time h was trurk bv Britt. and for that matter there were itiy fer of th early rounds In w hich he Unit I his return o well. But In th bng ru.i It waa bv awaiting Britt's lead and coun terlng that h wor down the native son , Nelson showed the iinu aptitude for giving blow for blow in bis fight with slartta Canole and Young Curbett. bj w ho as a rule were much faster hitter than he Even whn he missed, his Tfct wc-nt ilanFerously clone to the otho men's head or body, and whea it came to indiscriminate slurftng at ckise quarter;. Nelaon waa an excellent range fini'.-r , If I may Judge of what I tew tf htm In a contest with Antone Ue Grave in fan Francisco, Battling Nelnon. baa lost his Ideas of countering and hla sense of 4 1st a nee haa become a Joke. He rooted away ra hi old style, but in th majority of Instances bis opponent waa far out of fang At times Bat's swings shivered the air a full foot short of La Grave head. The desire to mix It waa aa strong aa ever, but hi notion of what con The picture -on the right showa Howe just as a' forward pats has been started. This play le an innovation In foot ball and has only been used a few seasons. It Is one of the most difficult gridiron play- to' execute perfectly and when not perfected will reeult disastrously to the team that relies upon it for gains. . stituted striking distance were lamentably deficient.' It la to b hoped . Nelloh't durability will not remain w-itn him long enough to convert him lnt6 a punching block tor very third rater that happens along. Un. fortunately for him, the desire to re habilitate himself aa a world beater has warped hla judgment, and lie seams un ablo to discern that his batting average has fallen off to an alarming extent. It la a pitiable thing when a man t, vanity dulls his Intelligence to such an extent that h doeun't recognise when It Is time to quit. The case of Battling Nelson is an Interesting on Thefe never was a cleaner living rlngman than the Dane, probably, and . when speculating , on the causes that brought him to the end of his tether aa a puplllet. he must be held Innocent of Indulging In the pace that 'kills. Hit comparatively sudden Blowing up gives strength to the old contention that In the matter of athletic vigor and excellence no man. no matter how care fully he conserves his nerve force snd his energies, can hope to remain at his best for longer' than eight or ten years. British Promoter Will Bring .Boxers ' NEW TORK. "Oct. 'U -Report ' from England etat that Will ' Ames. ' a. well known manager of boxers on the other side, is preparing to bring 'over a string of boxers representing all division, from the bantamweight to th welterweight class. The latter will be represented bv 811 Burns, who haa a good record In England. Tho lightweight will be George Randall,' who la rated as being next to W!l and Welsh. Billy Marchant. the featherweight, is another boxer said to rank-with the clevereat in his native land, and the bantam Is Sid Smith w'ho is up to the htandard of the rest of th team. 'Ames expects to match the men with the topnotchers of. tpalr. various weights In 'this country. Bid-Smith, the bantam, can make a lighter poundage - than Johnnie Coulon, Frankla Burru or any of th -other crack' bantams of America.' but will meet them on their own condl 'tions.:' Aii&nilrh claims the championship f England., a match with Coulon should attract considerable Interest. The men will arrive In a few day and will tout the country, boxing wherever matches Can be obtained - ' Freak of t FccblewMiadad. 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Among the Britons NETV TOBK. Oct. 11 -Was It Jack Jehason'a pompous waya in England and the flashlness the colored champion dis played 'with his white wife that caused such a reversal of feeling In the land r,f Kng Georfe aeainet the. man nhn de feated Jim Jeffries? Heretofore England has been a psra die for colored boxers, for In that coun try the blsrk man has been plven u1 moet ss much consideration as his w h'.te opponent; In fact, pome of the black have been made a great deal of. Colored ! boxers a-iways liked to visit England, becaufe they were placed almost on an equalltv with the. Briton. Jack Johnson has suddenly changed this order of things. It is given out pretty maight that it was not the fact that Johnson was to box Bombardier Wells that caused the ..- n,i,. .1,1 k 1 . V. - . 1 . I r B'T-L full.,,, aiiliuugii iv nn'j i .'iii-iti. able to do with it hut tlmnlr the for ward methods adopted by the champion and putting himself on too high a ped- eita! to gult even .the mlld-tempeied Britons. According to a letter recently received from a close follower of tho situation In London, Johnson Is "in bad" with the t.portingr'' fraternity over there. John son's manners, which gained him so much animo-;tv In America, a feeling that was never held toward euch men as Peter JackFon, Gorge Dixon. Joe Gang and other colored boxers, have evidently caused a similar feeling in England. This is all the more remarkable In vieu of the fact that colored boxers have heie tofore bepn treated with almost as mui-h courtesy as white boxers. In spite of the strong feeling against negroes in many quarters. Johnson would never have been a unpopular In America as he Is now if it were not for his actions outside of the ring since ho won the championship. 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