THE MICHIGAN DAILY PNNOCK GIVES BUT THREE HITS AS YANKS WIN, 8-1 OSAIRS DROP T}IIRD N ROW TONEW YORK 'rates Fail To Reach First Base Till Eighth Inning; Mealdows Is Knocked Out Of Box !ABE RUTH HITS HOMER (Special to The Daily) New York, Oct. 7.-Herb Pennock, eteran New York Yankee southpaw, scribed his name upon world series ecords most impressively today when s held the Pittsburgn sluggers to a eagre three hits, all occurring in the st two innings, to pitch his team to te third consecutive victory of the resent series by an 8 to 1 count at ie Yankee ktadium here. YANKEE RLER STANDIO WINS -OLVERINES-SPARTANS'r __ TO PLAY 2ND GAME TODAY -_ OHIO STATE IOWA CONTEST WILL FEATURE TODA YSMIDDLE W EST FOOTBALL GAMES . r, After pitching invincibly for seven and one-third innings, Piej Traynor succeeded in securing the first hit off the Yankee portsider, a scratch sin- gle to right field. Barnhart was credit- ed with the second blow of the battle immediately after with a double to right, Traynor racing \home from first to score the Pirate's lone tally of to- day's engagement. L. Waner regis- tered his team's third hit of the game, a Texas leaguer to centerfield, in the ninth inning. Not a single Pirate run- ner reached first until the eighth in- ning, so effective was Pennock during the first seven innings. Yankees Hit Meadows Frequently While the Pirate batsmen were swinging their clubs with little or no telling effect in today's contest, the Yankee sluggers pounded Lee Mead- ows, bespectacled twirler for the bucs, unmercifully until Cvengros re- lieved him in the seventh inning, after, three Yankee runners had crossed the plate. Koenig, who led the Yankee barrage on a trio of Pirate hurlers yesterday, Gehrig, and Combs led the assault in today's fiasco. Gehrig's drives were both of the extra-base variety, one being a double and the other a triple. Babe Ruth crashed a home run, with two on base, into the right field stands in the big seventh for his only hit of the game. Score Two in First Inning The Yanks clinched the contest in the first inning when Gehrig's triple scored Combs and Koenig, who had singled Cconsecutively just aheadof him. Activity, as far as hitting was concerned, then remained at a stand- still until the seventh frame when the Yankees unleashed a barrage of hits to score six runs. A home run by Ruth, a double by Koenig, singles1by Lazzeri and Combs, and a sacrifice by Dugan were the contributing factors to the Yanks big rally. Traynor, who singled after Koenig robbed Wright of a hit, was sent across the plate with the sole Pirate score in the eighth inning on Barn- hart's double. Harris and Spencer were then retired on infield ground- ers. The series now stands 3 to 0 in favor of the New York club which will be seeking the fourth victory tomor- row to clinch the 1927 championship. (Continued on Page Seven) ..N- t ... s . n Y. f . .t. 3.. _ si Gane Vill Be id PIyed Between Two Elevens Siwe Inifial Coutest in 189 STATE HAS WON TWICE This afternoon's encounter between Michigan and Michigan State will be the twenty-second contest that has been played between the two teams. This series of consecutive gares is the longest on the WOlvcrine -dule, the two teams having met each season since 1910. Michigan has played other teams more times than State college, but most of the relationships were broken during the years that the Wolverines were out of the Big Ten. The teams played their first game in 1898 when, as has been the case in the majority of instances since that time, the Michigan team emerged vic- torious. In 1902 Michigan played the Spartans for the second time and, Yost's "point-a-minute" aggregation scored 119 points to amass the largest score in the history of the Michigan- Michigan State feud. Pltyed To Scorele(s Tie In 1907 the Michigan team was again victorious, but the two teams played to a scoreless tie the next fall,f which is the only tie game in the his- tory of the rivalry. The two have had an unbroken relationship since 1910, Michigan winning all except two of the contests. The Spartans attained their first victory over Michigan in 1913 by a 12 to 7 score, and repeated their success in 1919, 24-0. With the exception of; the years 1916 and 1924 the Maize and Blue teams have defeated the Green and White by comfortable margins. Xlichigan Winis By Long Pass In 1924 a veteran Green and White team inspired by the fact that they were playing their first game on a home field in many years, offered the hardest kind of resistance and played the :Wolverines to a standstill until in the closing minutes Parker threw a long forward pass to Captain Stager who crossed- the State goal line for the only touchdown of the contest. The powerful Maize and Blue grid machine of 1925 defeated the State invaders, 39-0, while last year's ag- gregation gained a victory by even a wider margin. In the 21 contests played between the two teams, the Wolverines have won 18, lost two, and tied one. Michi- gan teams have garnered a total of 639 points compared to 58 for State aggregations. Wolverine teams have (Continueal on Page Seven.) MIDDLE WEST Michigan State at Michigan. Ohio State at Iowa. Wisconsin at Kansas. "ueat Harvard. Tah at Northwestern. I Oklahoma A. & M. at Minnesota. aIdiana at Chicago. Butler at Illinois. Nebraska at Missouri. EAST SMarquette atArmy. {IDrake at Navy. Brown at Pennsylvania. Alfred at N. Y. U. Lehigh at Princeton.C Johns Hopkins at Syracuse. 1I Bethany at W. & J. Rutgers at Lafayette Drexel at Carnegie Alleghany at Dartmouth E Beloit at Cornell. Wesleyan at Columbia. Georgia ataYale. -SO TTH Tulane at Georgia Tech. Centre at Vanderbilt. La. State at Alabama. FAR WEST I St. Mary at California. I Nevada at Stanford. Oregon Aggies at U. of S. C. EASTERN ELEVENS TO TAKE PART IN SECTIONAL GAMES Five noteworthy intersectional tilts will take place today, when the Har- vard gridmen will oppose Purdue at Cambridge, the Army take on Mar- quette university at West Point, the Naval academy battle Drake at An- napolis, Holy Cross meets Dayton university at Boston, and Georgia will give battle to Yale at Hartford. The dope favors all the Eastern teams, with the possible exception of the Purdue-Harvard game. Even though the Boilermakers are hard put to produce a man who will fill the shoes of their captain, Cotton Wilcox, they are sure to give the Crimson' gridders a hard tussle today., Yale is expected to have an easy time with Georgia, but southern teams have had a faculty of upsetting dope and springing unprecedented surprises on their opponents. (Special to The Daily.) I CHICAGO, Ill., Oct. 8.-As the fea- ture contest in the Western Confer- ence the vagaries of the schedule mak-' ers force the Iowa football team, hard- ly past the first stages of its develop- ment, against the extremely efficient Ohio State machine today. There are other teams which the Hawkeyes would rather meet in the first Big Ten game of the year. Coach Jack Milce's Buckeyes are being heralded as championship timber while the Hawks are still feeling their way somewhat gingerly pending the development of two ends and a good punter. Both of the Hoosier state entries in the Conference wil be featured today when Indiana encounters Chicago at Stagg field and Purdue journeys to Canibridge to tackle the Harvard' squad. Undoubtedly the loss of Captain "Cotton" Wilcox will severely handi- cap the Boilermaker's chance for vic- tory in the East. Coach Jimmy Phel- an insists, however, that he "has de- veloped an offense, which if success- ul, will give the Harvard team a start- ling surprise." Indiana's regulars scrimmaged with a phantom "Chicago tean/ as opposi- tion Thursday, Coach Pat Page send- ing against them a squad camouflaged in jerseys bearing the names of Chi- cago players. The contest marks the opening of the Conference scheduled for both elevens. both elevens. Butler invades Illinois in another practice affair for the Indians; Wis- consin meets Kansas in what should turn out to be more of a battle. The unexpected showing of the De- troit squad against the highly touted Army team last week increases the in- terest In the 'Titans' tilt with Notre- Dame today in Detroit. Neither Rockne or Dorais will venture to predict the outcome of the contest, but both coaches appear confident. Nebraska meets Missouri in the most interesting contest of the re- cently disbanded Missouri Valley Conference and Minnesota's game with Oklahoma A. and IV., completes the headliners in the Middle West. In the South Tulane faces Georgia Tech and Centre meets Vanderbilt in contests that should eliminate two of the leading candidates for honors In that sdction. Alamaa, u.ndefeated last year, encounfdrs Louisiana state in another trial game. , . AASSEE4 ME'1S *j4 (NE.RIO4S seRiES C V H Two Salient Reasons for the more than commanding position the New York Yankees have assumed in the nearly completed 1927 World Series are Herb Pennock and Bob Shaw- key. Pennock demonstrated yesterday that the Yanks have as good a pitcher' -- as there is to be found while Bob Shawkey'has so far in the series play- ed a silhouette role. It is Shawkey whom George Pip- grass credited with teaching him all he knows, following George's win Thursday. 4 FRIEDMAN, MOLENDA AND GRANGE TO PLAY AT DETROIT TOMORROW Former Michigan teammates will op- pose each other when Red Grange's New York Yankees, of the National Professional football league will clash with the Cleveland Bulldogs at Dinan field, Detroit, next Sunday. Benny Friedman, former all-American at Michigan, will call signals for the Bulldogs, while Bo Molenda, his Wolverine running mate last season, will be at fullback for Grange's team. Friedman is coaching the Cleveland eleven this fall in addition to playing quarterback. The presence of 'Fried- man and IMolenda on the rival teams will probably attract more attention- from the crowd than Red Grange, him- self. Molenda is a local product, hav- ing played on the Northeastern high school team before entering Michi- gan. Friedman is just as well known to Detroit grid fans by his all-round play on Maize and Blue elevens dur- ing the last three years. He gained nation-wide fame as a member of the famous "Benny to Benny" forward passing combination. His accurate passing and brilliant quarterback play earned him a position on most mythi- 'cal all-American team last fall. Watch Michigan Win in one of our New Fall Top- I ExclusiveLasts .and IPatterns' I0H122 Designed and Sold Only by WHITEHOUSE & HARDY. BROADWAYAT40"STREET '144WEST42"° SwRET METROPOLTAN OPERA HOUSE BD . KNICKERBOCKER BUILDING 84 BROADWAY-AT WAIL STREET PHILADELPHIA- 1511 CHESTNUT STREET i 11 The Donvntown Store for Michigan Men coats. J. $35 Value, $27.50 i i .. _d Gordon slicker lined cordu- roy coats $8 to $9.50 y "«.r .... i t t 5w. ;. tr " ® ® ' ' O ® a f ® .. j / / di , i l } s lfl n - \" ..:. .... .,: .. 1 ' ' =t f ' ,. 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