3 S The noble red man -never knew, when roaming in the woods, His race would have afoot ball crew delivering the goods. A fullback who- folk wr exelmlm Thought foot ball ni rathr coDdurlva To hlth ud lone llf Till ho iot In the otrllo 'And found the plebouuu baaly. Another yowif fullbMk natnd Keith Wm unwllllni Ut ?nt underneath. II htd to mar 11 lr) f-W With m MoT, And th virtu thoufht h hd nrh whit twit)! .J THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: DECEMBER 3, 1916. Judgments ARE the minors at last going to take matters in their own hands and have a little to say about how their own business is to be run? One might in fer from resolutions at the recent National association meeting that they intended to do just that little thing In the first place the little fel lows turned down every request or demand Davy Fultz of the Players' fraternity made, which is the same as throwing., down the gauntlet to Davy. In the second place they open ly declared themselves as opposed toy permitting tne national commission to interfere in their affairs, which is the same as slipping the majors a mild warning. The minors have been getting it in the neck for the last twenty years. The last three years they have been getting it good. The entire profits of all the minors in the country in the' last three years wouldn't biuy a Week's supply of cigar ets for a ; Mexican track layer. And the boys who have been footing the ills are getting somewhat pained, won't stand for much. more and any body who makes additional demands on them isn't likely to be" jdyfulty re ceived. Fultz has said he will not sub nicy l, iv,atnvu iu. uumt wiit-i. iiivj mit to the turn down the minors gave him at their New Orleans meeting. And as Fultz generally means what he says it probably means tne flay ers' fraternity will put up a battle, it mav even go so far as to call the threatened strike. But it is just as probable that the- minors .will fight nacK to tne umii, even closing incir parks if they have to. The minor leagues make up a pow erful organization and if they ever de cide to get together and fight shoulder to shoulder as they should they'll be come more of dictators instead of subjects in the realm of professional base ball. ' Doc Stewart, having been unfor tunate in his first year at Nebraska, is going to come in for a lot of criti cism because the Cornhuskers dropped two games this fall. But how any person who took one slant at that Nebraska backfield could put the blame on Stewart is a mystery to us. Creighton had a backfield that had the Cornhusker chargers beat to death. Nobodv but a miracle man ould have made a scoring machine out ot those liusker DacKs. next year tour mignty gooa Dacxneia men. Kellogg, Day, scnellenberg ana Mc Mahon, graduate from the freshmen to the varsity. Stewart should be able to mold a great eleven put of his present material and these men. If he fails then Stewart will have to shoulder the blame. But he shouldn't be made to shoulder it this year, he didn't have an even chance. Ktxt year he'll have more than an even chance, so let's reserve 'judgment, on the new Cornhusker mentor for an other twelve months, i Some big trades are going to be pulled off in the big leagues this year. Miller Huggins has been given orders to swap his entire club, Weeghman has announced that he will get a lot of new men for the Cubs, McGraw is after a player or two, Brooklyn wants a catcher and shortstop, the White Sox want a third sacker, the Browns need some new men, 'and so does practically every other club with the possible exception of the Red Sox. We were treated to some juicy trades and purchases last year and the-year before, when such stars as Collins, Speaker, McCarty, Herzog, Zimmer man, , Doyle, Mathewson and others changed locations, but they'll look like btfsh league deals' in comparison to those that are likelv to come ud this winter. American leaeue magnates 'arc qsawking because they say the Na- tu,n 1a9,a is malriner fh Ani,ipnn ' " G u i ......... a " . . . . . . bear the brunt of all the strife that arose from the Federal league. They say the Nationals now want the American league to transfer, the Washington club to Baltimore to ap pease tne disgruntled persons there who are sore over the peace agree ment. And this, they say, on top of the fact that the American league did not suffer from the Federals and only made peace to help the National out. And yet records show the American league played to a million more fans this year than it did last. Didn't the death of the Feds help a little bft in this enormous gain? No sooner had Jumbo Stiehm hit Nebraska to pay a Thanksgiving visit to his wife's relatives and see the Nebraska-Notre Dame game, than ru more began to circulate that Stiehm was out here after lfh old job. It is probably only natural such rumors would circulate. Stiehm in his now field lost four games and only won two, while Nebraska, his old field, didn't have its usual success. But there isn't much likelihood th&t the rumors (arry any truth, we -don't imagine liciuii uica Jai inuiai jj iu me. back, or that Nebraska cares particularly to nave mm Dacic. The much dicussed strike of the players sounds like a lot of Mexican bunk to us. The base ball player of the present day is much like the prize fighter. His first interest is the coin he gets. Shut up the parks a few days and suspend the payment' of salaries and hear the noise the play ers will make. If the magnates merely say, "let 'em strike," and then make good, it won't be long before the players will come to time. The major leagues have a lot of differences to settle this year. If they are wise they will make their settle ments quietly and cut out the nau seating publicity that has attended them in the past. Scraps between the magnates ordinarily give the fan a pain. And in these days of the H. C. L. it isn't wise to give the fan, who pays the freight, any illness. Base ball men might just as well begin to lay their plans for the re distrubtion of territory. Interest in the game will continue to lag until some changes are made. Eventually the redistribution must come, so why not nowr Well, the foot ball season's over; brine on the basket ball and the wrestlers. , MILLION-DOLLAR BALL PARK TALKED Owners of New York Ameri cans Confer with Ban John son About Plant. OLD OPTIONS ON LAND New York, Dec. 2. As a result of several preliminary caucuses now be ing held by base -ball magnates of the American and National leagues an of ficial anouncement is expected at the two big meetings on December 12 that ,New York is to have another million-dollar ball park and that the custom of the leagues using each oth er's parks during world's series games will tJe abolished. For several years the National league owners have resented the use of the Polo grounds by the Yanks a,nd it is known that the Giant man agement has hinted tliat the National league would prefer to have the his toric old grounds all to themselves. Captain Huston and Colonel Rup pert have been in the position of a visitor who feels that he has over stayed his time. They also have dis covered that the close proximity and friendliness of the two clubs have had a dampening effect on the local riv alry between the Yanks and Giants. Last fall there was so little interest displayed in a series of games be tween the two clubs that the idea was abandoned. - Too Friendly. Captain Huston declares that if the two clubs had beer! playing on sepa rate grounds a Giant-Yank seriej would have drawn almost as well as a world's series. The Boston American league club came in for a lot of criticism last fall for transferring their games with Brooklyn to Braves field in Boston on account of its large seating capac ity. It took away the American league atmosphere, even if the players did show a lot of it in their playing. That will not occur again. In fact it has become very evident that the harmonious co-operation of the two leagues (has robbed the game. of a lot of its fire. Hereafter they will go it alone. Talk With Johnson. Several weeks ago Captain Huston and Colonel Ruppert realized that the quicker they get a park of their Own the better it will be for their ball club, and they are on the job. Both of them are now in French Lick Springs con ferring with President Johnson on the question of a proper location for the big million-dollar park. The question to be decided is whether the grounds shall be located on Manhattan island or in Queens. Options are held on property at the other end of the Queensboro bridge and on two plots on the island. There is a chance for them to locate at the eastern foot of Forty-second street in the gas house section. . A year ago the captain and the col onel had this matter up, but it brought out so much publicity that they could not keep their plans secret long enough to make Jheir investments on a reasonable basis. Evidently they now have what they want and have gone to Ban Johnson to have the mat ter passed on by the league before the coming meeting. Mathewson is Not Worrying, He Says New York, Dec. 2. Christy Math: ewson, - manager of the Cincinnati Reds, dropped in-John Doyle's Forty second street billiard parlor , to see some of his friends who are billed to perform in the well-known "egg" tour nament. He wis inveigled into a foursome, during the course of which he discussed informally the 1917 pros pects of the Rhinelanders. I "I believe I will come out of the sbuth with a pretty good pitching staff next spring," said the man who was the idol of New York fandom for a decade and a half. "The veteran pitching staff was pretty fair and some highly recommended youngsters'are coming up to us. There is no reason why Toney, Schneider and Mitchell should not be, three of the very best boxmen in the game. Schneider has not studied the National league bat ters closely enough as yet. Moseley and Knetzer lack control. Control is something that can be mastered by painstaking practice. - "I'm not worrying a bit about Cincinnati's pitching,"' Matty con tinued. "That end of the game will be all right. I'll have time in Shreve port to coach some of the youngsters enough to guarantee a pretty reliable box department. Pitching is a very important factor to success. I feel that Cincinnati is. sure to improve this last season's performances. "The Red lineup as it finished the season of 1916 was not a weak fielding combination by any means. It could stand another clouter or two and such we may pick up from the rookies. Sev eral of the young regulars, among them Roush and Neale, needed last season's experience to put them on edge. My outfield next year "should be strong. . "In Chase and GrofKl have the two best infielders of the National league for the wings. If we have the luck to uncover- a first-class shortstop the Reds will have to take the dust of few rivals." Wealth of Fighters Bob Up in Welter Division New York, Dec. 2. Never was there such a wealth of'welters. That ill-favored class has suddenly burst forth in splendor with ho less than a half dozen topnotch contenders that haven't been rivalled in. the las't fifteen years. Look: Britton. MFarIand, Ritchie, Ted Lewis, Badoud, Bart field, O'Dowd, Griffiths, Gilmore, Mile Glover. Duffy, Marty Cross (Leach Cross' brother), and others. And only a short time ago the welterweight di vision was so unpopular that Packie McFarland, who was unquestionably the best welter in the game, refused to claim or accept the title, Neodl a New Tram. AH that Coach Toit of Mli-hlran will have to do neat year ll to develop -a new foot ball team. . Johnny Maulbctsch, the Wolver ine! of ll. Is through OMAHA COMMERCIAL HIGH SCHOOL TEAM The "Bookkeepers" made good record for themselvei as an ambitious, scrappy lot during the season. In the picture they are : Front, Oscar Weinstein. Second row, left to right George Bernstein, E. Rokusek, Julius Gerelick, Frank Ross, Milton Morearty, Captain Wade Reeves, Fred Morledge. Third row, left to right Kinsley, Albert Card,' Charles Conkiser, Coach James Drummond, William Dewey, Perry Shirley and Robert Moore. TENNIS HAS THREE MILLION PLAYERS r Once Ridiculed as "Ladies' Game," Strenuous Pastime Wins Many Men's Favor. CITIES BUILD . COURTS New .York, Dec. 2. Tennis, the same sport that was ridiculed as be ing too much of a ladies game a few years ago is now rapidly approaching base ball as a national pastime. This season, figures Fjed Alexander, the former national champion, more than 3,000,000 men, women and children played tennis in the United States. The game has taken such a hold on the sport-loving public that great tennis centers like New York, Bos ton, Chicago, Philadelphia, and San Fraricisco have sprung fcip and v the game is spreading like a prairie fire to every section of the country. Tennis was so popular . this year that most of the leading cities esta blished municipal courts, while hun dreds Of private clubs installed light ing systems so that their members could olav tennis at. night. Alexander declares that tennis has developed quicker than any other sport in this country, even including base ball, tie gives three reasons for this a wonderful form of exer cise, cheapness and a game that re quires but little space. Sudden' Popularity, , "The sudden popularity of- tennis surprises us all," said Alexander, who as a player and expert ranks with the topnotchers. "Now we have vari ous championships that attract in terest from thousands of youths, addi tional tournaments for even young schoolboys and many meets for women, whose members greatly in creased this year. The sport is no lohger restrteted to a fewspots like Newport and Longwood, but is scattered all over the land. Philadel phia is just as keen for the game as New York. One club at German towp alone 'has sixty courts and they're busy all the timei Chicago is another city of racquet weilders, while no one need to be told about the tennis sentiment out in Califor nia. . "Yet," went pn the veteran former champion, "the game started under the most discouraging circumstances. Tennis was introduced here from England some twenty odd years ago, and it was quickly taken1 up by so ciety. It was ve'ry exclusive. Society played it, and only society was invited to the few tournaments at Newport, Longwood and Sea Bright. The av erage sport-goer refused to have any thing to do with it. He poked fun at it as being a fad and a ladies' game. In those days it was a tame sport, and the best players,, with thei gentle tap-tap style, would ..only be second or third raters now. Was in Rut. "The game continued in a rut for a long while," continued Alexander. "Finally it gradually began to attract a few outsiders, who played the new sport more out of curiosity than any thing else. To their astonishment they discovered that chasing a tennis ball for about two hours was pretty good exercise.,. They invited others to take up the game, and that was the real beginning of tennis. "Dwight Davis in offering a cup for international competition did a great deal to foster the glowing game. Then came Maurice McLoughlin, with his new dashing way of playing tennis. He put additional action into the game, and that seemed to please the younger players, the kind who delight in taking strenuous exercise. "McLoughlin was looked up to as a model for hundreds of youngsters who have been starring on the courts the last few years. They not only played a dashing game like Mc Loughlin, but actually improved on the Comet's style, a development, that is making our leaders some of the greatest racquet wielders in the world." , Alexander explains that tennis is really only beginning to get big. Quincy Owner Puts His Whole Team on the Block Oscar Shannon, owner of the Quincy franchise, in the "III" league, has offered his entire team for sale. The players include Manager John Castle, Pitchers Higbee, Cummings, Young, Heizer, Bierman and Kucp per; Catchers Tyree, Linglc, Kuhn and Boelzle, and Fielders Foley, Gol vin, Turner, Boyle, Sherer and Trainer. 1 Hawkeye Basket Shooters to Have Extensive Schedule Iowa City, la., Dec. 2. (Special.) Hawkeye basket tossers have come together immediately at the close of the foot ball season and are taking their first workouts on the gymnasium floor daily under the direction of Coach M. A. Kent. About twenty men are out for the squad, all of them candidates who either had experience last year or who played with the re serves or freshmen. , As the saying goes each year, "Prospects for a winning basket ball five at Iowa City this season are very bright." The Hawkeyes make no com plaint of the outlook, however. Cap tain -Bannick, without doubt the best player in the state today, is out for forward again and is assured of a po sition. He has been showing up bril liantly in the first practices. Von Lackum and Schiff, guards last year, are also available and can be kept off the 'five only by the appearance of some phenomenal opposition. Two games with Ames, two with Cornell and one other remain to be arranged before the Iowa schedule is complete. Director Kellogg, however, announces the following gardes for the year: December li State Teachers at Iowa City. ' December 19 Lombard at Iowa City. January 8 Ohlcairo at Chicago. January 12 Indiana at Iowa City. January 17 Indiana at Bloomtngton. January 20 Purdue at Lafayette, January 24 Northweitern at Bvaneton. -February 9 Chicago at Iowa City. February 19 Minnesota at Iowa City. March Minnesota at Minneapolis. March 10 Northwestern at Iowa City. Dobie's Eleven to Tackle Dartmouth In East Next Year New York, ' Dec. 2. Dartmouth has arranged a game with the famous University of Washington eleven to be played at the Polo grounds next fall. The Washington team, which is one of the strongest on the Pacific coast, has not been defeated in three years. The players are coached by Gilmour Dobie, a capable foot ball in structor, who sticks to the old-fashioned game, using the forward pass only as a bluff. The Washington eleven has been eager to play a game before a New York crowd for some rime, hut it has been impossible to carry on successful negotiations with the big three Harvard, Yale and Princeton. Dartmouth, however, has come to the front with an acceptance of the Washingtonians' sweeping chal lenge and the New York Base Ball club has clinched the match, which probably will excite unusual interest. Vean Gregg Gets , More Coin Than Ty Vho is the highest paid player in base ball? Ty Cobb, Tris Speaker? Not on your life. It is none other than Vean Gregg, who occasionally, very occasionally, pitches a game for the Boston Red Sox, champions of the world. Gregg was wished upon the Red Sox late in1914 by the Indians. Then his left fin lost its wiggling power and Vean did little else than nurse it for the balance of the year. In 1915, and again this season Gregg was almost useless to his club. The main chores he performed were those of the relief variety. In 1915 he Worked to a decision in only six games; this year five. For performing in eleven complete combats in two years, Gregg got his regular salary, reported to be $5,1100 a season, and two cuts of the world's series melon. That means ap proximately $17,000 for working about twenty hours in two years, or $850 every six minutets If you have tears to shed, this is not the spot. Michigan Gridiron Star Leans Toward Aviation John Maulbctsch, captain of the University of Michigan foot ball eleven, has become all enthusiastic aviator,. He. has made flights with Don, McKce of Saginaw, brother of "Red" McKec, the Detroit base ball club's catcher, and seems anxious for more opportunities to buck the air. Bigbee Keeps in Shape By Chopping Down Trees Carson Bigbee, the rising young Pittsburgh infielder, is working on his father's farm out in Oregon and writes that he intends keeping in con dition by chopping down trees and in dulging in other "light" exercise. W1LLARD FLIRTING WITH QUICK DEATH Jess Laying Himself Open by Taking Life Easy and Work 1 ing Very Little. TWO FIGHTS, THREE YEARS New York, Dec. 2. How long can Jess Willard remain out of the ring and still retain his reputation of be ing invincible? During the last three years Willard has taken part in two bouts, one with Jack Johnson and the other the ten-round affair with Frank Moran. (That is not nearly enough Work to keep a fighting man in shape to do his best work. It is a rule with few exceptions that when a boxer retires for as long as a year he loes 50 per cent of his form. Jack Johnson was no exception to this rule, although Johnson was a natural boxer who needed less prac tice than the average gloveman. Willard is strictly a manufactured boxer. He is not by nature a fight ing man and it was only bv laborious practice that he acquired whatever amount of ability he possessed. Willard says the boxing he does every day during the circus season keeps him in good shape. But the champion's circus boxing is strictly a joke.' He merely goes two one-minute rounds and lets his sparring mate do all the work at that. Gymnasium boxing has ruined every fighter who tried it for any length of time. It gets him in the habit of pulling his punches. Willard showed in his bout with Moran that it was beginning to get in its work. He fought Moran as though he were boxing a sparrjng partner instead of defending a cham pionship. Instead of stopping his man, Willard merely boxed defensively when he should have been forcing the fight. He ifollowed the tactics learned in the gymnasium, which are altogether different to those used in the. ring. Then, too, Willard is said to have grown so fat that it is by no means certain that he will ever enter the ring again. However, it is becom ing evident that he must do some thing in the boxing; line this winter if he hopes to continue as an attrac tion with the circus. Of late the spectators of his abbreviated spar ring skits have taken to hooting at the place where the cheering should commence, according to reports from the west. There are certain signs that the titleholder is about to indulge in a scrap of some sort. According to the advance work he will face either Fred Fulton or Charley Weinert. Wcincrt probably will get the chance if, as seems probable,. Frank Moran flat tens the gawky Rochester giant when they come together in a few weeks. Willard would no doubt prefer Fulton, who still looks very soft, to Weinert, who is a good boxer and vcrv fast, even if he is not much of a hitter. In ten rounds Wein ert might cause the champion a great deal of trouble. Of course Willard's title would be safe enough if the bout were held in a no decision cen ter, hut it might be different if it took place in Tia Juana, 'or some place where the referee would be allowed to hand down a decision. Lawn Tennis On Ice is Newest Fad New York, Dec. '?. Lawn temps is to be played at the Ice Skating Palace, with Fred B. Alexander in charge of the arrangements; in fact, the idea originated with him. It is apparent that the players of this game must meet two big requirements. In the first place, they must be expert skat ers, and, in the second place, they must be equally expert tennis players. None but the best of skaters could hope to play the game. It requires more prompt and decisive action than hockey, even. Further, it must be apparent to even the layman that the players must be expert at handling a racquet, foi, unless they arc familiar with the different strokes' and the part the feet play in making these strokes, they are certain to come a cropper. Some five or six years ago the game was tried. But only one match was played. It caused a great deal of interest and enthusiasm ran high. At the time there" was much talk about forming an ice tennis tournament, with regularly scheduled matches throughout the winter. Ilaa a. Handicap. Hilly .llHn in n iwrai iimu.-, riiu nil that, but he's going to have a hard limn fnt- w, !.!.. an Innv k 111. HIKIuina lly remains In St. Taul. GOLF ASSOCIATION FACESBIG TASKS Reinstatement of Outlawed Members May Lead to Inter esting and Warm Debates. THOSE MUNICIPAL LINES Boston, Mass., Dec. 2. There may be exciting moments next January at the meeting of the United States Golf association delegates. The decision of the Woodland Golf club to pursue the course mapped out some months ago and tight hard for the reinstate ment of the members at present out side the pale can mean nothing more than a clear-cut decision which will show to the goliers all over the coun try the 1917 attitude of the new ex ecutive committee. The whole question is far bigger' than any committee or club, and it is to be hoped that steps will be taken in the meanwhile to have a harmoni ous gathering two months from now. The question that has arisen be tween the Woodland Golf club and the officials of the United States Golf association has not a few complex elements, important to every club in the country whose members favor the true spirit of democracy. j Some Suppositions. Suppose that 100 clubs had had their favorite members debarred by the United Slates Golf association of ficials and were deprived of a discus sion of the case. Suppose, as happened in this case, there was a refusal on the part of the resident executive committeeman to meet and discuss together the merits of the situation and that repeated ef forts on the part of the club officials failed to get the proper and courteous response expected concerning the no tification of disbarment, etc. Would many golfers deny that a feeling of great disloyalty would creep into the hearts of the members of the hundred clubs on the ground that they had hot the right sort of treatment by the men elected on a national ticket for that very purpose. i But as this happened to only one club there has not been the same feel ing of sympathy because of the pecu liar circumstances of the members in volved. The officers of the United Slates Golf association must meet half way every time any club, whether ac tive or associate, for the clearing up of any disagreement. In this case who would say that the Woodland club had received anywhere near a square deal. A Hornet'i Nest. It is on that account and not for the personal sympathy accorded to Francis Ouimet and the others that the Woodland club has it may sur prise some of the officials to hear heard from well over, fifty clubs in the east tendering their belief in their actiojn, and sympathy as well! while only five clubs you would not fail to guess' them without being told have said that they believe the club was in the wrong, And accompanying the letter from one of the five clubs was a statement that' it was only the majority part of the executive committee of the club which favored the United States Golf association action and that the club members were spokenly in favor of the Woodland club. Is it reasonable to presume that the official action or nonaction is right when it is so over whelmingly vetoed by thinking men far from the immediate scene of ac tion who surely have not been hap hazard in their choice. The game of golf is too fine a sport to be immeasureably hurt by the con certed action of a few men who are sincere in their beliefs that they are managing for the best interest of the game. That is a point worth consider ing. To our more than 500,000 there arc being added 30,000 or 35,000 new golfers each year. Municipal Links. What will be the new order when we have a million players or more in the country? Have many of ybu thought much about the new munici pal championship won this year by Chicago from Hartford and played on the links of St. Louis by representa tives of the golfers' who play 1600,000 rounds each" year? In five years more we shall have fifty to seventy-five mu nicipal links; in another ten years we shall have 4UU stanaarn courses of either nine or eighteen holes. Is there going to be one national organization in control of all the clubs and their members, with the right to make laws for the proper government of the sport? Golf is bound to be come the nationally played game of the land, as base ball will always combine the playing numbers and be pre-eminent as a spectacle. And now is the time when breadth of opinion as opposed to narrow per sonal choice, constructive legislation as opposed to guess work in the mat ter of new membership rules, a coun try-wide view rather than a nine-scvcn-club horizon is needed in Amer ica as never before. Fight for Favors. If the men in authority think it is the amateur rule alone which has roused the golfers of the country they arc much mistaken. For years there has been discontent over the distribu tion of official favors; there have been outspoken statements that the men in power did not have a democratic view of the golfing situation in the United States; there was at one time, almost a decade ago, a serious set of differ ences between the east and west, which were happily blotted out for the time being. Differences out west seem to have come once more to the surface in no uncertain form and there has been a different attitude on the part of the officials in refusing every request for the abolishment of the stymie, a pro cedure ten times less important than it may seem, involving no greater courage than it did to keep the Schen ectady putter and being a matter which need not be taken up with St. Andrews at all, statements to the contrary notwithstanding. Game Needs Men. I submit that the game of golf needs men of conviction who are wise and prudent. 1 do not- intend this article to take up the matter of the amateur question, but in this connec- HOW BARNES GAYE U. S. ROWING START Multi - Millionaire Enthusiast Spends Thousands of Dollars to Give Sport Boost. IT GAVE HIM HIS HEALTH New York. Dec. 2. Julius Barnes, called "The Father of American Row ing," has done more than any other man to popularize the aquatic sport in America, which has come forward with such leaps and bounds during the last fifteen years. And behind it all is a pretty story one that tells how a man, grateful for what a sport has done for him, has spared neither time nor money to raise U to ranking among the major sports of America. Twenty years or so ago Barnes, then living in his home town of Du luth, faced a nervous breakdown. He was emerging from his teens, but hard work and long hours had made their impress upon his health. Doc tors told him it was best that he should go away for a long rest. But that was just what Barnes couldn't do. Barnes today is rated as a multi millionaire. In the other days he was a poop boy, working his way along toward success, and traveling the long, hard road. And so he could not follow the advice of his physician, be cause to quit work meant to abandon his means of livelihood. And then it was that Julius Barnes took up rowing. In that darkest hour he saw a ray, of light and' it directed him to he water, to a boat and to a pair of oars. Every evening when his work was done he would taka himself down to Old St. Louis bav and row up, and down until nightfall and beyond. The exertion at first, tired him very much. Bnt in a little while he found that he could pull harder and faster and not feel tired. Soon his cheeks filled out and began to bloom. His chest took on a bulge and muscles began to develop on his arms, his legs arM on his body., In less than a year Julius Barnes, frail, wan and worked out, developed into a strong, husky youth, with clear eyes, clear skin and superb health. . Regalni His Health. "It was rowing that did it for me and nothing else," said ' Barnes, "When I took up the sport I was in poor condition. Within a year 1 had regained all my lost health and much more. And I have been a row ing enthusiast ever since." i A year or so after he took up row ing Barnes joined the first crew that ever represented Duluth. It was a remarkable quartet one that swept' its way to victory in almost every contest that it entered. i Fifteen years or so ago, when Barnes was forced to abandon the sport as a regular pleasure to devote his time to his grain business in New York and Duluth, he decided to bobst the game whenever he could. "Rowing probably toved my life," he once said. "I know what it did for me in upbuilding health. And so I felt that it was only right that I should open the way for other boya to grow strong and healthy through its medium." Patron of Club. Barnes became the patron of the Duluth Boat club. He spared nothing to make it a success. With several others who loved the rowing game as he does, he helped to build the strug gling club up to first ranking among organizations of its kind. Its mem bership jumped from a score or more to something close to 1,500. And the crews that they turn , out there in Duluth are . the greatest in America. A Duluth oarsman has become the standard by which all others are judged.. Oarsmanship has been de veloped to its highest possible stand ard in the Minnesota town, and dur ing the last few years the i story of every big amateur regatta has started with: "Duluth again won the laurels, scoring firsts in nearly every event," Duluth is a city that is filled with husky little elfs. And each is an oarsman. The boys there begin row ing at an early age, and when they are 12 or 14 they can pull a blade with the skill and oftentimes the power of an adult. And so.it is with the girls. Several years ago some of the daughters of the mem bers of the Duluth Boat cluh begged for a chance to row. They got it. Duluth now has some girl rowers who are the equal of many masculine stars of other cities:- "I think rowing is the greatest sport in the world," said Barnes. "Nothing Is better for young boys. The combination of water, sunshine and fresh air, together with exercise, builds up their bodies to the highest point of efficiency. It develops them in every other way and makes them manly little fellows. "The lesson that the boys learn in that way becomes invaluable to them later in life. And the superb health that rowing gives to them stands them in good stead in later years." tion let me proffer the following to explain what I mean; It took a great amount of thought and work, so we are told, to draft the new amateur rule which was first brought before the delegates last January. It was voted there to have the committee bring in another one and then within twenty-four hours an altogether new ruling was present ed. How much thought was spent upon this in comparison to the other which failed to satisfy? The latest draft was not an alternative, for it would have been presented at the rheeting. And it would be rather un wise to say that no time, or just twenty-four hours, was spent on the first rule given out. Such systems do not bring feelings of deserved confidence and the golfers of the country at large recognize that fact. Woodland will bring the .matter to a head at the annual meeting or be fore that time. They may not have enough helping votes then, with only active clubs voting, but again they may. Time alone will tell. The apt remark of ex-Senator Cannon that -"if the good thing, are made as popu lar as the bad things are powerful then we shall have good government,' may fit this case. a't ill', .1 uai til' ii n lb . ioI iW f