New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 4, 1916, Page 8

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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, APRIL 4, 1916. e pllege Nines Ready to Start Season--Cubs’ Owner Opposed 1o Inier Club Series--Tad Jones Receives " First Visit From Mr. Hoodoo--Loca! Bowlers Win in Middletown--With the Ball Players HMAN OPPOSED ) SPRING SERIES New Owner Evidently b by Experience This Year Zimmerman, Cubs’ Infielder, Says He is Off The Umps N | The apparel oft proclaims the, ball game should be classed as mur- ¢ i [ man.” wrote Shakespeare. This lino | der. that a man, Who has a meld of eleven Yor Apr i—Agits i was penned before baseball was | — [lsbandien ADIdsinIyIoal iR EaN The college b 1 sprin ibition gamce be- Lrown | en, ought to go in the hole for bein : ‘«' ""‘ Caso najor ue clubs, especially | In basebuall neither the apparel nor | The Ciich x z” Tl r.' o ‘.' ve. | Wiliiam HH‘ ( -‘ iy ! Sl “ S e DA et et We'll reach the top and hold it |.>le‘ generally observed here, ho RO 2 T found ady the man as he vn in the gamo, | thHi8! seuson if we only ‘keép. ‘in ‘the i cver, Ins (,hf"‘ a man must take g othiers Wil u“ the \‘. i nes . Charles Weeghman | And so the non-combatant is oft G George Staliings, 1" . o sEiOR Bl b e e e her club owners. Johnsou puzzled by the queer shifts in affai ARaIne s e e st g 3 : | U Which is the answer first and N r n 7 have heen among the carly o '!hL i1 et u] wius con- | A Casc in Point | And fore and-aft and all the tlme, ‘JIN,\ STAR EARLY irds and both hayc AT ‘” the we AT o the ame X T r " g . g e o Bereft any mystic cast | tean The N hbers of the samie clr Here a case in point. \While i Y \ OO T a iin ha : nbe of the anie circ t to | 'ron pa d pro: or ribald rhy § 4. | 4 1 1 pro-season contests, and that we were at a Southern training comp | 0] pallid prose o ribald rhyme; IN YALE FOOTBALL its o Sitoker of & Sumt ake ave auld advoeatel| {his' spring a visitor who! knew very | ¢ e¥Cit of SUX 2B HEPY B P Wi “to be in for another fine on preventing such exhibi- | little about baseball came up to the | ,Ij‘ fl‘“"‘\ “‘]“"';“‘” L oy | cason. Amher its southern trip xt year. | room ome night. While he was there | (& L OW, H18 S5SE S8 § Tl | Springficld Boy Looked Upon As Star 1aping up well for a team . that asked to public his | one of the players dropped in for . | = < BCL H | cnt South from indoor practice ., ) the question, President John | short fanning bee. 5 TRl R et o o i o o i | Next Scason, Dropped by only and when the weather becams oL e o1 e il chew of tohacco in his:mot e ere 1s no more ched Lo this, i more suitable for baseball Amherst of the National league yes- | CH o LOHReeD (B BILL I i) P No dull philosophy to shoot, | Shefl sehool. will surely make itself 1 in - erted th e W not op- rulled over one eye and a fine output | o 5 S By O | nake i look live and pring exhibition games be- | of profanity in his general conversi- | ;" y.¢ 15 place amid the loot: | n, April Walter e “,.“ g S : they confined the contests N e e Wioel el e || B o e R S B RS | counted upon as ol G caloU T A (R gan 1 5 S S R 5 o hold the Reader i uspense, < g ! @1 especially ard game for an openc nedizic neighborhood — of sitoc| remarked: #Say, Tdl hate tol [l 88 G0 o SR siinding . Job, 1si|iguard) position' on' Ulie Vale: foothallllandl the” Woreaster boys meays L dnd tining camps | umpire a ',:umv‘\\llh that fello in SRR jteam next fall, was dropped from the |gome trouble in L YSamed : iz leaguc clubs want to g iRl 0 e e GE o o 06 el | e SRR e skt IRl PomELo in tryir to connect her in the spring, T sec | | type that would bite off an car if e eieneviin ctudies vesterdayy MoGratnt|ons 1K' twists, Brown will open n if they do so in | giitaingsRdidnitcofitoRauit i i | “Ifulton to get Iplayed two years at IBxeter, whe ‘.““ ‘,(‘_':”_:;"’T”“‘:[“‘"l‘”“‘" SR heir training camps i He was surprised to hear that the | o)< ¢ (his is some one | he made a it irscerd mnls s et e e o e ;“‘ ,.‘yr ‘mm,., e esanjocher S el ulayeriin auestion’ wasioneiol the ould remit John Lawrence Sulli- | first blow T e e e e R B e ining regime more intercsting | most pleasant mannered entries in § "ot e Tanasiimons . $25,000,- | football team has received at the ! pagies seems to I R S A i ner am e | | the game, and had never been -t | oot pnf W " Ihands of the faculty. e e B . it must not be understocd | | oft the field, rarely protested a de- | Roland Harriman, son of the lale | e of candidates . this spring. would countenance the Giants | | cision and was never on the hunt for | e T AT P e e T e mouth will open up with Ford- b Super for example, com- | | any sort of trouble. It was over his | TO SELL D A i v sty et w':‘nf«'u.’«"x"]’]1.:,:;\'”",".1”' E \iAn e R for a series prior to the | | bean. Denver, Col, April oared crew yesterday ufter a week e . ettde of the championship season. | i —— {ions were begun here yvesterday for |absence with an attack of (onsHti | Goormetonn Navy and Amherst bewn. sames between members of | | ey e the sale of the Denver Wostern |Sturtevant captain of last year's crew, | opiicie o o1y Gd Sraherst-Penn. o t leagues 1 cannot see any ob- | | Anothcr Dhocs: | ieague baseball club. [t was an- jrowed again at No. He| has boen Hiemy o wrriiiame Wil start 1t to them anywhere,” added | i In the course of the evening two | nounced that offers had been received jout with a sorc The ’varsily } e e \v‘”;m‘_\ o rdiam le Ag : ) | cther men dropped in, but the visitor | from Hugh Jones, formerly of Lin- frowed four miles yesterday at a 10 | o princeton, Dartmouth at i Chicago Club Cured. ; [Eesll=dmtolicatenihaly They | coln, Neh.: Charles Thomas, former- | stroke. R e ey hman yesterday stated in were both hionably vet i1y secretary of the Chicago Nationals, S e el e mbale Ll Ll 5% 2 b ol ons tioh of asin s i Ly . { more, Georgetown at Navy and Am- b that as long as he was con- | | without any touch of flashiness, { and J. 1% Gunthorpe of Denver. NAPS TO LET OUT PLAYERS. | ot af Pennsylvania. The next day with the Cubs they would no | WE CORRIEHLERGI TR WO U, | £0L 50 L Cleveland, April 4—Pitchers Colla- | \yijliams will play Georgetown, Cor- meet National league clubs in | pleasant, non-aggressive in argument | Mo TR more and Kelly, together with —in- | . i ariqora wArsies™ and Darte it i b [ and weli versed on the general topics | CORNELL'S TOURING NI} (5lders Thom island Wamssanns raral|hor s Casy S 8Bl oAl seven-game series at Tamps. [ of the day. They talked very littlc | Ithaca, April 4—Highteen plavers |due to draw their releases from (he | (i he the first real ~day for thg h the Cubs were wiped up for | lmsvhull.h Their diction was without | vere chosen yesterday by Coach Al |[local American league club, it Swa Rl R _m;m‘g thi Tbookings mr ontest, have Impressed Weegh- a flow. There w a certain dignity | Sharpe of the Cornell baseball team |announced here yesterday. Carter and Tt Vans \m)w_"v\.wl‘rf‘;”mq ith the utter inadvisability of | n the bearing of both that was dis- | to make the southern trip: which |Garrett, pitchers, who were sent 10 | piiycaton, Lafavettesibennsy\VRibs. ng the experiment tinctive | starts Wednesday. They are Russell, | the Indianapolis and Newark —clubs | (o ol Catholic university, Willlame- Johnson will no doubt bring | The visitor was surprised to hear | Perkins, Olsen and Valentine, pitch- | vespectively, will be recalled when- | oo \vorcester *“Tech”-Tufts, Penn- estion up before the Nationsl | they were ball players. - “Umpiring,” | urs; Mellen, Ludwig, Sautters, Eck- |cver they show sufficient improve- | ([ otia’ State-Lehigh, Rutgers-West sion. He advocated the ban | 2 | he said after they had left, “must be | jey, Quinlan, Casper and Wolford, in- | ment to warrant it. Morton and | 5 oo™ 5o onth-Crescent athletio barnstorming, and succeeded | Chicugo, April 4.—FHelnfe Zimmer- ) fi the National league were con- pretty easy now with men of that | fielders: Sutterby, O'Connell, Dunlap, | O'Neil will be the battery on the | i und New Yorl scent fatite:c ing that adopted. President | man, the Cubs' star inflelder is off | cerned. In seasons pasl Heinie has | N'“'lm 'h’r K:imr‘l Who are thev?’ | Austin and Whitney,outfielders opening day. dd gy v vesterday asserted that the | yne umps this season He says so | Feen put out of a number of games, | hen he heard that they were’] i Bt atae uo bt the b | IRSR o fenboil © S4¥8 SO | ynd his absence has Dbeen keenly | Johnny Evers and Lee Magee. two of | A hReue i atine M prorativ| elf, and so does Manager Joe | telt by his team. 1f Zimmerman | the hardest fighters, two of the most . bwner in the big leagues Is | Tinker. Zim recently promised | sticks to his resolution and is in every | ag&ressive, scrappy stars of the pro- . nvinced of the folly of intra- | Josephus that his lips were sealed suine the Cubs should be away up in | fession, he came near fainting | and the ban is bound | #nd his ears filled with cotton as far the fight for the pennant from start | T give it up” he said. “If that | | as the arbitrators and the coachers . to finish. | fellow was a peaceable player | SENEE | Sl - - = o S ©nd these last were Kvers and Magee, | ou On ut by e e ST | A - o there's nothing left in appearances - 50DY: | K S CITY BOXER WAS ONE, TWO, THREE Orleans, April 4.—The Chi- | Types . ' " ationals defeated the New . He! o M i So atfonals lefcated e’ New oy Hoon Knocks ow Mevers of | FOR LOCAL BOWLERS | o, sou cannot atwnss fell what « sers et 18! St S s i New York in First Round. { fellow is by the way he looks. Wil- ! b esterday by 6 to 2. The score: | : i ; o ol - Jard, the heavyweight champion, has - h.oe joston, April 4.—Trial bouts in the a frontispiece that is fairly reekin ,,,,, 6 7 iver Cit Artis " i 3 $ e e 3 . 5 |national amateur boxing champion- R City Lone Artists Bow to the |\ ji;, pleasant intent. Kven in the iou get more rattllng aton. Hendrix and | ship tournament furnished plenty of Prowess of Hardware City Five— | 'NE “]‘“ ,f”‘““‘"; ”'"“I for I"'" mosi STRERE R e S i 5 fris ael | part placia or adorned with a smile d p/ AU (RO T Sport foy the 5,000 | spreiatons u Brennecke Ieatures, No one would ever pick him out for gOOd smokes and more v B e mbled in l\\f{vh)am"f hall Iflfl m\Eh}; R il & i i a fighter, much less a champion t t h t f RS NBEDED SUBMARINES, | Roy Helton of the Kansas C Ey A, C e ca rowling quintette in tae ( Bennie Leonard, first heir to the* ‘N, burg, Pa.. April 4.—Members proved the sensation in the 145 pound Inter-City Bowling league found an | lightweight throne. Jnoks like a as y cne soutor a Sl e ; 5 | cla He dallied with F. Meyers of ; . § annered kic His looks Buffalo Internationa 3 opponent last evening that they ar 1t mannered kid lis looks f iffalo Tnternational league | G855, (00 (ST ne A . about & 5 e | SO e package of LIBERTY h11 tean ho came here vester- 4 able to defeat thrice in an evening, | e B P I Corine ractice founq ninute in their first round and then " 5 > |l impreasion- he vields s above all one S b P arcEin SPring bractics found | yncoried n lert hook that put the =84 team claiming residence in the | or milaness and good humor. As an 7 than out of the big- Wt of ui ivacd tn i3 | Few Zorker soundly to sisep, aithe cily moted lor s housing of ‘nuts.” proposition. in the ring the Longcut.« e = < s B ) o) ¢ Whilg the local lads swept the Mid- poughes e ara i . Vo hanna river, N hree fon; tume division Elmer Laplance of 1 ) roughest Jooking (vpes are mere pre- Y -/ k k -, ehanna river, under three feet 5000, U0 o George Harrison o | dletown lanes In fine fashion. it re- | lims, the most. incompetent like this -~ ger-/looking packages. f o e o ame flood. An- icton, Engene Brosseau of Mon- | quired the display of the best in the | Coheis : : i ; e as ained. ircal defeated A. Colaianni of Pitts- | bowling brand, and each game was Liconacd s Patare. i 5 - A il hnirg and Marfin Burke of New |hotly contested from beglnning'to ond. | gghe. SOWFTS BASES That’s because LIBERTY is NEW HOPKINS COACH. Orleans defeated Mark Coretts of ] Century marks were numerous with ths:]dllw nn t 2 “n‘ ;1‘” \“\Ly‘ timore, Md., April 4.—Hank Roxbury. ‘ 1‘!"; I‘;;‘"t‘)- nationsnan onithe team S o, o Un L et all pure, clean, good tobacco— . ick was made head coach of In the 125 pound division Dave | failing to accumulate a three figure . "pi i "0 U velsh in order S B bnins ronthin o ei BrownWorliTorontofwon fiom Eed)jiscoren sometime Wduring Wthol playaR IR IR S TR Lol W R e it is not full of loose, hard stems » He succeds Chavie Bres. Mamilton of the Tnion Settlement A, | “Dutch® Brennecke proved to be the SH8 Mo 0 =85, 0 SPRSSIERCER. ’ % A et R e C. of New York. George Btcell of |nemesis for thc Middletown, bansing GBS Teriem i hos B that you can’'t smoke or chew. . ! the Union Settlement won from Mike | out the fine score of S for h ltshtclchaimpionahipicla Ee ‘b eIen iithe L GO i locked faster and worked with even § = = Snyder of Boston in the 108 pound | of the e o . greater cievern than Freddi E i < ias Ben Volger of the Educational | Yented Eddie Anderson from securing exanh 18 dic SMOKE lass. Ben Volger of the Bducational | |\, " rors in the bowling world, ‘Welsh. one of the game's master me- very pipeful of LIBERTY Alliance, New York, defeated Wil- | ; : 3 SN N TR0 G T S (ke fie . : Jiam Corbett, the New England 115 | :"“‘ Sy 9;1:‘_‘;;:L"‘é: _‘il‘w 2 ““’:}’\“.(,.‘!1:'1“7: s Bt natE e sna is cool, s]ow-burnlng’ fi‘&gl‘flflt. ] pound champion. The crowd jeered [ (G of 0T SR and there is no question about his i L fho Judges for. Eivii) the dectalon' to %P4 Wrisht rolled conslstently. | = (0 L8 1 10 M e five Big Gis And every chew of LIBERTY is Joseph Vetke of Detroit in his bout | =" o & ' Al e necded b olncadil Clver A PLEASANT 5¢ CIGA M S L ( City quintette put up the best game, at are ded—C'oolness lever- E, [ 3 ASANT 5¢ CIGAR vith J. Sullivan of New York. [l du e P gbs for the mateh, mess, Capacity, Courage and the Iong-lasting and full-flavored. e e | the latter’s score of 113 being the Crusher. : | high score for his club. The scores The lightweight who stops or elimi . : = | tollow: - rates Leonard will have no kick LIBERTY is the tobacco for Middletown, abont a dull evening when the affair 2 i Mead sS4 99 100— comes off. men—not mollycoddles. 2 | Krauth 105 109 94— | Sty | Shilling .. 84 70 - 1 the Big Bridge || [ | | Tuttle 82 108 | Over the Big Bridge, e 113 110 i Dear Sir: It has been sixtoen (el | = _ — | years since Brooklyn won # pennant i 461 478 ;:\!u.\‘ of that time the Dodgers . 3 o - spe around fhe foo 3 f yo ' New Britain, [fsneniRay Rt B S o ‘ i | know of any fan that is looking E | Luntone L105 0 a safe bet 1916, here R - ESANDL G RS L | Prior 5 .103 98 { Brooklyn to finish 1 cert: | | Brennecke oo og . than sccond place. Larry ! 1 l \1\ right 1;:41 ¢l has com back Marqguard : ] Anderson .102 is on the W With Preffer. Deli, L c t T b Malt beverages above the average in i — e e A e ong u onbacco quality--never above the average in price. raneusiaine RUChing b il Ternen e - = I nants. Sither ston or Brooklyn > . B PEDS WANT GAMES, i ihe olabican o this neacor. All the richness, snap and satis- - T y “nc 3 y that doesn't win will i 1 The Federals of Middletown have nd the one tha alit O everages you Can The Tedorais of Miaaistonn have | 408 (he oo that oot vy il fying quality of pure Kentucky leaf % |l Afford to Enjoy Nkt o rranze saines| \wWith anyiWoe (Hnenoy H. R. L. ® are blended evenly through LIBERTY % L . the fast teams throughout the statc S | ¢ 2 . 4w - e vomm Cinma ean | wvere tew bomees 1o pnmies || DY 28¢ing and mellowing the tobacco 4 A nickel at your favorite tap. arrange games with sl st e from 3 to 5 years. THOMAS CONROY, Manager, | Wi 48210 Joeaten . . 3% enagels | Loud and continued cheering from : y SO, The Hubert Fischer Brewery, HRCI e, Gt ) iy il eI e ! That’'s how LIBERTY goes to ! 14 ¢ hiy in 1Ming a year . rew 4 ! | : Brewers at Hartford Ct. — | ago this April date I the right spot, and keeps a hearty AMHERST NINE WINS. ! 23 | ) ) n Easton, Pa., April 4—The Am-| When Willard gets through with man full of vim and gOOd nature. I ¢ il 'l Ball teatn, bo it | the circus he will be ready to meet hers ollege basebal 5 its | o e : s el 3 : all comers.” He will if he quits eat- | Start smoking and chewing HOTE L BELOIN, KEEVERS & CO, R®X. { TAP AT LOUIS W. FODT, . NN SCHALARIL W. J. McCARTHY. way home from a Southern trip, de- feated the Lafayette C‘ollege nine yes- terday by 7 to The Amher: men anpeared to have profited zreatly by their Virginia jaunt, while the locals were short of practice. ! ing for the next six months | | way he can keep his ringside weight under 280. TS { THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY It hoxing brutal enough to be . suppressed, (1 act of umpiring a - ) : COMMUNICATED. | R | Sporting Editor Herald: { I If, in a game of pinochle, one play- LIGHT & =i HEAR “PLAY BALL i There are no hard and fast [ e W ‘Grantland Rice ‘.x’f,Jlxl‘H\\H fale, Dartmouth, Willams a0d contend that he would not. On gen the only i OLLEGE NINES T0 Holy Cross Start Season Soon cral principles however, it wonld secim real tobacco—LIBERTY—today.

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