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sesgntninne ebes 21104222221I2IITINIIIIILL, NORWALK BRlNGlNG STRONG TEAM TO MEET ALL- NEW BRITAIN—FALCONS OF NEW BRITAIN . TO FACE FALCONS OF MERlDEN RANGERS HAVE TOUGH DISH ON MENU TOMORROW —FIRST REAL TEST FOR COLLEGE FOOTBALL TEAMS TODAY —BOX SCORE 3383303000000 IIIIIEIIIIININIINIINNNNNNTINIIIINIIN ITIIPINIMIILI L, Nl]RWAlK OUTFIT HERE TOMORROW Tackles All New Britam at! Willow Brook Park NSO All-Norwalks eston All-New Britains arl Bean Alford v . NVOB® uoswairarein Smith Left C Rogers (Capt.) srennan (Ca pt.) Humphries .. Leonard Right Guard Donlan « Terloy Connelly . Leone Radzewich Zehrer ... . W. Smith Neale . +ves Dora ‘Right Halfhack Barnlkow ... ... Mullaney F " The All-New Britain football team, which caused the entire West Sides team of Hartford to be fired after Jast Sunday, and which sent many of the backers of the team to “the cleaners’ will meet the fast travel- ing All-Norwalks at Willow Brook park, tomorrow afternoon. The kick off s set for 2:30 p. m. Tt is expect- ed that the contest will have much bearing on the professional football situation in Connecticut, a defeat for either team putting it out of the run- ning for the state title. Here in New Britain, the fans just now regard the Al Britains as one of the best clubs that has sported the A-N. B, livery in some seasons. In taking on the All-Norwalks, the lo- cal management belleves it has se- cured a fast eleven that will force the issue every minute of tomorrow's game, Tf confidence means a thing, the visitors will prove to be a stub- born rival Down in the Twin Cities, there 1s plenty of feeling that Coach Bren- nan's eleven will romp home a win- ner over Bus Pond's and Dave Dunn’s charges. The localg and the coaches have not looked upon to- morrow's game in the light of a “getup” by any means, and have prasticed hard for the fray. The fact that the AN-Norwalks have shown such tremendous offensive power so far this season is to he reckoned with. I'rom the Norwalks comes the word that the followers of the team are willing ager “plenty” on their favorifes Conch Brehnan promises to uncork a pair of ends that will give the lo- s much to worry ‘aboutt in ‘harleston and McMahon. The Chagleston as a dance has the terp- sichorean knights for | nd this Charleston wiih the All-} sald to be n just as high favor the football fans down state. boy has shown conslderable in kicking this scason, and_ it is wmora than likely that his educated toe will be called into play tomor= row afternoon. . McMahon the maln cogs in the aerial attack that has built up. It 18 not know Freddie Leone, college of Eddi Gergetown will Both are said t generals. Manager bdd sent along the word (o New for the fans to keep “Turk” Smith, the halfback with 1 sev®ral seasons ran oppouents ra ged, while a member New Rochelle, N. Y. tea Able xpeculation is being n meeting between “Tul 220-pound tackle wit and Jack Donlan, t Is ¢ tackle. T . i Britain arc that the El own against the m The attractio ises to bring ont a to with This celebr Coach 1 ennan Iy wt formerly of 1} Hur n defin 1, form slan has Britain, an eye on clacular left is club. Smith Consid ifest ig the Ruub, the 1 ‘,AHH,« m Cits 1eh vaunted tomorrow Tacques will be t ORGANIZED FOR SE."«.SON West Cromwell Team Avera Years and 135 Pounds Hurls Gauntlet Down to Team London Expects to Have World’s Finest Airdrome Lor finest world a quarte now 1 Belore Trees moved and 1o take in lar Whe weomes will 1 space miles of betwee alight READ THE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR YOUR \\L\A\'!S Raub | McMahon | orwalks is | prowess | is one of | | provided fe ston | rly of | for | [HOLY CROSS TACKLES ‘ HARVARD AGAIN TODAY Purple Supporters Think Worcester Boys Have Good Chance This Afternoon, 1ge, Mass,, Oct. 17 (A—T ams of Holy Cross | Harvard will meet in the Harvard [football te and Mid-East Football Menn Stadi ay in thelr sixth clash in six consecutive years. Ior five year: |the Purple of Holy Cross has bowe |in defeat before the Harvard Crim- 0 310 0 In 1920 and 1921, by to 0 in 1922, by 6 to 0 in 192 1d 12 to 6 last year | Confidence In the chances of Holy |Cross were expressed by Purple sup- porters, {f the line holds against Harvard. The Crimson will go futo "u-imv, it is indicated, without the; services of Liddle Nash and Teo Daley. linemeh, hecause of injurics, ¢ Al Miller, specdy halfback, may |not be started, it was sald, due to |overtraining. The probable lineup: | Harvara Holy Cross 8 Karpowich | Sayle ) Left En Linder ....... Norton L f‘V Tdr‘l(m RUGOUP ..cvvvveeneesesqs Colepan Left Guard Macomber Lonergan Bradford Pratt .... . Finn Saltonstall Foley Cheek . . Wise! Crosby .. el . McMahon Left Halfback Miller T '! Halfback Coady Crowley ullback WET FIELDS HAMPERING LEADING GRID OUTFITS| Eagtern Teams Playing Important Games On Slippery Grid- Irons Today New York, Oct grected the four nes ot the ance 17 P—Wet fields | leading football cast today and a con- | tin of rain was in prospect. The greatest battle, from a nation al polwt of view, was the annua betw the championshi | Dame eleven and the soldicrs | West Polnt. Al seats in the Yankee stadium- 00, were sold for the game Knute Rockne said week his team would be beaten, but |the Army was confident for othes | reason. besides that statement. Yale and Pennsylvania, undefeat- ed in {he ecast last season, clash at |New Haven In their firs in 2 years. was the orite but expected. the in- meeting Notre from carly in the contest fa s on ane W stars are i uncertain Prince- 1ad fackles a much improved Middies, which {ton sq | group Hary | that | Crin cran foe in Holy Cross, one that has s the I t a in faces a vet- has se been ard om hs early pace seen contagts for wo ¥ h h total, ‘olnmbus Indiana at outstanding as piled battles Syracuse Indianapolis. games an im Ohio is oting Other eastern Cornell, Colgate and Jeffersor Maric g, Dart novs e ! Mic "the | George T.lttle, was formerly Coach Yost's alde and | conference race last { ern line the | Chicago, Oct. 17 (A—Two inter. eectional games and three clashe; involving western conference titl chances were the cholce dishes on the mid-east's football menu to * | day. I Columbia was the guest of Ohi § at Columbus and Indlana en. tertained Syracuse in the opening o the new Hoosier stadium at Bloom ington. Interest in the conference melee split among the Wisconsin igan meeting at Madison, Jowa. [llinois at Towa City and Chicago W Northwestern in Chicago, On these nes depended the reduction o undefeated teams in the title cam algn from nine to six and th avorites from seven to four. Wolverines and the Wisconsin previous to that one of his sta players. Toth straleglsts have heav Indiana the lead in week, has not non-conferenc: and took Wisconsin's crossed in clashes, Against “Red" Grange, Ilini un tamed terror of the chalk lines, wa pitted Cowboy Nick Kutsch of th Hawks, Big Ten, who ran wild as a “point ja-minute” performer against Louls last week, Illinois has epsedier back field and the advan, tage Of their experience in tw games of nete, while the Ha opposition to date has been negligi s Years of grudge were behind th meeting of Northwestern and Chi go. Two widely sepa brand of aftack were theirs belng prepared runs and short passes while Stagg- men were geared for a powerfu line bucking offenss, Ralph “Moon Baker was back in the Northwest goal two the McCarthy, Maroon backs for grovunc gaining honors, e honors were -Rowe Poly engagement and Minnesota's pre with Wabash was consid preparation for the game next week COMMUNICATED liminary ered Dame pearance of Junlor Basketbal Team in the Ficld This Year, Sports Fditor we hayve iards are what the | the sters? So far, the club to be the v basketball team heard from. hecome of Irving Yahm National Guards Reserves? tended every game at the mory last year, and these sam serve made the admiesio I happened to se Merlden last yoar— n they played th end of the secon tied e-minute period to be heard beginning practice is matter yout em, o junioj Wha and hi. T at price well spent. them play in it was At with the the playec s showed their fine fightin ast fi Meriden ve mi) audience utes the ated the to a GREEK MEETS GREEK Falcon Poothall Teams of | Britain and Meriden Battle In Sil- ver City Tomorrow. after t and tomorre riden when t Polish er- two teams IFalcon batt t iron, e to a Spa put ind played since that uttered dire be done at Merider re met Start (Campaign to Buy Johnson lhsnlnll Team o w Kavanaug palgn 2 wired Judge K.| M. Lantls, comitasioner of bassball, | asking his approval of the plan. have bition v, Tl 1zainst nior team, a team that only 1 Guards 1 to beat last year AS they of basketball Resers s rolle th Natior serves were ab) left the sfloor, the erc L tremendous hand. Afte . (Eddie Hart 1 appra | | | erves werd most or to Merid Trving them referred t you for am yor WILLIAM KENNEDY John Haves W ill Be Qut ader | Of Lehigh Lineup Today Tohn Ha the Le} Rritain 1a vill not tak this tno am tained weel him 1o the hos of this weel badly gauging or s' back and th serape Aok sl ouna he injured with a o8 to REDUCED RATES ‘| For Membership Y.M.CA. Men $10 Boys $5 During October Master and pupll, respectively, lod Badgers, mentor, scoring machines. Michigan downed the while been leading point scorer of the St it . Purple for sweeping end to compete with time and involved in the Notre Daskethall Fan Makes Plea Foy Ap- that the with Boys’ local that bhefore long after Johnny ha {Choice Dishes fo Be Presented on s o 8 o 14 5 14 e r 4 e e s e afeleven, o member call it Fact is, dented. at that, 8 1 MaCorn Beecher Johnson t 2 Hafnes Anderson Giannotta Kall Hulquist Witcox | Veronest t s Moore W © | Mateon n d and an ex 1, 4 v s Meriden's best q | &) ) e o r L | 4 s Mildred Hunter, of St. hag sort of upset tradition at Wit~ tenberg college this season. until this fall it was generally con- ceded that only men were capable | of occupying the rather exacting role | of cheer leader But Mildred took over the cently and has shown that , coax, plenty | leather-lunged folks in Mildred's too good (Copyright, KENSINGTON . BOWLING MILDRED HUNTER IN THREE CHEER LEADING for the even of the or W of the to And she's only N !| On the Afiéys ROGERS BOWLING ALLEYS LB Steam Rollers. Seulpters. Seis] Lk a 406 Berlin Court. s 20 Fagan . S8 65 a0 428 All-Rensington UNIVERSAL LEAGUE Wolves, i Wildeats, 108 ) Mary's O., For up football | joh re- gentler sex can en- ever you want to yelling from the stands, be a freshic rvice, Inc.) Leader For Foothall Eleven INTER-SEGTIUNM SHE MAKES THEM YELL---YOU BET SHE DOES [iAME_S__[lN_ T[]l]AY Mildred Hunter Upsets Traditi on At Wittenberg College By Taking Post As Cheer Poses Priesser Peterson Cinndromw Larson Heln a Wensels. 107 Special Mt I Crowley's b at Unionyill stars, New DBri 02’ 101 10 108 105~ Y Stedman Newton 111 121 (1 124 00— 3 98— a1 - Buteau S 541 461 CASINO BOWLING Dalls. ALLEYS Burnham W heeler Rosenswelg Flatelier Champlin . Outers, Vils COMMERCIAL BOWLING ALLEYS CORDIN SCREW LEAGUR 433 RY LEAGUE ks, e BT 21 | PRETTY STOUT LINE Olio State showed it had a pretty stout line when it Kept that gre Chicago backfield checked through- out the ut bhetween the i two schools at Windy City. | When you' ting McCarty, Marks, Timme and Francis you arc doing something a hit out of {ordinary. And that's what | Buckeye forwards di x rec the most of the the |and forced the fighting. ARHY-NOTRE DANE GLASH IMPORTANT Game in New York Is Real Test Tor Both New York, Oct, 17 (#-—A deter- mined Ariny mule today turned two menacing hoofs to the annual Notre Dame football invasion in an cffort to stem a triviupbant mageh which las crushed all opposition for more thun a year on the gridiron The meeting of these two major clevens of east and middle west this afternoon at o'clock in. the Yankee stadium marks their elev- enth strug Only two of the contests have been won by thé Cadets—th imies in 1014 and 1916, In 1916 the Army piled up its high- est score, a total of points, all made by the hard-running Gene Vidal, Light of the other were won by Notre battle in 1922 was a scoreless tie. Notre Dame, while unbeaten this year, has brought east u scoring machine of high power as yet un- fried against powerful opposition. Toduy's game presents the first big test for the new Rockne team, a linc-up niude conspicu by the absence of the famous * men”—Layden, Crowley, and Miller. Army, on the other veleran machine, heavy and power- ful—an outfit claimed to be even stronger than the lineup which was beaten in a close ga 0 by Notre Dar An attend- of 65,000 cxpected hut the corps was not permitted to to New York today, The probable lineup Notre Dame Crowe (C) nine games Dame while the Stuhldreher hand, h come Army ot Baxter (C) left end J Smith HA0HG . Sprague loft tack] DSBS . Schmidt 1oft guard Maxwell ... Mayer ... Seeman Mamnion . Saunders right end Edwards ... . Harding f(\\al'h‘rl»mk O'Boyle el . left halfback Hearndon .. . Wplson Hanonsek . . HewetL | Eagles and East Side Teams Clash Tomorrow | The Eagles football fepm wili Ik up against the t flde A, C. eleven tomorrow afternoon in a me that promises to be a thriller. » Kickoft will take place at 2:30 sharp. The Zast Side team 5 been putting in some hard prac- licks and after defesting (he Holy Cross cleven, is confident that the Eagles will be the next vietims. he following men will appear in the field for the East Side club: Kebhel re, Gordon rt, ¥. Sody Joyce ¢, E. Sody lg, Gokel It, custon le, Lindgren q, Friden Ostertag 1hh, and Leonard fb. C flnad|an Champ Gets Decision Over Lynch Vancouver, B. C., Oct. 17 (®— Yvie Foley, bantamweight champion of Canada, was given the unanimous decision of the judges over Joe Lynch of California after ten rounds of fast boxing last night. Foley led way during the bout. In the third he went down to one knee Lynch was the o'cloclk T8, Thor- rhb. cantioned several times during hout for butfing. Movie ADDRGSSES AnD STARTS cwe A CROUCHING 80— 284 BALL VAGGLING Now GNTERS WAGGLE FoR 2, MINUTE of a Golf Wiggler Loox S COURSE = ue TowarD T AND WAGGLING LSHIETING GAzZES TAE COURS WAGGLES S5AVAGELY - INT ONTINUE S AMD ETTLES Dowmn To RT g IERKY \E " | format ur Horse- | Trapnell | WAGGLES IITIISTININTILINNIT L COLLEGE ELEVENS FEARING GOLUMBIA Blue and White Seems to Have Exceptionally Strong Team New York, Oct. 17 out for Columbia! That's the warning cry bein sounded in eastern gridiron circles And well it might be, r the Blue and White insti- tution appears to have an excep- tionally strong eleven this rall. Columbia hasn't sponsored a real, first-class outfit s the old days of revoiving tandem tions, guards back and so on; plays that were favorites before the forward pass and open style bt game canfe into vogue. For several scusons football even taboo at Columbia. Only in the last few years has it been placed on the regular sport calen- dar again. Last fall Columbla boastcd fairly formidable aggregation beat some of t best schoole the east and he the Pennsylvania team to a tory. And Penn, it will be recalled, | had one of the outstanding elevens in the country. Much of the 10924 success was due fo the work of the late Percy Haughton, one - time Harvard coach, who took over the Columbla destinies last fall. Haughton passed on before the end of the season. But he had im- bued the Blue and White gridders { with the same old spirit which had | made Crimson teams famous and had sturted the renowned Haugh- ton system nicely, so that Head Coach Crowley was this fall able to carry on where Haughton had left off. In its early games this campaign Columbia has shown plenty of power on both the offense and de- fense, On the attack, espeelally, the Crowley machine has brought back the days of same of Colunibia’s fumous teams — outfits feared by | 411 opponepts. In Captain orge Pease (he Blue and White boasts one of the best quarterbacks of the scason, Pease Is a triple threat, He's fast, a remarkable ball-carrier, accurate passer and can punt and drop-kick As a broken ficld runner he has few, if any, superiors, Kirchineycr is also a star of the highest order, ‘When Walter Koppisch gradu- ated last spring prospects didn't look so good for the Columbia gridders. IFor he rated one of the greatest backs the. Blue and White ever had. But even minus the ‘great Kop- pisch, Columbia seems to be on its way to the most successful cam- paign' it has enjoyed since the old | days. “Watch was a 1t in powertul 10-7 vic- PLAY IN ROCKVILLE The Eagle A. C. football team wiil meet the fast Ramblers A. C. eleven of Rockville in that city Sunday afternoon. The Ramblers are re- puted to be one of the strongest combinations in the state, The fol- iowing men will report at the South End Drug store Sunday at 1 o'clock: *Tubby” Backshaw, Mar- tinelli, Deodorian, Boticelli, Luc: Mauro, Naples, Keifer, Bengston, Darrow, landino, Johnston, Boyle, Mauro and Barta. HAS REAL BACKFITLD Syracuse has a formidable back- field quartet in Captaln _Foley, Clarke Carr and Meister. The lat- ter has been a sort of surprise, hav- ing displaced Barbuti, regular, in the recent game with William and Mary. Foley, at quarter, is the out- standing star. BRIGGS ADOPTS A LONG SWEEPING /\WAGGLE FOR A MINUTEAND AJHALF FINALLY AFTER 40 oR FIFETY WAGGLES LAYS FACE OF Cuwul BAack ofF BAaLL y “6 wv-((fsr'l 76 p »‘J»