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Second String Pitcher On Athletics Record Performance Against the Cubs—Mackmen Are Favorites to Win Again Today—Mack’s Pitch- ing Selection Is Just As Much of a My cago Will 1’1‘c~em a Fighting Front After Opener. until Exact Hack Wilsor of the Cuh Wilson 1 a line iri wh putouts i After Mr 8o thorougt choice, nvmu was r today ¢ tactician 1 Cubs to ex i the Mack we tation st mood will Pr Athlctios Th v4 rting pitcher record among e OF FIRST SERIES BATTLE ’ Staft Turns in stery—Chi- * IMPORTANT GAMES | NEXT SATURDAY L 0 Football Acoounts May Be| i o Settled Between Rivals ame indi- a settling it's a tossup, quite cer- pre all in favor of 1 other: rest it appe: cations g the worm won't be given > to turn. categor Pitts- with West who with the onl Virginia's JIMMY F tie by D gle victory a Weslevan over W wit 15 to have venge last | huskers looked un- inst Southern M 0XX 29 EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, I NEW BRITAIN HIGH TO BATTLE PITTSFIELD FOOTBALL ELEVEN IN GAME HERE SATURDAY—HOWARD EHMKE IS BIG HERO OF FIRST GAME IN WORLD SERIES—CHICAGO FANS PLEADING FOR HITTERS TO GET GOING — IMPORTANT GRID GAMES EHMKE IS THE BIG HERO STEPHENSQN ed with all the deadliness of Boy "“ 2 Rexeect ll“i: Rine Rl Scouts hunting bumble bees with an | (oam Wil be looking for revenge s, | when it arrives in this city. It i) weathor Upragiotion foriinel| Lo L EULBIATASEOINSIE ik Jeanc: deyiwanBifals with W sentleishirting i & S0 0 B ASE AARCEE ST B winds Murderer's Row, striking | yo .05 o ':";;n]_l"q Lo, out, provided the shifting wind Coach Cassidy before the opening HIGH SCHOOL TEAM MEETS PITTSFIELD ON SATURDAY Only Intra-State Game On Schedule of Local Eleven to Be Staged At Willow Brook Park—Bay State Crew Has Been Beaten Twice By Hardware City Crew— Visiting Delegation to Present Much Stronger At- tack This Year—Cassidy Relies On His Squad. ; i Trootball fans of this city will se (h- only intra-state high school 1l game on the team’s sched- Saturday when the Pittsfield, “hool will come to this third year in suc- Tl] SEE THE BAIL i that the New Britain and lutely Gmleless in Game 9 | years a go with a after a s This was record of no d many vic- rchusetts son of Chicago, Oct. 9 (A—Today other day, according to the police, is an- | f torie but yesterday the Chicago Cubs|eleven's second last game and when couldn't hit the broad side of a | the final whi was sounded it barn. found itself on the lower end of the. score, Murder's Row was so guileless it | couldn't even have been convicted of st year New , Bri [ eled to Pit eld and in high trav- e that tea running a stoplight. 1f base hits | had been committeemen there "‘r ’“‘1 BUie ol aetnon Hon woulln't have besn enough for o (*°0 Ib W5 the zecond game on the schedule of the Bay State team. quorum. Murderer's Row perform- | Thirteen of the Cubs' brutal bats of the Pittsfield season the team men struck out, which is approxi-| \i;l e o strong sntfit and will be | mately” 897 atrokes on any course: | e of giving the Red ang Gold not! tol mention meverall othar Ghi- [T EHEE BN IS SOOERE S S | cago civic uplitters who almost!jivoiv that its line will be as heavy || el Gty |as that of the Cassidymen who av- Best of all, from an atmospheric, era a higher weight than most ndpoint, the boys fanned in a h'::\ln,,n school teams. They went down swinging like | garden gates in a Kansas tornado. | Hornsby, Witson and cuvier, who| UNPIRES NOT BLAMED occupy c No. 1, 2 and 3 in Mur- derer's Row, fell twice by strike- what doubtful classes University-Ford- Polo G the Hill in Chamy 1ships. Mexico City r\{l'f\fl 4 the ating t v, Californ uth Ora rounc had ¢, defeatin Alfonso U'nda > ) on, Claude Butlin. e 6-2, 0-4 1 Kinsey showed his| “rpg 61g game has changed consid- 1 m to beat Perez Cozio, | araply, but it is still the same. The ‘ | Cubs, T think lost because Root \ of San Francisco, | ought he could slip h st one woman player of the | guar“the plate on Foxx with two . g defeated Mrs. Ogilvie | sirijces and no balls. His guess was Josephine Cruick- | qg gooq as anyone's, except a sccond s U defeated Maria | guegger. And the fact that Foxx hit Marion ~Willams | jt over into the bleachers is all that i neon Gallardo, 6-1,{ counts. It he had shot it over and | $ Gladman, Califor-{ caught Foxx asleep he would have y 5 at Christina Villaurrutia, 6-2, | been a hero, , st As for flelding and inside play— P the doubles Misses Cross and | B > 4 ing. He had her ,;1if§,=,f\‘,~ (:»Oru:‘n-d FuAlE Sogucqand | S T RN eRy I8 char dniey Dl the ! e e | e T o Feingey | EAme differently now. Some fellow bal Y bt Ll | bunted yesterday and the crowd v 1 1 o : cated Franz Gerdes and |y, op0y a5 i they had forgotten the 1 i Sloyly 1 his | Gomez Palaclo, 6-1, 6-1, 6-0. {bunt. I liked McCarthy's general- i | Mack looked up from his| =5 ship, even if it lost. He first balled paners L-OUT Ehmke a couple of times and came | On the desk they lay en v Oct. 9 (UP)-—Madison | near turning the ball game upside int that Ehmke Garden officlals expect a|down, but Ehmke, after being fooled i out of the majors, | for the Al Singer-Leonard | those two times saved himself by H an ontc 1 a discard. o featherweight bout Friday. | fine pitching. He mixed up his curve K | “Howard” said Ma in that a newcomer to the Gard- | which has an upward tendency, and kindly, fricndly tone uses in | en, has established o reputation as a | he crossed them with a fast curve. spealkin | going to | knockout king and rivals Jack Shar-|He used a slow motion and put a ' ¢ G | kely After listen-|lot of stuff on the ball in the pinch- mke like alin good work- | es. orc than | out” Sharkey predicted that the Jer-| As for the players—they are two v all | erv boxer would become a champion. | fine teams, and 1 think this boy ' Fhat kid will talk himself into a|Cochrane is the best catcher I have R R e seen since Kling. They say he is bet I Pl e L ter, but you'll have to show me be- H Torr| e o T (TS fore I'll believe that. ) is ple Worcester, Mass, Oct. 9 (UP)—| The fine thing to me about this Lt “please Eive | Bocause of scholastic _difficulties, | WOrld's series is to find that a lot / arm hasn't been | Jsapnes Iian of Jersey City, N. J.|Of folks haven't forgotten me. I've ] i | the time to | member of Holy Cross first string |Peen in the oll game for years, and varsity cleven. has been banned | 1e8rning to crack out a freeze proof f Trom (he mame with Rutgers this | 0il 18 simple compared with pitching. ' i Thte hraem fers | we don'tigsk the right mixtire o t ¢ ¢ S e | Vestordey. The backfela dopartment | the. oll the flrst time we can try : this 1 was put through a long drill by | 2E2in, but the pitcher has only one ¥ : e e | guess—and after the ball goes into T 1 i b . b the bleachers he hasn't any chance A | to retrieve himselt. i At | The opening game was almost NEAON | perfectly planned and I think the : ! Athletics deserved to win because _"‘ they took advantage of chances and I they were best when they were \ ; ‘ threatened. We old timers have to of old ULIL stick together, and even if I am : I don't do M rooting for the Cubs I have to root i i 3 give you another for Ehmke. The old head won the HAMISRTURDAY chanc 1 n you tell me your game over the youngsters who will b 4 1 i t I'll take you up. We'll | have their day sometime, : it it way." 1 haven't any criticism to offer of 4 ] meeting in the fower either team. The errors were part i ed a few games suc- of the game and young English had I 1 1 sontinned to work with at least one tough ball to handle be- % 1 ' ways it cause it bounded in a funny way to 1 come | | him. But that didn’t really count— ke o+ i Foxx's home run settled ft. If ot it Hornsby had been able to hit the : e Sl nght T’wo Clgars | ball atall in the third inning the ; 1 et ¥ ehane Thei result probably would have been : then he was pointing for the | and Compare Ul | difterent, as it probably would have T | meant that Ehmke would have been Cubs | v, 1 lack's selection for the opening Flavors! — | out for a pinch hitter and that Root S 11, $he Ciibs was fi0t Sivhrt | would have finished the game. Yingl ABSENT FROM PRACTICH new ishmbse Takea few puffs of a hand. el 'Iurl';mf, ik Of.h s ].v‘;‘ml!e Hor uriingon, V. infon ot Him os | made 220+ then amyather S K8 L0 /e sl RS o Stk i S Yy a struck Wil 8 - ¢ More than a week cigar. Nnx;(hzrlthmildfrm R T b e g a0 disclsyin "“_2‘ an st back line of the box laying to step £ ce-drawing, even-Durnin in and hit a curve and Ehmke shot Grin Shmke 18 a fin coolness of the 7-20-4, an la fast one past him for a strike, D let your taste choose— |catehing him unbalanced and then A07, of t world series, but when: 3 a |curved him with a slow and then a or Carlson | to omes to me and tells The Cigar of Quality |ast curve. 1t was tine pitching ana ) to piteh. why ch fine control and it doesn't mean that HCLDS van DOWN do not know of any | Hornsby isn't a great hitter. In fact Klem| s [ bet teher than Ehmke n he | you can't fool a dumb batter—it is A ' ¥ right. * | the smart ones who get fooled worst. I e 1 ¥ u 1t you don't read Herald ¢ unmwl You don’t waste time if you read i red, both in the final L. | Ads, you'll miss it Herald Classified Ads., a A « L] Mexican he a, nge, ng the i !\a(lonnl )—The ampion- | quarter-final and s today with Ameri- | § fleld. Bethichem, P and d matches | the voum:v:fl nated the former | .o TOURNRY cONTIGES BROWN SAYS HOME | ’Ifi S”;}-_‘IFEP American Tennis Players l)umlnnle; il JIKINUER o e RUN WON EUNTEST Old Time Cub Star Thmks Foxy’s Hit Was Turning Point By Mordecal “Three Fingered' Brown | (Fai mous pitcher of the old Chicago Cubs) Chicago, Oct. 9 () | world | nave { et I saw m did to us Cubs something did to our suc in the Ofticial Sco Could H: se. Chicago, scorers of lcided to e charge for ninth inni cording to by Ronald sentatlve This dc son prac groun t forced a v the drive \\ould !out when v |it would have been presumed that | ! Cochrane base on ea 5 yl‘_m] thrown out both Simmons andi\m poison i the National Las | FIGHTS LAST NIGHT ‘ 02 apothecary,” he said, “but ‘ | TEAM HAS EASY DAY T U SR ) e | By the Associated Prees | Providence, R. I, Oct. 9 (UP)— 4 3 | " Chicago—Earl Mastro, Chicago, Brown's first string team had an| SAILS FOR EN n jand Bud Taylor, Terre Haute, Ind., | casy day terday with Coach T\)fiai _.\vw York, Oct. 9 (UP)—Britain’'s | draw (10). Salvatore Ruggirello, ‘\mmwnr) devoting most of his| Wightman cup tennis team sailed | Italy, outpointed Les Kennedy, San Itime to th The secon | contest ovi to 0. | today for Princeton and Albie lines. N0 EARNED RUN on the scoring bourd. flourishes he notifies his fielders | that William Wrigley, Jr., re- ture from regular sea- | when to start, when to stop and |auested Commissioner Landis to de- : was taken on the{ihen to take a deep breath, The lay the start of the game a quarter hat English could have fscorecard was going like a windmill Of an hour to give the clients Training varsity pounded the srruhs‘ for a 14-0 victory in a 25 minute| man, is favored to beat Sergt. Sam- | Okla., (10). scrimmage yesterday. Snead, big|my Baker, Fort Mitchel, in their — halfback, made both touchdowns| ten-round bout at the Coliseum to-| Indianapolis—itoy Wallace, In- and kicked both extra points. Miller | night. The bout marks McLarnin's | dianapolis, stopped Young Jack outs. Charlie Root, not a murderer | Jam but a pitcher, was another the fecble | Howard Ihmke two timed. Riggs | Stephenson, up from Alabama and in | | cell No. 4, struck out only once, orers Decide That Mitchell | Which for Murlarer's Row was some | kind of a récord. ave Caught Man at Second | Another factor contributing to the | squalls was Coniie Mack's acorecard. | Mr. Mack never gocs to a ball game 9 (P—The official | Without a scorccard. Tt is not that |erally ascribed to the failure of the | he doesn’t know the plavers' names arbiters to appear upon the field at nor is that he likes to read the ad- |the appointed hour. rertisement. It develops, however, that hun- dreds of ticket-holders were caught in an impassable jam before grand- fles at the moment of Ticket-Holders At One of Gatos Held Up First Game of World Series. Chicago, Oct. 9 (P—Tor once, the umpires are not to blame, and in- sist upon being absolved. The 15. minute delay in starting the first ne of the world series was gen- Oct the world serics have de- xempt Guy Bush from an earned run in the| ng of the first game, ac- | an announcement toda MelIntyre, Chic | Mack uses the program to wigwag iis thoughts and opinions to his £0 Tepre- | employes. By a system of swee ping | stand turns man at sccond on cach of erday, contributing, like the Cub | bres The simplest way of pre- he fumbled and that FOXX | bats a spanking breeze to the fes. | venting play was to delay the ap- e been on first with t“oin\-.qg_\-_ pearance of the umpires, who insist Miller singled. Ordinarily, | mMr Howard Ehmke, who sells they were at the park as early as | tarpaulins when winter comes, was|12:30 o'cloc modest in victory. “Hornsby, Wilson and Cuyler may would have advanced one | ach play even if English e sccond and third teams. | for London today aboard the liner | Francisco, (10) My Sulilvan, St. d team won a scrimmage | Berengaria. The squad, headed by | Paul, outpointsd Jackie Brady, er the third stringers, 12 | Miss Betty Nuthall, included Mr. racuse, N. Y., (10). will be continued [ Michael V the grid clash with Tiger this Saturday. New York—Johnny Dunde | York, outpointed Al “Rube” | berg, Brooklyn, (10). atson, Mrs. D. C. Shep- the | herd Barron, Mrs. B. Covell and Mr. | | Covell, manager of the team. New Gold- VARSITY POUNDS SCRUBS THE FAVORITE New Ha The Yale MCLARNIN = ven, Conn., Oct. 9 (UP)— New York, Oct. 9 (UP)—Jimmy| Tulsa, Okla.—Al Fay, California, McLarnin, Vancouver, B. C., Irish-!outpointed Babe dunt, Poneca City, i[)m()n. Louisville, (5). Booth were on the s\dfs-idohu( as a welterweight I OUR BOARDING HOUSE By AHERN | «THATS A RELIEF o ME ! ~a ] WAS AFRAID ID WIN (T! | ~« BETTER SEND HiM, ANGTHER CARD ,TELLING | HimM TS A FouR-PASSENGER! CAR, AN"-To BRING ALoda | “THREE MECHAMICS ! ~ NoT KhockiNe -TH' CAR, BUT EVEN AT 25¢ HE'LL NEVER GET A «\\ GooD RUN For HES MONEV! “+EGAD « SOMEONE BY THE NAME oF SoL STEIM Wod —THE AUTo -THAT I RAFFLED OFF! weTHE WINKNER IS A STRAMGER 0 ME «~So 1 SENT HIM "A POSTCARD 1o COME AND GET His PRIZE ! «t HM-M-- HE Wod A $l00 FROM OUR FILES 20 VEARS AGO: - WoMAN FLAGS —TRAW WITH PETIICOAT A WINNER UNTIL HE A\ CLAIMS %(rr 10-9- AT 17 i L i t|l——= <