New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 8, 1920, Page 8

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NEW BRITAIN AL BASKETBALL SEASON OPENS IN BLAZE OF GLORY—TWO GAMES SCHEDULED AT STATE ARMORY TOMORROW NIGHT—PRINCETON TIGERS DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEN FAVORITE TO WiN OVER YALE NEXT SATURDAY—NEW BRITAIN HIGH SCHOOL SHOWS BIG IMPROVEMENT IN PLAY AGAINST ST. JEROME TEAM: *___—_—_____—___—__—————' season’s teams. If the Penn harvest | s to come, however, under Heisman's | tuition, it will have to be reaped in the course of another Autumn. Navy's one-sided thrashing of the crack Georgetown aggregation was The Washington- | and had easl subdued at least two IS Bt0ck Greatly s iicoesnsstatac ratEnawar i s walkover against Lebanon Valley on tial courses of the Au- | banquet are now being al pleces de resistan Novemb with its snow | toward Alaska for the hlls—set in that the foot- Sep- team must be at its best to avert a pummeling in the service game at the I'olo Grounds on Nov. 27 Syraeuse enhanced . her gridiron s fast and furious month of training, Oc ests and November that fed war all right enough | back a week earlier. The husky rly superior to any that had ap- t thousands ‘of . d there previously this season. jEnrda The k (’Nelll's men had no excuses to what one might o8 thaIriastoat and thes Rva vt vulgarly inelined, ; $The Tigers didn't care bl vad Tl ahdatalooat tihe role, assigned them be- | ahsolutely another year, and that is i#he underdog, and they | the time when the Columbia coaches’ R to give the last ounce | efforts seem likely to bear valuable Bvitch that nssignment (o | fruit, ¢ to vecull another foot- A TR Lnivatety, L Rasd fluck fervently, even bitterly @ weo indications at of toniper paod far such offences as desirable eminence in the tussle with Union, which should on the fage of things have been beaten by at least two touchdowns. ’ ind pennlties Charley | had a | | Saturday, will certainly feel that his | | prestige by the victory over Washing- | ton and Jefferson, but hardly blotted | | out thereby the recollection of the set- | Quakers from Swarth- more brought to South Field an eleven | HAS FINE OPENING t Corbin and Stanley Works Quin- tets Win After Fast Contest Thae 1920-21 basketball | opened in this city Saturday evening, OUTLOOK NOT BRIGHT 1 When a Feller Needs a Friend Yale Faces Hard Battles With Tigers and Crimson in An Optimistic Man- ner—Acosta May Not Play. ‘New Haven, Nov. 8.—Yale's foot- ball outlook was described last night by a prominent coach as “squally, with immediate breakers ahead.” The .‘:lls face their Harvard and Prince- ton games, having beaten Brown, | Colgate, West Virginia and even live- season |1y little North Carolina through hair- breadth escapes from defeat, and ! when two games were played at the | having been subdued by Boston col- | State Armory. It was the commence- | ment of the Industrial league season, and judging by the performan { turned in Saturday night, the cominy on should prove very successful he league contest w | champion Corbin team of and the New Britam Machine com- pany quintet. Larson & Co. won the game 30 to 25, after a fast battle. The' “Big Chiet was one of the chief fagtors in the victory. He was ably | Brown Saturday. hands at offering excuses any- | supported by Morgan, a new man, in the league who registered six field goals. Larson, is still able to make the free tries count, getting six. For the Machinists, Tommy Sheehan, the former High school star, and Charlie | lege. The' coaches feel that the { Crimson and Tigers, who must be faced on the next two Saturdays, will prove tough nuts to crack. The coaches found that Captain between the | Tim Callahan was the only member st season | Of the hospital list who can be Te- lied upon to be hroken to harness be- | | fore the Tiger bout next Saturday. | His injured ankle is now thoroughl | well and he hankered to play against If Yale had not might have been rushed into the play wished to reserve him for the Tiger fray and give him more light scrim- Miller, were the chief point makers, | mage practice the coming week. team all this Fall, maintained that un- | each registering four field goals. John- ny Sheehan gave a good exhibition of floor work. Pelletier Looks Good. John Pelletier, last year member on the w |ol the Dartmout quintet, gave the fans and clean the ' puncturin finel crueial games of i cortainl Motions fell In fragments the great stadium. The &8 thh Dbelief that the Would show a great mar- h over the IN 600D SHAPE Harvard P many such s Come Out of Battle With Princeton Without Serlous rival for- Injurics—Start Pointing for Brown Cambridge, Mass., Nov. §.—Injuries | 6 perlad there Was |y, the Harvard football squad as the | RO tho fulfiliment of this | rogult of Saturday's hard battle wero Harvard was charging | romarkably Capt. Archie Hor- 4t will for substantial | ween, who threw one of his fingers out } the lne. The resist- | of joint while playing, Dr. Nichols 8 torwards stiffened be- | pulling it in place on the fleld, also closed and throughout ave a sovere wrench to his neck, but Infire second half this will be all right for the Yale game Ine was no kind of a tar- | two weeks away. Wynant Hwul ow to crash into head | the husky tackle, who was on crutches Bt, for. a goodly portion | as late as ten days before the Prince- | il periods the Crimson ' ton game, hurt his knee again, but is id weaker than their expected aronnd within a weelk. - ubbles Havemeyer, the rsity center, suffered considerably from minor injuries, Keith Kane, end: T: zan Tolbert, tickle, and Wignio Churchill, tha little halfback, wef® all Bad been the belief In | ;600 or Jess mussed up, but will be auagters tha while | pack for practice by miiweck | t flash great spced and Tho member e squad who Wwhile, the Cantabrigians | played against the Tigers were given | tely woar down thelr ad- | 4 holiday today. The iremainder of the sheor might of physical | team will get ready for the Hrown It was not the Prince- | game, where Harvard will undoubte: tion. however, which| Iy follow out its policy of recent rentor weariness and im- | years by playing suosdiutes, taking In the latter stages of number of regulars to Princeton to 2 { watch the Tigers battle with Yale | eprise—and this one al- el o came Wi e en- FIIGH SCHOOL ELEVEN IS GREATLY IMPROVED | Opponent« hed 1llusion | to do tlve stamina of the two most” bikTlant en on any gridiron East werinl at ris nasault of I fon 1o the huge ' nz Holyoke Team 25-0, largely responsible Defenting S whieh had been against the visiting the Crimson had g | ares or submit to defeat ved 'to even superior Princeton fueh a n ly successful disple tles of the forwar red and received Shows Reversal of Farly wnd of football th to the hearts of the sup- e team, the New Britain cleven. overwhelmed the school team of Holyoke, | Mary's field Saturday } afternoon, score 28 to 0. The man- ner in which the locals went after the | visitors indicated that the old spirit is once again back at the school, and the hopes of the students are greatly htened for u victory over Hartford High schoo! Leonard Appell scored the first | touchdown for the Red and Gold am, when he caught a forward pass shortly after the kickoff in the first ' period, and ran the length of the field for a touchdown lerner registered the second sco wme period The visitors t an s a k the second . broke up this style frequently Peplau, scored the third touch- iy and Berner fourth. Peplau . a fine exhibition of goal kicking, A1l four tries s stully al improvement in the ! team reflects much credit on Coaches Parker and Dunn. Physical Director George Cassidy, who was an All-Am- erican choice several years ago, s also out with the team, assisting in coach- | Displa Brought gome of Satnrday's tussle t confronts tLhe array lones will convoy to the lum at the close of this up more formidably than ppparent that the Prince- potential and the Tigers will have heking in thelr approach- b the, Blue. ! h's remnrkable easy over- Cornell gridiron machine ble simply because it was ywer has been rvers of th sen eleven In place 1 not the very bes ver Hanover, but the wble of the e or ptain »ertson would endons di to any ever pawed the turf, for belongs in the malaxy of % It was a stroke of bale- that deprived Spear's pu- r lender's services for the 1 of the season. His re portion of Saturday's en- the Polo Grounds seemed the whole team, and there any substantial part of the n which the superiority of rians to the Ithacans was t. Cornell’s pre absen of such ,n o lineup New Britain H. 8. St. Jerome H. Cooley Padden Left End Clifford Babryk Left Tackle Murphy ious op Il of which were defeated highly rated, and it seems at Doble will need another pnstruct a Cornell team that ® with the greal ones of | ¢ entz Left Guard. Abetz Grady Center, Fieneman F. Padden Rwht Guard Lynsky | Right Tackle. Practice for Yale, Schnaidt Kilker duel with Brown Right End hve as rogards the s} while Berner “lyso; wing Flyson Ndog, may have p ided ruper prescription for the nflict with Certainly a lively skirm ferable to a drill to ft men batel And it was cortainl lirnideh that pi Quarterback Peplau Hurley the eve of thelr Left Halfback \ppell ht Halfback Murtha are Fuliback New Britain 8, St Appe 2: goals, Peplau, 4; worth; refere Jerome 0 Peplau, Berner, referee, Ayles- Kiniry. n thre v on Saturday, e runloniane best showing of | 'CUchdowns. thus far ing of the meek Quakers Punthers, who had been Inw them go bitswas & i s cad th XeaCall every day. something to talk about by his exhi- bition of guard playing for the Stanley Works against the Trojans of Torring- ton, the locals winning 20 to Wal- thers was the big noise for the Stanley Workers from a scoring standpoint, registering 18 of the 20 points. The lineups: Corbin Cossette . Begley Miller Reynolds Paul . Sheehan Wilson Right Guard Score: Corbin 30, N. M. Machine 25; goals from field, Cossette 2, Paul 2, Morgan 6. Larson 2, Begley 2, Miller 4. Reynolds 4; foul goals, Larson 6, Sheehan 3, Miller retere, Dick Dillon; {imer, Pilz; scorer, Smedley. Stanley Works. ., Torrington. Grobstein. J. Pelietier, Rubino w frederickson Left Forward Walthers Wallace Anderson Banasih Talbot Riseldof left Guard John Pelletier Right Guard Score: Stanley Works, 20: Trojans, 15; goals from field. Walthers 5, Pel- | letier 1, Rubino 1, Wallace 1, Banasih | 2: foul goals, Walthers 8. Wallacel, Rubino 1; reteree, Dick Dillon; timer, Pilz: scorer Smedley Gameo Tomorrow Night. Two games are scheduled at .the State Armory tomorrow night when the Kaceys will open their season against the National Fire Insuran company five of Hartford. and the fa Stanley Rule and Level company auintet will oppose the Southington T. A. R. five Manager Pilz of the collected a fast Schroeder, Wingler Kaceys has looking team, with Kilduff and Dudack, forwards: Crean, center; and Campbell and Murphy. guards. Sautter and McKeon, are the subs. The Capitol City team will have Senderson, center, Pinto and Crosson, guard. The first game tomorrow evening will be between the Rule Shopand the Southington teams. Following the games, dancing will be enjoved. O'Brien’s orchestra will furnish the music. NAVY TEAM WINS, | Annapolis, Md., Nov. S.—Thera is | great pleasure around the Naval | Academy over the victory of the cleven /| Saturday aguinst Georgoown. That | team ig the strongest rival of the mid- shipmen in this vicinity and inflicted the only defeat the elevea sustaned | last s on. The victory is believed to mark the Naval Academy team g one of the strongest elevens of the year. Georgetown lad not lost this seasor ‘and stood second amonz tha collega | teams in total of points scored. The Navy won decisively and did n to uso much of thu speci which it had prepared. MATURO IN CUE FINAL. Chicago, Nov. 8.—James Maturo of | | Denver defeated W. D. Rickets of ¥lint, Mich., the play off of a tie for third place in the national pocket billiard tour- nament. The victory qualifies Maturo for the finals in which champion | Greenleaf, Arthur Woods of Minneap- olis and Walter Franklin of Kansas city will start today BOGASH KNOCKS OUT RY AN, Philadelphia, Nov. ¢.-—Louis Bo- gash, Italian champion of New Eng- land, knockedgout Willie Rvan of New BrunswicX in the thud round of | tha windup at the tional Athletic Club Saturday night/ The end started in the second round, when Bogash drove a hard blow to the ear, and in | the third he repeated the wallop. PLEASURE CARS Bi. IRVING JESTER 125 to 85 Saturday in | The coaches fully intend to return him to the battle line at guard, re- player whose game Saturday was also impressive, although lacking experi- ence and finish. The recovery of John Acosta has been . slower and is far from com- plete. It is doubtful whether he can assume the other guard place Sat- urday, but Herr's game has improved, although he is not uf the veteran variety yet. TIGERS ARE DISAPPOINTED Princeton Players and Rooters Had Visions of Victox~ Over Harvard— Expect to Wa ale. Princeton, N. J., Nov. 7.—Prince- ton’s foothall warriors arrived in Tigeriown yesterday, apparently none the worse for Saturday's battle with Harvard. Many of the plavers, in- cluding Keck, did not have as much as a scratch. While, of course, dis- appointed in the outcome of the game, after it had seemed won, the; men have no alibis, and are thinking of nothing but the coming of the Elis on Saturday. The undergraduates returning from Boston were a rather solemn lot. Tt was hard for them to have joy turned to grief for that was what it was when | the Crimson stepped over for the touchdown that evened the The Princeton rooters were counting on victory a little too soon, and it was hard to lose. T FOR NUMBERING. down Puzzied Many. Cambridge, M <., Nov. 8.—Anoth- er convincing argument in favor of | numbering the players took place in | Harvard | Saturday’s game between and Princeton. Harvard had three men together in the press stand who have been with the team all fall. | When tied the game w Harvard's touchdown hich made the trio agreed that Crocker went across. They went further and inquired later of some of the players who gave the credit to Roscoe Fitts Coach Fisher, calle the argument ber, left end, cision, oy game upon to settle named Clark Macom- s the scorer. His de- came after the 3 i : THE SHOE THAT HOLDS ITS SHAPE ! It isn't so much a question how much you pay for your shoes as it is the real value you receive for what you do pay. W. L. Douglas Shoes are always worth the | priceyou payfor them SOLD BY ' The Modern Boot Shop 168 Main St. pushed the deciding touchdown over | the line early in the last period, he ; in the final minute, but the coaches | placing Ed Quaile, the third-string ' score. | Your SWEETIE WHO HAPPENS s To BE A GIRL SCOUT TOUCHES You FOR A DOLLAR - MEMBERSHIP N THE GIRL SCOUT CAMPAIGN = AND ALL YOU'VE GOT 1S A TOP, STRING MARBLES, FISHHOQK. WNIFE AND A Nickel! Locals Put Across a 6 to 0 Victory Over Light Burr Roads Team of Bridgeport. Tha Nutmegs football team resumed | the winning habit yesterday, when the | light Burr Roads team of Rridgeportl went down to a 6 to 0 defeat. A good ! Tilden, Jr., Philadelphia, world ten- sized crowd witnessed the Jack Hagearty touchdown. The Nutmegs presented a somewhat changed lineup, with Cap- tain Nelson, pi Tully, of Hartford, a new plaver, also | sets. played in the line. O"Neil was at end, | bers and Kenny and Andrews were at the haltback positions. The locals manage- ment is negotiating with the Clay Hills management for a game next Sunday. The Clay Hills are rated as one of the best teams in Hartford county. TILDEN IS TENNIS VICTOR. Berkeley, Cal, Nov. 8.—William contest. | nis champion, defeated William John- logals | ston, San Francisco, former world champion, 11—9 in one set of a | scheduled match here yesterday. Rain prevented playing of the remaining scored the ng in the line, and year Tilden and Joh of the American _— TWO NEW AUTO RECORDS. Shreveport, La, Horey lowered the Southern dirt track record in tha automobiie races hera yesterday when he made 49 1-5 seconds, clippinz a second off the record set by him last year. Ray €laypool established « new two mile Southern dirt track record' when- hé made the distance in 1:43. The former two mile Southern dirt track record was made by Hugdanl in Atlanta last in 1:44%. . i Kansas City, Mo. MORNING TO YOU, PETE! Who crossed my trail in the hotel this afternoon but “Long Sam” Weaver! Last time I saw Sam to chin to was that night of July 15th when our old 38th clinched the “Rock of the Marne” title! And, I guess you won’t forget that night, old glue pot— everybody was stuck on you! Sam and I fought the war all over again and dug into our Camel supplies like it was “free commissary”. Sam never will get all done talking about that session when we couldn’t move a hair without getting a close shave—and, no eats or smokes! Sam has some song about how good Camels were to him in France—and ever since! That bird has the warble! Why, Camel talk trickles off his tongue like water flows over Pa Smith’s mill dam! Pete, old carpet tack, Sam has a head all right! “Camels certainly are friendly”, was the way Sam put it in his old-time vigor-vim style. “You know as well as I do”, he added, “that no other cigarette has such a mild, mellow body. And, there’s no harshness or tiredness of taste in a million Camels! No objectionable odor, no lingering unpleasant aftertaste! Summing it all up, Shorty, I'll say Camels are the greatest cigarettes in the world at any price!” Headed southeast tonight, with Winston- Salem, N. C. my first port of call. Some jump from K. C.! Pete, it's Winston- Salem where Camels are made! GET ME! Sincerely —1late at night! are mem< avis cup team here en rout> to Australia. Nov.

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