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UNDED BY GIANTS| firkers End \;lestern Trip‘} With an Easy Victory —_— fcago, 111, June 20.—One inning hamme, 'ng yesterday and have gore swim or gc'fing, fur tover 'interest there was in ¢{he of the bLail game. The Glants med niuu runs and 1l o hits into first inning and beat the Cubs, 3 They took three games out of here and win seven out of fifteen o road, which is not so good. New Yorks (N). ea vy might as well or motoring ab r h o a e AL e PEL) TR rott, sy 4 33 45 0 h, b 51 3 3 ¢ O ng. rt «+5 1 1 3 0 0 y, 10 . 85 1 113 0 O o of ... o553 % 30 O rson, 3b .3 110 3 1 or, . + 4 3 3 3 1 0 o8, P oo $ 010 2 0 shoveccs.88 9 14 37 18 1 Chicago (N). r h o a e o 0 3 0 O o 0 5 5 0 o 0 1 10 1 2 8 00 o 0 2 0 0 013 0 o0 o132 10 0o 0 3 3 0 0o 0 0 o0 1 0o 0 0 0 0 o0 0 0 0 o 0 0 1 0 tals ssencscd® 1 43711 1 Batted for Jones in tighth inning York .....9 0000000 0—9 “go .......0 1000000 0—1 uns batted in—By Burns, 1: by oft, 2; by Frisch, 1; by Youns Kelly, 1; by King, 2: by Snyder. Kelleher, 1. Barned runs—Off hn, 5; off Barnes, 1. Two-base Kelly, Burns, Grimes, King, h. Three-base hit—Barnes. e base—Bancroft. Sacrifice— locher. Double plays—Bancroft h; Hollocher and Grimes bases—New York, 6; Chi- Basges on balls—Off Barnes, ff Jones, 3. Hits—Oft Vaughn, 6 3 inning: off Jones, 8 in 7 2-3 in s; off Cheeves, none in 1 inning by pitched ball—By Jones (Ban t). Struck out—By Barnes, 2; by os, 2. Winning pitcher—Barnes. ng pitcher—Vaughn. Umpires— m and Emslie. Time of game— ours. « Phillies Down the Reds. incinnati, June 20.—Philadelphia o five hits and scored four runs he fifth inning yesterday, and won Cineinnatl by a score of 5 to 2. ly wag interrupted in the fourth in. by. & downpour of rain, the re- der of the game being played on ked fleld. The acore: Philadelphia (N). ab r h o a e lings, 2b +ue0e 4 0 0 6 1 O 4 1 V'3 ¢ 0 . $ 1190 ightstone, 1t ... 4 0 2 3 1 0 Kinson, ss . 4 0 33 30 Hams, cf ...... 4 T 1 4 0 O 1D ceceee 2017 0 0 a C aene 40 31Tl 30 plier, » .. ¢ 1. 1 0 3 o otaly +c.c0ee..34 510 27 14 O Cincinnati (N). ap r h o a ¢ Do 2 .... ¢ 21 ¢ 60 bert, 1b 32 009 00 ssler, rf . 3112 00 ush, cf .. 4 0 2 3 00 nean, It . 0O 0 2 0 0 £, 88 .0 01110 h, 3b ... o1 2 2 0 rave, ¢ 0 0 4 0 0 UG, P eecoee 01 0 3 0 0tals ..co0c...38 3 7 2710 0 fladelphia ..0 0 00 4 0 0 0 1—5 #innati ....0 0100100 0—2 wo-base hits—Bohne, Parkinson, asler. Sacrifices—Daubert , h, Duncan, Lee. Double plays— ler, Rawlings and Lee: Groh, hne and Daubert; Bohne and Dau- t. Left on bases—Philadelphia, ¢; cinnatl, 6. Bases on balls—Off Lu- 1: off Baumgartner, Struck By Luque, 3. Umpires—Hart cCormick. Time of game—2 nd 30 minutes. MoHenry Hits Timely. t. Louls, June 20.—McHenry's ble in the ninth inning yesterday red three runs and defeated Bos- to 4, breaking the Cardinals' ing streak of five games. The score: Boston (N). abr h o a e well, cf . ¢+ 1186 0 0 rbare, ss § 11130 rnbury, ss 0 0 0 0 0 0 uthworth, r£ ... 4 0 2 2 0 0 ehols, 1t ees 4 0 1 1 0 0 eckel ses 4 0:1 3 0 0 Ike, 1b hee 810 g gl d, 2b 413 2 60 oll, « 4 01 2 1 0 schger, P eeees 4 0 0 0 0 O A cooov.ee 36 4 10%25 10 0 St. Louis (N). ab r h o a e ith, rf 4 0 0 2 o0 0 ote, cf . 4 110y ek, 3b ¢ 2200 0 rnsby, 2b . 4 23 0 4 0 unier, 1b . 3 0 014 1 1 Henry, It 3 0 1 0 o0 o0 n, ss b 6 0 & & @ ns, ¢ . $ 00 3 3 1 A 2 0 0 0 % o0 alker, p .. 0O 0 0 0 0 o hultz ... 10 0 0 0 o s cccccvec.33 5 7 37 17 8 ne out when winning run was 1o 5 5. o' Nzirk.. . o alker, 1. 10 in 8 inning off Walker, none in 1 inning. Struck out—By Oeschger, 1; by Doak, by Walker, 1. Winning pitcher—Walk. wild pitches—Doak, 2 Umpires—Quig- iey and O'Day. Time of game—1 hour and 43 minutes INTIER VIDAL PICKS CAR French Government Official Believes has caused Tex Rickard, the promoter of the show to announce that he might step in and officiate himself. ““The first thing you know,’’ Rickard said as he sat on the edge of his swim- ming pool in Madison Square rden, ““they’ll wind up with me in the ring. I've done it before under similar cir- cumstances and it may happen again.” FRED FALLER GOING TO COAST Challenger Will Win Boston, June 20.—Fred Faller June 20.—(By the Associated | crack distance runner of the Dor- Press) — The Dempsey-Carpentier| chester club, had been added to the fight in the opinion of Gaston Vidal, Under Secretary of State for Physical Culture and Sports will develop into the bitterest battle ever staged be- tween heavyweights. French news- papers which were belittling Demp- sey's record professing to believe that the fight would be a walkover for Carpentier, he said, were rendering their champion poor service. “There is no doubt that Dempsey is one of the greatest fighting ma- chines ever seen in the ring,” M Vidal continued, “But so is Carpentier and, without prejudice to Dempsey's sharpness of brain, I feel safe in sa ing that Carpentier is the quic thinker. Thus everything being even physically between two perfect fight- ing machines, the victory must revert to the man whose brain will propel his muscles without the slightest delay after seeing an opening. I think that man {s Carpentier.” er NEW ROWING THEORY. Harvard Crew Changes Its Oars to Suit Wind Currents. Cambridge, June 20.— Harvard's freshman crew, in training on the Thames river for the regatta next Fri- day, has contributed a new idea for the books of rowing experts. Under the di- rection of Dr. H. Heber Howe, fresh- man coach, the Crimson yearlings trim their oars to suit the breeze. If the race is against the wind they use a nar- row set of sweeps; if the race is with the wind, barrel-shaped oars are used. It is Dr. Howe's theory that in row- ing before the wind a shell travels so swiftly that wide oars are necessary to get a maximum grip on the water and, while in the air, the blades serve in a sense as sails and catch the b ze for forward impulse. Against the wind the narrowest effective surface exposed | to wind and wave is best, to his mind. The success of the Crimson freshmen to date bas been held to justify the idea. TO MEET. City League Schedule to Be Mapped Ous Tomorrow Night. A meeting of the managers of the teams in the City league which will play games at St. Mar; playgrounds this season, has be led for 8:15 o'clock tomorrow night at the Hotel Beloin. Fred Guenther will head the Mt. Pleasant team; Charles Miller, the Independents, and C. Bjorklund Director Pilz announces that any manager desiring to enter a team in this league can do so. John Walsh, of Walsh and Hollfelder store, has donated a silver cup for the win- ning team. The first game will be played next Saturday. The $120 league which proved suc- cessful last season will again be formed this year. So far there are | three teams in the league, the Colum- | bias, Nutmegs and Redwoods. There | is room for another club or two in this league. the Trojans. RICKARD MAY RE! This Poss| Agreement Is Reached. Admits w York, June 2 —~Failure to reach eement as to who shall be the in the championship battle be- | GERMAN “JACKI ler, 9, is the German “Jackie Coozan." | He gets 25,000 marks a year. He also | gets a half dozen stein of beer a day. And he doesn’'t need a doctor's pre- scription | trio of New England athletes who will represent this section at the national championships in California next month. Faller, who set a new record for this section in the five mile run vesterday, will be listed for that event in Pasadena. The Myrtle street baseball team won a closely contested game from the Postoffice club yesterday after- noon, 20 to 19. The government men were leading 15 to 2 in the fifth in- ning when the Hill crowd took a sud- den liking to Coogan's benders. Ap- plegren’s two homers took the clout- honors for the day. Bill Roche d a clever game at the midway HOBLITZELL SELLS PEARCE Reading, Pa., June 20.—Manager Hoblitzell of the Reading Internation- als today announced the sale of Wal- ter Pearce, an infielder, tothe Roches- ter team of the same league. Pearce came to Reading from the University of Pennsylvania. Relay Race from Cochem to Coblenz Held Yesterday Coblenz, June 20.—The meter relay race from Coblenz, run yesterday by ten teams from different organizations of the American forces in Germany, was won by the Eighth Infantry. Headquarters Detachment was cond and the Fifteenth Infantry took third place The time of the winning team was 2 hours 55 minutes and seconds Bach team was composed of fifty men, one of whom was required to swim the Moselle River near Coblenz fifty Kkilo- Cochem ‘o se HOYT LEADS WILLIAMS' NINE Williamstown, Mass., June 20.—W. E. Hoyt, second baseman, has been elected captain of the 1922 Williams college baseball team. “DO WE GET IN?"—More than 1200 Portuguese and | Jtatian immigrants arrivea at Boston the other day in They are barred from a wild scramble to enter America. entrance until Washington rules under the new was on their status the pier. by fellow countrymen to free them from their frustrated by immigration law. C. H. Norton, For the Safety of Advertisers The Audit Bureau of Circulation has placed the buying of space on a scientific basis. That Organization maintains a force of expert auditors whose business it is to safeguard the money you spend to deliver a message to readers of A. B. C. publications. “We keep honest records. They are open for the scrutiny of the most exacting examiners” — says the publisher when he joins the A. B. C. “We are not afraid to put all the cards on the table. We want you to know where your message goes. We want you to know how many people actually receive our paper —how many buy it for what is in it, and not because of inducements offered for subscriptions.” These facts are contained in a report of the last exami- nation of our paper by the A. B. C. auditor. Come in and look them over, or let us send you a copy Don’t buy “sight unseen”! Get the facts. 4 THE NEW BRITAIN HERALD Is the Only Newspaper in New Britain Whose Circulation Books are Audited. The Herald Has the Largest Circulation of any New Britain Newspaper. An elaborate plan guards superintendent of ——— Man O’ War Not to Return to Track, Says Owner New York, June 20.—The persistent reports that have recently been in circulation to the- effect that Samuel D. R¥ddle was seriously considering returning his great colt Man o' War to racing were emphatically denied yes- terday by Mr. Riddle on the long dis- tance telephone at his home in Glen Riddle, Pa. Mr. Riddle made the un- COOPER - Storec of Hartford. FORMERLY UNION WALL PAPER COMPANY, WE MOVED TO 37 ALLYN STREET = JAN. 20TH, 1921. We have changed only the name—same owners—same low prices—same large selection. 1,000 PATTERNS TO CHOOSE FROM OVER A MILLION ROLLS IN STOCK All colors of the best non-fading duplex Oatmeals, with or without borders. Single - 15¢ wa 20c¢ & Harmonellas and Harmonettes—a reguiar 75c value. Everything in wall paper at 10c, 15¢, 20¢, 25¢. Nothing] over 25c. ZThe largest wall paper dealers in the world. Stores in principal cities and all sell wall paper at 1-3 to 1-2 the regular price. A call at our store will convince you. Cooper WallPaper Stores of Htfd “WHY PAY MORE?” Wwould not be returned to the track but would be kept: onthe farm. “There is no foundation for the port that I intend to permit Ma: War to race again ' said Mr. Rid “I have repeatedly told those hve questioned me on the subject Man o’ War would not be returne the turf. T cannot understand why ports to the contrary are repea being circulated.” Wall ] ) ) 6 ) 5 1 ) ) 6 6 ) ) ) ) DANIEL WEBSTE FLOUR When we launched DANIJLL WEBSTER flour on the market comparatively short time agr, we anticipated success, as we knew were offering to tha consurier the best flour ever produced, and t discriminating consumer iz not slow to recognize merit in a re meritorious article. However, the populs.rity of DANIEL WEBSTER has grown excess of our most sanguine anticipations. It has already plsased thousands of housewives. Its quality been a stronger argument than could have been made by tongue pen. It may well ke called “A flour of quality.” ¢“Better than best,” and we can truthfully clajm for it “Once known, never f ‘“mll." Clean, pare, wholesome and sanitary, DANIED WEBSTER will ever cuntirue to lead where the consumer demands the b Ours is a progressive company and our mill is equipped wif the most modern contrivances known to .nan, it being our const: aim and inteution to give to the consumers of DANIED Flour the very best flour in the world, ‘While DANIEL WEBSTER costs originally a little more other flours, “The value Tecelved more than equals the h cost.” Your bread will be more nutriticus, will have a finer flavor wjll remain sweet and fresh longer; and you can obtain more b: than from an equal quantity of any other flour, A trial will convince you. DANIED WEBSTER Flour will its own arguments and appeal to you as eloquently as did the nowned man whose name it bears. The guarantee protects you. Please read it: “If you are not thoroughly convinced that DANIEL WEBS' Flour has produced the best bread you ever baked after you hat used an entire sack of it, return the empty sack to the deale, leave your name with him, and the purchase price will be ed and charged to us.” s . W.J.CAHILL CO Wholesale Grocers o] gmen‘deu, Ct. - Plainvilie, (353 0 ) 5 i ] o ) 6 ] o] ] ) oou-TM WHAT! JusT GONNA TELL BCAUSE T MOM ON TORE OFF You SOME DAYS™? WELL ' WUATCHA CDRVIN' FoR V-You WENT AN’ TORE TWoO DANS OFF TU' CALENDAR A-AN' | | You DONT CARE, NOW T WON'T Now IT's DO VA? 5 SATURDAY ! e SHUCKS ! WUAT F IT IS SATURDAY ? T — iose) BY BLO. N-VES~FRIDAY IS MY BIRTHDAY AN'