Cape May County Times, 3 December 1926 IIIF issue link — Page 13

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CAPE MAY COUNTY TIMES. FRIDAY. DECEMBER 3. 1926.

Tagt Thirteen

Sports Colyum

By O-BY-JINGO

Twas A Splenwu Victory

k «( thr fcrat *»» th»t coaid bapp,,,

V*" - *'“*'«» ...«cp.omly cnao i «ion* Wawmvjie flcvci. The vjc.oi) uo iioubt dK pUyoi. .nd co«hai. but »u „il| „ ^ tbody. It is never h*rd to cheer a winner, but it is a V«sL to get up pep to root for the home team when it U

J1 the btimps and little ct the glon.

fc a*m repaid the loyal support of'the student body in that SUe game and unless indications are amiss it will give | chance for cheenng neuct year. Coad, Evans wisely did

-“t tr set the world a6re the first year. He molded toget-1 Slnc ® the reiim of Johnny Kll*man team which was over-run by the strong opposition i baae ,b * featherweight boxing irlv games, but showed strength to the end of the season bare i,Pon 3 rathfr muddlr-d f real setback from a county team was when Middle : Bffalr Last wp< ‘ k - bowerer ' Rlch - . i 32 to 0. After Optam Broadies was injured ini*” 1 non ** a 1 n - uboTe) P the team went to pieces. Cape May and WildssxS ter, ' .rnng^^ S Vnt^hi^ t but a single touchdown each against the Maroon and j sicn himself. “World’s Peather-

m m t ] weight Champion.” [ Tie btoutj of thr Ocean City team uaj tti tea/H It «• aulltanding nan uho tea capable of f fear into the ot*9iition, but loss of tuck r. star | mttia/iy tereti a It Coark Elans kes leu! c. good

l for next year.

resort” grlddcrs for losses. Whittington kicking. Whittington klck--d poorly Tompkins, of Sea lakiUn-- on ihe ball. v j«i»i How Whittington to ’Stevens wa-: eood for twenty ; out Tacarrino intercepted It and ran eight yards before being tackled. A short pass from Addi ’iatio to Sea-nan was good for four «ards. ■d .'.ddel.xrto's pass io Seaman was Inlet eepled by Whittington, who carried the ball to the Icc--n-n' • twenty-yard line. Just as he wh liile blew ending the third ■•St* Isle City gained for a first down, but lost ground on a series i of end runs and line bucks, losing | the ball on downs. Sea Isle City held, forcing Ocean City to punt. Whittington brought t back eight yard*. A puss from Whittington to Sterens. who wras over the goal line, was complete, making the second touchdown. An attempted drop-kick for the extra point by Sterens failed. The remaining minutes of play found both team* boldlna strong, neither team belnr able to gain considerable yardage. The lineup:

GAMENESS IN SPORTS

By Peg Murray I

Jimmy UM-pfS gali atJt sv*io agwwst

Moral Sir port Htirs S roars i Qty in if* true *enw is not a sporting town. The •nship for the home team .» miwing with the i vrho watch the various events held here. We are not I of the high school fans, but of the older generation. I is a strange condition when one considers the great civic Ibirh is exhibited towards the city. I^et some stranger make a nark regarding die city and he is certain to invite iment. but let the same person rake a crack at the local prhether it be basketball or baseball, and the chances arc

• fans will agree.

\ A drmomtr' tton of this could be seen at the Muni1 Field Uu: summer. The majority of the spectator! tins'. Rtricra. ffhy this cynical attitude should [iaRvn is herd to understand. However, wit kin a few I the pretent font will be replaced by the high school . It is hoped 'hat they wul retain some of the loyal $ which win demonstrated backing their football team.

Ocean City ' Icemen Melt

Before Sea Isle Pace of Sea Isle Gridders

Too Hot For Knights

of the Tongs

-UE. _ur.

r. wood.. L. lilies

C. Barth JIG. G. MeGufy R T. A Tompkins.. R.E. n. 1*0 . . _R. HH B F. Tompkins QB - Whittington I_H B. Braca F.B.

Score Wets Frozen at 12-0

L'NisvAt. Racinc Season season this fall has been one of the most unusua’ jtory of the sport in Maryland. Usually a juvenile chan. | beta determined by the tad oi the season in Man land, there is no recognized champion among the 2-year-old Osmand is generally regarded the best of the lot o. a of a mile, but at a longer distance he is an uncertainty *CT5 experienced in racif<g were in keeping with the | of other tporrs- Crusaoer, regarded as the best horse | has seen Mace rhe racing days oi his daddy. Maxi o War. career as a T-year-old by going down to defeat when it that he would be returned a certain winner in the run-

ic Pimlico cup.

, racing among the 2-year-olds, though, wul result I winter book for the Kentucky IVrby. Last winter regarded by mam as die juvenile champion of 1925 ' iMe play in the future books. So did Bagcnbaggagr

victories in winter racing.

brever, this witter there will be no outstanding favorite for he good 2-yei. old« did not come to form until after

s at an end on Metropolitan tracks.

J Rap. for instance, aid not come to hinwclt until the run- ■ the Pimlico FuturitHe tailed to fimsl. in the picture in . but would have been closer up and probably ■ tvmner tr racing luck. Then he took all the worst of it and was enough to win the Walden, which brought out some ot

ones that raced in thr futurity.

Sea Isle City football team won .Heir third victory of the season on Sunday by defeating the fellow members of Grange's Bcnev'olent Order of Ice Totem, the ' Ocean City Icemen, at Canuso ; Field. Ocean View, before a It ge ; crowd of fans. The Icetn .. » -e j frozen by the score of 12-0. U. | congealed water carriers not threatening at any stage oX the

I game.

Sea iale City’s first touchdown 1 was scored in the second period. •n a line buck by Tom Wblttlng|um. after Lee had . returned the ; jail to the twenty-yard line after the Icemen had kicked. A series i >f line bucks brought the ball to the one-yard line. Whittington .aking it over for a touchdown. | In the third period Sea Isle marched the ball down the field : from mid-field, a series of end | une and forwards bringing the I ball to tr . twenty-yard tine, where | lYhtttt igton heaved a beautiful pass to Eddie Stevens, who neItoUat.d the twenty yards for a j touchdown. i Stevens. Whlttingtr- and Mc>uey, with their Hne plunging and end running, featured for Sea Isle (tty while Allen, a former Caraegle Tech star. Seaman and Ad- , ieUztio. scintillated for the a la 1 Grange followers of Ocean

Substitution.': Sea Iale. Olden for Braca. Van Artcsdalen for! Tompkins. Peterson fo- Van Artcsdaicn. Ferrari for Olden. Cordouff for Ferrari. Tompkins for Petersen. Carouthers for Barth 1 Ocean C.-^y: Austin tor Cluttin. Chattln for F.'lllgl. Pelllgl for

Chattin.

F.eferec, L. Chester, Umpire. | Selvagn. Head Lineman. H. Rice.

f ircRRe^v.E ^ce-ce-fufirec a full G.AMF of Polo u«th hi^» l£Q Ff?AGTci«£0 ItU -iHRee Places

Amos Alonzo Siagg. in a recent article In a Vonabald* Gam-,

W‘

iLMediJLiPMxwr fTPYeo Ifj M mftofFfANT game with a very bad fi >d Rkjht AKKte HC MAO THE LEFT ONE VERYOBYKXjSCY BANOAGED. n ’he Htb OPfWeNTi WAsreD -ThEiR EFFORTS TWISTING Tr* wYONGOrlE ie *^j Copynmt. IMS. b* Matf^lasn Nrsswper Servic*

ceal.d the fact that a fox ins the *:

Ocean City Eighth Grade Pupils Lose Defeated 26 to 6 By Millville Grammar FootKallers The Ocean City eighth grade football team went to Mill-i vHlc oa Friday and met defeat at the hands of the Culver School teal* of that city. L} the one-sided score of 26-C. To- { day the Millville team will meet 1 the Ocean City boys on their]

own grounds. The Summary.

’ You

much Georgia grit fc

young Gammon answered: then turned and fell unconscious, a ;d

died that night I

Modern mpic* of .the courage shown by th • Spartan boy.

Hundreds of instances could be related of how player.; conceal, serious Injuries from coach ar team-mates, so that they won, ’ not Ik: taken out of the conflict.! Aiiam Walsh’s play with broken] bone? in both hands le only one] of many cases in point. ’’BiK

they ought to have been In the Bill'' Edwards, in hu "Football ! hospital. Every move was agony. Days.” tells about Garry Coch- ! but how Ihuy did mow! The ran. the Princeton captain, eho don "Give ‘rill It hurts" U broke his right sbouhler-blai

th-.- which be held hi

the tunic was gnawing,M hlw vitals. 1th-. until he fell dead, are common in am- every line of sports where phyeisaM.cal injuries occur Babe Ruth. lUll.j George Burns, and many other too j baseball stars have played the

U’ROBflftLY MOGE e xfvmflel* of Pluck ahL G»«IT rtRE- TO BE FOUND »« Pc?ot©acl 'Than ik 1 ANY OTHtR 5»’ORTdo you think he did. quit tho game He marely bad hU I aft shoulder bandaged so as to conceal the true location of hla Injury from the Yale playerc. and played on until they had to

carry him off.

The Penn Stale captain, whose hand., and face were badly burned by the explosion of a lamp in one of the study halls a week before th- PUtaburg game, was a hero, ev.-n though his team lost. In spite of blistered and scarred face and hands, he played a whah- of a game, and proved himself one of the gamest men in th • history of American foot-

■od In sports as it wax dur- In i

1907 Yale

And .-i II goes In every sport. Pluck, the com pell live spirit, courag •. the Ins.:net io carry on in spile of hurts—■whatever you want io call it. It's seen on the gridirons, diamonds, links, rings. . and playing field* of ihc work What 1 every day In the year.

Alumni Wins

Ocea

i City j

Gordon]

Powell!

Townsend . Stevens j Stockman 1

Oliver!

— Dainlcy { _ McGinnis: — Cham n

Ti nnev In Peculiar Posrnox _ Hat bent platvJ in a peculiar portion ever siikt ■Tneerv. He wa* haiW « thr ^qoenng hero b> m K «hr rrmaiKM.ai, after hr returned from hi*

Thr Gawr U IMall

I Sea l»le kicked to Addiliirto i Ocean City, after several futile .ttempt* to gain, kicked to Braca. i.ho returned the ball ten yards. Sea Isle brought the ball to the icemen's lour-,ard line. Whi.tJng- ! ;on took It over the remaining distance, but fumbled the ball over the line After much discussion the ball was given to Ocean ‘Tty an their twenty-yard line. Ocean City failed to gain and Seaman punted to Sea Isle City's tort ’

'five yard line.

Culvci

Wright

Wettatien XsT Myers X.G... Peterson Cenjer Airy B.G.. Broadwater . R.T. B. Cossaboon R.E. M. Cossaboon Q.B. MTii taker L-B— Hyson — fi.B. Henderson F.B

Toncbdowns-Henderaon. Chain.' Cossaboon. Hyson. Dainlcy 1 Points after touchdown—lieu- ; Bsferer—Carter. Umpire Harris. Head linewnan—Campbell. Culver ’I 14 6 6 0 -26

Quite a Contrast Frank J. Wickhorst. captai

Annual Grid Battle 18-6 J

I run. only lo b ■ stopped ten-yard line. Ross F r and Gordon cracked th • 1 be two-yard line then Fer carried it over for the t c. The kick for the ex

t went wild.

Ocean City High Vet. T] ,, , ^

Prove Too Strong For r.-. mMi ; a b>- i nu t compared

1926 Team llS„mnl"If g.^'Jv.nt^Jn ■

Gama Was Hard Fought Saturday afternoon on a quag mlre-lfke field with a fifty-mile gale blowing, and the tb.-r-ing point High Scb the score The bai

Walter T. Bew Wins Wildwood

Golf Tourney

Takes Over George Boya1 i jian in Finals, Also

Lands Medal Play

„ Heil Also Wins Honors

Lanlic lTty> :

up :

Other first winners were Charley Will. Sea view, who downed In Fitch, Wildwood, S and 5. and George Boyjjlan. a lan tic I'ily. who tripped R. R. Keane, Seaview. 4 and 3. The hottest light of the afteri -on was staged when Gus Hell. \Yii Iwosd. downed Fred Kreitzler. IJancreh. on the j nineteenth green. The match wls | keenly contested throughout with i tlrsl one then the other taking the lead. Hell evened the count on the sixteenth, halved the next two holes, and won by virtue of a lortlnl stymie on the final hole. Other second night victors who edged into the semi-final round were: Howard Topham. Wildwood, victor over Dave Apul. Jr., by S and 4; George Boeder. Wildwood, w h" defeated Wall Trctn. one up. ami Ed. Morion. Wildwood, victor over Dave Paul. Sr., by 4 and 3. .Marsh Hainbridge trimmed Larry Chalmen over the hurdles decisively- by -ount of ft and 8; both are members of the local club, flay I/vwc. Wildwood, donned <'barley Douglass, Wildwood, one Uoh Latimer, won his wry to

since l*e beginning William J. Mullicai

Tough Luck

Chess Champ

Life Saver Honored

: Two Better Titan One Jr

l ook a Long Time

Good Bui