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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1925, ALL MEMBERS OF Pl'I'TSBURGH TEAM ARE HEAVY HITTERS, RECORDS SHOW —MOST BIG TEAMS OPEN GRID SEASON SATURDAY WASHINGTON TAKES COUPLE AND WINS PE:IYNANTA GAIN MeMull m. Certain 300 Total Victory Made When Mackmen Lose to! Browns it 11 Innings— ! Red Sox Shut Out Tygers —Ruth’s Homer Beats White Sox. a8 PITTSHURG AB Adame, p 0 0 Totals 15 Batted for Oldham fn 5th. York L..100 021 Il . om0 -0 | Iwo base hit—Caray. Threo buko hit— Home run—Terry, §tolen bnses— Young Friech, Double plays Grantham (2), Frisel, vi Moore, Wright to Gran- ung to Terry, Left on buses W York §, Pittsburgh 7. Base on balls lam 3, oft Scott 1. Struck out by Adams 5 o 4. Losing pitcher— Oldham, Umplres—Hart, Rigler and Mor- Time—1:33 x 000, 200 New York, Sept P)—The American lcague pennant flies un- challenged at the Washington mast- head today for the sccond consecu tive season. [ Clark GHfith's Senators made cer- | ¢ tain of meeting the Pirates in the world series by sweeping both ends of a double header agalnst Cleveland yesterday, 4 to 8, and 6 to 2, while jan. the Athletics were succumbing to| the Browns in an eleven luning con- test, € to 4. Irankisn 20 000 Nine games ahead, Washington Cincinnati ...000 020 can lose all its remaining games and """“-‘" and DeBerry; still take the flag. To Goose Gos- =~ 1S SPORT VIEW glory for sewing up the title, ,\nm hitting a home run in the tenth In- | Haliback Addlessfls High School Bogs Pittaburgh CINCINNATI 3, BROOKLYN 2, RHOT 000 003 8 2 000 01--3 & Rizey and Yar- ning {o drive home the winning run Alex Ierguson easily subdued the Indiuns in the eecond game. LAmiting the Tigers to four Lits, Ruffing pitche hutout ball for the ted Sox yestorday, § 0 0, reducing Famous 26 P—Harold chosen on Wal- {cr Camp's All-American football tram and considered by many as one of the greatest open field runners, discusses for the benefit the chances of the Cobb men fi ing ™better than fourth. The Tigers’ \ school boys and others, the gam he knows it, in an article appearing defeat coupled with the St. Louis victory over the Mackmen put De- trolt two and one-half games be hind the third place Brow Bahe It cat the White a homer in the tenth with the ba filled, making the score 6 to Babe's twenty-first homer of the sea- son marked the®sixth time in his career that he had delivered a four play smash with the sacks jammed. |y (he Pittsburgh, with the National pen- | jcan ¥ nant already won, could afford fo| jjard work sufter a shutout, 4 1o 0, at the hands | criticisms suggestions: of the Giants, but New York had |ute to oth itics of high school, colleg 3 is the advic offers the young iron glory it writes Grange stion to keep fit. 1t gl which hardens up my ngthens my arms, shoul- the satisfaction of clinching with the lifting it en- Detroit, Sept. (Red) Grange, twic 3 and the ability to take and attri- s casily applicable activ piace in gpite of a I to sred by Cincinnati over leven innings., Brooklyn reer 1 only ecight drove Tirooklyn | nit through the ¢ in explanation of his hat's good es me wry iee nmmer," U iich WO reus r ! A back for a chap cngtomed t through a ball around 1 doa lit-| rnning IREET ry day.” The Nlinois half buck cautions gsters on high school feams to There's never any- “Anather good thing B himsell ¢ i the batl T throw 1ssing summer Wy on ove it casy [thing gained by irst f nights of practice, hard,” he advises, “the v tackler is not so likely to get urt as the slow fackler. Also, obvi- v, you will have a hetfer chance of stopping the man if you go into " | him with a lot of foree. At the same Hm" yon must be sure that you are going to be headed so fast in ! not |one direction that the man with fhe | swerve and get past you. ckficld man should be a fire tackler; he should also be in ofher ways, though footed, quick on able to start gun, rference as the hall. I can ‘Every h 1ld be fast, sure must he from a from in e carries Get low and and start fast.” The “pivef,” the football which Grange has perfected | digcomfnrture of opposing lines m] backfields, i& stressed as of first importance to the hackfiell men | It ts a good de f rapid shot well, to help | |efftciently as trf to defensive al Mke the basket of whirling and ehange of tirection. You'll re tackled in the | open field, twisting hake the tackler of his a i or in the . pivot turn you ont you 1o go on ta off arms and permit yardage. big fanlt ‘of many Wit the ball. Tha half heartedly you're worth. s of t1 | for mors o] e hacks 15| | t mean instead n field run- en ac fmportan $owin tell you you're i commence gamea it R funda Leliey m o5 knowing 8 nning, al Dettectives for ‘\ or! M Series Duties 1 (P An in rd . CHIOAGO 5 1EL NATION2! eit T nd that the during the of high | October number of the Amer- | a lot | wofking your head | He | to block | “consisting | 1 that often if | will | PITCHING JINY AFFECTS HURLERS Witness Rommel Trying for 21st Victory of Year By BILLY EVANS art of winning ball games in the majors fs often a most perplex- ing problem. If you have your doubts on that point, please consult Piteher Kddie Rommel of the Ath- leties, On August 7 Rommel twon 20th ball geme of the year. He gave a remarkable exhibition of pitehing In turning the trick, Cleve- land was shut out, making only two hits, Another unusual thing in connee- tibn with the game was the fact that it was played in 65 minutes, the shortest contest ever staged in the American league., ‘With 20 victories In the first 100 games played by hls elub, it was freely predicted that Rommel would certainly win 25 games and had a | chance to reach the #0-mark Then Rommel and his pitching ‘h 11 into evil ways. Trying to cap- ture victory No. 21 proved to be a | jinx. Tn the games he started, some mmc Invariably happened to cause removal, If it wasn't his pitch- then it was the failure of his at the bat or in The his his ing, m 'nnmnmz either | an mn weeks Rommel put forth his best foot fn an effort to win a | ball game but the breaks foiled him {Tt was Friday, August 7, as men- |tioned, that Rommel won victory [No. 20, Tt was September 16 hefore he annexed another, The Chicagn White Sox fell a vie tim to Ttommel in helping him hreak the itnx that relentlessly pursued him for =0 long a thme, | | Rommel's Case | pitehers have theiv good and That i ortain day | have all the stuff in the four or five days lafer little or nothing Now, bad days. 1 may world, whi ma ave ball During o i rubber wd 1o have some. long run of de- | from the | he ap and then | nel’s him fimes all his s ‘v‘ s driven 5L everal vhen pes uff, at the top of his game |1 great pitel He has the me tantalizing k e by o game, | good speed. a fine curve and a m tifving ch of : | T wpired a number of game sently In which Rommel s De at his best, only 1o sce him driven to the showers before the tion of 1he game The day that and broke 21st victory ed for didn’t warming Ronmiel inge § 1 emed 10 comple- Rommel heat Chi- i he the seem finx in winning | marked fo me rubher to have cago his he sta “Well, 1 thing while up, so T ma be able to get through nine innir In the first four nings Chica oven hits, but only one run Ir was apparent that Rommel wasn't but he was getting by Then there came « reversal and the five innings go made only one hit and no | rung. Yet it could that Rommel was “I never had 1 he remarked at | game, izt W form in Inst Chic be seen iz hest &tuff in my the of life the h There von | plesing proble piteher with [ pitcher with the thing of nothing wins. | Mayer Contest, prominer nito bugay considere of the most value to the | tine to the player to be letics. L aw led {he | players | Jimmy lonor. regarded Simmor Dyk This year ' s thred ar as strongly he running Rommel and hrane | has been the majors, a gr his c Ruth rec ed him for his All- the st the two lea or the h sed on at may make it 2 has heen and mo arond t catel t man 11 sensation Americs, mad hid gon is 1 . H Simmons | up of [ e A ar in the ontfield of t n 1 hitting 75 mark My ex-| But Ten Entries Left In Big E n(‘umnm 'hm ed by W W5 wit wn rfering Buck™ Ir., © out. intc llowa AN the for hour n rth nin. ton Team Starts orwich in Morr sel Kensing For N on the |fro Jisn't o « ever ut or Hudkin light Pacific TILIIIINILINITIITINILIINLILNL it THINKS HE'LL BE NEXT CHAMP [ Nebr himsel all the came nmy s words from the + wildent yed 1o 1 che much fir Inst ypion in oy s first ¢ pring thi Joe Beninmin, | Hudkns handed ing he ever had W Hhat { Vernon arer A i deeis workout {month from we to fieht and {tion there of |1hoy t f part o [them s not fateful m e oo telling o fiil n ihe c |tightwe More is there Ace i 18] was mostly nld no = his ion he = Vot hold onee worn hy 13 " self o in| . is not 1t er three to the cnon hy in e erage man. Ace Hud world irom Bt his wildne ing —~he's wild who Ace 1 love me™ spirit 1ould be a at all lime Ang is into the when he won the rown from 00d Sheik Joe 1he worst Tac in his life. Tn fact v in the ring sinec It in Jack Doyle's middle vap: His first of the more leep fighting friends in Chicago from eating. > light one, was D than 1 did Mulle |working out in ye Hudkins i3 ymnasium tting down to busi- and s mers ra ready all cof 1 Jinmmy Goodrich King of the the funny rith in t e nny rd neh But h to Lick him- T of it (-M Tonight y (/P) Hockey e city, in | “Tust | 'nort in the Gene | | s | paper | Ties Record * Soc \m:‘. hx,)lc ,'\ ashington Will Not Put on Inferior Team Washington, Sept. 25 (®) — Al- though they have clinched the American leagne pennant nd consecntive yi tors will pla their full in the e sec the 8Sena- strength and the regulars will continue in the lineup during the three game |sontherners come With the Browns, and Detroit and Chicago still fighting for the third and fourth place moncy shares the world series gate, Hurris said he strength did agair When the a four game however, most of the regulars will be left behind to put themsel in shape for the world series clash with the Pirates President Griflith said tors would leave here to ainst St. Touis that the other two he the arrive in {last | 11ini” go to Philadelphia Oct. BILESIEIIEINLELIILNNLL SECTIONAL GAMES Football This Fall to Have Many of Them Chicago, Seph 25 (P-—Nineteen great Intersectional football games in which five western conference elevens and Notre Dame play the chiet roles, indicate that the 1925 scason on the gridiron will be the groatest football has ever seen, Notre Dame has the heaviest inter- sectlonal schedule of any of the mid- dle western elevens, but of the Big Ten universities with intersectional games ahead of them. Chlcago faces the hardest schedule, The Maroons will meet two eastern elevens stand- ing high in grid circles and one southern team. Never in the history of the Big Ten has a conference school looked forward to such & heavy intersectional schedule, gon October 3 with the University of Kentucky on Stagg Field. On Octo- ber 24, Chicago goes to Philadelphia to y Pennsylvania, a game that will bring out all the strategy that 24 years of coaching has given Di- rector A. A. Stagg, the “Grand Old Man of Foothall.” Dartmouth, the “Big Green,” comes to Chicago to play the Ma- roon eleven on November 14, in the intersectional tiit for Chicago. Middle western and eastern grid citles point to this game as onc of the best of the season. Tilinois, with Bob Zuppke at the helm of the Orange and Blue, is the second conference opponent for Pennsylvania the week following the Chi o-Penn game. The “Fighting 31, to clash with Penn. Tllinols’ great All- American half hack, Harold Grange, will make his debut before eastern grid fans, Grange will be the big cog In Zuppke's strong offensive m chine this season, as he has been for the past two years, and the Tllinois feam will be moulded around the great star. Other western teams by Manager Buckeye stadium, would use the same | enators go to Boston for | series there next week, | Sena- | Pittsburgh the night of October 5. | This will give them the next day to work ont on Forbes field pre- paratory to the opening clash of the world serieg on October 7. Ansonia Boxer Wins om New York Rival | Ansonia, softy Hors burth of a ten-round decision Kid Mayo of New York in bout here last night. dv Rodney of New Haven lost a decision to Chick Dorsey of Bridge- round semi-final, and rommy Regan of New Haven knock- ed out Danny Maher of New Haven in the second round of their sched- nled four-round hout READ THE "I RALD (f \S\H‘I[[)‘M | West Point, | Wesleyan ing intersectional tilts this vear give evidence of the rising growth of east ~west games and west-south games. for the Tulane University of New Orleans, h Missouri, 1wo games with western elevens. of the Valley conference fleld today against St. Louis ' goes south early in the year, Oct. & o play Tnlane at New Orleans and north in Chicago on October 24. Columbia and thelr rivalry on the chalked field, of this time at Columbus in the hnge on Octoher 17. be popular Onee more seems to teams. The Navy with western clubs. | Michigan clashes with the Middies at on October 31. of Milwau- v eleven, in on October Ann Arbor, Marquette University kee also meets the {he castern stronghold 10. N West Htate, Point, Baylor Notre Dame faces orgia Tech, Penn. nd Carnegie Tech. Other intersectional gams of this 1 are: University of Detroit at Oct. 3; Knox College at West Point, Oct. 10; §t. Louis Unl- versity at West Point Oct. 24; Ohio at Syracuse University, INov. 7; Washington and Je offe: V at the University of Detroit, Nov. Geongle Day ls Badly Whipped by Joe New Haven Sept, (A—Joe Cur- rie, of New Haven, was given the referee’s decision over Georgie Day, also of New Haven, in a ten round start bout before the Nutmeg A. here last night. Currie was Day's master thronghout and jabbed Day's face until he had it covered with blood. Day was unable to use rush- ing tactics, being tied up by Currie every charge. ARE BIG FEATURE The Maroon eleven opens its sea- | schedul- | Onto State renew | B ST FOOTBALL SEASON TO GET UNDER ‘WAY TOMORROW GRIDIRON TITLES ARE AT STAKE THIS SEASON Undefeated Majority of Teams Start Season—Record Crowds Expected This Fall—All Are Turned To- ward Notre Dame, Several Teams, Tast | Yvoc Season, Will Have to Tight Eyes Hard, New York, § 5 (A—Elevens whose titles won stake in the 1925 football campaign are as follows: Team— Champlonship— Notre Dame. National Yale Dartmouth Penn Yale. Willlams l Illv AgO. wlated 1t York, Sept. 25 = I'ootball's march upgrade (0 new | heights of competition and popular promises to go forward with sed momentum in the season which has its main Kickoffs tomore row in various scctions of the couns wy. The campaigr startling in {man, y et new mar all 'z‘lnug the 1ino but 1925 1 expectod to see- most of these records dise Imaced. With new and gigantic sta- dia spreading up throughout the college world, this fall's bafties | East { L .“Big Three” . “Little Three™ .Wesfern Conference Mo. Valley Confercnce outhwest'n Conference jouth . Southern Conference Colorado. ... Rocky Mt. Conference California. .. Pacific Coast Intersectional Games slrefch sczson, has a notes tomorrow when two whose feams stood at the 1824 come to grips at South Tnd. These are the elevens of Dame, national champions of 1. and Baylor university of as, champions of the southwest- e conference, Watch Notre Dame Notre Dame's showing this season, on fop of the loss of all eleven regs ulars of Knute Rockne's 1024 title- (holding array, will be one of the items of major inferost. It seems mnlikely that the Hoosicrs will pre- sent anything like the formidable front they displayed last year, with {their famous “Four Horsemen' lead= ing the charg t Rockne has & wealth of good-material with which ito carry on Red Grange Again Many of the individual satellites of 1924 have passed from the grid- e but the most brilliant of »d Grange of Tllinois—will ba back to captain his team in his final season. Will he be stopped or will he carve I lasting place for himself in the {football hall of fame? These ques- {tions will he also of major interest in a campaign which will taks |Grange throngh eastern as well as |western flelds, for Tllinols meets |Pennsylvania at PhiladelphiA Oe- fober 31 in one of the season's most important intersertional con- tosts, array of brilliant confliets, east and {Other Goli Matches Played al ’“ Shuile Meadow v ' ance standard est, with more than twe seore in- ing through the The following club championship matches at the Shuttle Meadow ciub bave been played: 1. Wright defeated n‘ !, Mer- win, 5 up 3 to play; W. . Cololan defeated L. C. Booth, 4 u]) 2 to play; | P. B. Stanley defeated . R. Man- ning. 4 up 8 to play; W. J. Sweeney ldcteated Rev. S, Suteliffe, & up 4 to ! Iplay; N. L. Wright defeated A, B Porter, 5 up 3 to play: C. W. Man ning defeated C. E. Mitchell, 4 up 3 to play. T the score | E. M. Hayden defeated 1Y {Smith, $ up 2 to play; L. W. Young | defeated I' A, Searle, 4 up 2 to pla; . B. Baldwin defcated I, H. Shields, {6 up 4 to pla A. Porter defeat- ed Wachter, 3 up 2 to play. | ‘The President’s trophy eompetl- tion has just been completed. The ltrophy, a silver platter, donated by | | President Howard Humphrey, was | |won by David Manning, who defeat- ed €. W, Wilson fn the fiual round. George Rogers won the second 16 prize hy defeating A. B, Porter in {the final round. CITY BOXERS WIN Jimmy Clinch and Gene Rene Win Bend, Notre second 16, following are the ' California’s Record Out of the disastrous train of up- sets only one winning streak among Decisions in Bouts at Palais Royal Tast Night (Continued On Following Page) t Jimmie Clinch, New Britain's bat- fler. met Tony Weld of New Haven in the semi-final bout at the Palais Royal, Hartford, last night,’and was awarded the decision of the judges at the end of the third round. Clinch did practically all of the leading and forced the fight all the way. Gene “K. 0. Rene. another local boxer and a pupil of Clinch’s, show- ed his wares in the curtain-raiser. This bout proved to be a hummer, |and at the end of the third round the judges declared a draw. In the | |fourth session, however, Rene elearly showed his superiority and awarded a well-carned decision FOOTBALL $1.00 $9.50 SPECIAL— HADFIELD I\ BT s $15,000 s valued Real Folks at Home (a barber) MASSAGE THAT Tornic Q1D oFf AwD Gave wme couR BiTS[ (* ) CHRILS TiNE AAD A CusTOMER wHO EulBn A SINGE SHAMPOL - HELLOD EARY) S READY , floDAY Toom EVERY ~ CLarv Tow uP OM THE SUCKER ME SAID YES Yo EVERY THING SIXTY CENTS ONLY ONE WOMARN DvD ' @ = ' CHRISTINE | HAUE A TRIM—~-TTUL FOUR DoLLaks w TIPS ny \Jm ISN T i, FimE! PoOR JAKE ' HE WAS STUCK U TH MOST OF THE WOMEN AnD CHILDREN ToDaY:: NO HAVE HE HAD BAD LuCk WELL S NCE WERE HAUING ELECTION C HOW ABOUT AND A Sin s WEATHER DID ThE ' T You SHAMPOO s You Shout O 3 ) o To RIGHT, awar e A anC