New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 9, 1915, Page 9

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 9, 1915. — DONT STOP GIVING ——@Gas Domes and Lamps— Always Give Pleasure and Satisfaction A small payment down and a small amount each month secures one of these artistic fixtures We always carry a large assortment New Britain Gas Light Compan 4 o v — 3 9 9 * | summer to grab up anything that : spender in those ‘days when he was | he conducts a cigar store and billiar A State Farm for Alcoholics | pricity. 1t you looks like a pitcher. Among the launching his new league. Ban was$ | parlor, has turned down an offer made (New Haven Day.) t; it you don't newcomers are Ritter, Heuncke, Portograp y willing to risk the very last dollar of | by Manager Joe Tinker of the Chicago | Ottomans seem = ~ ] o One of t =t 3 L L °s n Ericksen, Cook, Stroud, Glass. Wil- his backers and when he declared | Federals to become a member of that ne of the Mmost impertant measuren| o (R N liams, Palmero, Scull, Press, Kirmayer BY “GRAVY.” war on the National league he issued | club. to be brought up at the present ses-| .., nagration of] and Royce., Most of these players orders to the club owners to go after | The offer was very large and flat- |sion of the legislature is the much dis alces. finished with the Giants last season. good players absolutely regardless of | tering, but Burns preferred to remain |oyssed for the establish rkey has o \ ! 4 . 5 x proposition Ritter is likely to get a lot of work | It Will be just a vyear tomorrow |ecxpense. Salaries soared. doubled |true to Manager John McGraw of the |ment of a state farm for inebriates, | Cduipment; has | to do, and he seems to have all the | broke into the |trebled and quadrupled. Great play- | New York Giants. The fact that the hausted army: i " It is a plan which will meet with con necessary stuff. Stroud will have the | pugilistic limelight by whipping |ers hesitated to sign a contract call- |local plaver is in demand shows that |giderable opposition as being a new | bad war that H ene o 2 - . * i r many 3 ir f - N g . I ot | Burop « ’I'ssmau Om Ma" on wnom (;'ams benefit of previous major league ex-| yoiote o L lder of the | iNF for many times their former sal- | he is recosnized as one of the TAstest | charge upon the state purse and es- | 1Urope: has no perience, acquired when he pitched ary for fear that by holding out & [ball players in the country | peciatly trom & constderable class of | TR for Detroit, while Cook also had a |1:onsdale belt emblematic of the wel- |jjttle longer they could get more. The e SO : e patience with | tion. has oni§ Can DGDBIW tryout in Cleveland. terweight championship of Great | fight continued until the National |people who have little patier vith o il uhid. The fact that jobs are to be had on | Britain, in a twenty round bout in |jeague, licked ‘to a frazzle, was | GEORGETOWN’S COLD SHOULDER |any effort to treat dipsomania as limitations Ril the Giant pitching staft this season Sydney, Australia. The new welter- | willing to talk peace. Ban Johnson Lomsis | diseass rather thsa es s vice . 3 g | should encourage these young fellows | Welght champion proved that his vic- realized that the days of wild spend- | Baseball Management Declines to Play | the "”‘l"" _'_”,'"" st gl :‘,","W”"'“' be. | promise of any New York, Jan. 9.—Now that John | to show at their best, and McGraw | tory was no fluke by giving Johnny a |ing had to end, so he met the over- Federal League Clubs, el Spnd ot diiissarin. L iving Not ®nly that, R - I P i o v v | e E o ) en yVste of deal McGraw has greatly bolstered his in-, will have no easy job separating the return match, also in Sydney, when |tures of the old league half way. It Washington, Jan. 9.—No Federal |ing with the evils of the drink havit |13 30ing whates wheat from the chaff. OIld faithful | he won by a knockout in the first | was a glad day for the magnates and S ' s bt ko trouble with I . Sorroic p i v league t will E i rashing- c since pro tself to be : . : Wilbert Robinson would come in very | round. McCormick has since proved |the fans when peace was finally con- mngmi:a\rv:'.r“ml‘fo:;::l’n ‘\\\I;‘SI "\]':e 'h lmsl: !m"“ proves 18 Austrian offi Hans Lobert, his next problem will be |, nqy during the coming spring to | that he is as willing to fight “for Ing | cluded but a sad one for the plavers. R e S L (e | e 1a muoh cbout the Hea ot 4| Mave UL, to give his pitching department a ' help McGraw solve his pitching prob- | and for country” as for glory and | One day they were drinking cham- “G Lot : | here is much about ot =) po who are attackl [ 1em. money, for he was among the first of | pagne, and the next they were kick- | __ Ccorgetown will not h""“] S04 | vronerly conceLeS Sties I e it | Albania, and Td ! | T ey [ the many British and French pusil- |ing because the barkeep gave ’em too | Snmes, With —the = Federal N laae) o Ditusideankecdet Lo Boorimtend e c] toi e I , the Giants were so roughly used in E is who volunteered to g0 to the |much foam on their lagor. clubs,’ sald Graduate Manager It is almost self evident that an ou Jtal {the World’s Series by the Athletics John’ Bannerman McLean, alias | front and fight with guns instead of " Charlie Cox. “I have given my word 'door life devoted to healthful labor in Either. Tuskl their big pitching four—Mathew: m\;{ ‘L“,', [u mdu,\“ t:om ffim ‘1;‘1" | gloves. ——‘ e 1:( . to (jlark Grifith to stay away from the open is better leuls Tm\ to re respénsible any Marquard, Tesreau and Demaree, W ‘1‘“‘r(~ ”\‘?‘X(”I. .m "1‘~‘ h “r‘ e A goodly company miight be made % SR WING ) REDS, ‘Vlr:,\ln): l.hh ds, ) store the nervous 1 v.vxy of . v\\l;:n Ttaly Ciants next season. Aarry was of the English, Welsh and Irish box- S e I have received letters from Buf- 1of alcoholic poisoning than is inca . r b e stre Tes 5 cetiv o ~ " f i ~, ’ . Zoflff(‘“"d ):“} lh“\""‘_-“:". CONeCtiVe | jast of McGraw's regulars to step in | arg who are mow fighting their coun- | HUZgIns Announces Catcher’s Relcase | falo, Baltimore, Brooklyn and Pitts- | ceration in a jail It would require | win adopt the urling corps in the game. line. Secretary Foster refused to say Mathewson ranked first among the | whether the objectionable water- National league pitchers in earned | yaoon clause was stricken out of runs in 1913; Tesreau came third. | [arry’s contract. McLean was signed Demaree was fourth and Marquard { g, only one year. elghth. To have your four regular S pitchers included among the best ) cight men in the league was no mean average. 1857-—Tom Sayers and Aaron Jones However, in the short space of a vear and a half th great pitching staff has been knocked sky high. Of the quartet, only Rig Jeff Tesreau | day was one in a fleld strength by the acquisition of thorough overhauling. In 1913, when try’s battles in France and Flanders. By St. Louis. burgh, asking that I book Federal an unusual degree of cynicism to be- | ey Ger Among them are MecCormick, Jem league clubs representing those cities Jijeve that the victim's chan of e duced Turkey Driscoll, Bandsman Blake, Bandsman for games Georgetown I have generation is not greater under the e hoped fof Rice, Symonds, the 105-pound cham- turned down all such requests, 1 feel former than under the latter cond found in the pion; Johnny Basham, Petty Officer that Washington is an American tion, even if there were not an abhun cen made rost Curran, Seaman Hayes, Pat O'Keefe, Ivy Wi S ¢ g league city opposed to the Federal aance of expert testimony in up- | figypt. the evidl TODAY IN PUGILISTIC ANNALS. |the middleweight champion; Dick Y ingo had been transferred to the Cinci i clut lonEiie & port oncealed, ‘The Smith, the champion of the light- RXSREARY e B Oy ——— Yet there is no gainsaying the fa Mohammedans 4 : The two-vear contract hich | heavies, and many others. & ar 2 peetis S ¢ 4 that the best interests of the alcoholic | key, and Turkes fought over three hours to a draw on | Tom McCormick was born in Dun- | Vingo recently signed with the st.| “'"'”"“]]“"”‘ Porritt, of Bartlord, | 4o not enter very largely into the for anyihing ., NI 5 ) % A A S C i ; he we nown writer and e« irer, the Thames near Canvey Island. This | kalk, Ireland. and began fighting in | (O Siubwilighe duplicatedioypthe B R e owurel: |sideration of a very large number of . 5 o Ty 1910. After beating a number of sec- neinnati management, and Wingo | Wi ot e . - sersons. Drunkenness I, in the view . of the coldest England | 19°0. After beating a number of sec | .3 3 creeq to sign it. ~Huggins said | Suftrage” at Socialist hall, 269 persor u i 1631 cha vl he 1o - & o S g N . . -1 9 outpointe SISO it i bt e S i b of these persons, a merc moral we el may be safely counted upon to win has ever experienced, vet the two | UOTRRCTR TR T T Be OUPOIMed | that as vet no plavers or money fig- | street, Sunday afternoon at : veland 'ness s . oS! sheer viciousness wo-thir s X “ason. | ; : 5 N i g yele » public i ited, ness at the best, Y t\:anfigfli‘:;m :flsx‘;mog;,‘i'fi\;p:( 1son. | gladiators, stripped to the Waist, | weight and whipped Jack Goldswain | UFe b the deal, but something would [ o'clock. The public is invited the worst. They have not the slight- | People used & i ‘ : be done later. about the appr e i &% battied fiercely in the bitter cold for {in a twenty round battle. He has 5 o 2t Eympathy twitkil movement | About the app ehould win a lot of games for Mec- since won over mearly al} the bes President Herrmann announced e i1 as urable | age In actual Graw next season, bhut there is no | the greater part of the afternoon, and ; S r nearly a the best 5 S L as a curable " 2igseasonh : 1 & welterweights of the British Islc that T. S. Griffith, an Indianapolis the “horseless & denying that Big Six was clouted | desisted only when darkness set in has gained the championship of . | American sociation outfielder, had to find the e flercely in the latter part of lasti, . 4.5 \were so weak they could | givision been obtained by his club, Figures have season and he cannot be expected to 5 Ao the work which once it was his | g ] $art 1o perforn so many of the championship battles | ment” of the major leagues recalls BIG FIGHT MARCH 6. {the benefit of its dipsomaniacs waiting arownd e s s b in England were, in former times, | the period following the close of the - e | The question is this Do the ob- | BA T & "“' l'” Sta e ne. pulled off in mid-winter, although ‘lnng and financially disastrous war- | Johnson Guarantoed $30,000 and ligations of modern civilization im- | t'mnetion " i Rube Marquard has jumped to the ppienes were then always staged in | fare between the Natiopal and Amer- Willard Will Got $15.000 | pose on the state of Connecticut any | Make himself o Federal league and Al Demaree has ' pa gpen country. Neither Jones nor | i€an leagues. It was just a dozen e | duty toward Its victims of the alco- | Wait will be lom :;::x'; '-rt':;“o“‘f“"‘ \‘1""““‘-" : "'h”“l Savers were satisfied with the result, | YCATS a80, come tomorrow, that the New Ym');, Jan. 9.—Jack Johnson hol habit, or are these individuals to | [TeCRINE aljlv.,r;‘llly chanc: or Marquard to play e e b e, so-called “‘Cincinnati peace compact” | and Jess Willard will meet in a forty ey e i e H {be more exceptionally neglected than | 'OTSe is ac Federal league ball next season, but | "".')‘::.,,‘.hp\'\m' '”,'f‘t,‘m‘\‘.f‘;-,"‘?. “:.ml“‘;:,:”‘"l'\_‘i ! was signed and sealed, and the ‘I]n('l‘l- five-round Dout for the heavywelgnt || WE DVITE ¥OU TO:VISIT OUR | |be MOre €xioe % n Iixtinction is, sed : : e o state's eriminals The prison at i I i 5 PATTERN DEPT., JAN. 11 th t i s tla - It also is doubtful it he will play with | i 0 e rinmphed, Ty | Ment put an end io the era of high | championship of the world at Juarez, A TERTUN L { Wethersfield is conducted, according to | D18 thought the Giants. i 2 . e salaries for baseball players, Duri Mexico, on Saturday, March 6. Final - 3 The value of : : § this victory Sayers put himself in line £ aseball players. During | Mexico, on Saturday, March 6. Fina Miss . Burke | |the recent statement of one of its di This will leave McGraw with®nly (0% (o championship, which he af- | the “War’ the star players had been | arrangements to this effect were made iss Adelaide M rectors, more as a reformative than | oveassd sINE Tesreau, Mathewson and Fromme asa (iiward defended against John Hoe- | AP to demand almost any salary | vesterday, after other bids were re- Special Representative of the las a punitive Instrumentality It re. | Value of horsesd w'fl;v‘;n nucleus for his pitching starr, i | SFVEEC SO { within reason or bevond it. but the |ceived from Havana, Cuba, and Tia- PICTORIAL, REVIEW CO. form 1n tha end steiven or in the oase | Creansll "»““"-‘: 0] S prov a very i Ve ; eace © pac P - e Ste % . on of ho: r.:h]pr nr\y:\? ‘:?’1;‘;110\5::‘(| \(‘r\hn.nu 1899—Oscar Gardner knocked out lf\‘ll"(\ <'nr1::(u"hp|n a sudden termi- _lu,xln.' er;(n. . of New York of felons, surely it would seem as if “l"’n“r‘ r}:mr";:\.g i « G since MeGraw el i . . 5 nation to that happy condition ot af- Johnson has been guaranteed $30,- . 2 > " §99,000,0 2 : P Pave Sullivan in seventeenth round at ; . . ~xplai 3 reform, rather than a medieval form - brought him here in 1913. Not in e fairs. The high-flying players came | 000, win, lose or draw, while Willard Will be hero to explatn the niany 500,000, In $34 3 h T 5 >- | |of punishment, ought to be the aim leng time has the Gia anager bee - : pa T y F £ assured ¢ distinctive features of the PIC | , hoga, Hami g’l ’1:‘ 3 the Giant manager been 1900—Terry McGovern defeated + A0Wn to earth with a dull thud, and, | has been assured a mintmum of $15,- TORIAL R - PATTERNS. | |of the community in its treatment of | = X *" . . §o short on veteran pitching talent. |, " hivon in eight rounds at New | While salaries remained on a some- | 000, and may receive a much larger g : or to all | | mers victims of common and distin utomobiies ow Schupp, who has been with the | (007 what higher level than they had been | sum by sharing interests in the affair || Which makes them superior to |tive form of mervous disorder Franklin county Giants two entire seasons and | 5 E e 5 ¢ e o other patterns. e fo « yervous diso tie ¢ seas hoE 90 ack Root defeated To . i before the Johnson uprising, they | with Jack Curley, the chief promoter, . 3 el Hchauer, who came to the Polo 1900—dacl oot defeated Tommy pr T | And if such is to be the aim, th Grounds in July, 1913 will probably been able Sant in six pounos mb Chicaes. ! were far from what the plavers had |and his assoclates, R N e S o VourTer it These :-rvnffliu to demand in war days S— - s » | every ow o i o . i - - S : abom hle practice aof herding other-| be shifted from the sccond string e Gilmore and his financial backers TINKER TURNED DOWN. y “”“““"” fi“)"“l - "dm°k' r:]*\ her | salesman will g reserve to the main firing line JOE ALMOST A SOLDIER., | have been accused of being somewhat At ap aa s epar me" se unoffending n )u of reasons why . -0 se v s e ¢ - q 5, 3 s i e, 3 als in o Jails, tr yetter - - e ther ROt eac yoiiha have il ve New Haven, Jan. 9.—Joe Pepe. the | reckless in their distribution of the | George Burns of Giants Refuses Good . il L e it the horse would started a big league game, though ! - rromote comfo hest shortstop in the Eastern asso-| coin of the realm in order to induce 5 . 2 = both are regarded as fine prospeocts, | oo T offer. Sn"e A Giateon for Teoubie | Bt the Ml Cincinnati, Ohio, Jan. 9.—Man- ager Miller Huggins of the St. Louis National league baseball team an- nounced here last night that Catcher seeking to treat the disease. And this class of people may be depended on to object strenuousi — to the state’s going to any extraor barely stand. 1t is remarkable that The present “policy of retrench- {dinary expense in an experiment for |2t Columbus sh ! Ohio. They indl i ciation, is working steadily at Win-| the stars to leave their happy homes i McGraw Realizes Position, chester's, but jsn't neglecting his phy-{in the old leagues and cast in their Little Falls, N. Y., Jan. 9.—Geor | McGraw thoroughly appreciates the sical condition. When spring rolls; lots with the Feds, but Mr. Ryron | Burns, the star outfielder of the D} 382 MAIN STREFT Turkey has the most curious policy | “horseless carria weakness of his hurling department, arcund, he says he'll be in better con-| Banccoft Johnson. the r‘\—\vas(vlmnl\'nr)\ Giants, who is spending the | that ever governed a nation. It is | fest excellences (Chicago Tribune.) affections of X e . 1 and Dick Kinsella had orders last dition than ever. reporter, was also something of a | winter at his home in this city, wher 1 simple, and has the beauty of sim- | attain.

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