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NEW BRITAIN DAILY 100L FIVE T HARTFORD HIGH NEXT FRIDAY NIGHT ON Y. M. C. A. COURT—_DRUMMIE AND COOGAN TO MIX THINGS AT " NEW BRITAIN HIGH SCHOOL FIVE TO MEET MERIDEN TOMORROW NIGHT—STEWARDS REFUSE JOCKEY LICENSE TO JIMMY BUTWELL—WHITE SOX START FOR TRAINING CAMP THIS EVENING ————— e ~ CELLENT BOUTS ARDED IN MERIDEN Googan and Johnnie Drummie', New Britain to Box Before Lepox A. C. he Lenox A. C. of Meriden has ar- ged another card of fine bouts for show which will be held at the hall aunditorium there Saturday ing. In the 10-round star bout on card Mel Coogan of Brooklyn, b recently scoréd a remarkable vis over Johnny Dundee. will Johnnie Drummie, the Irishman’ af Jersey City. Coogan Drummie met in the ring once ore and the go a slashing af- . This mill is expected to be even er as both boxers have improved siderably since that time. Drummic Boxed Here. brummie, 2’ former Waterbury er, will be fans for his great 12-round draw with ok Hrown, when the latter was mpion of the state. The bout was 4; bysthe -Lenox club in Meriden its members have always had sidorgble respect for Drummie’s y since. - " In'theeight round semi-final on the ld’ Joel Chivistie of Hartford will go 3 s with Young McKenna of These featherweights, agnized as among the cleverest in hacticut, ave met on two previous aglons. In each instance the bout @ humnier and it looks as though Meriden club has secured:an extra lattraction. A Fast Prelim. and Georgie He- den lightweights, ofare rivals for Silver City honors, appear- on the card in & six bouf: These . lads recently ed at a Leiiox show and since i the followers of cach boxer vrangled over who was the win- é Because of the feeling between remembercd by air gn.unusual scrap is expected they meet. qung’ Brown and Young Araff, : of New Haven bantamweights, i lopen the show with a four er. Dive Fifzgerald of New ven will referee the bouts. Edward Carthy will do the announcing and nes Daley will hald the watch. " BOWLING RESULTS STANLEY WORKS LEAGUE. Shipping Koom. bbeck . e 807 98 lman . 96 90 RN v v s ¢ Gt cox .. - 86 94 439 132- HARTFORD HIGH HERE FRIDAY NIGHT hall Season Nearing End The High nearing an end, hut two weeks calls for some of the hard- est games of the ye: Four mort contests will he engaged in by Cap- tain Bill Burns and his speedy mates, the first of which will be played to- night in Bristol, when the locals will tackle the fast High school five of that village. The teams cl two weeks ago; and N School won an e ever, the Bell Tow ter tean: on their wion of local night's fray. Meriden Next o'clock, furnish won of the New Britain school basketball quintet is the remaining ain Hig How- are a fans will Here Wednesday. fternoon at 4:30 Meriden Fligh school will the opposition to the locals Rasset( street court. The Sil- ave been gziving a fine slves this season, Wednesday on the ver City account of them and at the opening of the season they | foreed the locals (o top speed to win. 1 tford Next, On Friday in the Y. M, C big game of the scason will be pla with Hartford High school as the a traction. Jor several yvear High school has reigned supreme in the Interscholastic league, 'but this tain Managed to break their streak, defeating the Capitol’ Cit tes - on their own stamping ground. The coming battle should be a répetition. Then New Haven. The final game of the season, a league contest will be playea March 27, against the New Haven High school in that city. It should be one of the hardest battles of the season, but Captain Burns and Coach Dave Dunn are confident that the locals will down the Elm City lads, thereby keeping. their slate free from defeat and winning the league champion- ship. ! SOX START SOUTH Manager “Kid deason and 35 White Sox Players Including Eddie Ci- | cotte Leave for Texas Tonight. March 12— The Americans will leave Waco, Texas, for Manager Wm. Gleason and 35 mem- bers of the White Sox including Eddie Cicotte, the veteran pitcher, who has been holding out for a bet- ter contract will make up the party Cicotte announced yesterday “he was wready to sign a contract, “if an amicable agreement can be reached,” and said he would accompany the team south regardless whether he signed. Eddie Collins, second baseman, will not accompany the team tonight. He is in Philadelphia and has asked permission to remain there a week after which he will leave to meet the team in Dallas next week for the opening game of the spring series. The White Sox will be the last ma- jor league team to go into training. Chicago; Chicago tonight for spring * . training. Y rms ... lyes . drickson Anderson ffman ptyneux games forfeited. GADPDOCK THROWS DRAAK. Boston, March 1: arl Caddock Towa, defeated Tom Draak im two aight falls in their wraestling bout re last night. t fall was hae in 66 minutes, 20 seconds, and second in 13 minutes, hoth with head scissors and wrist lock. SLATE COLEAN, [Providence, R. I. March 12. own university swimming ed its season last night by defe, Syracuse university 4 10 own's Tecord for the season victories and no defeats. 'BOWLING asine Bowling Alleys OPEN DAILY 10 A. M. DIES’ PATRONAGE SOLICITED ' BROWN'S was BAR HARVARD'S MAT STARS. Two Wrestlgrs Eve of Yale Mcet. Crimson Losecs On Cambridge, Mass., March 12,—Cap- tain McDonnell and Brown, the bi foothall guard, mainstays of the Har vard wrestling team, were yesterday declared ineligible to compete against Yale in Harvard's closing meet of the season here next Saturday. McDon- nell and Managers Watkins and Hoeck were suspended from wrestling activ- ity by the college athletic authorities as the result of canceliing a meet on an hour's notice. Brown is at odds with the college o Is. Harvard, without a defeat thus far, hoped to conquer Yale, the Crimson seldom having beaten the Blue on the mat, but after toda wrecking of the team little hope of victory is en- tertained hére. WILDE VS. MASON TONIGHT. Fight Followers Toledo Are thering at for Meeting. Flyweight Toledo, ©O., March ht game and rted trailing this city vesterday for the Wilde-Mason struggle on Friday night. Most of the outsiders, however, will come in iday morning. George Biemer, manager, arrived yesterday and Mason came over from South Bend, Ind. Ed. Smith of Chicago, who will act as referee, is already on the job. He arrived Wednesday aft- ernoon. Followers into “Y” MAN TO COACH. A. E. Marriott to Handle Greek Ath- letes Tor Olympic € New York, March 12 riott, physical director of Men's Christian department, has lexander now in unes, the association heen foreign appointed by coach of athlete training ror Olympic according to a ble message received here yesterday from Athens ; Greece is the sixth nation to which the “Y” has sent an Olympic coach, France, Italy, Czecho-Slovakia, Po- land and Brazil having been already supplied. King fiigh School Basket- | 1ed here { bet- | home court. A del- | witness to- | artford | recent newspaper- ex- Young: | Greek | the | BUTWELL REFUSED | ~ LIGENSE TO RIDE Veteran Jockey Placed Under Ban of the Stewards i New York, March 12—Jimmy But- the veteran jockey, was denied a by the stewards of. the Jockey terday afternoon in i | held ‘dt the office 61 the Joc 18 East Forty-first street. H cation was laid ‘on the table on the recommendation of the license com- mittee. Joe B Eddie Taplin, C. H. Shilling? Ward, = Charles Gore and R Walcott also were denied licen, They have | been under the ban fer many months. B. Travers, Michael Sheedy, Mose Williams and Thomas Hodge were de- nied trainers” licenses. C. H. Peitengill, the aged turfman who has been judge for many will not be in the stand thi his place will be C. Cornehlsen, much younzer man, who acted as judge while Mr. Pettengill was ill last - Mr.Cornehlsen will assist B. C. Smith, who formerly w For several years the work of Mr. Pettengill did net meet with the ap- proval of the racegoers.. On several occasions his decisions brought fovth - storms of hisses and hoots from angry crowds. The stewards announced that Mr. Pettengill did not put in an ap- plication for reappointment this sea- son. sistant. LEADERS OUT OF RACE Brocco and Deruyter Meéet With Hard Luck When Former-Ts Tnjured and Is Forced to Retire. New York, March 12.-—~With Brocco and Deruyter out of the contest, the sprints for points in the six-dayv « bicycle race in Madison Square Gar- den last night were thie most spirited of the week. When Brocco quit early in the morning because of injury ke received in a spill, he and his partner were a lap and nearly a hundred | points ahead, . Their departure left eight teams tied on mileage and four of them almost even in the poiat score. The absence. of the popular Ttalian and his plucky Belgian partner did not afféct the crowd—it was as large as on the previous night. - The big building was packed to the roof and hundreds were turned away by order of the fire department. It was an enthusiastic and orderly crowd. | It seemed as if all present were | “rooting” against Alf Goullet. Every | time he won .a sprint he was 'hissod! to the echo, and when beaten, his suc- | cessful opponent was greeted with salvos of applause. t WESLEYAN B.'B. Its Secason With on April 3. Middletown, March 12 Wesleyan | will open its baseball season with a game with New York universi in this city, April 3, according to the ' following schedule announced yes- terday: ! April 3, New York university at New York city; April 10, Yale upi- versity at New Haven; April 16, Co- university at Middletown; Bowdoin at Middletown; Bowdoin at Middletown; | April 29, Lehigh at*Middletown; May 1, Brown at Providence; May 3, Johns Hopkins at Middletown: )Iny’ 7. Union at Schenectadi 8, Williams. at Willlamstown; 0 14, | "olgate at Middletown; May 21, Dartmouth at Hanover; May 2 Amherst at Amherst; May ity at Hartford; June 5, Tri Middletown; June 5, Amherst Middletown; June 21, Williams Middletown. TO HAVE EIGHT CYCLIS New York, March 12.—Eight lead- | ing amateur lists will compose the | American team which will compete :‘LJ the Olympic games in Antwerp this summer, according to Marold J. Dibblee, of the cvyeling committee connected with the American Olympic ! committee. The final tryouts will be held in the East, probably at Vals- N. J.. after sectional climination | s have been held in the loca ties where the spart is said, while the road tryvouts will pos sibly be raced over Long Island ro: was done in preparation for 1912 international games, SCHEDULE. | . To. Open N. X. U, the WRESTLING ON MARCH John F. Willis, matchmaker of the National A, (., which city, stated last night that he had an agreement with F. Iven the wrestling promoter, whereby the proposed Kent-Ventres, Beninmin- Hercules bouts would probably be staged on March . Willis to hold his boxing exhibi March 2 He has signed boxers as vet, but i iwo top no hout. any SUNDAY | Bioston, Mare h12 amatear sports on Sunda ommended to the legislatura yester- by a joint committec. The bill, | which was favored by a vote of 11 to | 4, would provide for local option on | the subject, the sports to he held only between 2 and 6 in the afternoon. Horse and automobile racing, hunt- ing and boxing woulG be prohibited. No admission fees would be charged and contestants would receive no pay. i -Legalizir was ree- pooular, he | has the permit | for the next boxing exhibition in this ! Benjamin, | ion on | Movie of a Man Arriving at an Important Decision RECEIVES LETTER FROM LANDLORD SAYING o ACCOUNT OF HOUSE BEING SouLD - wiu HAUE To UACATE MAY IsT T WwhY 0T QWN A HOUSE A~D- AwD- AwD LOT'? " IVE BEEw A GooDd TENANT Five YEARS- PAID RENT N ADUVANCE — 1T S AN OUTRAGE To MAUE To MoVvE Now T weLL - Gee WHiz! WHY DIDN'T t THINK OF ThAT TEw YEARS AGgo!!'? f Tua HURRY HOME To CONSULT FRIEND whFe “O4-n-n Abnes HURRY UP- WANTA TelL You SOMETHIW .. irst to Show the Newest IN : : pring Pumps and Oxfords Spring : tyles Lowest Prices Biggest Varieties Always the Earliest:'io Show the Latest in Dependable FOOTWEAR —FEATURING— Creations that are entirely new and in so complete an assortment that your choice is easy. 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