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BLER-TIGERS TO PLAY NUTMEGS HERE NEXT LEGION BASKETBALL TEAM WILL OPPOSE S T0 PLAY SIMSBURY TEAM ' R-TIGERS AY NUTMEGS of Local Eleven Con- of Repeating Trick to Eddy Glover Post American Legion Basketball Quintet to Face Speedy Five Tomorrow Night. The Eddy-Glover past, Legion basketball quintet will the court tomorrow evening at th State Armory, opposing the npoeay Simbury five. The boys from the home of Senator George P, McLean, have made a fine record in basketball and should force the locals at top speed. | The Legion management has secured the services of new players with the result that the locals shape up as a speedy quintet. The visitors will line up as follo Baly and Burnett, for- | wards; Shaw, center; Rallins and Fel- | lows, guards. There will be a pre- | ir, previous | Bminary game between two girl defented the | teams. | pearance In this city. i d, the Nutmegs, satisfied | TO HAVE BASKETBALL TEAM. | re caught on an off day A business meeting of the Em- | game, and minus the serv. [ pires football team will be held at heir reliable punter, Joe | 7:30 o'clock at the home of John 8. w foel that they ean turn! Allison, Jr., corner Stanley and bn their Capitol city rivals. | Pleasant streets FPlans for a ban- @ will have an important | quet and theater party will be dis- | the so-called Hartford | cussed. The prospects for the bas- | plonship. If all contem. | ketball season will glso be talked are carried out, the win- [ over. Such well known players as Il probability take on the | Nom Begley, Scheidel, Johnson, Ken- Clay Hill-All Hartford | dall, Rittner and Allison, are members that the Frog Hollow | of the club. The members will di ted lust Bunday by the [ cuss the selection of a clubhouse, does not lessen their | three suitable places being under con- they are, without a | sideration of the finest, smooth waork- machines ever seen In A heavy, scrappy line, | A & fast, hard running Migh offers some remark- | 6o for the runnors arc polnts of the Rambler- Britain fans will regret Visitors quarterback and brilllant “Spud” Drew, [ aeen .in the lineup, owing o0 arm he sustained some He has been deemed one football players ever soen American lllo be one of the some time, I8 al football fane when the well ra will oppose ey flold. Every points to a hard game, as rd boys are determined to om ines lons in d to loes afternoon bler-Tig s at Nut BOBBY McLEAN CHALLENGES.. Former Champion Skater Wants to Race Oscar sfathiosen, New York, Dec. 2.—D. R. Scanlan, manager of Bobby McLean of Chicago, former champion skater has issued a challenge to Oscar Mathiesen of Nor- way for a series of races for the title. JACKSONVILLE. Haverhill, Mass., Dec. 2.—Haverhill High School has accepted an invita- tion to have its football eleven play | the team of Duval High School at | Jacksonville, Fla. on December 11. The acceptance was conditional on ability to make necessary arrange- ments. HAVERHILL V! College Star to Play visitors have a very capa- udy to Drew in George | Bates college star, Talbot | fleldguard and a good brok- ner. Britain boys are practicing anticipation of the comink are fillod with a great deal over the final rosult, TO CAPTAIN N, Y. U. ELEVEN. New York, Deec. 2.—~James T. Fer- guson of Shreveport, La. yesterday was elected captain of the New York .“n:"’d?\:‘:,':“'mf," with | University football team for the 1921 punting in the previous | %ason. He played at quarterback this lerent story might be told. Year. I} direct the Nutmegs at ek Sunday, and ““Tacky” jompson and Hagearty will | the buckfield. The line will tact, with but one change, Nolson and Lou Seeley being TO COACH CORNELL. Ithaca N. Y. Dec. 2.—John Carney | of Boston, who for me past ten years has been coach of Phillips-Exeter baseball teams has been appointed nday's game will begin at | coach of the Cornell varsity nine to y. “Keek" .Parker will| succeed John Henry, Graduate Man- and Ted Hudson, famous ' ager Berry announced tonights Carney. ullback, will umpire. The | a former major leazue player, will a asked to report for| assume his new duties here in Feb- ! his evening at 7:30, at| ruary, hall. : WS HAVE GAMES Basketball | HOBLITZEL NOT TO RETURN. Parkersburg, W. Va. Dec. 2.—Carl Hoblitzel who managed the Akron | club of the International League dur- ing the 1920 season, will not return to | that club next season he has an- | nounced. Hoblitzel said he was consid- | ering other offers. The ex-manager was formerly a member of the Cin- cighat! Nationals and the Boston the | Americans. Quintet to Sinsbury and | < Terryville, Windsor, ir Charles Vibberts of basketball team has ar- | Br three hard games for his | DATES FORR MIDDLERBURY, Tomorrow evening the team | Middlebury, Vi Dec. 2.—The ey to-Werryville to play the | basketball schedule of Middlebdry Col- fidies of that place. This ag- | lege follows: December 10, Albany won 18 games last season = law School: 16th, Dartmouth: 17th, Ut to repeat this year. Next | Connecticut Agwies: 18th, Trinity; [ night the locals will play the | Januargf§; open: 13th Harvard; 14th, Independents and on next | New Hmpshire State: 15th North- | night, the locals will play | “astern: 224 MassachUsetts Aggies: Windsor. Miss Helen Mec. February §, Northeastern; 16th, Stev- | center of the quintet last 9N I play with the Outlaws in OWL HARTFORD TEAM Selects Quintet at Rogoers tion Alleys to Try Skil for | Tomorrow Night. m Kahms, has taken to management, and will take t of lane artists to the Char- Alleys at Hartford tomorrow 20 roll & team there in the a home and home series, for | . | SHARKEY LYNCH BOUT TONIGHT, New York, Dec. 2-=Jack Sharkey and Joe Lynch, bantamweight boxers | meet here tonight in 4 15 round elim- ination bout to decide which of them will meet Pete Herman, world's ban- tamwelght champion. Sharkey and | Lynch were required to weigh in at | 2 o'clock this afternoon within the 118 pound limit established by the state boxing law COLLAPSES: FROM BLOW. Philadelphia, Pa. Dec rell who has nn_l ali e leading mid- | Alewetghts in the last ten vears, is in a precarious condition at his home in Kensington as a result of being hit low “"" ) esking ¥t 1in @ bout with Herman Miller of Talti- N::"l';’r';“m" m“';“'l‘l"';';"""n'f more at Harrisburg Tuesday night. ote, Freeman, Frisk and burg. All theso hoys have g strong on the alleys this and are confident that they & home the bacon. The Cap- fity team will be made up of Nowing: Lee, Harding. Lathrop, and Bartholomew The second of the series will he rolled at w alloys next week Joee Bor- | | | —— | | DE ORO GAINS A TIE. ‘Chicamo, Dec ~Alfred de Oro of ! New York gained a tle for second | | place In the national three cushion billiasda championship tournament vestdrday by defeating Pierre Mau- pome of Milwaukee 50 to 23. De Oro's high run was LEYAN ACCUSES TRINITY. tford, Conn.,, De ~Trinity | Vesloynn again at the parting | ways in athletio relations. Wes- | clalng that at football this tall | opponents resorted to rough tac bringing protests from players, raduates and slumni. Ted Hud Finity’'s alumni sec has the Wealeynn senate te withhold , and the latter has consented oot the Trinity wenate at dinner | in & short time to discuss rola. hips. Have Your Headlights | Adjusted Properly Open Mon., Fri. and Sat. Evenings. A. G HAWKER IXING CARD POSTPON Liberty A. C. mana: forced to postpone the scheduled next Thursday night at d, between Sammy Waltz and Inphy u\\lnl to an In]ur)‘ 'n club to mont has | exhibi- D w Iz | Mumai (BERLIN CONS. FIVE | BEAT A. P. G. BOYS Good Bowling Battles Are Staged at Rogers and Casino Lanes Bowling rivals from the Berlin Con- struction company and the Americas Paper Goods company battled for honors last night at Rogers’ Recrea- tion alleys, the construction gang win- ning two games out of three. At the Casino alleys, teams both the State Trade school, Landers, Frary and Clark and the Trumbull Electric company, of Plainville, held down the lanes. The scores: N o i R BT T Trambull . Miller . Rawlings Neurath from O'Connell Corr Bernardo McKeon | Johnson 50 481 STANLEY WORKS. Office Bertini sh . Hickey Gavitt Conlon Ely .. Millerick MegConn . Lund Merwin Luebeck Elliott Wileox Anderson O'Bries 3 Hoftman Stevens .. Molyneaux umphrey Politis Burns Anderson Sheehan Wiison ... Maddox Nyack Knight Cayer Spare Salvator Parkins Morse Fitzgerald Wileox | Roden Peterson Turner Frisbe Narcum .. Volhardt Hilstrand Wunsh Coffey Sehwader Dummy Smith MeAvay Denkoske Man Iverson Parsons Lund | Martin Venborg Murray Recor Nyquist Lawrence Slasky Johnson Judgen Dummy Dummy TRUMBY K Dionne Powers LaField . Cole Lemeris Funk Grifin Ratelif Kiatt STECH New York. Dec 2-—Joe Stecher, world’s heavyweight wrestling cham- |v|l)h plans to retire from the wrest- nn. game after this season, he sald | fore he | straighten GosSH | GET TIRED STANDING ULIvE ALL DAY LONG 1 ONE EVERY Day- - | S'PosE Irm Lvewy To HAve so b THIS HAVE A DIFFEREmMT MANY CLOTHES I SEE A LOT OF PEoPLE OF COURSE AND t GET A LOT OF LAUGHS AT SOME OF THEM — OH DEAR ME Loow AT THAT MAN TRYOING T PuLL HvS WIFE AwAY- - SHE D BE A FRIGHT 1™ ANY CSLOTRES | CAN WEAR 'HORSES WITHOUT FOOD, ' PLAN T0 MEET HARDING OWNER IS FINED $1 (Continued from First Page) was sold to a Berlin man at a smail charge. Mr. Preston testified as to conditions | at Hurley’s stable. There was ng, food in the building'but several dozens of Whiskey bottles, indicating = what | the cause of the neglect might be. The accused admitied In a conversa- tion with the witness that he had ; been away from the horses for three days, having gone to Springtield to visit relatives, Hurley attributed his court record to excessive drinking. Having been on a spree last May, he felt that he should leave the city for a few days to out, Beiore making that Dcslmycr After hklng Notables on Board, Will Steam Directly Newport News. for Newport News, Va., Dec. 2.—The destroyer which is to take President- elect Harding and party from the Pastores at Cape Henry, instead of landing at Old Point Comfort 'will steam direct to Newport Newsa. As 'soon as the Pastores arrives in- side the capes Saturday wireless tel- ‘ephonlc communication will be estab- lished with a fleet of 30 aeroplanes and two balloons which are to act as escort of honor for Senator ‘Harding. ,Inlpectlon of the shipyard where | two battleships and two battle cruis- 1 MATE winDow DRESSERS, | THEY SLAM ME AROUND aS THOUGH | WAD NO FEeLINGS 'LL BE GLAD whHenN NIGHT Comes AND THEY TAKE OFF Tris FUR. T DoESN'T mean, ANYTHING ANYWAY STOWAWAY GHANGES MIND Youngster From Austria Tries to Float Across New York Harbor, But Cannot ‘Make If. Nw York, Dec. 2.—After bobbing ' around aimlessly in the harbor on & raft for several hours in. the - dark, ‘Wasic Ernst, an 18 year .old stow. away from Austria decided early to. day to abandon his novel method of eluding Ellis Island officials, and called dejectedly for help. ‘While thawing out by a radiator, he told a tugboat captain, who found him after much searching that he ! had been told that the way of stow- ers are under construction, a brief program at a local theater and sepa- rate luncheons for Senator and Mrs. Harding will constitute the major features of entertainment here after which the party will leave for Nor- folk. decision he went through $700, he told | the court, part o tor drink and pi izing that the ani.e.s should be cared for in his avsence, Hurley went to Curtin’s saloon where, according to his sldewent on tne witness stand, he spent his moncy and where he was robbed, the bartender during which was spent was stolen. Real- 1o have the horses fed his absence. horses of feed he made smlar ar rangement with Louis Comonicq and a man at the Cuter junk-shop. Prosecutor George W. Klett asked the accused why he left the city. He replied that he had intended to re- turn but had been confned to a hos- pital in Springtield for more than five weeks while he was on the verge oi delirium tremens. When he was dis- charged he summed up the situation in his own mind and felt it inadvi ble to return home since the police had taken his horse, one Jew his wagons and another Jew his harness. Hurley asked for an opportunity to pay afier turning another horse and 60 bushels of potatoes into cash. | Whenrefused he expressed deep re- explained. grets since he would probably have to tace charges of ncgiecting the horse as soon as released on this charge, he Other Cases Harry T, street, was fined and costs for failure to have proper brakes on his automobile truck. The accused figur- ed in an accident yesterday at the in- tersection of Washington and West Main streets. When Traffic Supervisor Clarence lamphere. turned the truck over to Elmer Sabel to drive into a garage, it was found to have no brakes working. On a similar charge Lewis Brasso was arrested yesterday afternoan on Hartford avenue when his three ton truck proved deficient in that respect, ! The owndr proved to the court's sat- isfaction that he had taken steps (o have the brakes repaired and was reasonably certain that | operate When the car was taken out. | He was ordered to pay court costs. Saul Dubowy and Paul Bada wera assessed $2 without costs each for wllowing their cars to stand for more than 40 minutes in a restricted part of Main street. Prosecutor Klett recommended a fine of $Sawithout costs on tobert Smyrk for a breach of the peace al- leged to have been committed last June. The accused left the city be- could be placed under arrest and made arrangements with ' To assure tbhe' they would ! not return_until yesterday. ; | U.S. GUNBOAT ACTIVE British Warships Also Sent Into War Zone of China to Protect Intcrests of Country. Bhanghai, China, Dec. 1, (By As- =ociated Press) —American and Brit. ish gunboats are hurrying to I-Chang a treaty port in the province of Hu- Peh, where mutinous Chinese troops have looted and burned a portion of the city. The American gunboat Monocacy, which now is on patrol along upper reaches of the Yangztse river above I-Chang, is the nearest warship to the scene of the trouble. Looting and burning at I-Chang continues and property loss there is heavy, says a message relayed from Nankow from the agent of the Stan- dard Oil Co. at I.Chang. The lives of foroigners, however, are said not 12 be in any immediate danger. DIGGING FOR BODY | Toronto Authoritics Look for Body of | Ambrose Small in Cellar of Grand Theater. Toronto, Dec 2.—Excavation was being made today under the Grand theater in search of the body of Am- hrose J. Small, long missing and weal- thy theatrical manager. A group of stage hands under direction of De- tective Sergeant Austin Mitchell will be kept busy digging up the earth ! under the auditorium until it is defi- nitely established that Small's body is not hidden there, it was said. Police officials have hitherto held to the theory that Small is still alive {and held for ransom. | Bardigan of ‘Washington ' KACEYS TO PLAY Y. FIVE. The undefeated Kacey basketball team of this city, will play the Mid- dletown Y. M. C. A. team in that lace tomorrow evening. The local layers and rooters will leave on the 6:15 o'clock train. PLAN BOXING BILL, A bill providing for 15-round box- ing bouts to a decision, having the approval of the Connecticut Boxing commission, will be presented at the coming session of the General As- sembly. aways entering America was hard and consequently when his ship en- tered the harbor he threw the raft overboard, jumped onto it and hoped to be washed ashore. He was taken to Ellis Island for' deportation. CONGRESSIONAL MEETINGS Agricultural Committces of Senn:a and House Assemble in Joint Session This Afternoon. ‘Washington, * Dec. 2.—Agricultural committees of the senate and house will meet in joint session this af- ternoon to consider possible relief measures for the agricultural situa- tion. Revival of the war finance cor- poration, further extension of credits to farmers, placing a tariff on wheat imports, utilization of funds in hands of alien property custodian as a basis ' of credits to Germany and subscrip- tion by congress to 51 per cent. of stock in companies formed for ex. port business under the Edge law are some of the measures which will be considered. KAISER T0 THE BAR Pittsburgh Spectators in Court Sur- prised When Olerk Calls “Kaiser Wilhelm”—Froak Name. Pittsburgh, Dec. 2.—Witnesses and spectators in criminal court here yes- terday craned their necks and cast Itheir cyes about the big room when 1 1 Out SUNDAY—BERLIN CONSTRUCTION BOWLERS CONQUER A. P. G. FIVE AT ROGERS ALLEYS—AMERI- IMSBURY HERE TOMORROW NIGHT—OUTLAWS MANAGEMENT BOOKS THREE HARD CONTESTS I'D HATE To Be The WIFE OF ANY OF THEM FRESH THIiNGS ST Tis Tiye MoST m.DEo-.,;;s Gowns Toy EVER 1 wWiSH | CouLd Go To A GooD ™MOWViE OR| SomMeETHING '‘a tipstaff, in a booming voice an- wanted at the bar. Falling to locate “Kaiser” in the court-room a force iof tipstaffs went into the corridors and continued to shout the name. ‘When newspapermen approached the court and asked for information it was explained that the Wilhelm in question wae a resident of Mill- vale, a suburb of Pittsburgh, and | that he had been indicted !or largeny * but not yet arrested. SCHOOL PUPILS TO PRESENT PAGEANT :!hw"‘wlnbawflh cal Theater on February 11 and 12 by Big Gast. . “The Light,” said to be an elabof- ate pageant and which has been pro- rduced in Cleveland and in Hartford, will be presented by the pupils of the ‘Grammar and High schools at a local theater on February 11 and 13. Mrs. Amy C. Guilford of the High achool faculty will direct the production, for witich almost 300 people are needed. The purpose of this pageant is tu forcibly impress the need of educa- | tion. The production has a prologue, ““The Vision,” and an epilogue, *““The Gleam,” and the following parfs: _ 1st, xperience”; 2d, “Tradition”; 3d, “Invention™; 4th, “Training"; 5th, ‘Discipline’ | Democracy" | “Force™; 9th, “Training for Democ-! racy”; 10th, “A Warning 11th, “Education's Dream * USED CARS FOR SALE 1919 Dodge Bros. Tovring. 1917 Hudeon Super Six, 7 passen- ger touring. 1917 Dodge Bros. Touring. 1916 Dodge Bros Roadster, Cadillac Coupe. 1918 Ford Delivery. 1917 Ford Delivery. ) The above cars are in A-1 condiffon. S.& F. Motor Sales Corp. Hindson, Essex and Dodge Bros. Distributors, Open Evenings. Tel. 781 155 Elm St. Kill That Cold With Wik ls CASCARA Collh, Coughs QO"‘o QUININE La éri ppe j Neglected Colds are Dangerous Take no cbances. Keep this standard remedy hwdy for the first sneeze. Breaks up a cold in 24 hours — Relieves Grippe in 8 daya—Excellent for Headache Quinine in this form does not affect the head—Cascara is best Tonic Laxative—No Opiate in Hill’s. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT nounced that “Kaiser Wilhelm” was. {