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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 25

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Brooklyn, New York
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25
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25 Poor Riding or Worse Fails to Bring Action From Bowie Stewards BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1929. WINS FOR GIANTS Campus Ramhlings BELTH Br N. B. Arm Chair Football Wanderers Tie Nationals in Soccer Match Rrooklynites Avert Defeat at Eleventh Hour. Whalers Are Checked Post Mortems Fonlham Great Defensive.

N. Y. U. Panicky Outfit-Lion Fails to Roar The Last Saturday in November Still Great Day for Navy Elevens flt HAROLD C. BURR "Anchors aweigh!" The ancient Navy order still echoes across football fields the last Saturday in November.

It was borne about on the Icy eddies that blew around Franklin Field, Philadelphia, this past weekend. Navy's anchor was up against Dartmouth. Bill Ingram's eleven, coming along slowly, was at its peak. The big Green team wasn't stale. It missed Al Marsters, of course, but It In Matter of Close Supervision Pimlico Officials the Better By W.

C. VREELAND In other years when the Bowie track soil was shifting and treacherous the uncertain footing was blamed for the whimsical twists whimsical is used in a cynical sense of form. But in the last year or two the soil received a good mixture of loam, until today there is no better track to race over than Bowie. And yet, in spite of the good going, the "form" this fall was more bewildering than ever. The soil cannot be made "the goat" this time.

And so the racegoers that were milkJbd and plucked in turn by a select few are wondering what sltoes. ''tSa 1 didn't have him against Brown and Cornell. Dartmouth was still one of the best of the Eastern elevens. Proof that, it didn't tire lies In th roomr French. In the disqualification of Misstep and the suspension of Mack Garner for being responsible for the horse's bumping Into Bateau.

At the time I candidly stated that though I had a bet on Bateau I didn't believe that when Misstep hit her he prevented her from winning, thereby gaining an unfair advantage. It was a bump rather than Interference In my humble opinion Misstep didn't deserve being disqualified. Another bad feature of the meeting was the way some horses were beaten many lengths time and again and then when they were well backed won as Impressively as they had been beaten disgracefully. Hedgefence was the most startling of the lot. His was a complete turnover of form.

In his previous races he had been beaten as much as 21 lengths. And then he came home well backed. Selah! Season Opens Some Fordham again showed siRns of real greatness. The record between those two games is not as fine as Fordham-ltes would like to believe It is. There are the two ties, D.

E. and West Virginia. Holy Cross was beaten by a touchdown and Boston College went down by but a single point. These were tough opponents, it is true, but their records against some of the other major Eastern colleges were not so good. PANICKY N.

X. V. New York University turned out a most panicky, ill-fated and overrated eleven. Sometimes it was very, very good, but when it was bad it was most embarrassing. And the bad days were, quite frequent.

Too frequent for comfort. And, starting with Hill's fatal mishap, there were any number of accidents and injuries in the Violet ranks. Hard luck parked at the gate at Ohio Field and refused to leave. Three of the Violet's stars, Chalmers, O'Herin, and Follct, suffered broken limbs. N.

Y. U. started well enough against two minor opponents, cracked up against Fordham and after that floundered around till they lost again to Georgetown, then recovered to beat three major opponents, only to slump again in the final contest of the season against Carnegie Tech. This was a poor N. Y.

U. team in comparison to Violet teams of recent years. Against the forward pass it was absolutely helpless, and was Just as inept in its use as a weapon. Inside Its opponents' 15-yard line N. Y.

U. didn't know what to do without the ball. It was anything but a "brainy" eleven. Football for the Violets looked too much like work. LINE TROUBLE Columbia, the least successful of the Big Three, had a bad case of line trouble all season.

The case was never very encouraging. Possessing a fairly clever and shifty backfield with a real ball-carrying star in Ralph Hewitt, the Light Blue never got anywhere, simply because the the line could never hold up at the crucial moment. And there never was a back who could push his way through a solid wall that refused to open. Injuries and the lack of substitutes also played a part in Columbia's dismal failure. And the fates were not always kind as that incident of half an inch in the Cornell game proved.

LOSE AMATEUR STANDING Guido Simoni, John Casanova and Marvin Owen, members of the football team of Santa Clara University at Santa Clara, have been declared ineligible for college participation because of the fact that they had signed optional agreements to play with the Seattle club of the Pacific Coast League. They were declared to have forfeited their amateur standings. The open season for post mortems and arm-chair football is now In full swing and the temptation to Join In the sport cannot be resisted. The post-mortem season is bound to be more successful for loyal followers of some of the local teams than the actual gridiron campaigns were. It always is.

There is bound to be a lot of talk about what might have been. Columbia's arm-chair philosophers will win that Cornell game for the Light Blue over and over again, even if Referee Ed Thorpe didn't think so. And N. Y. gridders of the easy chair will figure out time and again how the Violet would have beaten Fordham.

and Georgetown and Carnegie if Ed Hill had not met with his fatal accident and if half a dozen other things had not happened. Only Fordham's followers will revel in purely pleasant memories, though there is bound to be talk of how Ihe Ram might have beaten Davis and El'tins and West Virginia if the football gods had been more favorably inclined. FORDHAM SUCCESSFUL From a New York viewpoint the season of 1929 was not a banner football year. Only Fordham can do any pointing with pride. N.

Y. U. was beaten In three major contests, while Columbia failed to win any of its big games and, as a result, is In the market for a new football coach. The "Little Three" C. C.

N. Manhattan and St. John's enjoyed even less success, though St. John's has something on its two rivals, having beaten both of them for the so-called "Little Three" title. For the Fordham Ram it was the most successful season of its career.

The Maroon went through its cam paign undefeated and tied but twice. MaJ. Frank Cavanaugh, the "Iron Major," so called, some Insist, because of his ever present "iron" hat, turned out a powerful if not a spectacular team. Defensively, led by that defensive gridiron genius, Tom Siano, Fordham had few equals in the country. Its scoring power, some Insist, was not quite as great.

Often Fordham failed to tally in the pinches. TWO GREAT VICTORIES The two tie games the Maroon played lends credence to such a theory. Yet Fordham had a pow erful scoring combination in Fisher and Murphy, and in Bartos and Janis. The aerial attack these two combinations developed was one of the finest In the East. The N.

Y. U. and the Bucknell games gave Ford ham Us two greatest victories of the season. The Maroon pointed for that N. Y.

U. contest, surprised the Vlo let, mopped up the Polo Grounds with them and demoralized the Meehan outfit for half the season. But it was not until the Bucknell game, the last on the schedule, that The games were the order of the day in soccer circles yesterday, and none of the local teams In the At-j lantlc Coast League could do better than share the points with their op-ponents. The Brooklyn Wanderers, at Starlight Park, had a slashing game with the New York Their old rivals led by 43 up to near the finish, but the Rrooklynites were quite equal to the occasion and scored the necessary goal to tie. At Ebbets Field the Hakoah All Stars stopped the victorious career of New Bedford.

Here the score was 1 1. At Providence precisely ihe same figures resulted from the meeting between the New York Giants and Providence. The lineup: Pos. N. Y.

Nationals 141 Wanderrrs '4i Oral Sntisa Smith Warden McAdam McMillan t.slo Wegner Brown C.B Ohatlon L.B MRrtvn Kovncsl Gallagher Rrmin I.R.. Mnlnar Center. Nrhsdnma IL Blaven Robertson O.L. Yule Referee C. E.

Crelghton. Linesmen M. Bloom and F. Degroof. Goals Nationals: Nelson 2).

MeGhee and Gnllagher. Wnnderers: Nehndoma l2i. Robertson and Braun. Substitutes Enterkln for Molnar; Mitchell for Robertson. Time of halves, 4.S mimiles.

Pos. Hnkoah All Stars (1) N.Bedford 111 Fischer Harper H. Orosr. McMIII.in L. Sternberg Cowan H.

Mnhrer clulow R. Moutnoinerie L. Nlckolsburger Stewnrt 0. Netileld Chedraoy I. Haeusler Qialnaer L.

Gruenfeld Florle 1. Wortmanrt M-Ieavy O. Schwarr. McEachran Referee K. MrCabe.

Linesmen M. Hutchinson and E. J. noneghy. Goals McEachran.

New Bedford; Sternberg, Hakoah All Stars. Substitute nmrkrr for Mahrer. Time Halves of 45 minutes. Other soccer results yesterday were: Y. Olants.

1: Prnvldenre. 1. Fall River. 4: Pawturket, 1. Hlspano.

4: Newark Portuguese. 2. I. R. T.

Rangers, First Germans, New-ark. 1. Bsv Ridge Rovers. 2: Highland Park, 2. Trumpeldor.

Swiss 0. Blue Bocks, 3: Maccabees, 2. OJoa Nassau, 1. Oloa 2: Danish. 1.

Bavonne Rovers. Clan McDonald. 0. Haglbor, Swiss. 0.

Estonian Americans. 1: Floral Park, 0. Greek Hermes, Visitation, 0. Kllppen A. Bushwlrk Alumni, 0.

Tlngvallo. Livonia Thslles. 1. Nordic. 1: Flushing, 0.

By default. Xr-T 1 act mat 11 was pinymg ns otm. hhu- i ball of the day toward the cud of the fourth quarter. The Green was the last to score. It was just that Navy found her football soul.

It is an old Spanish custom Annapolis, with precedent and tra- ditlon behind it. For years Navy 1IHS rjT-fll pimilltiK tui i.i'm that Army is no longer met wavy polnt, just the same for that Satur day after Thanksgiving Day. NAVY LULLS LANDLUBBERS Other games are taken In stride from Davis-Elklns in 1928 to Notre Dame. Princeton, Penn and Georgetown in 1929. But when that rry of "Anchors aweigh!" rings out on the frosty November air all landlubbers must stand from under.

An unbeaten Princeton team made the discovery last fall. The lesson was driven home to Dartmouth Saturday. As it. happened both games were played on Franklin Field. Apparently Coach finds It.

Impossible to break loose from old habits. Surely he would rather beat Notre Dame than Dartmouth. Hp realizes the job of beatiiiK tliem both Is too grievous, because In these days of tough schedules a wise coach must pick the team he wants to down with touchdowns, and forget the other eight annoyers. KIRN MAKES IT A BIG THREE "Anchors awciith!" sane the sailors at Franklin Field, while Johnny Gannon threw those short, forwnrd passes and young Lou Kirn rammed through for first one touchdown and then another. The saga of Kirn has already been told.

Football fanatics read of it over their breakfast rolls and coffee as church bells called and called them to worshlp-of the despised scrub who won the big game. Burt L. Standlsh. creator of Frank Merriwell, should be writing football this DON'T SI SPIT! BOARD OF IinAITH 3 ONV FH.AH5K Former Georgetown grldder and decathlon star, whose 45-yard drop-kirk enabled the New York Giants to down the Chicago Cardinals at the Polo Grounds yesterday, 24 to 21, In a hertie battle. Field Goal by Plansky Gives Win to Giants 43 -Yard Kick in Final Moments of Pro Game Defeats Cardinals By HAROLD F.

PARROTT Thirty seconds before the end of the game at the Polo Grounds yesterday the Giants had the ball almost at midfield and the score was tied. But a 24 to 21 victory and the final whistle came simultaneously for Capt. Benny Friedman and his mates. The connection? A solid thump of big Tony Plansky's left foot that sent the ball spinning on an angle over 35 yards of stripes and 10 yards of end zone. It might have been Frank Merriwell that kicked I the ball that scored the field goal that beat the Chicago Cardinals yesterday.

That's how chock full of drama it was. With but a minute to play, the Giants recovered a fumble on the Cards" 20-yard line. In two plays Benny Friedman, the passing fool, made 15 yards. But they were yards for the Cardinals because Benny was thrown twice by the surging Chicago line as it rushed In twice to dump him before he could get rid of the ball. Then they called the man-moun tain Plansky back to the 35-yard line to patch up the damage.

There was Just time for one play. The ball caie on a wabbly arc from center almost before Tony had set himself and the deft prod Just about did clear the bar. Before that epic kick the game had been, to all appearances, In terred as far as the Giants were concerned under the epitaph of Benny Friedman, the quarterback who dared once too often. You can't fool smart fullbacks all the time, and that's why Benny's strategy of shooting surprise passes when standing behind his own goal-line backfired after working the first time. KEVERS NABS TOSS Nevers, ex-Stanford star, and the "greatest of all," according to Pop Warner, who should know, nabbed Friedman's toss in the third period and struggled back to the one-yard line.

It was no trouble at all for Ernie to puncture the vaunted Giant line for the touchdown on the first try. That made the score 2114 in his favor, even though his perfect place kick didn't manufacture the extra point because a Chicago lineman was offside. Friedman, flanked by Lenny Sed-brooke and Tony Plansky, canceled the aerial attack for the nonce and turned on the power plays after the next klckoff. It was Plansky who finally got off a twisting, squirming run that ended on the Cards' half-yard line. The Georgetown alumnus lost a yard In two tries before the Giant line made a hole large enough for him to drive through.

Things were all even when Friedman's never-failing toe produced the extra point. The Giants would never have gotten their chance for that dramatic finish if Gene Rose, Cardinal halfback, hadn't seen fit to intercept instead of batting down a 50-yard pass of Friedman's. That put the Cards' backs to the wajl on their 10-yard line and they never survived the squall. PARSES BRING SCORES What a whale of a difference a few passes make. The play was mostly in Oiant territory throughout the first half as Nevers and McDonald gained at every try behind a perfect cloud of Interference.

But the Giants had two touchdowns and the Cards none at tbe close of the second quarter, and all because Friedman dared. He threw one pass from behind his own goal line to Feather that made 35 yards. Another on the fourth down, with a kick expected, sent Flaherty over fora touchdown. Nevers and his mates watched wide-eyed but soon learned. Two can play at that game and Nevers shot a pass to Cobb Rooney for a score with only 20 seconds of the first half left.

The touchdown that gave the rcd-shlrted brigade the lead for the first time came in the third period when Bill Rooney Intercepted a pas and ran it back 40 yards to the 10-yrd mark. Little Gene Rose, a Wisconsin product. Blithered off left tackle on the second play for the score. Boro Park Y. HI.

H. A. Real South Brooklyn The Boro Park Y. M. H.

A. basketball team nosed out the South Brooklyn Y. M. H. A.

five, 42 to 41, last night in a Metropolitan Jewish League conten on the Boro Park court. The lineup: Boro Park i43i. South Brooklrn t4li 'There's a FORMAL INFORMALITY 7 about this and now Lou Kirn. NOTHING SPECTACULAR ABOUT THIS NEW HERO Kirn, the Milwaukee boy who Jonrd Navy Rnd Paw rhliadel phia prostrate Itself at his cleatedi fret, was as great as Booth against Brown and Army. He was another French of Penn State against Pennsylvania.

Except there was nothing flashy about his work. He ground out the touchdowns after the efficient manner of a manufacturer making buttons, shoes or locomotives. Half the time when he took the ball he was instantly buried from sight under a sea of green jerseys. Like an expert swimmer dove under the waves, squtrmlnsf along for the precious yards, feet and inches. ALL THE SAILORS WERE VALIANT "Anchor aweigh!" It wasn't Klin alone who obeverl that order.

Every player In Gold and Blue had his mud honk off th bottom from whistle to whistle. Bob Bowstrom consistently out- kicked Bill Morton, the great Marsters' understudy. Navy gained ground on nearly every frigid exchange. Some of these gains wets for 40 yards. And It was the bin tackle who broke through to smear his rival as he was about, to punt on one mcmorahle occasion.

That blocked kirk was the forerunner of Navy's second touchdown, Morct falling on the hall on Dartmouth's 12-yard line. The rest of the distance was easy for the vanishing Kirn. In brief, the whole Navy team was at the top of Its form and Dartmouth paid as Princeton paid before. Over here in New York Army put up its best game against Notr Dame. Saturday was a great day for the Service.

Certified For Your Protection by Alfred W. MrCanit, I). I I.I.I). INntrd pure (ntu rxrirrt, long ait'tiv In miamlee) for pure footle ami anui. Inrv fnrtnrica.

"Mol ilie'esenlertlie liotl throiiglitlienioiith lint I ciiiplialicalt sa that smoker of Cremo ever runs this risk. lie cause the method of manufacture aims to give Cremo the same Maml.ird of purity that pasteurization gic to milks. CIGAR ta I iMtrsiimrti foujiJiiiwiaam'iniiisiasHasaaaf v' -V" 1 (J (jemo (I 1 clio 4 brought It all about, BOWIE AND riMLICO Looking the racing squarely In the face, as it were, one is prone to place the responsibility at lax official supervision on the part of the stewards. The riding of several jockeys was peculiar, to say the least. If one wished to go to the extreme he would call it awful, and if he wished to give it a mystic twist he would call it weird.

The Pimlico officials, the stewards, were alert. They refused to countenance riding that was off color but which, to use a of the streets today, was not nearly as "raw" as that which place at Bowie. No Jockey rr jisr the last two years has been so severely or more universally criticized than Eddie Ambrose, surnamed "The Apathetic One." On at least three horses Ambrose's riding caused general objection by the patrons of the track. In one race that on Bateau he reaped the harvest of good fortune when the stewards disqualified Misstep, which had finished in front of him. Later, in the hands of another Jockey, Moscow won a fast race easily, fairly on the heels of that horse's defeat when ridden outside of the money by Ambrose.

At no time did the stewards reprimand or suspend Ambrose. But after Ambrose had won the Southern Maryland Handicap with Bateau and he took a day off from the races to work some yearlings he made that outing a permanent one for the remainder of the meeting. By that time criticism of Ambrose was so strong that it began to be public discussion. There was scarcely a turf write! reporting the races at Bowie who didn't voice the sentiments of fee track patrons regarding the sacmle work of the Jockey. And thenv on top of the sudden Improvement of Moscow and, the fast Improvement of Bateau, with tt obrose personifying Earnest En-- on the mare in the big prize as against his efforts in the overnight event when Misstep finished in front of her, Ambrose announced that he would hang up his riding tack for the season.

This caused, comment aplenty. His action was responsible for much talk. Surmise and supposition were twin thoughts regarding the why and the wherefore. Many thought that the stewards had quietly "tipped off" Ambrose to take a rest. Not knowing if the stewards made the move, the writer will not place himself on record, I'm merely stating facts that Ambrose, on the heels of the victory of Moscow, did not ride again at Bowie.

The Jockeyship of several rides was far below their best form. Why (he officials did not ask questions brought forth much comment. Whether it was neglect on their part, whether It was oversightedness or whether the cases made no ap- peal to them, oi whether they lacked the experience to note what the riper Judgment of the Pimlico officials detected deponent sayeth not. The extent of the steward's rulings, their most drastic action, was Grid Scoring T. PAT.

FQ. S. PU. Dtnowtkl. Rlverhead 15 8 0 0 98 Petrosal, La 8alfe Mekofske, Hempstead.

.10 4 3 4 7 0 0 0 3 1 3 0 3 1 1 0 3 3 3 1 1 4 5 9 9 2 2 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 0 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bauman. Oceanslde HarrUon, Woodmere Ac. 9 Leskosrltz, 9 Welsmen, Patchogue 9 Bachlel, Mlneola 8 Plitler, Westbury 8 Logan, Vallfv 7 Hoare, Westbury 7 Myers, Stonv 8 Sloli. Hlcksvllle 8 Dlstler, Weatbuiy 8 Young, Freeport 8 Oalucai. Baldwin 8 Zychowski.

Southamp'n 5 Pariona, Cart Hampton 8 Oove, Huntington 5 Prlcher, at. 8 Riddles-. Valley Stream 9 Hoflman, Baldwin 4 McOulre. Mlneola 4 Beattv. Westbure 3 WiHIami.

3 Hagen, 4 Zlttrlrk, Valley Stream at Kushay, Manhaaset 4 Oengarelly. 8t. Paul's, 4 Culver, Weat Hampton. 4 Buekhett, Southampton 4 Utterly, Port We.h ton 4 Atkins, Rlverhead 4 Watklm, Weit Hampton 4 Ataenbrey. Oceanslde 4 Cohen, Woodmere 4 R.

Smith, Port Wash on 4 Porter, Oreat 3 W. Prlcher. St. 3 Ruteau, Valley Stream I Kesue, Woodmere High 3 Olnver, Stony 3 Marrulla. 3 p.

Denowikl. Rlverhead 3 Orth. Hempatead 3 Tapping. Southampton 3 Savage. Patchogue 3 Minnlck.

Oreat Allan. Huntington 3 nodbee, Southampton. 2 a.mlth, Southampton 3 Welch, Baldwin 3 Stelner, Woodmere Ac. 3 Krauae. P.

JeReraon 2 Sheadee, Rant Hampton 3 Russell, Eaat Hampton, 2 stokes, Lynbrook 3 Iduta, Huntington 3 Tooker, 3 Ourman. Woodmere Ae. 2 Howe, Amltyvllle 2 Smallwood, Olen 3 Hutrhlaon, 2 La Crosse, 2 MrNally, Valley stream 2 Krtinak. Babylon 2 Pease, Babylon 2 Locke, Bay Shore 2 Wright, oreat Neck 3 leave, Oceanslde 2 V. Barnish, W.

Hamp'Q 3 Srhumway, Malverna 3 Schmidt, Val. Stream 3 Barnea, last Hampton 2 Terry. Rlverhead 2 Morrell, Amltyvllle 2 Reevea. Port Jefferson 2 fhstmen. Preeporl 3 Bianra, Patchogue 3 Maaa, Bay Shore 3 Shsgnon, Hempstead 3 Reason.

Lawrence .,,3 Raravelll, Oeeanstde 1 RnileerR, Hempstead 1 Abrew, Bay Shore 1 Srhtln, Valley Stream. 1 Fiedler, Oreenport Carrol St. Paul 1 Weil. Woodmere Ae. 1 Jshlonskv Msnhasset.

1 Hershev. Stonv 1 Markensle. Slony Br'k 1 Ketrham. Westbury 1 Hemmlnes. Lvnhrook 1 Ttipper.

Msnhasset I P'etsfeld. Woodmere A. 1 Stevens, Westhurv 1 Wunderllch, 1 in Master Tools and You Master Came fAtH 0 Aff ACK 11-2. By SOL METZGER The tools of any sport are its fundamentals. Nq basketball five wins without mastering them so thoroughly that their execution Is automatic, the movements of muscles employed a habit.

So, in the first articles of this daily series on bas-1 -fbll, a game played by more people than any other competitive one, I'm going to explain these various fundamental ere diagramming and explainir- plays and systems of leading fives of today. Today thousands of basketball squads are devoting their time to mastering these fundamentals. Were you on the Indiana squad under Coach Everett Dean right now you would find this a fact. Dean de votes much time to the matter of starting an attack. You see in this sport when a shot is attempted ana missed, defense switches like a flash to offense, if a defensive player gels the rebound.

This man Job Is to launch the attack by a pass to a teammate t-eaking for the other basket. Two are use-' )'" overhead hook the underhand, which may be either direct or by bounce. Tomor rowthe kind of passes used to ad- --re the attack. Nassau-Suffolk Morgan. Wlnnwood 1 Jasqulss, Hempstead 1 Carswell, Amltyvllla 1 Schlllto, Lynbrook 1 Arnold.

La Salle 1 MacLeod. 1 Hoge, Friends Acad. 1 Parant. Westbury 1 Oodtrey, Port JeReraon 1 Wight. Amllvvllle 1 Martlno, Preeporl 1 Lleblrr, Freeport 1 Psvnter.

Mlneola 1 Cronln. Bay Shore 1 Rvder, Huntington 1 Lellman. Orecnport ...1 Wells, Oreennort 1 Small. Friends Acad. 1 Nowickl.

E. 1 Tavlor. Westbury Herrlugton. Wlnnwood. 1 Well, Wood 1 Rohnian.

Baldwin 1 Krlngle. Great Neck 1 Oatley. Oreat Neck 1 Hempstead 1 Tavlor, Lynbrook 1 C. Vandermosteo. O'Slde 1 Blersack.

Val. Stream 1 Smith. Oceanslde 1 Holder. Pt. Washington 1 B.

Leyrer. Bsy 1 Brown. Bay Shore. 1 Kelley. Sayvllle 1 Markenr.ie.

8. Brooklyn 1 Rothenberg, Wlnnwood. Humphries, Hempstead 1 Austin, Stony Brook 1 Walsh. Lvnhrook I Adams, Oreenpori 1 Zalser, Mlneola 1 Jne Ht. Lawrence.

eVvllta 1 Leven, Port 1 Tomaselll, Freeport 1 Oolflberger, Babylon 1 Wright. Oreat Neck 1 Lee. Mlneola 1 Belcher. Lawrence 1 Lee. Port Jefferson 1 F.rhart.

Westton Beach I l.onihsrdl, Freeport 1 forrifan, Southampton 1 Shlebier. Patchogue 1 W. St. Lawrence. S'vllte 1 Wllcm.

Malverna 1 Vaughan. St. Paul a 1 Alessey, Oreat Neck ...1 Wohlmerher. Amltvvllte 1 Pateman. Stony Brook.

1 Aarnnson. Huntington. 1 Oreenway, Hlrksvllle 0 Rugterla. Msnhasset 0 Brunarl. La Sailt 0 Nash.

Rlverhead 0 Behler. Southampton Hammerer. Westbury 0 Sparaco. Olen Cove 1 Peter. Port Weshlng'n 0 Paxton, Woodmere 0 Moore.

Wlnnwood 0 Caaaldv. Huntington 0 Rns. Malverne 0 wicks, Rsy Shore 0 Flvnn, Bay Shore 0 Matto, Mlneola 0 Wlltse, Southampton 8 Matwell, Freenort 8 Westbr. Hlrksvllle 0 Hunneke Raldwln 8 Porter. Great Neck 0 Rarnlsh.

8 Herring. Malverne 8 Wagner, Huntington 8 Warren. Woodmre Oe. 0 Kennedy. Baldwin 0 Orcblnsr.

Freeport 8 DlMarttnl. rr'-'nort. 8 Rltteahouse. Friends A. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 8 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 0 8 0 8 0 0 FOLLOWS BROTHER'S STEPS Cooper French, Pcnn State halfback and a brother of Walter French, Athlrtlc outfielder, also is a shortstop on the baseball team and probably will get a major league trial -then he has finished college.

He is now a junior. 77) GUARD Gift SW 8eUL OFF 7j, SACKBOAOD The word "SPIT" stops you and so should the danger of spit' tipped cigars. Beware smoke Cremolt's certified! The law is clear on the matter of spitting rvery day offender are brought to court and fined for this oflVnsr agninpt piililic. health yel how often have we seen filthy igar shops where lh man in the vtindow rolls the leaves with dirty and spits on tbe euds. Every tobacco leaf entering the clean, sunny Certified Cremo factories in scientifically treated ly I'nited Stales (iovernnient approved methods.

And its purity is safeguarded along every step df the way by amazing inventions that foil, wrap and tip the cigars without the danger of spit. Over wns upent in perfecting the method of manufacture usetl by Certified Cremo. ARROW DEMI-BOSOM SHIRT A smart shirt a entirely aware of iU responsibility to style utterly eonsiderate of eomfort to its owner. It knows the caehet of laundered collars, ruffs and bosom their never-failing flair for day-long freshness. Arrow's tailored this obviously stunning shirt and the two matching Arrow Collars that go with it.

And Browning King's priced it at A Suggestion, Hrliheratelv made wilh confidence to Miinkrr, of imported cigars: Try a Certified Cremo made of the rlioii cm, tenderest leaves that the crop affords, all ripe and mellow. I tif goes through a slow, expensive maturing process that develop, tin-fullest flavor and mildness. You never realized how pood Certified Cremo is don't let its 5-cent price stand in vour ay. our phytic i.iu will recommend a mild cigar in place? of heavy, expensive lirumN. There isn't a bit of scrap in Certified Cremo not a trace of floor sweepings.

All long filler all fresh, tender leaves anil topped off with the finest imported wrapper! CniBii-proof immaculate foil-wrapped Certified Cremo is the kind of cigar the late Vice-President Marshall undoubtedly had in mind when be said: "What this country needs niott it a good 5-cetit cigar." Certifie (I all T)rowningKing Company Fulton St. al Kalb Are. New York I On East 45th Just Off Stti Art. 1285 Broadway, South of 324 St. 260 Fourth at 21 at St.

a. o. F. Meld If 4 0 Abel. If 4 1 Levy 113 Rnlnwlta JOS straesner.rt SOS 102 Kanler 0 0 (1 fig! 0 1 1 Pnllve 2 0 4 t.etlnen 2 4 lepper.lg 4 4 12 Steinberg.

Ig 113 Weslleukr 1 0 2aschlk. 2 0 4 (eltlln 2 3 Ueial 3 I Oorfnien.rg 0 0 0. Piansky 0 0 0 Total! 17 I 42! Totali lit 1 41 THE GOOD THAT AMERICA NEEDED 1 10? AKserfeaaj Clear Co. -j, 1.

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