New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 27, 1921, Page 8

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, - WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 192f. “FIDO” O’BRIEN NOSES OUT JACK WHITE OF NEW HAVEN ON CASINO ALLEYS, SIX GAMES TO FIVE—GEORGE BURNS MUFFS BALL AND DODGERS GET & OPPORTUNITY THAT RESULTS IN VICTORY OVER GIANTS—RICE’S BATTING AND FIELDING RESULT IN WIN FOR SENATORS OVER NEW YORK YANKEE® ATORS AGAIN | DEFEAT YANKEES s Great Work -al Bat and| Field Features Sensational Rice, Washington's enabied Washington York again here yes- the score being b to 4. Rice home run, & double and two his home run making Wash- ‘s winning run in the sixth in- In the elghth inning Rieco ted New York from tying the by making a sensational run- cateh on Pipp. It was fourth stralght de York, of ®am flelder, eat New April 27 001000 D0O000—1 Quinn Ington York ta Hoyt 001 112 and Gharrity: and The Lucky sland April r Speaker used s In the game yesterday but d them to win from Detroit, 9 He ecalled upon six pitchers, butchers, wix outfielders, three pasemen, two pinch hitters and inch runner only Indians to he entire game I, Stephenson and American twefity-three play through- being Spenker Gardaner. L h. @ " 051010010—8 16 1 10300122x—9 15 4 | Oldham and Bassler; Peotty Odenwald, O'Nell and Nun- and Ehmke Clark, fagby and wll n or. Kerr Has Bad 1 4 Cago, April (American) Kerr had one vad Inning yes- | in which he forced two rur the plate, and Chicago was to overtake St. Louls, the s winning, 2 to 1. Al rain storm pd the game M the second in- The score r. 002000100— 001000000—1 Severeld; Kerr uin mo Ker | 6 1 and and A's Stage Gheat Rally. ton, April 27 (American).—= double, Pratt's error on Du- fly and a pass Welsh fillead wes with none out in the ninth day. nock then struex out F. Walker, Perkin's single to left scored two enough to give Philadelphia n yictory over Boston. The score: v. h 0000000022 100000000 1 kins: Pennock to delphia n oro MPLIMENT FOR ROGERS Club and and " d Erwin's emen’s ends Vote of Appreciation to Pou-’ Owner of Bowling Alleys, prge C Rogers, proprietor of %' Recreaflon alleys is in receipt ettor from the Russell and Erwin en's club, thanking him and the s of the alleys for the courteous pent accofded the members of the in the bowling losguo which re- closed ita season on the lanes. tter follows ussell & Erwin's Foremen's Club, April 26, 1921, Jeorge . Rogers, eereation Hall, Church St few Britain, Conn sir e mombers of the Russell and Er- oremen's club desire to express uppreciation of the courteous and fous treatment they were afforded werien of bowling gumes recently concluded at your fuvors and accommodations vived, a feeling of Indebtedness arself and the personnel of the hall by a vote of the club; pleasant duty of the writer ¥y notify you of the same Very truly yours, WILLIAM CO , Secy., Russell and Erwin Foremen's Club, a FRANCE GETS STADIUM, s Ground at Over by Americans. April 27.—~A second stadium be given to France by America the American Committee of De- ted France presents to the city iswons a sports ground gimilar to hing stadium, presented to Paris he American army ring the war th nequired u la plot of ground heh to carry on itd work, and after the armistice this property, Mamaged, due to trenches having dug across it several times and to & large number of shell holes, presented to the municipality of ons by the Red Cross. The Amer Committee for Devastated France has come to the rescue and will the cost of levelling the ground erecting a stadium pissons Is Turned s, 2 American Red KANSAS IS OUTBOXED liwaukeo, April ~Johnnie be, New York, out-boxed Rocky of Puftalo in_a ten round GED. BURNS' ERROR HELPS ROBINS WIN — Reliable Lelt Fielder's Muii Is Followed by Two Hits Brooklyn, April 27.—Brooklyn ‘won agaln from New York yesterday, 3 to 1. Burns' muff ot Griffith’s long fly after Olson and Johnston had singled gave Brooklyn two runs in the third inning. In the eighth Griffith hit the ball over the right flield fence. Bill Lamar, Jlerooklyn utllity outfielder, who has heen suffering from malaria, has been sent home to rest. Score by Innings r. h. e New York...000610000—1 8 1 Brooklyn ...00200001x—3 11 0 Toney and Snyder; Smith and Mil- ler. ue In True Form, Cinelonaty, April 27.—Bunching hits off Freeman and Bailey in the seventh inning yesterday Cincinnati won from Chicago, 6§ to 8. The Cubs scored three runs off Luque in the first round, but could do nothing there- after. The score by innings: r. h. .300000000—3 8 Cincinnati 1000004 0x—5 7 Freeman, Bailey and O'Farrely; | Luque and Winga Homers Help Braves. | Philadelphia, April 27.—Home runs by Cruise, Powell and McQuillan fea- tured Boston's 10 to 6 victory over | Philadelphia yesterday. All of the lo- cal pitchers except Weinert were hit hard | Beits was struck on the head by a line drive in the sixth, the ball bounc- ing into left field, where Wrightstone caught it for a putout. Lebourveau, whose pinch hit won Monday's game, drove in three runs with a triple he made as pinch hitter in the fifth inning. Rawlings and Barbare had perfect batting averages. The score by innings: r. h. e Boston ....003023200—10 14 2 Philljes ...000040101— 6 15 1| McQuillan and O'Neil; Hubbell, Weinert, Betts, Smith and Bruggy. ! Chicago PITCHES NO-HIT GAME ———— Pussaic Girl Turns in an Unusoal real Against E. Rutherford Gram- mar School—Fans 20 Batters, New York, April 27.—Today's nomination for baseball's hall of fame is a female pitcher who twirled a | no-hit game. The hurling -* Miss Victoria Plaza of the Passai¢ (New Jersey) public school No, 12 team yesterday insoluble to the batters | of the Rutherford Grammar | school. She struck out 20 batters. Passaic won 7 to 1, their opponents scoring on a pass and two errors. Fast LIND, BUT PLAYS CH Man n Delaware Gamao Exhibits Ability Hospital Ward. Wilmington, Del., April 27.—Al- though blind and confined in a Clay- | mont hospital recovering from the ef- fects of a fall in which one of his legs was broken, Reginald Van Trump ot Claymont, Del,, is waging a chess bat- tle as keen and ax exciting as that be- tiween Capablanca and Dr. Lasker at Havana, with Willlam Canby Ferris, an accountant of Arden, Del, as his opponent. Both ef the contestants are well known and expert chess players. Van Trump utilizes a specially constructed chess board with pegged chessmen. As a move is made the result is mailed to his opponent, who in turn sends his move by maljl. The game has been under way for several weeks, { at GRORGETOWN JLOSES. Georgla Tech Team Finishes On Long End of 3-2 Battle. Washington, April 27.—Georgia | Tech, with Thompson hurling a fine | brand of baseball, defeated George- | town yester 3 to 2. Georgetown | made a desperate rally in the ninth, | but Thompsod took the situation in | hand and struck out Florence, pinch ; hitting for Flavin, and Hyman. The score by innings: .0 o 6 Georgetown .110000000—2 o Georgia Téech 000300000—8 7 1| Reynolds and Kenyon: Thompson and Bratton. WHITE SOX GET SAEA, New York, April 27.—Pat Shea, the pitcher, is to join the White 8dx after all. He is on his way to Chicago. Shea | was released by the Qlants to the White Sox under the interleague waiver rule. He was purchased last year by tHe New York club from To- ronto for $12,000, but it appears the paying of that amount was an obli- gation the White Sox didn't cave to assume. Bo the White Sox decided they dlan’t want Shea. But the man- agement of the Glants considered a bargain a bargain, and assigned the Shea contract to the White Sox and directed the pitcher to report to that | glub, WILL COACH KANSAS Lawrence, Kan., April (Potsy) Clark has been elected head football coach at the University gof Kansas and will come here on a Iong time contract, Chancellor E. H. Lindi, EVEN. T.—Geotge | | MeBriart (’BRIEN MANAGES T0 NOSE OUT WHITE Casino Bowler Wins Six Games From New Haven Boy “Fido” ©O’'Brien nosed out Jack “Kid"* White of New Haven by a mar- gin of one game last night at the Ca- sino alleys, in a match that showed the Elm City youngster to be quite a plugzer. For a time it appeared like a rout for the visitor, with the result standing six games to two in favor of the Casino representative. White, however, stuck gamely to the task ot toppling the timbers, and took the last three games. visitor stood high with 1,181 against 1,165 for Dennis. White also bowled the high single with 129 registered in the third game. The boys will meet again this evening at New Haven. At Rogers alleys last night, the Landers, Frary & Clark quintet, lead- ers in the Industrial league, took two games from the Skinner Chuck com- pany five two games to one. The scores of the O’'Brien-White match and other contests follow: CASINO BOWLING ALLEYS. 97 95 129 101 103 125 114 102 105 102 113 K9 99 108 110 114-—1188 128 90 108 110—1166 White O Brien 5% ROGRES® ALLEYS. INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE. Landers. J. Huek W. Wright Schmalz urgen F. Narcum Bowers Trevethan Valentin Kahms . Burke Senback Hayes ... Gangloff .. Haugh Campbell Odman Page . Myers Stanley W 88 419 443 N. B. Machine Co. Purkhardt 8 . 81 87 Hy oard 57 Cuback 58 Swanson 88 Lofgren 450 434 Stanley Works, Politis 59 Berry Molyneau Bertini Dummy Kalen Soloman Bean = Remington Ohisen Leupold Caswell | Rockwell H. May . Zwick Bottomle; C. May | Walthers Pleckert F. Jurgen .. Curtiss ... Gordon Blake Newton Strom Heisler Vater G. Hepp . Wenzel H. Hepp . Christenzer | Coons | Danverg Landgren White .. Holtman Lindgren Carison . Johnson Landgren .. Nelson 481 Valkyrian No. J. Carlson . H. Berlen C. Ericson . f. Landgren “arison Carlson Peterson Anderson rickson Ison A E. Al M 3441014 Valkyrien No. 2. In total pinfall the | 'BASEBALL lAin’t It a Grand and Glorious Feeling —AND JUST AS You FALL ASLEEp A BURGLAR ENTERS THRouAH THE WINDO! AND COMMAND S Youv To BE QUIET’ AFTER You'VE GONE To BED AT NIGHT FESLING VERY TIRED AND GROUCHY ~AND AFTER CLIMBING THE FIRE ESCAPCE TEN STORIES To THE ToP OF THE cH AN waur) You HEAR THE BAD MAN RIGHT BACwW oF You oNLY A G BUILDING ~ AND S AS HE'S ABWUT To CHUCK You OVER THE GDGE AT "W, il Copyvight N. V. Teibwas tume. IN A NUTSHELL WAR OBJECTORS T0 FORM ASSOCIATION Pledge Themselves Not to Take Up Arms Chicago St. Louis Boston . Detroit Philadelphia NATIONAL LEAGUE. S aget Results Yesterday. Brooklyn 3, New York 1, Cincinnati 5, Chicago 3. Boston 10, Philadeiphia 6. Pittsburgh-8t. ILouis game poned—wet grounds. » Tomorrow’s Games. Washington at New York. Philadelphia at Boston. ’ Detroit at Cleveland. Standing of the Clubs. &t. Louls at Chicago. Won. Lost. P.C. ! Cincinnati | Bt Feriell | ing the continuance of the match, and wished to resign the match because of Philadelphia, April 27.—Conscién- tious objectors to war service in Ger- many have férmed a uhion with morae than 10,000 members, each of whom has signed & pledge that they will neither take up arms, produce war material, give money nor aid in any way in what they characterize as the “orgaunized murder of subjects of other couhtries or. of our own coun. trymen.” This information comes from How- | ard H. Brinton, a member of the So- ciety of Friends from West Chester, | Pa.,, who recently attended a publie | npeeting in Berlin held under the auspices of the “German Union of Objectors to War Bervice.” “I expected to find a dozen or so long-haired persons sitting about a table, and instead found a hall, jam- med to the doors with about 800 peo- ple, the air tense ‘with suppressed enthusiasm,” said Mr. Brinton. One of the speakers said the organ. ization ‘was formed by German war prisoneks in England after they wefe permitted to réturn to Germany. A student who was a speaket at the meeting, declared that there 'was great need in the universities for ul‘ spiritual awakening, since "the oln! | | Pittsburgh ...... '$ Chicago ......... 6 New York .. .. 8 Brooklyn Aok INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Results Yesterday. Jersey City 6, Syracuse 2, Buffalo 5, Newark 2. Baltimore 8, Rochester 2. Toronto 4, Read 1, (first game). Louis (Ten in- Toronto 5, second gdme). Reading 6, nings; Tomorrow’s Games, New York at Brooklyn. Boston at Philadelphia. Cincinnati at 8t Louis. Standing of the Clubs ) Won. Lost Baltimoge Newark .... Jersey City Toronto Syracuse Rochester Reading Buffalo AMERICAN LEAGUE. Results Yesterday. Washington 5, New York 4. Philadelphia 2, Boston 1 Cleveland 9, Detroit 8. St. Louis 3, Chicago 1. Standing of the Clubs. N @D 0910 10 Games Today ¥ Toronto at Jersey City. Rochester at Newark., Buffalo at Baltimore. Syracuse at Reading. Cleveland Washington New York FLETCHER NOT TO RETURN. Philadelphia, April 27.—President John A. Heydler of the National leaguc, on his way from the west to New York, announced here yesterday that Captain Art Fletcher of the Phillies had posi- tively decided to retire from baseball. Heydler visited Fletcher at the latter's home in Collinsville, 1li., on Sunday and | tried to persuade the former Giant in- fielder to return to the game. Fletcher's refusal was based on the successive deaths of of his brother and father and his dislike for travel. Ag. Carison 60— 208 356—1127 FI. Petetson E. Johnson T. Anderson El. Foberg . A. Sandstrom mhitary party was stlil strong there and demanded revenge on the enemy. Another speaker said-that the Ger- mans who had permitted themselves to be driven into this war had brains that were nothing but soup poured into their heads by others. “Militar- ism, mammonism, egoism and all that goes with the Wilhelm idea must dis- appear,” he said. Dr. Helene Stoecker, of the Wom- en's International League for Peace and Freedom. said that the education supplied by the German state is drill, not education. “Instead of bringing hidden qualities:.to the surface, it hammers lies into the brain,”” she said. “If the ‘educated’ are taught only how to exploit humanity, it were Dbetter that mankind remain as ignorant as the Russian peasant.” HOLD-UP MAN ARRESTED Caught After Dodging Posses and Trains in Subway Tube—Ilis Two NEW BRITAIN V New Britain. .102 . 90 116 112 a8 FORD PLANS MONTHLY BONUS. 501 5 Aetna Nonpareil. . 77 108 112 114 100 Individual Payments Have Been Made = Yearly. Detroit, April 27.—At a conference of Ford Motor officials yesterday plans were discussed t0 pay the Ford Motor company’'s bonus to its em- ployes monthly this year instead of holding it until the first of next year. Last January the individual bon- uses ranged from $50 to more than $300. With production now practically normal, nearly the entire force once more busy, with business conditions still unsteady, officials of the com- ipany believe a monthly system of Companioni Escape. profit sharing will work out better for all concerned. 7 New Yorks April 27.—After three men held up & French steamship chet in a Brooklyn subway station early today and robbed him of $325 one of them took refugce in the subway tube leading under the East river to Man- hattan. The Frenchman related hia plight in broken English to the ticket agent, who started several workmen, armed with crowbars, wrenches and other tools in pursuit. The fugitive, who addy 8ave Nis name as Harry Gross, waj e fish, which is only twenty feat | caught after he had traversed the was. hauled. aboard with = a | subterranean pussage to Wall street, | e _after puttines un a- st battle | b st Johnston . Budnick .. Hallisay Belcher MAY DISCONTINUE MATCH. Dr. Lasker, German Chess Master, Said to Be HI. A Havana, April 27.—Neither Capa- blanca nor Lasker appeared last night for the fifteenth game of the world's chess championship tournament. Noth- ing official has been given out by those in charge of the tournament regard- l r ! i CATCH 2-TON SEA MONSTER Atlantic City, N. J April Old sea dogs, whose chief pastime is to spin yarns of gigantic fish they have landed, took two lookd then threw up their hands today when Capt. Clarence Starn’s craft docked with a black sea monster weighing more than two tons. It was caught vesterday in a mackerel net sixty miles off the coast. it is understood that efforts are being made to persuade Lasker to finish the series. It has been reported that Dr. 27 27.— Lasker illness. GANDIL IS ARRESTED Los Angeles, Cal., April 27.—Arn- old (Chick) Gandil, one of the form- er Chicago White Sox baseball play- ers alleged to be connected with the long, Moore's AND You MAKE A GRAND DIVE FoR THE oPen WINDOW WITH THE. BURGLAR _AT TouR HEELS YOU WAKE UP — (T WAS DREAM=- OH-H-K 'B,QY‘! AIN'T (T A SR-R-R-RAND AND. LOR-R-Rious FEELIN' T YEH'H'H-B_OJ' Notice of Hearing On Admin Account. Probate Court, Distriét of 8. New Britain, April 25, A. fostate of Henry A. Robhin Southampton, Nv Y., in said deceased. The Executor exhibited his istration account with said this Court for allowance, it ORDERED, That thé 2nd May, A. D. 1921, at 9 o'cloc. forenoon, at the Probate New Britain be and the sa signed for a hearing on thg ance of said administration ) with sald Estate and thiy rects the Executor to cite-all interested therein to appear time and place, by publis order in some newspaper p| in New Britain and havig lation in said District, and a copy on the public sign DS Town of New Britain, neare: the deceased last dwelt, and ing a copy of this order to at-law and legatees, and retul Attess BERNARD F. GAF Delaw River Shad Buck Shad .... Genuine Bluefish Sea Trout . Silver Salmon . rt Cod ..., Blue Steak . .. 'Large Flounders . ... Silver Bass ......... Splendgd Shore Hadda Halibut, Fresh Ma Roe Shad, Eels. Conn.. River Alewi Pound. Codfish Cheeks, Li Boiled Lobsters, Liy Boiled Shrimp, Round Neck Clams, Scallops, ing Clams, Finnan Try Our Indian | Oysters. They Aregl - A

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