=238. Football.=--The following is a typical football story:
=ARMY DEFEATS NAVY=
It was just as the gray cloaked lads from West Point
chanted in lugubrious measure before the game:
Go-oo-od Night, Nayvee!
Go-oo-od Night, Navy!
Go-oo-od Night--Na-ay-ve-ee!
The Army wins to-day!
They put into the chorus all the pathos, all the
long-sustained notes, all the tonsorial-parlor
chords of which it is capable, and those, as you
know, are many.
And the Army boys, sitting in a fog which in hue
just about matched their capes and caps, called the
turn correctly with their vocal prediction.
It was "Good Night, Navy!" to the tune of 14 points
to 0.
The youngsters from the west bank of the Upper
Hudson were triumphant in their twentieth annual
battle with the midshipmen from Annapolis by two
touchdowns and their concomitant goals, one in the
first period of play, the other in the third. The
count of games now stands ten for the Army, nine for
the Navy, and one tie.
President Wilson, in a topper that got wet, and with
a beaming face that was sprinkled with mist and
raindrops, watched the fight and stayed until the
final wild whoop from the last departing cadet had
sounded through the semi-darkness that fell upon the
Polo Grounds along toward 4:30 p.m.
Mrs. Edith Bolling Galt, who soon is to be Mrs.
Wilson, was present with her winsome smile and her
white furs and her lavender orchids--fortunately,
you could see her even through the haze--by the
President's side.
And then there were some forty thousand others,
whose ranks in life ranged down from cabinet
officers and generals and admirals to ordinary
civilians, who dug as deep--some of them--as $20 a
seat for the privilege.
Yet, do you suppose that President Wilson or any
official was the hero of the day?
We are as loyal a Democrat as anybody else, but NO.
Or do you fancy that the former belle of Wytheville,
Va., who is within the month to be the First Lady of
the Land, was the person toward whom all eyes were
directed during most of the afternoon?
There were considerable numbers of field gla.s.ses
focused upon the white furs and the lavender
orchids and winsome smile. But again the reply
is emphatically NO.
The leading character, the person who ought to
figure away up in the top of the headlines, the one
whose name was spoken more frequently than any
other, was a rough, rugged, short, stocky, right
half-back named Elmer Oliphant, who, according to
Army statistics, is twenty-two years old, stands 5
feet 7 inches in alt.i.tude, weighs 163 pounds, and
hails from Indiana.
Ollie was the boy. Before the first period of the
game was more than half over, there was a fumble by
a Navy back and an Army man fell upon the ball only
eight yards away from the goal line of the
midshipmen.
There was the crash of an Army back against the Navy
line, and just a little weakening. There was another
impact of a cadet against a wall that was almost but
not quite solid. There remained about two or three
yards to go.
Ollie was hurled in. He took the ball, sought coolly
for the weakest spot he might find in a line that
was almost impregnable at the moment, and then,
instantly finding what he wanted, twisted his way
backward through left tackle and fell across the
chalk mark for a touchdown.
The way the rest of the Army boys sank their fists
into Ollie's broad back when he got up, you'd have
thought he'd be in no shape for any other position
than lying flat upon a stretcher. But he came calmly
away from the tumult of congratulation, and as soon
as he could kick the mud from between his
shoe-cleats he booted the ball over the cross-bar
for a goal.
Throughout the rest of that period, and throughout
all the next, we may skip Ollie. All he did was run
around ends for distances varying from five to
twenty yards, and plunge through the Annapolis line
with from two to four men attached to his neck,
arms, legs and back, and tear up, despite these
handicaps, more earth than one of those tractor
ploughs the Flivver Man is going to put on the
market after he settles the European war.
Jump to the third session of the game. This was
scarcely under way before a long forward pa.s.s from
the Navy was grabbed on the Annapolis 45-yard line
by McEwen, the agile West Point center. He ran it
back twenty-five yards and when the ball finally
came to rest on the muddy field with half a dozen
Middies piled atop of Mac, it reposed just back of
the Navy goal-line.
Gray dominated throughout the day, physically as
well as sentimentally. If ever there was a sodden,
cheerless, disheartening afternoon for the battle of
the two arms of the service, yesterday was the one.
Luck is with the boys, usually. The golden sunshine
usually glints off the gold of braid and b.u.t.tons.
The nicest looking girls that ever a.s.sembled within
the confines of any particular area of s.p.a.ce turn
out and smile and put lofty notes into the
atmosphere with their giddy gowns and hats. There's
snap and verve and pepperino in the very air.
But for the first time in a long while the weather
forbade all this sort of thing yesterday. From early
morning a fog-blanket, wafted in from the Atlantic,
hung over the town. Now and then it rained. And when
you thought maybe it would clear off it rained
again. The good old golosh was brought out of the
spare bedroom closet and placed upon even the
fairest of feet. The old brown raincoat was dragged
forth into the light of day and placed above the
gayest of garments.
No girl was so foolish as to take a chance on the
ruin of her apparel by doing without a moisture
shedder of some sort. And not a general or admiral
or member of a governor's staff or other person
holding the right to wear a uniform was so
intensely proud as to expose his ornamentation
uncovered and take a risk at pneumonia.
It was, as a matter of fact, a pretty drab-looking
crowd that began to file into the Polo grounds a
little after noon. You can't get much local color
out of a gum shoe and a mackintosh....
=The Game Play by Play=
It was 2.15 when the navy squad ploughed through the
mud to the center of the gridiron. The Navy stands
upheaved and the midshipmen sent their battle cry
ringing across the field. Almost on the heels of the
Navy squad came the Army players and a great shout
went up from the Army stands. Each team ran through
signals for a few minutes and then the Navy won the
toss and chose the east goal.
Coffin put the ball into play at 2:20 when he kicked
off to the Navy. Craig caught the ball on his
25-yard line and ran it back ten yards before he was
hurled into the mud. Davis tore off seven yards
through the right side of the Army line and Westphal
skirted the Army's left end for ten yards and a
first down.
Here the Army forwards held and crushed the Navy
back a yard. On the next down the midshipmen punted,
but gained only five yards. Oliphant tried an end
run from a kick formation, but failed to gain, and
the Army punted, Coffin driving the ball to the
Navy's 43-yard line.
Westphal fought a path for five yards, but then the
Army defense held, and Von Heimberg kicked to
Gerhardt on the Army's 10-yard line. The cadet
quarterback flashed back thirty yards before he was
driven out of bounds and brought to earth. A stab at
the line failed to gain for the cadets and Coffin
punted to Craig.
The ball sailed far down the field and the Navy
quarterback had to run back a few yards to get under
it. But he did not get back quite far enough. As the
ball dropped he saw he had misjudged it and threw
his arms up to grasp the pigskin. His fingers
clutched at it, slipped off, and the ball dropped to
the gridiron as the Army forwards swooped down the
field.
Capt. Weyand was in the lead and his greedy fingers
s.n.a.t.c.hed the ball before Craig could get his
bearings. It was the Army's ball and only eight
yards from a touchdown. The midshipmen chorused to
the Navy line to hold. And the line did its best,
but its best was not good enough to throw back the
Army's battering attack. Oliphant jammed his way two
yards and on the next play drove through the
desperately fighting Navy line within a few feet of
the goal line.
Here the Navy showed a flash of power that sent the
midshipmen to frenzied shouting. Oliphant on his
third smash into the line was hurled back for a yard
loss. The next try made the fourth down and with the
cadet band blaring and the cadets shouting
themselves hoa.r.s.e Oliphant made his fourth drive
against the Navy forwards.
It was a lunge that carried the concentrated power
of the Army eleven yards behind it and it spelled a
touchdown for the cadets. Oliphant with several Navy
players clutching him stormed well over the line for
the first score of the game. He promptly kicked the
goal from touchdown and the scoreboard read: Army 7,
Navy 0.
This was the signal for the Army to break into the
song, "Good Night, Navy." They were still singing
when Coffin kicked off for the Army....[28]
[28] Joseph J. O'Neil in the _New York World_, November 28, 1915.
This story may be examined critically--and imitated--for its excellence in centering the reader's interest upon the football hero, Oliphant,--a stroke which gives the article almost a short story unity of impression.
The writer's shift from the game and the crowd to Oliphant is somewhat rough--note, for instance, "We are as loyal a Democrat as anybody else, but NO,"--but otherwise the story is good.
=239. Getting Players' Names.=--When reporting a football game, one can best follow and take notes on the plays by knowing the players by number. In big games this is made easy by the numerals on the football men's backs. On the smaller elevens this is not done, a difficulty which the reporter can overcome, however, by numbering the positions according to the regulation lineup. Thus:
5.LE RE.11 2.LHB 6.LT RT.10 RHB.3 7.LG RG. 9 1.FB 4.QB 8. C C. 8 QB.4 FB.1 9.RG LG. 7 3.RHB 10.RT LT. 6 LHB.2 11.RE LE. 5
Then in taking running notes during the game, one has to write only, "4 around 5 10 yds.," "2 through 7-8 to 20-yd. line," etc., filling in the names of the players after each half.
=240. Basket-ball.=--The accepted method of reporting a basket-ball game is much like that of football. Because in basket-ball the scores run high and the relative standings of the opposing teams are constantly shifting, it is customary in detailed accounts to give the exact score of each team at the end of every quarter. The following is a terse story of a game:
=BOYS' HIGH WINS CITY t.i.tLE=
The Boys' High School captured the city basketball
championship of the Public Schools Athletic League
by defeating the Bushwick High School on the
former's court yesterday by a score of 18 to 17. It
was the second defeat sustained by Bushwick, the
other reverse being administered by Eastern
District, which, however, was downed by Boys' High.
The ending was a sad one for the Bushwick team.
The Bushwick team showed good sportsmanship by
failing to enter a protest when it was alleged that
the final whistle was blown ten seconds too soon.
The matter was put before Mr. Aldinger, the referee,
who decided the game officially ended.
Boys' High came through with a strong finish. At the
opening of the game it scored four points before
Bushwick finally entered the scoring column. The
game was bitterly fought until the end of the first
half, which found Boys' High holding an average of 6
to 4.
In the second half Bushwick launched an attack that
soon placed it in front by a score of 15 to 9. Boys'
High then carried the fight into the enemy
territory, and, with successive field goals by
Bolotovsky, Gindee and Bonoff, the score was tied at
15-all.
The score then seesawed until Bolotovsky shot the
winning point with a free goal from the foul line.
The line-up follows:
BOYS' HIGH BUSHWICK
Fd.g Fl.g. P.
Fd.g Fl.g. P.
Bolotovsky, rf 4 4 12
Robinson, rf 2 0 4
Gindee, lf 1 0 2
Edelstein, lf 2 3 7
Bonoff, c 2 0 4
Cherry, c 3 0 6
Brown, rg 0 0 0
Dorff, rg 0 0 0
Ratner, lg 0 0 0
Billig, lg 0 0 0
----------
----------
Totals 7 4 18
Totals 7 3 17
Referee--Aldinger, H. S. of Commerce. Time of
halves, 15 minutes each.[29]
[29] _New York Tribune_, March 4, 1917.
In reporting a basket-ball game it is difficult to record the plays accurately unless one knows the contestants or they are numbered. The men shift their positions too quickly and constantly. To be accurate, the reporter should have a seat next to the scorer or else between two students or friends of the opposing players, so that whichever side makes a basket or an error, the reporter can get the player's name instantly.
=241. Track.=--Reporting a track meet is easier than baseball, football, or basket-ball since the events are run off slowly and all the results are announced to the grandstand. The following story of the 1917 meet of the Intercollegiate a.s.sociation of America at Philadelphia is a good ill.u.s.tration:
=RECORDS MADE AT INDOOR MEET=
Cornell and Yale, as usual, shared the top honors at
the third annual indoor track and field meet of the
Intercollegiate a.s.sociation of America, held last
night before a crowd of 6,000 persons at the
Commercial Museum in this city. The feature event of
the early part of the program was a three-lap relay
race between the Ithacans, Pennsylvania and State
College. Crim, who ran anchor for Cornell over the
last 538 yards, beat Scudder, of Penn, by an inch,
the Quaker falling under the tape exhausted. In this
event Cornell hung up a new record for the
collegiate indoor meets by covering the three laps
in four minutes, twenty seconds, two seconds better
than last year, when Penn won.
In the six-lap relay race, where each of the men ran
1056 yards, Yale romped home an easy winner, John
Overton beating Marion Shields, of Penn State, with
yards to spare. Pennsylvania, the third team
entered, finished in that position.
Yale sent an army of star timber-toppers down for
the fifty-yard high hurdle event. John V. Farwell,
captain of the Eli's track team, equaled the
American amateur indoor record by covering the
distance in seven seconds.
Richards, of Cornell, won individual honors in the
sixteen-pound shot-put with a throw of 42 feet,
8-3/10 inches, while Cornell's team average was 40
feet, 2-3/10 inches.
The Cornell entries in the late events swept
everything before them. Coach Jack Moakley's
long-distance runners won the twelve-lap relay in
the fast time of 22 minutes, 7-2/5 seconds, beating
last year's record of 23 minutes, 13-4/5 seconds.
The Ithacans also cleaned up in the running broad
jump with a team average of 20 feet, 9 and 1/16
inches. Culbertson carried off the individual honors
with a leap of 21 feet, 3 and 3/4 inches.
The graduate relay race proved the most interesting
event on the card. When the anchor men of Penn,
Dartmouth, and Cornell started on the last four laps
Riley, of Dartmouth, was leading "Ted" Meredith by
fifteen yards, with Caldwell, the former Ithacan,
trailing five yards in the rear of Meredith. Penn's
former captain brought the crowd to its feet by
overtaking Riley in the last ten yards. No time was
taken. Summaries:
Three-lap relay race--Won by Cornell (Shelton,
Windnagle, Acheson, Crim); second, Penn (Lennon,
Walker, Dorsey, Scudder); third, Penn State
(Whiting, Krall, Enoch, Cottom). Time, 4 min., 20
sec. (New indoor collegiate record).
50-yard hurdles--Won by Yale (Rodman, Davis, Offutt
and Farwell), 14 points; second, Cornell (J. M.
Watt, Cleminshaw, Pratt and Elsas), 10 points;
third, Princeton (Crawford, H. R. Watt, Erdman, and
Buzby), 6 points.
Six-lap relay--Won by Yale (Rolfe, Ireland, Cooper
and Overton); second, Penn State (Shea, Foster,
Whiting and Shields); third, Pennsylvania (Norriss,
Price, Scudder and Humphreys). Time, 9 min., 59-4/5
sec.
16-pound shot-put--Won by Cornell (Richards, 42 ft.
8-3/10 in.; Gillies, 39 ft. 11-1/2 in.; Howell, 41
ft. 5 in.; Schoof, 36 ft. 10-7/8 in.), team average,
40 ft. 2-3/10 in.; second, Princeton (Sinclaire, 44
ft. 9-1/2 in.; Cleveland 41 ft. 1-3/8 in.; Nourse,
34 ft. 8 in.; Ginnert 35 ft. 1-1/4 in.), team
average, 38 ft. 6-8/10 in.; third, Penn (Wray, 30
ft. 10-1/4 in.; Paul, 32 ft. 3-3/4 in.; Royer,
31 ft. 5-5/8 in.; Swann, 32 ft. 2-3/4 in.), team
average, 31 ft. 6-5/10 in.
Running broad jump--Won by Cornell (Culbertson, 21
ft. 3-3/4 in.; Richards, 21 ft. 1/2 in.; Shackelton,
20 ft. 10-1/2 in.; Harrison, 19 ft. 9-1/2 in.), team
average, 20 ft. 9-1/16 in.; second, Pennsylvania
(Jones, 20 ft. 10-3/4 in.; Bertolet, 20 ft. 7 in.;
Buckholtz, 20 ft. 1/2 in.; Walter 19 ft. 9 in.),
team average, 20 ft. 3-13/16 in. No third team.[30]
[30] _Philadelphia Public Ledger_, March 4, 1917.
=242. Golf.=--In reporting golf matches probably the best method is to lead with rather a full summary--a half-dozen paragraphs if necessary--telling the results, the character of the playing, the kind of weather, the condition of the links, and something about the compet.i.tors, then to follow with a detailed story of the game hole by hole. In the following story note that the length, the par, and the relative standing of the players is given on each hole. Note too that a numerical summary is made every nine holes.
=EVANS WINS GREAT MATCH=
Charles Evans, Jr., of the Edgewater Golf Club,
twice winner of the Western amateur golf
championship, to-day defeated Ned Sawyer of the
Wheaton Golf Club 2 and 1 in the semi-final match
for the great All-Western t.i.tle. To-morrow Evans
will meet in the 36-hole finals James Standish, Jr.,
of the Detroit Golf Club, whom he defeated for the
same t.i.tle last year at the Kent Country Club.
Standish won his way into the finals by defeating
H. P. Bingham, of the Mayfield Club, to-day in a
lop-sided contest, the match ending on the thirtieth
green, 7 and 6.
The Evans-Sawyer duel to-day was a grueling struggle
and from all points one of the greatest in the
history of the Western cla.s.sic. It sparkled like
carbonated water as compared with the rather flat
matches of yesterday.
Fought in balmy weather under almost perfect
conditions, the contest afforded, from start to
finish, plenty of thrills to the gallery of 2,000
followers. Old timers conceded it the best match
ever fought on Ohio soil. Each player had 74 in the
morning, while Evans had approximately 72 in the
afternoon.
Fourteen of the thirty-five holes were won under par
figures, ten were won at par, and two were ties
under par, leaving only two holes at which both
players were really ragged.
Sawyer shot remarkably fine golf in the out round of
the morning and at the tenth hole was 4 up, but from
this point Evans began to whittle down the lead.
Although Chick got on even terms four times, it was
not until the sixteenth hole in the afternoon that
he led, and the next hole saw him winner.
The score by holes follows:
=Scores by Holes=
=Hole 1 (385 yds., par 4).= Sawyer pulled his drive
into a trap from which he dug only to drop into
another at the left of the green. His chip shot hit
the bank and he was just on the green in 4. Evans
was 60 feet from the pin on his second, but his weak
approach putt gave him a 5. Sawyer took three putts
and counted a 7 for the first hole. Evans 1 up.
=Hole 2 (310 yds., par 4).= Evans pulled his tee
shot, but got a fair lie. His approach pitch was
short. Sawyer got 250 yards on his drive, pitched
eight feet short, and holed an uphill putt for a
win, 3-4. All square.
=Hole 3 (445 yds., par 5).= Two wonderful wooden
shots landed Sawyer eight feet from the pin, where
he missed his putt for a 3 and kicked the ball in
for a 4, one under par. Evans pulled his drive to
the rough from which he made a woeful pull with his
cleek to the weeds guarding the right of the
fairway. He was 20 yards short of the green on his
third and lost, 5-4. Sawyer 1 up.
=Hole 4 (170 yds., par 3).= This hole was halved in
3, the features being Sawyer's 30-foot, downhill
putt and Chick's miss of a two-foot putt. Sawyer 1
up.
=Hole 5 (325 yds., par 4).= Evans was wild again
from the tee, his drive being sliced to the brook
where he got a lie on the slaty bottom. He banged
out a high shot with his niblick, but went over the
green to the rough and was short on his return.
Sawyer was fifteen feet from the hole on his second
and won, 4-5. Sawyer 2 up.
=Hole 6 (515 yds., par 5).= From the high sixth tee
Evans pulled a low drive to the trees. He made a
great out with his mashie, being lucky in escaping
the trees. Sawyer lined out two of his regulation
wooden shots and was twelve feet from the flag on
his second. Evans heeled his long mashie shot to the
right of the green, from which he missed his four
and conceded the hole, Sawyer being dead in 3.
Sawyer 3 up.
=Hole 7 (310 yds., par 4).= Evans left his unruly
driver in the bag and played a cleek shot for the
seventh hole, Sawyer outdriving him forty yards.
Chick's pitch took a bad bound, but stopped eight
feet from the hole. Sawyer's pitch ran entirely
across the green. Evans's putt just trickled into
the cup, winning for him, 3-4. Sawyer 2 up.
=Hole 8 (145 yds., par 3).= Both pitched to the
green. Sawyer putted dead and laid Evans a dead
stymie. In attempting the five-foot slanting putt,
Chick knocked Sawyer's ball into the hole, losing
2-4. Sawyer 3 up.
=Hole 9 (435 yds., par 5).= Both got straight drives
into a driving wind at the long ninth. Two perfectly
played iron shots met with unmerited punishment,
both b.a.l.l.s touching the top of the hill and running
over the fast green into a trap. Both missed rainbow
putts for fours and halved in 5. Sawyer 3 up at the
turn.
Cards:
Evans 5 4 5 3 5 5 3 4 5--39
Sawyer 7 3 4 3 4 4 4 2 5--36
=243. Tennis.=--In reporting tennis matches one may use the following as an acceptable guide. The summary by sets at the end of the story in all probability was obtained from the scorer.
=JOHNSTON WINS CHAMPIONSHIP=
William M. Johnston inscribed his name upon the
cla.s.sic national tennis singles championship most
impressively yesterday, using a forehand stroke that
left no dispute as to his right to the t.i.tle. The
young player, who two seasons ago was hailed as the
successor to Maurice E. McLoughlin, made good the
prediction by the score of 1-6, 6-0, 7-5, 10-8,
while thousands cheered the vanquished McLoughlin
and the new holder of the highest honors of the
American courts. It was a memorable battle and an
inspiring scene at the climax on the field of the
West Side Tennis Club, at Forest Hills, L.I., when
the two men fighting for a sporting honor, and
fighting with all that was in them, almost collapsed
at the end, and hoisted on the shoulders of their
comrades, with the cheers of the 7,000 spectators
ringing in their ears, were carried from the field.
While the homage paid to Johnston for winning one of
the greatest matches the All Comers' tournament has
ever known in its thirty-five years was sincere and
true, still on all sides there was regret that
McLoughlin, the hero who overwhelmed Norman E.
Brooks and the late Anthony F. Wilding in the great
Davis Cup matches last year, would not have the
permanent possession of the All Comers' Cup on which
his name is twice inscribed.
It was not the same McLoughlin who stood in the
court yesterday that overwhelmed the famous
Australasians a year ago. Time had taken something
from his game, and as ever youth must be served. In
this instance it fairly leaped to its reward. Except
for the first set and the briefest of intervals
thereafter, Johnston was always the master of his
mighty adversary. He knew the game of his opponent,
and as in the ancient days when Greek met Greek, it
was the dynamic power, resourcefulness, and stroke
of Californian against Californian, with no quarter
asked or given. Two months before the two had played
for the Exposition championship at San Francisco,
and at that time McLoughlin had carried the match
and t.i.tle after five of the hardest sets which the
tournament produced. Then "The Comet" was on his old
field of asphalt with the ball bounding so high that
he could bring off his overhanders and where such a
thing as ground strokes were unknown.
Probably never in all the years of the historic All
Comers has a player displayed such phenomenal
command of the ball with a forehand stroke. There
were many competent judges present yesterday who
declared that its equal was not to be found on the
courts anywhere....
It was a stroke that stood the test, for no less
than eight times in the fourth set was Johnston
within a point of claiming the All Comers as his own
when McLoughlin made thrilling stands as of old, and
pushed the victory on a little further. When he
moved up to the net in the ever-flashing rallies all
the power and certainty of Johnston's forehand came
into action. Alert, with the eye of an eagle that
saw every move and the flight of the ball as
McLoughlin drove it at him with all his might, the
younger player whipped the returns into the corners.
He was like a cat on his feet, quick and sure, never
making a false move. There were times when he
nipped the best drives that the Comet sent over, and
turned them back for pa.s.ses. Repeatedly McLoughlin
overhanded the ball for what to him seemed a certain
ace, so that he relaxed and dropped his racquet to
rest, as if the point were finished. Johnston made
his recovery, however, and sending the ball back
found McLoughlin off his guard and so scored the
point.
The cross volleys into the corners, the spots that
had proved so profitable against Williams on the
previous day, were the chief bit of manoeuvring
that electrified the crowd. As Johnston played it,
it was as irresistible as trying to check the march
of time. He sent the ball into the left-hand corner
of McLoughlin's court like a bolt of chain
lightning. In order to play the ball with any
success McLoughlin usually danced around it for a
forehand shot, which put him wide of the court.
Calmly stepping in to meet it, Johnston crossed with
ever-increasing pace into the opposite corner. It
was run, run, run for McLoughlin if he wanted the
ball. He was on the defensive, and it was a
position, as in all of his matches, in which he does
not scintillate. So relentlessly was the younger
player forcing the former champion and veteran that,
even when he had glowing opportunities to make the
point, McLoughlin put his racquet to the ball too
soon, and so piled up a total of 42 nets and 38
outs, as compared to 37 nets and 26 outs for his
rival. That was chiefly where the difference stood,
for on actual earned points by placement Johnston
only had a tally of 53 to 51 for the Comet....
=First Set=
Points Games
Johnston 2 0 3 0 5 4 2--16 1
McLoughlin 4 4 5 4 3 6 4--30 6
Double
Aces Places Nets Outs Faults
Johnston 6 8 11 12 6
McLoughlin 9 10 9 7 1
=Second Set=
Points Games
Johnston 4 4 5 4 6 4--27 6
McLoughlin 2 2 3 0 4 0--11 0
Double
Aces Places Nets Outs Faults
Johnston 3 8 3 4 0
McLoughlin[31] 3 2 5 6 1
[31] _New York Times_, September 8, 1915.
=244. Boxing Matches.=--News stories of boxing matches are but a combination of the methods of writing football games and golf matches.
The first part of the story of a boxing contest should be a full general account of the fight, the fighters, the character of the boxing, the weight, height, and reach of the pugilists, their methods of attack and defense, the crowd, total and individual receipts, the exact time of the beginning and end of the fight, etc. The second part, like the golf report, should be a detailed running story of the fight by rounds. The following story of the Willard-Moran match at New York in 1915 may be examined as an example:
=WILLARD WINS ON POINTS=
Jess Willard, the heavyweight champion pugilist of
the world, hammered and pounded Frank Moran of
Pittsburgh for ten rounds in crowded Madison Square
Garden last night, but with his advantage of fifty
pounds in weight, six inches in height, and six
inches in reach, the Herculean Kansan could not
knock out the courageous Pittsburgh boxer.
Willard had every advantage throughout the bout
except one flash in the seventh round, when Moran,
with teeth set and the fire of anger in his eye,
made a wonderful rally and showered Willard's jaw
with hard blows just before the bell sounded.
The champion hit Moran hard enough and often enough
to knock out half a dozen men, and after the bout he
said that the only reason he was forced to let up
and not use his famous righthand punch was because
he broke his right hand in the second round and was
afraid to hit hard after that. It was in whipping a
vicious uppercut for the chin that Willard smashed
the hand against Moran's elbow. At the time, Moran
was groggy, and although the seconds in the
champion's corner yelled for him to tear in, Willard
had to stand back.
When the champion's glove was removed after the
bout, the hand was badly swollen, and he was rushed
away from the Garden to be attended by a surgeon.
The crowd that witnessed the bout was the largest
ever seen at a glove contest here. The Garden from
the floor to the upper gallery was jammed until
there was hardly room to stand. Although women
spectators were encouraged to see the bout, few
responded, not more than 200 being seen in the arena
boxes. Well-known men in all walks of New York life,
however, were grouped about in evening clothes, and
gave the boxing match as much tone as a night at the
opera. A few of the women spectators wore evening
clothes, but the greater part of them were clad in
the smart new spring suits which fill all the city's
finery shops.
Financially the bout was a huge success and a
tribute to the enterprise of the Western promoter,
Tex Rickard. The receipts amounted to $150,000. Of
this Willard got $52,600, including $5,100 for his
share of the motion pictures. Moran got $23,500 for
his share. It was an enormous remuneration for both
men for their forty minutes in the ring.
This first appearance of the new champion in the
ring since his defeat of Johnson in Havana a year
ago had set the town talking, and prominent men in
New York and other cities did not hesitate to pay
$25 a seat to see the bout. As Willard was such an
over-ruling favorite the betting was perhaps the
lightest ever known in a bout in which a champion
has taken part....
It was 9:40 o'clock when Willard hopped into the
ring and got a big cheer. He was soon followed by
Moran, who had even a greater reception. While the
two contestants were waiting nervously in their
corners the announcer, Joe Humphries, had the
proudest moment of his career when he gathered the
great figures of the fistic world into the same
ring. Jim Corbett, Bob Fitzsimmons, Kid McCoy, and
John L. Sullivan all stood together and shook hands.
The reception to John L. must have made the
white-haired old man's heart warm, for the old
timers in the crowd who remembered when he could
beat anything in the ring cheered him until they
were hoa.r.s.e.
In the champion's corner were Tom Jones, Walter
Monahan, and Jack Hemple. In Moran's corner were
Willie Lewis, Bill McKinnon, and Frank Kendall.
Willard's weight was a big surprise. When he
stripped off his green bathrobe the champion weighed
259 pounds, which was ten pounds more than his
handlers said he weighed and twenty pounds more than
when he defeated Johnson in Cuba. It was just 9:55
when "Old Eagle Eye" Charley White called the men to
the center of the ring and said, "Be good, boys, and
break when I tell you." ...
=THE FIGHT BY ROUNDS=
=First Round=
The men met in the center of the ring. Willard
blocked Moran's left to the head and they clinched.
Willard missed a right and left that slid off
Moran's shoulder. Willard landed lightly with the
left to Moran's face and followed with two more. A
left jab was all that Willard used in the first few
moments. Then Moran landed a left to Willard's
chest, and rushing in close tried to get to his jaw
with two blows, but failed. Moran was wary and
covered up as he came in on Willard. He also missed
a left swing that was wild by several inches.
Willard sent a left to Moran's head that jarred the
challenger, and he tried to come back with blows to
Willard's head, but failed. Moran could not reach
the jaw of the champion. Willard missed a right
lead, Moran stepping in close and evading the blow.
One blow that Willard landed clean, a left to the
head, made Moran wary. Moran could not get any blows
to Willard's face.
=Second Round=
Willard met Moran three-quarters of the way over the
ring and they clinched. Moran landed a left to
Willard's head after they broke and then they milled
in the center of the ring, neither doing any
particular damage. They were chary of doing work for
the next several seconds, Willard waiting to have
Moran lead. Willard pushed aside Moran's guard and
led with a left to the head which was blocked.
Willard forced Moran around the ring and battered
him on the head with rights and lefts. The
challenger was almost pushed through the ropes.
Moran missed a left lead that was blocked by
Willard. Moran feinted and made a wild hay-making
swing that missed. He then struck one blow to
Willard's chest that had little force behind it.
Moran led with his left and reached Willard's
stomach, but the champion did not mind the blow
seriously. Two right swings by Moran pounded on
Willard's shoulders and the champion retaliated with
a light left jab to the face. Both were perspiring
from the intense heat of the big arc lights. Willard
seemed to toy with Moran in this round, not exerting
himself to take the aggressive....[32]
[32] _New York Times_, March 26, 1916.
=245. The Unwholesome in Boxing Matches.=--One caution should be given in writing about boxing contests,--the need of presenting the wholesome rather than the unwholesome side. A report of a bout may be written in such a way as to appeal to the barbaric nature of one's readers, to make them revel in the mere drawing of blood rather than in the skill, the dexterity, the generalship of the contestants. The difference is in the reporter's point of view and depends not so much upon accuracy of presentation as upon his purpose to choose those wholesome details that have been successful in retaining pugilism as an American sport despite its many undoubted accompanying evils. In the following extract, for instance, the appeal is unhealthful; it savors rather of the Spanish bull-ring than of a legal sport in the United States:
What a fight it was! One worthy of Mars himself! The
stage setting was complete to the minutest detail.
There had been quite enough smashed noses in the
preliminaries to whet the appet.i.te for action to its
keenest edge. And the main event was put on so
quickly after the semi-final that this l.u.s.t for
battle had no chance to cool. Moran led with a
snappy left hook that drew blood from Coffey's nose.
With this first faint scarlet trickle the gallery
G.o.ds went wild. A second quick jab gashed an old
scar above Jim's left cheekbone and covered his face
with blood, to the delight of Frank's friends in the
center box.
=246. Automobile Races.=--Stories of automobile races follow closely the types of sporting news stories already examined. The following may be taken as an ill.u.s.tration:
=NEW WORLD'S RECORD BY RESTA=
+-------------------------------+
=The Results=
Driver Time Average
Resta 58:54 102.85
Cooper 59:39 101.41
Burman 61:22 98.63
Oldfield Flagged
+-------------------------------+
Speedway Park, Aug. 7.--(Special).--The world's
100-mile speed championship was won by a hood this
afternoon--the hood of Dario Resta's wonderful
Peugeot.
Cheers from 15,000 throats drowned the roar of the
engines as the Resta Peugeot and Earl Cooper's Stutz
wound up a race unparalleled for thrills and dashed
side by side up the home stretch and over the finish
line. Resta won $20,000.
Resta smashed Porporato's record of 99.05 miles an
hour on the Chicago speedway by driving the 100
miles at an average speed of 102.85 miles an hour.
Through the whole hundred miles, most of which were
reeled off at the record breaking clip of 104.6
miles an hour, the two leaders were seldom separated
by more than a car length.
Tire trouble early in the race put Oldfield in his
Delage and Burman in his Peugeot out of running.
They trailed along in a tremendous effort to
overcome the handicap, but trailers they remained.
Once, on the thirty-sixth lap, it seemed that Resta
had lost. A tire went bad and he was forced to stop.
But in just 26 seconds he was on his way again.
By that time Cooper had flitted far in the lead--so
far that had he not suffered a similar mishap
himself a few laps later, the game Italian never
could have overtaken him. Resta was again in the
lead when Cooper's bad tire was replaced.
The cars lined up for the trial lap at 3:30,
Oldfield starting first. A roar of cheers from the
grandstand greeted Earl Cooper in his white Stutz as
he started on the initial parade around the track.
Fred J. Wagner, the man with the red flag, stood
astride the tape and started the cars on their
flying race at 3:44 P.M.
=The Race by Laps=
=First Lap.=--Resta led in the first lap, Cooper
second, Burman third, with Oldfield trailing.
=Second Lap.=--On the second lap Resta stretched his
lead, Cooper closed up on him, only a car's length
behind; Burman came third, with Oldfield fourth, a
wide interval separating Burman and Oldfield from
the leading contestants.
=Third Lap.=--Resta was leading, with Cooper close
behind, and Burman third. Oldfield brought up the
rear.[33]...
[33] _Milwaukee Journal_, August 8, 1915.
=247. Billiards.=--In billiard matches the chief thing to note, in addition to points already mentioned in other sporting news stories, is the scoring of the individual runs. If it is necessary to write up the individual innings, the same style is used as indicated in golf and racing stories.
=HOPPE OUTPLAYS YAMADA=
Boston, Oct. 21.--Willie Hoppe, the champion, led
Koji Yamada, his j.a.panese challenger, 1,000 to 743
points at the close of their second night's play for
the 14.1 balkline billiard championship at
Convention Hall this evening. Yamada's total
to-night was 396. As was the case last night, both
men played carefully, which accounted for the long
time necessary to finish the game.
Hoppe's high run was 104, and came late in the
contest, his average being 19 6-26. Yamada's best
run was 82, and as it came soon after a run of 75,
it enabled him to take the lead from the American
for the first time in the match. His average was 13
22-25.
Yamada in the first half of the game gave a pleasing
display in which for the first time he showed
brilliancy at the ma.s.se. Hoppe was not up to form
during the early innings and got his points only by
hard struggle. Both players had a good deal of open
table shooting to do. The score:
Hoppe--49, 30, 2, 31, 3, 0, 22, 5, 23, 24, 4, 0, 8,
0, 17, 7, 55, 0, 44, 11, 104, 31, 0, 24, 5, 7--500.
Average, 19 6-26.
Yamada--9, 2, 1, 45, 30, 0, 75, 0, 45, 4, 2, 82, 0,
1, 31, 1, 0, 0, 9, 2, 3, 0, 1, 7, 3--347. Average,
13 22-25.[34]
[34] _Atlanta Const.i.tution_, October 22, 1915.
=248. Obtaining Information.=--In reporting games and contests one will have little difficulty in obtaining all needed information. Tickets are provided gratis and admit always to the best seats, known as the press seats, or the press-box, where all the newspaper men are grouped together. If the contest is an outdoor meet, the press-box is usually on the top of the bleachers. Here are installed telegraph and telephone wires, the papers often having private wires from their offices to the field. If the wires have not been installed and it is necessary to report between quarters or halves, or inning by inning, one should have the local telegraph company provide at least two messengers to take the bulletins as fast as one writes them. And one's notes should be so taken that the bulletins may be given the messengers within a few seconds after it is possible to report.
=249. Personal Opinion in Sporting Stories.=--On page 165 mention was made of four kinds of sporting news stories, and the reader's attention was called to the fact that three of the four--those dealing with athletic events before their occurrence, those dealing with the same events afterward, and those relating to sports in general--vary somewhat from the normal type of newspaper story. This variance lies in the fact that the three are hybrids, partaking of the nature of both the pure news story and the editorial. In an earlier chapter we have seen that the purpose of the news story is to present news; of the editorial, to interpret. We have seen that the avowed purpose of the editorial is to influence opinion. And so with these three types. They may be either presenters or interpreters of sporting news, or both. In the following story the writer is bent on telling the lineup of the Michigan team for the game against Cornell, the condition of the men, etc., but he is also bent on proving to his readers that Michigan has a chance to win,--which makes his story half editorial and half news.
=MICHIGAN HAS A CHANCE=
Ann Arbor, Mich., Nov. 5.--(Special).--We might lead
this story with something original and say that both
teams were awaiting the whistle. Instead, we will be
unique and a.s.sert that Michigan has a chance to win.
A victory over Cornell would make a success of a
season that has a good start toward being a failure.
Michigan's chance for victory depends on its line.
There is grave doubt in the minds of some that
Michigan has a line. Yost believes it has, because
he has seen his center, his two guards, and his two
tackles charge and block in practice. He hasn't seen
them do anything in games but look sick. But he
knows they can do something else and he is wondering
if to-morrow will be the day when they prove it to
the public and to Cornell.
If the Michigan line should play tomorrow as it
played against the Aggies and against Syracuse, the
best back field in the land would be null and void.
But if the Michigan line comes to life, performs as
it has done when a.s.sistant Coaches Schultz,
Almendinger and Raynsford were scrimmaging against
it and using all the words they knew as lashes to
drive it to action, then Cornell will find itself
up against the toughest foe it has faced this year.
Yost admits he has a good back field. His
combination of one senior, one junior and one
soph.o.m.ore--Catlett, Maulbetsch and Smith--would, he
believes, gain acres of ground against any team in
the country if the line would give them half a
chance.
Smith, to be sure, is in bad shape. He is going to
start the game, but few expect him to last through.
Bay City gave him to Michigan, and before he was
hurt he showed enough to convince his coach that he
has the makings of another Galt.
He is of the versatile type, and besides being a
good ground gainer himself, he is of great
a.s.sistance as an interferer and a handy man on
defense. He backs up the line when the other side
has the ball. At present almost everything ails him,
save possibly barber's itch and the h. and m.
disease that helped make Niles famous.
Maulbetsch, Yost says, is a better defensive man
than last year. As for his plunging prowess, he is
probably just as cla.s.sy as ever, but a man can't
plunge very far when two or three opposing linemen
are sitting on him, as they were in the M. A. C. and
Syracuse games.
Catlett is a streak of speed, and since this is his
third year of varsity football, he is playing more
intelligently than ever. Roehm, the quarterback, was
one of Hughitt's understudies last season. He is
light, but fast and willing.
Thus in the back field we have a good all round man,
a wonderful line plunger, a speed demon, and an
agile, hard worker. All of which a.s.sets won't be
worth a yesterday's transfer unless the line
holds....[35]
[35] Ring W. Lardner in the _Chicago Tribune_, November 6, 1915.
=250. Advance Stories.=--The details which one may include in advance stories of athletic meets are innumerable. Some of the more important particulars, however, are predictions of the outcome, the effect of the contest on future events or on the rank of the teams, names of the players and the officials, absence of important men, opinions of the men, their trainers, or their followers, weak spots in their play, local or national interest, time and place of the contest, ways of reaching the field or grounds,--in fact, any details that will interest one's readers in the approaching game. Such preliminary writeups require good reporters--men who can observe closely and a.n.a.lyze carefully, and hence can give their readers reasonable predictions of the success of the teams in which they are interested. The following may be taken as a typical preliminary story:
=PROMINENT OFFICIALS AT GAME TO-DAY=
+-------------------------------------------+
=Facts About To-day's Football Game=
=Teams=--Army and Navy.
=Place=--Polo Grounds.
=Time=--2 P.M.
=Corps of Cadets and Brigade of Midshipmen
march on the field=--1 to 1.30 P.M.
=Weather Forecast=--Fair and warm; rain
late in the afternoon or night.
=Routes to the Grounds=--Eighth and Ninth
Avenue "L" and Broadway subway.
=Directions for Finding Seats=--On the back
of each ticket are printed directions for
locating the seats in the various sections.
+-------------------------------------------+
When the referee's whistle sends the Army and Navy
teams charging into each other this afternoon at the
Polo Grounds, most of the United States government
officials, army, navy and marine corps officers will
be gathered in the seats and boxes around the
sidelines to cheer 1915's football season on to its
death in the spectacularly most brilliant game of
the year.
President Wilson, doomed again to neutrality, will
divide his time between the Army and Navy sides of
the field. Mrs. Galt will arrive with him shortly
before 1 o'clock on the train which brings besides
them one of the largest and most distinguished
delegations of government officials, army and navy
officers, who ever saw an Army-Navy game.
Secretary Garrison will be whooping it up for the
Army on the cadets' side of the field. Secretary
Daniels, reinforced by his twenty-one-year-old son,
will be right there where the Blue and Gold of the
Navy waves, and take it from the Navy this Secretary
is some rooter when he gets going.
Secretary McAdoo will be there--but why attempt to
name all or many of the prominent folk. Cabinet
officers, admirals and generals, all take a back
seat to-day. In the full glare of the limelight
stand the twenty-two gridiron fighters from West
Point and Annapolis. To-day there is only one firing
line; it's the chalk-marked field at the Polo
Grounds.
The Midshipmen arrived here Thursday and went to the
Vanderbilt yesterday. The Army team, coaches,
trainers, and advance delegation of officers
arrived, making the Hotel Astor their headquarters.
Every train from Washington, from Annapolis, from
West Point, which pulled into New York thereafter
was packed with Army and Navy adherents.
And Broadway was ready with its usual welcome. The
Vanderbilt, Astor, Waldorf, McAlpin, and Martinique
were profusely decorated with the flags and with
Army and Navy colors. Generals met cub lieutenants
in the cafes and dining-rooms (where seats had been
reserved both for last night and to-night weeks in
advance), all eager to get some late "dope" on the
game.
Store fronts were gay with the Navy Blue and Gold
and the Army Black and Gold and Gray; street hawkers
were disposing of the winning colors. New York was
on its biannual football spree last night. The Army
and Navy were in town....
Betting? Well, as a Navy man put it, "We've got a
few iron men with us." Yes, they all came "heeled."
Navy men are asking 2 to 1 and getting it in spots.
But as the hours slipped by and the old Army-Navy
feeling grew, there was no telling the odds--each
man bet as the impulse of the moment prompted him,
anywhere from 3 to 1 to even money.
Probable Line-up To-day
Army Wgt. Navy Wgt.
Neyland 170 L.E. Von H'mb'g 180
Jones 200 L.T. Ward 177
O'hare 192 L.G. Kercher 185
McEwan 192 C. Goodstein 172
Meacham 176 R.G. Smith 199
Weyand 197 R.T. Gilman 187
Redfield 163 R.E. Johnson 169
Gerhardt 145 Q.B. Craig 147
Ford 171 L.H. Westphal 184
Oliphant 163 R.H. Davis 153
Coffin 162 F.B. Martin 161
T'l weight 1931 lbs. T'l weight 1914 lbs.
Avg. wgt., 175.6 lbs. Avg. wgt., 174 lbs.
Referee, W. S. Langford, Trinity; umpire, F. W.
Murphy, Brown; field judge, J. A. Evans, Williams;
head linesman, Carl Marshall, Harvard.[36]
[36] _New York World_, November 27, 1916.
=251. Review Stories.=--Stories written days after a game are generally of an a.n.a.lytical nature, their purpose being to review the play or contest and explain why one team or contestant was successful and the other a failure, or why one method of play, attack, or defense proved better than others. Sometimes, however, such stories are merely individual incidents learned late, but of interest nevertheless to the readers. An a.n.a.lytical story is the following:
=NEW RULES UPSET TEAMS=
With the advent of October, the month which
generally ushers in the football seasons, the defeat
of Yale by Virginia was one of the most conspicuous
cases of the old adage that history will repeat
itself in football as well as in any other line of
athletic endeavor.
In former years supposedly stronger elevens have met
with unexpected setbacks from teams which were
thought to be only tools in the helpful development
of the big elevens for the harder and more important
contests to be played later in the season. In the
old days of the five-yard rule and ma.s.s play,
schedules could be outlined with so much accuracy
that a coach or athletic director seldom made
mistakes in his schedules.
In those days the chart was framed so that each
succeeding game would be harder to win.... The teams
were sent into the game to test the pet plays of the
coaches, such as the revolving ma.s.s on tackle, hard
concentrated attacks on and off the tackles, with
the runner being pushed and pulled by his
teammates....
If plays as outlined by the coaches did not make the
necessary distances, then the teams practically
settled down to a man to man contest, and football
history records the number of games which ended
either in scoreless ties or knotted counts.
Following this old custom, the big teams select the
opponents who in the old days were easy to beat in
the first games. It is true some changes have been
made in schedules, but it is only reasonable to
a.s.sume that the coach of a large eleven would be
foolish to schedule an opening contest with a team
which he thought had a chance to beat his own
aggregation.
Using Yale as an example, the authorities at New
Haven would never have scheduled the Virginia game
unless they thought in their own minds that Old Eli
would trot off the field an easy winner. On the last
Sat.u.r.day in September the Blue eleven had an easy
time winning from Maine, 37 to 0.
Following the changes in the rules, coaches nowadays
cannot afford to take a chance with any team,
whether they have a heavy, strong team or a well
balanced eleven. The players do not get accustomed
to the excitement of actual combat so early in the
season, and the least little thing which goes wrong
in their offensive or defensive play will unbalance
them for the remainder of the contest.
Harvard, last year's eastern champion, was compelled
to play a lot of football to win from the
Ma.s.sachusetts Aggies by a single touchdown. Had
Percy Haughton, the Crimson coach, thought his team
would experience such a hard game so early in the
season, the contest would not have been listed. The
Crimson eleven, in other words, was opposed by a
team which had been thoroughly groomed in every
department of the game, the Aggies apparently
realizing what a victory would mean to them.[37]...
[37] Walter H. Eckersall in the _Chicago Tribune_, October 10, 1915.
=252. General Stories.=--The last type of sporting news story, that relating to a sport only in a general way, may be considered briefly. In this type the actual news value is small. The interest of the story lies rather in its informative worth, the writer's purpose being to present general, but significant, facts that will interest followers of the sport. Usually it is expository. Its nature is well ill.u.s.trated by the following subjects chosen practically at random: "Batters in the American a.s.sociation Weaker in 1916 than in 1915"; "t.i.tle Holders in the Ring Play Safety First--Refuse Long Battles"; "Tennis Gaining in Popularity"; "Is Baseball a Back Number?"; "Any Man Can Play Par Golf"; "Ty Cobb's Place in Baseball History." Such stories are valuable in the Sunday edition, and in addition to giving general surveys of various sports, help to interest readers when athletic news is scarce. They are the feature stories of sports.
XVII. SOCIETY
=253. What Society News Is.=--The society editor's work concerns itself with the social and personal news of the city and county in which the paper is published or from which it draws its patronage. It is almost entirely local, news of the state or of other cities being of value only in so far as it affects women and men of one's own town through former exchanges of courtesy or hospitality, or for similar causes. Nor does it concern itself with the unconventional, the abnormal. Elopements, clandestine marriages, unusual engagements, freakish parties, and similar extraordinary social and personal news do not come within the sphere of the society editor, but take regular, and usually prominent, places in the news columns.
=254. Difficulty.=--The society editor's work is with the conventional in the local fashionable world, and for this reason probably no other kind of news demands so consistent care, discrimination, and habitual restraint. She--the society editor is practically always a woman--must recognize readily relative social distinctions, to know what names and functions to feature in her column or section, and to be able to present the details of those functions acceptably to the various social groups about which and for which she is writing. The latter requisite in particular is difficult. For in attempting to give appreciative accounts of weddings, dances, receptions, she is liable to overstep the narrow limits of conventional usage and make herself ridiculous by extravagance of statement; or else, in trying to avoid unnecessary display of enthusiasm, she is led into use of trite, colorless words and stock phrases. She must by all means take care not to say that "the handsome groom wearing the conventional black and the lovely bride arrayed in a charming creation of white satin consummated their sacred nuptial vows amid banks of fragrant lilies and beautiful, blushing roses to the melodious strains of Mendelssohn's entrancing wedding march."
=255. Ill.u.s.trations.=--The following stories of engagements, weddings, dinners, dances, receptions, club meetings, and charity benefits have been selected at random to show the accepted methods of handling society write-ups. At the end are added a few personal items--_personals_, they are generally termed--and a single "society review." The restraint and dignity of tone of the stories are worth close study.
=ENGAGEMENTS=
Mr. and Mrs. George A. Stewart, of 311 North
Parkside Avenue, announce the engagement of their
daughter, Gladys, to Charles M. Sailor, a son of Mr.
and Mrs. Samuel Sailor, of 25 South Central
Boulevard.
The first debutante of the season to become engaged
is Miss Bessie Allen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
George Osborne Allen, whose engagement to Harry O.
Best was announced Sat.u.r.day. Mr. Best is a son of
Mr. and Mrs. George R. Best, of 131 East
Fifty-fourth street. He was graduated from Harvard
in 1913 and is a member of the Knickerbocker Club of
this city, and also of the Bal.u.s.trol Golf Club. He
is a member of the firm of Best and Flom, 136 Walker
Street. Mr. Best is the third in direct line to bear
his name, being a grandson of the late George R.
Best, one of the most noted architects of this city.
The wedding will take place in the spring.
=WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS=
In the Church of the Heavenly Rest on Tuesday
afternoon at 3:30 will be celebrated the wedding of
Miss Doris Ryer, daughter of Mrs. Fletcher Ryer of
San Francisco, Cal., to Stanhope Wood Nixon, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Nixon. The wedding ceremony will
be witnessed by a large number of relatives and
friends from California and several of the princ.i.p.al
Eastern cities where the families of both the bride
and her fiance are prominent.
Gov. Charles S. Whitman is to act as Miss Ryer's
sponsor and will give her away. Miss Phyllis de
Young, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael H. de Young
of San Francisco, will be the maid of honor and the
bridesmaids will be the Misses Pauline Disston of
Philadelphia, Ray Slater of Boston, Mary Moreland of
Pittsburg, Elizabeth Sands of Newport, Frances Moore
of Washington, and Helen Flake of this city.
Walbridge S. Taft will be the best man. The ushers
will be Henry S. Ladew, Patrick Calhoun, Henry
Rogers Benjamin, Ammi Wright Lancashire, Esmond P.
O'Brien and Hugh D. Cotton.
Following the wedding ceremony there will be a
reception in the ballroom of the Ritz-Carlton. The
engagement of Miss Ryer and Mr. Nixon was announced
last autumn. The bride-to-be has pa.s.sed the greater
part of the last two winters in New York with her
mother and during the summer season has been
identified with the colony in Newport, R. I.[38]