New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 24, 1916, Page 8

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NEW, 3RI¥AIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JANUARY 24 1916. Leagues-This Week’s Games Harold Bertini and “Pat” mped into the lead for individua onors in the Factory Bowling leaguc ge of 96. ave The Union Works comfortable lead in ague, and it looks as if this aggre: ution will ‘‘cop off” e season. Their work improves eac! beek and there appears to be a sn a © Stanley Works teams are hav! | hot battle for second place, W es at present. The Vulcan bway honors. The standing a rerages of the league are as follow W. X VO, Ave, mion Mfg Co. ¥5 tiigae erlin Con’stn 20 13 .606 anley Works 820717 (663 nders No. 2.... 21 18 .538 43 mssell & Erwin .. 20 19 .512 441 anders No. 1 18 18 140 L el AR 9 27 418 orth & Judd G 28 111 High single—J. Trevethan, 123 High three—Hogan, 326 Team single—Union Mfg. 544. Team Total—Union Mfg. 1,484, High Average Men. Bertini 96 Powers 96 McQueeny . 94 Blanchard 94 Nyack 93 Dickman 93 Middleton 93 Myers 93 Hoffman 93 Hogan .. 93 Lantone 92 Neurath . 92 J. Trevethan 92 Rawlings 92 W. Wright .. 91 Walker .... 90 Molyneaux 90 Thompson 90 Gaudette .. 90 Nut League Figures. Interest in the Nut league contin- ks to grow each week. and much en- uslasm is being manifested by the embers of the various teams. The anuts are leading at present, but e other teams are confident that hey will be able to bring them off eir perch before the end of the son. The standing and averages llow: L. 5 ickorynuts 8 .565 412 jutternuts . 12 .428 409 jhestnuts . . 13 .277 411 High single—Stagis. 123. {High three—Lemeris, 304. High team string—Peanuts, 4582. High team total—Chestnuts, 1,323, High Average Men. Gregory .. . 96 A. Puppel . 95 Peplau .. 93 Krause 91 ‘Windish 91 Lemeris .. . 90 Thompson 88 J. Jurgen 87 B. Jurgen ...... 86 Berry 84 Weare 84 Stagis 84 Sattler ... . 83 Huck .. 82 Lookis . . 81 Wagner ..... 81 H. Puppel 80 Carey . 80 H. A. Rittner 80 The Ice Picks team of the Stanley ool league are making a strong bid or the championship honors in that pague, and have acquired quite a ad over their nearest rivals. The anding and averages follow: W. L. P.C. Ave. lce Picks .. 9 4 .1000 349~ ail Sets A | 6 .444 338 dd Jobs .. 4 5 .444 322 Plumb Bobs . . 5 8 .11%1 320 * Four Men. High single—Stotts, Connors, 113. High three—Stotts, 293. High team string-——Ice Picks, 370 High team total—Ice Picks, 1,081. High Average Men Barnett ... 91 MecBriarty . . 90 90 .. 90 . 90 89 Sandstrom 87 Nelson 83 Anderson ..... 81 Draper wees Al Jones 81 Platt £ 78 Burdick .. . 78 Johnson 77 Games This Weck Manager Rogers of the Aetna Alleys AETNA ALLEYS Pin Men Always on Hand Bowl in the Day Time ARE DOING LOCALLY flich Enth?xsiasm "In Various Powers ring the past, each having an aver- five the the honors for ikelihood of them being displaced. he Berlin Construction company and fie honors in favor of the suburban- Iron Works and North & Judd teams con- nue to flirt with each other for the i | 1 1 » New York, Jan. 24.—It now looks as if the athletic words will lose an- other athlete shortly. The latest one to announce his retirement from the cirder path is Norman Taber, holder of the world’s record of 4 minutes has arranged the following schedule for this week: Monday, Factory Leéague—Stanley Works vs Russell & Erwin; Landers No 1 vs Vulcan Tuesday, Ranger league—Landers No 1 vs Berlin Construction Wednesday, Barraca league; kins league Thursdayl, Nut league; Stanley Tool league; North & Judd vs Vulcan Iron Works. Friday, Factory league—Union Mig. vs. North & Judd; Berlin Construc tion Co., vs. Landers No. 2 Ad- JACK AKLEY TO STAY AT CORNELL | Veteran Signs Ten-Year Contract to | Train Cross Country and Track Teams. Ithaca, N. Y., Jan. 24.—Cornell's | track and cross-country teams are as- | sured of ten years more coaching by | Jack Moakley one of the greatest trainers in the country, as the result of an agreement just reached by Moakley and the Cornell Athletic as- ' soclation. It wag announced last | night that Moakley had signed a ten- year contract to coach the track and cross-country tcams. he news was hailed with delight by Cornell men | and will be received with much grat- ification by alumni the country over. Jack Moakley came to Cornell in 1899 and will complete his seven- teenth year as track and cross-coun- try coacl next June, when his pres- ent contract expires. He has been largely instrumental in developing | cross-country teams. The news was fourteen of his team have won the in- tercollegiate championship in the last seventeen years. Six of Moakley's Cornell teams in the last evelen years have captured -the intercollegiate championship in track competitions. Moakley has been rated as the pre- mier track coach of the country. He | is the man largely responsible for the | popularization of athletics at Ithaca. It is one of his principles- never to drop a man from the squad, no mat- ter if the aspiring athlete has not a ghost of a show to make the team. As a result of Moakley’s policy between 400 and 500 men are now taking ac- tive exercise in various branches of athletics and the track squad at Cor- nell is larger than any in other uni- versity of the county. Moakley was 52 years old last month and his new contract means that he will devote the rest of his active coaching life to Cor- nell teams. Local Militiamen On Short | was in | bu | not showing as good team work Busy Week Planned for Local Bowlers--Averages and Standing of Players and Teams---Alumni De- feat West End A. C. in Fast Contest--Pioneers are Beaten by Vikings- Moakley to Remain at Cornell |. HAT THE BOWLERS | Taber Planning to Let | His Spik es Grow Rusty 12 3 seconds for the mile run. He has written this decision to Athletic Manager George V. Brown of the Roston A, A Taber is one of the greatest runners the world has ever produced, and his loss would be a | severe blow to amateur athletics. CO. E BEATEN TWICE BY SIMSBURY TEAMS End of Double Bill of Basketball In the Wilderness. Simsbury club won both games of basketball in a double-header bout with the teams of Company E of New Britain in the town hall here Satur- day night. The first game was won byby Simsbury, 27 to 15, and the sec- ond game between the junior teams of the two clubs was won by the Sims- bury team, 41 to 9. A good crowd attendance, expecting to see an interesting game, but both games appointing, the spirit of good, clean sport being lacking in the New Britain teams, they being more anxious to display their pugilistic ¥ hen 4o mlay the game It was more surprising to the Sims- his is the fourth time they have encountered Company K and the previous games have been good ones. The teams were late in ar- riving. If the club could induce visit- ing teams to arrive earlier, they would undoubtedly increase the attendance at all the games. Summary: e Company E. Simsbury ZeRer it e Sus i n B e Neville Right forward T honop s oSS John Welch Left forward PrRulds e K e 1. Quinn Becker Daly Bloom, Duplin . Left guard . T. Quinn Score: 27 to 15; goals from floor, Zeher 2, Thompson 2, Welch 3, E. Quinn 7, Neville, Daly, Paul; goals from fouls, Paul 5, Welch 2, Quinn; | referee, Shea; timer and scorer, Bour- geois. In the second game Munigle and Shaw did very gcod work. Munigle getting nine baskets and Shaw seven. Although Simsbury won both games they did not play as good a game as | ‘they dld last week against the Torring- | ton team, missing many baskets, and as they have in some other games. The summary: Co. E. Second. Snider Simsbury Second Munigle LOBAN o oo siviaimomininioes ofithin Fellows Right guard Smith s aakys ot i . Spatcher ‘Waldbusser, Rouse Left guard Score: 41 to 9; baskets from floor, Munigle 9, Shaw Logan Snide Paro, Kane, Fellows, Spatcher, Wald- Other Sporting News on Page 12. busser; goals from fouls, Snider, Fel- lows; referee, Shea; timer and scorer, Bourgeois. /] The Game. | | © the Game is great, when the Game is young, When the speed is there with the | vital spark; the flame burns red where the glow is shed On the dream beyond to the edge | of dark: When the wallop call, When the heart holds out for endless dash; ‘When you hit thé ground with a swift rebound And come again for another smash. | | When waits for a hurry ) i an O the Game is fine, when the Game is new, And Youth’s a pal with a helping hand; When they winning play | | | look your way for the | | i | 1 I i j % i ayed baseball club owners throughout New ¥ e again, shows that no limit exists as to | Iiultgren and TFarrell also played b ik s ,‘;‘\f}n’g‘;?a,‘,;’?” Tl b e o e :‘:\ v, | finely. The score | England, and it is probable that the hen your nerves are steel and you've When the P. L. quit the Yanks the| Alumni e T o Cr el oy e el B e e o | lopes i W. Hultgren The International league also held T Left forward. | its meeting here today, at the Me- I e s e Reynolds Walthers | Alpin, and was expected that several e SO Be L e i of the clubs, including Harrisburg, When yc Z > kick anc Sohs >ickop | Providenc ity, i JouDave s b e O I oot scnada i Pickop | Providence, and Jersey City, will As you drive again to the waiing been forced to disband instead of the -onter Bitpmest sy S g 3, Sy i Feds! Think of poor Frank Navin up Jacobson | managers will also be anmounced. against the job of trying to sell Ty | Martin PR e Banckece] e © 3 - S Cobb and Sam Crawfor 3 ba - e - But tO;fXKLOi‘Z Fon wElieenG thelich. Liskiiee: devscmesballl el L Farrell star for the victors. The s old: - Right guard. \ounx‘vaotnrtarbclmve you have come‘ Donnelly. Pioneers But the cheer is stilled where your | Baseball was kept last winter on the re, Alumni 15, West Bnds = 34; | FelErBOn ir. ..o toraciarrs s SHg ariclonca thpllicd kee veeve and baseball peace did the | goals from field, Jones 2, Reynolds, | ; <8 OIS v W A= TeAtn were few on the open field, Home for this wintes. Whistthey will | Beiade 1, Martla 3. Koptf 2, Hultgren Nelson ... Bloht T udaciy e e e TP hots' % introduce next winter to seramble |4 Walthers 2, Pickop 6, Sandbers, | ig orwar breath ago; things is not yet known, but it will be | liiirl‘ell 2; ):mtls f.’ronj fouls, ;Toncs. o 1ller St oih ouiaelon e sporto somstninat never iitear Unoni en | EciadoNs IELckep Rz Sandbare ik SRR RS e ing Page you can lay your ultimate or con- | eree, Slater. Stegrist When dope and the records begin ¢iuding shirt. to show. 3 The Viking A. C, five handed the | Nelson HARVARD 2, PRINCETON 0. Pioneers, leaders of the league a sur- i . New York, Jan. 24—Harvard de- | prise, when they forced the South | H. Hultgren ok no immortal het to sug- 3 \ ) 1! tomienp ortal prophet to Sus- . 4 princeton at ice hockey, 2 to 0, | Ends boxs to take the small end | Score, Vikings, 34, Ploneers 29} gest that Percy Haughton intended to | turn over the complete leadership of the Braves to George Stallings. No man who has been as smart as Haughton has been in football could ven consider any other proposition | in baseball. A man who is only part manager of a ball club is worse than no manager at all. | Managerial Control. 1 The only way to get effective leader- | <hip is to give the manager full con- | trol. If he knows his job he will de= liver the produce. If he doesn't, he will at least do no worse than a good manager who is constantly hampered. McGraw has had great success be- cause he has been absolute boss. Mack has succeeded for the same reason. These two have been the niost successful in baseball. Yet if cither had been subjected to authority from above their careers would have been spotted with defeat. When Murphy began to interfere with Chance the Cubs went to seed. The Reds have had more managerial interference than any club, according to general testimony, and their forty- vear record is proof of the price that | must be paid. Suppose you have a po6r manager. Can him and try another. But it is better to fire him than to interfere. The minute the player knows his man- ager isn’t absolute boss the aforesald | manager might as well trade jobs with | thealert young bat boy. And it takes | the average player about ten minutes to find out who the real boss is, Moran’s Chance. It also, sometimes, takes a differ- ence of opinion to provide the purse for a prize fight. Here’s the opinion of one fight fan: “Where do you get that stuff about ‘Willard beating Moran? Send it up a side alley. Moran fought a better fight against Johnson for twenty Tounds than Willard did the first twenty at Havana. Neither Moran nor Willard is any great boxer, but Moran has a far better punch, and in a finish fight would surely win. In a ten-round bout, as both are slow ctarters, I don’t think anything could be proved. But over the full dis- tance there would be nothing to it but Moran.” In the grip-germed interim, what has become of that deathless, thrilling | 45-round combat to be arranged be- tween Mr. Welsh and Mr. White? Or have we overlooked some important item in the last week or two? Texas Leaguers, Before placing your baseball wager kindly recall how many were picking | the Phillies to win a year ago today. We have no desire to purchase any of his ball players, but what price is Mr. Sinclair willing to make on one of his umpires? For, after all, what is Home without an umpire? ay, what is an amateur?” writes Jack Jolly, the rollicking Scot. Judg- ing from most of the stuff we have scen printed of late, we should say an amateur was any person who had never started a sporting goods store. We have no idea as to what they in- { tend to do about it, but a lot of in- terest would suddenly pass from any championship that found Francis Ouimet and Maurice McLoughlin | barred. PORT Y ALUMNT FIVE BEAT | Exer bEison rowia cide Question Whether It Will Be & P Mer; or or Kastern Association. Ve &) W de’S W()l‘l( —-Vlkll] S er committee, appointed by the Na- Grantland Rice ™ iR e b sk .| Hand League Leaders a Surprise ti meets here at the Hotel McAlpin to- That $50,000 Purse. oy day, the question of the future of» “The punch is mighter than (eS| P - baseball in New Engiand will be de- pen’— Two fast games of basketball were 2 . T cf 1 o 4 4 We wrote this once before with | staged at the Y. M. C. A, gymnasium . S.a%% I‘hefl(ommntv('e 1s made up ¢ groans; SEE e el e e s T President | AWl & M b g A’;‘ul here ‘\1\-0 (uruhlo write again "m( (|()\;'n((l i d o rm'“ i , International league, President Tim “The punch is mightier than the pen | five 1 s LI ENds : A . Murnane New England league, 3y forty-seven thousand bones.” rattling contest, score 85 to 34. The Murnane of the Ne » and Secretary John H. Farrell of the National The Eastern association, made up of ; | game was a thriller, with both teaius fighting hard To Schade assoclation. By bones, Amanda, we do not mean for victory. the assay of a Doet's bean, but wWhat | (1o sterling forward of the victors, | Lsrn;;»;‘g;_:??;mnnly known as kale-seed, | belongs much credit for the victory. = Connecticut and Massachusetts cities, 5 He was in fine form and registerd Which failed fo operate last season, has a plan for a six-club circuit and o S e . | seven goals from the floor and six G ?1“:‘;"';‘!;'},1?: i1 from the foul line for a total of 20 Wil suggest this proposition to the = -nead ay - { " o 1 - " N Lone-head play is any play that|Points. Schade was ably assisted by ‘E‘:“;““;""’l Gt h‘ 1(1?“01' :\}::m\e:; 3 e 3 | . Lol % gland league however, want doesn’t go through as originally pro- | the fine defensive work of Martin .00 with the best of the clubs of jected. and Kopf. Pickop for the lose torm ten- the other league and a club circuit. This plan seems to have met with the approval of most of the played a fast game registering 6 Frank Chance, in-entering baseball | 80als from the floor and 2 from fouis. of a 35 to 29 score. The playing of the Swedes was a revelation to their here Saturday. Two scorceless periods were played and in the extra period goals from field, Ellison 3, Dudack 2, Nutting 2, Moody 65, Peterson 2, Nel- Percy and J. Morgan each scored for followers, the work of Brink the son 2, Miller 3, Brink 7, Slegrist; Harvard. This was Harvard’s second | sturdy center and Miller proved too goals from fouls, Ellison 5, Peterson victory over the Tigers. | much for the losers. Ellison was the 2, Miller 2. 5 The Great American Smoke —‘‘Bull” Durham Fall in line with hundreds of thousands of red-blooded smokers of the good old U.S.A. Smoke the cigarette tobacco that's been an American institution for three generations—‘“Bull” Durham. The rich, relishy, star-spangled taste of “Bull’’ puts the national spirit of get-up-and-hustle into your hand-rolled cigarette. “Bull” is the freshest, snappiest, liveliest of smokes. GENUINE ‘BULL DURHAM SMOKING TOBACCO “Roll your own” with “Bull” Durham and you’ll find far greater satisfaction in your cigarette than you ever did before. Made of the richest, mildest leaf grown. “Bull” has a delightful mellow - sweet flavor found in no other tobacco. And its aromatic fragrance is supremely unique. Men who never smoked cigarettes before are now “rolling their own" with “Bull” Durham. FRE An llustrated Booklet, show- ing correctway to “Roll Your Own" Cigarettes, and a packageof cigarette papers, will both be mailed, free, to any address in U. S. on request. Ad- gln(.:! “Bull” Durham, Durham, ‘THE AMERICAN TOBAMMO CO, Ask for FREE package of ‘‘papers”® with each 5c sack. jSm%kmg T‘Hb;r‘co, “eTpLATRWELL & Cu.

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