New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 20, 1916, Page 8

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014 Age No Hindrance to Bu siness Men’s Indoor Team--Tad Jones Discusses Football With Captain Black--Meriden High Beais Locals by Single Point--O’ Rourke to Make a Kick Over That $1,000 ) FELLOWS SHOW YOUNGSTERS UP Siness Meh Hand X. 0. to Comeback Theory fhe Saturday Night an In Jeague staged an auspicious f Satur evening .at the when two rattling contes Eed : fhzs, i jom baset put up er that yo ‘actor own L up by g stunts B a and ther game as hibition ame, a1t in ndoor the excelle ert Loo on atl s goat was i zame gnni m., Ppre ap; inty of iehi nound | the | iller behind derable with winner: ceumulated. up the p 1 burden | s in the last inning and | > without a run. game was between and the West Ends, and the former ore and Moody were i victors and Hultgre sewetter for the 1 rs ness to do second neers m by BISCUITS TO ME ed Polish sen—Lewis [ HASSEN. Grappler (o Me Faces Costello, Waldek Zbyszko, o ns Hassen, th br, in one bo rnament s’ theater Eht, is; in good will wrestle ‘hicago grap- i to 3} Hartfor:1 the eve any, fully wrestler as his brother, who toured this country so several years ago. 7 a w of fact. the younger |i jother etter man on the mat | lan the other in manv respects, such | speed. It is speed which en- fasten on many of the bring him victory over heavier adversaries Zbyszko-Hassen match one between Strangler Coste The third betwoen Jack Me- Farmer B the Ver- man A matches will to falls out a essfully 1t him to hich and the of onger Besidc lere will be Pwis and Gus mber will ath and ont stron to finish, i | be | | a CORNELL SQUAD REDUCED. Cuts Baseball Groun Starts Training Table. Tthaca Y., March 20—The 11 baseball squad heen cut enty were the coach, art arpe and N n Cor- to Al- group will ible tomorrow. baseball and will be run by Cafeteria, in the Do- buildi instead of 1ssociation itself. This nature of an experi ha by and t nine Sharpe in at 1e trainine ack e Univer festic Science b the Athle Brve is in the erit The the e baseball squad udd, Burpee team this vear e e men retained o Austin, Burgard « Dunlap. Eckley, Huckins, Ludwig, Miller, O’Connell, Olsen Por- Quintan Russell Rickard Scuit, Sutterby, lentine, Whitney, Wolfrod n Benedict, arr, H Cas- oftma Millin, elic fin trel nd JAKE SHOWS "EM. cal Lad Pounds Out Home Run for 20-—The in. charge . of esterddy easily of the Tex 7 to if- re made by the visi- it 2 home run over fence, while Kocher, flunter- and rell “got doubles. The home icam made only four its, two off Palmer, who pitched the rst five innifigs and an equal number Perritt was wild, and hitting 2 rell led in batting with nd two sii while Kocher double a ingle .in team 1 the box four do ma two times np. Bpecial Ratesto Ladies Afternoons AETNA BOWLING ALLEYS TELEPHONE. MOKE OXMOOR | A MILD, Ch ners Jeems Says Method of Payment | made by Tinker Out Early With His Flag Filying Forecast, Tampa, Fla., March 20—Jo: out s with® the statement that th sago Cubs are pennant win- in the parent and his club ennant race from June on. There 5 no doubt but what Tinker has a rong team. He hag had two clubs organ- should lead the \\o pick a powerful aggregation from. Last cason hc captured the Federal Tinker league flug with in the National league this sei- | {pe son. Joseph s team ization s he has the strongest | great team. j | The | Tell me, O Delphic O That once held regal sway— Not who will win the war beyond {Where mill stand at bay; Not who will win the hattle Leyond the blood-red sca Where armies melt That come to April's ttut rather tell me The destinies of man, What sort of chance has Willard got knock out Frank Moran? cle, sround out as the snows lea as you spin To | Arise, O Delphic Oracle, That once foretold the truth, Of armies and of battlefields, Of Age and eke of Youth; ! Not whether Teddy’s turn will come o rule us of ol Nor whether Wi Will satisfy the fold; But rather, tell ‘me- as b hazy veil of doubt, ifas F. Moran got any chance iwe knock Jess Willard out? son’s policies vou lift To Mr, There i that M Willard and Mr, Moran. least one definite point Willard and the cqually Mr. ! Morun should consider Ten tho nd or twelve thou :ad | people are going to pay more money ce this contest than was ever dreamed of before regarding a ten- {round, no decision hout. Having paid more average prices, they naturally, to expect more. And as r. Willard and Mr. Moran are got- ting record-breaking prices for their display, it is strictly up to both to see | that those who made this big money possible get the proper return; it is up to the brace of principals, not to play it safe just to get by, but to try and earn those big purses as far they can. They owe this much to the box- { fizht loving public and to the game |itself—the game that has lifted them (from a few dollars a day to a good many thousand dollars a minute, at than re double going, as strong team, while | E in the National league werc | Ehej ceded but weak. Now that Joc 't mean that W picked the best material fron to shut both two clubs he is sure to have CVer On paper it casily looks is the strongest club in the league. Tinker has also a of promising youngsters n Several of them have shown in the practice games here. this wealth of material on hand Cubs will surely be there the Cubs anything has Ingredient, Nard and cLne eyes away as if it National number hand. up well With the cvery Lest second, each in his stock. be wasted where time is paid for the rate of over $2,000 a minute, over $330 a second. should Not many give the moments can at or k3 Harvard can lose football stars by | et i | 'ROURKE IS SORE, | WILL FILE APPEA of $1,000 is Unfair—Ball After Joh, of his Bridgeport., March 20-—Believi: that the terms of settlement claim again: tion are unfair, James H. O'Rourke he will file notice of his 4ppeal to the national commission to day. He says the of announced by s is decidedly heard of in baseball O'Rourke was allowed $1,000 for his services to the defunct Eastern ociation, but instead of receiving a check promptly he was informed that a series of no interest paving notes, payable one and two years from date, would be issued. The Eastern directors ,ntended to pay John H. Zeller in the same way for his Pittsfield claim. O'Rourke just learned that the notes are unsecured, and that settled him in his deter- mination to appeal. Neal Ball, leading candidate Bridgeport's manager, will go ‘o New York Monday for a final confer- ence with the Toronto manager. Ie will make an earnest plea for his 1c- lease, but if he cannot get asv from the Tnternational league W drop out of the race for the Bridsc yort job. method the ¥ unjust N 2 GLAZE COLORADO COACH. Boulder, Col, March 20—Ralph former Dartmouth and Uni- f Colorado football ar, was night elected football coach at University of Colorado. aze aptain of the Dartmouth foot- team in 1906. In 1907-08 he the was bhall was a member of the pitching staff of | the was Boston Americans. Last year ae football coach at the Univer: of Southern California. The Abolition of Man. (New York Times.) was that dauntless stateswo- worthy of stern Kansas of the who uttered the immortal phrase, “Man must be abolished” ? She was of Kansas. Perhaps she was of the mighty days of Populism. At any rate, her stark words still rankle in the bosom of the sex to be abolish- ed. Hers was a counsel of perfection. In The Emporia Gazette a milder but still sinister attack on the Tyrant is Womgn Who Votes.” She writes that “the men will never again have a right to smoke at ban- quets in Kansas.” To live in Kansas may be a joy so consummate that the smoker will not s the forbid- den cigar. But coar men in non- Who man, fifties, er I | i | | | | where shall guilty man hide? the Eastern associa- ! for ! the carload: but until she loses Percy Taughton there is no grcat call for «ny Crimson tears. suffrage states, may be forgiven for shuddering. California bans The women district, in s adopted a | | | nother clubs of scourge: the Alamedax ' sion recently at Lodi, resolution for the resto ation of the poll tax, but specified particularly that the tax should noi apply to women. So The Sacramento Bee. Tor Haughton that few othe modern telescope into all which is jjust a has could nd taken see material with a rounded it out the essentials of stardom— the ability to do somethi trifie better than someone els Where, These y curtailments and burdens seem guide- boards on the dark road to Abolition. | Over the Centuries. remember—I Temember— As Tom Hood used fo say. When Caesar led the Roman Leagus | And Pompey used to play: To a Young Man's Mustache. (Lucia LaMesse in Stanford | iy B | When Homer's paper sent him down PR W vt e .| To cover games at Troy, Eleniilis = feobxicbihan elstithoulole ni| iy lEr A vl e (i - Lo e foot) his 1ip, i Each tiny hair immaculate in place | ' 25 DUt a little boy. Shielded from harm when he his soup doth sip, The very essence of tonsorial grace! Yet [ must dread the time when thou art grown. a 1 remember—I (Well, Hood repeated, too) When Virgil had a story faying Romulus was through: Slifnrlstivie s komp lan Joncc L ce3audauienen L ESRiREd Dipped in all beverages ever known. .. .. > i The veritable strainer of his face, o'\ Matty, at his father’s Still, as I gaze on thee in ansxious | o DeVer Wom a game. thot, sometim or not? remember— I wonder, are you there Machine Malkers “The Germans,” are the greate all machine alkers, where efliciency counts.” Let us take a brief 10ok. In the . Some |way of machine makers, there 5 the story | njp. MeGillicuddy and then a My, girl’'s rescue of two |jeGraw. Ther also u Carrigan hoys by hanging from a(und a'Jennings, a Callahan and g lettering them hold on to | yyonovan. Also a Moran. I her legs. Pictures of the girl and | of the sixteen Big League leaders of her legs were printed with the leleyen are Irish. Which( as porcont. | story, which as might be guessed v o e e, told by her. The hoys and th father said it was all made up-—one boy helped the other out and the girl was on the shore and di nothing. Now a breakfast food compa s decorated her with a hero medal tory all told over again with photos lof girl and her legs. Also denial by | boys and father. In the hands of a - ¥ | | good story teller it makes interest- that 40,000 Russians get for fighting | |ing reading, too. Almost anything (W0 Weeks with hard lead. i will find readers that is illustrated . | a girl's legs, though they are gott McGraw believes that Jeff Tesrcau, | rather common in print now. Rube Benton and Poll Perritt will win over sixty games for him thi on. Ana despite 1915, it isn’t very often that McGraw's spoken belief is | pushed back down his throat, v an cditorial, of Chiefly About a (Waterbury Girl's American.) easy these da the papers told Legs. Fame is weeks ago of a brave drowning bridge and In the act s just exit of starting anything, i as well to see that the neares: working properly t t | | | Half-Lengths, | | | It all depends upon your environ- ment. Willard gets the same pay for Loxing three minutes with soft glov A Story of Mystery and G “Fantomas’ me. household France as Sherlock is as a tain - p name in is in the English speaking countri It is the name of a m erious be who is present in every crime, who is intangible and unknown. spector Juve, the great police detec- tive, is ever on his track, but never succeeds in locating this phantom of crime. Read these stories of crime which are appearing in The Sunda World Magazine serially, beginninz next Sunday. This is the most thril- ling story of a super-cririinal ever written—advt. Holmes — | “The one unce . |Cubs’ strength.” as Joe Tir i “is the pitching staff.” V polite spot to have break out, if vou where higher up. t of the ker puts it, ch is no uncertainty arting any- but T an are Her “Only arc words that the fans adore: twenty-four days more,” —I . J Benny Kauff has laid out a fine | | | | for But it does both mean that, through ! | | | | | PORT » LIGHT by Grantland Rice | little hike Lattir th Siberia sprit f along for hir if he through the first month 20 About fine have in Northern should around rings as ELM CITY CLUB. Dan O'Neil d ‘o Be Behi to Secure Franchise. March 20 today in Worcester settle the ow ship of the Ne ven basehall nine in the gue. The representatives George Cameron estate. the franchise and grounds at Savin Rock, the 1y will WANT d Move New will Haven, be made e which the have The throu bl property. tood to be from sringfiel New man It is to will morrow. N city has regarded Stoddard Rock poses grounds ue which ter of New John c a who is backed by I likely that the Brev be agreed the of the teaw -0 Neil upon oddard of th made an offer W liheral ans the ds for veal cstate and to remove the team situated near Dixwell aven- is nearer the husiness cer Haven than is Savin Rock ilins and Cornelius O'Con- nell will probably attend tomorrow meeting in Worcester the Cameron estate. WINS TWO, Turner Tcams Bow Tivice To Militia Men. £ basketball teams won two victories Saturday evering at the State Armory, the first teaulr defeating the New Britain Turners quinte:, score 50 to 17. Zehrer and Thompson starred the winner Co. loser The second tea won from i a hot contes nd Chalmer and m of the militia men urner ond team, sore 12 to 11. Clyde played weli for the va shining eli ic- s Denni th and | for the short enders SCCONAd Of the CON- | m s wre———— " i temorro combinaticn | representinig | and Klumpt for the star second will date, of the in New announe- discussed A captain at a later meeting held was he it CONQUERS LOCALS ' Defails of Spring Practice Dis—‘“” cussed—Exeter Star for Yale Victory in Sight Local Playee Dungles and Meriden Walks Off With Contest. Haven. March of Solomon of quintet Saturday p tossers High five, on the part of guard 1 referee Lo foul, and depriving the home boys a pretty basket caged by t tells the tale of the losing of Has ntest Solomon however, played throughout the | eveniy his defensive work was the cause of the Silver City a8y A~ { tion not piling up a much larger score. Hibbard and Breckenridge were the chief tters for the locals, the connecting with the basket for while Br ed four and the foul anxiety on sehool ird part basketball ht battle local Yale 1ched zht new head New ind spent with Captain Cupe K ed the matter [ ball practice, in wh i endeavor i damental gan it played at 1t | | | Haven fou the Meriden when ho. od to the The score scus of pring Jone mists the 1 caused |-call a to teach ot &t decided tc the ard was tice a d At with Sweene. soon a footha the snow three feef {the new Yale or, is expec when will he perfc Fido Kewip football team. who three vears that school Yale next | vestore fine game i fand the Dresent fit and idiron is o Milse athletic advi ch New Have fad n of the pla will ¢ Adeep. eneral to point former o cck toss Captain cter nine from ! ha | Ter | winners chiefly work did the lc Of the thirty his team, Fitz which is a work for MeGrath The New Fitzpa 3 through o down a came knov here ) whirlw e * brill ho t examing - | ture tation of | ty hool reach New Havea nt senls | today tutoriy ef d two for at il points cap- landed twen- night's Mischler and finely summary Kempton he the best 1. Exeter | to Yale, instead ! e had intended i to have been d I tion of Tad Jones ball coach. Jonc who {urned out F ship teams, and B3 Tiim. Captains Vaughn represénting the Harvard baseball Taft hotel herc the conduct of the championship games between the three universities this sprin | | The question as to whether { coach should be permitted to sit | the players’ bench direct | was taken up at length. . L son a move was rted bar | WELSH-MITCHELL | coaches from the bench and put the'| Wilvaukee, Wis, March { command of the team in the hands|die Welsh, lightweight champion tof the captain ‘o definite decision {and Ritchie Mitchell, Milwaukeer on this matter was reached at to- | have been matched for a ten round day's meeting {hout here for either April 7 or April e question 10, it was announced yesterday quarter in one player also played boy's de score ar Dart ion to com mouth. wheie | is believed recent Yale's new the champion- men of Meridan Ticsson Britain ridg to the selec- ! Left forward foot- Mischler W coach Right forward Mctirath tor idolize % \ Solomon Law and Nash, ! Left guard. Yale, Princeton and teams, met in the 1y to diseus Parker o X Warden Right guard Meriden High 30, 29; field goals, Hibbard Parker, Fitzpat- Mischler, McGrath: foul goals, ckenridge 9, Fitzpatrick 3; referce, Wi n; time of halves, 20 Score, ain High ridge 4 rick Br Kenan, minutes. New Brit- Brecken- ve on ffairs | and BOUT, 20—Fred- of umpires also was “Bull” Durham. i /1t takes c;fily a little The Star Spangled Alert, square-shouldered, ready-for-a-fight-or-a-frolic men_like the punch, dash, vim and vigor of the great American smoke — Wherever the flag goes over the seven seas, there you'll ind these lively lads “rolling their own with “Bull” Durham. 7 Ask for FREL package of “‘papers®” with each 5c sack. v Smoke! SMOKING TOBACCO practice o learn to “roll your own” with “Bull” Durham. " Simply get the knack— then you'll enjoy your cigarette as you never did before. Because the live, crisp, snappy taste of “Bull” Durham has never been equalled by any other to- bacco. And rolled up in a cigarette it gives you the freshest, mildest, wholesomest smoke in the world. The distinctive mellow-sweet flavor and aromatic fragrance of “Bull” Durham make it unique among tobaccos. For genuine smoking pleasure and satis- faction 1 1 your own” with “Bull” Dus Ict, show- ct way our Own" Cigarettes, and a package of ci will both be ai J address in U. S. on request. Ad- dress “Bul Durham, Durham, N. C. THE AMERICAN TOBACCO CO. Y v

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