New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 17, 1930, Page 24

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 190. LOCAL FOOTBALL TEAMS TAKE TO ROAD WHEN HOME GAMES PROVE FINANCIAL FAILURES—CASSIDY ORDERS H. S. CAPTAIN OFF PRACTICE FIELD—HELEN HICKS PLAYS SENSATIONALLY IN WOMENS GOLF TOURNEY —- YALE QUARTERBACKS HURT ASSIDY ORDERS CAPTAIN LUDWINOWICZ FROM FIELD 8. Coach Angered When Leader Reports in Civilian Clothes for Important Practice — May Not Start Him Tomorrow — Fink Down in Studies Again— Several Lineup Changes Likely in Stamford Con- test Tomorrow Afternoon. % Captain Joo (Penoke) Ludwino- | Fica, the bad'boy of the New Britain | Righ school football team, was or- | Fered oft the practice field by Coach f @eorge M. Cassidy yesterday after- | foon when the captain reported in fi:eet clothes for the drill. @ Words flew thick and fast when f $, coach saw his captain kicking | the football in his ‘“civies” The ach was of the opinion the cap- #ein should have enough interest in | the welfare of the team to practice rior to the Stamford game tomor- | Sow and, after expressing his opin- Son in no uncertain terms, he told | fim to leave the field. The captain did. | Coach Cassidy said today that it Me found Ludwinowicz was not in e right mental frame of mind by me time tomorrow he would start hn Moore in his place. as taken off the first team this Feek. It is probable that the coach #nd captain will bury the hatchet by me time tomorrow. ill bury it has not been announced t. 4 Fink Down in Studies £ » To add to the troubles of the New ritaln mentor, Richie Fink is ex- pected to be ineligible for the game. | Whe one subject that is holding him wp for several weeks continues to og him. 1t is said that illness in the mily of the teacher in charge of e study has been the partial cause &t the delay. 2 When Fink was out before, Coach ssidy had turned to Gerry Flood, Moore | ‘Where they NEW YORK VIOLETS ARE UNSHRINKING N. Y. U. Unafraid of Missouri in Tomorrow’s Game New York, Oc (LP) — So many football nicknames are in- congruous that perhaps it doesn't matter, but the thought of a pack of Bengal tigers from Missouri ar- riving today to take on nothing of more threatening a nature than well have the local horticulturists | up in arms. Before tomorrow’s big intersec- tional game of the cast is over, how- C. A. will be the organization ren- dering the complaints. Ior Chick Meehan's N. Y. U. Violets are of the non-blushing variety, on the football field and elsewhere. | New York university, of fact, is strongly favored to de- feat Missouri. Meehan and his men even go so far as to explain that to- | morrow’s game at Yankee stadium | will be rather in the nature of a tune-up for the following game against the Fordham Rams. |” Upon finding they were so lightly |held, the Missourians intimated lupon their arrival that they might Put, according to Cassidy, Flood iS|payve something of a surprising and e will probably start “Bud” ainst the Stamford team. Joe Mly- f ®arskl may start at a guard posi- Jon, Although there is possibility anges, the probable lineup for the amford contest tomorrow will be a follows: Gramitt and Mangan, ends; Ludwinowicz and Zimatra- wich, tackle; Mlynarski and O'Brien, ards; Parda, center; Zaleski, quar- rback; Kloiber and Steinle, half- Bcks; Dabkowski, fullback. W Stamford Stresses Aerials * According to reports from Stam- {ord, the player New Britain players will have to watch is Fabrizzio, left Meifback, who is a triple-threat yer. He throws most passes and is on the receiving end . of a dangerous lateral pass play. Two coaches have been drilling the Stgmford team andiyesterday's ses- sion consisted almost entirely of forward passing. The Stamford team will be lighter than the Hardware City eleven. SEVERAL NIGHT GAMES ‘West Virginia-Detroit Contest Most f ioubled with an injured ankle and Tmportant Schedule. New York, Oct. 17 (A—Only one of the east's major college football teams figures in the usual batch of Friday night games tonight. .Ira Rodgers’ West Virginia Moun- taineers invade the middle west in an f attempt to gain revenge for a 36-0 beating they absorbed at the hands of the powerful Detroit eleven last year, West Virginia already has been | beaten by Pittsburgh while Detroit | has swept through three minor op- ponents in impressive style. on This Evening's Duquesne entertains Howard col- | lege of Birmingham at Pittsburgh: | George Washington plays host to South Dakota at Washington; and Waynesburg clashes with Geneva at lev?r Falls, Pa., in other night ghmes, Gerard Signs to Pilot New York Hockey Team New York, Oct. hockey season for the has been ushered in officially with the signing of Eddie Gerard, one time Ottawa defense star, as man- agetr of the New York Americans. The new manager, who succeeds Lionel Conacher, player-manager last year, played with Ottawa in his active days and later took over the Montreal Maroons, guiding th a Stanley cup victory in 1926 won in 1928, to give up the he was in t. o Mac Fayden, center Kenzle, wingm Unlversity hock signed by the the American Hockey Le | Big Minors Will Sizn New Series Agreement Chicago, Oct. 17 (R—T Ameri- can Association, victoriou. the ten junior world h started in 1921, will sien a new agreement with the 1 League for another series a ten year period, President J Hickey of the Americ tion sald today. Rocheste Louisville for the 1930 ship. in series w Associa- feated FLETCHER WITH YANKS New York, Oct. 17 (R—A Fletcher, former manager Philadelphia Nationals, again will act as u coach for the New York Yankees next season. Joe McCart newly appointed Yankee maanr anneunced Fletcher had accepted terms for the 1921 & on Fletcher has been a Yankee coach since the ceason Of | threat, however. of the | (P—The | ted States, champion- | | unpleasant nature to show their Steinle | rials, | Violets Not Afrald | The Violets are not hiding their | neads in apprehension over this They look forward to winning by from three to six days. | It may be closer than that. Although there is no doubt that Meehan's ag- gregation has a decided edge. The | Missouri eleven hasn't done any {scoring this year and may prove | consistent in that respect at least, |while N. Y. U. has great power, | plenty of backs, and the craft im- | planted by one of the east's most successful coaches. It is significant that New York | university, in final hard practices for | the game, worked out against both Missouri and Fordham plays, indi: gcatxng the boys mean what they | say when they claim to be pointing | for their local rivals rather than for the “Big Six” eleven. “Cripples” Ready to Play Jim Tanguay, Meehan's sopho- {more ace, who was rumored a con- ‘firmod cripple, returned to the squad |in the final scrimmage, but found |2 number of other backs, including |several of his fellow sophomores, quite willing to have him remain on |the hospital list. Bob McNamara, sophomore star of the Villanova. game, kept Tanguay's place in the | first team lineup for a good part of | the afternoon. | N. Y. U. has a pair of brothers | ready for action tomorrow in Her- | man and Joe Lamark, but that is nothing to what the Missourians dis- played upon arrival. In the Bengal squad are three sets of brothers, Ed and Bill Asbuhy, guards; Hadley Kimes, fullback and his brother, Ira, center; and Russ and Eldon El- | lis, ends. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT e Associ Press. New York—Kid Chocolate, Cuba, knocked out Benny Nabors, New York, (1); Black Bill, Cuba, out- pointed Freddy Latanzio, New York, (10): Pablo Blanco, Cuba, stopped Bobby Hermany, New York, (3). Minneapolis — Tommy Loughran, Philadelphia, outpointed Dick Dan- iels, Minneapolis, (10). Guest Rated as‘Best Indoor Polo Player | New York, Oct. 17 (UP)—Win- ston Guest, back on the last two American international polo teams, is the best indoor polo player in the United States, according fo an an- nouncement following the annual meeting of the Indoor Polo associa- tion here last night. Guest was ranked at 10 goals, the highest rating cver given an indoor polo player. Earle E, at No. 2 was ran A. Hopping, who played on the international team, at seven goals. Princeton to Take Up Rugby Football Play etor M. i Oct. 17T (P— will be played for | me at Princeton next squad of 35 candidates the first practice which d by Harold Cooper, for- ser of the ~ambridge Cooper now fs a stu- n graduate college. sport will be on an informal basis and will have_no of- | ficial recognition by the university sociation, it it proves will be played the follow- as a minor sport. Prac- last all fall and several be played next spring dule ha ng year | tice will games will 1lthough uted the 'ORES OFTEN —Boston ored six fresnman y as the ice in con- tion with tomorrow's game with Boston, Oc ty's varsi ne the squad terr nec 5 Middlebury. | New York university’s Violets might | ever, it well may be that the S. P. | as a matter | week's vet been | LOCAL RIFLEMEN | LOSE FIRST MATCH Middle Haddam Sharp Shooters Successful on Range New Britain rifle team was de- feated in its first league match last night at the state armory, the rific team from Middle Haddam turning the trick to the tune of 1,715 to 1,686. Thus the local team, runner- up last year in the Nutmeg Rific league, lost to the winner of the state championship last year in the opening match. Both teams shot rather erratically at times, even the stars being a little off sight last night. High score was made by W. Cav- anaugh of Middle Haddam, with 187 out of a possible 200. Under the rules, with twelve men shooting on each team, the two low men were |eliminated on cach team. and the ten high scores total counted in the finals. The scores. with stars to indicate low scores eliminated, and the to- tals, with the low scores climinated, follows: New Britain . 158 159 178 169 “ooley Boehn . Beach . . Kalish . White Stankis . Trick .... 5. Holt . McCormick . Williams Cichowski . Belkin Middle W. Cavanaugh .. P. Hallbers F. Gwenga . H. Selden ¢ L B i Evans : ) BY OSSIE SOLEM : . Hale . Des Moines, Oct. 17 (®—An un- | - Olson . ofticial record of 9.4 seconds for soeisled 100 yerds certainly should qualify Eoin | Cy Leland of Texas Christian univer- e . 2 sity as the fastest man in football 3 today—for that matter, for many a day. Coach Schmidt naturally tries to utilize this speed to the best possible | advantage. In 1929, the young “Man o War" galloped to the Southwest conference championship for T. C. U. aided by a simple ver- slon of the old Statue of Liberty play. He is on his way again this year. T. C. U. forms with an unbalanced line end with the backs shifted to the right.* Leland plays the wing | back to, the right. The ball_is| snapped to Hinton about five yards directly back of center. He is a passer and off-side runner. The schedule for shooting next Thursday night is as follows: New Britain at Meriden, Glastonbury at Middlefield. Wallingford at Middle | Haddam, Capital City at Farming- | ton. MISS HICKS DOWNS CALIFORNIA WOMAN Plays Great Golf &0 Enter Semi- veck e troven o pas svarue, e Finals—Glenna Collett Wing | though to receive a pass. In reality J.os Angeles, Oct. 17 (#—~The he goes over to knock down the| defensive rifht half. % Oliver, Tight half, lets the defen- shadow of a 19 year old girl, whose | sive right end come in, but forces string of sub-par rounds has been | the spice of the 1930 women's na- | tional golf championship, fell across him to the inside. Salkeld, left end, blocks the defensive right tackle in. the path of Queen Glenna Collett to- | | day in her quest for a fifth crown | Griffith, fullback, swings around and Dlocks the defensive left end out. Leland holds in place for about in rine years, two counts. Then he comes tearing Pride of Long Island, Miss Helen |around to take the ball from Hinton s sturdy game was put to an |and swings wide all alone, | cid test yesterday but she turned | The idea of the play is to give| back Mrs. Leona Pressler, the Paci- flc coast's last contender, 2 and 1, | in the quarter finals. Leland a chance to get into the It was a duel that probably will | open. Once there, he is gone. Michigan has used a similar play be remembered as one of the great- est in the 34 years of the tourna- successfully for years. The odd part ment's history. of the play is that it will go het((:!'J against a so-called “smart” end than Miss Hicks was hard put by Mrs. Pressler, a former western cham- Football Broadgasts || Tomorrow _—— | | ®. B. C. Chain | (Eastern Standard time throughout) | 1:45—P. M.—Harvard vs. Army— WEAF, WEEIL WTIC, WTAG, | WCSH, WLIT, WGY, WGR, WOW, | 'SAT, WFLA, WSUN, WHAS, WSM, WSMB, KGO, KECA-KFI, KOMO, KOA. (Announcer Graham McNamee). 2:45 p. m.—Wisconsin vs vania—WJZ, WHAM, KW. nouncer Bill Mundy). C. B. S. Chain 1:45 p. m—Harvard vs. Army— WABC, WBBM, WHK, WXYZ, KOIL, WCAU, KMO WFBL, WMAL, WPG, WWNC, WLBZ, WBCM, WBRC, WBT. WAIU, KRLD, KLZ, WDAY, WHP, KLRA, WLAC., KFJF, WHEC, a dumb one. You can figure that the smart end will come in at a pretty definite angle and fast, and pion and runner-up to Miss Collett | the surprisesot the play is that un- last year. At the turn they were |18 he is nifty on his feet he is) squared, with the Inwood. N Y. |Prevented from changing directions | girl one under par and Mrs, Pressler ‘“g e iotaree Lend tnde ! L : 2 | On the other hand, you never can | [Posting a perfect 39, Including an |y what & dumb end will do. He| %he hard driving Miss Hicks had‘mlght blunder directly in the path | |2 possible 78 for the trouble-making | °f “¢1and: par §1 Los Angeles Country club | north course. | Glenna Docs Even Better | This was eclipsed, however, by her New York city neighbor, Miss Col- | lett, who was forced into a potential | 77 before she could turn back Miss | Pegey Wattles of Buffalo, 3 and 1.| | After hovering about perfect figures | for three days, the defending cham- | pion had four birdies on her home | round of eight holes. Miss Wattles | had trailed during the out nine, and | collected a half dozen birdies in her | unsuccesstul fight to upset the fav- | orite, | In the other semi-final bracket, | | Mrs. 0. S. Hill, Kansas City, will test her steady, determined game on Miss Virginia Van Wie of Chicago. Seldom spectacular, Mrs. Hill, a| | semi-finalist Jast year and medalist | of the current tourney, posted a 38, | one under par, on her ouf nine, and |defeated Miss Maureen Orcutt | Hawortli, N. J. 3 and 2 yesterday. Cy Leland, Texas Christian University’s sprinter-quarterback, His great speed is utilized, among other ways, by the “Statue of Liberty” play. plays an essential part in getting Leland loose. EASTERN FOOTBALL | | declare Cornell will give Princeton | Of somewhat lesser interest will be {leyan may go down before Roches- | will be favored ‘WDBJ, | is the team's greatest scoring threat. Austin Griftith, fullback, FANS T0 BE BUSY Must Watch Traveling Teams and Back-Yard Scraps New York, Oct. 17 (P—While two powerful eastern elevens swing into the mid-west in gearch of na- tional football recognition tomorrow. the others stay at home to battle sectional rivals of ancient standing. Eastern fans will have to keep on: eye glued on Carnegie Tech and Pennsylvania as they respectively invade the strongholds of Notre Dame and Wisconsin and the other peering intently at one of a half dozen domestic clashes backed by the glamor of tradition. No game in the east will draw more attention than the clash of Harvard and Army in Soldiers Field, Cambridge. This will be a duel of two formidable machines neither of which has yet been flly tested. Up at New Haven the Bulldogs of Yale, undismayed by their defeat Dy Georgia, will try to penetrate the rugged defense of Tuss McLaugh- ry's Brown Bears. Gil Dobie has laid aside his well- known pessimism long enough to “a battle.” Experts tifnk Dobie a trifie conservative. Another meet- ing of old rivals brings together Columbia and Dartmouth at Han- over with the latter's superior re- serve strength expected to provides the margin of victory. Unbeaten Teams Clash The tenth meecting of Pittsburgh and Syracuse brings together two unbeaten teams as also will the| 19th clash of Fordham and Holy | Cross. Other outstanding games will {nvelve Villanova and Boston College; Lafayette and Penn State: Lehigh and Gettysburg: Temple and Washington and Jefferson; and Western Maryland and Georgetown. Rutgers’ contest with Johns Hop- kins and Bucknell's tangle with St. Thomas. Of the “Little Three,” Amherst will be favored over Worcester Poly and Willlams over Hobart but Wes- ter. Perhaps the classic of the day among the smaller colleges will be the Tufts-Bowdoln class at Bruns- wick, Me. As for intersectional games, Navy over Duke; New York University over Missouri; Col- | rate over Michigan State; and Mary- |land over St. Johns of Annapolis. | Davis Elkins invades the south to {meet Furman; Haverford plays | Kenyon of Ohio, and American uni- | versity tackles High Point of North | carolina. | Chocolate Knocks Out | DARTMOUTH WORKS IN AIR Hanover, H., Oct. 17 (UP) — Aerial work featured Dartmouth’s final workout yesterday in prepara tion for the first major game of the son with Columbia tomorrow. ere was also a 45-minute serim- mage between the varsity eleven and a team of substitutes armel with Columbia plays. | KSCJ, KDYL. WMT, KFH, WORC, KHJ. KFRC, KOL, KFP, KVI | Broadeasts by individual stations will include: 2:45 p. m.—Florida vs KYW. —Minnesota broadcasts Chicago— vs. Indiana—se)- rate by WCCO and KSTP. | 2:00 p. m—Michigan vs. Ohio State —WTAM. 5:00 p. m.—~Washington vs. Ore- gon—KOMO. 5:15 p. m.—Oregon State vs ford—KHJ, KFRC. 5:00 p. m—U. S. KIF. | 5:00 p. m.—Olympic Club vs. Cali- fornia—KO. | WMAQ and WBBM also will be on | the air with a game at about 2:45 | p. m. Stan- i Plymouth Contest i Closes ‘ C. vs. Denver— DAY, OCT. 20th Hurry! Get Your Contest Entry Blank at | J.B. MORAN | MOTOR SALES 313%; Church St. Tel. 2842W Demonstrations On Appointment PENN WANTS DRY FIELD Philadelphia, Oct. 17 (B—A dry field Penn's chief hope for the Wisconsin game. If the field is dry, | Penn has an even chanec says Coach Lud Wray, have the edge. is | otherwise the Badgers | Nabors in First Round New York, Oct. 17 (UP)—Kid Chocolate, brilliant Cuban feather- | weight, scored one of the quickest victories in his career at the Olym- | pia club here last night when he knocked out Benny Nabors after two minutes and 36 scconds of fighting /in the first round. The bout was scheduled for 10 rounds. INJURIES HIT HARVARD Cambridge, Mass., Oct. 17 (UP)— Weakened by early-season casualties, | Harvard made final preparations to- day for tomorrow's battle with Army, a team the Crimson never | has been able to beat. Injuries have robbed Harvard of the services of two mainstays, Charley Devens, halfback, and George Talbot, line- | man. Added to these losses was the | revelation yesterday that Mal Ban- | croft, reserve guard, was out with injuries. The West Point squad, 40 strong, arrived last night and was to work out in the stadium today. | N FOR BEST RI LTS YALE HAS PAUCITY OF QUARTERBACKS Tnjuries Mean Weiner, Fourth- Stringer, Starts Tomorrow New Haven, Oct. 17 (P—Yale's varsity football squad faces a scarc- ity of quarterbacks, a situation that is far from encouraging on the eve of the clash with an undefeated Brown eleven. Charley Heim has joined McLen- nan, Snead, and Lindenberg on the injured list, and Coach Mal Stevens has again been forced to look around for a quarterback to start against the Rhode Islanders. Heim was all set to start at quar- terback in tomorrow's game but physicians found that an injury which he suftered in practice earlier in the week was more serious than at first apparent and ruled him out of the game. He was to have re- placed McLennan, who is nursing a twisted ankle. Coach Stevens now is looking to Sandy Weiner, fourth ranking quar- terback on the squad, to fill in for Heim and plans to hook him up with Sullivan, Dunn and Crowley in the backfield at the start of tomor- row's game. Hans Flygare who was promoted to the Blue squad Wednesday when Lindenberg, regular left end, was pronounced unfit to play, has been selected above Madden for the in- jured end's position. Jock Sutherland, head cdach, nev- er saw a football game until he en- tered Pitt in 1914. He was sent in the third game of the year and play- ed four years, N OUR BOARDING TO MEET Grand Old Play Gets T. C. U. Speed King in Clear |[FOOTBALL TEAMS UNABLE EXPENSES HERE City to Be Without Week-end Sport as All Local Elevens Schedule Road Games—All Sustain Losses in Home Games, Making Them Reluctant to Try Again—Receipts Very Low Despite High Type of Football. NOGKS MAKE STAR OF VANDY PLAYER Johnny Askew, Once Clumgy, Now Hailed as Great Nashville, Tenns, Oct. 17 (P—The story of Johnny Askew, the substi- tute halfback who broke into the headlines by scoring four touch- downs for Vanderbilt against Min- nesota, is one of the season’s finest. Three years ago Johnny, as a Vandy freshman, weighed 1335 pounds, was slow and clumsy. He distinguished himself solely by his ability to take knocks, without get- ting anywhere. As a sophomore he weighed 140 and still had his other traits, but Vanderbilt squads are small and he clung desperately to a place with the scrubs, appearing early at practice and staying late. He asked the other boys to tackle him in some private running practice. Last fall, it was the same old story. He stuck around, played a littls and took the bumps. This year he figured to be the same Johnny, hanging around and taking the bumps while one of the best arrays of Commodore backs in years headed for all the glory. Then Vanderbilt opened against Chattanooga and Johnny got in the game. It was only a warmup and it didn’t matter much what hap- pened to him, anyhow. But Johnny had suddenly found himself. He had it. His coordina- tion had clicked and he ran, tackled and blocked skillfully, intercepted a pass and tore off a dizazy run for a touchdowp. His welght was up to 150, largely because of a Spartan physical and dietary discipline. Against Minnesota Coach Dan McGugin figured that Johnny might be ripe. He was. He went in against the Gophers when Mouse Leonard, ill with a cold, weakened under the pounding of the brawny Northmen. Minnesota threw a pass, Johnny intercepted it and reeled off a touchdown. He added three others before the game ended. That's just one reason why Van- derbilt will take a lot of stopping fn the Southern conference this tall. Bristol and New Britain Bowling Teams to Clash The Bristol and New Britain rep- resentatives in the state bowling league will meet at Rogers Recrea- tion Alleys tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. The New Britain team won three games from Bristol Mon- day night and have hopes of win- ning three tomorrow. Nick Tronosky and Joseph Gacek, both of this city, are rated as two of the best duck pin bowlers in the country by G. L. Isemann, president and secretary of the National Duck Pin Bowling congress. CARNEGIE TAKES 37 MEN Pittsburgh, Oct. 17 (P—Carnegie Tech is taking mo: chances on ‘run< ning short of men in the Notre Deme game. The squad which left for South Bend yesterday included every available varsity player, 37 in all. HOUSE Néw Britain will be without & single football attraction during the coming week-end. The Rams will play in Bridgeport, the Blues will be in Windsor Locks, the Pawnees are playing the Maple Ends in Bristol and as yet the Tri- angles have not reported a game, al- though it s said the team will play in New Haven. Lack of patronage is the probable reason for the unwillingness of the teams to play at home. The Rams played once, took a financial lacing, and then took to the road. The Pawnees played here last Sunday and they also suffered financial loses. The Blues have not played here as yet. A few years ago the park com- mission had a difficult time trying to settle the differénces between the varjous teams that wanted the park. It was necessary sometimes to allow one team certain Sundays and an- other team other specified dates. So anxious was the professional team to have a Sunday that it had to pay the Blues for the use of it. Rams Suffer Loss Professional football is in a bad way this year. The game with Thomaston resulted in a loss of more than $200, The Rams are making up losses in two road games and may try another home game a week from tomorrow. Although ne official announcement has been made it was indicated that if another financial loss was suffered the pro- fessionals would stay away from home for the rest of the season. That New Britain will have few home games in Octeber seems cer- taln. The high school team will play away from home for the entire month, it being in Stamford tomor- row and Bridgeport next Saturday afternoon. Last Saturday the team played in Pittsfield. At the rate things are going in this city, it is fortunate the team is not staying at home. The contest against the New Britain alumni resulted in a loss. Al- though the expenses were not high the receipts were practically noth- ing at all. All the Sunday teams are enjoy- ing good seasons from the sport standpoint. The Pawness, improved practically 100 per cent, have lost only one gathe. The Blues have lost one and the Rams were defeated on one occasion. The Rams and Paw- nees’ losses were by 6 to 0 scores, but the Blues lost 25 to 0. Appleby Asked to Defend Billiard Title in Month Chicago, Oct. 17 (P—Edgar T. Appleby of New York, who regained the national amateur 18.2 billiard balkline title by defeating Percy Col- lins of Chicago last week, has been asked by the National Billiard asso- ciation to defend his champlonship \sfilhln the next 30 days, instead of 0. Ray V. Fessenden of Madison, Wis., is the challenger and it is like- ly the match will be played at Mad- ison. ARMY LEAVES QUIETLY ‘West Point, Oct. 17 (#—The Army cadet corps does not get to travel at lelsure as the football team does. Thé ‘meére students were too busy even to give the team a sendoff when it left at noon yesterday, and 'they will continue to be that way until tonight when they start for Cam- bridge. Firpo Wilcox, former University of Oklahoma athlete, {is appearing as a professional wrestler in New By AHERN Ho{\lz Nou TRIED 1 -TUNE A} NET oM THAT NEW MNSTERIOUS BOARDER HERE 2 wc WE -TRED To GET HIM T2 HE'S AS —TiGHT-LIPPED AS A’ BEAR TRAP! «w HE™D WHISPER LONG DISTANCE !« -THERES SOMETHINE ol : aR H:‘% DOIRS 1N -TH™ GENERAL. COMFUSION ¢ =i : onl ! |USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS TALK, BUT MAN THAT auv, oF we AS AN INSPECTOR FOR SCOTLAND YARD, I LEARA “THE COMVERSATIONAL ART OF MAKING A SILENT COMMIT HIMSELF HIS OWA ACCORD !« EGAD,WAIT «T'LL ENGAGE HiM IN A CHAT AnD

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