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EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER, 15, 1929. ATHLETICS CHAMPIONS OF ENTIRE BASEBALL WORLD Most of Cr bulk of two- of & lead was two i dev g0 ient among the hopeful but whe r too g a ird ning Run Is Scores Haas’ Home R Bishoy e corn foot insic and turn back to | ur Tt ti ir Mille ed the Rally of Mackmen in Yesterday's Game Without Paral- t lel in History of Sport—Two Men Out When Win- | Bishop’s Single Is Followed by | m Over Kiki Cuyler's Head—Sim- 1l of it 1 nin mitted | | | Howard | | | \ | lily ATHLETICS ARE CROWNED CHAMPIONS OF THE ENTIRE BASEBALL WORLD—PICKING HERO IN THE WORLD SERIES PROVES TO BE DIFFICULT TASK—INJURIES TO REGULAR PLAYERS ON HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAM FORM SERIOUS HANDICAP FOUR OUTSTANDING FIGURES IN VICTORY OF ATHLETICS dlule Huas Bing Miller with | RECORDS RROKEN | PICKING HERO OF SERIES 1N WORLD SERIES MACK DISPLAYED PROVES DIFFICULT TASK| Three Figures Are Qutstanding in Victory of Athletics’ (00D STRATEGY FOUR HIGH SCHOOL MEN ARE ON HOSPITAL LIST Injuries to Regular Football Eleven Proving a Severe Handicap to Coach George M. Cassidy—Ross, Za- leski, Dumin and Captain Joe Potts All May Be Out. of Saturday’s Game—Yesterday’s Practice Session Is a Mild Affair—Ends Act as Secondary Defense. Injuries to members of the regu- ds arey 15 atti- | to the progress of the eleven in the t past few s and today there Surprise and - DiSappOIIMEDt chacie norer st S G Shown by Ctb Followers | at the practice session yesterday ernoon, Captain Joe Potts suffered a | four who have been in the regular |a bad ankle. John Dumin, re Chicago, Oct. (UP)—An sprained thumb. Hope is held that | FANS IN [;HIEAG[] | lar New Britain High school football | team have become a severe handicap, Em———— line-up on the hosptial list. Quarter- back Billy Ross is suffering from center in the first two games, is bat tered from serlmmage activities tude of surprise, mingled with dis- appointment, characterized Chicago | the team will be in shape for th baseball fans today as they pondered | Norwich Free Academy game in the downfall of their Cubs. { that place Saturday There was a distinet difference of The practice session yesterday opinion as to whom should bel.pornoon was a mild affair. As yot blamed for the four games {0 ONE|;4thing has been done to improve' |world series defeat that the Dhila-|¢pe forgard pass defense which' delphia Athletics handed the Chi-| g6weq such a glaring weakness in cago :num, : Tunmey got the|\Ne Dittsficld High school contest D since Gene ney g ®last saturday. s proba (O_(.:"M e e Tahen e lay|last Saturday. It is probable that ult Coach Cassidy will instruct his sec- s th prawled on the floor re | |8 d team to work passes against the and no ru {Most of These Marks Shattere | Over Cubs—Jimmy Foxx Hit Mightily in Three of | ¢ld brove and Waiberg as a‘z:‘\_“(:g’]: rom e D o | (ITst eleven 5o that the backfield men | Ehmico Fafled o) Dast | S l . S “d | ) 2 F [L R B l any Eenfonys ore | ©an get used to blocking this attack. | 1 & ’ , as has the Cubs' defeat. ywherc 9 B sho von e e zame | 1 SEVENUD TNING SAtUA] | Four Games — “Mule” Haas Pounded Out Two | First Line Reserve Battalion jas nas the cuns acteat. mverwhere 45700 fans wore e o s of the series in i ol \-1ri did | Ll | Timely Home Runs — Speed of “Lefty” Grove | | query “How did they do it” ;\?\r: g:]::vorrn(}tl‘x(!:lrrin;fi m»:“; ”::: | ST s e e | (M—Despite Shved Mo Conteste ™ Resumelof Events in En(ire[ Philadelphia, Oct. 15 (P—The| Tt seemed unt xllm_(nvw‘“t’o“ 1(1;]“‘[0 Bt e e e tuth and hi B RRHD (D= e REILS | pitching strategy of Connie Mack | Chice o faps that any basehall 245 | it instead move back and work ! yuble starte Sl | |had the ability to trounce thel - : 2 worked too | 5 et 10790 nerieal sy | ] S oy | With the secondary defense in an at- worked o s o Playoff [l favorites ns o Il etlen ol B T iiea St obo i e A X in the clash | |ent from the type of cunning he|yore willing to admit that Phil | S P e ‘l’“ 8 o ! Gidn i 3 S il e cck. This system is one : g c and the Cubs.| Philadelphia, Oct. 15 (/) — The | pitching by Guy Bush, who got out |displayed in the days when he had |adelphia team rated to be xnnknl ek Gl Coaidr Q.m,,\:,.m"p s I aab ot it down when | t2sk of picking the hero of the 1829 | of several bad holes and held two [gender and Coombs and Plank o [as favorite but they were not will {0 (PR FS IV 8 FPOeor T8 T “-“ e et PRty their record | WOrld's series scemed today dif- | A's sluggers, Simmons and FoxX, {send after ball games. Scldom ing to admit that the ies al\o;,mhmn e 'sv‘o 7 ““>\&:rl\”“ iss a big curve for a the seventh | ficult as it was trying to guess Con- | hitless. ~ Hornsby, driving in first |anybody but a member of this im- (have ended four games 1o one, |y o foo W UCESERE (8 518 Ehe < ‘ come | Bie Mack's starting pitcher. run and Cuyler, knocking in other | mortal trio take the mound for tha| They pointed out that [h'-,v/'\,x‘r_'n fi can Ly ihafonane ‘1!“. 2 explained that he 1 pull | There was one herofc figure after | two, snapped out of thelr batting |tall facticlan in world title combat| all the breakss Backing that opin {5 (BT SEouer fOUOmers think L “How 10 {o | another down through the lineup of |slump for first time. Earnshaw |in the days of old, but no fewer|ion Was the superb pitching exhibi- T0 AR uld be out- nd whe | the triumphant Philadelphia Ath- 7S & Sl e S " tion which Pat Malone put up yes- Smarted by a clever quarterback fall fanned 10, going full route, as he|than six men toed the rubber in : | : ; tch, I am anxious @5 foll dast fall- oo The three perhaps that stood , gy : it sl . 4 ' terday only to lose in the ninth in-|Who would fake a forward pass and longatad ! P8 (started his second successive game. |the 1929 classic. Of these only |t & 1s one of | LOE out most conspicuously, after an | vin. i ' > oonae Earn. |ning after he had pitched two hit|then run the end ey Cuyler's running stop And throw on | Howard Ehmke and George Earn-| g . 1 | to go t - lanalysis of the five games, wWere | .’ & pi 19 X o : | ball for eight innirgs. Also there AN B ) of | Haas' hit. holding appa shaw pitched complete games. e » Tes | Jimmy Foxx, young first sacker, his| 3,110 to single in first w Brotesasy iMackisl declalont tollens | i3 Uie (sUnENnIcH Seauatd “‘“L‘WILSON LEAD]NG HITTER letics ' | bat mighty in three of the four vic- | (OR® 5O F 5 | tablish hia two atar left handers,| Yison to allow fly balls to dmni - | tories; George (Mule) Haas), whose | %51 Fourth Gam |the Mesers. Walberg and Grove, as|%fcly. and there were m“m‘mm‘ IN WORLD SERIpS GAMES Mack a exp out twelve | freqi home run was a crucial blow | ie | “r e g‘pn"“ Tavontod thess |others things, such as the failure of | 5 R rove, whose great team in the historic “lucky seventh” of | Won by Athletics, 10 to 8, with |& first line res DLey | Rogers Hornsby to show up to his LPNL0aC, BLoa two masters from breaking into the 5 | —_— 1 Btiped Mg on of [the fourth game and his sccond, | unprecendent rally in seventh, when |10 masters WAl ers ol | customary style, which came in for| ; 3 her ocs of the claasic Uit | man-sized homer the tylng factor in | ten runs and ten hits registered off | Sin1Ing column until, Wallberg pUCL | giscussion. Chicago Center Fielder Who Tost by ! OF (18 wolawslc Bwas alling T ; : led out the decision in the fifth| - ; not enthus- [and in addit ered throughout hmke was admirably held up by |the final contest; and Robert Mmm; four Cub pitchers as 15 men went | o sferdas Lot the Gnalilyliofi| . There was one: opinion uh_m\ e Fricedin he Bin AT oul L s Y & it nee- | Mickey Cochrane, r catcher of (Lefty) Grove, whos southpaw | to bat. Simmons opened attack unn;:‘]'”‘x‘ 3\“"{ e G ‘m}mi {n |seemed almost unanimous and that s Sun / to utilize his ¢t_ |the Mackmen, and Hickey thus step- | speed saved two games and was | home run and Charley Root, who | Neif Wor 2 ahps |was that Manager Joe McCarthy Called the ¢ o utilize his lest- | |k : | the official earned run averages, re- | : = ed the Goat. 1 skill solely in emergencies, |Ped into several new fi ree- | ready for a third, only to have the | had pitched shut-out ball for six in- | ' made a mistake when he jerked Mack Among Leaders Jtoke the record for put distinction go 1o George (Rube) g i e yiatdl | lcased today. % [€ broke the record for pu i s S | nings, knocked out after clding xsh(l1 Between them, Grove and Wal h fourteen in the first game | Walberg, another portsider. [initsiny first seven mentoibatd INenE | f ot e S on led an assist to top the marlk | There was, also, the chunky fig-| nit for freak homer by Haas to cen- | C 8 2 s S chances ure of Jimmy Dykes, with the high | run, that one unearned. Each pitch As n- ter on ball Hack Wilson lost in the { Charley Root in the first game 2 ~ [the pitcher had hurled three-hit ball Wilson, considered by many the goat © | for seven innings. The fans seemed | of the world sc s the leading - |to think that the first game would | slugger in the n t er Philadelphia, Oct. 15 (P—Hack | : hes just conclud < : " SEmeiend e cst batting mark of any of his t 3 T |ed six and one-third innings all in .00 gone into extra innings with aled between the s ,f" ,(,0 L v oS fohdme ) Sirine outs Halwesa: ‘them | mies: Mickey Cochranes wHol foo| poott Sigiiratere l;;ulrlor;“;n::;‘f"“‘“"f' Grove fanned ten and Wal- |1 4 700ra n the ninth if Root nad | cago Cubs el 1oess edonn, o e it every game with marvelous | =% F 58 SR O SHE HONE nmugm“'“”’ SlanyRonlyRNozelE Ry SHalRass it/ cen Hlatt fin' | Wilson, the center fielder, who out S ol o Al Simmons, the great left-| deciding runs. Simmons, Foxx and flri*{ only one. | But the central figure in all dis- | lost three flies in the burning rays Tt 10w new ot | IoI0er, Botent dn hath oritleal I8l-l nyia ool gt twio Hite/ln this dnd| oY Dush WHO won tHEZ ORIVl eussion was the comsback ebility of |of the sun an Saturdsy which tuined ark for the series which | 108 0f the last two games: and 1ast, | ;0™ won orld's series record | 50Me Credited to the Cubs, turncd|connie Mack's team. Fans here were | the morale of the National League 59. Ho added two assists| DUt Bob least, Edmund (Bing) Mil- |, /o S0 )"0 iburst atter Cuba| U, With an carned run average Of |amazed that any team could sock|champlons, batted 471, far Sar. st two games, lost : ot tofal ot y|ler, - veteran - right-fielder, who | S “bog | A2 the best showing of any of the itne offerings of Pat Malone for | passing every othe Lot X : : : 0 s record for total chances o e S . | had knocked Jack Quinn from box | i« SEa % | passing every other player. He made 1 in Philadelphia i knocked in the deciding runs in the Rt T e . (th"nxo pitche i three runs in the ninth when Pat|cight hits in seventeen trips to the i as no |CCCRLed P first game and the winning run| &% SHACK Incuding o homer bY| . Despite Ehmke's thirteen strike-| s rignt and e obviou SOl o e s e o strike outs with 60, 1 with 2 §50,000 blow in the last. | Grims e c‘hwi:in;‘oms in the opening game, [GSOEE right yeaterday. | Wew' ‘Natlonal| mot the Athlcties, Thicd Baseman A o Walberg Supplanted Grove e it Tast e Tanning | nanawieannsd m'fi""'"ll honors | jeague teams have put on any such |y e e Lil o) Other near-records ar Bech the Suiatanatne. Horo badtyc| four and Tunning total of Cubstrike- F *i° Sorice M ESVEIRSSR | comeheck againat him vihen Ho had | Conne Macica ensemble was the 1 he said, DA M R to relicve Howard | outS (0 44: “T\‘_,i”“,"""'(‘f': kel TO RESUME PRACTICE B e e ol o (i:',.‘,r,’;':r hha“:, et out 1 them ™ M o, s IR o G ot me and suc- [ SEPRCR five for: Cubs Tielding| princetony N. J. Oct. 16.—The |ag'to why the Cubs elected to Pass | (e serins T DT O $ fonal Fainalt Lo TN s cceded as Walberg did. Ehmke's| [04fUres were two wonderful run-| princeton Varsity were ready to re- | jimmy Foxx in the ninth to get at | Schicé: although the fans can o shoot at by winning 0t fvs “game heroics were not repeat- il and throwouts of R0ot | sume practice today after a Mon- | Bing Mitler. True, Foxs Js a great | iover OrSel the thrill that Hovard ’ 5 tne | 0. or he might also have been the | SRC HOrnaty ot Joe Boley, A's »jhcl{‘- | day lay-off. All of the players came | hitter but he hadn't touched Pat for | 1170 ® PItChing gave them in that a1 ¢ 2 t "° | main bidder for the laurel wreath, o ‘k- T nniness remarkable | {hrough the Brown me in good |a safety during the day and Miller | \,_L ‘_‘: 2 i y e after | e ) behv e real h(-io"{m.lf"\\a mostly | - ¥ Hack | cd workout with the reserves yester- | He already had garnered one of the | Lr vl i o ‘Y_’ ”f"qo orngs of hopes | Individual Batin el anell desiuslioadions T FimoG | day. St afte el I ieno (i el R H o GO el e 1 et | i e > calls them, were outdoing i Game e a tough man to face in a pinch it is | 8 'IR it .300 and Stephenson bat- e o s i paere "“”‘“I{'Ihh e Won by Athletics, 3 to 2, with| ENTIRE SQUAD PRACTICES |Miller. 7o R L GHT, ey and” Burns, Philadelphia, Oct.| The hero of the Cubs, from athFiling ninth inning rally scoring| New York, Oct. 16-—iChick i e e oy T Most runs, Inning (2), Sim- | oniy winmer and. therstore e it | two hits by Pat Malone for eight|OUt for practice Monday and zave | Philadelphia, Haltback | Simmons hit an even .30, The A's b e w“{m e On;m\‘isi innings. Home run by Haas over | his charges the stiffest workout they | Dick Gentle received a rest Monday ’f“‘ ed -281 in the series and the i 1 Press) ‘runs batted in, inning | their greatest figure was pudgy | TIENt field wall, with Bishop on first, | have had this season. The Violets |as Penn started preparations for the | Cubs .23 laom grns Joa . Hack Wilkon, mighticst of o Cap | tied the beore and Bing Miller scored | face a hard game with Penn State | California clash Saturday. Al the| : s W Sla Cuns batted in mame (1) clouting array hat ofherwise. failed | AL Simmons, who had doubled, with | Saturday and count on a victory to | other regulars worked out in a USD HMERALD CLASSIFIED ADS : neiiatg e g o e up 1o it repmtasion. W ilaon | the winning run on another two base | Offset Saturday’s loss to Fordnam. rimmage with the freshmen. )R BEST RESULTS 1 « = hits. led both teams at bat with .471, Yet| PIow after Jimmy I'oxx was inten- | e 3 Dy Hack also was a “goat.” for it was | tionally passed. | ; ; his dismal performance in losing fly| Ehmke, starting pitcher, knocked OUR BOARDING HOUSE B AHERN 3 i aHb: Alls in the sun Saturday that con- | out in fourth, when Cubs scored both | y ( it tributed largely to the A's starting | their runs on hits by Cuyler, Grimm | 1 I | come-back. Charley Grimm. clever { and Taylor and pass to Stephenson, | a1 ha s, (3), frst baseman, . played Lrilliantly | after two men were out. Rube Wal. Oct. 12, (home run and | throughout the serics and also hit| berg finished and held Cubs score- = % [P st Wl I nara.” The batling “bust” was Ro-| ess, allowing only. two mits wnd «a Now TAKE; I WANT You -To HECK ! THEN WE AT DI \ Club Batting fers Homsby, the seven-tme Rajah | fanning six to make total of 50 Cub GET ALL-THIS Il ONE LUMP fuee WEALTHY 2 et WELL, IF <ing, New Or ting aver clup(iGKLIEEN G Honal LeakU S Who | strikeouts, a new world's series - 7 Z Toe Ting, New Or g ) ruck out cight times (o lead thel ora, Fieiding ARBE P «wTHE WHOLE SUM LEFT -THE MATOR, HAT'S TH* CASE, I quT P e an S it ub strikeout vietims. The : A Z ) | o ost rune both clubs, - gama) Lt O T e | Backwardcatoh by Engltsh ot BY HIS UNcLE, WAS A PEW HUMDRED E7 uy 308 -Too QUICK et S I o ing GIANES Al was Shortstop Elwood English, with [0 o0 : DOLLARS { v’ WHOEVER TOLD \JOL\' H ~r WHER I HEARD T’ i o ol ning | (Lo CEiTs: e el Ran i ees - IT WAS A HALF MILLION SHoULDNT NEWS, I BougHT A I5¢ Toledo. (1) Tig sl Torr s 0at 12 et serae DENIES M'GRAW RUMOR WEAR A SOPT HAT -To ENCOURAGE ' GITS DOVN ro 1 hon rd the in nted {ro. 5 victor $31,653 2001 19. Mc 24, 1 William LLEC Cambr Hurry K halfback, of the H |t The summa f outstanding fea- os one First Game gc«lnnr‘l Jacob Ruppert Says Yankee SPENT MosT 2 Won by Athletics, 3 to 1, with | al : quy | Howard Ehmke's slow curves puz- Ianager fla Peeniielected tand ) C ¢ “ = “ 7 ‘(, m‘."“x’,zlxng Cubs, producing strikeout Will Be Named Soon. Lriie HE victims for a new world's series rec- |ord. Hornsby, Wilson and Cuyler club. | cach struck out twice. Jimmy Foxx's home run into center field “birdcage { bleachers” only run off Charley Root, who allowed 3 hits in seven innings, New York, Oct. 15 (UP)—In de- nying reports that John McGraw had been selected to succeed Miller Huggins as manager of the New York Yankees, Col. Jacob Ruppert, one Oct., one Oct. 1 hitter bat- : D1 205)) aLCh St Lt flf,‘f | but A’s scored two more in ninth off | owner of she Yankees, revealed that 7 B ""("{fiu,\' Bush on Miller's single afier [ the new manager had been selected Fielding. two crrors in row by Elwood Eng-|and will be named within a few lish, Cub shortstop. Jimmy Dykes | days. poo ! -outs, series. Coch-| ¢y 1ianed fielding feature with div.| “If McGraw is out of a job T will putouts game (14),| D€ cateh of Stephenson's drive in | gladly give him the management of RRas Ot ey { fourth. | the Yanke: said Col. Ruppert. st chances accepted Second {“He is a very fine man. Bui the re- hrane (59 put-outs Won by Athletics, 9 to Pat | port of his coming to the Yankees = - " Malone being knocked out of box in | is news to me. As a matter of fact c ; | game | (OUrth inning after yiclding six | he isn't the man that has been de- g Oc runs. FFoxx's second homer of ser-|cided upon.” Geneoal ecoras ies again started Cub pitcher's down- | Dan Howley, former St. Louis st strike outs, one club, | [l in third frame and Al Simmons, | Browns manager, Arthur Fletcher, driving in two rums in fourth and two more in eighth, equalled world's Yankee coach; and Bob Connery, Yankee scout, are considered the ost world R Gonnis A aris series record of ™ four in one game. | MOst likely selections for the posi- es cligible to play | G60r8e Harnshaw, A's starter, wild |tion. Ruppert refused to give any nding club (7). Bddie Col. | and relicved in fifth by Lefty Grove. | intimation as to his choice. 1911, 1615, 1914, 1917, Who held Cubs helpless rest of game, — adding six strikeouts to Earnshaw's | HEAVY TRAINING DAYS Sz e 1) || @ oestiee T ot o NRTL S T s B e O J. Klem, National | used four pitchers, Blake, Carlson |qp ee days of heavy training was and Neh following Malone, Grimm s predicted for the Holy Cross varsity | furnished fielding feature with one- ED FRESH CAPTAIN u | tootball teams in preparation for the | idge, Mass., Oct (Up)— | hand falling stab of wide throw by {'orgham meet Saturday. The cru- Wells of Glence, Iil, a|lnglish to get IFoxx on first. Wil- d an easy session yesterday. has been elected captain | 50N, Foxx and Dykes got three hits|Manfieds and Klarman two sub arvard freshman football | each. |players were placed on team a Won by Cubs, 3 to 1, on fine |linc-up in yesterday's scrimmage. | . FoR HIS “TRIP! we WHAT SPENT ON -THE HOUSE «oBUT -THERE WASNT EMoucH CleAR AN' BLeW SMOKE I - FOREMAN'S FACE ~ ~ee -THEN T WENT 1 “HT SUPERINTEMNDENTTS OFFICE AN SAID 0 HIM, “WELL SIMoN LEGREE, Noud oL” GIN-PACKER, «wiTHE MATSOR OF “THE MoNEY GAVE ME, 1 INCLUDE PADDING e WALLS! 1 WAS A LU FAST oN yiill T DRAW ! /oo