THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1925 Al, mr po, io .-mmww~ . ~ iv .....,r I 11111 .. "" } .. _ , , _.. .., PITTSBU RGH WINS Oscar Bliege Forced Out of Game When Knocked Unconscious by{ Pitched BallI HIT THREE HOME RUNSj PITTSBURGH, Oct. 8.--H Cuyler's home run into the right field stands .inthe"eighth inning with Moore on base gave Pittsburgh the second game of the series here today 3-2, evening the count with the Senators. Vic Aldridge was Manager Mc- Kechnie's pitching choice, and the big moundsman twirled a steady game, allowing eight scattered hits. Twice Aldridge allowed the bases to be filled with none out, but each time he managed to crawl out of the hole, once in the fifth inning when the Sen- ators failed to score, and again in the ninth frame, when one run was sent across the plate. Manager Stanley Harris started Coireleskie against the Pirates and the famous spit-bailer allowed the Na- tional leaguers seven hits, but two of them were homers, Glenn Wright lifting the ball high into the left field stands in the fourth inning, and Cuy- .er getting his long hit in the eighth ame. Coveleskie gave way to Reu- ther in the ninth, when the former Dodger star went in to bat for him. Oscar Bluege, star third sacker of the Senators, was hit. in the head by a fast ball in the sixth in'ning, the ball striking him two inches above the ear, and knocking him unconscious. Doctors reported that Bluege was not in a serious condition, but that he was suffering from temporary dizzy spells. Myer went in for the injured player. Joe Judge, first man up in the sec- ond inning, scored the first run of the contest when he hit the ball into the right field stands for a homer, dupli- cating Joe Harris' feat of yesterday. Glenn Wright tied the score in the fourth with his homer. The score remained deadlocked until the eighth when Moore was safe on Peck's juggling of his grounder, and went to second on the hit and run play, Carey going out at first. Cuyler then gave victory to the Pirates with hi~s home rurlj the ball hitting the ground and bounding into the stands. The Senm;to threatened to come fron behind. ft the ninth when Joe Harris wked: t6 start the inning. McNeely wa sent in to run for Har- ris. Myer then singled into left, plac- ing McNeelyon second. Peck then worked Aldridge for a walk, and the bases were filled, and none out. Bob- by Veach was sent in to bat for Ruel an'd he sent a high sacrifice fly to Max Carey, scoring McNeely. Ruether, bat- ting for Co-veleskie, struck out, andI Rice went out, Moore to Grantham, ending the contest. Box score: IBOSTON A31FIICANS ICI'ADII u ll L111 1111 =IN= WORLDISERIES TI'T'LESU11 U HID 11 Club W. L. Pet. IH hI 1 oston, A. L........5 0 1.000 TO II Boston, N. L.......1 0 1.000 1 Cleveland, A. L. ....1 0 1.000 Cincinnati, N. L. ....1 0 1.000 Coach "Navy Bill" Ingram and his Washington, A. L. ...1 0 1.000 Chicago, A. L........2 1 .667 Hoosier football eleven is expected Philadelphia, A. L. .. 3 2 .600 to arrive in Ann Arbor this morning Pittsburgh, N. L. ...1 1 .500 prepared to meet the Michigan grid Chicago, N. L. ......2 '3 .400 team in the opening game of the Big New York, N. L...3 5 .375 Ten Conference. The Indiana aggre-) New York, A. L. ....1 2 .333 gation will hold a short signal drill, Philadelphia, N. L. ..0 1 .000 on Ferry field this afternoon to wear Brooklyn, N. L. ....0 2 .000 off the effect of the journey from Detroit, A. L. .... . ..0 3 .000 Bloomington, Indiana. Coach Yost has only a light signal V fpractice scheduled for the Wolverines Intra urajfems this afternoon before lining up his --_ - iteam on 'Ferry field Saturday after- The following list of tennis matches noon. Y sterday practice consistedl was omitted in the schedule published of punti* drill, signal practice, and in yesterday's Daily. These matches. Moundi $$ with a secret session in must be played off by Monday and the stad m to which none but play- reported to the Intramural office. The ers ad aches were admitted. first round winners whose names have Early the afternoon Coach Kipke have not been published in the sec- pointed t some faults to the punt-1 ond round should report at th'a of- ers. Palmer, Fuller and Gilbert all fice for their opponents. showed improvement and increased Singles: Levin 4852 vs Daven 8752; their distances. Small 9553 vs M. M. Merritt 6835; 'Coaci''dad Weiman selected two Heinz 22442 vs Roethke 22117; R. 'am .near the close of the practice Brody 3317 vs D. Alycar 9717; Dalton d sent them through a drill in 6617 vs Heinsheemer 22245; Cressman I 1iilding up a defense against forward 4691. vs D.' M. Brown 7901. paisses. After the men proved to the Doubles: Garber and Cressman coaches that they were adept in stop- 4447 vs Watts and 011 6453; Wenger ping passes, the Red team was given and Berkey 5517 vs Moore and part- Fliaa N ys to use against the Blues.- ner 21624. The hlues displayed a talent for EXPECTED ERE THIS MRNIN analyzing the plays and were quite! successful in stopping them. The whole squad then adjourned to the stadium where a secret signal drill was held. Coach Fisher's reserve squad work- ed out with the freshmen in a scrim- mage at the other end of the field, the game ending in a scoreless tic. In 1915 the United States used 45 per cent of the world's supply of rub- ber. Last year the United States used 70 per cent of the supply. j(GARLAND GRAN GE ILOST TO ILINI GID EAM CH-ICAGO, Oct. S.-Garland Grange, brother of the famous "Red" Grange, of the University of Illinois, was operated on suc- cessfully yesterday for a dislo- cation of the shoulder. Garland injured his shoulder in a scrim- mage game several weeks ago.{ He will probably be out of the game the balance of the season. The results of the games of the last P Ihi Sigma Delta 18, Alpha Delta T hi 0; Tau Epsilon Phi 12,mPhi Beta IUUII~fIVILI~fIIIUUIIL Delta 9; Phi Kappa Sigma 8, Phi Kappa 0; Phi Gamma Delta 6, Delta Results of the first week of inter- Phi 2; Delta Chi 5, Delta Kappa Epsi- fraternity speedball indicate that a Ion 1; Alpha Rho Chi 1, Alpha Tau hard fight for the title is to be ex- 'Omega 3; Nu Sigma Nu 9, Delta Upsi- pected. The games have been well Ion 6, Phi Chi 16, Phi Mu Alpha 0; played, with but a few in which the Theta Chi 14, Delta Sigma Phi 2; Phi teams were not well matched. TheI Sigma Kappa 7, Sigma Nu 1; Phi Sig- schedule of the games for the next Cma Delta 18, Phi Kappa Alpha 3; week were sent out yesterday by the, Phi iLmbda Kappa 9, Delta Tau Ep- Intramural office. .il(;n 1. Harry Stuhl.dreyer, All-American quarterback on last year's Notre Dame championship team, is report- ed to have been offered $7,500 by Waterbury, Conn., to play professional football there this fall. ',M ,.. tr '' flue Cheviots Special value at $40.00 / . . ' ° ,' ' r // UM r(Ounrwoat A shipment of Overcoats has Just been received. Here is a distinctive assort- ment of fine overcoats tailored from fabrics from the best -foreign and American looms. 'The tailoring, the fabric, and the pattern of these gar- ments is a combination you are seek- ing. 608 East Liberty A single and double breasted models ~W GHLR& CO MhlyWAHlY ,Jor TI/en c S--, ince 1&4 g * I I i shm- Exclusivc styles and high quality, moderately priced| I I aindbrown 7~W cirnclive 1to ;1422 11 VAN BOVEN CRESS &THOMPSON ,INC. l' "-I I R' - 1 ._ a _ , . ~_ . 11 I i Washingion AB R Rice, cf............5 0 S. Harris, 2b......3 0 Goslin, if ...........3 0 Judge, -lb ..........4 1 . Harris, rf......3 0 Bluege, 3b-.... ...2 0 Myer, 3b ..........1 0 'Pckinpaugh, ss .....3 0 Ruel, c .............3 0 Coveleskie, p ......2 0 *McNeely ..:......0 1 **Ruether..........1 0 ***Veacli ...........0 '0 H 0 2 2 0 4 0 0 1 11 2 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 A 0 4 0 0 0 1 0 7 0 2 0 0 0 E 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 Exclusive Footwear For-Boys and Little Gents. Afred U RUBY Inc. 12 Nickels Arcade HIA F9 . '/ o .. .. .i r '+. / / , ;.. " r .1 i" " . ' ., Q 1 __..,,, ._,--' I .. _ t , /'r !' r. l 11 I 0 I I Tfotal ...........3 2 824l14 2 Pittsbulgl AB R 11 0 A E JACQUARDS I I 4, Moore, 2 .........4 Qarey, c ..........4 Cuyler, rf .........3 Barnhardt, if.......4 Traynor, 3b........3 Wright, ss.........4 Grantham, lb......4 Smith, c .. .........3 Aldridge, p.......3 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 2 1 0 3 4 1 J 0 1 16 0 1 0 0 0 2 5. 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 $l 'V Aj 11 .rye '11"" .32 3 7 27 13 0 Totals....... . I *Ran for Harris in ninth., **-Batted for Coveleskie in ninth, **:-13atted for Ruel in ninth. Pittsburgh. ......000 100 02x-3 Washington...........010 000 001-2 Home runs-Judge, Wright, Cuyler. Sacrifice hits-Coveleskie, Cuyler, S. Harris, Veach. StrucksOut--By Aldridge 4, by Cov- elesje 3. Bases on balls-By Aldridge 2, by! Covelesie 1. UNIBI SWIMMING 1RAGES SCKEDULED FOR .TONIGHT' Six all-campus swimming races are on tonight's schedule at the Union i Pool. The races will be handicap af- fairs with Coach Mann determining the handicap. They will be open to all men students on the campus, ands Blue, Blue Grey and Oxfords Ha1f Hose For Winter AN EXCEPTIONALLY com- plete selection, embracing a wide range of fabrics and pat- terns, now awaits your inspec- tion. Most of this stock-is im- ported and exclusive with our stores in Ann Arbor. 0 New in the line of imported wool hose, fancy patterns to suit the discriminate. Prices from $1 to $4.25. WiU1Z;GmtpaI are the Colors we are Selling in In dividually Tailored Coats Tailored by KAHN $48 to $125 Tinker . Company I From One to Fite Dollars rK IIHI f JIMsI is Ell I I