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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 14

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Brooklyn, New York
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Sports ection HORSE 'STIMULATED" AT LAUREL Laurel, Od. 20 It is reported that Clay Sutphin, triinci the S. W. Labrot horses, w.is suspended for 60 days by the Marylanc State Racing Cornmbviori, upon report that the horse Lawless Lady which he saddled in the last race, Oct. 8.

was stimulated. Sutphin wau recently appointed lo the labrot stable post by the Anapolis, yportsman after the sudden resignation of William Lrfine. IRISH ROOTERS DEFEAT SCOTS Belfast, Ireland, Oct. 20 W) Ireland rallied in the second half today to score twice and defeat Scotland, 2 1, in the second inter, natinal soccer match of the season. The contest was played in dull weather before a crowd of 35,00 fans.

Scotland led at the half, 1 0. Daily 14 A NEW YORK CITY, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1934 Start of Warfare Between Navy and Columbia Vacca Wins R. P. I. Cross-Country Run Troy, N.

Oct. 20 (VP) R. Vacca, Nott Terrace High School. Schenectady, today won the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute invitation crosscountry run. Vacca's teammate, R.

Slade, was third, and a third Nott Terarce lAbrams' Long Runs Gives Flatbush Tie Flat bush School is boosting Dave Abrams tot he sky today, after the manner in which he saved his school from what looked like a sure defeat at the hands of McBurney. With McBurney leading 120. Abrams took a pass and ran 40 yards for a third period touchdown. He romped 80 markers after intercepting an aerial in the fourth Brilliant Rally By Gaels Tops Fordham, 14-9 Mat to. Loads Mulligan's Team lo Victory in Hard Fouhl Rattle is, jr "M- af 1 Tom Tomb, Columbia quarterback, getting off opening Football jl Domes Stars As Navy Halts Columbia, 18-7 Lions Overshadowed by Brilliant Midshipmen After First Quarter By HAROLD PARROTT Navy moved down Baker Field yesterday like a cloud screening tha sun gradually, but unfalteringly, irresistably.

Columbia, which had basked for a time in the early glare of a quick touchdown at the end of a blazing 90-yard march, was eventually eclipsed, completely overshadowed for the first time since Princeton's manpower whipped the Lions la Palmer Stadium last Fall, 20 to 0. At the head of this Middie mon soon was an electric figure, Buza Borries, and he stood out like chain lightning on Columbia's darkened horizon as he set his Navy team alive to push across three successive touchdowns all brillian, in the making of an 18-to-7 Navy victory. Lineups: Pos. Navy Columbl L.E Dornin Kerrigan L.T Lambert Riehavich, L.O Burns f'arrara Robertsha Clampa R.O Zabrisicie Wuera Culter K. RE Mini Chas QB Pratt Tomb L.H Borrie Barabas R.H Kina Brominskt F.B Clark Ntvct Referee.

J. p. Egan, Duquesne; umpire, E. P. Ilughilt.

Michian: linesman. J. W. Hoban. Dartmouth; lield Judae, F.

R. Wal lace, Washington College. Handicap Won By King Saxon At Empire City By W. C. VREELAND In a start to finish effort, King Saxon made amends for his defeat at Jamaica track a week ago by Captain Argo, by carrying the colors of C.

H. Kneblknap home two lengths to the good in the race for the Scarsdale handicap, worth $2,075 net, at the Empire City track yesterday. King Saxon led all the way and stepped the mile and 70 yards In 1:43 1-5. He carried 112 pounds and was ridden by Tommy Malley. Andy Schuttinger's Fortification, Herbert up, was second, a neck in front of the Wheatley Stable's Dusky Prin cess, which was five lengths in front of Halcyon, the other starter.

King Saxon's triumph marked ths third consecutive victory of the afternoon by Jockey Malley, who had previously wonthe second race on Nandi and the third with Captain Argo. King Saxon was favorite at even money. Fortification was choice at 13 to 5, Halcyon 7 to 2 and Dusky Princess 12 to 1. King Saxon came back to his true form after what may be called a distressing interlude for his backers. After starter Cassidy had passed up a chance for a perfect start, he rang the bell on the four horses with Halcyon left at the post.

The stewards then ordered th entries of Halcyon to be refused the future on the plea that he 'vtoi left at the post three times" out of his last four starts. King Saxon never gave up his lead and galolped home with two lengths to spare. Fortification Just lasted long enough to get the plice. Captain Argo, a 'week ago at the Jamaica track, added to the wealth of Bernard Baruch by running off with the New Hyde Park handicap. Yesterday he increased his owner's holdings by sprinting away with tha Enterprise handicap.

It was a race for horses entered to be sold for $7,500 each. Because of his open victory a week ago he was made 1 to 3 favorite. Only the plungers bet on him at that price. Captain Argo Jumped to fc iront at the start and Tommy Malley permitted him, under restraint, to gradually open a gap. He held his advantage to the end and won eased by four lengths.

It was a race but no contest. Wise Anne was second and Bright Phantom third. Starogan won the first race. Th fast but 'Mnt hearted Impromptu tried to steal the -ice but was unable to obtain more than a three leingths advantage "in the early stages over Starogan. This was no sufficient margin for when th Daughter of Westy Hogan chal lenged Imromptu quit and Starogan won by half a length with Impromptu a short head in front of Toano.

Nandi won the second race. Rust was second. chapter. Spartans Gives Jaspers Sound Shower of Touchdowns Bewilders Chick Mee-han's Football Squad By FRANK REIL Michigan State had no cannon to salute its touchtown, but if it had the sounds coming from Ebbets Field yesterday would have recalled the battle of Verdun. Manhattan owned the field piece but had little use for it.

as the sprinting Spartans from East Lansing did all the scoring in the intersectional game witnessed by 18,000. Six times Michigan State men creased the last white line while Chick Meehan's Jaspers, bewidered by such a varied running attack, found themselves snowed under a 39 to 0 score. It was worst beating that Manhattan has received this year, but perhaps it was to be expected, as the Spartans came to the Brooklyn ball park fresh from contests over such worthies as Michigan U. and Carnegie Tech. Scored in All Teriods Once in each of the first three periods, Michigan State manufactured touchdowns and then finally in the last period when Manhattan had exhausted itself trying to hold the Spartans in check, the visitors went in for wholesale production and piled up three more.

Michigan had so many cracky football players that even substitutes broke into the scoring column. Chucky Steve Sebo led the list with two touchdowns, while the others who helped to trounce the dazzled Jasper were Rus Reynolds, who converted an intercepted pass into a 63-yard touchdown; Jim McCrary, colored fullback, who scampered 40 yards for his tally and kicked two extra points; Fred Ziegel and Donald Wiseman, both humble substitutes. Might Have Been Worse Perhaps the score would have not been deprived of the services of been higher if Michigan State had its ace, Kurt Warmbein who left the game early in the second period with a bashed face. The statistics reveal how completely Manhattan was beaten. In first downs they trailed 16 5 and were outrushed.

341 yards to 70. Four Michigan forward passes went for 50 yards while Manhattan, completing three, gained 20 yards. The 131 yards that Michigan gained in the run back of punts also played a vital parr, in the one-sided victory. Pos. Manhattan Michigan State LE ConneU Zares Bartell Inndel Wheeler Dahlgren Mostr Bur.olits Ft Scit Wanner Murray Reavelv Lyons Klewicki 41 Welch Reynolds L.H Warmbein Colina F.B Barkaus McCrary Officials: Releree J.

T. Clinton, Yale. Umpire C. A. Reed, Sprint-field.

Linesman J. C. Hennessy. Brown. Field judge O.

Vergara. Notre Dame. Tilden and Utrecht Booters Battle to Tie Samuel Tilden and New Utrecht High School soccer teams battled to a 22 deadlock in a Brooklyn P. S. A.

L. contest at Ulmer Park yesterday. Both teams were tied 11 at the half as a result of by Marty Markfeld of Tilden and Bernard Emil of New Utrecht. Midway in the second half New Utrecht took the lead when Emil scored his second goal. However, the game again deadlocked when Bernard Greenspan of Tilden sent the ball through the posts a moment later.

Lineup: Pos. R.H. C.H.. H. I.R I O.L..

Tilden New Utrecht Lpibowitz Hurwitz Woiensky Glandrberg GoltiB BaMilst ('crinrlc Levine Shemtslty Mur Ambus Oioia Golden KOmll Mamlel Mtiiler Greenspan Nanni Iionneliy Wolfe By GEORGE Cl'KRIE Harry the Horse Mattos, 1ST pounds on the hoof and able lo do a 11 that needs to be done to a toot-ball except kick it, led the Galloping; Gaels of St. Mary's, often known as the Moraga Marauders and the Madigan Magicians, to a 149 victory over an astonished Fordham team before 55,000 at the Polo grounds yesterday. Coming from behind in the second period, the Californians paraded 53 yards, to send Mattos plunging over for a touchdown. They began another march late in the third period which carried over into the next quarter, covered 65 yards and ended in a touchdown pass, Mattos to Eddie Erdelatz. MANIACI RUNS 80 YARDS TO SCORE Fordham brought its followers howling to their feet early in the opening quarter when Joe Maniaci.

the Lodi whippet tank, intercepted a pass from Herb Schreiber, to race 80 yards behind a screen of perfect blocking for the local touchdown. As the game drew to a close. Wilfrid Tatro, Ram left guard, slammed through to block Fiese's kick for an automatic safety deep behind the end zone. The boys played hard football throughout, with St. Mary's ganging Fordham's tackles, using them up and causing Sleepy Jimmy Crowley a most uncomfortable afternoon as he flung in replacement after replacement, vainly striving to plug up a Maroon line sagging in the middle.

St. Mary's Fordham L.E Erdlatz Pactum L.T Meis'er Ludinowicz L.O.. Kordick McArdle Jorsensen Misklnis R.G. Eidyayan Meany Yezerski Sabo R.E Pennmo Borden B. Fiese Harlow L.H N.chelini Sarausky Schreiber Maniaci F.B Kellogg Sorota Referee, w.

T. Halloran, Providence; umpire. J. C. Hollenback.

linesman. Dean Watkeys, Syracuse; held judge, E. E. Miller. Penn.

State. Army Scores Easily Over Sewanec, 20-9 West Point, N. Oct. 20 IA) Without subjecting its two back-field aces, Captain Joe Stancook and Texas Jack Buckler, to a moment's wear and tear, Army disposed of its fourth intersectional foe before 8.000 fans in Michie Stadium today by whipping the University of the South, of Sewanee, 20 to 0. Coach Gar Davidson, possiblv taking into consideration the firs: period telegraphic report from New Haven which showed Yale running up 24 points on Brown, used hii first stringers with extreme restraint.

The purple-shirted Tennesseeans. one of the lightest teams ever to appear hereabout, could not stop even the mixture of second and third string players Army sent into action, but put up a tenacious battle and made several threatening gestures via the forward pass, on one occasion covering 50 yards in six plays, four of which were com-nleted aerials. Pos. IE Ktmbrell Youne L.T Wolf Bo.lm L.G.... Smith Vincent PT Preston stromberg OB Nazzaro L.HB...Pe!l H.B..

F.B Marts Kin? B'air Hall Hives Heat'nman Eu.stis Hrtich Pnasf- Ruch Referee W. H. Priesell. Prinreton Hm Wre C. J.

McCarty. Linesman M. Tnnmnson Oeoreotown. Judze A. Brumbatish.

Penn State. ARMY POLOISTS PLAT This afternoon at the Fort Hamilton polo field, the Governors Island quartet will engage the First Division fficers in a benefit polo game that may decide the winner of Col-yer Trophy. The Brooklyn riders already have too captured two Barnes of a tree out of five series. Th proceeds of the Game will go to the Army Relief Society. SCHANBEL ONMAT Hans Schanbel and Leo Wallick will wrestle in the feature spot of the Ridgewood Grove's weekly mat show Tuesday night in a finish bout.

Five other time limit engagements complete the card. runner came in fifth. Vacca's time was 12 minutes 54.7 seconds. Furious Yale Attack Whips Brown, 37-0 Elis Run Wild to Score Four Touchdowns in the First Quarter By TOMMY HOLMES Staff Correspondent of The Eagle New Haven, Oct. 20 Brown was completely upset by a furious Yale attack in the first period and never did get going this afternoon.

Some 20,000 spectators sat in the big bowl astonished at the magnitude of the 37-lo-0 victory of the Bulldogs over a combination that a week ago gave fair Harvard a whale of a touch battle. The team that Tuss McLaughry brought to New Haven was one that was supposed to trade bite for bite with the blueclad Bulldogs. It never had a chance. The game was only a few minutes old before a sustained march of 66 yards down the field ended in a Yale touchdown. Three more followed in quick succession and Brown was groggy with a 24 to 0 deficit by the time the first period ended.

Yale shoved over another touchdown early in the second quarter, then coasted until the final period, when Mather Whitehead seized a Brown pass and galloped across the goal line for his third touchdown of the afternoon and Yale's sixth, One Yale Weakness John Kelley accounted for two touchdowns and Bernard Rankin carried the odd one over. About the only weakness Yale displayed was its failure to convert extra points, which are sometimes important. Otherwise it seemed that the Bulldogs could do nothing wrong. Yale traveled fast on land and by air in those early minutes when Brown was being shoved all over the green grass. It seems that Ducky Pond's eager young athletes are adaptable people.

Their most successful method of rushing the ball was a fake pass to a back who swept around end and drew the Brown defense out while the real ball carrier slipped through some convenient hole. Pennsylvania used this stunt successfully against the Bulldogs a week ago and the Eli's have perfected it for themselves. This play, alternated with short, flat passes over, the line of scrimmage usually thrown by Jerome Roscoe, made Brown very ill and Brown couldn't get well. Elis Start Parade The touchdown parade started from Yale's own 34-yard line after Brown had punted. Exactly eight plays and the Bulldogs were over.

A pass, Roscoe to Morton, gained about 25 yards and Whitehead, a minute later, shot through the line for the score. The second one came when Roscoe threw a forward pass to Whitehead for a 20-yard gain over the line and the third when Roscoe threw another to Kelley, out in the clear for a 20-yard run. Kelley also scored the fourth, seconds later, blocking a punt deep in Brown territory and pursuing the bobbing ball over into the end zone. Rankin was the whole show in the Yale march in the second period. He slithered through on a grand run from midfield and was downed 13 yards away from home.

On the very next play, he circled left end for the touchdown. Karaban Played Well After that, the Bulldogs seemed satisfied. Their one remaining score was a more or less routine. Brown's captain, Bill Karaban, threw a forward pass in his own territory and Whitehead slid in behind the receiver and intercepted it, to dash 20 yards over the goal line with nobody near him. Po.

Brown Yale L.E Summerfield Train L.T Praad Wright L.O. Lear Davis Emery Grosscup R.G.... Capasso Strauss Olsen C. Ctirtln R.E.... Ball Kelley B.

Rellly Roscoe L.H Elrod Morton R.H Anpleyard Rankin F.B Karaban Whitehead Referee. H. B. HackeU, West Point; umpire. W.

R. Crowley, Bnwdoin: linesman. B. W. Carson, Penn.

State; field judge. A. W. Palmer. Colby.

Crusaders Rout On II chin' Cambridge, Oct. 20 (Pi-Riding the air lanes on the wings of Jim Hobin's spectacular passes, the powerful Crusaders of Holy Cross spotted a fighting Harvard team six points and then scored four touchdowns to beat the Crim-som, 26 to 6, before a crowd of 40,000 in the Harvard Stadium today. Once In the final minute of the first period and twice in the last quarter, Hobin faded back behind his burly rush line and hurled touchdown passes to his teammates. The first one traveled 27 yards in the air while the others were even longer, his final effort sailing 45 yards into the waiting arms of Walter Janiak in the Harvard end zone. Makes Rout Complete To make the rout complete, a young sophomore halfback.

Vin Dougherty, from Scranton, 1 LOCAL Nary, 18 Columbia, 7 Y. It l.afavelte, 1 Michigan State, 3 Manhattan, 0 St. Mary'j, 11 Fordham. 9 EAST Armr, Sewanee, ft Dartmouth, 'i (I Georgetown, 3 A 0 Holy Cross, SO Harvard, 8 Penn Stale, 111 Lehigh, I) fitr College, 2ft Lowell Textile, A Pennsylvania, Rutgers, 19 Minnesota, 111 Pittsburgh, 7 Princeton, W. IS Syracuse, Ohio Wesleyan, 19 Villanova, Detroit, 0 Yale, 37...

Brown, ft Moravian, 25 Brooklyn College, ft Dickinson, 2 Allegheny, 9 St. John's 12 Swarthmore, 9 St. Anselm's, 19 Middlehury, lit. Springfield, II Providence, 1:1 St, Lawrence, :19 Ilubart, 9 Ithaca. 1.

Iliirtwlik. 0 Slippery Kock, 29 tilenville, (I drove Mly, 119 Bethany, 9 Westminster, 7 Thiel, fl West. Va. 33 Massanutten 9 I a Salle, 7 St. Joseph's, 0 Burknell, 12 SI.

Thomas, (t P. M. 29 Juniata, 9 Irsinus, F. M. 9 Drexel.

8 Lebanon Valley, 7 Delaware, 9 Hampden-Sydney, ft Bloumsburg Trhrs, 11 Mansfield Tchrs, ft Wesleyan, 21 Haverford, 7 P. I 2K Clarkson, 0 Boston I niversity, Bates. Rhode Island, 7 Mass. State, fl New Hampshire, 21 Maine, 7 Washington 111.. Johns Hopkins, 0 Naxy Plebes, 7 Kiskiminetas 9 SOUTH Alabama, 13 Tennessee, ft Oglethorpe, 13 Rollins, 6 Duke, 29 Davidson, 0 Richmond, 7 V.

M. 9 Maryland, 11 V. P. Wake-Foretit, 1 1 Presbyterian, Vanderhilt, 7 Auburn, Catholic 92 Baltimore 0 F.ton, 32 Randolph-Macon, 9 Catawba. (lullford, 9 Woflord, 29 F.rskine, Furman, 9 Mercer, 3 Western Kentucky Tchrs.

29 Transylvania, ft Texas Christian, 13.. Texas A. A 0 Inion, IS Morehead, Brooklyn Prep Suffers First Grid Setback Charlie Moutenot. substitute left halfback for All Hallows, galloped 30 yards off tackle to shove Brooklyn Prep into its first defeat of the season at Erasmus Field yesterday. 6 to 0.

Moutenot was in the game ao a reserve for Stapelton The Crown Heights eleven had previously won twice, both times from uptown prep schools, Xavier and Fordham Prep, by one touchdown margins. Moutenot made his touchdown dash in the tihrd period to break up what semingly was developing into a scoreless battle. The Blue and White tried to make i. the deficit by launching a fourth period aerial attack. "Hilly" Renz set the parein a march down the field but, with the goal in sight, Brooklyn Prep lost the ball and Its opportunity for scoring on a fumble.

Lineup: Johnny Marcum Honored with a Day made a good showing with Connie Mack's club this past season, has been pitching a number of games in Southern Indiana and Kentucky since the season closed and was featured in a "Marcum Day" at Shelbyville, twirling for the tsneioy colas against the St. Matthew's team. College IT yesterday at Baker Field. Tigers Barely Grab 14-12 Win Over Generals ami Lee Only Defeated in Last Two Minutes of Play Princeton, N. Oct.

20 (P) The football teams of two of the Nation's oldest institutions of higher learning Princeton and Washington and Lee waged a dramatic, nevre-wrackSiig battle with the mighty Tiger eleven emerging victorious by the slender margin of two points. Faced with its first defeat in two seasons, Princeton turned what would have been one of the most stunning upsets of this surprising year into a 14-to-12 triumph when Pepper Constable, regular fullback, held out of the starting lineup, plunged over the goal line for a touchdown with two minutes to play. Rallies Arouse Crowds A crowd estimated to number 25,000 went wild in the closing quarter as first Washington and Lee came from behind to take the lead by a succession of spectacular forward passes, and then Princeton staged its final winning rally. A long forward from Sam Mattox, captain of the Generals, to Charley Smith, towering end, gave the invaders the first touchdown In the opening quarter. Mattox.

however, failed to add the extra point. For Princeton, seeming to find itself for the first time, evened the score in the second quarter by unloosing a sensational aerial attack of its own and moved into the lead when Ken Sandbach place-kicked successfully for the point after touchdown. Ttie air brought each its last-quarter touchdown and again the extra point was a vital factor. Three forwards in a row, with Mattox throwing the ball into Austin Moore's arms over the goal line on the third one, gave Washington and Lee its second 6-pointer. Mattox' try for conversion again proved unsuccessful.

Tigers Rush Reserves Princeton rushed in fresh men and called upon Garry Levan, the great climax runner of last year. The ball was in midfield and the time was short, Katz Kadlic, heaved a long forward towards the goal line. The referee ruled Washington and Lee players interfered with the intended receiver and the ball was Princeton's on the W. and L. 23-yard line.

Again Kadlic dropped back to pass, this time to Levan. The aerial found its mark and Garry reached the two-yard marker before he was brought down. Levan then hit the line for a one-yard gain and Constable cracked through center for the score MacMillan was. called upon to kick and the ball sailed between the goal posts for the extra point. Pos.

Prlncelon Washington it Lee L.E McMillan Ellis L.T Sloess Owinss O. Wcller CUimm Kulbsugh filynn H.O. Bonino T. Dyer Lea Smith QB Katllir Healon H. Arnold R.H Mattox F.B.

Bailey Referee B. L. Euerts. Catholic. Umpire T.

DcKt'nn. Geortic WashiiiKton. Linesman A. Young, Pennsylvania. Field Judge S.

S. Scott. Michigan. Meola on Mound For the Bushwicks Mike Meola Just arrived from the Pacific Coast where he enjoyed a successful season will pitch the first game for the Bushwicks against the Farmers at Dexter Park tomorrow afternoon. In the nightcap the Bushwicks will play the Bay Parkways.

These games may wind up the local semi-pro season. 4 V7JT' kickoff in the game with Navy MIDDLE WEST Notre Dame, 13 Carnegie Tech, ft Michigan, 9 Georgia Tech, Ohio Slate, 19 Colgate, 7 Chicago, 21 Indiana, 9 Iowa Stale, 31 lowa, II Ohio Northern, 29. ft St. Louis, 7 Missouri, 9 Kansas Slate, 13 Kansas, 9 Bluffton, 9 Dellance, 9 Miami, 7 Ohio 9 Findlay, ,17 Detroit Tech, 6 Denison, of) Wittenberg, 9 Wooster, Akron, 0 Hiram, 13 Boa ling Green, 3 Western Reserve, 25.... Ml.

Vernon, 0 Muskingum, 3 Heidelberg, 0 Ohio I'. (B), 9 Arthur Holbrook College, ft Coe, 9 Cornell College, 0 lie Pauw, 29 Hanover, abash. 25 Rose Poly, 0 Central State Tchrs, 13 Michigan Normal, 12 Purdue, II Wisconsin, 0 Kvansville. 19 Oakland City, 0 Concordia, 13 Macalester, 12 FAR WEST California California ft COLLEGE SOCCER St. 1 L.

I. 0 Brooklyn College, 0 Selh Low, 0 Navy, 4 Getlsburg, CROSS-COUNTRY Navy, 1.1 Virginia, 40 Plebes, Virginia Fr 3 SC1IOOO KESULTS Krasmus, ft Lincoln, 0 12 Boys High, ft Tilden. 13 Hamilton, 1' Seward Park. 12 Jefferson, 9 All Hollows, 6 Brooklyn Prep, 0 Poly Prep, 7 Peddle, ft Woodmere, 6 Brooklyn Friends, 0 Kew-Foresl. 27 Riverdale II l.a Salle.

31 St. oJseph's, II Roosevelt, 12 St. Francis, ft John Adams, 12.,, Jamaica, 9 Smlthtown, 7 Sayvllle, 9 Bay Shore, 6 Riverhead, 0 Westhampton, 1.1 Patcbugue, 0 Cleveland, 0 Flushing, 9 Port Jefferson, 14. 0 Great Nerk, 1.1 Central (Valley Stream), 18 Poly Prep J.V 12 Bay Ridge Bulldogs, 0 Plans 'Farm'. League For Coast Circuit Tacoma, Wash.

Just when the formation of a Northwest League appeared to have been given up for at least another year, new interests came to the front to make the organization of a Class circuit in Washington, Oregon and British Columbia a virtual certainty. Russell J. Nelson, traveling secretary of the Hollywood club of the Pacific! Coast League, came here with a proposal for the formation of a "farm" league for the Coast circuit. Nelson spent a week in Tacoma, making preliminary plans for the proposed league, which would draw clubs from Vancouver B. Victoria, B.

Aberdeen Hoquiam, Bellingham, Everett Yakima, Bremerton and Seattle, all in Washington, and Portland, Ore. Commerce Body Honors Walker Bill Walker, southpaw hurler of the bt. loii is Cardinals, was honored at his home city, East St Louis, 111., with a luncheon elver by the Chamber of Commerce. The Association and pupils of Hawthorne School, which ho once attended, presented him with a bronze statue. Walker's former teacher made the presentation.

HARRIS STAYED AWAY Bucky Harris was not at the world series games. Perhaps Harris didn't like the idea of showing in Detroit after he had failed to lift the Tigers into a contending position. Our baseball folk seem to be thin-skinned these days, is the comment of Sporting News. Gophers Beat Pitt Panthers ByScoreofl3-7 Minnesota Giants Talk Two Winning Touchdown in Last Quarter Pittsburgh, Oct. 20 A sum-bering golden giant Minnesota's mighty oflense awoke with a start late today and in fifteen brief, thrill-soaked minutes, crushed Pittsburgh 13 to 7, knocked the Panthers out of the national title hunt for the second straight year, and rundled off toward new triumphs with 64.850 staring and gasping in the wake.

Like the 10.000 Swedes who jumped off the weeks at the Battle of Copenhagen, the burly Norsemen rose as if from ambush in that final quarter, and in two tremendous blasts, scored two touchdowns. turned a rnut into virtorv am! paraded off unbeaten in the title race, as dangerous an eleven the countryside. Pittsburgh was the nation's football capitol today and for three quarters the mammoth crowd in the great sun-drenched horseshoe atop the city's highest hill revelled in the power of the Panthers. Rarely Saw Ball Through the first two periods. Minnesota never had possession of the ball past its own 32-yard line in fact had hold of it onlv eigKI times all told in the first half.

Onlv a magnificent defense in the crucial moments had kept the Panthers even seven points at bav the result of a 64-yard lateral from Izzy Weinstock to Mike Nick-sick, and Weinstock's perfect kick for the extra point in the final seconds of the half. Minnesota didn't come even close to making a first down, with the big AU-American captain, Francis 'Pugi Lund, harassed at every step by Pitt's vicious forwards. Trice in the first half, before the score, the Panthers were inside the Minnesota 15-yard line, once with a first down on the 6-yard line as Harvey Rooker oimmjeu ljuna iumnie on a bad I pass there from center. Minnesota's bulgly line rallied and 1 four times stopped Weinstock, a tremendous human battering ram. I snort oi me goal, holding him for downs finally on the 2-yard line.

The rarest kind of a lucky break saved the Gophers the second time as Nicksick, from the 11-yard line, passed into the hands of Julius Alphonse, Minnesota halfback. Just over the goal line for a toucliback. It was close to being a safety. P- Pitt Minnesota Tenner L.T Hoei Widselh L.O... let Orti Shof.vr;i Rennebohm Ormis'on W.

Hevan RT Olijniczak Bentftson Baxter Lurson B. St idel I. Nicksick Lund tc.l Larue Clarkson FB Officials: Rfrr W. G. CroIJ, Swart hmore.

Umpire-T. J. Thorp, Linesman W. M. Holienhaek.

Pennsylvania. Field Judge C. M. Waters Williams. Thief Lightened Pitcher's Luggage After the Junior World's Series was over, Joe Sims, pitcher of the Columbus club, departed for his home in aJsper, carrying lighter bagage than he had planned.

A thief took part of it in Columbus. Missing were his ba.seball equipment, a valuable cigarette lighter and an autographed ball that he prized. POLO AT WESTBIRY The regular Sunday high goal polo matches at Bostwick Field, Westbury. L. will come to a close this afternoon when Pete Bost-wick's Aiken Knights face Stewart Iglehart's strong Westbury four.

N.Y.U. Griddcrs Trip West Viu, 12 to 7. Machlouitz Starring Goals Tlden. Markfeld. Greenspan.

New Utrecht, Emit 2). Substitutions Tilden. Strobintr for Andrews; New Utrecht, Wiene for Bashist. Time of halves 30 minutes, Releree Pox. P.

S. A. L. Twice Machlowitz called his own signal and twice he evaded the Maroon players, scoring in the fust period after only four minutes of play on a run through his left tackle of 47 yards. His second score was made on a spinner play and he raced 43 yards for the second NN.

Y. U. touchdown that proved the winning margin, Pos. N. Y.

13. Lafayette L.E Klein Arnold L.T Wal; Adsma LG Carlsen Nesi Fischer Patton R.O. Relbinan K.T DeBenediCtis Piitnuati RE Hardy Pltzwater QB Machlowitz Evnor L.H stablev Pa-tor Bialkow-k Sjpill Biales Harvard, 26-0, Clever Passing threw a 40-yard pass which John McCann, a reserve end, caught in the end zone for another Purple score with only seconds remaining to play. While the Crusaders were taking their time getting organized, Harvard uncovered a surprising offense in the first period, twive marching deep into Holy Cross territory and putting over a touchdown on their second drive of 51 yards which was consumed in six plays. Pos.

Harvard Holy Cro Avery L.T. Harvey L.O. Moran Comfort Morandol Oundlach Planasan Moncewlca RE Kelly CUrlejT QB Hsley Call- L.H. Hoi4 H. Bilodeau Mo! F.B Jacksnn Brlf-i Hrfcr-e-W.

MrOinnes. Umpire- O. Lowe. Mnesman C. M.

Bankarl. Field judge U. T. Willie. By PAI E.

WARBURG From under a chill breeze that settled over Yankee Stadium yesterday afternoon bloomed one evasive violet in the form of Nat Maclilowitz, 162-pound quarterback. Replacing the injurde Charlie Siegel, who was forced from the lineup as a result of the West Virginia game a week ago, the new field general proved too much for the shadow cast by a stubborn Lafayette band of warriors. Thus, the new regime of football at New York University under the coaching of Dr. Mai Stevens again took root in the grid parade of colleges and triumphed 12 to 7. It as a triumph marred by some poor taetlo, i.

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