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Judge, 1928-10-13 · page 23 of 36

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JUDGES Stage curtain designed to enhance the modern risky play. This teaches us that we should always be kind to our elders, especially on Saturday night, for you never know when it may be your turn to ride on the merry-go- round, and it is just as silly as ever to be without ice-skates in the summertime, IX.—The Bouncing Boodle or Keesing’s Folly. This play was first used in the famous classic between the Penn State Orioles and the Castoria Fletchers in the summer of 1912 and takes its name from. the President of St. Thomas Conser- vatory, who was then coach of the Memphis Blues. Followers of the game will re- Frost of ‘ore of souls were burned to death or partially disfigured by jumping from the basement balcony when the fire- men had no net. It was some- times called the year without a summer, due to th y rains which fell almost steadily from the twentieth of October until the fifth of the previous month. This may seem to the reader like useless detail and it probably is, but I throw it out bodily be- cause it is necessary clear nee of the events immediately pre- ceding. History tells us that in’ this series, Fred Longworth, who was then playing outfielder for the Detroit Athletics, fell from grace because he missed a 92-foot putt on the twelfth green, understanding of the signifi The champion bell ringer of the summer gets a job replac- ing an elevator hoist. unlike his previous form that he was almost mobbed after the third round by his former Detroit Athletic Supporters. Fred felt in duty bound, therefore, to come back, or, as the French idiom has it, “ricochet. In any game s of the Soil this particular t 16-0 in favor Jerseyed lads in the final quarter,and with only an hour and twenty minutes more to play Longworth called for his trick At this signal each of his players whipped out a cunning lit- tle false-face and put it on, fell in line > file, and the t t little ballet dance amusement, you may of the opposing team as well as of the spect: When the act was over the op- posite side ave Long worth’s boys a d, and while the were congratulating them on great performance, why, this Freddy Longworth picks up the ball and runs down the field with it for at least three touchdowns and a locomotive. —Ricnaro S. Watrace executed a ne: to the g Tomicbooks:c