New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 29, 1916, Page 12

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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 1916. - Tigers Hand Giants a Sound Walloping--Jones Turns Down a $30,000 Fight Offer--Kiniry Will Lead High School Nine--Anderson Wins First Leg in Match Game--Baseball Results. | ‘ TROUNCED,. | Schang of Athletics Out for | “(Goem i R E@EVENEE Catching Record T his Season g LIGHT e e e number their earnest athletes mnext ¢ 1all, then certainly Princeton and all ‘ | 3 % = Mgr. Buol Submits Schedule for ! other rivals should refrain from put- ting themselves under such an unfair akes It Two All By De- : s Granlland FUC® |'“3iiin tor e st tro scasons | An important meeting ing New Yorkers : e = | hae workea under such a hanaiosn | Athietio couneil of the New | through her desire to meet a just re- il hsollees held Another Quer Das in himself may be over-exploited, | quest from the public which pays 2 & but it is evidently sincere, It is no part | most of the bills. | hiuster. When ‘the daily records| But there is no reason why Prince- j number of matters of impor Legin to drift into Secretary John | ton should continue to give her two were transacted. Man Norman Hevdler the ex-Fed will have his | main rlvals this advantage if they re- Bertini. of the basketball fteam re share of base hits and the rest of it. fuse to adopt the same custom. | ported that there would be a sm 6t the ban 2 _ ot we've let it go at that, . — Either all, or none, should be num- profit realized on the past seasc il oy . 3 Well knowing what theodds were for ; We'd like to see Benny make good | bered, to get a fair test. The awarding of monograms to mem £ amount fo much as % -2 3 G e Criereenl Tk, to the last degree. He was a trifle el of the squad was postponed iplayed ‘by the Giants. The 3 - : hoisterous in his self-paise, but at ! | a later date § were trounced by a S : But taking up the cases now of Evers 1¢ast he introduced a new element | A Mere Detail, Perhaps. The council voted to disapprove of B to; 3 and that made It % 4 e k R o i:to affairs and added more than his | We are told that numbering the the selection of Willlam Dudack as ffedk: on four games. The > o Another query reaches out across the Share to the general gayety of things. | plavers only benefits sporting writers, captain of the baseball nine, and in f Houston next Sunday will] % 5 4 : i bisy Ghant “his in itself deserves a fitting reward. | and that, anyway, football is played his place John Kiniry, was selected B serics: besides affording iy RN With .raging lip and burning words | | for the benefit of the team and uni- Captain Kiniry was one of the main fas fans an opportunity to o ; and crimson-tinted glim, | | versity students—not for the public stavs of the team last season, and i 'y Cobb and Benay Kauft % g A We wonder wonder how the Umpire Two Years From Now. | On the day of a big game the 50, player of whom fine results ¥ice of one admission. Cobb 4 3 % e kP feels when John and Heinie start. U e e e e TR e | ho are not university ¢ dents expecte s leader of the tear fled to report’ to his team s » _ g 5 et iTensiwillard Tack intoithe ring| who pay $2 per—total $100,000 > is an infielder nd in the games day e : Sty ; i y . - \ibe | —Exchange . mishaps and near-mis- Colonel J. Tinker picked the Cubs : ge. ! ) h‘: d‘:xxlv‘?::: %4 accident 1w R to finish first and the Phillies to finish If they do it will not be into any = ¥ = i fifth. 1 20 or 24 foot ring. Nothing under a There are many queer and quaint plaver of the Waxakachie . ' i D = SN . SRR R e R s Whereat the Phillies stepped out | 50-100ter if Jess expects to turn | drifts to human nature. The news- |3, 1€ SRS S0 O (R0 TP B i« no nrst inning and @nd made it six straight from the | #10UNd: i = Ll nine e ‘K""‘.””',,"'\_'l !the team pier between the umpire and aforesaid Cubs. Not that these early _ | e e R e President Davis, W. F. Judd “Graw of New York. : soplegdctallnghaves anygencdrivalne ederal league made one big 000 a vear for lelen that helpes LR . ; : 11 but enough at least has happened to 1 inouidinave sranbad e R IR IOREE B 1. iondition of a : make Colonel Tinker wonder whether . S e | : g B o s i i or not he isn’t entitled to one more {58 qivision clubs playing be- | i Unnings, He .put his instru- Gk e 1010000 a0 da T ltheun e H e o I (R e erid B O SIS e N ER son She SN EcnEE NP IOl & RIS one o it of business, bnt was ud- | : : i} ceipts at $3 a throw. Any onc who | re&ime that pays Jess W r_\‘flv'd'r-r"““l‘y" fiazeociaiio o NN 0,sec the rest of the same. | o - This looks to be a bad year for flag | ¢an entice over $150,000 for a ten- i ju‘\":(i\,'.“‘”j\:‘f"\ b fi‘,‘! ‘\‘ ‘\: .\“”?‘!%‘ : ‘J‘ o fc e and Umplre Milier clashed o DeE ol bt entaet Baif i o mne Inesdecisonioxine i aceniii b SARO TS R BERIATEES BRI ORI N ERSEHECE RS L Sl $ The game holds no | hours cach Coming Scason i3 ; ;o > , o & afte 0 th ¥. M Vaprch | 29— : N . ; We've wondered how the pitcher fee plemoor s ¥ % h 4 ” when Ty Cobb goes to bat; JRRRE 1 - nere : We've asked you how the batter feels Y’ fhe Giants £ : J G when Johnson starts to pitch: #¥axahachie ; . And having put these queries through a mere detail, of course season he stood out in the fore jone of the stars in the state in High | school circles. He is also a member of the crack Pirates team Robert Manager Buol were selected a t mittee to purchase necessitie | the team. Treasurer Judd of | council reported. that the past team Jiilon. of rules.iv the strth L 0 in cither circuit will be able to put ; bevond the dope. AN QS thee umpine: had to back » £00d. stuff on dispiay and then finish | hurdle that he can't take. | E On account of the field crowd S ; TO PLAY FOR TITLE. | — - April 15 April 17 tuck. April April C. L. 1. at Suffield fW and Hughie Jenrings azceed £ - % And the club in sixth place may be . The deciding and most important nd rules bef(()]re{(he r!ameh ‘An & o 3 cnly a bleak cdge back of the winner | Spring Song. asketball game of the intercollegiate 3 ow was- good for one hase. . > co0 far as playi strengl s con- tive us spring > poet cried . 3r is ¢ B taes 1 the sttt | L(J‘_If]:‘d_‘ playing strengith is con :Kl’\r:n!-.»nl":“’j(»._" the poet cried. season, which closed more than two | .\\‘u‘v‘fl 2 \.,,y,;,'.,"'\““','," ‘\”\W iy MicTigue tossed a ball that got - e D e e il e ka0 R TR ey Ivan AN O R s rom Heilman and rolled siowly G ) Princeton tied for first place, will ! Fartfordiat Hartrord fhe crowd. McGraw instructed ‘ to' move up, but the umpire 3 Benny Kauff may be a number of | .give us spring,” the Rooter cried, “the mnn‘on_ | 3 3 s, but he is no part of a false | \with o throb Alibi’ For Kauff. 4 3 8 aL ‘Spring with Speaker and with Kauff, #9-;‘“\7 e hois in s hithng . . Benny sr;\l‘[(’.\l away with the great- S <o b Sihitne st_outburst of eloquence in baseball Esterday the Glants might have ristory, relating in advance his feats Bd their way to a ciyse decision Then, getting away to a cheer for their team. Pennsyl ed Merkle bobbed up with four ; : i . Erogey start where the average ath. | Bothy has been handicapped by iliness, including a double. Bashful : e - lete would have been subdued, Kauff | Sir: Which is the more important— | the men practically broke trai | ¥, hpwever, seemed too anxious kept his head up and refused to waver for a goifer to keep his cye on the |after the regular season ended, but | :anr:;)t t;".ik?w‘a {b‘ow- ¥ Fheey s in the sligytest until the base hits HFall or for a prizefighter to keep his | they have got themselves together in i v other Giants in the same 2 ¢gan to poOp ove on the crown until he has counted | good shape again, and a big attle | (Other eament. Dovle got- out of the | Philadelphia, ~March 29—Wally | Last season Schang was shified ; i T T o e T it o THE B A b s e e z anticipated. And Sixteenth Pages.) after making -a hit in the *hirq | SCP@N8. the brilliant young catcher |around considerably by Mack: bur, and 1f it-had not been fop |°f, the FPhiladelphia American: is | while he put up a steady game wheve- | = — m—— sue's generosity in iving sig |OUf After the backstopping record |ever he was used, his backstopping on balls in the last four innings | 1S Season.’ The husky receiver of | was not as brilliant as it was the B would not heve made their S:)em‘;\;h\lftms has asked Manager |year before. This year Schang says Wo runs. uff- had his chance in the ninth, p McTigue fanned th> first two rs and walked the next three. best Benny could do was to dr\ve] i back: for ‘the fly tha: ended the oo =5 WON'T LET WILLARD |LoCAL BOWLER siiows | Ny == p‘ g Pl‘ifiCGAlel’t tobacco ..40111001 Bl P ) VISITOR SOME TRICK = ; i No_ Falos ‘Alarim Spring with pos ! played in Weightman hall at Un:- Naugatuck in this city versity of Pennsylvania tonight. N. [ H. 8. Alumni in | | this Princeton is the favorite in the play- : i lay 20—New Haven at New Ha A D off and the interest is so keen at Ol Srrinefand iCobb. N u that a special train will carry | the Tiger rooters to Philadelphia to ven | May 24—Middletown in this ci | May 27—South Manchester at ! South Manchester | May 30—Hartford in this ecity | | June 3—New Haven in this city Sporting News On Thirteenth ack to permit him to catch |he wants to he known as the har = s ) 5 STy every game for his team during the |est working receiver in the 2 r ? e Rey et 1916 season. Schange states he Is|leagues. Wally will more than ha stronger than he ever was and is|his hands full handling the Athletics’ capable of eclipsing the record made | young pitchers, and Mack has a by George Gibson some years ago.|number of them too. ALEX IN GAME. Anderson in Tip Top #orm and Bur- | B e o Tmers rew 1| | bowr Gete a Beatme—oumer | T ETRTHE | 1 h Se\'c:nh :fx: Final (i:lr:(‘_ 11’[‘01]] Jones Declines That Sum for tesults, { : A - 0“‘ £ 4 plpes w ei:e one : % R . Petersb"r'g» Ti!’\ March 29— | 2 iSddic Anderson tue iocal star of N 1\ 2 Philadelphia Nationdls madé a | BOll[ Wlth Fl‘&fl FllltOH the Acina Alleys, contestel in the rirst by 0 R! : snlo e ore jn sweep of the spring series of | s i ] d O v g 5 of games with arbour of n exhibition es with the Chi- ; : : g3m h . RISy, b- Nationals by winming jyester-| New York, March 29.—Thomas ] 0 n8tn JagCSienlas puuning fou 8 gdame, -3° to: 1. v i 3 R etin manac 1 tollhota e Donoejof sewEsnee AnHoiSUD eEYInes R e e e e lles even in hitting, but coulq | Anancial affairs of champion JesS |, .. riark, having for s best niri, dand the bingles when most need- | Willard cooly turned down an offer | made in the third frame. Alexander started for the Phillies | OF Sio-‘;w JSateroey, oniiie menny ;' from the western pari Joe: Tinker's men could do very | Weight boxers’ services for an evening. ....;y won the second sitin e with his delivery. The S:Oorp:er\ To most folks $30,000 looks like a lot ., \ arein® of ‘ons it s r. h, e, |0f money, but to T. Jones it seemed | Loy 1o for $50. Thn s - 0000700001 6 5 |a mere trifie. He gave the offer a i [/ 'S ladelphia, ... 00300000x—3 ¢ 1 | brief thought or two and then threw it | "\ paor o patteries:- McConnell, Vaughn and | into the discard. _ 96 104 105 12 Alexander, Demaree and The $30,000 offer was from a syndi- | gy rhour (Southingcon) | N\ NN out ‘of five strings: in all but one \ \ MIMIDINL.|.. N\ | cate in Milwaukee, headed by Tom sy Andrews, the well-known promoter. 3 - - Sl o First $25,000 was offered to Willard | ]Ml}::‘ :_mfe ‘"‘;*I‘:“f':(l“l" the se for a 10-round bout in the Wisconsin | nmfi 12’»‘::(,\\1{)‘— “ s “:".“\_;“‘C 8. 2 o 2 = metropolis with Fred Fulton, another | & > > novan’s Charges Win With Ther- Jong, lanky Kansas boxer. When'| Brennecke. mometer Behaving Badly. Jones turned down the first offer, the | Cusack 2 84 176 £3— promoters boosted the figures to $30,- | A. Anderson .115 103 112 30— 000. They wanted to stage the hout | Brennecke .. 81 108 106 100— on April 26. | —_ - As Fred Fulton has been touted as 298 295 ihe logical candidate to meet Willard, Wright. than their engagement with the | now that Frank Moran has been dis- | poperg . 51 104 attanooga Lookouts yesterday af- | posed of, Andrews belioved that Wil- | s puppe; . 95 g7 foon. The only hot thing to the |lard would jump at the chance to i m’' wpjghg ernioon’s muss was the nickname | meet the big backwoodsman. Tulton Tobasco Kid Eberfield, and _that | stands 6 feet 43z inches in height and bsn’t hot enough to make one for- | weighs 215 pounds. He has a reach f that the thermometer was bat- | which is almost as long as Willard’s. g around the 45-degree mark. The Tnstead of jumping at the offer, as ore: the Milwaukee promoicts expected, Jones calmly notified theia yesterday ew York .. 001100004—6 12 {hat such a bout was out of the ques- | H. Rittner . 5 4 80 hattanoozs 000000000—0 {tion at this time. Willard’s con- | Stagis < Batterie Keating, Cullop, Shock- | tract with the Sells-Floto circus will | H. Puppel and Nunamaker; Allen, Karr, Her- | take effect on April 29 and Jones will | Fleins ceeenen rt, Smith and Kitchin. | not take on any engagement which | Peplaw .. 5 Bl 90 103 3 Rridd = . niight jeopardize the $150,005 contract | - — v “CrT NG g | With the tent show. o Jones wired 443 459 AND’ CIRCUIT RACING DATES. | 1 "0y 0 v s day that there st o Fartford, Conn, March 29—Eleven | oyld he no bout with 1t alton. = s s rces, for a total of $23,000, will com- Jones was to have started back to | »Wuirf]*"" 08 S0 st v‘he_ program for t?w annual | chjcago yesterday but stayed over to .C,m’dr‘gtnt G 5 ;2“r 10t 9 fand “Circuit races at 4hr?r(cr 0ak | gitend to some fiinal details in con- ; - ette ..... 89 76 52 ark, Sen_tember 4 to 9. Six of the | poction with the motion pictures of | % urgen ...... 79 9:: vents will be on a new half-mile |t willard-Moran bout. He will 381 aclk: The: principal race will be the | ;o urm to Chicago this morning. =i === harter Oak -2:08 trot for $5,000. B I S D T T £ N O T 3 448 | fikrles .close on May 1. ring within a short time and his first — ! — opponent is likely to be Jim Coffcy, SCHMARR BEATS LARSON, SMOKE the Irish heavyweight. While Frank Returning to his old titie form, Moran’s next opponent has not been | .. e il Ascidod Fvor, {’r{’ers oas some tapy | “Hermie” Schmarr admivistersd a ’ vesterday that the Pittsburgher wonld | Walloping to Charles ( the be matched to box Jack Dillon, the In- [ Schmarr association pool tournament, dianapolis light heavyweisnt, before a | last evening the man wich the carly | | local club, after Moran ha ro?urng{llm‘ks being on the long end of a moi el EYHuse ¥ i sTON SA‘E“‘. N\ N\ . YANKS BEAT MINORS. M. hattanooga, ~Tenn., March 29— pm all Teports, the battle of Look- mountain was a very frigid af- r, but the Yankees are unwilling concede that it was any more frap- N\ R the national joy smoke N\ EY fire to a jimmy pipe jammed-chock- Men who have stowed away gentle old pipes full of Prince Albert tobacco, or roll up for years have brought them back to the a makin’s cigarette—if you're digging after tune of Prince Albert! It will set free reasons why P. A. has revolutionized the any-pipe-shy-tongue! pipe and “rolling” game; why P. A. has trebled the number of pipe smokers in six years; why Prince Albertis foday smoked in every civilized nation on the globe ! Give P. A. the third-degree-test-out! Drill Rolled in a makin’s cigarette, Prince Albert like sixty into that enticing flavor, that fra- is so refreshing and so delightful, it gives you grance, that long-burning coolness. Your a brand-new idea of how mighty fine a real confidence never will be abused! The pat- makin’s cigarette can be! It’s as satisfying ented process makes all that possible—and to your taste as the prettiest thoughts of frees the tobacco from bite and parch! smoke-happiness you ever uncorked! MM N\ The games in the Nut league sulted as follows: Peanuts. \ N\ P. A. will prove out 100 per cent. any hour of the twenty-four! It will give any man all the pipe-happiness he ever did yearn for! AN\ N\ \\ For Prince Albert has won its way on its merits. e el I e Dl Won-over men of all tastes—it's so universal in its tins, 10c; handsome pound and half-pound tin popu]arlty; so good, and fnendly’ and satlsfynqg | humidors, and in that classy pound crystal-glass ; 4 5 humidor with sponge-moistener top that keeps It will win you quick as a flash! the tobacco in such bang.up condition ! R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Winston-Salem, N. C. N \ A\ T ‘A MILD, PLEASANT 5c CIGAR lfrom his five weeks’ vacation. to 56 score.

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