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Speaking of Sports Erection of the Herald Playo- Braph for the world series was start- ed this morning in preparation for the opening game between the Phil- adelphia Athletics and the St. Louis Cardinals Wednesday afternoon. Ac- cording to an announcement made & week or more ago, the teams will play in Philadelphia on Wednesday and Thursday, will travel on Friday and will resume play in St. Louis on Saturday, Sunday and Monday. They will be idle Tuesday and w resume in Philadelphia, if necessary, a week from Wednesday. The playograph service has been extremely popular in past years and it should prove no exception to that rule this season again. Plays will be depicted on the board within gec- onds after they are completed in the games thereby giving local baseball fans, and there are many this year, the best possible service and pleas- ure. All records for industrial baseball contributions were smashed Satur- day when the fans attending the Stamford-P. & F. Corbin baseball game at Walnut Hill park, gave $124 and some odd cents to the col- lector who passed among them. This is the greatest sum ever contributed at an Industrial League game in recent seasons. The Corbin players are assured of receiving individual trophies, a banquet will be held and many other things will be done which ®uld not otherwise be attempted. Following the game, the Stamford bail players were the guests of the “Y"” and were treated to sandwiches and sweet cider. They were very happy at winning the game and complimented Bryce Long on the fair treatment accorded them in this city. They spoke expressly of the excellent work of Iid Crowley, the New Britain umpire. The reports given in were that the Btamford fans insisted on contrib- uting generously. They even went 8o far as to take the box away from the collector and canvas each mem- ber of their party for a donation. Their share of the fund received was by no means small. Another disagreement may arise between Manager Eddie Moore of Kensington and Johnny Cabay, manager of the All-Stars over the place for the second game. Moore refuses to play at the Washington park diamond and Cabay want to play at Willow Brook park because there will be a football game on there. He doesn’t want to %o back to Kensington for the sec- ond game. The Kensington scribe announces that the second game will be played in Kensington. Cabay states that he is to confer with Manager Moore to- day on the subject and he predicts that an agreement will probably be reached. The Sacred Heart A. C. will hold an important mceting tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in the club rooms. The club will elect a manager of an amateur football team and’ will plan for the fall and winter sea- son. An cight team basketball league will also be formed. MACK GETS TEAM SET FOR SERIES Athletics Will Practice Today and Again Tomorrow Thiladelphia, Sept. 29 (R—Connie Mack and the Athletics secking their fitth world series trophy, will go through the final motions today and tomorrow preparing for ths opening game with the St. Louis Cardinals, scheduled for Wednesday. Mack gave his championship out- fit half a day off, but ordered all hands to report for a workout mn the aftcrnoon. The A's will work cut ag in tomorrow forenoon and in the afternoon Shibe park will be turned over to the Cardinals. Many of the unofficial experts are of the opinion that Burleigh Grimes, veteran spitballer, will start for t Cards. In order that the A's may becon: accustomed to the intricacies of spit- ball pitches, Mack has been having , Jack Quinn pitch to them as much as possible the last few days. Thousands of fans received notics through the mails today to call at Shibe Park and receive the tickets allotted them. Most of the box seats were handed out at the park ticket windows yesterday, and by late afternoon it was expected all the reserved seats, numbering about 30,000, would be in the hands of the customers. Shibe Park, usually deserted wn Sunday, was a scene of activity yes- terday with all the employes on duty. Groundskeepers were putting on the finishing touches, telegraph companies were taking practice shots and wiring the new press gal- lery atop the roof for the small army of writers who will cover the | Beries, In the stands John P. Collins, head usher, put his 228 girl and 5 men ushers through a lengthy drill. The girls will wear red berets for the serics. During the series days 500 police will be detailed to Shibe Park to handle traffic problems LINEMAN OUT OF GAME Cambridge, Mass., Sept. 29 (UP) —George Talbot, vatsity lineman, injured more than a week ago in one of the first practice sessions of the * season, will not be able to play in Harvard's opening game with Ver- mont next Saturday. Henry Gildea, substitute center, who was hurt at about the same time, is recovering satistactorily, however, and will see action against Vermont. doesn't | Baseball Standing AMERICAN LEAGUE Games Yesterday New York 8, Boston 3. ‘Washington 9, Philadelphia 4. Chicago 10, Detroit 7. St. Louis 11, Cleveland 5 (1st) Cleveland 15, St. Louis 5 (2nd). Final Standing w. 102 94 Pct. 662 614 .558 526 487 .409 403 342 Philadelphia ‘Washington New York 86 Cleveland 81 Detroit .. . 75 | St Louis 63 Chicago 62 | Boston 53 91 102 | NATIONAL LEAGUE | Games Yesterday New York 7, Philadelphia 6, innings. Brooklyn 6, Boston 3. St. Louis 3, Pittsburgh 1. Chicago 13, Cincinnati 11. (10 Final Standing w. 92 90 L. 62 64 67 68 T4 54 95 102 St. Louis icago New York Brooklyn | Pittsburgh Joston Cincinnatt Philadelphia BOBBY JONES 1§ ENPEROR OF GOLF Atlantan Has Little fo Say Over His Great Victory (Special to_the Herald) Ardmore, Pa.,-Sept. 20 — How it | feels to be the crowned king of golfers and champion of golf cham- plons, past and present, can't be found out by questioning Robert Tyre Jones, Jr., who Saturday won his fourth major victory in a sea- son's play when he beat Eugene Homans in the finals in the U. S. amateur and thereby established a record that is likely to stand as long as golf is played. There is a lot that he might say ! but he is leaving it to others to do | the talking. He did not even bother to deny the sensational story that was sent out before play started | here, to the effect that he was al- most crippled with stomach trouble. Fifteen thousand of his fellow citizens saw him establish a record | on the links that has never been approached and may never be equalled, and when it was all over the golfing god of Atlanta as usual, had very little to say. “I may and I may not play in future champion- ship tournaments,” was the extent of his remarks. Within six months he had scaled the Olympian hcights of golf. The British and American golf cham- pionships, amateur and open, were in his bag when he sank his final putt Saturday. In a season he had accomplished with his woods and irons what no man had done be- fore. Only an amateur could do it | and the Georgian did it with the aid | of “Calamity Jane.” It does not, matter now whether Bobby Jones plays championship | golf or not. Fourteen years ago he | set out on his golfing career. At 28 he is king of American and Brit- ish courses. More than that, he| cannot be with driver and putter. | “I felt that 1 had something defi- | nite to accomplish and 1 did it.” | That, done up to the quecen’s taste, is enough. | Right now, as on other occasions, | Bobby Jones might cash in a for- tune on golf. But golf to him is no | more than a game. By profession | he is a lawyer and it is said to be his seeret ambition to win honors in the law courts, cqual to those that | he has taken on the links of Amer- ica and England. That will not ad- mit of six months' golf ecach year. He has taken nothing out of golf and he owes no debt to the game of the Scots. If he retires, who can blame hin? A 50 to 1 shot by the odds of Lloyds to win all four British and ! American major golfing titles this ! year, Attorney Jones upset the dope. | He had never won the British ama- | teur and he was beaten last year in the first round of the U. S. Ama- | teur. But 1930 was Jone§' best vyear, better than any stretch of imagination last March. And now there are no more golfing worlds | for the Atlantan to conquer. | Last year at Pebble Beach, after | time played favorites with the vet- erans, but at Merion, this year it| was youth that was served. A 19 | or 20 year old youngster was des- | tined to cross clubs with the season’s | thrice-crowned champion, but Ho- man who won out for the honor, was | no match for the champ. He prov- cd to be a straw man, offering little resistance in the triumphant on- sweep of the great golfing god Jones. | Willie Park, Sr., Tom Morris, Sr., | John Ball, Jr, H. H. Hilton, Harry Vardon, James Braid, Jamie Ander- son, J. H. Taylor, John Ball, and | Tom Morris, Jr., across the Atlantic, and Walter Hagen on this side were golfing names to conjure with when {he aforesaid gentlemen were in the heyday of golfing fame but in a span of seven years not one of them approached the record clinched at Merion Saturday by a southern gentleman whom the world fondly knows as “Bobby.” | Once his fellow citizens wanted to give him a $50,000 house; now he could have the world, the seven seas and the north and south poles, but the gift of the world would not tempt the four-fold champion to jeopardize his amateur standing. Golf is just like that to Emperor Jones. No, you cawt beat it. And yet there are those who will accept five dollar gold pleces for making a low score on miniature golf courses. DROPS DEAD ON TRACK ér, Mass, Sept. 29 (UP) —While running »n the cinder track at Holy Cross college's athletic field here yesterday, Joseph Mortimer, 18, of 170 Lexington avenue, New York, a freshman, dropped dead. Heart dilation was reported as the cause of death. {fleet Chicagoan, | plete survey of the youngsters had been eliminated, ‘, NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1930. { FATHER AND SON BATTLE FOR PRESIDENT'S TROPHY Roswell Moore Is Pitted Against His Parent, E. Allen RECORDS FAIL TO STAND THIS YEAR Terry Leads National While American Race Is Uncertain New York, Sept. 29 (P)—The champions of yesteryears were even less in evidence than the batting records of former National league seasons at the 1930 campaign of the major leagues reached its end. In the entire list of batting lead- ers, only one 1929 title holder in each league managed to retain his crown for another season, according to figures which have not yet been | ofticially checked, while in the elder | circuit, records suffered almost as great a slaughter. Babe Ruth, al- though unable to retain his title as home run king of all baseball, con- | tinued to lead the American league | with 49 four baggers, improving his 1929 mark by three. Kiki Cuyler, continued to steal more bases than any other National leaguer although his total of 36 was below his 1929 mark of 43. the leading batsman of the Nation- al league, compiling an average of .401, although he was not able to pass the total of 254 hits made by Frank 0'Doul of Philadelphia in winning the 1929 title with a .398 mark. He did succeed in tying th total, which is a National league rec- | ord. | Chuck Klein of Philadelphia and Hack Wilson of Chicago led in the individual record smashing. Klein scored 158 runs, hit 59 doubles and | made his blows good for a total of | 455 bases. All three were records for his league, passing the totals of 1156 and 52, made last year by Rogers Hornsby of Chicago and Johnny Irederick of Brooklyn, and a few years before, Wilson left hard- ly a fragment of - the league home run record as he hit to beat the mark of 43 set by Klein in 1929, And in doing this he established an all time Major league mark of 180 runs batted in and helped his team 1do as much for the club honors with la total of 171 for the Cubs. Adam Comorosky of Pittsburgh supplanted |a teammate, Lloyd Waner, in first | place by hitting 23 triples. The final result of the race for the ship which Lou Gehrig of the Yan- | kkees and Al Simmons of the Athlet- lics carried on, may not be known until the official figures come out, but umofficial returns have it that Gehrig's three hits yesterday brought |nis mark to .38, to give him crown by a one point margin. ever gets the decision supplants Lew “onseca of Cleveland. Charley Geh- inger of Detroit, who swept Ameri- can league honors in 1929, came to end of this year without a title. Last | season, Gehringer led in runs with | 121, in triples with 19 and in stolen | bases with 27 and was in two first place ties, with Dale Alexander, De- trolt, with 215 hits, and with John- | son, Detroit, and Manush, St. Louis, scored 153 times. Johnny Hodapp of Cleveland made 225 hits, 51 of them doubles, Farl Combs, New Yorl smacked 49 triples and Matty Me- Manus, Detroit, stole 23 sacks. In the performance of clubs as a whole, a few more records turned up in a brief and perhaps incom- the marks of past Three were in the American league, where the Athletics went to bat 5,686 times and the Yankees {scored 1,060 runs and had 980 bat- ted in. Both Yankee marks broke Major league marks of 982 and 938 set by the Champion Chicago Cubs of 1929. The Cardinals had one slug- ging record to their credit. They hit 367 doubles, passing a Major league | record of 355 set by Cleveland in 1921, FINAL GAMES IN (Continued From Preceding Page) Comorosky, 1 Subr, 1b . Sankey. Bool, ¢ French, s Totals Douthit, Adams, High, Bottomley, Orsatti, 1b i ot [N 1 Gelbert, Dean, p Totals Pittsburgh Louis Two base oft French French 1, 100 000 002 001 Bases on ball I ; Struck out: By Douthit Dean Dean 5. South Dakota motorists paid a lower tax rate, $13,95 on more cars, 169,325, this year than last year, $15.63 on 161,000 machines. Billy Terry of New York became | of 450 total bases made by Hornsby | American league batting champion- | the | ‘Who- | | with 45 doubles. This year Simmons | MAJOR LEAGUES Moore, in Final Round On Friday—Bates and By JIGGER While the President's Cup golf tournament at Shuttle Meadow fs not designated as a father and son veloped into a match between E. Allen Moore and his son, Roswell. It took the full 36 holes yesterday for the younger man to conuer his elder by one up. The peculiar part of it was that Mr. Moore senior had to give Mr. Moore, junior, several | strokes. Friday's play. staged in midsum- the winners | Ormond Bates |3-1. B of the quarter-finals. beat Harold Mott, Allen Moore won from Max | Porter, 2-1. M. Hellyar took {match with Louis Jones, 5-4, and |Judge Kirkham, after beating R. J. |Smith in the first round. was taken |into camp by Roswell Moore, 3-1. In the semi-finals Saturday, Allen Moore beat Ormond Bates, 2-1, to go into the finals. At the | same time his son trimmed Hellyar [to the fune of 5-4 to win the right to meet the winner of the upper bracket. Sunday stymied the finals of the | second flight as a minister advanced {to the semi-finals Saturday and he | was otherwise engaged when the |match was scheduled to be played. Rev. Samuel Sutcliffe, playing in his |first tournament in several years, |came through the lower bracket, | triumphant, and will play Hugh Me- |Kenna for honors in the second | night, early this week. | _In the second round, Friday. Bob | Poteet and Bob Parsons battled un- Itil dark to an 18-hole tie and then |tossed up to sec who would proceed. Mr. Parsons called the coin and then | was eliminated by Dave Manning, 3-1. Hugh McKenna captured a |close match with Len Morse, 2 up. | Veterans Clayton Parker and Fonz | Porter locked horns, or crossed nib- {licks, and Mr. Porter took less turf to win. 4-3. Rev. Mr. Sutcliffe and the rector won, 3-2. In the semi-finals, Mr. McKenna had an easy time winning, 4-3, from Mr. Manning, whom he caught off ued his winning streak to beat Clay- iton Parker, 4-2. Added drama was provided yester- day in the finals of the third flight Banker Noah Lucas, besides oft the tournament, did a :\\'hon |running | His smiles, as he came off the 15th |green after the morning round, be- |lied the fact that Gail Porter had him five down. Continuing to smile | through the after dinner session, Mr. | Lucas gradually picked up holes un- |til he was but one down as he drove | trom the 36th tee. | The shots of each contestant did not go perfectly down the home |stretch and after the final putts had |been sunk it was found that Mr. [Lucas’ six was good enough to |square the match. Still smiling, he very neatly took the extra hole and | won the third flight to his | daughter's satisfaction. A year ago | she confided to her schoolmates that I her daddy was a great golfer and I now her faith in his ability on the links is without bounds. | This faith of one’s children in his | golfing ability isn't the worst thing in the world. Perhaps it does spur a man on to better his game to the {point where he can win an occa- | sional club tournament and improve {his game and at the same time not neglect his business, Reducing his handicap by five strokes in a season, |as Mr. Lucas has done this year, isa worth while achievement when golf |is taken as a recreation and no time is given to it for practice. All of which is a long ways from |telling how Noah Lucas got to the |finals. Another banker, who also i enjoying his season on the fairway | Fred S. Chamberlain, stood path of the Savings Bank treasurer. Friday, he beat Maurice Pease two up while Mr. Lucas was winning from Frank Shield, 3 In the lower bracket, Gail Porter beat Claude Leroux, who has ad- vanced from the dub class, one up. and Charlie Davis beat Duncan Shaw, conqueror of Logan Page, 3-1. Mr. Lucas breezed through match with Mr. Chamberlain, a 3 winner, but Mr. Porter had to play |to the 22d hole before he could win | trom Mr. Davis. | For the first time in the hostory of the President's Cup event at Shut- {tle Meadow, all but onc match was Ifinished on schedule. Every contes- tant had a good time and the non- crack golfers displayed a fine game. | A little more pruning of handicaps and the local fraternity of divot dig- gers will be evenly matched for next season. ADS event, the finals in the first flight de- | mer heat, braught close decisions to | his | Ralph Howe had a nice match which | his game. Rev. Mr. Sutcliffe contin- | “Homans" and won in an extra hole. | little | in the | his | 9 at Shuttle Meadow Club — Youth Carried to 36 Holes to Defeat His Elder One Up—Close Decisions Are Made in Quarter Finals Hellyar Fail on Saturday. NAUGATUCK TEAM (Continued From Preceding Page) Moore Van Delft | Miriliani .... «+ R. Zaleski Batkus quarterback | Kloiber | Sudowski left halback | Tomlinson right halfbac | J. White Score, Naugatuck 13, New Brit- ain ; Substitutes: New PBritain, | Flood for Steinle: Naugatuck, C. | White for Van Delft; Martin for | Anderson. | LITTLE WORLD SERIES | T0 BE CONTINUED TODAY Rochester Redwings Hold a Thret | to Onc Edge Over the Louis- | | Colonels. } Rochester, N. Y., Sept. 20 (®) | The little world's series was to be | {continued in Louisville today with | the Rochester Redwings, Interna |tional league champions, holding a | three to one edge over the Louis- ville Colonels, American association | representatives. he series, a best |five out of nine affair, will be con- | |cluded in Louisville. Paul Derringer, crack right hanc er of the Redwing staff, was the whole show in the fourth game of | |the series here yesterday. Derringer. | who goes to the St/ Louis Cardinals next spring, held the Colonels to [four hits and struck out eight. | Phil Weinert, winner of the first game of the series, started for Lou- !isville but was relieved by the vet- !efan, Ben Tincup, in the fifth inning in the midst of a two run Roches- |ter rally. Tincup gave up only one |hit over the rest of the game and got two of Louisville's four hits, the [other pair going to Marcum, right fielder. Rochester scored once in the first |inning on a walk to Brown, Topor- icer's single and Collins' double. In {the fifth, Pepper's scratch double, |an infield out, a sacrifice fly, Layne's two base muff of Derringer's single land Toporcer's infield single ac- counted for two more runs. A single | by Florence, two walks and a field- er's choice gave Rochester its last | run in the seventh. i Steinle ville PLAY SCORELESS TIE | Pawnee Football Team Battles Tufts Eleven of Mliddletown Without | Crossing Line. Despite three rushes to the five vard line, the Pawnee football team | lacked the necessary punch to push | the ball over the goal line and it |« contest with Tufts in a | | scoreless tie yesterday in a game staged on the Tufts’ home field in | | Middletown. The Pawnees outplay- od their opponents having the ball | |in Middletown territory most of the | time but they were unable to get | over the goal line despite desperate cfiorts. i Quarti and Gianotti made consist- ent gains through the line but | fumbles killed their chances. An- | other poor kick gave the Pawnees | another chance but mixed up plays and penalties again killed the op- | portunity The Pawnees will practice Tues- day night at 6:30 o'clock at Willow Brook park. Coach Rice is plan- ning a big change in the lineup. | cnded its YESTERDAY'S STARS By the Associated Press. Ruth, Yankees—Pitched full game against Red Sox, kept 11 hits well attered and won, 9-3. Crowder, Senators—Stopped Ath- lctics with seven hits and won Fothergill, White Sox—Clouted Tiger pitching for four singles. | Dean, Cardinals — Made major | | league debut and beat Pirates, -1 on three hits. | | Goslin, Browns—Collected two | home runs, double and four singles | in double header with Indians, | Thurston, Robins—Held Braves to eight hits and drove in four runs with homer, double single to win 6-3. DEFEATS LOCALS Lodge | | figure to be too strong for the sev. enth place Sox, but may nct go intc the affair with the earnest spirit | The feature contest is expected to | develop in the series opener it Pal Malone, ace of the Cubs, is pittey against Ted Lyons, the Sox's grea: ight hander. iSCORES HOLE-IN-ONE AT HARTFORD COURSE | Willilam . Gorman Makes Ace 180 Yard Drive At Good- STAMFORD TEAM CAPTURES STATE INDUSTRIAL TITLE | Thrilling Pitchers’ Battle Ends in 1 to 0 Victory for Down State Baseball Team — Winning Run Is Scored On Error in Second Inning—Stanley of the Visitors Allows Local Crew Only Two Hits—Gives One of Greatest Hurling Exhibitions Seen Here— Details. P. & F. Corbin’s “murderers’ row” ,walked. This would have put Jas- was effectively silenced Saturday by |per on second. Patrus then got his Stanley, first string pitcher for the |single and Jasper would most prob- |Stamford Gas & FElectric Co. base- |ably have scored. As it was Huber Iball team, and the down state ag- |rolled out to third and the inning | gregation pranced off with a victory |was over. ‘ over the local crew and the state| The Corbin batters were absolut: | industrial baseball championship by {1y helpless before the shoots of | the score of 1 to 0. | Stanley who is one of the leading | before [twirlérs in the Middlesex league. He [more than 5,000 people at Walnut | Was accorded nice support. His team Hill park in one of the most color- |liad three errors, two of which were | ful settings ever seen here. It was|dropped foul flies by the a pitcher's battle from start to fin- |Corbins committed three win Park William J. Gorman of 103 Brigh- iton street realized a golfer's fond dream Saturday afternoon when he made a hole-in-one drive on the |17th hole. which measures 180 vards, at Goodwin park, in Hartford | He was a member of a foursome. including Patrick Gaftney, Raymond Torrell and Patrick tecano. The drive traveled the entire distance ir {the air until it reached the green catcher. misplaga| 1t then rolled and dropped into th The contest was staged A | allowed only fhree hits from ish with Jagloski, Corbin twirler, | having the edge in strikeouts and walks but with Stanley having the advantage in the number of hits al- lowed and the support accorded him. Stamford’s only run came as a| result of an crror in the second in- ning. It was the only score of the game. Kotos had been thrown out at first by Jagloski. O'Neil then | sliced a single over second. Weavir | popped up to Bill Mangan for the | second out. Harrington then bunt- ed between first and second and all hands were safe. O'Brien sent a hard grounder to Bates at first. The ball was oniy checked by the Corbin first basemen | and Joe Lipka covered it fast out | in the'grass. Bates got to the bag | in ti for a short and qui throw | but he failed to hold the ball as O'Brien bumped him. O'eil torc, for.home and was ecasily safe. Man- tanago was thrown out at first by Lipka to end the inning. Jagloski then lightened and then | until the end of the game but the | damage had been done. | Seldow has a pitching exhibition | like that given by Stanley, been seen | in this city With the Corbin team | recognized as a hard hitting crew, the Stamford twirler kept the locals | hitless until the sixth inning. In this | frame, Patrus sent a hit into left field for a single. No runs resulted. up | The only other New Britain hit came | Horn: in the cighth when Jagloski sliced | a double between left and center. | This also failed to result in a run. Corbins lost their best chance fo | tie the count in the sixth when Joe | Jasper went to sleep on first base. Jagloski had flied out to third bas: when Jasper was safe as Harring- | ton, the Stamford catcher, dropped his pop fly in front of the plate. Tha Stamford players started an argu- ment about interference but Umpire Crowley wouldn't allow the claim. Jasper was a few feet off first base | when Stanley suddenly whipped \h\-! behind Jagloski. The summary S E Montanago, & [ Martin, 2 Lione, &s Stanley, p Kotos, 1f O'Neil, ¢ er, 1b Harrington, O'Brien, 1t 0 0 0 | ma Totals Huber, rf Bergeron, Bates, 11 Lipka, 2b Mangan, ¢ Jagloski, p wleuscossroor Totals Stamford P. & F. Cor Two base fice hit Stanley Stanley 4, tin, Lione, pires: Crowle 010 000 hits: Martin, Jagloski Martin, Bases on balle: Jagloski 1. Struck out Jagloski 7. Stolen bases: Passed N and Wal GUBS VS. WHITE S0X Will 1 000—1 -0 Sacri- oft By Mar- Um- n Two Chicago Teams Mect Again This Year in City Scries to Decide Supremacy Chicago, Sept. 29 y's Cubs have finished the Natiorfal league scason with a per- fect record of four straight victor- |ies over Cincinnati since the Rajah assumed charge of the club. Winning 90 games during the sea- n—the number they figured would give them the pennant—qualified the Cubs for a chance to make a lit- tle extra money in a city champion- ship series with the White Sox. The Cubs won the 1928 city series and will start defending the title Wed- nesday. Of the 16 city series played, Sox have won 10, with the first on | ball to the bag and he was caught |back in 1203, having wound up | dead. Preisser, following him at bat, |2 7 to 7 tie. The second place Cubs|amination. (®)—Rogers | cup. . Avery was a spectator l Mr. Gorman was a former New Britain High school football player and is the father of Dick Gorman, former high school basketball pla: |er and a member of the P. & F | Corbin basketball team ' SUAREZ VS, MILLER *| Argentinian Lightweight, Undefeat- ed in American Campaign, Meets Stiff Test Friday New York, Sept. 29 (P—Justo Sugrez, Argentine, who has yet to meet defeat in his brief American battles Ray Miller, left 3| hook specialist from Chicago, in a {10 round bout which will open the indoor season at Madison Square | Garden, New York, Friday night. | Suarez hopes to batter his way into {a match with Al Singer for the light- | weight championship and right now |is not very far removed from it. | Miller, however, has a habit of up- |setting favorites. He boasts a ter- |rific punch, especially in his left hand, and is a much more experi- enced battler than the Argentine. | This bout heads the national schedule for the week. Mickey | Walker, middleweight champion, |taKes on Del Fontaine of Canada, in a ten rounder at St. Paul Friday |night with no title at stake, and |Tuffy Griffiths, Sioux City, Ia, heavyweight, meets Emmet Rocco |of Elwood City, Pa., at Detroit to- |night. At Philadelphia tonight Ed- |die shea, Chicago featherweight swaps punches with Lew Massey of | Philadelphia. CAPTAIN ONLY C: Boston, Sept. 29 (UP)—Captain |John Dixon was the only casualty todey as result of Boston college's | first clash of the season in which it beat Catholic university 54 to 7 Sat- lurday. The extent of his injuries | was to be determined by X-ray ex- OUT OUR WAY GOOD NIGHT! EveYTHiNG T BRING HOME .1 HAFTA GO THRU A THRO DEGREE — SA HOU COULD 1HAL THINKS TM A 1-37 REG. U. 8. PAT. OFF. MANY DID HE SAY oL CoulD HANE «~ I OID YOou TAKE ANY MORE THAN HE SAID YOO COULD HAVE~—ARE YOU SURE HE SAID YU COULD HAVE THEM~JUST WHAT WORDS DID HE USE - \GO0D GOSH ~ (F T BRING HOME A CAP PISTOL SHE WELL MANY D\0 ' MAN ME . £ THEM ~~ HOW GANGSTER! WHY MOTHERS GET GRAY. ,NOU GET ToO THINGS FOR NAWTHING To s0IT 1ITS STRANGE 1 NEVER SEEM TO BE ABLE TO GET THINGS JRWLLAMS ©1930 B/ NEA $ERVICE, INC. SALESMAN SAM POOR. KID' \'LL BETcHA HES LOST WIS MOTHER — OR WIS MOTHER'S LosT ! Placing WHATS TW METTER, YOUNG- EELLA? Jatay JONES the Blame Gosu! Tiass ToBsad! HOW'D k& Do (TP WELL | WU GONNA GWE H(M & 00D PUNCH (N TH' AN' HE DUCKED AN’ W(| HIT ™' LaMP PosT! €EIsT