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3 ' Smith - Lambert . ‘Gzudette | EDDIE ANDERSON AND JOE HARPER SCHEDULED TO OPEN 15-GAME BOWLING SERIES TONIGHT AT ROGERS’ LANES—HUGGINS PINS FAITH IN CARL NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1921, ] MAYS TO DOWN GIANTS IN SEVENTH GAME—HORSE FALLS DOWN IN RACE BUT MANAGES TO WIN—STAR BOXERS TO APPEAR AT HARTFORD MONDAY | ANDY AND HARPER . | TO ROLL AT ROGERY’ 15-Game Series for $100 a Side Opens Tonight The 15-game series between Eddie rson, of this city and Joseph Har- of Waterbury, for $100 a side, is soheduled to_open tonight at Rogers’ Recreation alleys. The series is ex- pected to prove a lively one, as both Anderson and Harper are considered among the best of the duckpin bowlers in Connecticut. Harper is usually ac- companied by a delegation of fans that make their presence known in more ways than one. Recent games rolled by Anderson, showed that the local boy has returned to form, and there is a general air of confidence that he will defeat Harper. Last night's games at Rogers' laxes were between teams in the Commercial, Odd Fallows and South End leagues. At the Casino alleys, the Traut and Hine company leagues held forth, with some good scores resulting. The scores: COMMERCIAL LEAGUE McMillans Y A STAR FEATHERWEIGHTZ TO MEET AT HARTFORD Hughie Hutchinson and Al Shubert Heads Charter Oak A. C., Inc., Exhibition Monday Night. The Charter Oak A. C., Inc., has ar- ranged an attractive boxing card for next Monday night at the Auditorium at Hartford, when two leading feath- erweights will come together in the 12 round main bout: They are Hughie Hutchinson, of Pennsylvania, and Al- Shubert, holder of the New England featherweight title. Both boys have boxed at Hartford on previous occa- sions, and' their work has been sati tactory. Hutchinson held Andy Chan- ey to a draw, and later defeated Sammy Waltz by the K. O.- route. Shubert has been battling for several years, and his record is one that he can be proud of. For several months two young mer have been disputing the right of each other to the ring name *“Young Mack.” They hail from Harttord and Stamford and on next Monday night will de- termine who's who, as far as “Young Mack'" is concerned, as well as ac- quiring the bantam title of Connecti- cut. This melee will be the semi-final of 10 rounds. A six-round preliminary will open the show. 80 89 84— 753 79 87 76— 242 84 103 100—287 86 79 86— 251 90 97 89— 27§ 419 465 435—1319 National Biscuit €o. Sablatsky 84 81 Lindell wees 97 88 Ma. 13 87 Borkowski . 99 88 91— 278 Piedmont .. 96 83 86— 265 449 427 428—1304 Besse-Leland Co. ‘ 85 85 88 103 81 85 7 Graves . McMillan M. Johnson . Bingemer .. Richter 92— 257 83— 268 76— 236 89— 258 98— 289 90— 256 77 102— 279 87— 87 - 79 Gijbney . ‘W. Johnson Larson . Gallup . H. Johnson Haynes . 423 438 466—1325 Hil 'k Printing Johnson . 79 92 Bl .. . 97 74 Bradley .. 101 97 Clancy . . 99 111 89— 299 Olson .. 85 88 78— 251 461 462 425—1348 Adkins Printing Co. 88 15 — 163 93 76 82— 251 87 104 100— 291 91 92 83— 266 88 90 85— 263 83— 254 86— 257 89— 287 Bmith Anderson . Bingston . Stanley ..... Newell ... O’HEARN PLAYS WELL Charley Kecps Yale Team Traveling at Top Speed in Yesterday’s Prac- tice. New Haven, Oct. 12.—Yale's var- sity football eleven drove four touch- downs across the scrub goal line in quick suceession during the fifty-min- ute scrimmage practice yesterday aft- ernoon, while the reserves penetrated the ranks of the regulars for one. It was the longest and one of the se- verest scrimmages of the season, and although the scrubs clung to prac- tically the same lineup with which they started, numerous substitutions placed an entirely different eleven on the gridiron for the first team before the curtain was rung down. For the first time this year Charlie O'Hearn ran the regulars, although he re- mained in the lineup only about ten minutes. « Under his field generalship the varsity appeared like a trans- formed combination, three of the tour touchdowns being sent over the line during his administration. W. VA. CALLS OUT ATHLETES Morgantown, W. Va., Oct. 12.—The irst call for cross-country runners and wresters for the West Virginia teams in these sports was issued today by wrestlers for the West Virginia teams expected that both squads will exceed fifty men, ; i 89- 89 447 437 439—1323 Market Co. 87 78 76 76 79 87 94 91 92 89 428 421 Armour Co. 89 83 82 81 79 72 100 91 93 94 Mohican 90— 67— 91— 78— 257 108— 289 434—1283 255 219 257 91— 90— 263 253 151 280 89— 106— 293 73— 13 449—1313 reum Hornkohl . e ... 443 421 Spring & Buckley Nolan .. eee 81 78 Scofield ... 74 C. Hayden .. 92 Goff ...... 76 Swanson 85 Hickcock . 83— 108— 81— 98— 88— 242 252 277 166 285 88 427 405 458—1290 L. O. O. F. LEAGUE. Andree. 76 84 83 85 86 1indgren Carlson .. Johnson . Landgren Nelson 92 86 79 94 87 430 96— 93— 84— 110— 84— 467 264 263 246 289 257 1311 Gustotson’ . Supeson 102 79 92 84 92 86— 281 95— 257 98— 285 95— 262 90— 286 464 Ohlsen ... Hollman . 462 449 Comstock. . 81 76 89 1375 75— 243 70— 146 88— 266 93— 290 92— 272 7 1284 418 94— 101— 167 278 154 258 260 173 Buechner . Anderson F. Schroeder .. J. Schroeder Squires 85— 87— 82— 449 1281 Gerstaecker. ITensler 8t " L. Hernzman .108 89 Dehm . . 82 Henzel 85 H. Hepp 91 G. Hepp Christinger . 89— 89— 170 286 82 255 270 175 76 1315 84— 84— 89— 86 95 86 76 433 447 436 Stella. 79 76 81 85 81 Rock ... Thayer Sabrack Hoffman Lundgren M. Hoffman 88— 187 94— 170 80— 246 76— 242 93— 259 73 ~ 85 81 85 Needham Leupold . 82 88 106 97 239 286 Team No. 3. Caswell 99 94 Rockwell .... ..80 85 H. May . B 79— 267 90— 275 245 7170 89— 282 88— 253 90— 264 799 266 266 Team No. 2. 94 92 83 91 100 99 277 282 Team. No. 4. .99 93 81 95 109 93 289 281 267 Pawlings Zwick .. . C. May 93— 279 86— 260 91 290 270 829 Prechart .. Jurgen Walters . 97— 100— 79— 276 289 276 281 846 TRAUT & HINE LEAGUE Selander Olson . Simon Baldesari Bailey .. 80— 58— 79— 227 71— 226 76— 212 218 165 364—1048 71— 219 HUGGINS PLACES CONFIDENCE IN MAYS - Garl Can Win Next Game New York, Oct. 12. Theo Giants and Yanks were keyed up to a semi tone or so above normal today for the seventh game of the world series, tied at three games all by the Giants 8 to 5 victory yesterday after a week of warfare at the Polo Grounds. They seemed to think that tricky something called the break in the game would make its appearance this after- noon and point out the ultimate victor in the championship struggle. Whoever wins today will be only one victory away from the -throne, while the losers must take the next two games in succession to .become champions of the world. Mays Against Douglas. Carl Mays will be sent against the awakened Giants today Managey Hug- gins said to be followed tomorrow by Waite Hoyt who permitted the Na- tional Jeaguers only one run in 18 innings. *“Shufflin”’ Phil Douglas, is the likely choice of McGraw. - Should this big spitball artist be put to work this afternoon it will be the third tome he has opposed Mays. They pitched the starter last Wednes- day and the Yanks won it 3 to 0. ‘When they met again Sunday the Giants won 4 to 2. Douglas will carry He has a bad cold it was noised about by his comrades. Perhaps it will keep him from pitching. If so, McGraw said he would select either the aged and slender Sallee or Pat Shea, a new comer. Shea in his. few weeks of active duty with the Giants this past season won five games and was beaten only twice. McGraw said he would like to give the youngster a chance in the series. Metropolitan fandom believes the rumpus up at the Polo Grounds will 8o the full nine games. Regard, they say how the teams, over.the span of a whole week, showed themselves im- bued with a tit for tat spirit. The Yanks took the first two then the Giants won a pair, after which the Yanks forged ahead only to have the Giants catch up with them yesterday by pummeling the service of Harper and Shawkey for 13 hits and 8 runs. A Giants Have Edge. The advantage of power in the box now iies with the Giants. Douglas and Barnes have shown they can halt the rush of Yank bats. Dovglas is booked to pitch today, and Nehf tomorrow. Nehf lost two games to the Yanks, largely because his team mates madec but one run in 18 innings they labored with him. This would leave for the possible ninth game assignment, Barnes, who twice has rescued Toney from the fury of a Yank attack and then held them while the Giants pounded out victories. Besides there are the second string flingers as yet untested. On the other hand, Huggins has trotted out only two successful pitch- ers, Hoyt and Mays—and the Giants vow they no longer dread the under- hand shots of Mays, having beaten him on his second start. It is Mays who may have to pitch a fourth time if the series go the limit. ‘ Yesterday's game was exciting, the first 4 innings so crisp and full of thrills that what followed seemed drowsy though the closing founds pro- duced as much of interest as the aver- age contest. Nobody may remember these last innings a year hence but even the mast calloused folk do not expect to stop talking about the three home runs in less than ten minutes, the three wal- lops when flelders stopped terrific clouts they should not catch by hurl- ing themselves in front of the flying sphere, the long run of Chick Fewster to absorb Young's foul, hit to the bleachers in the first inning, the un- daunted spirit that carried the Giants to victory after the Yanks had twice gone ahead of them and the manner in which Barnes curbed the Yanks when Carlson .. Malonéy . Woodner Walker .. 85— 96— 80— 96— 236 237 231 252 428—1175 ‘Willoughby Johnson Preston . Donlon . Heath .. Macholtz . 80— 11— 242 221 147 12 160 267 53— 84— 80— 368—1158 Kunze Dilfaro Paplouski . Freberg ... Anderson Ramm 76— 72— 94— T4— 98— 226 247 172 168 273 i 153 377 448 414—1239 . Tigers C. Ramm ...... R, Johnson G. Worthner Kenther Hasselback Linn 85— 69— 137 11— 221 79— 231 ..— 130 81— 263 Iz 189 68 . 75 73 71 91 5 79 59 91 378 379 385—1142 Athlctics .. 90 79 Ptomshek . Renshaw Brown Dauzae Kerner 89— 2638 69— 223 67— 216 76— 221 95— 253 396—1181 69— 80— 90— 87— 65— 202 223 251 204 217 Bonn .. Miller . Andrews Hartman every two or three days.” their bats were swinging merrily with the joy that Toney furnished. Cool After Homer. There was a big hubub by the root- ers over the three homers in the sec- ond inning. But the players were surprisingly calm in their reaction to these wallops, just as if banging the ball into the outlying sections of the amphitheater was nothing to make a fuss over. Whan Emil Meusel propelled one into the lower right field stand with Kelly on base, not a person grasped his palm as he crossed the plate and walked to the dugout. Rawlings go- ing up to the front with his heavy ar- tillery passed the returning hero in silence without so muc’: as offering a salute of recognition. Even the bat boy’s nod of approval seemed per- functory. It used to be that play couldn’t go on until the home run maker had been congratulated by all his team mates but that simply isn’t being done these days. The homer that Snyder poled a moment later the players appeared to accept without particular enthusiasm and this also was the case immediately afterward when Fewster put the Yanks ahead once more by hoisting one into the bleachers with Shawkey on base. Styles change. Perhaps major league players say, “Pshaw, what's a home run? We know a fellow who hits one That fel- low—Babe Ruth sat in the grand stand yesterday. Mayhaps it was just as well. His substitute, Fewster, hit a home run which Babe probably couldn’t have done with his sore arm and the substitute got several long flies far from his position that Babe might not have reached because of his sore leg. 349 391—1097 Leupold 78 78 402 403 431 1236 Team No. 1. Tyler 69 83 76— 228 ‘White Anderson ...... .. Whitney ... Meniavim .. Raineault .. Cusack 83— 151 55 55 71 61 D82 e 84— 70— 99— 89— 197 283 242 England has more rivers, in Dro- portion to its size, than any other country in the world. PRE.WAR PRICES AT Yankees' Manager Hopeful That| {Ward, 2b a handkerchief with him to the fray. | Composite Box Score of the Six Games Between the Yankees and the Giants YANKEES, ab 2b 3b hrtb Miller, cf 0 Peckinp'ugh, ss 22 Ruthy e G Fewster, 1f ....3 R. Meusel, rf 22° Pipp, 1b Liif .20 McNally, 3b .. .19 Schang, ¢ .....14 Devormer, ¢ ...1 Mays, p ... Hoyt, p Quinn, p Shawkey, Collins, » . Rogers, p **Baker CooNoCOoRWLH OW®ELNG CooNom Mo Ow TSmO w e T cooccocococoHooOC0OO coocccoco0000OOOHKS 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 CoONO RN G ®O T ®mm o so bb sh sb avg. 167 .136 po avg. 1.000 .95 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 .979 867 1.000° 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000, 000 1.000 .000 16/ 2 oo o 19 19 8 0 b O cococoRoNRRIL LN R B T coccccooonoRRONOS ohocoHomoonERNOONOR cscoccoccooNHOOOOROO cocoooomRa Totals ...179 21 - e 2 3 E 3 Burns, cf Bancroft, ss Frisch, 3b Young, rf Kelly, b .. E. Meusel, Rawlings, 2b Snyder, © *Smith, ¢ Douglas, p Nehf, p Barnes, p Toney, p oo - - i 22 ..23 T cuooommmu NN, CROOONN0N Dk 0T coccoormmroonY coccooorormor cccooromooo 2 " CRO OO0 0ummm o £ » 9 'S .984 u ° o 3 o cComooruwHaLN®® coromooNBaROL [ ccoroooocororrE cococococorooworE R T L T TR Totals - - Giants . Yankees ... *Smith batted for Douglas in the **Baker batted for Rogers in th Shawkey in the eighth inning of six Winning Pitchers—Mays, Hoyt ( Pitchers—Douglas, Nehf (2), Quinn, Struck Out—By Mays (Kelly, By Nehf (2), E. Meusel, Snyder, Bancroft (2), Mays, Ruth (3), Ward (2), Miller Barnes (Fewster, Peckinpaugh, Miller (3), McNally, Schang (2), Shawkey); croft, Kelly); by Rogers (Rawlings); Harper (Frisch); by Shawkey (Banc: by Piercy (Kelly, Rawlings). Hits—Off Mays, 12 in 18 innings; glas, 12 in 18 innings; off Barnes, 10 i nings; off Toney, 7 in 2 2-3 innings; Quinn, 8 in 3 2-3 innings; off Collins, innings; off Harper, 3 in 1 1-3 innings; Left on Bases—Yankees, 29; Glan Double Plays—Ward and Pipp; 342 425—1156 @ NEXT ey Peckinpaugh and Pipp; Peckinpaugh, Kelly; Frisch and Rawlings; Rawling: and Pipp; Schang and Ward (2); Passed Balls—Snyder, Smith. W Rawlings, by Mays. _— e TIGERS NOT CONFIDENT Very Little Optimism Shown at Nassau Coming Battle With Navy ‘on Saturday. for Princeton, N. J., Oct. 12.—By press- ing all the football talent they could find into their ranks Nat Poe's Ome- lettes gave the Princeton varsity a hard fight yesterday in practice, two touchdowns only - being forced over the scrub goal line. Roper held a forty minute scrimmage, during which he irove the men at top speed, and then, not satisfled kept them ou tfor a sig- nal practice. Optimism it not by any means epi- lemic at Princeton over the Navy game—not even prevalent. The over- confidence which was feared earlier in the season has vanished over night with the news that Lourl and Garrity will not play. To add to the general gloom, Coach Bill Roper in a state- ment on the Navy game said: In my opinion, the Navy has thg best team in the East, and the outcome of the Princeton-Naval Academy game on Saturday still remains doubtful. The middies have a veteran line and a good 'S o < @ 0 2 1 1 8 4 0 3 eighth inning of first game. e ninth inning of third game and for th game. 2), Barnes (2), Mays, Shawkey. rns); by Hoyt (Kelly, (3), Burns (3), ); by Douglas (Peckinpaugh, Schang '(2), R. Meusel, Pipp, McNally; by (3), R. Meusel (2), Ruth, Pipp, Ward by Toney (Ruth); by Quinn (Ban- by Nehf (Ruth (3), Ward, Hoyt; by roft, Rawlings, Young (2), Frisch); Douglas. Losing off Hoyt, 12 in 1 Sinnings; off Dou- in 15 1-3 innings; off Nehf, 9 in 18 off Shawkey, 13 in 9 innings; off 4 in 2-3 innings; off Rogers, 3 in 1 1-3 ¢t Piercy, 2 in 1 inning. ts, 41. Quinn, Peckinpaugh ahd Pipp; Wand, Ward and Pipp; Frisch, Rawlings and s, Kelly and Smith; McNally, Ward Schang and McNally. : ild Pitch—Barnes. ‘Hit by Pitcher— backfield, with lots of gaining power on straight plays. The combination is hard to beat. SHEA AND GOURDIN. New York, Oct. 12.—Chief rivals in the national amateur athletic union pentathlon championship at Travers Island today were Dan Shea of New York, winner of the decathlon title recently and’ Ned Gourdin, world’s running broad jump champion and record holder. Shea who is‘n veteran at the all- around competifion has been perform- ing excellently this season. Gourdin specialized in the jumping events at Harvard but was expected to do well in the sprint and javelin events, with a possibility of finishing well up in the 2,000 meter contest. SUBSTITUTES FOR BROTHER Middletown, Conn., Oct. 12.—Al Fricks, who sustained a broken nose in the Stevens game, is in Philadelphia receiving treatment, and Johnny ‘Fricks, his brother, is playing at half- back for him in the Wesleyan line-up. Scriggins is being tried out at full back, which may mean the elimina- tion of Adams. BIG AND PROMINENT EN AT SIXTH GAME Fdwards, Ringling, Rickard and the Roosevelg Brothers See Giants Rout Out Yankees. New York, Oct. 12.—There was a slight falling off in the attendance at ihe Polo Grounds yesterday. When George Buns, the center fielder of the Giants, stepped up to the plate in the first inning, several hundred seats in {the upper tier stands were still va- cant. There were a few unoccupied ~hairs in the lower stands, but the bicachers were jammed as usual. The fact that there was some long distance clouting in the way of home runs by Emil Meusel, Frank,Snyder of the Giants, and “Chick” Fewster of the Yankees, kept the crowd in nois- ome mood. Fewster, who played for Babe Ruth, was cheered on two oc- casions, but had the Babe made the hit and the catch that his substi- tute did, there would have been much more cheering, no doubt. And the Sultan of Biff caml in for a Iittle applause also. He posed for a pioture with Mae Murray, a winsome actress, just before the gtart of the 3ame, then paraded by the press stand (o the dugopt. The Babé was not in uniform. He was wearing his latest cut with his ieft arm in a sling. While he crowd wasn't the biggest of ihe series, some of New York’s big- £ést men turned out to see it. “Big"” Blil Edwards occupied a box with john Ringling, the circus man. Mr. Ring'ing, while not in Big Bill's class, is not a lightweight by any means. Wiih them was| Tex Rickard. Kermit and Archie Roosevelt had front row seats in the grand stand. Twenty fans from Miami, Fla., were presen also. They were rooting for the Yankees, as the team trained there one year. ZBYSZKO COMING TO U. S, Heavyweight Wrestling Champion Sails from Rotterdam . Chicago, Oct. 11.—Stanislaus Zbysz- ko, world’s heavyweight wrestling champion, sailed for New York from Rotterdam yesterday after spending a month with his aged mother in Cra- cow,” Poland, according to word re- ceived by his manager. Zbyszko sent word that he has been training daily and Is in good condition. His first match of the season will be against Farl Caddock at Des Moines, Ia., Oct. 28.—He will arrive in New York, Oct. 19. HOFPPE WINS ON BIRTHDAY Philadelphia, Oct. 12.—Willie Hoppe holder of the 18.2 balkline billiard title for sixteen consecutive years yes- terday, celebrated his . thirty-fourth birthday by defeating Charies G. Peterson, the St. Louis trick shot vet- eran, in an exhibition match. Hoppe downed his opponent by a score of 300 to 150 and established an average of 93 1-3 points an inning. HORSE FALLS DOWN BUT WINS RACE Jimmy McKerron Perlorms Admirably at Lexington Lexington, Ky., Oct. 12—Jimmy McKerron, bay gelding, by Jack Me- Kerron, demonstrated at the Ken- tucky Trotting Horse Breeders' As- sociation track yesterday afternoon that it is possible for a horse to “fall down and win.” The speedy gelding captured the Phoenix Hotel Stake, feature of a good programme, after an acident in the second heat in which he and Edna Early went down. Jimmy McKerron finished fifth in the first heat, after a bad break caused him to lose the lead in the stretch, the heat going to Jim B., the “Western Cyclone.” In the Second heat, Jimmy McKerron and Edna Early hooked up.in a thrilling drive down the- stretch. The gelding fell and Edna Early’s foot caught in the sulky wheel. Roy Grattan went on and won the heat, but Jimmy McKer- ron was given fifth place, the judges deciding that the accident was un- avoidable. Edna Early received several slights cuts and was withdrawn. The last two heats went to Jimmy McKerron in eash fashion, Roy Grat- tan finishing second in the third and Jim B. getting the place in the final Ray handled the reins on the winner. Betsy Chandler, in capturing the third heat of the unfinished 2:16 trot, paid the longest price ever hung up on the Lexington track. Only one ticket was sold on the filly, and the lucky holder of this ticket drew down $897 for $2. Betsy Chandler, however, lost the last heat to Klio in a close finish. The latter won a heat Monday and thereby won the race SECONDS HOLD CRIMSON Varsity is Held Twice for Downs on 10-Yard Line—Hurry Call Coaches. Cambridge, Mass.,, Oct. 12.—The Harvard varsity failed to penetrate -hs second team's defense yesterday after- noon after a forty minute scrimmage. Twice the regulars managed to reach their opponents’ 10 yard line, but had the ball taken away from them on down. Percy Jenkins, the sophomore halfback, contributed runs of 40 and 30 yards, but to no avail. The forward line again was decided- ly weak on the offensive, and the coaches were inclined to be pessimis:ic At any rate, the longest session of the fall took place today, although it is a state holiday. A hurry call for coaches to help out was made last night, and an eleven anade_up of thém y scrime mage against the varsity. The Georgia formations will also be used by the second team. Leo Leary helped coach the ends yesterday, paying particular attentiony to Fitts and Lockwood. for 22 | H ] \ MYy GooDNES3 ME. THE CRIME THATS IN Tiars WoRWD!! 72 S = WELL=- | THOT 1 HEARD A No'SE 8Y THE WINDUH AND BEIN' WIDE 'WAKE-~ | AN’ WELL OF LATE— | THE DOOR LEADIN' Room., — MWELL- | RECKON ME 'BOUT THE SAME TiME ‘WHAT Do YouU SIANT HERE' AND HE SEZ-" OR 1'LL BLow BEEN STEPPED SLEEPIN’ aut BY INTO TiHE SETTIN' HE SEEN '‘NY SEZ- LIME THAT AREEP YOUR MOUTH SHUT YouR BRAINS OUT" - = THINKS BURGLAR STORIES JusT BEFORE BEING SENT To BED,