New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 2, 1919, Page 18

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YANKS GET REVENGE ON RED SOX IN OPENING OF SEASON IN HUB_MAYOR SIGNS ORDINANCE THAT MAKES SUNDAY EASEBALL A REALITY IN NEW | . YORK—JACK BRITTON LIKED THE NAME OF HIS HOME TOWN—TIGER OARSMEN ARRIVE INNEW HAVEN AND BEGIN PREPARATIONS FOR TOMORROW D ROSEBUD AND ' W06 w5 ChAMpION BRITTON covn oo e i s s ) N. B, MACHINE LEAGUE. | WONZHALAMTLY OFFERS on THE DRAW - CoPS \ | Bee STEADILY GETS A PAIR OF ' = | []MAR KHAYYAM WIN | Bloodgaoa " PR“U[‘ []F H[IN1EK LosinG. HASN'T ‘ban BULLETS o Tme DEaL,| 1@ 2PSN Gue PoT awo (RROTER EULLET, o3 | Bloodgood . 33 83 | Y | Doherty ........ 83 A PAIR OF ANY THING. RENEWED HoPE TOSSES 1N A CoufLa A PAIR CF LADIES, | {Murray . amas 7 F ! WAY i THE HoLE SEEDS, ALL STAY., | McCarron Champion Three-Year O1d of 1917 “( = 40 Welterweight King Raised Here, z P 1 1 9 396 | Takes the Rennert Handicap | _ aon. Decided Name of Town Would Do 11 COUNTS CwPs Kerin ' Webb : | Lamb s b B ] 1 the Baltimore, Md., Maj ~Two for- | Boyle : g fack Bricion, an Irishman, is | s new welterweight champion of the world. He stopped Ted Lewis in nine round at Canton. O., on March 17. It zocrs to a high pitch of enthusiasm | 4 was the seventeenth meeting of the t the opening of the Pimlico meet- Willamek oy & 255 [ pair, and the title changed hands on T e | March 17. Quitc a day for the Celts Kalem ......... The final round went 2 minutes, 10} stopm turned the course into a veri- | puitigan .. ... : z seconds. Lewis made a poor show= table quagmire and drenched onlook- | purkhact . ... ; ing throughnut. He was floored 1§ to the skin, but they were enthusi- | — | three times in the sixth round astic, neverthele 442 39¢ 9 A right to the body, and a left to} ‘Omar Khayyam, who was practi i nining. Jaw wrested the title from Lewis. ! 1y invincible as a three-yvear-old inHoward . 95 - 2 Eritton’s family name is William J. 1917, nidde his first appe ‘e of the ! Collins FER = 9 { Breslin. He was born® in New ‘}’_”\ | = = Vear in' the Rennert Handicap, at one | Baldwin ........ ! 96 76 52 | state, end raised in (‘0"""““?”!'}] ‘IA‘L“E' AFFECTS FURTHER - SoMeBobdY RAISES 1T, 1S cCaLLED. Big w-:s ;ms Ble PoTD fla. 5 o i e e e hane o 6 - ton was th> name of the birthplace - 2 < ' ND ,1STIN HIGH Goo! fiile.. o doreated o high-class fleld | Kaus .. : 1[0 i Grees o 0 AT AND GREATER NON AFFECTS ATTITUDE TRIUMPH el e e s ;‘r;t.\cnflah‘n.ndl fashion. It was the |Gorman ...ux::: i raluas place. /he frst men- | CHALANCE - anD ToSSES| oF DISGUST AnND DOUBT EueninG. TELs Howl race the renowned son of Marco | © ace. . Jf;d SrtiheRne S At 392 435 426 3| tioned is of no consequence, but the ANOTHER SEED HOPING DECIDES To STIEK “;EF‘LLED e naiblete, Fheh he sped home nearly a length | First Floor. latter is—obvious ALt WLl _STAY, oR ALONG AND RAISES QANDIEEE: iip £yt of Commander J. K. L. Ross' | Abramson ... 96 81 n Britton came to Chicago he SAaa A A Boniface, he was greeted with a round | o g £ LR yerrsiold g e « 98 applause that lasted fully five min- 83 9 The first thing Mr. and Mrs. Bre E o rEOrge W sl Eapp LW ho 78 | lin showed their son on his arrival e ificosgs W Tolls ShaDD 21 S8 2 321 | in Chicago was the schoolhouse. The ERnthe « Sutnricy o 1917, dnlenedy second day of Chicago life led Willie i, i 461 432 Broslin righ? up to the Headly school, Rl tna: Arst and last furlongs of | Purchasin; at the cornzr of Garfield and Lewi kehe mile could be seen by the spec- | o iieren e Sl e [¥tors who crowded the big stand and | iy Lo kid! Whatz e gile. club house. With the rain came |wyjjljams ....... 76 10 5 3 | where yuh from?” was the greeting &°10F Which obliterated the field asiyoloy .......... 90 & f 3| extended h'm by the gang. soon as if, ssyung*around the final turn | Read ... ....... 76 ‘ N e swered young until it wag'Svell into the home ‘H’l'h‘h,ly - | lin And that all he would After a 1ong' delay at the post because | 1 52 fle wis a close-mouthed little of the fractiousness of Papp, the field | { mick anyway, and when he became | Xfi‘i'“ Ay “ito art. Papp ! Curran ceeew. 68 T3 - 209 { frightened "e was as loquacious as | | ed ‘the most earl veed and led | Lagan .. e §8 E 241 jan o around the first turn, followed closely | F. Bacon..... 74 91 As D Rritain” was all L/Errant, with Omar Khayyam |Foster ..... s8 76 ; covld learn from the was the last the crowd |W. . Mg R litile stranger, the gang called him f sdaw of. them until the field came | 5 = that—just “‘Britain.” splashing out of the fog at the final | 106 .HK Across th: street from the school- furlong, post. | Tool Design. house was huge lot of about ten | Dyso S il 83 8 lies = S : 2 % Respends in Fi Spur | Dyson E aer Hcre the kids held their - champions, Omar Khayyam and | Dummy um tosebud, aroused 10,000 race- | ing yesterday afternoon. A heavy rain 5 Lester .. 19 T 76- >2 | games ana fun. Sometimes they At tfiat point Commander Ross’|Foberg - .- 86 100 — 264 poxed—when they could dig up the Bonifkte and Papp were fighting it i S s e 82 112 S gloves, usnaily. out stréde for stride for the les But | Allis o ... 88 84 Y] Boxing was “Britain’s"” cue. That \x;.‘hne they were utilizing their every | = | was where he came in; and when he once of speed and stamina, Omar | did others usually went out. He soon m_was-swinging along in third e developed into such’ a good fighter place with Jockey Kummer sitting | [llingswc 87 e that he quit school and hc,m,f,p a sidll:in the saddle. As the crowd rec- | Cadont £ 79 2 z [ newsboy. Tie was branching out, you ognized the contestants and began to | Talmads o g - see. When he was a schoolboy he fl cheer for its favorit Kummer gavi ‘}'(')“"g':‘i\;‘ SeoHgso 5 had to fight over in the lot, but as f the conqueror of August Belmont's |1 Sop D e %6 [a newsbov he could fight all over lgreat Hourless his head and the | town mighty Omar sprang forward as was | Later he accepted a job in the cir- his custewd*Wwhile a three-year-old. | 2 culation department of a Chicago | Igoe 5 q 90— = . 5 i S i = - goe . newspaper. He was still progressing, § His stride fairly ate up ground and | gl Lolo : | newspap s progressing, when thes final 16th pole was reached as now he could scrap in the news 3 Keatin ot i 3 he wassh command. From then to | raracs alley, with an illustrious audience the jufiges Kumm ept him under | A campbell ln"’l: isvd.fl”fi,‘ A A 2 Aght restraint and won the 51,000‘ iv‘“ '\7‘\‘(‘1 4":’!‘1'7 ‘]:ipm n‘”‘f‘:mP fioF‘n— 8 ¢ I > sporting | | a3 1 purse without doing his best. : ot Bonifacé ran a remarkably good "“jt‘“f VBRG] U LD Tl §race dn{l so did Papp. When Mr. ;’mgf“ ight, kid?"” he sald. Loft's kqlt pulled up he showed signs e : of lampfless. He had been kicked un- | .“A .f“““l‘i GF i 1""“’ is running der the #ight shoulder at the post and | i . ) aoane s,[‘f;“‘_:“:_\"’;(b e 't" e “‘h‘“ painfafiyf ¥t inot seriously injured. | NATIONAL LEAGUE. ebovplofict s misubedinicptoniTnT Qheers for Old Rosebud. | ek “They call me Britain.” 81! The ' ovation which greeted Omar | : S “And your first name j KHayyeam was no more spontanecous “Wh >r-— hey just call me Brit- fand’ sindere than that accorded Old | g v n—that filand. < Boston and Pittsburgh-Chicago game Tack' 1s'g . § Rosebud when he galloped home an | were postponed on account of rain. . el Jack & (R e iigasy’ vietor in the sixth event. Op-| ey 20 Apa)e | posinz thie Applebate entry were some | Standing of the Clubs. sag e | ‘.,.h?gh»class sprinters, including Flags, | w. L. 5 e sport «d grabbed the phone {ithe champion sprinter of last season, | Cincinnati x T 0 ‘z‘vvf‘l' v)llcd the promoter. i but ,at no. time during the six fur- | Brooklyn BRGRE e sct el iorkyouana B scant] W longs’, Journey was the old champion | New York ......... & : T e ) e [Vextended. At the end he was half a| Philadelphia ... ... .. 3 T Sl len s B Sl SRl fdozen lengths ahead of Flags, which | ChiCago ............ : SO e T B Y43 o similar distance in front of Mrs. | Pittshur i 3 W aiies disss uingstactiotitno \i®ayne: Whitney’s imported Peter!|St. Louis. Soplon: & Piper, | Boston revisus to these two popular vie- | mes Toc Jtories the crowd was ated to a Philadelphia at New York dsensational ride by J v Loftus on| Boston at Brooklyn. Samuel Riddle’s chestnut colt Mr. Chicago at Pittsburgh. 3 rummel | Cincinnati at St. Louis. | | j Mr. Brummel won by a nose, but it = e | = z;\vmx the jockey rather than the horse AMERICAN LEAGUE. i who ‘won. Louis Feustel, the trainer T, Cincinnati 6, St. Louis 3 New Yark-Philadelphia, Brooklyn- ot i i e ort SRR New Yok Teams Wil Open See- po b bl el s pl o e i P i s et | R s O b S o ome | PREVAILS IN THE BUSINESS JACKET SKETCHED. THE B = it LA O Thefe el TRE G IS i el oo VR S P it g G s il kit gl e od Tanore” T et S The NS UL D et s e mowmels e THE BACK A DEEP VENT, SUPPORTS THE ENTIRE geeme 2 11 e B i bean, Chiadeioni 3 ey | oo he At duy of ohe wook s | STYLE EFFECT IT IS ONE OF THE MOST GRACEFUL, £into command. Five jumps from the | Washington ...... g Mayor Hylan signed the 3 r \ R e pnes s s D e e AND IMPORTANT OF SEASONABLE DEVELOPMENTS,) ront and seemed fo he saining with Games Today. “r’n";mlmot":jr hi\ the board of alder- each stride. But under the vigorous New York Bostc ast Tuesda handling of Loftus, Mr. LR,.,:‘:.,L;, W, nmu;’m.. l:l.n‘::)(hlyy[|m | The ordinance permits the playing | eame on again and managed to earn Detroit at Cleveland o :\\{nr‘iuy professional baseball after READY-TO-PUT-ON Hthe honors by the proverbial cye- . Louis at Chicago. ;m”""“ in the afternoon. The ordi- ‘lash. It was the jockey’s first mount nce further provides that ball clubs ¥since his suspension two months ago, INPERNATIONAL LEAGU ?}[;Jeratfln: in the city may not raise | CUSTOM SERVICE WITHOUT Kinnoul, a chestnut colt, by Peter —— IesmpricesitongBundayigamesRover, THE ANNOYANCE OF A TRY-ON MQuince and Lychee Nut, belonging to | Results Yesterday. :‘: eededodiadisloneliarg=dion Walter M. Jeffords, won tho Druid | Buffalo-fersey Cily game postponed, | ppe o Hill Park purse, a four-furlong dash, | F4in adva_:g o= ;m;n.: NEE R DOt for two-year-olds. He won by half g | Dinghamton-Reading game post- | g, antags of the ordinance. Next dozen lengths. Harry Payne Whit. |Poned. rain S thed Now W rork Ehiladelphin Bra oo s e nd el oo WENewer e morn (oMNE i el DoF tmon cal| i1 0 e roollyn Boston Nedonal\edena Ydgle, of the Richard Carman stable, | e e B e Baltimore-lochester same post- | YeSterday will be plaved off. When- Mrs. Payne Whitnev's colors Eerediain Separ [possibleRtheselSundayionen 2 sonn il ol - | dates will be used to play oft post- ¥plechase by her aged bay gelding the {Clube. i B e fDlechaso by hor ased bay gelding - ... | dent of the National league, wishes to | A Tetan. Goldilocks, owned by General | Butalo .......... . 000 | discourage the practice of playing o e Second, ‘uw(h m, Rochester ... o 0 1000 \‘dol.)blu ho:m‘v»rs . Weld’s Belle of the Sea third. | e Sl 000 | Hevdler's idea is to move up games e ntol 000 | from the bottom of the schedule. In = = Sk 000 | the meantime if games uro prevented AETNA BOWLING . i 000 | by rain they will be plaved on dates ALLEYS. { Binghamton ..... 000 ("h 3altimore 000 contests for Sundays. In this way it Jhur Ba )0 ch Street. Games Today. will not be necessary to resort to i | Open A“eys at A“ Buffalo at Jersey City. luuumu heade made vacant through the shifting of Toronto at Newark. Tlmes Rochester at Baltimore, Binghamton at Reading, (OTHER SPORTING EWS ON FOLLOWING PAGE.),

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