mmmmmmmm ••'•• ' •» Saratogas. Sportsfultonhistory.com/Newspapers 21/Saratoga Springs...

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-iii.m » THE SARATOGIAN. SARATOGA SPRINGS. R V., MONDAY. OCTOBER 31. 1932. PAOT ELSWt College Football Returns to Conference Competition Coming Week-End INTERSECTIONS CUMAX REACHED LAST SATURDAY C ANZONERI GIVES PETROLLE CHANCE AT TITLE FRIDAY NEW YORK. Oct. 81 (AP) The blgest lntereectional surge of the season now written into the records, college football returns this week to conference compe- tion all along the line. There will be a few intersection- s' jousts, notably those involving New York university and Geor- gia, and St. Mary's of California and Ford ham, but for the most part major elevens will be con- cerned solely with their bids for sectional honors. Approaching the first November date of the campaign, the situa- tion in each major group or con- ference can be summarized as fol- lows; , EAST—Pitt, by virtue of its sen- sational victory over Notre Dame, generally is ranked at the top al- though Colgate draws plenty of support. These two, with Colum- bia, Brown, Holy Cross, Pennsyl- vania and Temple, are the only re- ( maining undefeated teams in major ranks. At least two on this list may be erased this week in the duels between Pitt and Penn, and Brown and Holy Cross. Columbia plays Navy, Colgate meets Miss- issippi College, and Temple en- counters Haskell. Other leading games in addition to the Ford- ham-St, Mary'* and New York Univ. -' Georgia duels, involve Harvard and Army; Boston Col- lege and Villanova; Western Maryland, another undefeated ar- ray, and Bucknell; Syracuse and Oglethorpe, and Penn State and Sewanee. BIO TEN—A four-game confer- ence schedule with Michigan, the leader, picked over Indiana, and Purdue, in second place, favored over Chicago, Wisconsin and Illi- nois, Northwestern and Ohio State, are paired in other confer- once games. Minnesota, which plays Michigan Nov. 19 in the S me that may decide the title, ees Mississippi of the Southern Conference, and Iowa meets Ne- braska of the Big Six. BIO SIX—Oklahoma, the only eleven except Nebraska undefeated within the conference, plays Mis- souri in the most important game with the Sooners heavy favorites. Kansas State and Iowa State meet in another conference game. Kan- sas and Notre Dame play at Law- • , rence. , , ,. NEW YORK, Oct. 31 (AP) Tony Canzoneri stakes his light- weight championship against Billy Petrolel, the demon puncher from Duluth, in a 15- round battle in Madison Square Garden Friday night. Despite Petrolle's many sensa- tional performances here and de- finite the terrific punch he packs in either hand, he will enter the ring on the short end of the bet- ting unless plenty of money is rushed to his support this week. There are two major factors to explain Canzoneri's position of favorite over the midwestern vet- eran who has waded through lightweights and welterweights in- discriminately during the last two or three years. One concerns the elbow Injury Petrolle suffered in training and which forced post- ponement of the bout: The other is the question whether Billy can make the weight without serious- ly weakening himself. Petrolle's comparatively long layoff from competition due to his arm injury probably has done the veteran no particular good. The weight question, however, is the more serious. He scaled over 140 pounds a few days ago and lie may have to resort to heroic meas- ures to get down to the class limit of 136 pounds. Hfs most ef- fective fighting has been done at 139 pounds. Canzoneri, who won the title by knocking out Ai Singer in one round in November, 1930, knocked out Frankle Petrolel, Billy's younger brother, in the third round in his most recent engage- ment. w ••'•"•" ' •» Saratogas. Sports ! i—i * *—.-• Two boys, Rocco Cutri of Pitt and Dave Hedges of Dartmouth, recently made mistakes that cost their teams victory in the last few seconds of play. Both situation! were charged with the kind of dramatic tensity and suspense you ready about in those football novels. This season and many oth- ers, have seen no such striking anti-climaxes. Cutri is the Pitt quarterback who called for a forward pass on second down and with 80 seconds to play with the ball nine inches away from Ohio's goal line. The pass was grounded in the end zone for a touchback. So Ohio State tied Pitt, 0 to 0. Hedges is the Dartmouth half- back, who with 30 seconds to play, dropped an easy forward pass that landed kerplunk In his mitta as he stood with nobody near him in Harvard's end zone, So Harvard won the game, 10 to 7. Cutri's error was one of confu- sion. Ohio State had been offside twice in the last minute of play, which nullified two downs — though the scoreboard showed fourth down. The penalty, since the offense as committed within the five-yard line, was half the distance to the goal—18 inches the first time, and nine inches the sec- ond time that the Ohloans jumped the gun in their attempt to smoth- er the rush. Before their miscuea both young men had played the" kind of foot- ball that wins All-America selec- tion. Both were stars. Then—one little play—and they became goats. LIST OF UNTIED AND UNDEFEATED ELEVENS NOW 20 mmmmmmmm WHITEHALL WINS AT HUDSON FALLS BY 12 TO 6 SCORE OUT OUR WAY By WILLIAMS NEW YORK, Oct. 81. (AP)—The 1932 football campaign enters the crucial November engagements with only 20 teams unbeaten and untied. Notre Dame, Harvard, Johns Hopkins and Catholic University all suffered their initial defeats last week while Temple, St. John's of Minnesota and Wagner College of Staten Island were tied. Colgate and Auburn jointly share the scoring lead among the unbeaten and untied teams with 195 points in six games. Columbia ranks third with 186. Colgate and Southern California are the only elevens boasting uncrossed goal lines. The 20 teams which an Associat- ed Press compilation shows neither beaten nor tied follow: Pts. Pts. Team Won for agst. wOigaxe •«•••.••.••.•« t> Auburn 6 Columbia 6 Dayton (Ohio) ...... 6 Tennessee 6 Centenary 6 Cincinnati Illinois Normal 6 Virginia Poly ..„^^^ Holy Cross % 6 North Dakota State . 6 Waynesburg (Penn). 6 Pennsylvania 5 PACIFIC COAST Southern California, co-leader with the Uni- versity of California at Los Ange- les, faces the California Bears in a vftaLstruggle,, <IL C. I* A^*con- I queror of Stanford last week, is 'idle. Stanford-Washington, Wash- ington State - Idaho and Oregon Stats - Oregon are other confer- ence pairings. ; SOUTH fir Auburn, Tennessee, Louisiana State and Virginia Poly all undefeated but the two latter face strenuous tests this week. Louisiana plays South Carolina and Virginia Poly must take on Alabama, Tennessee is heavily favored over Mississippi State. Auburn enjoys an open date. Five other conference games will send Maryland against Vanderbilt, the latter undefeated but tied by Tu- lane; Duke aaginet Kentucky; North Carolina against Florida; Georgia Tech against Tulane; and Virginia against Washington and Lee. SOUTHWEST — A comparative lull in the race which may be de- cided by the game between Texas and Texas Christian Nov. 11. Texas should have no trouble with I "Baylor this week while Texas I Christian - plays a non-conference ; game against Simmons Friday. j Rice and Arkansas, Southern Methodist and Texas A. and M., ! complete the conference card. ROCKY MOUNTAIN Utah, ! apparently once mors the class of I the conference, plays Colorado | University. Denver, unbeaten but tied by the Colorado Aggies, plays Wyoming; Colorado College, upset Valparaiso (Ind.) ... Hillside (Mich.) .... Susquehanna (Penn). U. C. L A Michigan After his fatal mistake of sev- eral years ago, Roy Riegels, the California center, came back and played splendid football. But the name of Riegels Is associated with!So. California 5 the idea of running the wrong way Brown 5 on a football field. - The Unlimited Association of Grandstand Quarterbacks will talk about Cutri's mistake for years. But, suppose that forward pass had barely been hurled, war still in the air when the gun sounded, and had corns to rest thereafter safe in the arms of a Pitt halfback! Then, what kind of a guy would Cutri be! And suppose that Dave Hedges had crushed the ball to his chest with the same nonchalance with which Bill Dickey pockets a high hard one hot from the arm of Lefty Gomez! Wouldn't he have been an immortal hero in Green Mountain history then! There will be all kinds of passes that fail to click in the course of a 195 195 186 156 149 133 124 120 108 94 94 82 153 144 143 113 108' 101 84 64 HAGERTY COACH AT GEORGETOWN, SUCCEEDS MILLS HUDSON FALLS, Oct. 81 — A rugged Whitehall High school eleven rode to victory on the crest of a dazzling aerial offensive and a vicious bard running attack feat- uring the irrepressible Johnny "Blanchard, co-captain and quar- terback, Saturday afternoon at Derby park, Hudson. Falls, turning back one of the gamest Hudson Falls High School eleven of all time, 12 to 6, in a thrilling north- ern conference battle witnessed by close to 2,000 spectators. The triumph over the valiant Green and White of old Sandy Hill was the Maroon's flgth straight in as many games in the 1932 conference campaign, thus keeping its record unblemished for the season, and assures the crown- ing of the 1933 champion the com- ing Saturday when Coach "Amby" Gilligan's formidable array takes its aerial circus and fleet-footed Co-Captain Blanchard into Gran- 21 vilel to meet the High school rep- 19 resentatives of that place, also un- 27 > beaten and untied this year. Hud- 23 son Falls, by a victory, could have 26 somewhat dampened Whitehall's 25' title aspirations and made itself 13 eligible for a tie for the leader- 19! ship providing Whitehall subdued 25 Granville High this week-end. 271 12 CAMBRIDGE, Oct. 31 — Play- 18 lng a vastly improved brand of 311 football above that which they 6 had displayed in the Hudson Falls 17 game two weeks ago, an alert and 13 smooth-running Glens Falls High 13 eleevn crushed Cambridge High j 0 here Saturday afternoon, 20 to 0, 3 in a northern conference tilt. The score, however, indicated only slightly the Red and Black's su- periority which throughout the en- tire game enabled them to smash their opponent's comparatively light line continualy for 25 first downs to four. conquerors of Colorado University and Colorado Aggies, faces West- ern State and Colorado Mines and Colorado Teachers clash in an- other conference game. - THIS CURIOUS WORLD - a quarterback could call the right play every time, a football game would become something like a track meet If every forward pass Went to its mark, there would be no point in trying anything else but forward passes. These football players are just human kids down there trying with everything they've got to win. A fellow who errs in a crisis should have sympathy rather than the razzberry. Such, however, is not the philos- ophy of the old grad who never played football, and the gent who pays his way in for the privilege of burying rather than flattering Caesar. WASHINGTON, Oct. 31. (AP)— Georgetown University^ installed a new coaching staff today with ^ ^ w e ' f r T y marked by many GREENWICH, Oct. 31 — Green- wich High school's football repre- sentatives climbed into fourth place in the northern conference standing here Saturday by shad- ing a game Fort Edward High combination, 12 to 8, in a rough BROWN BEARS IN 19 TOO WIN OVER GLENS FALLS A. C. John L Hagerty, 1925 Hoya cap- tain, succeeding Thomas E. Mills, former backfleld coach under jurats head mentor, penalties. It was the Witches' second win in five starts in the conference. four starts, relegated it to a fifth Do You Remember a - .... -••»• I.. !*• •• e One Year Ago Today—In one of the big intersectional games of the year, Oregon journeyed east and drubbed New York Univers- ity by a score of 14-6. Notre UNION SCORES ON WILLIAMS 6 TO 0 Ibbtba^'^aMe^mh^^^ Hagerty cams from New-.-York 1 p i aGe tie with Glens Falls, which lead.^performed at^iSx-ii^-ia. - is^M-Jt f IS 1* S* * * n •? 7 14 SI ss 1 IS a* M s * SI M » IS 17 S4 4 11 IS Sf fsf&WV m df, mm] FIOWER or ORIGINATED IH 7HS OtmNT, HUNDREDS' OFVEAAS ASO. rr STHB \ IMPCPiAL FLOWER. OF JAtHH, WHERE IT ISCAUED 'X/KWA MPANBS* ^^AlpfHstOXUJO O-KtKU-SAM. IMS SY MA StftVKC. IMC AN INSECT POWDER USED/NMLUNG PLANTl/C£ IS MAX FAOMTHB DRIEO FLORETS' OFA / S&C/CS OFCMOANTHeAMJM/ 3E The Hedges incident won new respect for Eddie Casey, Harvard's coach. Eddie could hardly wait until the game was over. He poised on the sidelines, and with the crack of the pistol, was off and running—not to bis own Harvard boys, who were in a huddle to give a cheer for Dartmouth, but to the Dartmouth team which grouped to cheer the Crimson. He dashed up to Dave Hedges, threw his arm over the boy's shoul- der and spoke words of solace. Eddie was on the spot once or twice himself, and knows what a fellow feels like after he has muffed one! MECHANICVILLE WINS Nott Terrace High's football eleven succumbed to Mechanicville High on the letter's gridiron Sat- urday, the homesters tallying the lone touchdown in the second quar- ter. It was a hard-fought game, but the Mechanicville boys proved the stronger. Howard Mahoney, Dicello and Harlan featured for Nott Terrace, while Whalen, Walsh and Alvarez shone for the winners. ^—TTTI— . I LEADER AT EMPIRE. B. B. Stable was the leading mon- ey-winner among the owners, with a total of $3,408, at the twelve-day autumn meeting of the Empire City Racing Association which ended Saturday and marked the conclu- sion of the metropolitan racing sea- son. H. Jacobs, leader at the Jamaica autumn meeting, was first among the trainers, with 15,765. 1 e ONIONS. Onions peeled under water will not bring tears to the eyes. at the expense of Cambridge. —_ MARKS FALL IN CROSS COUNTRY MEET ktit Giants' professional team to take j won itg first conference decision charge of a grid squad that has been defeated in three major games this year. He brought with him from the Giants, Maurice Dubofs- ky, Georgetown captain last year. Mills resigned yesterday after serving nearly three years as head coach. His assistants, Frank Kers- jes and John Carberry, also Notre Dame products, resigned with Tiim. "For some time," Mills said in tendering his resignation, "I have been quite conscious of the fact that Georgetown has been dissat- isfied with the record of her foot- ball team. During recent weeks this criticism has borne down upon me rather heavily. After consideration, I have decided to step aside and allow some one else to take my place." Haggerty, during three years on Georgetown's squad, was rated one of the best backs in Hoya history. Dubofsky played guard. The uni- versity athletic board has named Charles Brickman to the third vars- ity coaching place. Brickman has been handling the freshman squad. ••ii RETIRE EQUIPOISE AFTER BEATING IN LAUREL HANDICAP The Brown Bears gained undis- puted possesion of first place in the northern New York semi-pro football league Saturday by over- whelming the Glens Falsi A. C. 19 - 0 in a game played at the local Recreation field. At the same time the Ticonderoga A. C, which had been tied with the Bears for the leadership, lost to the Hudson Falls Green Jackets. Johnny Chase, local tackle, re- covered a Glens Falls fumble be- hind the goal line in the initial period for the first touchdown. In the second quarter, Kiley, Bear s same kind of a trick to give the locals a 12 to 0 lead as the half ended. Folts missed both attempts to kick the extra point The third touchdown came in the last period when the Bears launched a drive from their 30- yard line to the goal. A pass, J. Folts to Johnson, was the final blow. Johnson added the extra SCHENECTADY, Oct 31.-After Dams "found Carnegie Tech fairly defeating the Williams College easy and beat the Skibos, 19-0. I football team here Saturday. 6 to 0, Ten Yssm Ago Greentree Stable's Damask LAUREL, Md., Oct 31. (^—Syl- vester W. Labrot'e Tred Avon from the Holly Beach Farm of Maryland stepped out at the Laurel race track to win by a head over the favored Equipoise Saturday in the Washington Handicap, worth $14- 800 to three-year-olds and upwards for a mile and a quarter. Trsd Avon's victory paid $19.50, $6.40 and $3.60 acroa* the board in the pari-mutuels. C. V. Whitney's Equipoise was left behind at the barrier and was driven hard by Jockey Sonny Workman to pull up behind Tred Avon. Back of the Son of Pen- nant by a nose was A. C. Bost- wick'a Mate. Following the race, his trainer, Fred Hopkins, announced the Whitney horse will be retired for the remainder of the season. Equi- poise has won 10 of his 14 starts this year and $107,375. TROY, Oct St.—Two records fellj in the annual interscholastic cross- country meet Saturday at Rens- selaer Polytechnic Institute where 818 harriers engaged in a contest won by Steve Szumachowski, 17, of Mont Pleasant High school of Sche- nectady, in 12:49, six seconds faster than the previous record. Nott Ter- race High school of Schenectady took the team award. The meet saw the largest num- ber of entries in its 11 years of existence and marked the smash- ing of the record set last year by Ed Weille of Newton High, Elm- hurst, L. I. He did not race Satur- day. Harry Peckham of Grand Gorge High School was second in 12:56; Louis Bartlzek of Lynn Memorial High school, Lebanon, conn., third in 13:03; Peter Olexy, Lanford, Pa., fourth in 13:04, and N. Krupnick, Bacon Academy, Colchester, Conn., fifth in 13:06. Nott Terrace High School, Sche- nectady, which last year finished second for team honors in the meet to Mont Pleasant, this year finished with sixty points. Mont Pleasant and Passaic, N. J. High Schools tied for second team hon- ors, with 104 pointaeech and White Plains High School was third with 105 points. e The score: Glens Falls Humphries D. Folts left end Smith Murphy left tackle Davis Maekey left guard Watters .... Hall center Van Wagner ........ George right guard Bartholomew ............. Chase right tackle the outlook for the rest of ths TJa- Flve Years Ago Today-Walter j on **&*•*•' ••*•» »• 2 2 ; <5 Hagen, with 141 over 86 holes, led t0 * P 00 / *tart losing to wesieyas qualifies in the P. O. A. tourna- a " d , A f heP8 *- tne G *™ et m « n jE* ent held at Dallas, Tex. He was the * r lait „**•• « am *T' ^S^'tf***** «•• i ™^TMIT Hobart, R. P. L and Williams, one stroke underjpar. Rochester and Hamilton, the'laet Toda —Th two team * on tne 8ch « dul «. ehoul* be beaten. . »,nnAA ™ * ** i i Jl Williams, until this year possess- the $10,000 Manly Memorial Stee- or one ' ^ ^ ^^Sag* 1- •chase at PlmUco. One of the eleven9 m the j ^ wa> outruia#€ &£l CrOWd "*° f thC T nK ,eMon l outpassed, out-punted and was unw -20,000-saw the event able to , t m&ny oi ^ g,^, ^ saulta of ths Garnet eleven. Meeting for their 26th time in a rivalry dating back to 1887, tha teams appeared to be on eves terms after a scoreless first half, but in the third stanza. Fox,. etitute center on the Garnet en, caught a Williams fumble is mid-sir and raced 22 yards to Wil- BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hams' eight-yard line before he Lou Bush, fleet little halfback of i * " brought down from behind. A Massachusetts State, has widened P 8 * 8 f rom Dill to Murray afte* his lead over the field Jn the race three line j l a y s had failed accounb; ^onationar football scoring hon-! 8 * for ths score. This victory gave ors . I Union its first win over ths Bueh scored a pair of touch- since 192 * downs against Amherst Saturday to boost his season's total to 18 for a total of 96 points. Second place Is held by Ralph Graham of Kansas State, Big Six leader, with 79 points. e i •'• WSHCOtfflNUrS TO TOP SCORES IT PAYS TO »nVFRTISE JOCKEY COUCCI HURT Jockey Silvio Coucci, OSS of ths ridin gsensatlone of the year, was injured Saturday when he was thrown from Welcome Gift tsV.jMB first race at Laurel, Maryland, tip boy was taken to the track taf = Yaffee r. oiliI \ u Lebowltx t * # * * •*-•* i right ..... Washburn quarterback left halfback right halfback fullback Kiley Carroll Johnson Today's Crossword Puzzle -«J Score by quarters: Glens Falls 0 Saratoga ......... 8 0— 0 7—19 Saturday's Stars T BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. Gil Berry, Illinois-ran back Chi- cago punt 75 yards for touchdown that gave Illinois first Big Ten victory since 1939, after passing to Froschauer for first score. Verdi Boyer. U. C. L. A., blocked two Stanford punts, paving way for touchdowns that won 18-6 vic- tory. Breezy Wynn, Tennessee, booted field goal in last three minutes to defeat Duke 16-13. Eck Allen, West Virginia, scored SHOOTS KINO RAILBIRD Ernest M. Pettit of 34 Marvin street brought down a king rail- bird with a shotgun while hunt- ing ducks at Saratoga Lake. The bird, which was killed, carried leg- bands* which identified it with the Kellogg Sanctuary, Michigan. It also bore the numbers 655, 653 and 471. Canadian Province 1 Answer to Prerloss all five touchdowns In Mountain- eers 84-7 victory over Marquette. Stanley Saluakl, Indiana, aver- aged five yards a try through Mississippi State line, scoring two touchdowns. Allen Rogers, Auburn, dashed 66 yards after catching Hitchcock's pass for winning touchdown against Mississippi. Mike Sebastian, Pittsburgh, scored Pitt's first touchdown against Notre Dame on 45 yards run. Ivy Williamson. Michigan, blocked Princeton punt for touch- down that put Michigan ahead of Tigers. HORIZONTAL 1 Spiral shells. 8 Word baring same sound as another, but a different meaning. 10 Small plane <#A a diamond. 11 Foe. 13 Communion table. 16 Fatty matter secreted by glands. 17 Angler's 18 Acme. 39 Skirmish. 20 To rest again. 41 Sooner than". mmBBBi u P^ [33(2 OSS IBSffl aSlB i-mwgj 22 Epochs. 33 To hanker sfter. 25 Network. 36 Small child. F7 Corporeal. 42 Depression. 43 Gibbon of Malay penin- sula. 44 Donkey-lfke beast. 39 To undermine. 46 Greek letter". 30 Half an em. 47 To incline to 31 watch pocket. one tide. 32 Is what part 48 Serving to THS GUMPS—RIGHTO! of the body is the stapes? j 34 Ton. ! 3S Acrimonious. 37 To perform. discover. II Having little tendency to take a tsed petition. VERTICAL 1 Having voice. 2 Sheaf. 3 A great deal. 4 Above. $ Definite article. 6 Ages. 7 To scoff. 8 Detests. 9 Lighted coal. 10 Swift in mo- tion. 12 Christmas logs. 12 Wooded pla- teau in.France, formerly called Aasdtsf- 16 Cms wad enltf- ehares/ 17 Dainties 18- Male est. l9To fondle. 21 Wigwam. 23 Sea gull. 24 To bind. 371 wheeL U soft pewtt of. man's body. S3 Small 36 Period of his* 37 Li rely. 18 Browned breed. eirssit 414 4»« 4» Yon and me. 80 Seventh not* Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

Transcript of mmmmmmmm ••'•• ' •» Saratogas. Sportsfultonhistory.com/Newspapers 21/Saratoga Springs...

Page 1: mmmmmmmm ••'•• ' •» Saratogas. Sportsfultonhistory.com/Newspapers 21/Saratoga Springs NY... · mmmmmmmm WHITEHALL WINS AT HUDSON FALLS BY 12 TO 6 SCORE OUT OUR WAY By WILLIAMS

- i i i . m • » THE SARATOGIAN. SARATOGA SPRINGS. R V., MONDAY. OCTOBER 31. 1932. PAOT ELSWt

College Football Returns to Conference Competition Coming Week-End INTERSECTIONS

CUMAX REACHED LAST SATURDAY

C ANZONERI GIVES PETROLLE CHANCE

AT TITLE FRIDAY NEW YORK. Oct. 81 (AP) —

The blgest lntereectional surge of the season now written into the records, college football returns this week to conference compe-tion all along the line.

There will be a few intersection­s ' jousts, notably those involving New York university and Geor­gia, and St. Mary's of California and Ford ham, but for the most part major elevens will be con­cerned solely with their bids for sectional honors.

Approaching the first November date of the campaign, the situa­tion in each major group or con­ference can be summarized as fol­lows;

, EAST—Pitt, by virtue of its sen­sational victory over Notre Dame, generally is ranked at the top al­though Colgate draws plenty of support. These two, with Colum­bia, Brown, Holy Cross, Pennsyl­vania and Temple, are the only re-

( maining undefeated teams in major ranks. At least two on this list may be erased this week in the duels between Pitt and Penn, and Brown and Holy Cross. Columbia plays Navy, Colgate meets Miss­issippi College, and Temple en­counters Haskell. Other leading games in addition to the Ford-ham-St, Mary'* and New York Univ. - ' Georgia duels, involve Harvard and Army; Boston Col­lege and Villanova; Western Maryland, another undefeated ar­ray, and Bucknell; Syracuse and Oglethorpe, and Penn State and Sewanee.

BIO TEN—A four-game confer­ence schedule with Michigan, the leader, picked over Indiana, and Purdue, in second place, favored over Chicago, Wisconsin and Illi­nois, Northwestern and Ohio State, are paired in other confer-once games. Minnesota, which plays Michigan Nov. 19 in the

Sme that may decide the title, ees Mississippi of the Southern

Conference, and Iowa meets Ne­braska of the Big Six.

BIO SIX—Oklahoma, the only eleven except Nebraska undefeated within the conference, plays Mis­souri in the most important game with the Sooners heavy favorites. Kansas State and Iowa State meet in another conference game. Kan­sas and Notre Dame play at Law-

• , rence. , , ,. —

NEW YORK, Oct. 31 (AP) — Tony Canzoneri stakes his light­weight championship against Billy Petrolel, the demon puncher from Duluth, in a 15- round battle in Madison Square Garden Friday night.

Despite Petrolle's many sensa­tional performances here and de­finite the terrific punch he packs in either hand, he will enter the ring on the short end of the bet­ting unless plenty of money is rushed to his support this week.

There are two major factors to explain Canzoneri's position of favorite over the midwestern vet­eran who has waded through lightweights and welterweights in­discriminately during the last two or three years. One concerns the elbow Injury Petrolle suffered in training and which forced post­ponement of the bout: The other is the question whether Billy can make the weight without serious­ly weakening himself.

Petrolle's comparatively long layoff from competition due to his arm injury probably has done the veteran no particular good. The weight question, however, is the more serious. He scaled over 140 pounds a few days ago and lie may have to resort to heroic meas­ures to get down to the class limit of 136 pounds. Hfs most ef­fective fighting has been done at 139 pounds.

Canzoneri, who won the title by knocking out Ai Singer in one round in November, 1930, knocked out Frankle Petrolel, Billy's younger brother, in the third round in his most recent engage­ment.

w ••'•"•" ' • »

Saratogas. Sports ! i—i * *—.-•

Two boys, Rocco Cutri of Pitt and Dave Hedges of Dartmouth, recently made mistakes that cost their teams victory in the last few seconds of play. Both situation! were charged with the kind of dramatic tensity and suspense you ready about in those football novels. This season and many oth­ers, have seen no such striking anti-climaxes.

Cutri is the Pitt quarterback who called for a forward pass on second down and with 80 seconds to play with the ball nine inches away from Ohio's goal line. The pass was grounded in the end zone for a touchback. So Ohio State tied Pitt, 0 to 0.

Hedges is the Dartmouth half­back, who with 30 seconds to play, dropped an easy forward pass that landed kerplunk In his mitta as he stood with nobody near him in Harvard's end zone, So Harvard won the game, 10 to 7.

Cutri's error was one of confu­sion. Ohio State had been offside twice in the last minute of play, which nullified two downs — though the scoreboard showed fourth down. The penalty, since the offense as committed within the five-yard line, was half the distance to the goal—18 inches the first time, and nine inches the sec­ond time that the Ohloans jumped the gun in their attempt to smoth­er the rush.

Before their miscuea both young men had played the" kind of foot­ball that wins All-America selec­tion. Both were stars. Then—one little play—and they became goats.

LIST OF UNTIED AND UNDEFEATED

ELEVENS NOW 20

mmmmmmmm

WHITEHALL WINS AT HUDSON FALLS

BY 12 TO 6 SCORE

OUT OUR WAY By WILLIAMS

N E W YORK, Oct. 81. (AP)—The 1932 football campaign enters the crucial November engagements with only 20 teams unbeaten and untied.

Notre Dame, Harvard, Johns Hopkins and Catholic University all suffered their initial defeats last week while Temple, St. John's of Minnesota and Wagner College of Staten Island were tied.

Colgate and Auburn jointly share the scoring lead among the unbeaten and untied teams with 195 points in six games. Columbia ranks third with 186. Colgate and Southern California are the only elevens boasting uncrossed goal lines.

The 20 teams which an Associat­ed Press compilation shows neither beaten nor tied follow:

Pts. Pts. Team Won for agst. wOigaxe •«•• • . • • . • • . •« t> Auburn 6 Columbia 6 Dayton (Ohio) . . . . . . 6 Tennessee 6 Centenary 6 Cincinnati € Illinois Normal 6 Virginia Poly . . „ ^ ^ ^ Holy Cross % 6 North Dakota State . 6 Waynesburg (Penn). 6 Pennsylvania 5

PACIFIC COAST — Southern California, co-leader with the Uni­versity of California at Los Ange­les, faces the California Bears in a vftaLstruggle,, <IL C. I* A^*con-

I queror of Stanford last week, is ' i d l e . Stanford-Washington, Wash­

ington State - Idaho and Oregon Stats - Oregon are other confer­ence pairings. ;

SOUTH fir Auburn, Tennessee, Louisiana State and Virginia Poly all undefeated but the t w o latter face strenuous tests this week. Louisiana plays South Carolina

and Virginia Poly must take on Alabama, Tennessee is • heavily favored over Mississippi State. Auburn enjoys an open date. Five other conference games will send Maryland against Vanderbilt, the latter undefeated but tied by Tu-lane; Duke aaginet Kentucky; North Carolina against Florida; Georgia Tech against Tulane; and Virginia against Washington and Lee.

SOUTHWEST — A comparative lull in the race which may be de­cided by the game between Texas and Texas Christian Nov. 11. Texas should have no trouble with

I "Baylor this week while Texas I Christian - plays a non-conference ; game against Simmons Friday. j Rice and Arkansas, Southern

Methodist and Texas A. and M., ! complete the conference card.

ROCKY MOUNTAIN — Utah, ! apparently once mors the c lass of I the conference, plays Colorado | University. Denver, unbeaten but tied by the Colorado Aggies, plays Wyoming; Colorado College, upset

Valparaiso (Ind.) . . . Hillside (Mich.) . . . . Susquehanna (Penn). U. C. L A Michigan

After his fatal mistake of sev­eral years ago, Roy Riegels, the California center, came back and played splendid football. But the name of Riegels Is associated with!So. California 5 the idea of running the wrong way Brown 5 on a football field. -

The Unlimited Association of Grandstand Quarterbacks will talk about Cutri's mistake for years. But, suppose that forward pass had barely been hurled, war still in the air when the gun sounded, and had corns to rest thereafter safe in the arms of a Pitt halfback! Then, what kind of a guy would Cutri be!

And suppose that Dave Hedges had crushed the ball to his chest with the same nonchalance with which Bill Dickey pockets a high hard one hot from the arm of Lefty Gomez! Wouldn't he have been an immortal hero in Green Mountain history then!

There will be all kinds of passes that fail to click in the course of a

195 195 186 156 149 133 124 120 108

94 94 82

153 144 143 113 108' 101

84 64

HAGERTY COACH AT GEORGETOWN,

SUCCEEDS MILLS

HUDSON FALLS, Oct. 81 — A rugged Whitehall High school eleven rode to victory on the crest of a dazzling aerial offensive and a vicious bard running attack feat­uring the irrepressible Johnny "Blanchard, co-captain and quar­terback, Saturday afternoon at Derby park, Hudson. Falls, turning back one of the gamest Hudson Falls High School eleven of all time, 12 to 6, in a thrilling north­ern conference battle witnessed by close to 2,000 spectators.

The triumph over the valiant Green and White of old Sandy Hill was the Maroon's flgth straight in as many games in the 1932 conference campaign, thus keeping its record unblemished for the season, and assures the crown­ing of the 1933 champion the com­ing Saturday when Coach "Amby" Gilligan's formidable array takes its aerial circus and fleet-footed Co-Captain Blanchard into Gran-

21 • vilel to meet the High school rep-19 resentatives of that place, also un-27 > beaten and untied this year. Hud-23 son Falls, by a victory, could have 26 somewhat dampened Whitehall's 25' title aspirations and made itself 13 eligible for a tie for the leader-19! ship providing Whitehall subdued 25 Granville High this week-end. 271 12 CAMBRIDGE, Oct. 31 — Play-18 lng a vastly improved brand of 311 football above that which they

6 had displayed in the Hudson Falls 17 game two weeks ago, an alert and 13 smooth-running Glens Falls High 13 eleevn crushed Cambridge High j 0 here Saturday afternoon, 20 to 0, 3 in a northern conference tilt. The

score, however, indicated only slightly the Red and Black's su­periority which throughout the en­tire game enabled them to smash their opponent's comparatively light line continualy for 25 first downs to four.

conquerors of Colorado University and Colorado Aggies, faces West­ern State and Colorado Mines and Colorado Teachers clash in an­other conference game.

- THIS CURIOUS WORLD -

a quarterback could call the right play every time, a football game would become something like a track m e e t If every forward pass Went to its mark, there would be no point in trying anything else but forward passes.

These football players are just human kids down there trying with everything they've got to win. A fellow who errs in a crisis should have sympathy rather than the razzberry.

Such, however, is not the philos­ophy of the old grad who never played football, and the gent who pays his way in for the privilege of burying rather than flattering Caesar.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 31. (AP)— Georgetown University^ installed a new coaching staff today with ^ ^ w e ' f r T y marked by many

GREENWICH, Oct. 31 — Green­wich High school's football repre­sentatives climbed into fourth place in the northern conference standing here Saturday by shad­ing a game Fort Edward High combination, 12 to 8, in a rough

BROWN BEARS IN 19 TOO WIN OVER GLENS FALLS A. C.

John L Hagerty, 1925 Hoya cap­tain, succeeding Thomas E. Mills, former backfleld coach under jurats head mentor,

penalties. It was the Witches' second win in five starts in the conference.

four starts, relegated it to a fifth

Do You Remember a - . . . . - • • » • I . . !*• •• e

One Year Ago Today—In one of the big intersectional games of the year, Oregon journeyed east and drubbed New York Univers­ity by a score of 14-6. Notre

UNION SCORES ON WILLIAMS 6 TO 0

I b b t b a ^ ' ^ a M e ^ m h ^ ^ ^ Hagerty c a m s from New-.-York 1 p i a G e tie with Glens Falls, which lead.^performed

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The Hedges incident won new respect for Eddie Casey, Harvard's coach. Eddie could hardly wait until the game was over. He poised on the sidelines, and with the crack of the pistol, was off and running—not to bis own Harvard boys, who were in a huddle to give a cheer for Dartmouth, but to the Dartmouth team which grouped to cheer the Crimson.

He dashed up to Dave Hedges, threw his arm over the boy's shoul­der and spoke words of solace.

Eddie was on the spot once or twice himself, and knows what a fellow feels like after he has muffed one!

MECHANICVILLE WINS Nott Terrace High's football

eleven succumbed to Mechanicville High on the letter's gridiron Sat­urday, the homesters tallying the lone touchdown in the second quar­ter. It was a hard-fought game, but the Mechanicville boys proved the stronger. Howard Mahoney, Dicello and Harlan featured for Nott Terrace, while Whalen, Walsh and Alvarez shone for the winners.

^ — T T T I — , » . I

LEADER AT EMPIRE. B. B. Stable was the leading mon­

ey-winner among the owners, with a total of $3,408, at the twelve-day autumn meeting of the Empire City Racing Association which ended Saturday and marked the conclu­sion of the metropolitan racing sea­son.

H. Jacobs, leader at the Jamaica autumn meeting, was first among the trainers, with 15,765.

1 e ONIONS.

Onions peeled under water will not bring tears to the eyes.

at the expense of Cambridge. — _ •

MARKS FALL IN CROSS COUNTRY

MEET k t i t

Giants' professional team to take j w o n itg first conference decision charge of a grid squad that has been defeated in three major games this year. He brought with him from the Giants, Maurice Dubofs-ky, Georgetown captain last year.

Mills resigned yesterday after serving nearly three years as head coach. His assistants, Frank Kers-jes and John Carberry, also Notre Dame products, resigned with Tiim.

"For some time," Mills said in tendering his resignation, "I have been quite conscious of the fact that Georgetown has been dissat­isfied with the record of her foot­ball team. During recent weeks this criticism has borne down upon me rather heavily. After consideration, I have decided to step aside and allow some one else to take my place."

Haggerty, during three years on Georgetown's squad, was rated one of the best backs in Hoya history. Dubofsky played guard. The uni­versity athletic board has named Charles Brickman to the third vars­ity coaching place. Brickman has been handling the freshman squad.

• • i i •

RETIRE EQUIPOISE AFTER BEATING IN LAUREL HANDICAP

The Brown Bears gained undis­puted possesion of first place in the northern New York semi-pro football league Saturday by over­whelming the Glens Falsi A. C. 19 - 0 in a game played at the local Recreation field. At the same time the Ticonderoga A. C , which had been tied with the Bears for the leadership, lost to the Hudson Falls Green Jackets.

Johnny Chase, local tackle, re­covered a Glens Falls fumble be­hind the goal line in the initial period for the first touchdown. In the second quarter, Kiley, Bear

s same kind of a trick to give the locals a 12 to 0 lead as the half ended. Folts missed both attempts to kick the extra point

The third touchdown came in the last period when the Bears launched a drive from their 30-yard line to the goal. A pass, J. Folts to Johnson, w a s the final blow. Johnson added the extra

SCHENECTADY, Oct 31.-After Dams "found Carnegie Tech fairly defeating the Williams College easy and beat the Skibos, 19-0. I football team here Saturday. 6 to 0,

Ten Y s s m Ago Greentree Stable's Damask

LAUREL, Md., Oct 31. (^—Syl­vester W. Labrot'e Tred Avon from the Holly Beach Farm of Maryland stepped out at the Laurel race track to win by a head over the favored Equipoise Saturday in the Washington Handicap, worth $14-800 to three-year-olds and upwards for a mile and a quarter.

Trsd Avon's victory paid $19.50, $6.40 and $3.60 acroa* the board in the pari-mutuels.

C. V. Whitney's Equipoise was left behind at the barrier and was driven hard by Jockey Sonny Workman to pull up behind Tred Avon. Back of the Son of Pen­nant by a nose was A. C. Bost-wick'a Mate.

Following the race, his trainer, Fred Hopkins, announced the Whitney horse will be retired for the remainder of the season. Equi­poise has won 10 of his 14 starts this year and $107,375.

TROY, Oct St.—Two records fellj in the annual interscholastic cross­country meet Saturday at Rens­selaer Polytechnic Institute where 818 harriers engaged in a contest won by Steve Szumachowski, 17, of Mont Pleasant High school of Sche­nectady, in 12:49, six seconds faster than the previous record. Nott Ter­race High school of Schenectady took the team award.

The meet saw the largest num­ber of entries in its 11 years of existence and marked the smash­ing of the record set last year by Ed Weille of Newton High, Elm-hurst, L. I. He did not race Satur­day.

Harry Peckham of Grand Gorge High School was second in 12:56; Louis Bartlzek of Lynn Memorial High school, Lebanon, conn., third in 13:03; Peter Olexy, Lanford, Pa., fourth in 13:04, and N. Krupnick, Bacon Academy, Colchester, Conn., fifth in 13:06.

Nott Terrace High School, Sche­nectady, which last year finished second for team honors in the meet to Mont Pleasant, this year finished with sixty points. Mont Pleasant and Passaic, N. J. High Schools tied for second team hon­ors, with 104 pointaeech and White Plains High School was third with 105 points.

e

The score: Glens Falls Humphries D. Folts

left end Smith Murphy

left tackle Davis Maekey

left guard Watters . . . . Hall

center Van Wagner . . . . . . . . George

right guard Bartholomew . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chase

right tackle

the outlook for the rest of t h s TJa-Flve Years Ago Today-Walter j o n **&*•*•' • • * • » »• 2 2 ; < 5

Hagen, with 141 over 86 holes, led t 0 * P 0 0 / *tart losing to w e s i e y a s qualifies in the P. O. A. tourna- a"d, A f h e P 8*- t n e G * ™ e t m « n j E *

ent held at Dallas, Tex. He was t h e * r l a i t „ * * • • « a m *T' ^S '̂tf***** « • • i ™ ^ T M I T Hobart, R. P. L and Williams, one stroke underjpar. Rochester and Hamilton, the ' lae t

Toda —Th t w o t e a m * o n t n e 8 c h « d u l « . ehoul* be beaten.

. »,nnAA ™ * ** i i Jl Williams, until this year possess-the $10,000 Manly Memorial Stee- o r o n e ' ^ ^ ^ ^ S a g * 1- •chase at PlmUco. One of the e l e v e n 9 m t h e j ^ w a > o u t r u i a # € & £ l C r O W d " * ° f t h C T nK , e M o n

l outpassed, out-punted and was unw - 2 0 , 0 0 0 - s a w the event a b l e to , t m & n y oi ^ g , ^ , ^ saulta of t h s Garnet eleven.

Meeting for their 26th time in a rivalry dating back to 1887, tha teams appeared to be on e v e s terms after a scoreless first half, but in the third stanza. Fox,. etitute center on the Garnet en, caught a Williams fumble i s mid-sir and raced 22 yards to Wil-

B Y T H E ASSOCIATED PRESS Hams' eight-yard line before he Lou Bush, fleet little halfback of i * " brought down from behind. A

Massachusetts State, has widened P8*8 from Dill to Murray afte* his lead over the field Jn the race three line j l a y s had failed accounb; ^ o n a t i o n a r football scoring h o n - ! 8 * f o r t h s score. This victory gave o r s . I Union its first win over t h s

Bueh scored a pair of touch- s i n c e 1 9 2 * downs against Amherst Saturday to boost his season's total to 18 for a total of 96 points. Second place Is held by Ralph Graham of Kansas State, B ig Six leader, with 79 points.

e i • ' •

WSHCOtfflNUrS TO TOP SCORES

IT PAYS TO »nVFRTISE

JOCKEY COUCCI HURT Jockey Silvio Coucci, OSS of ths

ridin gsensatlone of the year, was injured Saturday when he was thrown from Welcome Gift tsV.jMB first race at Laurel, Maryland, t i p boy was taken to the track taf

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quarterback

left halfback

right halfback

fullback

Kiley

Carroll

Johnson

Today's Crossword Puzzle - « J

Score by quarters: Glens Falls 0 Saratoga . . . . . . . . . 8

0— 0 7—19

Saturday's Stars T BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. Gil Berry, Illinois-ran back Chi­

cago punt 75 yards for touchdown that gave Illinois first Big Ten victory since 1939, after passing to Froschauer for first score.

Verdi Boyer. U. C. L. A., blocked two Stanford punts, paving way for touchdowns that won 18-6 vic­tory.

Breezy Wynn, Tennessee, booted field goal in last three minutes to defeat Duke 16-13.

Eck Allen, West Virginia, scored

SHOOTS KINO RAILBIRD Ernest M. Pettit of 34 Marvin

street brought down a king rail-bird with a shotgun while hunt­ing ducks at Saratoga Lake. The bird, which was killed, carried leg-bands* which identified it with the Kellogg Sanctuary, Michigan. It also bore the numbers 655, 653 and 471.

Canadian Province 1 Answer to Prerloss

all five touchdowns In Mountain­eers 84-7 victory over Marquette.

Stanley Saluakl, Indiana, aver­aged five yards a try through Mississippi State line, scoring two touchdowns.

Allen Rogers, Auburn, dashed 66 yards after catching Hitchcock's pass for winning touchdown against Mississippi.

Mike Sebastian, Pittsburgh, scored Pitt's first touchdown against Notre Dame on 45 yards run.

Ivy Williamson. Michigan, blocked Princeton punt for touch­down that put Michigan ahead of Tigers.

HORIZONTAL 1 Spiral shells. 8 Word baring

same sound as another, but a different meaning.

10 Small plane <#A a diamond.

11 Foe. 13 Communion

table. 16 Fatty matter

secreted by glands.

17 Angler's

18 Acme. 39 Skirmish. 20 To rest again. 41 Sooner than".

mmBBBiuP^ [33(2 O S S IBSffl aSlB

i -mwgj 22 Epochs. 33 To hanker

sfter. 25 Network. 36 Small child. F7 Corporeal.

42 Depression. 43 Gibbon of

Malay penin­sula.

44 Donkey-lfke beast.

39 To undermine. 46 Greek letter". 30 Half an em. 47 To incline to 31 watch pocket. one tide. 32 I s what part 48 Serving to

THS GUMPS—RIGHTO!

of the body is the stapes?

j 34 Ton. ! 3S Acrimonious. 37 To perform.

discover. II Having little

tendency to take a t s e d petition.

VERTICAL 1 Having voice. 2 Sheaf. 3 A great deal. 4 Above. $ Definite

article. 6 Ages. 7 To scoff. 8 Detests. 9 Lighted coal.

10 Swift in mo­tion.

12 Christmas logs.

12 Wooded pla­teau in.France,

formerly called Aasdtsf-

16 Cms wad enltf-

ehares/ 17 Dainties 18- Male est . l 9 T o fondle. 21 Wigwam. 23 Sea gull. 24 To bind. 371

wheeL U soft pewtt of.

man's body. S3 Small

36 Period of his*

37 Li rely. 18 Browned

breed.

eirssit 414 4»« 4» Yon and me. 80 Seventh not*

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