New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 1, 1928, Page 10

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| HIGH SCHOOL ELEVEN SWAMPS PITTSFORD, VT, TEAM—NEW BRITAIN BLUES AND PA , GAMES OF SEASON—BEAGLE SIGNS TO PLAY BASEBALL WITH BIRMINGHAM CLUB—WORLD SERIES DRAMA IS FINISHED ' - |TED HART IS CROWNED T ~ SHUTTLE MEADOW CHAMP MAJOR LEAGUE Waite Hoyt Wins His 22nd DRAMA IS DONE FOR ANOTHER YEAR Game for Yankees and a Bonups of $2,000 by Beating Tigers—Athletics Are Thrown For a Loss by White Sox—Senators Score Victory Over Browns—Cards Drop Easy Game to Giants—Cubs Take Reds Into Camp. - By the Amociated Press. ( The major league drama is done for another season but the Yankees | and the Cardinals still have an| epilogue to offer. They mieet in the world's series starting at New York on Thursday and ending when one team has won four games. | With both pennant campaigns al- Yeady decided. there was not mnuch to interest the baseball fan in yes- | terday's closing engagements. Most | of the game's faithful stayed away | in large numb-rs, some of them, no o |the Riue, 1b A Danning | Btwenol Bott Wiltse, ed for Blas @oubt, resting up for the excitement | s to come later this week. With & $2.000 bonus as incentive, Waite Hoyt, right handed ace of Mil- ler Huggins' Yanks, pitched the American league champions to a 7| 10 6 victory over the Detroit Tig Hoyvt ‘had been promised “two grand” as they say in the very best pugllistic circles, if he won 22 games this year. He was cufted about rath- or freely by the Tigers but wen his Peward with the aid of Babe Ruth's B4th and Lou Gehrig's 27th home guns. Already badly crippled. the Yankees narrowly escaped losing @hrig's ervices for the world's| Beries when the big firct baseman wa i truck in the face by a bated Lali ' Ball in the 7th. He collapsed but re- €overed sufficiently to walk off the feld. | “The Philadelphia Athletics finished the season two and a half games back of the Yanks when they were thrown for a loes by the (‘hicago White 8ox in general and Bol 1and, a rookie pitcher from the Mis. | olssippt Valley league, in particular.’ Weiland held the A's to scven hits | &hd fanned nine men; The Weored the only run of the geme i e seventh when Kammi singled home Reynolds from second base. : Goose Goslin's homer with two oh in the fitth was the high spot of Washington's 9 to 1 victory over the Bt: Louis Browns. ‘The Boston Ited Scx romped to an easy 7 to 2 win over the Cleveland. Indians, Phil Todt getting a home fu.. and three singles. i The 8t. Louis Cardinais, their sec- ond National league championship tucked away. did little but go through the mottons at the Polo Grounds &id lest 10 the runncr-up Giants, ¢ to 2. Karl Hubbell and ¥red 4'rankhouse allowed only eix hits apiece but two of the Llows off | the Cardinal hurler were home runs | by O'iFarrell and O'Doul. The Giants thgs finished the scason tvo full sames behind the champions. ‘The Chicago Cubs, in third place, 60k the Cincinncti Reds into camy, 6.to 1, behind 001 pitching Perey Joncs. iThe Brooklyn Dodgers, although ®o higher than sixih place, ended the scascn with one’ nore victory than defeats when the Phillics were met and, conquered, 5 to 1. It was thc firet time sinee 1924 that the Dodgers have finished with a per- ecntage of .500 or betier, The Pittsburgh Pirates, cham- plons. ot the league last yeur but no better than fourth place holders in 1028, and the Boston Braves com- Pleted their schedules on Saturday. American League Wei- | Dursl, 0! Gasefis, 20 Ruth, it .. Pasbal, W Gehrig, 1b ‘Buma, b Rabeggeon, 5 Yiefigovgh. « Grabuwski, Hoyt, p Fothiergill, r( Warner, s ¥ PILATED LA AB B PO WASHINGTON AR Kb &5 Judee. Farri« Has e, Cromin. Bool, Jenes 1 ol sz Dhaa by b Manush run sax to Wil Jones 4 Toerp. Todr Totale - Gerken, 1 Lind b 1 sawell T for Ba mhart in Myart run 7th, i ofn T To Two hit: Mackayden i‘!afio:afi.eague ot 1ligh, 31 lmouucmarumn? Oratti, Latey, i s, oim, rt Thevenow, Totals s NEW YORK i oK Veltman, semzszaz 4 . 2 000 100 200 000 10x—4 Hafey, Holm. Thres Home runa: O'Farrell High to Fiisch to By Frankhouse Dl mrweciwnan> Totals . Louls Aow York Two base hits: Biow it Veionan O'Doul. Doulle pliry Bottemley. Btruck out: 2, Lubbell 1. 001—2 CHICAGO . A R Jones, 1 Drersen. Cincinnath Two bose hite: Cuyler Jones 2 Ha grav PHILADELPHIA oo S wtlern, if g % Thomps n, b Hurst, 11 Whitney, b IKiein, W Vaiin na ams. ot £ Ratted for M s i fata e Dr. Keith Moved To LEONARD BUILBING 300 MAIN ST. Specializing in P ‘l;‘mfh Extraction ess "|Lou Gehrig in runs batted in. {tie with the year of | % | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1928, STIL UNCERTAIN Race Between Goslin and Maw- ush Remains to Be Settled New York, Oct. 1 (P—Although Itogers Hornsby clinched the Na- tional league batting title carly last week beyond any possibilty of doubt American cague battle between Goose Goslin of Washington and Heinie Manush of St. Louis remain- " [ed unsettled until the last ball was pitched yesterday. Final settlement, in fact, will be definitely made only when the official statistics are pub- lished neat winter. Goslin and Manu . grappled down the stretch in the closest bat- ting duel in the younger major league since 11908 when Lacry 14- joic thought he beat out Ty Cobb on the final day Ly rolling five singles down to Red Corriden of i, L.ouis. who played third base back on the gra Larry's five stood, but the flicial averages showy ed Cobb with two or three more safeties than he popularly was sup- posed to have, and the Detroit star %lled after all with a mark ef .324. The semi-official statistics of the lofficial American league statistician show Goslin in the lead over Man- ush toda by the thin margin cf one point, 379 to Unofficial fig- ures throughout cities were at great variance on these two players. And the real troth will be known only when Ir- win M. Howe relcases the. official standing. Neither Goslin nor Manush came anywhere near the figure With which Harry Heilmann won the 1927 championship—.398. Heilmann him- self, strangely poor in even Years and almost fnvarially a champion in the odd, fell off 74 points to .324. Paul Waner of Pittsburgh, second to Hornsby in the 1928 National league scramble wit , won the 1927 championship with an av age of 379, Babe Ruth retained his mastery over both leagues in home runs and in runs scored, but again yielded to The Babe tied 1920 in home runs with 54, making this season rank in a his Yankee debut as his third best major smith remains the only man in either circult who has hit 50 or more home runs. The Babe crossed the plate 162 times this year againat. 158 runs last season, and batted in 144 mark- ers only to see Gehrig shade him by one. The first baseman beat out the Babe last year in runs batted in hy a margin of 175, the majer league record, to 164, although Ruth was setting a_new home run mark of 60 while Gehrig was smasming only 46. Lou opain was second in homers this season, but with ,a mere 27. Paul Waner led the Natienul League in runs scored this year with 141 against the 133 his brother Lioyd and Hornsby brought in last year for @ tie. Paul topped the Na- tional in 1927 with 131 runa batted in, but Jim Bottomley of 8t. Louia took the crown this year with 133, DNottomley also tied Hack Wiison of Chicago for National League heme run honors, each geiting 31. Haek ticd with the veteran Cy Willama of Philadelphia last ecason, each ringing up 30. Cy could get only 12 this year. Jarry Benton of New York retain- ed pitching honors in the National, this time with 25 vietories and only 9 defeats for .77 Last year he won 17 and lost 7 for .70S. Waite Hoyt made it an all-New York proposition last year by taking the American League title with 22 and 7 for .719, but Alvin Crowder, the 8t. Louis star, gathercd the honors for 1928 by winning 21 and losing only 5 for .808. Hoyt's won and loat figures wore identical with those he estab- lished last year National League Batting—Hornshy. Braves .387. Runs scored—P. Waner, TDirates 1 . Runs batted in—Dottomley, Car- dinals, 12 Total hits—Lind:trom, Giants, 23§ Doubles—P'. Wancr, Pirates, 51. Triples—Bottomley, Cardinals, 20 Home runs—DBoitomley, Cardinals, —Wilson. Cubs, 31. Stolen bases—Cuyle Pitching— Benton. nts — von . lost 9; percentag 9. an league Cubs, 36, ~Ruth, Yankees, 162, Yankees s batted in—Gehrig, al hits —Manu: h, Browo Donbles— Manush, lirown, Triples— Combs, Yanlee Hotie runs Stolen bases— Mycr, Pitching—Crowder, 21, lost b: percentage . INDIANAPOLIS LEADS Tao Teams Mec A series to Clash n Todey in Fourth Contest, By |y Y. 1 ®—In- | ianapolis was lcading Rochester one game in the little world | series today as the two teams trav- led to Indianapolis v here they will Lrenew the confest on Wednesday. "'l‘h-- Indians took yesterday's game here 5 to 1 which gave them to the Red s one, | ®wetonic in the first game 3 o 2 pitched yes- terday and held tae Wings helpless. Rochester's lane win was the s ond game which they took 10 tn The third on €aturday resulted ina 12 to 12 tie after darlnees ferced @ halt at the end on the 12th inning Games will { polis Wednesd, urday with a =ary to de- Rochester, N, Oet, played In Indiana- . Thursday and Sat- nday game if neces- haseball. hit o LPar in - the major league | league campaign. The Yankee swat-: | during the day. Manni hole and the 18th with 1z in Little World | who humbled Rochester the champlonship of Defeats Clarence Manning —Sensational Golf Excites Large Gallery of Spec- tators—Morning Play Hampered by Rain — Win- ner’s First Crown — Considered to Be One of the er!lkilll Players at the Club—Play by Play. (By Jdigger) A new champion was crowned at Shuttle Meadow yesterday when Ted Hart heat Clarence Manning six and four in the 36 hole final cham- round in the rain. Hart shot 40 on the lower nine to be one up at the turn. By winning the 10th, 11th, 14th, 15th, 16th, and tying the 12th and 13th holes he finised the round four up after Manning captured the 1ast two holes of the upper nine. The cards. Morning round: Par out ... 445, 443, 553--37 Hart 4 453, 563—40 Manning 546, 3 6o4—41 434, 445—34 Hart 434, 443, 46638 T8 Manning B44. 454, 555—dn 81 Hart's play on the first nine was better than his opponent's and ex- cept for a few slips he shot the holes perfectly. He got six pars, five of which won holes. Hia four on the 335 yard fourth hole was not good enough to win or halve it as there Manning got a birdie three. Going one over par on the second and eighth holes he lost them. Both took fives on the fifth hole. Ted played steadily with his woods and iron and wan very accurate with his put- ter. Manning had dificulty with his irons, clubs with which he usnally excels. That upset the rhythm of the rest of his game and neither his ap- proaches nor his putts were up to his best. But at that he often made €004 gecoveries. His 20 foot putt to win the fourth hole was a “Calamity Jane” special as the stroke was christened by Fred Chamberlain. Ted started off the upper nine by playing par and taking the 10th and 11th holes. Manning saved himself a half on the 12th by sinking another long putt. The next hole was tied with fours when both players miss- n Hart then scored three more pars to win the 14th, 15th and 16th holes making him six up. . On the 17th tee Hart missed his drive for the first ahd only time hg took that & pair of fives ending the morning * round four down. He took a 40 to Hart's 38 com- ing in. The gallery which had been fol- lowing every shot melted away to talk over at the Sunday dinner table a round of golf few of them could equal. Half of a match which had |displayed a voung player making his sHots like a coming champion. A contert in which a four times cham plon had never heen ahead of hi new rival for golfing honors. It was a battle to go back to iIn the afternoon. Others who had heard about. the turn of affairs hastened te the course when the weather cleared and the sun came out. A large crowd followed the match during the last 18 holes of play. Displayed on the mantel over the tire place fa the grill room of the club was the silver platter lnown as the “Directors Trophy for the “‘Shuttle Meadow Club ' Champion- ship.” Manning, Manning., Sweeney and Bweetser it was inscribad. One more win and Clarence would take it to have and to held. But he had before him the task af getting back four holes rend to victory. Beside the grand prize wrs 8 earving set which would go to the loser of the day's match. Ted, just having st up housekeeping, is well supplicd with cutlery gnd decidel he did not need turkey or crow mo he teed off de- termined to hold his advantase. Manning missed his drive and an iron shot to get off to a poor start. Hart drove 225 yards into the edge of the rough to the right. He shot an iron just short of the green. Manning approached to thin a foot of the cup and the gallery feit sure that Clarence myas hack on his game, When Hart chipped past and to the left of the pin and then putted past the hole four feet it looked as though Manning might win the hole but Tod holed his putt and the 19th hole was halved. On the 20th Manning put his ge- {eond shot within a couple of feet of the pin while of the green. ¢ tiole out Toth | rairway on the well up the faircay in two toward the flag sitiuated 548 yards from the tee. Neither got on in threc and | voth took two putts to halve with Using an iron cff the T on the 22nd hole Manning proached four foct Hart took three to get on and then heokicd to the left of the & hole tec ap- | Caren |duce Hart's lead fo two holes. But that proved fo be the could win though he next four holes in par that he often had to muke did tie | wus playing steadily. Bxamplea of th on the it a chort hole wore M second shot he | had to come out of a ! enongh to the cup to got The pace be he missed a. fhrec foot putt to lose the tor all trap 1 five. his =pl come: do his best he could not gain the lead by a single hole. Bt he was game to the Jast. puit. Hart drove & long ball on a day when en pionship match. Playing the morning | ed short: putts to win with a three. | before he wos on the | the set to carve | fart's ball was ghort ce took the hole in three while Ted needed a five to and went | from the pin. got another birdie to re- last hole he the But to do akillfrl recoveries against an opponent who furnished holes. Om the > ning juct missed go- two |ing into the brook and after his had fo hole a five foot puit. On the following hole he near an 1o teil and when ith {0 go three down, Manning Wdid fighting quali- {1irs had too big a handicap to over- | In Final Round of Tourney ! with his second. Manning was short |on his drive and in a trap short of [the green in two. He came out nice- Iy but Hart took the hole with the regulation two putts to become four up. He increased his lead to five after { Manning failed to get out of a trap |in two tries on the short 28th and Ipicked up. Then Hart saved a hole by laying a stymie which Manning did not get around. The 30th hole was halved in fivess The short 31st hole was halved [ with threes und Hart was five up and five to play. A win or a tie would win the match and championship for [ Hart on the next hole. Krom the [back tee the outlook ahead was {bright or dark depending upon | which contestant viewed the narrow opening to the fairway. “Martha's Vineyard ' to,the left and the gallery lined up to the right. 88 vards away futtered the flag which would b lowered for the putts and that might_wave for the victor. | The® spectators could not see the | tee but they heard a crack as wood [met ball and Hart's drive sailed | down to the 200 yard mark. There | was another crack but this time a | ball had hit wood. Manning’s tee | shot crashed into a tree and glanced !ofi out of bounds over the “Vine- |vard." The gallery sighed in sympa- |thy for the game golfer who saw his | |1ast chance to keep in the running! g0 aglimmering. But he fought it out te the pin | and just missed getting a long putt |to halve the hole in five. Two good | golfers shook hands over the hole. | One had been able to keep on top | of his game to the end of the rounds | while the other was below the stan- | dard of his golfing ability. | By his record during this tourna- ment and especially in the finals yes- | |terday Ted Hart has placed himself | | well toward the front of the ranking | players of Shuttle Mcadow. He has | demonstrated that he can play stead- | ily whether ahead or behind and turn in scores in the 70s. He will be a hard man for aspiring champions to bent in the future, now that he has his name on that platter. Afternoon cards: Hart, out—b556 543 | Manning, out—536 Hart, in—435—35. Manning. in—5x5—36. b 553—41. 343 554—38. Betting Odds Are on St. Louis Team | Due to the Fact That Yankec Players Are Injurcd. | New York, Oct. 1 (UP)—Betting odds, favoring the St. louia Cardi- | nals to defeat the New. York Yan- /kees in the tworld series, ha | lengthened rapidly since the two ' major league pennant races were | decided. The original odds offered by New York gamblers were 6 to 5 on the National league champions. Over- | night these went out sharply to 7 to 5 and then to 10 to 7, even be- |fore a majority of the sporting | gentry had heard about the injury |to Lou Gehrig. who is bringing back la badly swollen face as the remult {of an encounter with a batted ball | in Detroit. | | The 0dds are 5 to 4 on the Cardi- nals to win the opening game, but 12 to 5 against the National league club winning the first two games of the serivs, HE DIDN'T WASTE AND NQW LOOK AT NEXT PRESIDENT 12 the 25th hole and went on the green ! Colling, New York . LOOK AT HERBERT HOOVER = WHEN HE WAS A BOY YouR AGE | 1@ STUDIED HARD HIS TIME RUNNING WILD ARCUND TowN - / Vg HIM- PROBABLY OUR ) SORSELEEICESNSLAISE0E8802050084RE48E0000005000ED500 80D WNEES BOTH DEFEATED IN FIRST ©c02000500 " YANK BATTERS ARE [NEW BRITAIN HIGH TEAM BEATS l_’[l_TS_l_’OkD ELEVEN Local Huskies Come Through In First Game With Vie- BETTER ON PAPER Lead St. Lousans by Thirteen Point Margin New York, Oct. 1 (—The Yank- ces enter the world series with a paper offensive 13 batting points greater than that of the Cardianis, but with much of this theorstic advantage offset by injuries to star players who helped compile it. ‘The aunouncement today that Larl Combs had suffered only a sprain und not a fracture of his vight wrist in Detroit last Thursday bolstered Yankee hopes as his .310 bat did much to help the American league champions along (o their team average of . Babe Ruth, Mark Koenig and Tony Lazzeri, who outhit the'r re- spective Cardinal rivals by generous margins, are handicapped by injur- ies of one degree or another, and the loss of any one of them would more than eit up any batting mar- gin which may be left to the Yank- ces. Alarm was felt particularly over the condition of Lazzeri. but the Signer gamed his way through the last three weeks of the American league season when the Yanks had to have him. Perhaps he can re- peat in the title ceries. Have Bad Reputation The tradition of hitting has re- mained about the Cardinals ever since 1920 when Horneby first scal- ed the heights. The fans at large have looked upon the &t. Louisans as uncommonly dangerous with the willow—regardless of the actual av- erages. Tha new champions are by ne means poor batsmen, but they 1all far short of being the hardest swatsmiths in even their own league and in dual league statistics rank fifth to the Pirates, the Giants, the Yankces and the Athletics. Make Wits Count Cardinal feams of recent years have known the knmack of making the most of their hits, however, and the runs have pattercd over the plate when needed. The National league invaders will be forced to make the most of their drives when the cham- pionship series starts at the Ruppert stadium on Thursday if the team bat anywhere close to their season's performances. The 8. Louisans will be substan- tially outbatted individually in five | of the nine positions on Thursday | with, Combs in center field. Unless Dugan resumes his post at third base, six Yankees will enter the game with a margin over their various Cardinal rivals. S The series will bring together the | rospective league leaders in runs| batted in, and will pit the American league home run champion against the man who tied for four base| honors in the National. Babe Ruth's | margin of 54 home runs to 31 over Jim Pottomley gives the Yankees a DLig bulge in long distance clouts, but | Sunny Jim's 133 runs batted in com. | © more favorably with Gehrig's 145. The Averages The final batting averages of the regulars and the reserves on the rival World series clubs and the team marks follow. : Catchers Wilson, 8t. Louis .. Bengough, New York Smith, St. Louis ........ Grabowski, New York 264 1363 .239 .238 223 First Basemen Gehrig, New York .. Bottomley. St. Louis . Second Basemen New York . 3t. Louis i Third Basemen | Louis 286 1 373 325 High, st (Continued on Following Page) When a Fellow Needs a Friend WELL Look AT AL SMITH For THAT MATTER / To 7 3 K 775 You 7 oy, 01 | High schoor ‘and Aléx Zaleski tory by Score of 19 to Completely Outclasses Tears Off Beautiful 44 0 — Hardware City Outfit Opposing Crew — Zaleski Yard Run—Forward Pass- ing Is Spectacular—Account of Play. A big red army of huskies who lare to represent the New Britain on the gridiron this year met @ team of warriors from the Green Mountains of Vermont. the Pittsford High school team, at Wikllow Brook park Saturday aft noon. After a weries of crashing line bucks, long end runs and off- tackle smashes by the New Britain team, it carred home the fruits of victory to the tune of 19 to 0. Crowds at the opening game of the New Britain High school sea- son are never very large, but there was a large crowd aL the game Bat- The New Britain team out-classed its opponents and because of this. one-sided ad- vantage there was litue enihusiasm shown. Probably the most exciting event which teok place in the afternoon was a beautiful 44 yard run by Alex Zaleskl on a skin tackle play between Pittsford’s right tackle and right end. He ran straight for the goal line, but e was stopped within four yards of the line on a beauti- ful tackle by Ken Muzzy, Pittsford's star and safety man. Pittsford 4id not @e much in the way of offensive pl In fact it did not score a first down until the third quarter. This was the only earned first down of the game. New Britain made 13 firs, uowns, five of which were scored i succession on a march down the field for the ini- tal score of the game in the first quarter, s Coach Cassidy's team made three touchdowns, all on line smashes. Eddie 8owka went over for the first score in the first quarter. Mike Grip crosed the line for the second carried the ball over for the third. Only once was New Dritain able to score in the try for the extra point. It came about on a forward pass from Sow- ka to Landino. Incidentally the 19 to 0 score was the same as that of last year. In one department of the game New Britain was very successful, its forward-passing attack. In Satur- day's game all the passing was done among: the backfield men. The fowka-Landine combination was very ' effective. Too much should not he expected of a team in ita opening game and at the rame time too much credit for its success can be given. Pitts- ford High =chool team this year was stronger than last year's team, but it was not strong enough to give New Britain High a test and the team’'s followers will have to wait until the Pittefield, Massachusetts game Saturday to get a line on how the team will be this season. The line did its bit when ft smothered Ken Muzzy and the other Pittsford backs for losses on several occasions. The backficld was not called upon for secondary defense work except in forming a defense againgt forward passes. In this last- named department of the game the New Britain backtield did a wonder- ful job. Not one of the Pittsford for- ward passes was completed and many of them were intercepted. The stars of the backficld for New Britain were Zaleski and although fowka did not make the longest ine. his gains were consistent. Zalerki made some nice gains. In the line the greatest work was done by Krank Casale, but every other mergber of the line held up his end. The ends did not have much of a test | since most of Pittsford's ball carry- THATS WHAT | ALWAYS SAYS FosTER WHEN WAS A Bov- CAN'T Go GALLUMPING AROUND Tue STRE ExPEC’ T'BE Tg PrRESIDENT ETs AwD ing the line. Summary of Game Pittsford won the toss and Thomas kicked to Zaleski who carried the ball from New Britain's 37 yard line to its ¢3rd yard line. Bowka hit left tackle for four yards, Grip made {five yard at center, and Landine made a first down on a center plunge. On two successive plunges Sowks made a total of seven yards and Zaleski made a first down. On the next play Sowka skinned left tackie for nine yards but Landino fumbled, recovered, und was able to carry the ball back te its o al place with. in a yard of first down. SBowka car- ried the ball to the 16 yard line for another first down. On a trick play Landino ran around Pittsford's right jend for 15 yards and on the next place Bowka hit center for the first touchdown of the game and the sea. (8on. This occurred five minutes after the game had started. Sowka failed in a drop kick at- tempt for the extra point. The :all was in Pitteford’s possession on its own 35 wyard line when the first quarter ended Shortly after the second pe.io: began Thomas punted to Grip wh carried the ball from New Dritair 35 vard line to ita 48 yard line, | one of the Hardaare City team + oft-side and the ball was brou back. New Britain was penal five vards. Thomas kicked off. on New Britain’s 25 vard line, lino dashed between right tackle end for nine yards and Zaleski 17 yards in the same place o other side of the line. Grip fumbled and Davenpc covered near mid-field. Bog tlipped in and nailed a Pi back in his tracks and a f pass to Thomas was incomp the next play. Grip received 85 vard line. Sowka ran back took a pa the conter and threw a forwr to Landino which netted 2 | Another first down was mac | Sowka ran through right ta 25 vards to the Pittsford ine. Zaleski made 10 yard 11 yard line. Sowka hit the of the line and five more yay clicked off. The bhall was four yard line when Grip c over for a touchdown. Many of the people in the were not aware that a sce been made at this point in t) and when Landtno tried t the hall over for the extra po were gure no touchdown he made when he fumbled. Tk was 12 to 0, 8owla received the hall Kickoff and carried it from h 25 yard line to his 45 yard lin the first play he threw a be pass to Landinn and a total vards was made on Ahe play. { halt ended on this play. Second Half Sowka kicked to Pittsford o first play. Umpire Nixen ruled a forward pass thrown by a F | ford back was complete when A | Grip roughed the receiver on Pi | ford’s 44 yard line. Pittaford pu d to New Britain's three yard Iii\ This was the only time in the gam| | that the Vermont team. had bee| near its opponent’s goal line. After the Red and Gold team La | failed to gain Sowka kicked out 13 done though the center of | Pittsford. Thomas made four yard at New RBritain's right gusrd an (Continued on Following Page) >l L] . [ h L]

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