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The Central New Jersey Home News from New Brunswick, New Jersey • 12

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New Brunswick, New Jersey
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12
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PAGE TWELVE THE SUNDAY TIMES, NEW BRUNSWICK, N. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1939, bounces risli. arvar 9 c. 20 Upsets Tom Harmon Passes, Runs Princeton Air Rotll Elevens Register Michigan lo 21-14 Victory ckCnBhc8T Last Period Scores Seymour Sparks Yale; Crimson Miscucs Costly Cornell Eleven Ends Campaign With 26-0 Win Michigan Ace Scores Twice and Passes to Third Touchdown Over Ohio State Sheridan Huns 60 Yards for Final Notre Dame Score ISEA All-America Grid Eleven to Appear in Home A'eu's Tomorrow By WHITNEY MARTIN The 1939 NEA all-America football team, presented annually by the Daily Home News and selected by sports authority Garry Grayson, sports editor of the NEA Service, will be printed in the Daily Home News tomorrow. As Selector Grayson states, the names are not picked out of a hat, but through careful scrutiny of the college gridirons throughout the season.

In addition to the first, second and third teams, the list of honorable mention candidates and illustrations will also be Middies, 28 to 0 Stanley Takes Three Touchdown Passes in Tiger Finale PRINCETON, Nov. 25. A long passing attack that baffled their opponents enabled the Princeton Tigers to close a successful season with a 28 to 0 victory over Navy before 35,000 spectators in Palmer Stadium today. Three tremendous tosses to Howie Stanley, Princeton end, brought the same number of touchdowns in the first half, and another series of passes set the ball up for Ed Rose to plunge across from the one-foot mark toward the close of the contest. In scoring their sixth straight victory the Tigers clinched runner-up honors to Cornell in the so-called Ivy League, their only defeat having been at the hands of the champions early in the season.

In today's freezing weather they again demonstrated that their passing was deadly, but that their running game was mostly a myth. The Middies, cheered on by 1,000 of the Annapolis corps, gained only ANN ARBOR Nov. 25 (IP) Ohio State University won at least a share the Western Conference football championship today in much the same manner that Max Schmcling won the world's heavyweight title flat on It back. Michigan's wily Wolverines wrecked Buckeye hopes of a "clean" conference season by spotting Ohio two first-period touchdowns and then roaring back to win by 21 to 14, the sceond time thi year that Ohio State surrendered a two-touchdown edge. Cornell came from behind earlier in the campaign to hand the Buckeyes their only previous loss.

Tom Harmon, Michigan's mighty halfback, stood head and shoulders above the rest of the field, his passing and constituting a one-man victory parade but Buckeye mistakes cost Ohio State the laurels. Twice the alrt Wolves turned Concludes Undefeated Season by Whipping Pennsylvania I'lULADELI'IUA, Nov. 25. VP) In 21 plays and a blocked kick, Cornell's heavily-manned football battalions put over four touchdowns today to bury Pennsylvania under a 26-0 score, win the championship of the Eastern Ivy League for the second year In a row and, best of all, finish their season unbeaten and untied and hailed as the kingpin of eastern football. Before a crowd of 69,000 in Franklin Field, the Ithucans put together those 21 plays In three high-geared scoring drives of 50, 49 and 44 yards.

In between the first two marches, they sandwiched the blocked kick and, for the entire afternoon, they kept Penn outside their own 40-yard stripe. The Penn supporters In the big double decked stands had turned out hoping against hope for a repe- Fen el on Registers Upset by Winning Endurance Handicap BOWIE, Nov. 25 oP.i. Belair stud's Fenelon, a 15 to 1 shot, upset an imposing Held of two-yenr olds to win the mile and 70-yard endurance handicap today. Well handled by Jackie J.

51 out, Fenelon was kept close to the pace until the turn when he shot around General Manager and hammered across the finish line by a scant head. The time was 1:45 3-5. The winner collected $8,775 of the purse and paid hackers $32, 14.50 and 10 20 for 52 mutuel tickets. General Manager paid $10.90 and $6.20 and son Altese paid $12.60 to show. DiHjuesne Tops Carnegie Tech Keep Record Spotless as Second Half Attack Clicks Eli Sophomore Passes lo First Score and Registers Second CAMBRIDGE, Nov.

25 iff) A fighting Yale football team took advantage of every miscue made by the supposedly smarter and stronger Harvard forces to gain a 20-7 upset victory today before a chilled crowd of 52,000 at Harvard stadium. While ending a two-year Crimson reign in this 38--y r-old Big Three classic, the Elis wasted two of the five trips they made over their traditional rivals' goal-line only one of their three touchdowns was generated by power. They outplayed Harvard by a wide margin, despite the latter's 11 to 4 superiority first downs, and kept the Crimson well under control until the last minute of play, when Ca ain Torby MacDonald saved his team frorr a shutout by running and passing 80 yards before plunging from the one-yard line. It was "Yale's 33rd victory of the long series fcainst 19 defeats and six ties. Both of these teams, the weakest to represent those once great football powers in many years, got off to wobbly starts, but Yale managed to pull itself together and started rolling early in the second period for Its rst touchdown.

Harvard's only two fumbles opened the gates for the other two Blue counters. SOCTH BENO, Nov. 25 mighty Trojans of Southvrn California roared along their undefeated way today, but the fans who shivered and shrieked and moaned as the western team won 20 to 12, went away from the game with a feeling of awe at the spectacle. Awe for the sheer power of the white clad giants from the west; awe for the spirit of an underdog Notre Dame team which never would admit It waa licked. It was a football game which built climax upon climax until tha spectators in Notre Dame's stadium were limp and exhausted, a game in which an out powered Irish, eleven, which seemed on the verga of annihilation, suddenly began ripping and slashing back at its giant foes until it had tied the score, and never gave up even after the Tro jan powerhouse again had taken command.

Four of the five touchdowns were scored in the last frenzied quartet when for a time it seemed that th impossible would happen; that tha Irish youngsters, dwarfed by theii whlteclad foes, would steal tha game. In the first period even the most violent Notre Dame fans wouldn't have given a worn nlekle for thei team's chances. The first time th Trojans got the ball, on a punt which rolled dead on their 33, thej; began to march. A van couldn't have moved out Barron Cagers Have 18 Games fi I I Ohio fumbles Into touchdowns. A crowd of 80,227 crammed every corner of the Michigan stadium to witness one of the thrilling duels in the 37-year history of the Buckeye-Wolverine grid feud.

Ohio State start like a power- Woodhridge Basketball Team Opens Season December 19 titlon of last year's scoreless tie and another fine show by Francis house, ram-iing across two touch Xavler Reagan that might keep the downs In the first 10 minutes, both Red and Blue In the fight. PITTSBURGH, Nov. 25 (P)-In smashing last half rally the un- on passes by Don Scott, quarterback, after Intercepted aerials had started the Bucks goalward. Bag of Tricks Ohio dipped deep Into lta bag of tricks to score the first, Guard Vic Marino lining up at an end and then taking Si five-yard heave in the end zone. Three minutes later Scott passed 17 yards to End ihey were disillusioned very shortly on the first point and, while Reagan kept faith with them, he couldn't get far without more help.

His captain, Harlan Gustafson, at end, did as much as he could for almost the full 60 minutes as he turned in pne of the greatest defensive performances of the day. I PIT' Mil, -A Villi Ponn u'n a hnHlu Freddie Burr and Hovey Sey-1 defeated-untled Duquesne Dukes mour sliced through the Crimson came from behind to defeat Car-line for 30 before the former negie Tech today 22 to 7, keep-contacted Alan Bartholemy, the I lng intact their spotless record highly polished sophomore end, and winning the steel city's "back-twice with aerials. The second one. yard" series. a six-yarder, he caught In the end Held to a lone tally in the first zone.

half and trailing 7 to 6, Duquesne'a Bartholemy, a thorn in Harvard's Pny backs ripped the bulky Tartan side from start to finish, made a line to hreds th second half, diving catch of another Burr pass slashing through for huge gains in th third period, a few inches be- and scoring two touchdowns and a yond the end zone. That tally was np'd oaI- As the Rame ended illegal but the irrepressible sopho- Dukes were threatening again deep more immediately put his team In in Tartan territory, another scoring position by recov-l Wlth the ewpt'on of one 40-ering a poor pass from center a3 yard touchdown march and a drive Harvard tried to rush from its 20. th where fumMe r. lost the ball In the second period Seymour Seal Game Carnegie couldn't dent the stout Seymour ran three times before bluffite defense. Burr went over from the three-yard As has been true of Cornell all Clair taking it in scoring territory, season, it was difficult to single out Scott booted both extra points, any Individuals above the team, and that ended Ohio.

Early in the Halfback Hal McCullough and End second session Harmon and End Kirk Hershey split the four touch-jjoe Rogers connected on a 49-yard downs between them, but McCul-1 aerial gain to the Buckeye six, and lough had rivals for ball-carrying 0n the second play Harmon flipped honors in Whit Baker and Mort a touchdown nass tn Otisrteihack W'OODBRIDGE, Nov. 25. An 18-game schedule, including three open dates, will be played by Wood-bridge High's basketball team this season, it was announced today by Stephen Werlock, director of athletics. The Barron tossers, under the reins of Coach Lincoln B. Tamboer, will open their elate on December 19 with Hamilton township and will close their season on February 27 against Perth Amboy Catholic.

The schedule: Dec. 19, Hamilton Township, home. Jan. 5, Carteret, away; 9, open date; 12, Red Bank, away; 18, Cranford, home; 19, Dunellen, away; 23, Perth Amboy Catholic, home; 26, South River, away; 30, Carteret, home. Feb.

2, open date; 6, Long Branch, away; 7, Red Bank, home; 9, Hamilton Township, away; 13, South River, home; 16, open date: 20, Long Branch, home; 23, Dunellen, home; 27, Perth Amboy Catholic, away. one less yard than the victors did by rushing, and the first downs were the same 12 to 12. But the Navy did most of its ground-gaining around the middle of the gridiron, while Princeton struck with lethal effect. The Tigers completed 11 out of 21 passes attempted. The first three Princeton touchdowns went like this: Bob Peters to Stanley, 25 yards plunk in the end zone; Dave Allerdlce to Stanley, 20 yards plunk on the goal line; Peters to Stanley, 44 yards plunk! On the third one, Stanley was forced to run the final 10 yards.

60-Yard Drive The first score, at the close of the opening period, climaxed a drive of 60 yards. The second, early in the next quarter, capped a 69-yard advance. The third was all Peters to Stanley the whole 44 yards. Peters and Allerdice did some exceptionally fine pitching, and Stanley was brilliant on the receiving end. All were long passes and some of them were even wobbly, but the Navy secondary was helpless against them.

Navy, thanks to hard running by Tom Blount and Sam Boothe, dominated the third period, twice going well into Princeton territory. The Middles even had the upper hand in the fourth up to the time Princeton intercepted a pass on the 40-yard line. Then the Tigers collected themselves and struck again. Stan Pearson, a substitute back, shot a pair of passes to Rose and Peters, and the ball was on Navy's Tom Harmon, Michigan ace, ran wild against Ohio (State yesterday as he tossed two passes for the first touchdown, circled right end for the second, and set up the third. In addition he place-kicked three extra points.

Forest Evushevski Landsberg; Alva Kelley on the other wing blocked the kick that Hershey recovered In the end zone, and in the line Howard Dunbar, a roving guard who traveled far and In the third period Guard Ralph Fritz snatched Scott's fumble on the Ohio 35, and Harmon followed with a cass to Roeers on the 16. Then on the 11. with Bob Westfall recov- Lafayette Tops Lchmh, 29-13 the Notre Dame line more effectively than did the Trojan forwards ai Grenville Lansdell and Bob Peoples, but mostly Grenville Lansdell, be gan to march. Lone; March Sixty-seven yards they marched In 12 plays, the only play that failed to gain being an intercepted pass, and when Lansdel shot over from the two-yard mark the bewildered fans thought they had seen the ultimate in offensive perfection. For the remainder of the period, and well into the second quarter the dazed Irish were back on their heels.

Doyle Nave had taken over the Trojan offense at the start of the second. It was Nave, Nave, Nave, running, passing and kiclursr, and the law of averages al: promised a score from his effect He did carry the invaders to Irish one-yard line, but there own fumble ruined the bid Harry Stevenson, recovered in 'no end zone for a touchback. That break was a tonic to tha bewildered Irish. From their -0 they marched to USC 44, with it Piepul and Stevenson sparking the attack, but Peoples checked the invasion by Intercepting a pass on the 10. It was the first time they had been in Trojan territory.

Soon after this a Lansdell punt was returned by Steve Sitko 12 yards to the USC 30, which was tha line but the latter was called back because of an offside. The penalty moved Yale back to Harvard's eight-yard line but Burr wiped out seven of them by running and passing to Sterling Brinkley, his other winger, who was dragged down about four feet from the goal. Sey wide to smear Quaker runs and Michigan pulled "old 83" out of the erlng for the Wolves, passing plays, had a supporting sack, and Harmon, after a bit of. The game-clinching touchdown cast that didn't give him a chance backfleld "dipsy Doo," skirted his 1 came with 50 seconds to play, and to gain too much pre-eminence. right end for the touchdown that was a personal as well as an artistic 50-Yard Drive evened the count, Harmon kicking triumph for Coach Fritz Crlsler of The second time Cornell got the b0th extra points.

I the Wolverines. Michigan started ball, after receiving the opening gcott tool: the next kick-off on 'its march on Its own 38, where kickoff, it went 50 yards in six ms ten and raced vo the 29, from Westfall recovered Strausbaugh's plays. Baker made 24 of those on Where Halfback Jimmy Straus-: fumble. Harmon's runs, and his a reverse, and pitched to McCul-; naugh went off tackle for 57 yards, passes to Ed Czak and Evashevskl, lough for the last six. Before the the longest of contest, but put the ball on the Ohio six, but the quarter was over Kelley, racing in John Hallabrin, fullback filling in Bucks pushed them back to the 24 from his right end position, had for injured Jim Langhurst, fumbled i In three plays.

Villanova Tops Manhattan, 7-0 Mazzei Scores in First Period on Quarterback Sneak With- mour naa utie difficulty pounding over the points that put the definite seal of Yale victory on the argument. Yale appeared content with a 14-0 lead going into the fourth period, when Seymour rolled a mighty boot to MacDonald. who was smeared In his tracks on Harvard's 8. There Joe Gari ella, who replaced Fran Lee, fumblec' anil Cape Bur-nam smothered It for Yale. Again Burr and Seymour swung into action and the latter scored from the five-yard line to give Yale a Griffiths, Metuchen Resident, Catches Touch-down Pass BETHLEHEM, Nov.

25 (IP) For the first time In three years Lehigh scored on Lafayette today, but after taking a 6-0 lead the Engineers faded and Lafayette came on with a rush to win, 29 to 13. A crowd of 13,000 that turned out for this 73rd renewal of the nation's longest football rivalry went one-foot line. A plunge failed to budge the Sailors' line and a pass was incomplete, but on third down Rose plunged across behind his interference to wind up the scoring Hlnchman placekicked two extra points and Aubrey and Jackson The Outdoor Sportsmen iaen a. iiying oiv inai oiocKea a Reagan punt on the Penn 15, and Hershpy followed the bounding ball into the end zone and fell on it for the second score. Midway of the second quarter Cornell came on again, 49 yards this time in nine plays.

Two completed McCullough passes helped make it first down on the 16, and from there the star halfback whip- BY BOBBY GUXES eacn accounted ior one. x-irw vnnir nt ib Man Eight days are all that are left i lng dike and started out to sea on of the wildfowl shooting season in the outgoing tide. Those were the only scoring op- footballers haven't MnetiinitlAa ri noln liorf Kilt hOV 1 Villanova scored a point against 204 lead inasmuch as Howard Kavt Jake Deinzer. foreman on the ped off Penns left tackle, cut back the state. The season that opened slightly and fought his way through last October 22 came in like a lamb.

into an uproar midway of the sec- didn't upset 5 since 1900 and they ond period when Lehigh scored on I Ppnn mpn foP lh, iast two but according to the latest reports a iw-vira uirwara rsss. ai uox to i iniua uiii. from the Barnegat Bay and Rari government project, placed the web-feet there and for two weeks held them fenced in with wire until they could acclimate themselves to the new surrounding. After first clip- Charlie Griffiths of Metuchen. N.

J. vumiiuuieu i wo extra points. Iowa Gridnien Rally To Tie Northwestern tan Bay districts it should go out in a blaze of activity. made good each time. Navy, already beaten four times, carried the pigskin into Princeton territory on five occasions, once reaching the 25 line.

That was their best effort, though Louis Mayo brought the crowd to its frozen feet with a beautiful 50-yard return of the kickoff after Princeton's third score. nearly every play Elmer Layden would send in a substitute to rtop the clock and outline the tactics planned on the bench. Time after time it seemed that Layden's skinny finger might reckoning some nameless, forgot ten man of the Notre Dame army tn Boston College Trims Kansas State, 38 to 7 But their elation was short lived. The Maroon, led by Sophomore Waiter Zirinski. who scored 17 points, came back to tie the score at the half, took a three-point lead the precedent today.

They were pushed all over the lot by a highly favored band of Wildcats but the best Villanova could do with its wide edge was a 7 to 0 victory over the Jaspers before a crowd of 9.951 customers who saw the proceedings at the Polo Grounds this cold, bleak afternoon. The Wildcats, beaten only by the great Texas Aggies and Auburn so far this year, scored the only touchdown late in the first eriod at the end of a 31-yard drive after taking a poor Manhattan kick. Harry Maz- in the third period in Zirln.okv'n Nov Hunters combing the flats along 1 ping their wings, the mallard were Barnegat during the past few days allowed the privileges of the pond have reaped the harvest that the last week 17 slid over the wall cold and miserable weather provid- and into the grip of a strong out-ed. Broadbills, black and brant, going tide. supplied most of the targets and was the at H(Je for the unfor.

many local hunters have been in tunate quackers for two youths fin-on the take. them off from a small boat It Is more or less of a paradox with rifles as they passed the city because word from the Saint Law-'dock. rence districts has it that the flight Mote duck and two swan are to 'a hero's place, but the half ended John Kovatch caught a pas from Stevenson on the USC five, I and the next play was swarmed by; 'white Jerseys on an end run at-j tempt. Nebraska Cornhuskers Whip Oklahoma, 13 to 7 EVANSTON. Nov.

25. A -Iowa's amazing band of gridiron warriors came from behind in the fourth period to score a touchdown and tie Northwestern. 7 to 7, in a thrilling, bruising game played before 40,000 spectators. Clawson, reserve fullback, scored for Norwestern in the second ppr-od from the four-yard line and Murphy, Iowa's plunging fullback, counted for the Hawkeyes at the art of the fourth, going over from the one-yard line. 20-yard field goal, and then ran.

College, ripe with power and ver-) wild in the last period to score sat ility, dealt a smashing blow at three touchdowns. Lehigh scored Big Six gridiron prestige and nirain in the last 30 seconds on a hauled itself into the Bowl game i 43 yard aerial, Roscnfcld to Bill picture today by thundering to Simpson, a subend. t0 7 triumph 'over an outclassed Zitinsky set up the Maroon's first Kansas State eleven before 11,000 score by running back Steve at Fenwav Tark. Smoke's punt 47 yalds. A p(U(, onlv ice during the game could I tondron to Allen, put the ball on th flrivnnr hevnnH mill.

LINCOLN, Nov. 25 OP). has just recently begun in earnest. I be liberated in the park in the i Two touchdown passes from Roh- ze turned right end on a version Texas Christian Turns Nevertheless enough have been seen spring, it was also learned. in the shore vicinity to make it well 1 Back Rice Owls, 21-Q the 12 and Zirinnky bucked over field, once to score against Boston worth going after.

Npwt youthful electrical ftaiii ill; iinai nil jraius 1UI lllc tally and Nick Basca, as usual a passing, running star all afternoon, coiverted for the extra point. three plays later. rig to Petsch, both in the second quarter, gave Nehraska a 3 to 7 victory over Oklahoma before an estimated 37,000 here today. Oklahoma scored with a minute and a half to play on three successive completed passes by Clark. Coppage took the third one for the score third stringers tn the game's dying It would seem that the river is 'appliance salesman, who is regular moments and the other time in the just a bit too close to the new John-1 habitue of the field and meadows third period when they reached son park located in Highland Park, of Middlesex county, took two more the 20 only to be stopped cold by ci I for 18 duck, placed there a few cottontail near the Pints off the raging Eagle defense.

I weeks ago, waddled over the cnclos-' Lincoln Highway. Football Results FORT WORTH, Nov. 25 Texas Christian struck twice in th first period and once in the fadinjr minutes to defeat Rice 21-0 in a Southwest Conference football gama today. It shoved Rice into the cellar in place of TCU. Looney scored two touchdowns and Sparks on with Cook adding the extra points.

COLONIALS WIN, 1-t WASHINGTON, Nov. 25 Washington University turned back Bucknell 7-6 today before a crowd of 3,000 to win Its first game over the Lewisburg, football team in six years. Vale Ilarvurd Gamecock Fiirhlinir Time Down South I'linrt-ton in 7 11 It's -avy lfc 8-20 7- 7 iv- oo Colgate 0 Columbia Cornell IVnn $3,000, New Orleans where the sport for it. Tlace a starving bird into a is older, has become a contender pi, whose floor is strewn with corn, Villanova Manhattan Mlrhliran Mate (V- 1 with a $5,000 tournament at a South I and It will speed to its adversary Temple 0 County Swim Meet Wednesday Boys Under Age of 18 Will Compete for The Titles: Forty Entries Keceivetl NKW ORLEANS, Nov. 25 Across the nation this month in barns, rar.

islands or swampland the fierce little gamecocks who fear death less than they fear a June ug return to the pits. From New Orleans northward Kenner pit on the ci y's outskirts. over the kernels. Pen It long hours lng at a sound the cripple hobbling to doom, the pierced brain throbbing with the thought to fight. Dead birds will be found to have as many as 150 gaff marks.

The cock which turns and runs, even thong wou ed, si a "dunkie," a barnyard craven, a disgrace to Its breed. But one which shows the final desperate spark of courage t'nUcije lVislon Katun There are other pits nearby. The rjport thrives also, as evidenced by the advertising and ac- 0 7 away from the wife and kiddies, and it flies past their gentle duckings to Its appointed end. Jungle) Bird Thousands of years ago, men Florida west, the referee's cry i counts of matches in four or five an lafawttj. l-rtilKh 0 Duquevne (j Carnegie Tech.

0 Michigan 0 Ohio Mate I'enn stat, journals devoted to game fighting. (V 2 0 5 7-21 I snared a species of jungle bird in in South Carolina, Mississippi, Ala- 0 10 7 0 7 7 0 0 All boys under the age of 18 years en, one-meter diving champion of 0 7 0 0 0 0 ft II 6 0 ft-JB 0 0 0 00 .1 IX 0 7 07! 13 7 7 12 3 0 0 0 77 7 0 0 SM 0 0 0 00 II 7 0 7 24 0 0 0 00 ft 0 0 1120 0 0 0 13 1 i 0 7 7 O-4'l 6 0 0 08 0 7 5 02(1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 07 0 0 0 0 of "Gentlemen, pit your cocks!" will send them into their fatal minutes of grit I steel. To the eye the dance will be a blur of feathers and to the ear a tattoo li a snare drummer's roll. sometimes will oe wnnarawn iroiu i inat vm' mppt ct are Invited to compete in the an-1 msl sars meei bama, West Virginia, Tennessee, the wilderness south of the Hlmala-Oklnhoma. Texas.

Indiana, Mis- yBgi and some of these in time bn-sourl, Ohio and many other states, jrame the fine fat chickens of the Ihike N. Carolina Stat Oll Other at rone contender for iho Breeders say it exists to some ex- barnyard leghorns. Plymouth Reds. But of the fight and lost bcts-to livejnu.il Middlesex County Roys' Swlin-as a brooder which will keep that ruing Championships, which will be conr in in lta own line or (n A i1 A-nyJ lkt Vina But they strike Hh incredible tent in every state, with few excep- Bocks, Rhode Island Indiana rulifoniia Notre Ilanie force, and for a certain number the five titles at stake are I'M Hen of Metuchen, lunnrr-up to lloffm: i i the championships Ihe Nalsitnrium; William Ftinl, fiO ynid h.T k.stroki' clnlh i- I Charles McFrl-y, 1. e.

i 0 0 0 0 7 I Wednesday night at 8:30 o'clock, shown Signs Of weakening. Krrn Chase, director of the meet, has announced 40 entiles fust fight will be the last. Olhers: may vivc lx or seven matches. A rock which is thrown by the! fight against wooden sides of a pit can drive its deadly stud coated (unit North ot'rn X. M.

Baylor iv- 7 ft- i 7 7 0 7 7-21 0 (I 21 1 IV- 7 Wisconsin MK-ioiirt hana Hons. some remained jungle birds, fierce There is no Federal law against and lethal, and from the days of it. but a number of Legislatures (heir first rousing battles at the outlawed it along with passage of cave's mouth men began to breed the old nti-prlzeflght statutes. In them for these qualities, other sections, the cruelly-to-anl-1 Themistocles, leading his little nmls ban has been invoked. band of Greeks against the Persian the opposition is active, 1 horde at I'lataea, halted their the meets re held In barns behind march at a roadside where two closed dors, or back In (he pine rncks were fighting to death.

He Gamp Fighter Cutting ability, as a punch in boxing, Is the mark of champions. It is the ability to damage. A cock which has it is dangerous as long as it is alive. It may be pierced by the steel of Its opponent six times have been received to date, includ i epreseiitn' ive in the 1 citing three county champions, Chel style event. Paulua the 25-yard outdoor' As an added i-ii fre-atyle titleholder, Ed Hoffman, ballet will be porfotm by t.i-50-yard outdoor free style cham-1 hers of hi- New Brunt w.Vis and Luclen Bruno of Metuch- i ming Club.

GrglaTrh. 1 II Florida 7 0 Auburn i it will hang there until released by lis handler. Last year in Cuba, a turd thrown against a spectator made fatal wounds in his chest. The sport is as old as hlHtory. In India, rules for cock fighting appeared before laws for men.

George Washington fought cocks at Mount Vernon and once on the same djiy iltcndcd a vestry meeting and a Florida, among other states, sl.e. i from SUPn courage. and vet w' a rivlnir flurrv make hRVe Wn Caesar saw many fights. And he fight and Se sur- MinOI.KSKX COl NTV MWIMMINO If NovenilM'r In New Brunswick V. M.

A. I'ool ininio ine sni nomi nr hiiihiik uik In any case, if ynu are a breeder, bnt barlans. Earlier English kings I handler or merely a lover of the were fans, and at least one cannot be acquired. It Is bred into 1ote of Hi; Hi Name. a line and slrengtnened tnrougn gamebirri, you are welcome to the Elizabeth.

Ben Franklin proposed SCHOOL S( OKIX Snjder M-rwy 13, Lincoln t'lcrwy My) Not ley Kearti 0. Milllmrti 39, Madison 0. Ridge Clifford Sool 0. GarfMd 21. tirton H-Hintnn 8, Hom-IIp n.

Cranford Aluninl 8, Westlldd Alumni Address meets, few of which charge admis-1 the game bird as a national b' sion. If you are none of these. 1 rathei' than the "somewhat coward- birds sometimes are given the cockers care not a hoot if you I ly eagle." to hangers-on for food. In the never see a match, and if you 1 Corks are bred for two thinas south Negro pit workers claim them cock fight. I-hwoln Rx-ferc Lincoln referred matches, An-ilii'W Jackson bred and fought City George WnnhlnRt'w 7, Hm kncll fi.

Moravian 8. i TufU 34, Matp 1. Marnhiill Motrin Harvey 1. Albright 40, l-elmnnn Valley H), IMuware 21 a.tilnirlon i'ol. o.

Oavli and Mkln 13, Ml. M. Mary'a 7. South Carolina 7, Miami 9. (Ii-mwon 11, Furmaji J.

Mllliiap 2, VV. Tenmnwe Teii'h-rr o. Mivlnilpt State 1H, 6. Illinois 40, hlH8o 0. llnlirrf 14, Olwrlln it.

Ni'braalca 13, Oklahoma 7. Trxaa Christian 21, 0, Tmm Tech 13, Montana 0. Oklahoma A. M. Crelgh-ton TvJm It, Drake 1 suspiciously like trouble- niincinallv: "Giimeness and for an an understood amenity.

The cocks at the White House, and to-too Ift, Regional (Sprlngi lioliuav lieldl It. day cock which carries on with an eve pierced out Is called a "Jackson," The sport, though Utile talked or written of -xcept within the "rocket's" fraternity, is thriving In the States once more. i II. Id) 12, Ml. "5-yard freestyle for boys under li years 50-yard freest In for hoys under IS years 50 yard back stroke for hoys under 18 years 50-yard breast stroke for boys under IS years Fancy dive for boys under 18 years ii'heck Events Entered) Please mail entry blank to Norman Chase, Y.

C. A 9 Livingston avenue, New Brunswick. maker, sometimes thev care if you 'indefinable something known as 'R surprising am "good do. In this case, you might try to; cutting power. wlln fh no firmer than the bux- get In-you might just ti v.

I Gametics to the cock breeder is om hen'a who has spent her life- The cock fighter's defense of his not the sameness of the j.rize ring, (tim scratching for worms, sport is made with such fervor a man may claim its laurels' "I would rather be re-Incarnated at least while listening, it Is hard takes a gloved beating to tie as a game than a dunkie rooster," to resist conviction. The game bird, down finally in the sweet oblivion the cocker says. "As for cruelty, he says, is a creature whose su- of a Knockout. which Is the better way to die, a preme hunger Is the battle lust, and In the cockpit. It is the quality twist of the neck for a stew pot? death is nut too high a price to pay which sends the blinded bird sttik-lor in a duel, if you love to fight?" Holy I'rlnit; loretto 12, FranKlIn 17, Newton 0.

B'irlihglonZT. pn Brinual tourna-Red Bank 7, Long Branch 8, Inient with piizes totaling about.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1903-2024