October, SATURDAY WILL REKINDLE MANY WARRING FIRES East, With Four Classy Games, Holds Attention of Football Fans YALE MEETS Civil Wars Will Be Refought All Over the Country Over Week-end By BRIAN BELL (Associated Press Sports Writer) New York, Oct. 23.—()—October toming in like a football lamb will leave with the roar of a lion as Saturday, October 27, brings nat- ural rivals together in many sec- tions of the country. Few October afternoons Have prepared a more bountiful feast for hungry follow- *rs of the autumn sport. Especially in the East is the day tich in football color. Army and Yale, Princeton and Cornell, Dart- mouth-Harvard and Syracuse-Penn State are only. a few of the games n which interest is centered. Moving West, Iowa and Minne- ota, Michigan and Wisconsin and Nebraska-Missouri are some of the high lights, while in the South the * season in full swing with Van- derbilt-Virginia, Georgia Tech-North Carolina and Georgia and Tulane meeting in games certain to have a bearing on the success or failure of yeasons. ARMY After Comi Babe Ruth’s Small Legs: Are Weakenin FARRELLSAYS Besides the distinction of being the youngest student in Harvard Univer sity, R. B. Konikow, 14 years old, is winning athletic honors, He’s tr: ing out for coxswain of the freshman crew and here you see him giving orders to his oarsmen during a practice race. THE BISMARCK BAMBINO WILL SOON PASS BY Home Run King Played Like an Artist Leaving Loved Ones in Series ANKLES TOO SMALL Miller Huggins Is Looking for a Good Man to ‘Alternate With Babe By HENRY L. FARRELL (NEA Service Sports Writer) While he was hitting all those home runs, making all those heroic catches and playfully razzing his! fans with all those defiant gestures in the late world series, it may have | been that the Babe was making his last glorious baseball stand. In_retrospection now it seems manifest to not a few of those who saw the Babe in the last game in St. Louis that he was inspired to super-efforts by something more than the mere love of doing the things that he has been doing for so many years. The personal way in which he ted toward the crowd, especially fans in the bleachers, seemed to have in it the act of a great artist who knew he was in his last big rs arses TRIBUNE = Hits ’Em Hard eee é Sutherland Has One Crack Back in Tom Parkinson Jock Sutherland hasn’t the team at Pittsburgh this year that he had in 1927 and he hasn’t any “Gibby” Welch about in his backfield. He AS POSSIBILITY Zuppke Team Has Easy Sched- ule, Excepting Ohio State, ° Left Chicago, Oct. 23—(AP)—It isn’t very broad and it seldom has been, but a triumphant smile has again wreathed the face of the “Flying Dutchman,” Coach Robert Zuppke of Illinois. With a victory over Indiana and @ comparative easy schedule ahead except for Ohio State, arch nemesis of the orange and blue, “Zup” and his powerful eleven have started on what appears to be a straight march towards their second straight Big Ten football championship. Minnesota, Iowa, Ohio State and Wisconsin remain as threats, but barring what would be most unex- pected upset of the conference sea- Ron, the Illini should tie, at least, for top honors, dea men have yet to meet Northwestern, Michigan and Chi- cago, all of which have been defeat- ed, in addition to Ohio State, which is the last game on its schedule and at home. innesota or Iowa will be virtually eliminated Saturday when they clash at Iowa City, Wis- consin all but ruined its chances by tying with Purdue, while Ohio State must conquer Indiana, Iowa and ILLINOIS LOOMS FOR LOOP TITLE ST SSS SSS TT SET TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1928 The first deer of the season to fall before the guns of hunters in the Adirondack mountains wi illed by a 16-year-old boy. Here's. Floyd Sameon, of .Utica, N. Y., and the fine buck he se on his first deer unt. ng in Like Lamb, Leaves Like Lion on Grid g Under Strain of Big Body GUN SIGHTS TO GUIDE SEGRAVE Speed King to Pilot 200-Mile Racer on Daytona Sands by Rifle Sights qo London, Oct. 23.—()—When Ma- jor H. O. D. Segrave goes hurtling over the sands of Daytona Bé&ch, Fla., in the near future, at a speed of well over 200 miles per hour, he will steer his car by rifle sights. This,is one of the features of his new ‘car in which he hopes to at- tain a speed of 240 miles an hour, perhaps more. Steering at so enormous a speed is of inestimable difficulty. The | slightest error when the car is go- ling at four miles a minute would plunge it into the sea and mean | disaster. ‘ Major Segrave will try to obviate that difficulty by steering the car with sights, just like a rifle, and di- rect it just as a bullet is directed tc its target. it The apparatus on the car Co! of telescopic sights. These wil trained on a bull’s eye target hang- ing from goal posts, 26 feet apart. There will be another pair of goal posts, similarly equipped, one mile away. Major Segrave will sights on the first of these targets when he is a distance of four and one-half miles away, and then start. As he hurtles under the first target suspended over the start of the timed distance he will pick up the train his HW. i | nies . | / i moment and who was taking his| has, however, a smashing line plung-| IMinois, 2 monumental task for any|Pete Jordon Will ter divectip: af Yale and Army have, the matter and there isthe weakness of te |loved one 10 hin bosom. His man-| erin Tom Parkinson hs Tllback| eleven” Minnesota'y great team has “yoo Now Woptce| ferent Eee Sed. steer rectly of a 10 to 6 victory for the Elis ZONE PLAY IS NOT system. If the fixed plays fail, and|Merisms had in them the attitude of| who is doinp most of the ground|@ tough schedule left—Iowa, North- Poi ote SPR en ane | over the Cadets, brought over by they are likely to, there is only one|the big star who says: “Boys, this| gaining for Pittsburgh this year.| western, Indiana, and Wisconsin, Z ER ae! Illini Will Send j the Army as unfinished business thing to do, and that is to punt. is my last big act and I’m making] Parkinson is playing his second year| Realizing they are in for a strenu-| New York, Oct. 23.—The New inl en from last year’s program. .A GENERAL PLAN IS Zone play demands frequent |it @ good one.” He didn’t act that of varsity football. ous battle Saturday, Minnesota and|/ yor, Yankees hope to ‘present a ‘Baseball Nine to stunned Army team saw Bruce Caid- punting and the ball is give to the| Way in the other three games nor in ewes ere we Orin lone HOES IN PED =| ch betteebabancadliestching anath . well.toss a pass to Quarrier for a other team more often than it|@ny other game of his career. There SRiGaTaE iG ve had Japan Tri-Yearly F touchdown and later groaned as the should be. always before had been a certain HTS He ree A pene oc abide pie otis Serb ter : great back kicked a field goal to Perhaps the zone play system is|dignity about the way he accepted BE SO Citi! have kept their|__ Urbana, Ill., Oct, 23. make the Blue triumph complete. worthy of consideration, but I have |#Pplause. POEL ee me Bits cue fue tel Ustversity otdilinns Yale in the same game stopped the| By ‘JOCK’ SUTHERLAND _| aiways believed that a’ quarterback | You mightsaythathewasout there actice and changed tackles, whil ment is contemplating sending its crew of Biff Jones right on the goal| (University of Pittsburgh Football|shouid be allowed to use his judg-|to show up those who had’ mourned einen Clacente “Gpoacs mocked oe looking over the fu-| baseball team to Japan for a series For line and there is some speculation Coach) ment. I instruct him to watch the|late in the season when he wasn't i his na her line: “ae eyelet sea inter- ie Be ened s d | of games every three years, a as to whether this can be repeated.| s, hes furnish their quar-|defense and to take advantage of/hitting a balloon and hardly could| (By The Associated Press) | his Gopher line and developed inter- Cochranes, | George M. Huff, director of phys- Yale has no Caldwell to throw! to, rier yeecrget dns re pool any apparent weaknesses. walk that he was through. Perhaps ee ae was iter from _satisfi ' t 0 rot th ical welfare, believes a trip act passes this year and no Quarrier to| ron on which are indicated plays to| 1 want him to know the field and|he was showing them up. He never Lange Cocca cis caitcs | alewmrnig 62 ti regu men who caught the | the Pacific, available to every ball catch them, but there is @ Garvey | be used in various parts of the field. |always to work toward the center.| Will admit that he isn’t as good to Mestines Solin, wa cago. fancy of the Yankee | Player who takes a degree, will stim- who can run and a Decker who can|1¢ the ball is in dangerous territory, | want him to consider the elements, |Physically as ever. Ball players| lario Martinez, Spain, won on Coach Glen Thistlethwaite pror- t vell ulate interest in the game. place obstacles in the way of the ‘i fy aa ified If the the time remaining, and to know his|Never do. Ordinarly humans sel-| foul over Tommy Murphy, Tren- ised a drastic ‘shakeup in his Wis- its for the Cards, oe other fellow doing much running Eater Fs de ce plays pe own team and his plays. dom. 7 ve = rig oe Ao enn} + oe lineup for the Michigan in- ithe, Cubs and the 4 on_an ambitious scale. specified, etc. This is one method|_ If he keeps these factors in mind, His Legs Are Gone ee Nee having discovered several Senators, is Pete . 4 Princeton and Cornell, who re-|cF teachin, the so-called “zone play” |I don’t care what plays he uses, if}, But his intimate pals and go#d| Giacchino, Philadelphia, (1). weaknesses in the Purdue. gai lordon, from the Georgians Say a sumed play last season after a va-lovstem, = in his opinion the,” will gain ground. jfriends| on the Yankee ball club] Boston — Jim Maloney, Bos- | Michigan's. regulars were given Western league cation of 20 years, meet at Prince-|"¥Zone play is much discussed, but ———____ think that his legs have gone. And| ton, outpointed Jack Renault, |day of rest yesterday, while Coach je Jord: Mogan cwaciarniee Garvey Better Sev ton with a thought of busy ait | jg Zone Play pe leelneeee at that is another way of saying that| (0%, outpoin b Mills, Hill, |Tad Wieman and Fielding H. Yost shared. for $22,000, Th Caldwell FO! ernoon at Ithaca a year ago when euaaty ahages in the lee tending. 2 NORTH DAKOTA he is through. S gt He a over” Tony ued a joint statement denying! and even though “Colonel Ruppert sl mR oe Princeton won 21 to 10. Cornell |foward a more open game and less , His legs have been going for some] Fuente, California, (2). friction between them. has a lot of money to spend he eae Ss i will enter the game with a rest of |conccrvatiny it wal ootna ny ees | time. And considering the weight : Aid —- doesn’t part with that amount with- || | Atlanta, Oct. 23-—Bruce Cald- lees two weeks. Two great pessimists larity.) of their burden and the punishment Hutchinson, Kans. — Angus B n Leon: rd K t out getting something for it. well was a great back for Yale fet meet in the rival coaches Gil Dobie |POPMMTN. ow pesoe pian jhey fave taken they have been a] Snyder. Dodge City, Kansas, | DENNY “€onal ep Soil rhe ad ney eee last season, but the Elis have an alw oF Coral and Bu Roper of Pice| persona" Geet lee in| cre And'io aidspenter'ani| (tReet jim Somes, Ber. |- Busy in Hockey Game ier"n"ts lScqu its sme || Seitaereestoes there oe | ga Hareard Bites Dartmouth lare'bused mace on sbeervetion, aa] Minnesot® Expects. to See/Couins. But they werent bult cut| Pete On Ds ene eae ey matin Bee] |, Gegeateceven believe. i Harvard fell before Dartmouth |discussion with other coaches, than| Grafton Boys on Varsity |°f Proportion like the Babe with a| _ Montreal—Al Foreman, Mon- | New York, Oct. 23.—(AP)—Benny |far“away from a steady job in the ||.” Hurry Mehre, Georgia's coach, MB | hon 30 to 6 at their last meeting, but|on actual experimentation heavyweight wrestler’s trunk on a| treal, knocked out Leo Kid Roy, | Leonard, who retired as lightweight | majors. also thinks the same, re indications point to a closer strug-|° The majoity of eau ieaj ata vcone Next Season chorus girl’s ankles. Montreal, (2). Géorge Sidders, | boxing champion of the world, nev- NOTHER BARRON ON “Garvey is much faster and . gle this year and Pittsburgh may|servative perhaps too conservatiee The hardly could walk} Montreal. won on foul from [er saw @ hockey, game until last ANOTHER BARR smarter and picks his holes bet- not be able to defe: jarnegie|—and they live in fear of the wolf| North Dilestasrnay bessencesented eevaen the last games of the reg-| George Fifield, Toronto, (7). ae ant aon. aa ee ught a ae than Caldwell did,” Mehre ape iy. it in- y oak 'S. Tech 38 to us a8 rast) cae ie chorus that follows one or two de- in the University of Minnesota foot- splananon Sipe areas New York—Baby Joe Gans, Benny purchased the franchise of | Pat Barron, younger brother of The players say he hasn't the Cal Giaviditor ithe chew ship of eats. i Soap es have such high | ball team next year by two youths | him moving in the series. There is| 108 Angeles, outpointed Nick | the Pittsburgh Professional Hockey | the famous “Red” and Little Red drive that Caldwell had, but his 543 Bueteehiaieong- other imines opinions o: tl reir reputations that|who are being tutored this year iN! long season coming for rest, it is} Palmer, Brooklyn, (10). Billy | Club in the national loop. He is re- | Barron at Georgfa Tech, is a fresh- speed makes up for that missing “U Yor Pennsylvania has high hopes of ey want: tee to take! the freshman squad. ., |true, but legs the age of the Babe’s| Algers. ‘Phoenix, stopped Sam- | ported to have paid $125,000 for the | man footballer this year at the same || asset, ‘ cla reversing a 12 to 6 verdict in fa-|finds popularity with the latter | peep arg ee nevers: and Bill |don't come back. ‘And the Babe is Tiey: Merton bear Angees: [oo : te nie Vor of the Navy’ last’ season when {tint | have been showing up good in prac [ROX Testing. He is out barnstorm-| Jimmy Harrison, Los Angeles, a: Reece iedasee tte oe Renan hat igh have | tice sessions, according to Coach ioe stanton ae troit, (6). Artie Deluca, Brook- (4) IR yf) (6) GAR. AS are ; sebescta datented Towa 38 to 0| judgment on the part of ihe ae Rings Sherman of the “frosh to ask and didn’t feel ike @orinennae lyn, sont peinton St Cohen, Pat- MEN, WH GUARD THE] EAL TH SM ‘HK E Cl Phi last year an to 0 the year be- =. i ! 1 a ing. e_is not barnstorming for aati J . Ou fore, but even the most partisan of|ley deen specthee ieaciecise f° he carsity aqueck nach as back on} money. “He is enjoying himself at| Dayton, 0. — Johnny *Farr, FOR al earrespolls tenm's_ supporters |i quarterback, in the matter of Farrell will toy form Tine senitans |the only Recceatign she oxen. Cleveland, outpointed Jimmy bs e: apa cores to calling plays. is gi t i ‘ '. lis, 2). is at fepented. ows has Mays McLain, lof the field, laid out in zones, and | Unit sratee oy ana! at tte The real hard test was applied Red “Holloway, indianagotie; : 303 the big Cherokee brave, to throw|the signal-caller must use certain |that Shermon foes to work with | {0 the Babe last season for the first| qutpointed Babe Dare. Dayton, A For req - Im 5 Fs . An i ay ter, mith Bronko Nagurski, a con-| Zone ay, to. my way of thinks | (rere erat eaaE A omen expected |Be broke down under the strain. In Sere en panes dens Cac ‘ (om @) Cre INncipa. .EXCCUUVES.OF For ver ‘ackle. In other years the|ing, indicates lack of confi i int Previous years, by misfortunes : fullbacks have played a prominent | the Pl The attack peer painhinn see 50, before the which did him no good, he got a Cincinnati — Babe Ruth, + a = ye We = in this game. Herb Joesting . test of two or three weeks, but this| Louisville, won a decision over e tan are 1 om an (9) FOR the attack in the Gophers’ last year he had to pound his legs up| Tommy Ryan, McKeesport, Pa., F i. ‘apa ae act area puoeke sa ie ann down until they all but fell off] (10). : : Cae ey eavy work for + a on . . : the Hawkeyes when Minnesota wes|| OUTSTANDING FOOTBALL GAMES SCHEDULED FOR His friends on the ball club think Little Rock, Ark.—Joe “Kid India na a re Cc 1 a Cr Smokers For taking as much as it gave in the SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27 at be will not be able to play an-| Peck, Kansas City, decisloged ae . ae are oe coming Ohio State With Scores When Same Jeams Met Last Year eee ean ones age eee : oe ment is said to be mak- Se een cordingly and is seeking Did you know that—| oO AS this survey demonstrates, = an overwhelming majority z of the principal executives of the Standard Oil Company of In- , diana are cigar smokers—and ey are men whose busingss duties require the maximum of mental and ph: fitness. Men who cigars receive comfort without penalty to nerves and throat. Slowly, lei y, they extract from each puff a . measure of enjoyment. Here are no harried nerves, no habit, no 4 hurried lighting of one. ci; from the end of another. And team meeting an aggressive Indi- (By the Associated Press) ana outfit should make a sharp, smart. struggle. These two did not play in 1927. Michigan was two touchdowns better than Wisconsin in the last meeting, but the Wol- troubles, probably will ov Be sone ubles, probably nof made favorites Saturday. Dakotas in Civil War _ Nebraska and Missouri, tradi- tional rivals, will charge at each other from the outset with the result as always in doubt. There was only one point’s difference last. year, Missouri winning 7 to 6, and both teams are powerful this The Dakotas are all mixed regular alternate for| | him. The Babe always will beable to hit. Cobb still can hit, and so can McGraw, but the Babe isn’t hitti like he did. The infielders play in for him. They don’t fear any more that they will be killed if the ball doesn’t go out of the park. The balls he didn’t knock out of the lot in St. Louis droppe? where Douthit would have fielded them if he had been in position, But they are points beside the is- pa The geal is that Babe in re- cent years always has had a limp, And the limp gets worse. , . East ++ Amherst (12) vs. Wesleyan (20). Army (6) vs. Yale (10). Boston College vs. Boston U, Brown vs. Tufts. Bucknell (34) vs. Gettysburg (0). Carnegie Tech (7) vs. Pittsburgh (23) Colgate (0) vs. N. Y. U. (0). Columbia (19) vs. Williams (0). Cornell (10) vs. Princeton (21). Dartmouth (30) vs, Harvard (6). Fordham vs. Washington and Jefferson Georgetown vs. Duke. : Holy Cross (6) vs. Marquette (12). Lafayette (7) vs. West Virginia (7). Middleton, Mass. ... New Haven, Conn. Boston ..... Providence, R. I. Gettysburg, Pa. Pittsburgh .. New York Harry Heilmann calls Dur- ocher, the Yank rookie, “The All-American Out” ..... The Philadelphia writer on the jury named Foxx as the most - uable American League player - +.» The other seven voted for Cochrane ..... And the/ ball players say Cochrane .. . Mike Gazella played a half-inning in three world series with the Yankees ... And got $18,000 The Yanks took wrist watches for their world series Cambridge, Mass. New York fashington . Worcester, Mi Easton, Pa. Oronto, Me. 5 A Maine (67) vs. Bates (0). The bi 4 rizes from the Judge . . . Es- rich Havor of a cigar makes in- a Go ened Eniladelphie Navy’ (12) vt. Pennayivania (6); Bee OS ee ready for! {elle wasn't. mad at Belasco . ale ion wanecey: gies, while the Univer-|| New Brunswick, N. J. pee Bie. Ao )iva Byzacuse: (6). When he’s through with the majors| She. raved at the high-browed To quote a prominent New York . orth Ds chroar specialise : “The outstanding reason = throat trouble amongst smok: . is the irritating, burning action of hot tobacco smoke on z sensitive throat tissues. Ci; * smoke isc bacco critics who said she couldn't act any better than Jack... Her Jack is still helping friend Tex . By saying that Kanute n_is a great heavyweight Connie Mack won’t quit baseball .. , Says he’s ony 66 -. And has 34 more years to get in there with a pennant winner And the boys say take that long if his he won't have to work, and- he'll never consent to be anything but a head-liner. * Mid-West ++Chicago(7) vs. Purdue (6). Illinois (7) vs. Northwestern (6). Indiana vs. Ohio State. Towa (0) vs. Minnesota (38). Towa State vs, Kansas, Michigan (14) vs. Wisconsin (0). Notre Dame (32) vs. Drake (0). Nebraska (6) vs. Missouri (7). S. D. Aggies (12) vs, South Dakota (16). +N. D. Aggies (0) vs. North Dgkota (13). South +» Alabama (24) vs. Sewanee (0). entre (0) vs. Kentucky (53). North Carolina State (12) vs. Florida (6). Georgia (31) vs. Tulane (0). Georgia Tech (13) vs. North Carolina (0). vities won both arguments last year. Georgia Tech, with another pow- srful team, should win from. North Carolina’s less experienced outfit, but the Tarheels can never be -held lightly, and Vanderbilt, hailed as one of the Southern Conference's best elevens, may have its hands full with Virginia, a team evident- ly able to rise above the handicap of. injuries. to: key men. Georgia, tly somewhat below its sen- sational form of 1927, seems likely to have some points shaved from {ts 31 to 0 defeat of Tulane in their Chicago mpaign, Ill. Bloomington, Ind. Towa City, Ia Lawrence, Kan. Ann Arbor, Mich. South Bend, Ind. . ‘Lincoln, Neb. Brookings, S. D. . Fargo, oe nother year to serve on -year contract, and he'll out, but the ball players think he will serve it out as a very good ball player but not as the Babe, the greatest that ever lived, No one need worry about the Babe's future. But it won't seem like baseball when he is gone and you can’t say to your neighbor: “I see the Babe s one today.” macked another World’s Highest Golf Links Are in Pyrenees La Palina c+ Amarieaa Largest Selling High Grade Cigar (over a MILLION A DAY] Lod : io tandianl ual q Birmingham .. Lexington ...... Tampa, Fla. .. Athens, Ga. . Chapel Hill, N. C. Aad all bis smiles are pars; with on : o and less of that tired feel- ‘ i i » To really test cigars with Ne : Mississippi vs. Loyola. : pita His eyes are bright . ce Norman, Ola. Oklahoma (14) ve, Kansas Agios (20), || y Perpignan cob tatee—(AP)—Tho| | "with saad ight | | jefe to yourself and to cigars Focerieseemes «+ é--sorrRenmgnge ve, Washington and Loe gon hy ont HruneB e] | Fr heats Tom ed TE Pilltas— America's large ile, Ark. (40) ‘§ Z ry al : , i gon Nathelle: Toot enferb se, Urenta Tetmas ©) 1) PRPS Nady aaa orth ed Tote in on the Le Palina Clab Smoker ooch Sunday ight ot ‘eing, high grade cigarcover Ri V. M. I. (6) vs. Maryland (10). business man’s week-end ‘as 3:30 Eastern Time over the Columbia Broadcasting System. bs - Southern Methodist vs. Trinity. e round trip from Paris is near- : v ly 1,300 miles. The out by the Southern Railroad okie already hes a ‘palatial hotel in this ae. gorner a the mountains, with a ‘view at ittracting more aN ‘. Far West Washington vs. Oregon Aggies. Stanford 133) ve. Beno Sate (0), Southern California (33) vs, Occidental (0). U. of California at Los Angeles vs, Idaho. +o». Washington State vs. College of Idaho. ota (6) ve. Montana State (0). ).