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>'A(TK SIX T IT E ADVA N C K - X E V S WKhXKSDAY. NOV. 1, 1<>.*;3 NOTRE DAME TEAM MAY REDEEM ITSELF AGAINST THE NAVY BLUE AND WHITE WORKING HARD FOR CANTON GAME OF A. Players Are Given Hard Drills Bv Coaches Team Had Stiff Scrimmage Practice on the Campus Yesterday Afternoon. SPORT^TOPICS The O. F. A. squad Is hard at work these night:* ironing out the kinks auu errors ot tne disastrous Canton game last week. From ap- pearances it look- as though the Navy Looks for N. D. to Cut Loose in Saturday's Battle The O. F. A. football squad con- tinued its work in luvparaiion for ne league ihaaii»ion>hip this com- big battle of the year and are pre- dicting that Canton will no: ex- perience siuh an easy time in de- tethered its high horse and will enter the Canton game with all due NiOW YORK. Oct. 31.—The Xo- ,„ , , tre Dauu baii club which has not Blue has come down to earth, ana sniffe<] xhe Uae Uugt of an eaemy liae since about 4 ?oai the af'ernoca of Ot!. P. M. on 14. w A U step respect for the Oliver men. They j OUT ; n lhe biR ,. onclele bowK uaica realize they mu>t play real foot-j is Baltimore^ municipal stadium, ball to beat Canton and therein is the guarantee that Saturdays af- • nu Saturday with Canton High i feating the Blue as they did last rriiOid. The team is more or less j week. The Blue aad White are also in iairly good physical condition • of different opiniou regarding thein- .4»-l with the exception of a few J selves finally coming to earth with! Wheeler an«! Thomas who will test] the past minor bruises, which should clear the realization that Canton is a i O. F. A. to the limit this SiiuiUiy and try to shove poor little Navy around. At least Coach fair will be one of the best. Can-JRipp Miller teels that all the pent ton lias two fast heavy backs in j up anger and disappointment of three weeks will come l>0£> ur hefore uame tiiu*-. all appears good ball club and every ounce oi .avorable for the eleven to be at • football ability will have to be] Some one asked us how it came full strength, reauy to go with the | brought into play by the Blue if j about that Ma lone defeated Can- <JIM mug whistle. Kligibility hurdles Canton is to be he'd to a low score., ton so easily, 26-t>. A check-up have also been taken in snide by in Wheeler and Thomas, Canton the !*)>•£ only one of the thirty-three i has TWO of the best backs in the v>ei!ig floored by old man scholas- ! league. possessing plenty of speed tic jas well as weight, while the Cotra- • irandy and Pest hel are giving ; ty Seat line can take care of it- che boys an extra ilos^ of scrim- self in any ball game. riiage. a> iasi night again, helmets I Indications are tha fans from the ami pads were called out. The Burg will see -several new faces in scrimmage lasted well into the ear- the Blue lineup during the playoff iy earkness with the first squad game as already several iuds *vho naving the ball mosi of the time in I have been on the second squad are < j fiorts to erase the sluggishness receiving personal attention fr«;n gives us the information that Can- ton los! many yard> because cf crashing down on the thin should- ers of his young and light Mid- dies. \They can't lose all the time ami I hope they dont take it out on us.\ Ri») waiW. Meanwhile with Chung-Hoon and other agile rab- heaw penalties and the lost yard- Wt backs in hard drills, he wa age amounted to better than 2«»0 yards. A few yard; should ask someone. if someone of the- O. F. A. play so apparent in the Canton game test week. The >ine esipecially. was given much ai- enJion in charging and driving A-hile a bit of a defensive check-tip was looked into. From Hie work- :>ui. onlookers are certain O. F A. the coaches. These new lads ai e anxious to go and prove their worth j , and it is more than likely tha: [ Brandy will start some of them a> ! football like all new deals needs '• new blood which means new life J and life is what the Blue team vill 1»M ready and sel to go tor ihe ! seems mostly lacking. Turnover Was Light On Market \KM\ YORK. Oct. CI.—Trading VH» ragged on the exchange today i«d the turn-over was very small. Tra<Liug was so slow that the es- a!*;ishment of a trend was nearly j «possible. Uncertainty over the •vorld monetary situation had a de- riutental effect on the trading T<»- H\ -ales were approximately 1.:;«M.». •tie* hares, Closing prices: Alrt ka Juneau 2.~» F»-S .tilled Chemical 127 -V8 'ni.-r Can Co *7 .%TT f»coinotive 2*5 4m Tel * Tel ill .\ im Itadiator 11 .V> Xat Dairy Prod 13 Customers at the Colgate-Tulane game in New York thi no doubt be dizzy following the old pigskin around. Both the Red Raider> of Colgate and the Green Wave of Tulane hand the ball back vud forth in the backfield in a manlier that would make Thurston green with envy. The Tulane backs are among the speediest in the country but have been bothered with fumblitis all season. Against the young men of Andy Kerr they I will probably go places in a b*g _g| way unless the fumble trouble determinedly plugging away set- ting up a defense for the Notre Dame offense—such as it is. IN. D. Has Edge On comparative scores Notre week wi'll 1>alri * ? naiK a distinct edge of 2M points. Pitt beat the Navy, tun- ning up -'4 points. Then Pitt went to South Rend and ran up 14 points. Quod erat demonstrandum • And we didn't even go to N. 1>. C, either!) Tulane. acordiug to most of the loca! experts, is coming a long wax- just to take a whipping. I? travels ftom New Orleans to the Yankee Stadium to face Colgate in another Eastern attraction. Tulane already has been clipped by the Texas Ag- gies. Georgia and Alabama Poly. Some of the other big shot* in the Fast are taking advantage of their custom-build schedules. Army plays Coe ami Harvard plays Le- high. These are pretty soft pick- ings for great big boys to be lean- ing on at this time of the year. Tigers Meet Brown Princeton has fair opposition in Brown. Somehow the hunch per- sists that Brown hasn't a bad ball club and the Messrs. Le Van. S;of- ford. Constable. John, Lea and Fairman will have their hands full. Their showing against Wash- ington and Lee wasn't as bad as the scor«> indicates, however. They made two touchdowns that were disallowed and had an emotional letdown coming to them after their great play against Columbia. The Yale-Dartmouth game means a lot to the respective alumni but the general public has lost some of it* interest since the shellacking the K!is aJ>soi<hed from Army. Bob Lassiter may be able to get un- tracked this Saturday and continue the jinx Yale possesses over the Big Green in the bowl. Dartmouth has yet to win a game at Xew Hav- en. National Biscuit 41 1-4 j bob? up again. N Y Central . - 2f» 1-2 i —000—« Xat Power Light 10 1-2 j Syracuse has been one of the North American 15 i-2 j «rreatest in and out teams in the X Y N H & Hi 14 1-2 \n> Tobacco %n.» rican Tobacco» B *IU*»JTO Auto -i»irt L<»c Works ->-:h St'-^l rfcilJ: * Ohio &o: lea l\» \a.uinet Hecia 'auiadian Pacific \«ti.ri i'-an C<« *«ti» *2as <..t Solr«»fUs \hr* sl**r <\<t i *ej i-au-k ^ W Hi P«»ot rCa> : man Kodak r>if R R -I l*«»wer Ar Lizht . . . i>»:i-ral Klerirk- ^•i^t-ral Moto^r.^ .•en F<»od Prod ^fti»««ri<-h Rubber . . ,^w»«ir^r Tir..e .... 71' 1-8 21 1-2 Proctor-Gamble 3S Pub S.-rv X J :•£ IS Radio ^1-2 Hep I Si^el 11 IS Rem Rand €1-2 Safeway Stores 27 -Vs St-ars Roebuck s\d Oil of N J 4n r,-8] Socony Vacuum lo 7-s S:udebaker Corp 4 Tex Gulf Sulphur 2« Tex Corp 2^ 1-2 V S Pipe & Foundry i:-S V S Smelting J»*J 1-4 United States Steel 36 .\M i 1'nited states Steel Pfd . Woolworth New York Curb , Hudson Bay 1 Cities S-trice Niagara Hudson country for the past few year*. Trying to guess which Saturday they will be \in\ is like trying to figure out the treasury balance a day in advance. They were 4 *out\ with a big O la.^t week but are hunting for Nittany Lions ^hit- week and may be * 4 in.\ We have been losing sleep for a number of seasons over this **now you see me and now you don't** business of Bill Orange and from now on we are > mi*« Co. One Match Last Night At Crescent In the Class C league match rolled last night the C & M Grocery an«.l Clark Biscuits divided, with two points each. Schedule tonight: Lisbon No. 1 vs Lisbon No. 2 vs Facultv Five vs State Hospital. 1GA Five. W. M. Middle- going to consider each Saturday that they hare lost—until we re- Scores: C A M ceive a sworn affidavit to the ef-1 House 1 1 56 feet that they really have won a !_*» I ball game. ; Farley Jr. i Extra F'v^ . ir.7 . 152 2 Points) 151 192 Fortier 14S 2 1-4 We hear that all those attractive I j ^| little co-ed cheer leaders out at the O. F. A. are getting new per- .^1 manents. etc.. for the game at Car.- j ton on Saturday. We have a Mttl* 3 H j I*-* !• 9 j sugge tion to mrke to the girls? Unter S COWardlCe {about a th-me song for the big CaUSed Death Of Man : *«tle. ^> f < ^** they are confi- dent that their football heroes wiTl Farden Jr. i.r 147 1:55 16<» 1S2 so Hi*—41:: in.:,—4*: Vocational to Play Massena On Saturday North Country Eleven m Primed for Annual Game With Syracasans. . 7:>4 77r t 761 Clark Biscuit (2 Points) LaPlatney Extra 1 Brian \Extra St-eley 145 1^7 \ZS 2M) 147 17« H\^T R<H.TtlX. Hue.. iHri. 21.— 1 4 ,-%| The failure of Feiix Vancellete. 21. min .-o how about ^Cnder a Blank- MASSKXA. Oct. ::i.—The Mas- sena High school football team will play its last game of the 15*:;:: sea- son Saturday, meeting Vocational High school of Syracuse on Alco Field. It will be the fifth meeting of the rivals. The Vocational game has be- come the most important on the 14J4 1^7 ; Massena schedule developing each 151 47„ ' year more and more interest among ! North Country fans. The first three meetings resulted in victories for the Bonn-elly-coached team but la*t i;**—475 year (, * rl ^on SeybolL coach of the 1ST,—4«5 v »cationaUtes. let i t b e known 14^ 1^ that he ha4 a real team and waitf- 1 jj, 4^- <\d to beat Massena even more than 2\%r t ^12 to win the Syracuse City league Z I 'championship. His team defeated !4o ^ 12 ::i 1-2 :;^ r.-x 1*1 74 1-4 71 L-. 1-4 i7 ^-4 Z^ ^-4 :u 1-4 11 i^> 2S» 7-> ir*-at Xortherc 16 1-4 Jliiioi* <V»tra3 22 Z-x lateraafioeal X3<kH IS 2-4 12 1-\* ,0 ^'* iwtnedia:e<y to The res<'ue of j ii!! 7-x Raymond Win^. 41. when the Lat-! ter was accidentally shot in a hunt- ing ac< idem was remarked ui»on in a ve-dicT l»v a <-orone:V : jury' •uiiich inre-tirate*! Wiug's <i*-ath J yester<l«»v. * T«-s:\iaoay was :hat afie: \\':W. j bad )**+-:* shot by a bus lei trmu [ Vam-elleit's g«in. the ycynr*-r -a;a^ i et of Blue 6S7 H->* Thomas Gardner Died Yesterday At Local Home 7H2 224* t ^ ke locals 7 to 6, but lost the city ~ ' \ championship to Central High. Sey- •_ hol4 aa ^ hfej \+m\ look upon the was reniocetf to the McLeila n fan ! M *^«-na contest as their kti> game eral parlors. Mr. C^irdner was a ;of th ** sf ^ son - devoat member of St. Mary's par- Mass«-na meat ran *OT help and by «he tir.ie a Thomas Gardner. retired far- 1 ?u«-r t#f the town died yt-r-terday at Ogden^lwirg City Ho»t>lia! as«i of 0>w<egatclii^. \:*> a. m. at th** <fo*-«*»r a:rive<l ih«- ^htira <•: ta*-« accident had bl^I IO d^aifa. J The jaiy s ver/jtcj was: *\Ray-i , _ x . a M •.^.rw? \i--»^ «,^.- ».:< ^.^.K *».«.A«-< 7. J Home fvr Aged, where he resided ni^»n^i u ;n^ in*-* n*s a*a!n tflTOugii a bullet wound :n tie rizbi thizh.. bavins b*^a «ho? bv F#-i:x Vaac-1 j ^\^ caused by Ho^toG (>a : ****** Ht * wa5 oorn *• 0***«*S*1- chie Ian. 4. l^*^*. a s^m of ThJBi* * !he past »-!evea :r.;»nth>- I^alh cerebral hemoiT- lette in the woo*;.- at tre mhiV huntin? deer. Although ( iat Tel St T«-3 II Z-S Vf . j^y Vaac^i^.;^ respo!i>.We :or j =*ad Mary I^rea ti^rdcer aad coa- the deafh Oi fUrooa* Wi&z o^i^ j ducted a fans a: <iar<iii*rs Com :o n*xrig«-- by JKT ?#i3T D a:s ; *-***.* c-s vz<- S: ««- dMvot *ro»d. Sar- - rxc: f- z: : viviag :« a b^t'lher. Jo^t. wac i* lat^rnatiocal Harvester l^hirL Va R R . MomKonery Ward Ma-la*' Mwlland . 12 1-2 17 1-2 « 1-2 V . Ill <\. .^ «-^ -A.- »-v: t *£ ai f^*\ A^*^i Tfc* k^iy c^aHetery. throagh the ish throughout hy life and a coB-i F,Mkha A -*demy <x>aie>t mitiiout sistent supporter of its a<-tivitie^. j f * n<N,ji; ^^^ Tn ^\' *w several H c was a fine citizen, a successful i \^ <^^*i^es. the most venous fa nter and had a large circle of!? 1 ^ K * •** «i«^rrd by Fraak fronds mho mouru the p»>sm* of ?SrikuJT \ *** ****** ™ one of the community's most re*-j _. * .. *^ tke final appearance e f IS Uas Mr. Gardner i< also survived byj^^ p|av*r*. The seniors are Cap- a sister-in-law. Mrs. James Gard- ] lain VaHa*^ Hi^by. r«ard Bob ner. and a nephew. William Gard-j Harris, quarterback: Philip Milli- ner, botli of Bingfaamtcn. jica. fuUbark: Aifeen Wolsteaaolm*. Th^ funeral will be held from:* 11 *\!- Leonard B«aucaet«e. tackle: jMrtuurm Stacey. tackle: Walter aud thence to ^^ 7!!TT *** »«1*«« P^d ^guraki. halfback: from the firat eleven, and Harold Robian. tarkae: Tommy Romeo, kalfback: Spai fore aad Martmn. m^d* »<i p rao . McLe:ian funeral parb»rs lo- ^w a: S»:H- s. m. ih*- ,r >.<» S Mary's cathedral where a re- quiem mass will be celebrafed at !•.».- Buria\ W:M be 1c S: Mary's gwari of thr second eleven.