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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1924, spitatieiatiztasastiiainassasiniis 70,000 FANS EXPECTED TO BE CROWDED INTO YALE BOWL SATURDAY — FEATHERWEIGHT CONTENDERS WILL HAVE TO FIGHT FINISH BOUTS —LOOKS LIKE WALTER JOHNSON 1S THROUGH WITH BIG LEAGUES — CHICAGO LOOKS LIKE LEADING CONTENDER 25352222222 0000 080408 JOHNSON AND WEISS GIVE 'MPIAN GARCI, IGNGE ON AND OFF TH IELD DEPOSIT ON COAST CLUB PALUSOTHINDOWN Fans Now That Walter Thein Washington Convinced Is to Pass 1 Washington Reconciled Pond Hurled Pass That Gave Yale a Touchdown Eli Bmu,,:a“ Preparing H} I WSTFRNfHS Now Wegh 187 Pounds aud - pect (o Make 126 9.~ - ALL HAVE CHANGE Has Best ¢ Crown ;agu Howev.‘er. to Conle Madison Squar net profits buted among ti ry Wills, Ba ¢ Renault g and nault we to de jured thumbs, but Ma with the hest o a vic not neglecti owever, se Gowdy, and Babe H alter FEINTING 15 LOST ART IN BOXING GAME TODAY Jack Britton Says That Only Ome Or Two Fighters hnow What 1s 1) \ (AR TER ruR iR Presence Adds Tower of Strength t Crimson Machine NATIONAL GUARD JUNIOR TEAN SEEKING OONTESTS an 1o Vlay Preliminary Games at the State Armory This Winter WITS£LASS THE (FRCEST. . 'SELUING: CIGAR (N THE WORLD 72 GOES T0 THE WEAD F THE &/Y" WITH sripE OP '8 a ;;r.mmm is remarkable ex- | ersit Still Maodest Young Man owered wit i d Instructs hvl Hmm TUNNEY TO FIGHT r most ath 70000 FANS Wi -+ OEEGAMEINBOWL. Other Big Games Saturday Drawing Many Fans at capacity g to the coll ball surpris ntenance, for s to brighten the Fisher to have Tirst then weror the Dartmout} Princeton, nd co rs at Soldic oppose Harvard Yale 4crnmmz to campus reports. Eleven |'men will be there, but a squad of 46 | | with 23 injured, many of them | wearing crutches and canes, can | hardly be expected to present fts mightiest front, However, the loyal student will fight with the team and ‘ en ragement born of despair ‘m y possibly carry the day. On the other hand, the Yale team is prepared for brilliant accomplish. ments with promices that the same |team which Princeton found so | powerful will eppear In thé last de- ense of the bowl, Rumor last week said that Yale had ignored Harvard in its cfforts to vanquish Prince- ton, This has been accomplished and the Yale players have been practic- ing signals and avoiding the possi- Lility of fnfuries in preparation this week. The Elis well realize that the Haravrd team they meet on Satur- v will be far different from the which Princeton defeatcd so v ¥, out they belicve that Scott, Tond, Allen and WBench, Supported ¥ line powerful on attack end offset any difficuties suntered from the in power that is sure to be Har- vard's when the first whistle blows. Syracuse's calibre is still an un- certainty as a result of its defeat by West Virginia Wesleyan, and Col- g machine against its smaller opponents, may be able attain its game” power. ilton’: beaten Alfred to 0, rkson 41 to 0, Hobart 42 to 0, and Springfield 33 to 0, but has lost to Nebraska, 33 to 7, and to West Virginia, 34 to 2. “ontinucd on Following Page) | FOOTBALL UPSETS OF PRESENT YEAR Each Week Has Some Surpris- ing Overturn By The Associated Press. New York, No 19.—Football prowess comes in leaps and hounds and knows no favorites according to the 1024 records of several of the nation's great elevens, On few occa- sions in history have the upsets been | 50 tremendous and 8o frequent as in the season now rapidly drawing to a close. The first real surprise of a some- what mystifying year occurred when Willlams came out of the northern hills of Massachusetts to stem the red tornado of Ithaca which had | swept all before ft for three years. | Columbia, spurred by the late Perey Haughton, overcame the conquerors of Cornell, a bolt of football light- ning in itself. But the great crash was to come, for Ithaca, the Dobie machine, burst forth again and over- turned Columbia. ‘These were the scores Williams 14; Cornell 7 Columbia 27; Willlams 0. Cornell 14; Columbia 0, This story of the defeated rising to conquer the conqueror of the con- qaueror is found twice in considera- tion of the leading teams of the middle . Tlinois' defeat at tt hands of Minnesota Saturds brought about both situations. The result of the Tllinois-Minnesota- Michigan series was Tllinois Michigan 14 Minnesota 20; Iilinois 7. Michigan 18; Minnesota 0. The team led by the redoubtable “Red"” Grange also fell behind in the | Towa-Minnesota-Tilinois competition, the game rdsulting: Iowa 13; Minnesota 0. Tlinois 36; Towa 0. Minnesota 20; Tllinois 0, In this history-making warfare, which has records of the greafvst cleve series has run true to form, t teams considered being Yale, Dart- | mouth and Brown. Yale defeated the Providence Bears, 13 to 3, and the New Hampshire Indians hunted gridiron hem down and clubbed them 10 to | , then Yale and Dartmouth locked in a {4 to 14 tie Coming chances tor the game” trios. Lafayette has beaten Bucknell and Rutgers Jias downed Lafaygite. Bucknell and meet this week. Princeton h trampled on Harvard and Yale h conquered Princeton. Yale met Haturday. e e DAISY Single to 1,000 Shot . - {| HavE You rALkFN) | For THE CROSS |{WORD PUZZLE |crazE @ — oF ALL THE A FADS THAT ONE TaES THE BISCUIT SININE marred the | ona | wins a | Rutgers | Harvard and | AIR RIFLES - $100 . $4 95 | HADFIELD’ I THINK PEOPLE THAT WORK ON CROSS WORD PUZZLES ROLL HOOPS AND PLAY WITH FEATHERWEIGHT CLASHES MUST GO T0 A DECISION No Dra\\ s Will Be Allowed in Case of Even Flght It Will Go to Extra Round. New York, Nov. 19.—Boxing offi- clals of New York state have awept Ia\\'ny all possibility of draws by de- claring that the six contenders In the featherweight chafplonehip meet at Madison Square Garden ¥ri- day night must “fight to a finish.” To assure decisions in the three bouts the hoxing commission has re- sorted to amateur rules, which pro- vide that extra rounds shall follow failure to decide upon a winner. Lut in the amatenr cvents the Jimit is generally three rounds and the professional featherweight patties are scheduled for 10. In the ama- teur contests one exira round cal for votes from the judges. The comr mission has specificd two additional sesafons for the professionals, In the finals, which are schedulsd for 12 rounds, should a draw be the verdict, the competiton nist go tiree extra rounds before a new vote is taken, « Although posters advertising a 15- round encounter between Tont Gib- bons and Kid Norfolk for the ,Christmas fund show on December 9 have been broadeast, the hout was | <anctioned by the commission only after a heated discussion yesterday. 'Commissioner Muldoon, former chairman, insisted on Bartley Mad- den as an opponent for the Minne. sotan and refused to make the ge-, on of Norfolk unanimous, Harry and Jack Renault exposed in jured thumbs as arguments against their appearance in the ring with the man who staved off Dempsey for 15 rounds at Sholby. iBlOfl‘(‘l C ornehn« Hopcs | To Star as Did Red Dunn Milwaukee, Wis. Nov, 19.—Ath- lofic prowess usually runs in fami- There are the Dunns, for in- | stance, Red, one of the best quarter- bicks and punters ever developed at Marquette Unlversity—and an All- America, by the way-—has a young- er brother whose toe gives promisc of bheing as great as the sensational oot of the auburn-haired kicker. The youngster hose name 1 Cornelius, is a freshman at Mar- 1 plays end. He is a Dle. strapping fellow, weighs more than Red, and is a natural Kicker who can ¢ shoot the long spirals nearly as fa s his brother did in his palmise aquette The {00! experts say that witl 4 year's practice his Kicking wclipse that of Joe's. A third brothe Johnnie, i3 tearing things up at quarterback on the Marquette hi eleven and looms as a f star oN THEM ALL THE TimME S HALF BA ANY WAY-- YOU KINDA EXPECT IT OF HiM \—K\DDVES Ty AL RIGHT FOR TH® \ AND SIMPS ~ r—w/—/' TWELL HERE'S WHERR | / o (;ELE\/_H ;3\ 7