tba
When all is said and done you can hardly see the players. They are bunched together most of the
7-28-7-11, and all manner of numbers; he grows fearfully excited over
r; not the things that a gentle youth would send in a letter to his best girl, but the rest of the team don't seem to mind it at all. The other s
e umpire. Every man acts as though the eyes
they are off again! A splendid kick causing the ball to form a perfect curve as it sails through the air, one great big chap fairly springs up several feet to catch it as it comes down; he runs, and his side, w
life insurance policy, for he certainly needs it as he wanders up and down. Each side is filing its pr
ttended to by the surgeon and staff-a liberal sprinkling of water
al mission in life seems to be to cuss and yell numbers as fast as he can get them out, is on hand; watches his opportunit
th sides form. They toss up for t
like a pack of Kilkenny cats, until nothing but the tails are left, you
n the ball over. Phew! what excitement! what joy for the winners
s just as bad; that is, in
riding in butchers' carts, on bicycles, on tricycles. I had almost said icicles, because they were going any way so long as they got there. My curiosity at last got the best of
pitiful smile, as thoug
game of football, and they ki
e Reds won, to the everla
is not one bit of hard feeling between victor and vanquished. They s
s try and give the other chap a fair show, a run for his money, so to say. Then if we do come out ahead it won't matter so much. A kind word, a loving thought, means a lot