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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1930. —— —— KENSINGTON AND ALL-STARS TO MEET ‘IN >SEAS'ON’S PROBABLY FINAL BASEBALL GAME—PAWNEES TO MEET STRONG TEAM TOMORROW-—BLUES AND RAMS TAKE TO ROAD—YALE-GEORGIA' AND NAVY-NOTRE DAME GAMES AMONG THE HEADLINERS JOE JACKSON’S ALL-STARS SEEK KENSINGTON SCALP Suburban Team, With 19 \\'ins in Row, Faces Hard | Assignment in Turning Back Outfit Composed | Mainly of Factory League Champions—Pechuk and | Jagloski Expected to Meet in Hurling Duel—Game to Stalt at 2 15 0’C lucl\ A C - NEW GEORGIA STAR MAY FLAGH TODAY i« | Buster Mott, Hero of LongRuns, fo Play Against Yale The Kensi 20th consec morrow aft with Joe city at 2:45 o'clo avenue grounds. the opposition for Kensington now semi-pro chs anxious for gton will s rnoon All- k on the Jacksor 1is iv w m games, !Innu the state and climacti i » nott Oct 1 (P—Georgia, football host last ind of surprising another packa ilk wrapped up for Haven. Norman " H. and he high Robert which Industrial ! which beat league championship. Bergeron and - Huber of the factory nine play with Kensington and Mangan will be out of town, but their places, will be filied Corbin players will be so that Jackson's out vide real o s, Ga ¥ 1 their posts should pro comes schoaol position for Kensing o on p " ; team, work Tattle pire. Manager “Wink" sington is ill with be unable to be at tt row, but his players quested to be at the fie .o'clock, when a photozrap team will b will McKeon while J for the loc 1 um- Venturo of and will tomor- Ken- tonsilitis game n re- 30 the h of RED AND GOLD OFF ONPITTSFIELD TRIP Many Fans Accompany High School Team to Bay State City Shortly 8 o'clock ti ing 30 hus afternoon the New ball team Pittsfield, be ,sport colors Britain High school on the gridiron Mass., where they play the Pittstield High school at the city's Hastern league The contest heduled for o'clock The u tardine curred be late the b about the game company the Athletic Mana Palmer and Acting General M Zetterman. Coach Geor sidy traveled in an autom Many Rooters Follow La n th® morning priy au- | men i ntercepted tomobiles decked for gold colors left Berkshires the sideli victory in t A great porti will Britainites, school te followin F. Fleischer every game less of where This will & game for the er two games Fans will judge the high school clas lineup will 1 center: W guards: Moor tackles; Man dleski. g ber, half PENN SEEKS 12TH WINOVER VIRGINIA Goach Wray Sriits raupner o Hali— C Tistei n nDnec Philadelp the dir: Univer: eleven its 12th ginia. Coac £00%-,f will tear 1 is par 1 by the ilars, oc- gular can ual delay, of one of again today but if occasione in th papers. Facult Hc were A pass south vou med opport tude hal- sou Aus- BT DARTHOUTH IN GONDITION FOR BOSTON YNV, GAME MeCall Eapected to be tion » Plav—Team in Be ty today of Scason cor 4 Robinsor Sokolis Sweeney Hemeon Carlstein Graupner Munger Perina Officials Swarthmore Colby: fie Washin scott, m;m, . Mott, | another | 50,000 WILL SEE (Georgia Hopes to Stop Yale's 10T PRAISES BAN ~ ONMOVING BACKS (Says New Anti-Homentum Rule I5 Foothall Advance \ H. YOST Oct 11 (P— mass momentum Wt by members of the football rules com- a gentury 1bolish- L rule | of al By Ann Arbor, | Momentum en fou FIELDING Mich., nd ave inter mittee The t culminat ollegiat for a third of committee's efforts at a this all 11 foothall te to come to a stop of at least a second after shift or| huddle. l The rule last year read, “approxi- | ‘mm ly a second.” But this year the | committee decided to say something | more. 1t is: “You must stop at least i:x second.” Split second watches are to refer to make “at least” is complied in members year nat requires a recommended certain the with. A constant agitator for a clear un- destanding of this important rule, I feel the rules committee finally reached a firm position. It is that can be understood any- where. The clarity will benefit foot- ball in the long run "he phrase, “come to in the 1896 neral football Jowed three men in motion Yale and Princeton, in their spe- cial agreement on the rules, change this to read that one man might be | in motion when the ball was | snapped. has one 1 full stop.” rules. In rs first | rules al- the DALLAS MARy wed by Lee Hanley, horde, Capt. Hank quarterback, Bruder, and Dal sity Northwestern univ s are two of Marvil, tackle, the Northwestern, Captaifi Finally Breaks His Jinx threatens to sweep to a Big Ten title this year, strongest PAWNEES MEET BRIDGEPORT MOHICANS HERE TOMORROW Scrappy Battle Is Expected When Teams Clash at Wil- low Brook Park—YVisitors Have Not Been Scored Upon This Season—Pawnees Hope to Break Jinx and Overcome Park City Team—Game to Be Only Football Contest in City. RAMS FAGE TOUGH TILTINELM CITY | - Triangle-Pros Have Former Gol-i lege Stars to Oppose Locals | —_— Mohicans PR Nowell, Levine Right End Kantor, Tackle Pawnees Peterson Hoppi Sullivan Rizht i a . . . Alagro Right Guard Prudhon PR C. Findley Center Ma ard Malone .. Donnelly, Zeal Bergomi reell, Cavino Durwin New Triangle afternoon at Britain Pros | New Lineup for the Rams-New Haven game tomorrow Haven Rams Conley Stauss LN’! JAnd Savino, Castaldo (‘u'lrlorbacl« Broderick, J. Findley Right Halfback b .. Simone, Graviro Halfback ¢ Simone, Graviroe football cham- play their first Ostertag Triangle Pros | Quarti Combs | Gianotti Beloin McCoy | Left Maguda The Pawne; pions of 1929, will jliome game of the present season temorrow afternoon when they - HUPEr | cjagh with the Bridgeport Mohicans at Memorial fleld, Willow Brook park. The records of the two teams are almost alike thus far, and an even Dbattle is expected. The local eleven played to score- less ties in its first two starts and dropped a 6-0 decision in Wate Smithwick ........ Left G , city Scully s Reynolds Center Benzuis e Right Guard Cannella S Gaffney ackle DeLaurghery . Jones Right Politis . : Right Ind members of the purple Baut i s Sat Quarterback the one man a part of the | The following n motion rule be a1 rules. b0 The 1895 rul imended, referred to three one man in motion forwar the last of the first American ru in which all eleven men allowed to be in motion for- | vear me Chicago, Oct. 11 (A—Capt. Bruder got by his first football game | of this season without injur: and s the the eneral and | men and | Northwes tern still is regarded team that beaten Big Perhaps Bruder, the much in reminder rul ward. The Ten conferenc more* so than ever, be- wise called by Coach Dick back he h little cause | virtually is the 1 the committee nece that time has been unremit- ting in an ecffort to ecliminate mo- mentum. It has_been especialty ac during the Tast 10 years be- of the development shift 1896 rule as toda Tanley greatest has | ever seen e his back entrance, battle New touchdowns, to slip out a In the intersectional with ive Tulane of Orleans, university Bruder dashed 1o wise of o Shift kicked goals f and his long p hoys constantl of their own te Wearing on his jersey, an elan that made that up until of injuries kept cept four games years of football The boys are saying an injury must stop Northwestern is fo be ke Bi title. It do [linois, Minnesota, In consin will be able to, ed among rence foes the extra points, s kept the southern stri 1 to get out rritory jinx defying “No. 13" Bruder played with it hard to believe this season a seri him of all ex- in last two two meaning The latter » mass plays for- common wa plays have The earlier of personncl. aning. appea of the tackle and \ations had been eliminated in 1906, to a series of rhythm produc- the ball being snapped at pla supposedly reanings shift uards back & 2 steps, moment the ire stationary. In reality the power of the rhythm continued through the moment of | the ball, producing an 11 nan mass momentum play It was against this type recent enactments of committee have been dire Minnesota, in produce of this er vie ‘of ift | hich under observation The Gophers. in the heralded jand broadly copied ota shift, always used two and times three | The Minnesota been ext and south has shifted known the play of the but its shift is onc viduals only. It is made vely as possible to salanced Ime af the 1 is put in play nifestly it ne rule so definite and posi- 5 quate sup- it all teams come to a full |[PI¥ Of reserve linesmen losing all momentum, or to| In Bruder the team has a > the rules and again permit | FUPIC t man, one who Il teams to be running when the | Kick BN S ihe Sopen [ ball is snapped. 1t is the universal |Smash the linc From the team’ opinion that football is better off for | \*ATNer Wi back formation, Han- climination of both momentum and |'¢¥: however, has stationed Bruder {at left halfback. He doesn't want e risk Bruder in the fullback job. The tou est team on the North- stern schedule Notr Dame, Trish journcy to ke for L battle, Novemher o his Bruder :pt from t look like na or Wis- passing a of offcnse s the the rules Northwes -opt Wis- sive the teams inc confi looked un me day that n the strong Though Brude doesn't compr strength of tern has a d the fret er exc e N onsir on widely M hops Tulane team, 14-0.{ spe s rhead long odds the purple. backfield that around 1 pounds, in- Moore at right half. Rus sell at fullback and Lee Hanley calling signals. Up front is { perienced playe which perhaps pound tack the by son and other simi shifts have ensively U it cluding Wolve- of indi- as unob- an the rines, line rs, spiced with ex- the stoutest of o the 200- veteran 2 illy and Marvil. um’s only appare nt weak- lack of an ade create moment was sary to he |tive 11 | stop, to to TRIANGLES OPPOSE BURNSIDE FLEVEN Local Foothall Team Abroad for Hard Game The Tria to kast stror ston CONTEST IN BOWL “Mighty Atom” Again Teday N Goes H Oct as objective of followers today as the Georgia's formidable in th east's outstanding inter tional fray. ven 11 (P~ Yale | 000, Elis | rray football football tean Hartford tomorrow All-Burnsides of at Burnside field. The will use strongest anxious to break into the column and as it knows the team is no outfit to be trifled will go to mect that local line-up, advants was of play- t favol s no doubt in the minds the southerners Blue a close fight ant win. Y went L last year at Athens ake game and tain to he home v slig team its he experts that ould give the might 1 1s it s win ana | home Ga. |V Albic 1hly With several line- I will present an exceptionally he Triangles. Among fans whom Captain 1gnani's men meet will be former versity of Ala- one time ind Maskill me vears hedule former college play- ers in its t Hartford the on to- f Un Heim ATat bama ro. guard fullback; 1alfback of The kick-off p. n. The line Triangles nillacote Svra- cuse Army d for 2:30 All-Burnsides | Neinn Sivolo Raney Waters Maturo MeNally rrrubba Richards cCormick Feigetia arti Wilson Left Halfback Gill Maskill Ialfback izno Heim Fullback louder that | it | chiefly All of the | smashed | | Hank KING FOOTBALL SUPREME IN SPORTS WORLD TODAY ' End of World Series and Begmnmg of Important (;ud-' | iron Games Bring Fall Sport Into Unquestwned Pre-eminence—Yale-Georgia Battle in Bowl Chief Eastern Spectacle — Other Intersectional Games | Draw Interest. | |l‘ otball castern s reigned supreme orts world today real rival in sight for the months. With basebal series completed to the satisfaction of the American league, newspapers | | turned their sports pages over to the | intercollegiate gridirons. marked by a series of sames, between the east and south, with a few between major elevens on | the Atlantic scaboard to add spice to | the program. The biggest spectacles of the day “|was in the Yale bowl between ¥ ind Georgia of the Southern Confe lence with Yale hoping to avenge a -0 setback of last yéar. Another | sirong Southern Conference outfit, Georgia Tech, faced the Tartans of | Carncgie Tech at Pittsburgh., | Virginia Fages Penn | Other intérsectional games brought together Virginia and Penn at Phil delphia; Washington and Lee and | West Virginia at Charfeston, W. Va.; {and Hampden-Sydney and Cornell at Ithaca, with the castern teams favor- |ed in cach instance. In the middle- west, Notre Dame was the choice | Navy at South Bend. but xpected to trim Western at Cleveland and Washing- ton and Jefferson looked for victory over Wittenberg at Springfield, Ohio. Of the purdly domestic struggles, | rinceton’s tussle with Brown at Princeton packed theé most elements | of drama, buf even battles were looked for between New York uni- versity and Villanova at New York; | Colgate and Lafayette at Hamilton, | N. Y., and Syracuse and Rutgers at Syracuse. t Some Have Other m over \\\(h no | t three | world | against Pitt W Reserve Ea or teams faced le ous opposition. In this group were such clashes as Harvard-Springfield, Army-Swarthmore. Columbia-We leyan, Dartmouth-Boston university; | Holy Cross-Catholic, Lehigh-Johns Hopkins and Penn State-Marshall. ling the long list of smaller games were such clashes as Dickinson-Ursinus. Franklin and Marshall-St. Joseph, Amherst-Union, Williams-Bowdoin, Albright-Mt. St. s-Colby, Maine-Connec- and Hamilton-Roches- FIGHTS LAST NIGHT the New ngland, irargo. N. New York ko, Butfalo, falo, New Murphy, « asy Games 3s seri- | Azgies Associated Press. York—Jack (Kid) Be outpointed Billy Petrolle g D (10); Sammy Dotfman. | outpointed Steve Halai- N. Y., (10); Patsy Ruf. ! York. outpointed Spit 11 Fargo, N. D. (10). hicAko~=Ankus | Snyaar, Dodgs| City, Kans.,, won from Otto Von | Porat, foul (1). | Omaha. Neb.—Millio Millitti. Oma- | knocked out Lefty Cooper. Lo (7) \a Angeles Ken(ucky R;arl Contender | In Dixie Football Race | Lexington, Ky. Oct. 11 (P— Ken- tucky, which has been making fast bootball progress under the tutelage | of Harry pupil of Bob | Zuppke at gures as the dark horse of the Southern confer- | this autumn. The Bluegrass ent which won | lost one and tied one last fall, an even 20 lettermen, including spectacular “Shipwreck” Kelly, halfback of 1929 The line averages close peunds, and the backfield Kelly, includes such veterans the Phipps brothers, fullbacks rey Spicer, who played half ind several others Gamag Illino ence has the sophomore to besides 200 as Ca- or juarter ‘Woodman Grip eee Halfback bury last Sunday. The Mohicans, McLean | N0t vet scored upon, have won ons { game by 6-0 and, like the Pawnees, | have engaged in a pair of 0% draws, Man hard at have them r Left Radzewich A Right Halfback Collins Fitzgerald I ulIbA( k ger Otto Barta has his men work this week in order to ady for what is ex- be a real contest. The TIn an effort to weakness at tackl liti: strengthen a Manager Al Po- | BELE Hel (0 iyg;t’ud I:: put his men through Cannella, last | 0 u Sa1id N ui‘\'vruAI new plays, the line-up has Sgreed to play with the team to.|Deen strensthencd by the addition I morrow. He 18 a powerful player|Of Gianotti well-known gridiron and will do plenty of damage to the | Star and every effort has been made | backfield stars of the Triangle Pros “:l preslgjihe Nisa s l?"f"‘ e 1’_‘_"‘ Lt forcba it 1o predioted. velop a scoring combination. The r's Fordham vorr, oct, 1t — wine LY CROSS EXPECTING ‘ WIN FROM CATHOLIG U.| Points to Boston College’s Big Score | as Crite Worc Mike I fin, fullba today. A was score beat ago. > probable Holy Cross Colucci Pyne Baironus Favulli Clark Fitzgerald Cavaleiri | O'Connell | Garrity ... Baker Griffin ster, vulli, game as Holy Cross regulars in the | play. ame with Catholic Last week the Thomaston team [Lawnees, in view of these prepara- | made most of its gains through qne [ tions, are confident of shaking off lof the tackle positions but this|their hoodoo tomorrow and expect | weakness is believed to have been|to cross the Mohican goolline not o [eliminated with the addition of the once but several times if things go | Fordham star. One of the most out- [ Well- standing men in the Fordham line| Inasmuch as this is the only foot- last vear, Cannella is said to have|ball game scheduled for this city tomorrow, a largg crowd is expect- |the flattest feet in football circles. \1: is probable that Beloin will be|ed. and the Pawnee management the game will be one | shifted to the other tackles position. | Promises that | George Smithwick, who entered last | Werth seeing. The team is composed week’s game late and who immedi- | Of Young men playing for the fun of lately began to play aggressively, is| the game, and one will be slated for a guard position. He|trying his harde the way | proved m was capable on the first | R Scully will be shifted | here/| from t i okden according to Cagle’s Brother Trains Hors | tentative plans | For 1931 Grid Season | The New Haven team is made up| Tulsa, Okla, Oct. 11 (B — A looked for in view of the | (5 s great extent of former Wil-| brother of the famous “Red” Cagle by which Boston college | 1jams players. The Williams team is| may be one of the University of Tul- university tow weeks | the only cleven that defeated N backfield charges in the 1831 | Britain last year. It won by 2 to 0 | gridiron campaign . |in the final minutes of the last| Norris Cagle. who scems (o tuke | game of the season. Of that team,|after his brother in the matters of Blasi | combs, end; Caughlin, guard: Hu-|football and red hair, has envolled iber, guard; Jones, quarterback and jin the Ti school, but is ineligibla Monaco | McLean, halfback re with the|for this team because he Pros. There are | former Jast | transferred from the Southwestern “"”"“hxo(k players including McCoy, end, | Louisiana Institute at LaFayette. {and DeLaurghery. The latter is aj He hopes, however, to play with deadly receiver of forward passes|the Tulsa eleven next year. and will have to be watched. He| The vounger Cagle h: distin« Menke | ruined the New Britain High school | guished himself in practice with the | team’s hopes a few years ago. regular squad and promises to be- O'Brien | Othgr stars are Werwaiss, former [ come onc of the main cogs of the | Nutmeg player: Gaffney of Bran-|1931 machine. Lyons | ford; Fitzgerald, all amateur | S !end; and Frankfuter of the Atlan-| OMAHA LOSES GOLFING PAIR 5. | Omaha, Oct. 11 (®—This city has | The Pros have played two games |lost one of its best golf familic Oliver |so far this season, winning both,|Foye Porter and his wife will move {one by 13 to 0, over the All-Tor-|to Montclair, N. J., this month. Por- Demelo | rington team and the other by 6 to | ter annexed the men’s title this sum« | 0 over the Ansonia Acorns. {mer at Sleepy Hollow country club, Sheary | |and his w S took the women'z {l,\li HERALD CLASSIFIED :\I)S;th;mvpmn\ rion—Favulli and Grif- fin to Start. Oct. 11 (UP)—| and Les Grif- | Ma every cente all were to start their first | Catholic university fairly casy win for a lincup holie U ft Lnd Left Tackle ft Guard on Ambrose Center ht Guard Right Tackle Right End of b b R ertoni | ¢ Quarterback Left Halfback Right Halfback™ Fullback hip OUR BOARDING HOUSE BY AHERN MASOR DO Vou WAKT // BUT, DINRY «-BEIlG A To MAKE A CHUNK OF CANDY / DoG EXPERT, —THAT ISKT A FoR \VSELF 2 v A FRIEWD POODLE ! « EGAD, HE'S A OF MINE GAVE ME —HiS WELSH SPANIEL AND PART POODLE -T6 SELL FoR $25. BPITZ v SELLING (S A BIT AT \TAKE $lo. ouT For StuGaisH , DINNY ;. AUD —THE N'SELF { wv HE'S coT A MARKET (S DULL AT PRESENST! PEDDLEGREE —THAT GOES ,~FOR INSTANCE , FRAUCE HAS A BACK To -TH” FLooD ! 2\ FIFTH oF -THE WORLD'S GoLD ! < AT SMART ~SAY, ~~AND BESIDES $ilo. PROT—‘[‘F HE STARTS BARKIAS” WoULD NoT BE 2 @ AT A DRY AGENT A BLockK