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NEW BRITAIN DA BOWLING WORLD lles Arranged for Various gues at the Aetna Alleys feature in last week’s City matches was the defeat of the aks by the Tribunes in straight This week the Annex, leaders, The Elites, whose men have n the injured list, will have two men to put against es. feature in the Factory league e defeat of the leaders, Union 0., by the newcomers from Ber- Red Men teams are all closely eams from the Paper Goods Co. rt rolling this week on Tues- nd Friday, while the M. E. club starts their regular sched- th four teams Wednesday even- des the daily cash prizes a hand- Eold belt chain is up at the Aetna for the best five strings for the City League Standing. Won Lost P.C. Ave. 20 7 .T40 474 16 11 .592 466 16 11 .592 458 14 13 .513 470 8 19 .296 458 T 20 .222 445 h single—McBriarty, 132. h three—E. Anderson, 355. h team string—Annex, 538. h team total-—Annex, 1482. High Average Men. . 102 101 99 98 98 98 97 96 95 94 94 24 . 93 . 93 o AY nex vs. Live Oaks. tes vs. Tribunes. pnderers vs. Tigers. Factory League Standing. ‘Won Lost P.C. Ave. n Mfg. Co.... 16 3 .833 450 ley Works ... 12 6 .667 454 in Canstruction 8 4 .667 420 Hers No. 2.... (9 9 .500 430 pell & Erwin.. 8" 10 .444 433 ders No. 1 ... '5°10 .333 436! h & Judd.... 3 9 .250 .407 | an .......... 812 .200 423 igh single—Weare, 119. igh three—P. Wagner, 313. igh team string—Union Mfg. Co., igh team total—Stanley Works, High Average Men. . 98 . 95 o a0 93 91 | 91 | . 91 o O Blanchard . 90 rse 90 90 ke . 90 hiker ... 90 dershaw i 20 Games Monday. Landers No. 1 vs. Vulcan. Stanley Works vs. R. & E. | Friday. North & Judd vs. Union Mfg. Berlin Construction vs. Landers 2. Herald League Standing. Won Lost P.C. Ave. hooners 16 5 .761 252 lewtons . 13 11 .541. 237 arlights 11 10 .523 246 lewdrops . 12 12 .500 245 umpkins 11 13 .458 243 jhamrocks ... 38 15 .167 227 High single—Edwards, 120. High three—Edwards, 305. High team string—Schooners, 292. High team total—Schooners-Star- ghts, 805. High Average Men. dwards . 91 paly .. . 9 ‘ance 85 D'Brien . 85 ‘rewhella . 85 Moran .. .. 83 icEvoy .. 83 ... . 83 lerkin ...... . 83 KEE - BALL ALLEYS the new amusement which became so popular in the large cities last winter, will be installed at the AETNA YS within a few days. up against the Live Oaks, run- | the | pd and every game is a 50-50 | | i Barrett and Cornell Lead All Others--Busy Week Ahead for Bowlers awnees and Annex Play Tie Game for Championshi, —-Dave Dunn Ends College Football Career; Developed in the western football season is over the enthusiasts are still talking over the playing of certain men who have helped make history on the gridiron this season. Probably the most talked of player on the western grid- iron this year is Buck, the Badger's Madison, Wis.. Nov. 29.—Although ; WEEK IN THE | Buck of Wisconsin is the Greatest Tackle West Has Past Ten Years < great lineman. Walter Eckersall, who many declare was the greatest quarterback that ever handled a ball and who has been an official in a | number of the games played in the | conference circle this year, states that | Buck is the greatest tackle the west has developed in the past ten years. McAllister ...... ceesann e 2 Backmann 8 Barker 79 Zisk .. . 78 Dineen 76 Lawlor .. 15 Lindberg 15 Smedley 3 Smith ~......... 70 Games Tnesda.y. Schooners vs. Starlights. Pumpkins vs. Newtons. Dewdrops vs. Shamrocks. . Red Men’s League Standing. Games Thursday. ‘Warriors vs. Braves. Sannaps vs. Scouts. Mercantile League Standing. cuit, 468. 52| DUNN BIDS FAREWELL | TO COLLEGE GRIDIRO? | Local Has Not Completed Studies at Fordham, But Has Played College Football Four Years. New slump, York, Nov. 29.—Despite its the football team which has just closed its season at Fordham is expected to develop big things for Won Lost P.C. Ave. Scouts ... .16 11 .592 443 [the Bronx college by a year from ‘Warriors . 14 13 .518 428 now. Only two_regulars will be lost Sannaps . o }‘3 i: g}[g :g: by reason of the four-year rule, and Br:{ve; . () e jtwo players who are in the sentor High f;’;iei_o\,";";‘gs class have signified their intention of | High team string—Sannaps, 478. | returning to take up law. Seven | High team total—Scouts, 1393. of the men who finished the season 1n | High Average Men. regular positions are freshman, and | Earnest . g9 | have three more years to play. Sandstrom .. 93| The two men who Fordham loses | J. Wright .. g3 | this fall are Dave Dunn and Al Yule, Fransen 93 | who have been considered the two | Calbert . . 9o |stars of the Maroon eleven for last; Foberg . 91 |two seasons. Neither veteran grad- F. Robertson 90 |uates, but as Dunn saw service at Puppel . _ 90| Yale before coming to Fordham, and A. Olson 09 | Yule starred for New York Univer- Oberg . g9 |sity a few years ago, they have reach T. Wright 89 | ed the intercollegiate disability ag> C. Nelson 88 | which follows four years' competi- | Fusari ... 86 | tion. Neither player will leave Ford- L. Logan ..... . 6 |ham, however, Dunn remaining o ‘A. Robertson . 85 | put in his last term at the law school, Abramson §5 | while Yule has 1 a big stretch be- | fore he takes h As degree in medicina yet Harry Vaughn has not made announcement whether he is a e for the next year’s coach- “th or not. No choice has been made yet of {next season’s captain, but it is likely | | that the final selection will Won Lost P.C. Ave. | tween Jack Conklin, the left end who ATIOULE bt 168 .667 403 1;: 4 freshman at the law school, ErelghtRO Moo 12 9 .571 393 .nq Jim Butler, the Maroon right National Biscuit .. 11 10 .524 400 | y.)¢ * Butler is a senior at college, Electric Light 3 15 166 397 |t s going to take up law. Both High S‘;‘gle_‘ga“akceml‘;és men have played for three years. g;g? e KON atiow) Bis. | For other material Fordham _has , right end; Kendricks, rignt High team total—Armour, 1302. ‘«Eflnt(o??k“(gl)lr:‘;:t qf:‘fttl;d_ High Average Men. back; and Cantwell, right half, all Hornkohl g7 | ©f whom are freshmen. In addition, o e e (5 | Morcaldi, Donnelly, Corriden, Hall | MelIntyre o4 | Muleahy, and Delahanty, all of whom Wallace .36 j appeared in‘one or more of the bigger Glenn . this year, will be eligible to Berry 83 , pla; gain. The "I"._i" will be award- Shea 87 and will be followed by Neciath S | the captainey clection. The Bronxites | FiayEE 3¢ | have also almost completed arrange- Smith g4 | ments with Columbia for a fight for Matthews g3 | the city title in 1916, while they ex- Tonce %5 | pect to open the season against ei- C. Wilcox %5 | ther the Army. Princeton, or Penn- Dix 51 | sylvania. Maerz ... 20 _— RSUones i s 80 FEDERALS ARE CHAMPS. Game Wednesday. The Federals won the - 120-pound Freight Office vs. Electric Light. | championship of New Britain' yes- Thursday. terday afternoon, when they defea- Armour vs. National Biscuit. | ed the Pirates of this city, 7 to 0. i crushing victory lie be- 'BARRETT LEADING TOUGHDOWN SCORER Cornell Gaptam Grossed Oppon- ents’ Goal Line 22 Times Another football seacon of joys and corrows and of realizations and dis- appointments has passed, and the talkative friends of more than one university to are all prepared to prove who will listen that their cleven was the best of the Football isn’t played essen- to decide any championship. is more tradition and senti- ment attached to college football than any other sport, and a single victory over traditional rivals means a lot more in many instances among the big college elevens than a sensa- tional team which goes out and es- tablishes a so-called record. It i the thrill of the game and the desire for clean, invigorating sport which should have a stronger appeal than the clamor for a ‘championship As football schedules are arranged, there is no object in view to work out a series of intercollegiate contests by any system which will decide which is the best team. Outside of the few traditional contests, schedules are made up to suit the wishes of each college. Some of the best teams in the country each year do not meet, and, in fact, some times | do not even play a common rival which will give even a vague com- parative value of their strength. It is much the same with college base- ball. The strong desire to win a so-called champlonship at any cost belongs to professional rather than amateur sport. The football season just ended was the greatest the game has known in point of widespread interest. ~ More people have become interested in the gridiron game than ever before and, although, with its intricate rules, it | is not an easy game for the layman to follow, it is becoming more popu- | lar cach season. With the numerous | new college stadiums of enormous | seating capacity, it has been possible anyone ticular | for more spectators than ever before | to witness the big games. The total attendance figures for the hig football games throughout the country this season will show a new and greater interest in the gridiron game. This season, like other vears. has | produced its football heroes, and the | stars of this vear's campaign rank | up well with those of other vears. The game as it is now plaved fur- nishes all the requisites of hard- fought strife between trained ath- letes without some of the features | which made the game objectionable ' serious kept several seasons back The injuries this year have been down to a minimum. while the game has not suffered in its intensity of execution or earnestness, There have been more surprises and reversals this vear than in any previous season, the most notable instances being Yale and Pennsyl- vania. The elevens which have done the best work have traveled alona ! on a high wave of triumph and have done notable things. Three tedms in the East stand out above the others. Cornell has had a great ! season. suffering no defeat. and scor- ing a total of 287 points azainst fifty by its rivals. The Harvard team which ended the seascn with such a over Yale lost its only same of the season to Cornell in midseason. Harvard’s record for the was 164 points against scored by its rivals. season ! thirty-six | The Pitts- | burg team. coached bv Glenn Warner, ‘ scored 247 points against twenty-six | bv its rivals. Pittsburg’s decisive | victory over the powerful Penn | | State team, 20 to 0, on Thanksgiv- | ing Day, when both elevens were at [ the top of their game, stamps the | | Pittsburgers as a powerful organiza-i i tion. Pittsburg may, or may not, have the lax eligibility system with | which the eleven is charged, but | nevertheless, it must have been an unusually strong football team. It i did not play any of the big Eastern | | teams this season, its game with Cor- | [ nell having been cancelled after the | defeat and rough reception they gave | the Ithacans in 1914. As cham- | pionships are claimed, Cornell and Pittsburg both make demands for | that mythical honor. Out West, the University of Washington and the Oregon Aggies also come forth with the mild suggestion that perhaps they might be able to win some games if they had a chance with the | best elevens in the East. | The leading point maker of the sea- | son was Captain Barrett of Cornell, | | who made twenty-two touchdowns, | while Gilroy of Georgetown was sec- | ond with sixteen. Mahan of I | Har- | vard scored eight touchdowns. Among the season drop kickers Dave Tib- | bott of Princeton and Thurman of irginia each had six, while Miller of Columbia kicked five. i The record of the best known teams for the season and the lead- ing point scorers both by touchdowns and by field goals follows: Opp. . W .L.TiedPts.Pts. Cornell 9 287 50 Pittsburg 8 247 29 Columbia, b 126 28 Harvard 8 1 .. 164 36 Wash. & 8l G A Lafayette 8 3 206 112 Union . SRl 10 Frenk'n & Marll 8 7 1 .. 30 Dartmouth 97 1 1194 40 Georgetown 97 2.. 317 40| i The End and the Beginning. You think because the last game has been played at the football season is over; at the curtain is down for another h fat-head— O inccemparable boob; Would that you are right—but you are not; 1 you think the football season Is over You should have your ears examined; Also your eyes; Tor you are either blind and deaf Or crazy, Or all three. 1 you think the season is over tell a Cornell man | That Pittsburg is champion; Or a Pitt, Univ. man that Cornell 1s Number On Or a Harvard man that Cornell had 'The better team; Or suggest that Mahan is a greater guy Than Barrett: Or vice versa; The football season is just over? Wottheballyel— It’s just begun. “Mahan the most sensational foot- ball player in the country change. Not quite. The most sensa- tional player in the country will be one—who isn't all-American the one—if there is picked upon somebody's eleven. The Next Yale Coach. S Now that the hunt for a new ir: LIGHT Grantlend Rice Yale coach is desperately on, may I ask if any one has considered calling in that brilliant rush organiz our | 0id friend en? Surely the f would spare him for such noble purpose, and by next fall he will have worked himself out of a Job. If the well known Yale spirit Fas slumped, why not pep it up with | a litile Teutonic frightfulness? We gotta do something to make it inter- esting for them Hah-vids, ain't we? SEWELL FORD. The fact that Cornell beat Harvard with Chuck Barrett out of the game during fifty-five minutes of play is evidence enough that Cornell had a regular football machine and one tha was not depcndmn upon any one star The Winning Machine, Coach Yost of Michigan was among those who observed the Cornell-Penn and the Army-Navy conflicts. ‘A good strong line and one back- field star to carry the ball or act as a threat to give others a chance make up a winning eleven,” he said. “Cor- nell and Harvard had the strong lines | and the backfield stars in Barrett and in Mahan. They not only could gain ground themselves, but they made it easier for the other backs to work. Maulbetsch was as big a star as ever, but he had no line to work back of. With a weak line, neither Mahan nor Barrett would ever have shown to any great advantage.” Job for -Mahan. We see where Ned Mahan will not take up coaching after he graduates. If Mahan is uncertain about his future he should go upon the stage. In ad- dition to proving himself a great foot- ball player, he proved to be almost as great an actor. PORT PAWNEES AND ANNEX IN SCORELESS TIE | Gity Foothall Championship Unde- cided—Big Crowd at Game The first annual debate betwecn | the Annex and the Pawnees football elevens, W held yesterday after- noon at Traut's field, before one of the largest gatherings of enthusiasts that ever assembled to witness & football game in this city, it being es- timated that between four and five thousand followers of both teams were lined up before the game was called. i The contest itself was a long tHe lines of the *sand lot” football, and™ was marred by the many arguments | between players on both sides, also | wrangles with the officials over rul- ge. In this respect the Annex team | garnered the honors. When the teams arrived at the field, it was seen that the boys from the easternh end of the city were considerable heavier than their opponents, but the follow- ers of the latter team argued that the dash and speed of their pets would overcome this advantage. In*™ this they were right, for 'but once during the game was the Pawnees goal line approached, and the Annex could not get nearer at this time than the 30-yard line. The Pawnees sev- eral times threatened to 'score, but the heavy line of the Annex brac- ed at criti times, and prevented a score. The early part of the game was de® voted entirely to old time’bucking the line tactics by both teams, and re- sulted in only small gains. The An- nex were guilty of many fumbles, which their alert opponents were quick to recover, and toward tho end of the first quarter the Pawnecs succeeded in getting the ball to the fifteen yard line, but lost it on downs. In the second quarter nothing gf importance occurred, first one teain getting the ball and then the other, Haughton's fake plays call for|and the playing for the greater part finished acting to be effective. And at|was in the vicinity of the center of thig art Mahan rose to great heights. | the fleld. Both in expression and in action he went through his part so well that he The second half opened with both teams going at each other with ven- was frequently chased and tackled | geance. Much punting was done by vhen King or another back was|both teams with “Chief” Larson carrying the ball twenty vards away | clearly outkicking Scott for the Ar- in another direction Spring Training. Before Mr. Henry Ford goes over to save Europe he might get some | rceded practice by establishing head- Penn. State .. gaT o R e 1480 61 Syracuse 07122288 16 Colgate (e 221 3 Princeton 86 2 136 33 Amherst. 86 3 81 66 Swarthmore SEbRaTT 04 8 71 Brown 95 3 1166 Army A3 Navy 93 199 Yale 9 4 5 83 Pennsylvania A A0 s Carlisle : 8.0 4 Touchdowns—Barrett, Cornell, Gilroy, Georgetown, 16; Hastings, Pittsburg, 11; Mechan, Syracuse, 10; Mylin, Franklin and Marshall, 10; Mayer, Virginia, 10; Wilkinson, Syra- cuse, 8; Heyman, Washington and Jefferson, 8: McCreight, Washington | and Jefferson, 8; Mahan, Harvard, 8; Pennsylvania State, 5; E. Anderson, Virginia, 5; Weldon, Lafayette, 5. Field goals—Tibbott, Princeton, 6; Thurman, Virginia, 6; Miller, Colum- bia, 5; Mahan, Harvard, 4; Lake, Lafayette, 4; Oliphant, Army 3. Martin, Navy, 8; Clark, Pennsylvania | State, 7; Bush, Swarthmore, Col- | lins, Cornell, 7; Shiverick, Cornell, 7; Herman, Franklin and Marshall, Oliphant, Army, 7; Leighty, George- | town, 7; Wall, Georgetown, 7;; Will- amson, Pittsburg, 6; Andrews, Brown 6; Pollard, Brown, 6; An- derson, Colgate, 6 Evans, Franklin and Marshall, 6; Berryman, ’ quarters at New Haven, Conn.; Ann Arbor, Mich,, and Philadelphia, Penn Who Goes Next. Ted Coy received a large and healthy dent in his football Tenown when he attempted to coach Yale in 1910. Howard Jones, who had more than made good at Syracuse, took up the Eli assignment, and thereby dropped most of his coaching fame. Frank Hinkey followed Jones, and ncw he, too, moves on out into the shadows, Shevlin took up Hinkey's task at the finish, and dropped a hunk of the glory gained five years ago. The job of coaching a Yale eleven What's Your Overcoat Preference? WE'VE a regular feast Overcoats | Step in and t Garments. nex. In the last quarter the Paw- nees on a beautiful forward pass aided by some fine line bucking by Krause reached the 10-yard line but fine defensive work by Breen and Blanchard held the southend boys at that point and the Annex secured the pigskin on downs. S8cott im- mediately punted, and Schroeder fumbled the sphere, and the ball was recovered by Bayor for the Annex | on the Pawnees thirty yard line, it (Continued On Ninth Page.) doesn’t seem to be a bit more dan- gerous than charging a trench fringed with machine guns, shrapnel fire and poisonous gases. Not a bit. If Mr. Ford is able to produce peace in Europe, there is a bare chance that such genius may bring the Feds and O, B. together. But we wouldn’t advise a bet. of new and handsome o ry on any or alt of the new We've many entirely new Styles to show you. And we shall take pleasure The way to buy an Ow. is the most becoming Style in doing it. ercoat is to find out what for you to wear. DON'T BUY IN A HURRY! Fabrics of Kersey's Ch etc. Plain colors for Conser eviots, Chinchillas, etc. vative men and very at- tractive coiored Overcoatings for Younger Men cut in the swagger new English Men admire. 310, $12, §1 f On our Menu of Choice Overcoats orm-fitting style Young Sup to $18 you'll find the Chesterfield, the Balmacaan, the Button Through coat, the Belted Coat, the Warm Storm Ulster with Convertible Collar and Bel lar Shawl Collar Coat. ted Back, the new popu- * Come in and try on! ewYork$10-312-313SampleShop | Home of Better Values 357 Main Street, New Britain