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The Montgomery Advertiser from Montgomery, Alabama • 9

Location:
Montgomery, Alabama
Issue Date:
Page:
9
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NINE 1 THE MON ICOMERY ADVEK I IStR Constructive Fearless Independent SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 2 6. 9 3 7 GIANTS iLAST TO PACE; CUBS CONQUER CAKBS Duke Steam Rolls V.P.I., 25 To Georgia Team Beats Oglethorpe, 60 To 0 Hi Harry Giimbert Yields Only Seven Hits As Giants Land Cate Dashes 71 Yards As 12,000 Fans See Blue Devil Team Score In Every Quarter Gomez Hurls Yankees To 5 To 2 Win DeaconTeam I TEAM5 Georgia Wins American League DuunUi'i valt Waahlartaa, Philadelphia. S. HI.

Lean. 4: Chlrata. S. Near lark, Kuttoa. I.

IrMraW at leelaa ratal. McCarthy Paces Attack Carleton Bests Warneke In Duel As Cubs Thump Cards, 5 To Fette Beats Phils To Hang Up 18th Mound Win. GREENSBORO. N. Sept.

25. Ufy -Duke University whipped Virginia Polytechnic Institute 25 to tonight before 12,000 fans to open defense of its Southern Conference football championship. Duke scored in every quarter and turned back two real V. P. t'vreau in the last half.

Duke's second string started the game, but it took first stringers to draw blood. Substitutions were fre Star Bulldog Halfback' Giant Rookie Star Scores Three Times In 60-0 Victory By 32To 0 Coach Neyland Tosses Four Elevens Into Grid Contest Vols Display Power Duncan Dashes 65 Yards To Register Final Six-Pointer Clan Waa I.mi ay. Sew lark .61 I Itetralt KS (airaca 4 letrlaaa Jtl Haataa m.i SS Jtl I Maahiaxiaa "a FaUaaVlpala 4 HI. Laata 11 MS Petrels Threaten Rookie Phebus Twirls Senators To 5 To 3 Win Over A's Joe DiMaggio Stars Browns Land Fourth Win Over Cliisox Ai Tieje Hurls Good Ball quent Bob Mara smashed right guard ond half opening kickoff. A pass from Tipton to Hudgens got 34 yards, to the Tech four, and Tipton scored around right end.

A 50-yard punt by Tipton midway of the last period put V. P. on fu three. Hudgins raced In and blocked Darnell's punt and Baskervule covered it for a touchdown. With passes clicking consistently in the last half.

V. P. I. got to Duke's 16-yard line as the third period ended. Then again.

Just before the final whistle, aided by passes and dashes of 33 and 27 yards by Demuro, the Techs got to the Duke six, but the heavy Duka line repulsed the drive. Each team made 11 first downs, 10 of Tech's coming in the last half. The score by periods: V. P. X.

0 0 9 00 Duke 7 6 625 Scoring touchdowns: Duke, O'Mara (sub. for Stephens) Hackney (sub. for McAfee): Tipton, Baskervllle. Point after touchdown. Hackney (placement).

Sophomore Backs Shine In Opening Came For Bulldogs ATHENS. OA, Sept. 25. (JF) A ITodnT'i Scheael) rt Vark at Hataa. Itetralt al lrelaa4 (t).

HI. I -anil at thlraia. Philadelphia at Mathiastao. National League ITaalardara MraalU) Near ark, 7: Hraokb a. 1.

B4loa. Philadelphia. I. niragu. fit.

Lout. S. I'tllaburib at Claelaaatl (rala). one yard for the first score. The way to it had been paved by a 21-yard pass.

Smith to Hudgins. Hackney added the point by placement, but missed his three other tries. A short punt by Darnell which went out of bounds on the Virginia Tech 26, set the stage for the second touchdown. A forward-lateral pass. Smith to Hackney to Hill, got 12 and O'Mara slipped 10 through center.

Hackney move dto the one-yard hne, then scored. Duke scored six plays after the sec startled University of Georgia football By ESCAB THOMPSON KNOXVILLE. Sept. 25. The University of Tennessee football machine coasted to tni vlctorr over a lighting band team, held score leas In the first quar NEW YORK.

Sept. 25 (VrV-Con-tinuing their recently acquired and highly successful habit of giving rival pitching the first Inning blues, the Giants maintained their I 1-2 game lead on the National League race today by whipping their best-hated rivals, the Brooklyn Dodgers, 1 to 3. Given a seven-hit. six-strikeout pitching performance by Harry Oum-bert. the New Yorkers put the game on ice with four runs before two men were out in the first inning, and were never headed.

Oumbert, after yielding an unearned run in the first, had only one bad frame, the third, when he served a home run ball to Jimmy Bucher with another Brooklyn player on base. But that ended the Dodgers' scoring and left the Giants' pennant lead just where it was, since the second place Cubs also won their game from the SL Louis Cardinals. Paced by Johnny (Slugger) McCarthy, who clubbed out three singles and drove In two runs, the Giants collected a total of 13 hits off Fred Frank-house, Jim Lindsey. Roy Henshaw and big Max Bucher. Every man on the lineup hit safely at least once as the New Yorkers, just home from a highly successful western awing, opened their final nine-day eastern drive, which appears headed for the title.

They wasted little time going to work on Frankhouse in the first With one out, Dick Bart 11 walked, after which Mel Ott, Jim Ripple, McCar- ter after a threat on its own goal line, came to life to swamp Oglethorpe 60-0 this afternoon. i nf Walt Forest Deacons vooay oeiorr; Led by fleet sophomore backs, Geor Tiger Cubs Club TTna Iml ret. Xew Vark SS hlrara .53 M. l-oul. 7 Pltlabiirsh 'V'1 llaatoa 14 71 Hrooklva SI SS .4 IS Philadelphia ST -la liaclaaatl SS BOSTON, Sept 25.

(JP) Lefty Gomes had his first bad inning in over a month today, but he recovered from it Immediately and had little trouble pitching the Yankees to a i to 2 victory over the Boston Red Sox, for his 21st win the The Sox tagged Lefty for four hits and both their runs in the first inning, ending the southpaw's 24th consecutive -shutout-inn lag streak. But Lefty tightened up with the start of the second and blanked tha Bostons with one hit the rest of the way, to post his fifth win in a row. Meantime, the Yanks, paced by Joe DIMaggio with three hits, and Lefty, himself, with two, clubbed Lefty Grove, gia swept its way around ends for most of it massive scoring before an estimated 5,000 persons. Lose 13 To 12 Vassa Cate topped Georgia's scoring. crossing for three touchdowns, one of Panther Cubs Nose Out v- I HARRY OUMBERT (Today' Schedule) ftrnaklya at Vark.

I hlraaa at M. Laula. Plttsbarth at Clarlanatl, BoMoa at Philadelphia. which was a 11-yard sprint OllTer Hunnlcutt followed with two touch downs. The Oglethorpe Petrel neared the Auburn Frosh In Tilt At Plains AUBURN.

ALA, Sept. 25 A com Navy Runs Over W.AndM,45ToO Guldahl In Favored Role Mik Gonzales and Rube Walberg for a total of 13 hits, bunching them when Georgia goal in th Initial period of the first on short line gain and a lengthy pass. Tinsley halted the at-tack, tossing Buck Thomas for a 13- paratively weak Auburn freshman they meant runs. football team bowed to the baby Pan yard loss. They scored first in the third on three hits, added another in the fourth thers of Birmingham-Southern, 13-12, The line-up: Oglethorpe--- res.

T.eorrl. here Saturday In the opening test of the season for both clubs. The loss Owen (c.) L.E Maffett to tie, and then put the game on ice with a five-hit, three-run splurge in the fifth, featured by a two-base smash by Lou Gehrig. Lou was knocked out Ole Miss Is VictoraS-O Rebels Open Grid Year With Win Over Louisiana Tech UNIVERSITY, Sept 25 UP) University of Mississippi today gave Louisiana Tech a 13-0 defeat on a muddy field in the rain. The Rebels turned goalward on several occasions, sending Ray Ha pes and Billy Mann on off tackle surges to far outgain and outplay the Bulldogs, but had only two successful punches to throw at the Tech men.

Kent Massengale, aub for Hapes, started one, with a 30 yard run to the Tech 11, late in tha second quarter. Johnny Lenhardt plowed for from his fullback post, and, fumbling saw Ham Murphy, end, scoop the oval over the goal Una for a score. Captain Bruiser Klnard kicked from placement for the extra point It was Hapes, Parker Hall and Mann on tha second score, the three alternating in a steady drive down the field from their own 30 to count at beginning of the third period. Mann went over from the 6 yard. Kina.

couldn't make th extra Weem UT. Badeett was the first handed the Tiger Cubs Star Golfer Defeats Runyan; Little Also Wins Match BELMONT, Sept. 25. P) in five campaigns under Coach Ralph Stewart, L.Q.. Troutman C.

Lumpkin Axelburg R.O.... Tinsley Zelencik RT Haygood Chesney c. Thomas Jordan. momentarily in the ninth when he collided with Ben Chapman while fielding a foul at first base, but he recovered in a few moments. Neither eleven could muster much of an offense, but both took advantage of their breaks to score.

Defensively, SEW VORK BOSTOV AB.H.O.A.: AB.H.O.A. B. Thoma Roddenberry Murphy L.B Hunnlcutt Open Champion Ralph Guldahl, fresh from his western free-for-all conquest, froaetl 1 I Docrr tk 4 1 4 Vandiver Pulk Hartman today moved Into the co-favorite role 1 1 1 Cramer cf 4' I 1 Cronl aa 4 11 aiFoxx.lk a in the $12,000 Belmont open match The acora by periods: however, both looked fairly welt First blood was drawn by tha losers in the second quarter. Buddy Mc-Mahan returned a punt 20 yards to 1 aiHiaiBs lb I play golf tournament by overwhelming Paul Runyan, of White Plains. Knife Sb 4 DMslo rf Gehrig- lb 4 Selkirk rf Hoas If I IjuoH tb tilen 1 livmes 4 Oglethorpe 0 0 00 Georgia .......0 37 27 N.

a former P.G.A. titlist, by the approximately persons in uk opening game of the 1937 season. Playing under a broiling sun, the Vols scored twice In' the first quarter on 10 running plays. Fleet-footed Babe Wood raced back the opening kickoff to Tennessee's 27-yard line. Then with Wood.

Cheek Duncan and Pat Reno ramming the line, the Vols' first-string team rushed to Wake Forest's 41. Wood tossed a 16-yard pass to Duncan who outran several Deacons down the right sidelines. The act was repeated a moment later when Wood, flashing some of the brilliance he displayed last season, skirted right end for 28 yards to the Deacons' 8-yard marker. Three line drives by Reno produced a score. Coach Bob Neyland yanked his starting eleven, but the second and third stringers were good for two more in the second period.

The Deacons' line stiffened and halted the Vols' running plays, but Tennessee took to the air and scored with Red Harp, substitute for Wood, passing 10 yards to George Hunter, end, who stepped six yards lor the score. The fourth touchdown came in rapid-fire fashion. Guard Al Thomas recovered Dave Fuller' fumble on Wake Forest's 21-yard stripe. Onthe next play, Sopbomor Halfback Billy Barnes faked a reverse and ran through the middle of the line for a touchdown. The final scora came on the first play of the third quarter when Duncan, Vol raced 65 yards down the left sidelines behind beautiful interference.

Tennessee showed flashes of power while the first string eleven was on the field, but the Carolina outfit put up a stubborn scrap against the Vol reserves in the last half. Wake Forest made a scoring gesture in the first quarter when aJ2-yard pass. Fuller to Halfback George Wirtz, placed the ball on the Vols' 24. Line plays produced only five yards and the ball went over. Wirta and Fuller, ably assisted by Flankman Roy Evans, carried, brunfcwof the Deacons'- off enstfij.

The scrappy Deacons tied the Vols first downs with eight. The lineups: Wakeforest P- Tennessee (32) Weaver LE Wyatt Powers LT Fulton Pate LG Melton Mumford (C) Little Bryan RG Hayes (C) Spruill RT Woodruff 1 1 4 1 I Touchdown Cate (sub. for Dan. Chum.n rf 4 Saffk If HiRatel lilirav 1 Southern' forty to launch their Initial Pennant Races At A Glance By the Associated Press The Giants came a game nearer clinching the National League pennant yesterday. Although they were unable to increase their 3 1-2 game lead over the Chicago Cubs by shipping the Dodgers, they are now in a position where they need to play only slightly over .500 ball during the remainder of the 12 james still on their scheduled to win the pennant As matters now stand, the Giants -have 12 left to play and the Cubs nine.

If the Cubs should tn every one of their remaining fames, the Giants would have to take only eight out of 12 to win. If the Giants played only .500 winning six and losing six the Cubs would still have to win all of their nine to take the title. Here's the present setup: Games To Club Behind Play 3iants 88 54 12 Cubs 86 59 3 1-2 9 ler), Hunnlcutt, Fordham (sub. for Hartmen): Cavan (sub. for Hunnl (loatale 1 cutt); Ehrlick (sub.

for Danvler); Van- twr.valr I Walbera aiver. From placement points: Touna-. Total SS IS 17 1 Total SI 17 11 Roddenberry, Hartman and Vandiver. Batted for (Joaiale. ta stb.

Officials Darwin, referee: Boat- New Vark eel 13 Botioa tec tea ANNAPOLIS. Sept. 25. (P)-The Navy football team opened its football season today by giving the 15,302 spectators an exhibition of power, which stopped William and Mary cold, and brought the Navy victory, 45 to 0. The football machine created by Lieut.

Harry J. (Hank) Hardwick, Navy's new head coach, rolled down the field twice in the first quarter to tally. It waa stopped temporarily in the second period when the regular linemen were resting, but came back in the third to shove across four more touchdowns, while second string backs added a seventh In the final quarter. Bill Ingram and Alan McFarland, regular backs, were the spark plugs Of the attack. Emmett W.

Wood, and Ulmont Whitehead, substitute backs, contributed their bit with scores, while Lucien W. Powell, end, and Clarence C. Corbitt, substitute end, showed ability as pass receivers, converting tosses into scores. McFarland went over the Una for the first Navy tally 4 1-2 minutes alter the opening whistle, ending a Middy drive from midfleld, featured by runs by Ingram and McFarland, and a pass McFarland took from Ingram. McFarland drove through center five yards for the tally.

Later in the quarter, with the ball on the William and Mary 30, Ingram faded to the right and tossed a pass that Powell caught on the five-yard line to 'score up. tallies cam fistf ltf tfie third quarter, McFarland tireakintf'' through center from the 13-yard line; Ingram going over from the two, after a pass he tossed to Powell put him in scoring position: Corbett taking another Ingram pass to score, and Wood breaking loose for a 25-yard run. Whitehead scored, the final tally on a pass from Lem Cooke. Ingram's alternate, early in the fourth. point.

right, umpire; O'Sullivan, head linesman; Slate, field judge. Running of Little Hapes and all touchdown drive. Brodie McCorkle dashed to the 23 and a pass from Dick McOowln to Boney WUliford advanced the ball an additional thirteen yards. Short plunges moved It to the three and Willlford shot over for a score. McGowin missed the try for the extra point.

Aided by a fifteen-yard penalty, the baby Panthers, with Thomas, Clark and Sands alternating in carrying the ball, marched 43 yards to run up their first tally. Clark ploughed the line for two yard to score. The extra point try by Clark was wide. Williford's fumble In the third pe around work of all-America Klnard, giant tackle, counted heavily In Ole Miss favor. Illinois Eleven Rolls Over Ohio University rtlAUDltnU TV r.

Hanes avrac better than 19 varrlx Der trv nn mint return with Klnard beating ends and sometimes the safety UjU, OCpb, T) The fighting mini polished to a huae luster tha nnanina wk man oown lor punt. If Tech had a atae if ara Parentl Flnvd. tackla whn arami. mnafc nf tha riod bounced squarely into the hands Zuppke's silver Jubilee year as head 1 football coach today with a smart 1 20 to triumph over the battling afternoon picking himself up after of Fullback Peck Sands and the lat ter galloped fifty yards to unlock the stopping rebel tnrusts Lineup: bod uata or Ohio university. breath-taking margin of I and 7.

Lawson Little, of San Francisco, businessman-golfer and the bogeyman of the professionals since the retirement of Bobby Jones, kept pace and remained on equal-betting terms, at 3-1, with the open champion by smashing through, thanks to an afternoon rush, for a i and 4 victory over Johnny Farrell, of Short Hills, N. who defeated the great Jones in a playoff for the 1928 open. Today's third-round matches were over 36 holes. Henry Picard, of Hershey, Penn, another of the four Ryder Cup players to qualify for today's play, moved along by defeating Wiffy Cox, of Washington, 4 and 3, to move against Little tomorrow. The other survivor in the upper half of the draw was Johnny Revolta, of Chicago, 'another Ryder Cupper, who advanced with a 3 and 1 victory over Jimmy Thomson, blond bomber from Shawnee, Pepn.

Byron Nelson, of Reading, Penn, also of the Ryder Cup team, bested Ray Mangrum, of Dayton, Ohio, two up, in his first 36 holes test, to move against Charlie Lacey, of Great Neck, L. who topped all of the American competitors in the last British open and survived by trouncing Clarence Clark, of Bloomfield Hills, N. 4 and 3. Dirk Meti, handsome Chicago pro, playing In his second tournament since he suffered a fractured leg in an automobile crash last Winter, played the best golf of the day to de-fpat Mortie Dutra, of Royal Oaks, 5 and 4. Metg carded a 68 In the morning round which equalled the competitive record set by Thomp tie and give the winners their second The summary) Run, Rolf.

DIMas-slo, Itehrlg, helklrk, (tames, lloerr and Cramer. Krrnr. (4len, IXMnaslo. Croaet-tl, lloerr. Rub.

batted In, UIMnsalo, fainerl, Oetarls, Selkirk. Hoas, C'mnin, t. Twa-baae hit. Knife, (iehrlc. Hlolea baae.

belklrk. Chapman. Uouhla play, Laiierl aad Oehrlg; (Mmsale. Crania, Dor rr and Fox; llbrala, Daerr a a Foxx. Base a balla, aff dome.

off t.rore, 1 aff Oonaalea, t. mrlkeonta, by (i.mi, Si by ftonsale, t. Hit, off Grove, In 4 l- lulling. (tanaal, la t-1 Walbrrg. la Loalag sltiher, titan.

Nats Bump A's WASHINGTON, Sept. 25. Ray Phebus, one of Washington's rookie pitchers, chalked up his third victory today in four major league starts when he carried the Senators to a 5 to 3 win over Philadelphia. The Athletics nicked Phebus for nine bits and he gave up five passes, but with men on bases he was difficult to score on. Philadelphia started with Edgar Smith In the box.

He was succeeded by George Turbevllle and Bud Thomas. PHILADELPHIA WASHINGTON AB.H.O.A. AB.H.O.A. six pointer. Clark's place kick for the LA TECH Pes.

OLE MISS Funderburk LB Graham The Ulini had some trouble getting the Bobcat tinder control enough to cause an opening day crowd of in Memorial Stadium a hit nf Lewis LT Williams thy and Lou Chloza singled In succession. That accounted for three runs and sent Frankhouse to the showers. Lindsey gave up the fourth run on a forceout The New Yorkers bunched four more hits in- the fifth for two runs, when Bartell doubled, and Ott, Ripple and McCarthy singled In order, in the course of which Henshaw, who replaced Lindsey In the fourth, went out In favor of Butcher. The final Giant run was produced In the seventh on a hit batsman, a walk, a forceout and Bucher'i error. BKOOKI.VN K(W VOKK AB.H.O.A.

AB.H.O.A. Conner ef 4 I "Moore If 4 1 0 Hall LG White Hewitt prehension. But once under way, they rolled over the nmt vnnnrrctar in Glrard Aston RG Bilbo RT Kinard Swindell decisive fashion, scoring a touchdown In tha fleet fhlil anj i Trimble RE Kincade Darling OB and rnmfnr otr.hln ihmlln. Bradley st.wvu.p UW of a couple of others. Hanna LH Hapes Carroll RH Hamm Ohio University whirr, nrwet nil.

Whitman FB Hall nola bv a touchdown In ia.is Evans RE nenoricas Burner 1 4 1 Bartell Herring La. Tech 0 0 00 Miss. 7 013 llMtet lit 1 lOtt 1 Hippie rf Mnuh rf Scoring touchdown: Mi Mur McCarthy 3B Wirtz LH Anderson RH Fuller RB partisan fan their slight chill by scoring on handsome forward pas maneuver in the second quarter to come within a point of tie at half rly lb Duncan Wood Reno Man rf a a ai Almnd ef 4 4 bar rf 'help a l.vrta l(oe. If phy, Mann; extra point: Miss: Kinard (placement). llliilor.iarf ,1 tlanniiir tehd Officials: Referee.

Mr-Cab (Tennl- Knrlih aa .1 Sjiiumbert 4 Score by periods: Wakeforest 0 0 0 00 Tnnc ..13 13 6 0 32 umpire. Camnbell (Mlllxami- wl'arkM I leal) Sb 4 Travli 4 tNtm If 4 iWnndel lb 4 (' rf 4 Bilwrlh th 1 Hlerrrll 1'hebn linesman, Waddy (Ga. Tech); field Tennessee scoring: Touchdowns, 0 a (i juage, nnsnnon (St. Stanlslaud). r'nkhne Llnflney 1 iHllann Hentdtn- Butcher fl 1 S.

M. U. Picks Up Late To Trim Teachers, 14-3 DALLAS. TEXAS, Sept. 25.

Wrong on everything they did for the first three periods, Southern Methodist's Mustangs pulled out with two last-period touchdowns to beat a game and outweighed North Texas Teachers team today, 14 to 3. Methodist scored when Henry Guynes apun over from the eight after he and Bob Belville and John Harlow had sliced tackles from the 43. Harlow's 30-yard gallop after a spinner and a laterlal, Belville to Crouch to Morrison, from the 12, netted the second marker. a Wrbrr I lohnsn If lb Hill rf 1 Brucber Pater tb a Uean 1 I Parke lb i Kama a llou.ta Sb Smith a yHthrork 1 Trbrl elo 1 Thomas son and later matched by Leo Dlegel Generals Vanquish Duncan (2), Reno, Hunter (sub for Wyatt). and Barnes (sub for Duncan); points after touchdown, Herring (place kick), Barnes (place kick.) Officials: Referee, Foster (Hamp-den-Sydney): umpire, Preas (Georgia Tech); head linesman.

Hackney (N. C); field judge, Ramey (V. M. May We Suggest a Loan? Wofford Team, 20-0 LEXINGTON. Sent 2SJJu The Washlnitnn anH n-n i- scoring through the line and through nie air, roae to an easy 20-0 victory over Wofford College of South Carolina in their ODenlne a-ama hera tw of rnuadelphla in the qualifying rounds of this competition and then jacked up his total another notch while playing the 14 afternoon holes he was called upon to complete be.

fore Dutra was eliminated from this golfing gold-mining rush. the Cards were unable to do anything with Carleton a slants until the eighth, when Bordagaray singled, took second on Hack's error, and came around on consecutive hits by Medwlck and Padgett for the only other St, Louis run. I HK T. I.oi i AB.H.O.A. AB.H.O.A.

Home Run Standing lone and winning point was peneci. Auburn took the ball on downs in third on the winner's 23-yard stripe when a pass from center was rolled back to Clark and he could not kick, five plays later, with McOowln and McCorkle leading the assault the cubs had scored and were back in the ball game. McGowin hit left tackle to score. Center Jones, however, crashed through to smear McMahan's boot from placement for the extra point and the local plebes' chances of a tie went flying away. The rest of battle was fotfght largely in Auburn territory and the game ended with Southern in possession of the ball on Auburn's ten.

Time probably prevented the Hill Top frosh from pushing over another marker. Outstanding players failed to bob up on either team. Several of the baby Panthers, however, should see considerable varsity service next year and maybe a few of the Auburn cast will be valuable big league collegiate performers before they graduate. Lineups: Auburn Freshmen (12): H. McOhee, left end; Starks, left tackle; Miller, left guard; Spivey center; Lott right guard; Mills, right tackle; Etheridge, right end; McMahan, quarterback; McOowln, left halfback; WUliford, right halfback; McCorkle, fullback.

Birmingham-Southern (13): Guthrie, left end; Sheffield, left tackle: Wood, left Duncan, center; Wolff, right guard: Elmore, right tackle; Hoiliday, right end; Stedham. quarterback; Der Manuel, left halfback; Thomas, right half back. Sands, fullback. Score by periods: Southern 0 6 7 013 Auburn 0 6 0 6 13 Summary: Scoring touchdowns: Auburn: McOowln, Willlford. Southern: Clark (sub for Der Manuel), Sands.

Point after touchdown: Southern: Clark (placeklck). Substitutions: Auburn: Chrietzberg, Flllette, Ellis, W. McOehee Torres, Albert Head. Southern: Clark, Jones, Rulford, Cooper, Sparks, Johnson. Stokes, Hunt Officials: Hovater (Alabama), referee; Pateraon (Auburn), umpire; Farr (Birmingham-Southern), head linesman.

day. Total. S'J 1 till Total 33 13 till Batted for Lindner In 4th. XI Batted for Kngllali In 8tl. 3i Batted for Butcher In Mh.

Brooklyn 1(12 (HKl KM) New York 400 Kit 7 HI'MMAHY Kan ('oonrjr t. Bucher, Bartell Ott Mitartliy. Hippie, terror Whitehead. Ott, Phelpa, Bueher, Bartell. Kuns batted In Manush, Ripple, McCarthy Chioita, laanln, Bueher Ott.

Two bate hit Roaen Bartell. Home ran Bueher. Saertflee Bucher. Donhle play Whitehead, Bartell and McCarthy larrtto and Bur her; Bueher and Has.ctt. Bae on ball off Frank honor Humbert Bntrher I.

HI ruck out by (inmbert S. Hrn.haw X. Hit. aff KranklHHiae 4 In 1-3 Inula! I.lnikey In 1 t-3: Hrn.haw 4 In I llulil.er In Hit by pltrher by filinilirrt (Haoettl; Itulrhrr (Bartell). Willi pitch Hrn.haw.

I.uolnr pllrhrr I'mnkhaaoe, Trustee will advanc you The General rlafenHinv vienini- Probable Pitchers State chamnlona. ncnred firt in tha the money you need $100 to By the Associated Press XESTERDAT'S HOMER: Stone. Senators Herman, Cubs Bucher, Dodgers' Cronin, Red Sox opening period when Bobby Long, piungeo. over rrom the one-yard line. Thev tallied inln in the Total as fttHi Totals II iBatted for Pater In Sth.

lteI far Smith In 1th. Batted for Parker la Sth. Batted (or Tarbevlll la Sth. Philadelphia 100 OoS S20 Waahlngta) Oil TO Sux Summary Run. waome, Haaann, Hill, Almada, lwl, atone, tt Krrors, Mloae and Kill.

Kna. batted la. Waodell, Phebn. fltnne, Xrlann, Mow. Twn-ba.

hit, ewanmo. Hill, Trart. and Mofte. Thre-hae hit. Ha.wna and W'a-drll.

Home run, atone, ftarrlflee. Hrnrker. Double play, Brnrker ta Newsame; New-Home to Haoa. Baae an off Smith, 3: Phebua, by Hmllh, 4: by I'hrhii. I.

off Hmllh. 7 la 4 Tnrbetlll. Ik 1 1 pan la Inula pltrher, Phebu. Lo.lag pitcher, amlth. third on a seven-yard pass from Hark .11) 1 I liJMartlnrf ft a Dondulap to Frank Jones.

In th last quarter Ray Craft rifled a 24-yard pass to Dunlap, who took It on the goal line and stepped over, time. THE LEADERS: DiMaggio, Yankees Oreenberg. Tigers Gehrig, Yankees York, Tigers Foxx, Red Sox Ott, Giants Henna tb IMnnre rf Murine! 4 I ollln. lb a Mnbrk rf I I vrrla rf l.alan II 4 a Jarre 1 iarlton a 4 Ilrtljry 3b 4 1 KM Ire II, 4 II .1 I Milnlrk lr 3 1 4 I'ailtett rf 4 4 "Clrilte 1 1 7 Oiircher 1 I 3 4 I Brown It 1 I IllrUw.UIr 4 i Hararke a $1,000, or even more, if on our usual easy monthly repayment plan, for any con-ttructive purpose. Easy terms.

Trustees LOAN DISC. CO. Ground Floor Shepherd Bldg. 44 38 36 33 33 31 California Wins BERKELEY. CAMF Sent.

3 University of California's football team opened it nsnn in imnrMiiu. I.EAGIE TOTALS: American Notional NEW YORK, Sept. 25. P) Probable Ditchers in the major leagues Sunday: American New York at Boston Hadley (11-6) vs. Wilson (15-10).

Philadelphia at Washington Caster (12-171 vs. Kohlman lO-O). 8t. Louis at Chicago (2) Koupal (4-6), and Kimberlln i0- vs. Lyons (11-6) and Kennedy (13-12).

Detroit at Cleveland (2) Bridges (15-10) and Auker 15-g) vs. Allen (13-0) and Feller (6-7). National Brooklyn at New York Hoyt (8-S) vs. Huboell (21-8) or Smith (6-3). Boston at Philadelphia Shoffner (2-1) vs.

Smith (5-3) or Passeau (13-17). Pittsburgh at Cincinnati (2) To-bin (4-3) and Brandt (10-11) vs. Derringer (10-14) and Cascarella (1-6). Chicago at St. Louis (2) French (14-10) and Lee (14-13) vs.

Weiland (15-12) and Krlst (3-0) or Johnson (11-11). 764 598 Browns Trip Chisox CHICAGO, Sept. 25. iP) Les Tietje. former member of the White fashion here today with a 30 to 7 victory over the St.

Mary Gaels. Sixty thousand sweltering fan aaw tha con. Total 1,362 Sox who has been In the Texas League iCJaU I this year, came back to beat the Chi cago team this afternoon when the St, The Water Is Cool Fa 5 IK Martla 1 Total. 1 Tol.l, 3.1 17 Balled fur YYarnrk In Sth. rhlrai MM Ml.

1111 so M) aid Ml MMAKV Kan. Hack. Herman tnlnhark, avarrrtla. J. Martnl.

Bar-dagaray. Krrar Bordaaaray, arlelan. I ararretta, Jariea. J. Martin.

Rita, batted la Hartnett, Hit, aiarrelta. 'arse. I'adselt. Herman. Two baaa kit t.

Martin t. Hartnett. Three baa hit ar-arretla. Horn ran Herman. Ntalen baae.

Jare, (avarretl. Bar an ball aff larleton Vlarneke 4. Mrark aat by Carletaa Warneke S. Fette Wins Hth PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 25.

JP Lou Fette won his 16th game of the season today shading Bucky Walters In a pitcher's battle as the Boston Bees beat the Phillies. 2 to 1. Walters yielded only five hits to eight by Fette. but a streak of wlld-ness In the second when he Issued Louis Browns scored a 4 to triumph in the opener of a three-game series. The Sox clicked Tietje for 11 hits, but the righthander kept them well enough scattered, while the Browns pounded Bill Dietrich for 13 hits in the eight Innings he worked.

Johnny Barkley made three of the Browns' hits. No more 'than 1,000 fans saw the Sox lose a half game to the Indians, who are in fourth place, four games behind the Chicago team. st. l.oria (Hir.tno AB.H.O.A.! HB.II.O.A. Carry 4 llayr tb 4 I I allber rf I 0 hrrlrh rf 0 Tuskegee Team Wins A.

A. U. Cinder Title the fish are striking! The Lake are Clear the Calendar it Black the Weather is Right! Depend on BARNETT for Timely Tip 'U' hi Leading Hitters TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE. ALA, Sept. 25 Tuskegee Institute's stellar cinder path performers won the national championship in the women's Amateur Athletic Union track and field Cubs Nlrk Cards 8T.

LOUIS, Sept. 25. (JP) The Chicago Cubs found their favorite stoogies, the Cardinals, about as usual today, and whipped them to 2 to remain 3 1-2 games behind the Giants in the National League pennant race. They collected ten hits off Lon Warneke, their old teammate, and bunched six of them In three Innings to score all their runs. Tex Carleton was tagged for nine hits, but, except for the sixth, when the Cards got to him for four, and the eighth, when they collected three, he was rarely in trouble.

The Gas House Oang played the game under protest after the sixth, when Umpire Beans Rcardon reversed a decision on a close play at first, which necessitated calling bark a run that had scored. The inning had opened with Pepper Martin hitting a double. Johnny Mil scoring him with a single. Ducky Medwlck forrlng Mlze, and Don Padgett driving a single to left. With runners on first and second, Llppy Leo Durocher hit to Billy Herman, who relayed to Rip Collins on first.

Reardon at llrst railed Durorher out, but reversed the decision, claiming Collins nulled his foot off the bag. Medwlck had scored, but was called bark and a heated argument followed, with the Cards announcing their protest. The run probably would not have made any difference In the final result, anyway. Led by Billy Herman, who walloped a homer In the ninth inning, the Cubs broke a scoreless pitching duel with two runs In the fifth, and added two more in the eighth. Their first pair of tallies were produced on a single by Stan Hack, Prenchy Bordagaray's three-base error on Herman's grounder, and Oabby H.rtnett's double.

In the eighth, a aalk. Phil Cavarretta'a triple and Billy Jurges's single added the other pair, making Herman's homer In the ninth virtually unnetevary. Arter their argument In the sixth, which gave them their opening run, three consecutive bases on balls after a single by Rets, hurt his cause. Boston scored what proved to be the winning run In the third when J. Moore dro)ped Fletcher's fly for an error after singles by E.

Moore and Cuc-clnello. The Phils got their run In the meet which was held in Trenton. N. Saturday, Teams from all sections lof the United States participated. Nesr-J est rivals to the Crimson clad young a i women from Tuskegee tied with 14 Everything You Need Bell Ih lo.mlk If I lift lib 1 Dail Ih Allen rf I flnllnl 4 Barkly lb Tlrlj a 1 I I 3 I II I a 4 a a a a a a a a a a Walker rf Rdrllfr If 4 4.tpllng 3 S.lluaur lb I ib a aaer.

ab 3 Kewell 4 I Dtrlrk Ple 0 lauiothal a jnmwa a ItMtnaeher Paul Waner of the Pirates climbed bark Into baseball's batting Big Six yesterday without lifting a bat. While he was Idle. Oabby Hartnett of the Cubs, who had previously held sole possession of third place In the National League, hit only one-for-four and dropped two points to a tie for third with Wsner. at .356 each. There were no changes in the American League trio of the top half down.

Standings of the leaders (first three In each league): Player. Club O. Ab. R. H.

Pet G'h'inger, Tigers 135 527 126 ISO .376 Medwlrk, Cards 148 599 108 225 .376 Mlse. Cards ....137 530 94 191 .361 P. Wner. Pirates 145 80 89 210 ,856 Hartnett, Cubs .107 348 47 124 .356 Gehrig. Yanks .147 646 132 192 .252 Travis, Senators 124 487 66 171 451 fourth on singles by Cnmllll and Stephenson.

BOitllN AH.II.O... AB.H.O.A. I.nrm If a V.rrl. i I 1 r.nihih 3b 4 Moore rf 4 I I I I Martln ef I I hleln rf IRSS I no re If .1 1 4 I I rollll lb 4 I IS 1 4 I aenla tb 4 OUR STOCK OF FISHING EQUIPMENT IS NOW IN TIP-TOP SHAPE! PREPARE FOR YOUR FALL FISHING! Fletrhr tb 4 (It poinu earn. Lula Hymes, Tuakegee'e fine young woman athlete, raptured the broad lump, and Cora Gaines, toappled the timbers In a startling performance, to win first place In the hurdle.

Cora Gaines also placed second in the high Jump. Lula Hymes ran second In the 50 metres run. Florence Wright was second In the shot put and discus and at the same time Melissa Pltspatrick was turning In a second place In the baae ball throw. In the spectacular one-fourth mile relay, Ce-lestlne Blrge, Jessie Abbott. a 1 Smith and Lula Hymes, turned In a sparklln performance to win second place.

Jessie Abbott was fourth In the hundred meters and Mable Smith ws Mela cf 4 Wr.llr a 3 IHjte 1 ell. 1 .1 Brown rf 4 i I 1 Whllny 3b 4 I 1 a 1 nahoretn a 4 a I Mephaa tit M.ller. I I Total SS II t7 17 Total at II 11 17 tBatlrri for llonnrn la Sth. yBatted for Dietrich la Sth. Batted far Brawa la sib.

at. ImI on an tit 4 I blraga eat so i a The amauryi Raa. Vaamlk, lift. Al-lea. Hark ley, Hayea.

Krearlrh. Apnllag. lirror, Radellfr. Rna batted la. Bell.

Gallia, Barkley, ti Badrllff, Bawara. Twa-baa hit. Walker. Bell. LOANS Quickest, Lowest Cost No Local Appraisal Fea New Buildings Old Buildings Refinance Remodeling Apartment Central Agency Hill Building W-997 Cedar 997 G.

W. Barnett Hdwe. Co. Ik aad Apnllaa. Harrl'lce.

I 'lift. Tletle. Donhle nlar. (lift ta Hark. O'Neill On Way Oo CLEVELAND, Sept.

25. (VP) Reports were revived here today that Steve O'Neill waa definitely scheduled to lone his job as manager of the Indians at ihe close of tha American Lesgue season and that Mansger Bill McKerhnie of the Bo-tos National League tram was to succeed him. iraea I Tatal. XI a 17 It Total It 17 la Halted far Walter la Mb. Botoa ll Fhllailelphl una I Ht MU4KV Hnn K.

Moore, Heta. In. tollll. Krrnr i. Mo re, Kna bulled In lelle, tenhnn.

lonhle iM Narr. to l.mMII: War.ller to Mrrlnella rletrherj I a rloello fanaMU(ee)l Mate a hall, alt Waller. 4. I ett 4. Htrark oat hy Walter.

I rile I. ley la DarUi Coaaer la Hare to Bunara: Barkley to arey I Davl.i Datl. I. arev The Sportsman Store fourth in the 200 meter. The tem la TletJ la Gulllanl ta Crer.

Rim an ball, aff Tietje, Ith-trMi, I. atrike. tklefrirh t- I la i 110 Coosa St. Phone Cedar 2617 win gv signi arcing in new roric uny return to the Instl- aff llletri.h. It la f'f Brawa! Sunday Sr will aeae la I.

I.la allcbee llleteleb. tute Turftdav.

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