Clipping:Interpreting the sixty day rule
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Date | Sunday, June 4, 1871 |
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Text | The loose interpretation placed by many professional players on the membership clause will probably cause some trouble. It seems to be a very generally accepted rule that not playing in any match game for sixty days will validate a player’s claim to join any club he pleases, and that he may at once assume active duties on the nine. This is not the case, membership alone being preclusive; and if any player–whether he has played in a match game or not–acknowledges his membership of any organization, by election, presence at meetings, payment of dues, or any other sign, he is ineligible to play on the nine of any other club until he has ceased to be a member of that club for the specified time. |
Source | Philadelphia Sunday Dispatch |
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Submitted by | Richard Hershberger |
Origin | Initial Hershberger Clippings |
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