New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 26, 1930, Page 14

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

fatEtrErENITELEL Y LR Ve sraniserasranrainrar e e s PRISAEG ¢ 24 - . - - " ~ w - § T ..dently remembered that the NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1930, - — e STAMFORD COMING HERE 150 STRONG FOR GAME WITH P. & F. CORBIN TEAM TOMORROW—SOKOLS ARE HONORED AT CITY LEAGUE BANQUET—KENSINGTON WILL PLAY CABAY’S ALL-STARS SUNDAY—HIGH SCHOOL OPENS GRID SEASON TOMORR/OW CARDINALS MAKE SURE OF TIE FOR NATIONAL FLAG Dispose of Possibility of Defeat by Trouncing Pitts- burgh Pirates, 9 to 0 — Chicago Cubs Victorious Over Cincinnati Reds, 4 to 3 — Two Leaders Are Only Three Games Away From the End of the Sea- son — Athletics Swamp Yankees in Abbreviated Contest. By the Associated Press. The St. Louis Cardinals got back into action at home yesterday and disposed of the last possibility of a defeat for the National league pen- nant without a playoff, by trounc- ing the Pittsburgh Pirates, 9 to 0. Chicago, now managed by Rogers Hornsby, was victorious over the Cincinnati Reds 4 to 3, but the Cubs still were the losers in the pennant battle. The two leaders now are only three games away from the end of the season and the Cubs re- mained three games behind. One more St. Louis victory or one de- | feat for the Cubs will settle the = struggle for good. If Chicago meets | S¥anson, xx . with success in its remaining games | puroc e against the troublesome Reds and | Cal the Cards lose three to Pittsburgh, | Frey the season will end in a tie with a| i three game play-off to decide the pennant winner. The Cards went about their ness of winning the flag yesterday in | Blair, an expert manner, combining all lhni‘_“’:"‘:"" € virtues of a good baseball team to |\/jleo win with a minimum of trouble. As|D. Tay the veteran spitballer Burleigh |Hartnett, ¢ Grimes held the Pirate hitters in|pel" 1P check, shutting them out with seven | Teachout hits, the St. Louis batters pounded | Malone, the pellet from beginning to end, collecting a dozen effective blows. | The first inning was enough to de- cide the game. Taylor Douthit s opened the action with a double and | ., Xy<-Patted for Durocher in sth. scored the first run on Frisch's sin- | chicago 110 001 gle. Then with Adams and Frisch| Two base hit: Teachout. Three mered a home run over the Tight pang: of Frey 1. Risey 1. Teachout 1. field pavilion to give the Cards a 4|Struck out: By Frey 2, Teachout 4, Ma- 10 0 lead. Ray Kremer, Pittsburgh's |lone 1. Winning pitcher: Teachout. Los- starting pitcher, was driven to cov- | "8 Pitcher: Frey. er in the second inning as the Cards continued to score and Glenn Spen- | cer was called in to finish the game. ;;v“:‘:"’": The Cubs likewise got off on lhe{r’ Waner, rf, cf .. right foot against Cincinnati, but the | Grantham _2b Reds proved very troublesome before | tranor 3 | Comoros the end. Hornsby, "vho became ac- | suhr, 1b tive manager just before the game |Sankey. as Joe McCarthy asked to be re- | Hemsey, lieved immediately, sent young Bud | spencer, Teachout to the mound, and the| youthful southpaw did very well for | eight frames. Home runs by Woody | English and Gabby Hartnett in the | Douthit, first two innings started the Cubs oft | Adams, 3b ahead and a few more timely blows | Lo 2o - gave Chicago a 4-1 lead going into | Hatey. It the ninth. But Tony Cucinello evi- | Watkins, rt Reds {(an"uw. c were supposed to be Chicago's Jinx | Grimes o and drove his second home run of | the day over the left field wall. Har- | r.fio-‘h’u’f i Ty Heilmann duplicated the wallop | &'*Pars” i1 o2 and Ford singled before Pat Ma-| Two base hits: Douthit 2, Grantham. lone was hurried in to save the game | P. Waner. Three baschits: Gelbert, Wat by retiring the last two batsmen, |Kins Tome run: Botiomies . palls: Ot Spencer 2 The American league champions, [out: By Grimes the Philadelphia Athletics. played | pitcher: Krem six innings against the New York R AR R A AR Yankees before rain halted the game | and got in some very good batting practice for the coming world - series, They had piled up 17 hits | oft Ruffing and Johnson and had a 13 to 3 score when a sudden storm stopped the slaughter. Lou Gehrig's 41st home run, made in the first in- ning, accounted for all the Yankee Tuns. The second place Washington | Senators, directed by First Baseman | ritt. Three base hits rock. Bases on balls: Off MacFayden 1, Liska 3. 3. Struck out: By Liska 3, Mac- Fayden z2—Batted for Warstler in 9th. 22—Batted for Heving in Sth. zzz—Batted for Connolly in 9th. 2222—Batted for MacFayden in 9th. National League Manush, Todt, Roth- CINCINNATI AB Crawford, 1b Meusel, 1t Cullop, cf Cuccinello, Heilmann, Ford, 2b Gooch, ¢ 3b rt mocooonunsoHy HoHsounoMMONy ] HesomoonuHwoN® b o S = e lsormnusznal shusmsssnuy sl 3 base PITTSBURGH AB o o of cososow T -TOOP e » » = e 1 Totals wo g @ b1 [} SRl e Sl tersmo e e e (TR SRR e st (s | odimur oluacmommnny 1 000 000 Grimes pencer 4. Losing Italian Giant to Appear in Ex- cococcccocmuccocool “BE INNEW HAVEN Joe Judge, found the going. some- what tougher against the Boston Red Sox. They finally came out ahead, hibition Tuesday Night 26.—Primo Car- in New Haven, Sept. 3 to 2, as a few timely blows put |Nera. fistic idol of every Italian over two runs In the seventh inning | (NS country and second only to while Ad Liska gave six of Boston's| Mussolini in their affections, will eight hits to Scarritt and Rothrock. | Probably be making the final appear- The Chicago-Detroit game was rain. | 21¢e Of his current North American ed out, bringing a double header |tOUT ON Tuesday night when he ap- o oraorrom | pears against three heavyweight op- . ponents for two rounds each at the Amencan League | Arena. For, immediately following | his six round bout at the Arena, the | Gargantuan ~ Venetian will make |ready to depart for Europe where | ne is scheduled to fight Paulino Uz- | cudun at Barcelona, Spain, late next | month. And, with his bout against | Paulino, Carnera will start his cam- §|paign to force the big shots of the 0| heavyweight brigade to meet him. Carnera’s campaign to get bouts with the reigning contenders re- ceived a tremendius boost during the rece: meeting of the N. B. A. when the assembled solons recognized the glant as the outstanding contender | for Max Schmeling’s crown and ac- cepted his forfeit check of $2,500 to bind a titular match. From a circus giant and strong man to the out- standing heavyweight contender in | less than a year is quite a jump but he Ambling Alp has made it with lenty to spare. If Schmeling per- sists in ducking Carnera, then he will be suspended by the N. B. A. in the tates in which the organization controls hoxing. The days of hand picking Car- lera’s opponents has passed. While the big fellow was learning the rudiments of the game his managers \\'ASH(_\T;TF were careful whom he met. Now that AB X he has developed into one of the o ; outstanding figures in heavyweight rank polish, he is ready to meet anybody, Sharkey, Stribling, Schmeling, all in order. Bill Duffy and Leon See have thrown down the gauntlet to every heavyweight of any importance in the world. They helieve they have the next world’s championship un- der their wing and welcome the chance to pit him against any heavy- weight in the world to show that the bis fellow is ready for the toughest of the tough ARMY STARTS TOMORROW . Y., Sept. 26 (UP) v day of scrim- books, today NEW YORK AB R Byrd, 1t 3 0 Reese,, 3b Ruth, 1t Gehrig, 1b Chapman, Cooke, ¢ Jorgens, Westling, s Ruffiffing, p Johnson, p E 0 0 0 0 P chmorsuoy | &l Totals PHILADELPHIA AB'R M Bishop, 2b ) Dykes, 3b Cochrane, ¢ Schang, ¢ Simmons, 1t Foxx, 1b Mgller, rf Moore, rt Haas, cf Boley, s Williams, ss Walberg, p Totals New York Philadelphia Two_ ba gens, Mille: hits:_Bisio rig. Bases on berg 3. Losing pitch Manush, Cronin, Shires, Harris, cf Liske, p Totals Oliver, Scarritt, 1t Miller, 3b Rothrock, of 1b 55 Durst, Heving, © Webb, zz Connolly, e Sweeney, 72z MacFaydén, p Small, zz2z z mag looked forward with 000 001 day 000 o010 100—2| The Cadets held a signal practic= Rothrock, Heving, Scar- | today. Boston University Totals ‘Washington Boston Twe base hits: with the necessary poise and | to the opening game | here Satur- | OLD GUARD STILL [ Meet at Merion Today Merion Crigket Club, Ardmore, Pa, Sept. 26 (A—The Old Guard dies but never surrenders. In spite | ot the devastation wrought by the | vounger generation in the ranks of the “golf veterans earlier in the week, the semi-final round of the | amateur ‘champtonship today found two of the Old Guard left. Bobb; | Jones and Jess Sweetser, old mer lin golf at 28, meet in one match |and the winner will battle for the match, Gene Homans vs. Charley Seaver. J Bob and Jess, champions both, were born the same year within a month of each other in 1902, Jones in Georgia in March gand Jess in Kentucky in April. The other semi-finalists are mu younger. Seaver, a Los Angeles b is only 19, while Homans, who lives at Englewood, N. J., is 22. The age equation did not enter inlo the match in which Homars defeated Johny Lehman, the west ern amateur champion, § up and |t> play in the quarter finals, fo they are practically the same in vears, but yeung Seaver struck a | telling blow for the juveniles when he defeated Wiliam F..McPhail of Boston, nearly five and four. Jones disposed of Fay Coleman, young Californian, six and five to | play, and Sweetser beat back a de- | termined dvive by Maurice McCar- | thy, the young marathon golfer, five |and four, after the former intercol- legiate champion had the veteran | one down at the luncheon intermis. “last four” today brought thrills to the staid Merion Cricket | club course, with its wealth of tra- | dition. When Jones stood on the first tee today only two matches stood between him and his |grand slam in clubs, all the major titles any man can win in one sea- son. Sweetser, his opponent, chance to make his come-back com- plete by beating the best golfer in the world. The big Kentuckian's brilliant “career was interrupted by illness after he won the British amateur championship in 1926. Since then he has Mowly but sure- |the trap dotted trail. Only one other native of the United States ever has won the elusive British amateur and Sweetser today match- ed shots with him.~ If it is in the cards for big Jess to beat “Rubber Tire? Jones, then he will have another claim to fame, for the records do not show that any one man ever has beaten Jones twice. Jess stopped Bob, eight up |and seven to play at the Country | Ciub, Brookline, Mass., in 1922 and | the next day walloped Chick Evans |and won the championship. | Sweetser for vears was regarded |as one of the two best manipulators |of a mashie-nibligk. the effective |approaching club. Walter | was th® other. Of late Jess has not | had his deadly touch, but he seems t be regaining it. He never needed it more. Merion pays off handsome- ly on mashie-nicblick artistry. There is a chance to use the club {or half the holes. In the quarter finals Gene Ho- | mans played the best golf of the eight men on the course. His swing |13 not so smooth as that of the other |three semi-finalists but he gets re- |sults and the ultimate scttlement | will be on that basis. Homans was | captain of the Princeton freshman | team in 1928 and promised to con collegiate golf, but his career was interrupted by illness. He is all right now. as witnessed by his win- ning the.last north and south ama- teur championship. Seaver,- a broth of a boy who should be a big man when he grows ;up, hits the ball great distances. H= came east from his far western ome to prep for Princeton at the | Hun school, but now has decided to go back to California and enter | Stanford. Pop Wazner unquestion- lably will be glad to see him in a | football uniform. The flag of the United States Golf Association has flown frem the |Merion staff all week. For the semi-final match the banners of | Harvard, Yale, Princeton and Stan- | ford might have been raised. Jones ‘“‘Pnt to Harvard, Sweetser won the intercollegiate championship for | Yale, Homans was a Princeton stu- | dent and Seaver is on his way to Stanford. They were off early in the day. Homans and Seaver leading the pro- cession at 8:30 a. m., eastern stand- ardeand Jones and Sweetser follow ing at 9 o'clock. ' MAJOR LEAGHE LEADERS | By the Associated Press. (Including games of September 25) National League Batting—Terry, Giants, .404. Runs—Klein, Phillies, 157. Runs batted in—Wilson, Cubs, 181. Hits—Terry, Giants, 5 Doubles—Klein, Phillies, 59, Triples—Comarosky, Pirates. Home runs—Wilson, Stolen bases—f American League Batting—Gehrig, Yankees, .381. | Runs—Simmns, Athletics, 150. Runs batted in—Gehrig, Yankees, 173 Hits—Hodapp, Indians | * Doubles—Hodapp, India | Triples—Combs, Yankees, 22. | Home runs—Ruth, Yankees, 47. Stolen b —McManus, Tigers, | FOR BEST RESULTS REMAINS N PLAY |Bobby Jones and Jesse Selser title with the victor in an all-junior | 7 | 0 years his senior, 36 hole | had & ly been' beating his way back along | Hagen | tribute a brilliant chapter to inter- | AL SIMMONS = e NO. 11—TRYING TIMES Lean years for the lean leader of the Athletics followed the break-up of this famous 1910-14 champions. They took a heavy toll in money and prestige. The Philadelphia club, stripped of its stars, dropped from | the top in 1914 to the bottom of the American league in 1915 for the first time in its history of 15 years under Mack's management. | If not only sank to the depths, but stayed there. The Athletics, once a name to strike apprehenslon; among opponents, became the joke | of the league. The team occupied the cellar for seven successive years | and remained in the second division | for ten seasons. It looked as though | Mack, with the advancing years and | Keener competition for promising young stars, had lost the master's | touch. It was a period filled with bitter- ness and disappointment for the veteran. He was able to take a | brighter view of its after he had at | last driven another team to the top in 1929, Looking backward he told me: “I made a mistake in under-esti- mating the ability of the game to come back after the war. I was caught napping. As a consequence it took us longer than I expected to develop another winning club. | “The three main reasons for the long period of depression in the fortunes of the Athletics were: “First, the Federal league and the | upheaval it caused' in organized | baseball's ranks. forcing me to breai | | up a championship team. | | “Second, the world war, taking so | many of the best play nd retard- | |ing the production of younger ones | for several years. | | “Third, the reconstruction and| | readjustment perioa | following the war, when boom days | in industry kept many young play- | ers from sticking to the sport. | “Meanwhile, new interests | tered baseball. The Yankees, under | the ownership of Colonel Jacob Rup- | pert and the able management of | | Miller Huggins, produced a man-nl.} ous combination that dominated the | | American league, winning six pen- | |nants in eight years. McGraw | | formed another wonderful club and | | wqn four National league pennants | |in'a row. | “Babe Ruth helped to revolution- | ize long-distance hitting, setting an | | example that the younger players | | quickly began to follow. = Rogers | Hornsby created new batting rec- | ords in_the National league. “As I say, I was a little behind this parade. In 1925, however, the | Athletics were strong contenders, | leading the league until the middle | of August Inexperience and a | succession of injuries cost us the | pennant that year, when Washing- | ton won, but I felt then it was a | question of a short time only be- fore we would win." | When Mack first 1 SV"Sk of rebuilding vir | tire new team in 1915 and for }su(rmfidmg few years he felt | vinced he could develop raw | rial once more. He time: “I made up my mind to build from the ground up. I seldom go | after a minor league star, not be- | cause of the ridiculous price asked | for his release but because I find | he is harder to develop to my style | of play than the inexperienced youth. | “I have tried my hand at | dling these high priced league sfars and find too set in their wa cannot be dertook iy an the | con- | mate- said at the han- minor | t they gre| nd invariably of faults which e in a ball player better than I that the fans will not patronize a los- ing ball team. I don't ask them. All I want is a fair chance. I prom- ised a powerful team in 1917 and 1 will have it." The As of 1917 were last and so were thole of the next four years. | Mack not only found his theories | of development shot to pieces by | the changes in the times and in player conditions, but he finally was forced to enter the bidding for | highly-touted minor leaguers | Before he turned out another win- | ner, Mack and his partners, the Shibes, spent more than a half mil- lion dollars for talent | They reached the climax when | $106,500 was paid to Jack Dunn of Baltimore for Robert Moses Grove, the southpaw pitching star, in 1924. As it turned out, this investment | | paid big dividends. After a wild | season or two. Grove struck his| stride and established himself as | one of the greatest left handers of Nobody knows (1923 MACK HAD LEAN YEARS e e rior of those other two great south- paws that Mack handled — Rube Waddell and Eddie Plank. All told, a half dozen stars that shone in the pennant victory ef the Athletics in 1929 cost the club ap- provimately $330,000. Besides Grove, they included George Earnshaw, Al Simmons, Mickey Cochrane, Max Bishop and Joe Boley.. Simmons was purchased from Milwaukee: in for $50,000, Cochrane for a similar amount from- Portland, Ore., in 1924, the others all from Balti- more. These players proved exceptions to a somewhat general rule that high- priced players fail to pay the divi- dends expected. (Copyright, 1930, Yhe Associated Press) Tomorrow: A Daring Experiment. FOOTBALL SEASON OPENS TONORRO Strong Teams Pitted Against Weak in First Games New York, Sept. 26 (P—Another football season has rolled around to thrust itslf upon the sports stage before bascball is quite ready for its final bow. Sporadic firing already has been heard in some sectors as a half dozen eastern teams beat the gun immediately | that sounds a general call to arms | all along the football front tomor- row. A few college aggregations, notably Harvard, Princeton, Penn €0-|and Navy, will wait another week | before swinging into the dizzy whirl that is intercollegiate football. Tomorrow's engagements, for the most part, pit the strong against the weak as major teams sharpen up attack and defense for the titanic battles to come. Yale starts a week earlier than usual, taking on Maine at New Ha {ven while Army tackles Boston Uni- | versity at West Point. Cornell, fight- ing its way back to the glories that were hers in a football way a decade ago, opens against Clarkson while Columbia, under a new coach, Lou Little, meets Middlebury. Dart- mouth's first foe is Norwich; Andy Kerr's Colgate travelers brush up on their lessons against St. Lawrence, and Vic Hanson's orange-clad war- riors from Syracuse swing into ac- tion against Rensselaer in a night game. Pittsburgh, with 4 somewhat green but potentially powerful squad inaugurates what it hopes will be an- other successful season against | en- | Waynesburg, and Carnegie Tech, a| | CLUB BUILDING , —To the | formidable array, meets Buffalo at | Buffalo. Penn State faces Niagara; Lafayette meets St. Thoma: Lehigh takes on Ursinus, and ‘Washington and Jefferson starts against Bethany. West Virginia, which already has beaten Duquesne to avenge a 1929 tie with the Dukes, meets a state foe in West Virginia Wesleyan. Chick Meehan's New York univer- | sity aggregation expects to romp with Hobart and Fordham should get nothing but a workout from Bal- timore. Boston college, Holy Cross and Geor, ition in Catholic, St. Bonaventure, Mt. St. Mary's respectively. Brown opens with Rhode Isjand which swamped Arnold college under a 3§ to 0 count in fts first start. Those two strong Philadelphia teams, Villanova and Temple, battle | Lebanon Valley and Thiel respec- tively, while Rutgers is facing Provi- dence and Bucknell takes on Geneva, All members of the “little three, Williams, Amherst and Wesleyan open tomorrow, meeting respective- ly Rochester, Vermont and Colby. STRESSES PASS WORK Middletown, Conn., Sept. 26 (UP) —Coach Jim Oberlander made a final effort today to smooth out the pass work of his Wesleyan eleven, The team meets Colby here tomor row. Weslevan's acerial game wr entirely off form in yesterday's pra ce. Earl “Sparky” Adams, third base- man, only 5 feet 4 1-2 inches tall will be one of the shortest men in the scries. He is a dangerous hit- ter in the pinch, and was for six | USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS all time, the equal if not the supe- |Y€ars a star with the Chicago Cubs, HiGH SCHOOL T0 START TONORROW Naugatuck Alumni of 1998 to Open Local Grid Season After three weeks of hard condi- tioning, the New Britain high school football team will open its schedule tomorrow afternoon, playing the Naugatuck Alumni of 1928. The game will be played at Willow Brook park and will start at 2 o'clock, iD.S. T The starting lineup of Coach Cas- sidy’s team will probably not be known until the team takes the fleld. However, from what has been done in the practice sessions it is probable that the local team wil] line up somewhat as follows: Either Par- da or Dumin at center, White and O'Brien at guards, Captain Ludwino- wicz and either Zimitravich or Moore at the tackles, Gramitt and Partyka | Sunday afternoon, the Kensington at ends, Zaleski at quarterback, |baseball| team, winners of 18 con- Kloiber and Fink, halfbacks and |secutive games and rightful claimant Mileski at fullback. to the state baseball championship in There may be variations in this |the semi-pro class,’ will meet an ag- |lineup as Coach Cassidy has been |gregation of all-stars gathered to- trying O'Brien at one of the end po- |gether by John Cabay, manager of sisions. He is fast for his size. Sam [the City league champion Sokol Miriliani will probably see service |team, at the Percival avenue grounds before the game is done. in Kensington. This will be the first The Naugatuck team is confident |game of a series of contests and will of administering a defeat on the lo- [be for the championship of New cal toys for many of them have | Britain. starred on pre- school gridirons last | Manager Cabay stated today that year. However the Cassidymen will |he has not yet made his final se- have the advantage of better con- |lection of players for the games, dition ahd haying worked together. |but he expects to have a club thaf Captain Butkis will start at quar- | will mow the Kensington combina- terback for the visitors. Joe Rozint [tion down. That this will be an ex- and Bill Stokes will be at the half- |traordinary feat, goes without say- back positions with John White at |ing. Kensington has one of the | fullback, FEarl Lavalley and Lewis |strongest combinations in years and ;rrisno at the ends, Andrew Evans |it has been playing excellent ball all and Ralph Quinn at tackles, Charles | season long. |and'Raymond Lodge at guards and | zapager Eddie Moore and the Albert. Hermon at center. members of the team are laughing SEASON IS ENDED enough baseball players in. New Britain to get a winning combina- Sharkey-Campolo Bout to Be Fonght in Garden October § tion together. In fact., the Kensing- ton team states, there was no single team in the city that could compare with Kensington and the pick of all New York, Sept. 26 () — The | metropolitan district's outdoor box- | ing season has come to a sour con- clusion. \ these clubs will be little better. The contest is scheduled to get under way at 3 o'clock Sunday after- Rain forced postponement of the 15 round heavyweight tilt between | Jack Sharkey and Victorio Campolo | noon. All paths will lead to the South End town for the game. In- last night and directors of Madison | Square Garden, after a lengthy terest in the contest has been heigh } huddle, decided to hold it in the lened by the fact that the players’ IGarden itself next Friday night. Matches. KENSINGTON WILL MEET ALL STARS Series for City Championship to Start on Sunday lists have been limited to those men | who have played on the Kensington team during the scason and to base- The Garden failed to reveal its reasons for transferring the bout from the stadium, where 75,000 ball players within the confines of New Britain proper. spectators can be accommodated, to the Garden with its maximum capa- From the outside looking in, it appears that the coming series will | city of barely more than 20,000, but | | two factors were believed to have led be the best baseball offerings of the to the surprising decision. First, it | entire year. was believed the Garden did not care Y. GYM NOTES to risk further postponement because | The Y. M. C. A. will come out of its long sleep to usher in the new cra that starts on October 6. Be- ginners' classes will be' formed in swimming, tumbling, boxing, wrest- ling, life saving and fencing. Bruce |of adverse weather conditions; and | | second, the bout had arpused so little |8¥m class and handball tournament | public interest that it was believed ; (doubles) are included in the sched- it might more profitably be conduct- |ule. According to the 1930-1931 gym ed in the Garden itself. | schedule the tumbling class meets Sharkey ruled a better than 2 to |Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at !t:ne and apparently the public be- |every Friday at 8. The fencing class lieved it would not see an even meets on Mondays at 8:15, and the |match. Sharkey's defeat by Max |life saving clash gathers every Fri- | Schmeling on a foul also unquestion- {day at 8:30. ably has hurt the Boston sailor's| The Friendly Long is the fencing instructor. The 1 favorite to whip the giant Argen- |$:30 o’clock. The boxing class meets Indian club will | drawing powers. | The Garden faces a big loss on the bout for its has guaranteed | have its first meeting on September 20 at 4:15. Membership is open to boys whose ages are from 10-11. An interesting program will be offered getown tackle minor oppo- | | Sharkey $100.000 and total receipts | were not expected to go over that figure. |to attend the first mecting. | As‘a result of the transfer, all in- About 50 members of the boys’ | door shows already scheduled at the 'department will attend the Yale- Garden have been moved back one |Maryland football game on October week. 4. The tickets were issued free. this year and all eligible are invited FINISH FIRST ROUND OF PRESIDENT’S CUP TOURNEY Survivors in First Sixteen to See Busy Week-end— Second Flight Play Results in Some Close and Ex« citing Matches—Second Round Will Be Staged To- day With Semi-Finals Taking Place Tomorrow and Finals Being Run Off On Sunday—Accounts of the BY JIGGER In the fight for the President’s Cup in the golf tournament at Shut- tle Meadow, Ormond Bates beat Dave Mahoney 2-1 yesterday in the first round. L. W. Young was one up on Harold Mott. E. Allen Moore won by default from George Rogers. Max Porter put J. H. Robinson out of the running to the tune of 5-4. M. Hillyar took his match with A. W. Borg by default. Louis Jones beat Earl Higbee 3-2. The match beween Judge Kirkham and R. J. Smith was not played due to the judge competing in the state seniors’ tournament and Roswell Moore won from Herbert H. Pease 3-2. Dave Janning beat Ernest Smith 4-3 in the first match of the seconu flight. Robert Parsons and Bob Po- teet battled to an 18-hole tie and will have to play off the match to- day and Hugh McKenna won from Curt Booth by default. Tom Crow: shot his head off playing agai Len Morse, scoring four strokes bet- ter than he had “ever played the course before, carding 91. He made his young opponent travel at an S1 clip before he could take the match at the 18th hole. There Tom drop-' ped in a 10 foot putt as nonchalant- ly as Bobby Jones might have done. Mr. Crowe lost out but his noble work all the way around aroused the admiration of his opponent who sometimes cracks 8§0. Clayton Parker won by default from George Bean. A. B. Porter | caught Cliff Parker off his best game when he himself was rather hot and took the match 3-2. Rev. Samuel Sutcliffe labored against a big han- dicap in playing W. E. Bentley but came through the match a two up winner. Ralph S. Howe drew a byc. F. S. Chamberlain proved that he is a golfer of parts by trimming W. M. Cowles 3-1 in the third flight. M. W. Pease beat C. S. Bradley 3-2. F. H. Shield, after a siege of illness, came back to the course strong and beat R. C. Germond 5-4 after hang- ing back of a crippled seniors match all the way around the lower nine. Trying to go through the visiting veterans from the third to the ninth hol: Frank drew a promise from the pair that they would give way after the ninth hole but he did not know then that the twosome had already played the upper. So their concession was rather pointless. Noah Lucas, playing an 81, won from Max Hart by five holes. C. J. Leroux took his match from A. H. Harrop by default. Gail Porter beat | George Taylor 1 up{ Charlie Davis ‘beat E. N. Humphrey 3-2 and the match between Duncan Shaw and Logan Page was not played. Today the second round will played in each flight at 18 hol The third round will b~ played Sat- urday and the finals will be run off Sunday. ha UNABLE TO PLAY Providence, R. I, Sept. 26 (UP) —Captain Lincoln Fogarty and Joe Mahood, regular backs, will not be’ lable to play in Brown's opening |game against Rhode Island state to- morrow because of injuries. Fo- garty's bad knee may keep him on the bench for two weeks. NAVY TEAM DRILLS HARD Annapolis, Md., Sept. 25 (UP)— Navy football coaches drilled their charges hard today looking to the opening game one week from Sat- urday. Hot weather interfered with practices. OUR BOARDING HOUSE BY AHERN ‘\‘ {7~ GooD-BYE PARTY (M —THE | H VENERABLE OLD oWlL’s | |3 CELEBRATE MoVING IKTo 3 | 1| GBR NEW QUARTERS !wv | % «THE RAFTERS WILL RiMG WH Sode Awp SeEST AD AT MIDMIGHT WE EAT A DUTCH LUNCH ! wae I HAVE PREPARED A ToUCHING SPEECH IN -THE FoRMm oF ; 2. A FAREWELL ! i N BANGIANG o " o AND EVERYBODY I8 —THAT NEIGHBORHOOD WILL HURL A PARTY BECAUSE TH' oWLs CLUB (S To BE ToRA Dawal! o ABOUT THREE A.M. T CAN SEE TH PATROL WAGOMN COME DoWAM TH” STREET FOR A FINAL RAID~ To LAY SOME oF Vou “TH” BRIG OVER -TH” WEEK ©1930 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. [3 " . [ 'y

Other pages from this issue: