New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 9, 1922, Page 8

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) \ FEBRUARY 192t NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, 9, e —————— e ——— e —— _BOWI;I'NGRESULTS ON LOCAL ALLEYS — RICKARD MATCHES TOM GIBBONS AND HARRY GREB FOR BOUT ON MARCH 13 — AMERICAN LEAGUE MAGNATES TRANSACT BUSINESS IN MEETING AT NATIONAL CAPITAL--BIG DEMAND FOR SEATS FOR THE LEONARD-KANSAS MILL TOMORROW 2w Conn. Amateur Boxers RUTH WILL PLAY New York Policeman \FEW SEATS LEFT RIBKARI] MAT[;HIg— / Bl]WllNfi RESULTS ON LOGAL AILETS ove ey ok B""”‘ AGAINST ST. LOUIS \B""" Young We’"“ FOR LEONARD BOUT GIBBONS AND GREB o o Light Heavyweights 1o Balle Collegians To Box Under English Rules Feb, 0.+ knglish col will be used here Suturday night in the Universities of I'hiladelphia, lege hoxing rules | for the first time a4 meet between Bob MeAllister, holds the 100 yard | Record Crowd 10 Wllness Benny virtue of his vies | New York, 1'eh, 9.—Three Connec the New York |m4|um.|n. |ticut boxers fared badly In the open- ing bouts ut Madison HSquure Garden Metropolitan =~ A, A, | How the Varlous Rollers Fared Bambino and Meusel to Start| hy Last nghl on Lanes The Galne: will oppose the morrow night The contestan @Gaines, Seribner, Carmen, Orsini and | I'risk, Narcun, | Yadish; Stars Myers, Larson The resuits night on the | of Hartford rs here to- of $100 Perfectos: Perfectos Casino for u purse s will be: I"oote, aml Anderson of games rolled ocal ally follow: STANLIY BUSH ©'Brien PBarnes Tyler Andy Brooks Packard 93 04 98 99 463 436 Rolls Royce Wheelock Burns Lundaquist Duplin Brown Hall Johnson Wollman Mordes 104 70 103 A 88 450 443 1347 Overland .96 il 86 9 445 100 It 83 88— 86— 471 399 Hupmobile Hanford Rowe Stanton .. Ahlquist Northrop Pierce Karpinski Nurczyk . Rockwell Humphrey 89 66 76 88 L100 64 4 92 113 4 419 427 Arrows. 89 1 Dimmy o0 Myers May .... Dalzell Olson Clanson Huber Draper Johnson Maier Ifanion Sandstrom Patterson Norfeldt Doyle Rowling Jones Center Churc Miss Prentice W. L. Miss Ramage Miss Beele . Steege .. C. H. Hall Hagen ... 422 Hudson 2111 7 . 87 .106 86 85 83 70 86 7 467 Buick 401 418 — s Fellowship Club. Chestnuts. 84 67 ST 13 hs 69 s8 195 Doughnuts. 229 216— 240 260 Mixed Nul\ Miss_ Bergann A. Y: Andres .. Fred Andres Dummy l.eon Bacon Mrs. Bacon Mrs. Winger H. P. Dykens sP L.yons Swanso Harper Itvan . Harper Lyons vANSON . Peterson Bl ckand Yitzgerald Coyle Huch Lumm; PPerkinz Schuader Peterson Beifil Vollhardt DBarry P'orizo Dunlay Pleucker . Matsen Stfnick Crowley ‘Traceski TLemeris Dummy Cocoanuts 82 110 83 S0 69 68 91 308 CTIAL MATCH Ladies kB! 88740 n 321 317 Gents 200 312 0 349 220 311 RD LEAGU Parrots Pheasants .91 85 101 86 101 480 Canarics 7 87 113 116 488 456 Blackbirds 100 | Coll Classes Are Suspended last night. J. G. Stebler of Stamford, osing to #an Goldberg, of New York, ! in three younds, in the 138-pound | {diviston; Mank Carfagne, of Pitts- | burgh, defeated Albert Cudhy ot | Iridgeport, in three rounds, in the {112-pound cluss, and George Fifeid of ‘foronte, Canada, won the decision over Steve Smith, of Bridgeport, in three rounds, in the 128-pound class. SPORTS AT DARTMOUTH During Three Days of Winter Carnival Ac- tivities—Many Ivents Scheduled. Hanover, N. ., Peb. Dartmouth college put aside academic routine to- 9. day to prepare the way for its annual winter carnival, and to welcome a host of guests. 1%or the next three days the schedule of the outing club will supplant that of the faculty. Re- ginning with a torch light procession and skating, coasting and tobaggoning events tonight virtually all the activi- ties of the college will be in the snow or on the ice. It was for this annual occasion that the undergraduates addressing invita- tions to the young ladies of their choice recently, suggested that this vear they forsake the frills and forbe- lows of fashion, for the warmth and comfort of galoshes, mittens and tam- o-shanters, Tomorrow the annual iate snowshoe championship tourna- ment will be the big event. Ski races also will be held. On Saturday Dart- mouth and Columbia will play hockey, and the new ski jump will be tried out in r‘r)mrwllflon for the first time. OWENS AND KLEM American and National League Um- inter-colleg- pires Selected for Giants-White Sox Spring Series. 9 Chicago, Feb. 9.—Clarence “Brick" Owens will represent the American league throughout the spring training series between the Giants and the White Sox, it was announced here to- day. William Klem was selected by President Heydler some time ago to act as the National league member. DARTMOUTH WINS Hanover Collegians Defeat Cadets at Hockey, 3-0 West Point, N. Y., mouth came here feated the Army at 0, in a hard lgame played on Stuart Rink. The Hanover collegians were clever skaters. Hall's speed being a feature of their good play. Marinelli, the Army’s mainstay, could not score for the Cadets, heing stopped effect- ually at every attempt. Dartmouth slipped one past Kasner in the first period. Yoster shdoting it on a pass from Osborne. The second period was scoreless, with the Army displaying its best form, Tohin being kept busy defending the Green goal. In the final period both Perry and Osborne scored for Dartmouth within the first five minutes of play. Feb. 9.--Dart- sterday and de- ice hockey, 3 to \mknu sel Burns Burns Hjerpe 447 Robins 75 90 s1 Harmon Peterson Erickson Maier Dummy 101 82 448 CORBIN SCREW FOREMFEN, Scheyd. Heck . 73 106 6 4 80 414 £3 04 83 86 Corr Kiely Scheyd | Ditey 428 423 Corr. 79 s1 | Holt Ryberg Berg 78 Miller Hu Rebillard ...... 95 286 309 269 449 43 Bradbury. Kisselbrack 8 Sorrow Baldwin Dehm Suneson Benson. 8 b 100 56 86 $% a1 | English Vile Pratt Ilenson st s ) ° o 451 CORBIN, 17, 5T ] 4121245 & P Dept. 4 an Lake Crane Selander { Lecgler | Ward an 4 Dept. 84, a8 g1 80 104 85 Olsen Meskel Season Against Browns Washington, 1'eb. 9, The American League schedule for 1 was adopted here yesterday ufternoon, he Yan- Kees' owners found that they had becn awarded twelve Saturdays and an equal number of Sundays at the Polo Grounds, that they were to play the Athleties on Memorial Day in Harlem and were to entertain the Red Sox in New York on Labor Day The Yan- kees land the Patriots Day--April 19 morning and afternoon plums at Boston, This arrangement means that the Giants will get opening day-—April 12 July 4 and one Sunday more than the Yankees at the Polo Grounds, The Red Sox, who were somewhat slighted last season, got a better deal in the 102 edule, Still, the Ath- leties not only get Memorial Day in New York, but draw the Yankees in Phigidelphia on July 4. The Yankees will opén at the Polo Grounds against Washington. The schedule shows that while Babe Ruth and Bob Meusel are under sus- pension nntil May 20 the Yankees will play Washington, Roston, Philadel- phia, Washington again, Philadelphia again, Washington for one day again, then C‘hicago, Detroit and Cleveland. On May 20 —the day the Ruth- Meusel suspension is to expire—the Browns will open a series at the Polo Grotinds It seems likely that quite a few fans will turn out that afternoon The Yankees will open their first in- vasion of the West in Chicago on June 6. O'Doul Tecarr and Jolly are only southpaws among the newcomers. Tecarr is battling with double pneu- monia, ‘and Jolly, who was with Gal- veston last &eason, is likely to need more seasoning. If Harper were to retire for the year O'Doul probably would be the only available southpaw. And it may be that lefty will be traded for an outficlder. Huggins did not go back to New York with the Colonels last night. He returned to his home in Cincinnati and will leave for New Orleans from there. the BOB ROPER DISCIPLINED Former Army Captain Is Punished By Michigan Boxing Commission lLansing. Mich., FFeb. Suspension of Bob Roper, ordered a fortnight age hy State Boxing CCommissioner Thom- as RBigger, prior to a scheduled bout with Harry Grelb in Grand Rapids, Las been approved by the Nationa! Loxing commission, according to word received by the state commissioner. The Greb-Roper bout was cancelled after Commissioner Bigger chargec Roper had engaged in another match within four days previous, contrary to the Michigan law. Roper ignored an order to appear for a hearing. 9. TBALI: BATTLE Cubs' basketball quintet will play the Alley A. . of I'nionville next Monday night. The following players will report at the Elihu Burritt school at 6 o'clock: Captain Selander, Brunnelle, Meckler, Neipp, Gray, Dickenson, Cianci, O'Rrien and Spitko. Dickenson, Spitko and Cianci were injured in a gume recently, and some doubt is en- fertained that they will be able to piay in next Monday night's game. Seeks Throne BASK The reorganized viadimioviteh has chosen by the Monarchist Congress which met in Delgrade as a candidate for the Russian throne. Grand Duke Cyril been Three fairs have in the I nited States since world been held 1893, | which the ives of countries in grows scrape off the mealy hanan; coat fruit ! before vating the championship tory over Bernie night's Samaclar thus becomes the lete furnished by the MeAllister negotiated the in ten seconds flat, one-tifth of a see ond’ slower than the record, Other members of the partment’s noted athletie I’ J. Ryan, Olympic mer thrower; Matt McGrath, champion weight heaver, and MeDonald, also & weight man SKATING TOURNEY OPENS Cream of American Wefers, Jr, at las A AL pames, “finest." police P Compete at Lake Placid Neat Three Days, lLake Placid, 1eh, 9. Saturday night decide who is the am ateur speed hkating ace of America, began here today with season. ‘The men are ter and William Steinmetz of cago, (‘harles Jewstraw of Placid, Joe Moore of New York nne (‘harles Gorman of St. John, N. The men will compete each There will no handicaps. Rubber Baihing Suit For Winter Miss Persis Tuma, of Riverside Drive, New York, has the win- ter tourists at Atlantic City agape with her new bathing suit. She says it retains the body heat and is-just the She didn’t say the open work stockings made of rubber, thing for snow plunges. retain the heat. -« He fourth famous ath- 100 ,\nrvlw world's indoor : completely sold out for the Leonard- des quartet gre champion ham- former | Iee Skaters to During | morrow evening, and it will be a case Skating events which will, it is anticipated, by ‘N'r\ml five contend- ers, all of whom have won at least 30 points in previous skating meets this Roy WeWhir- (hi- Lake B. in two events afternoon of the three day meet, be no preliminaries and o and Kansas in Action » The reserved quare Garden i | | | = ! oh New York, 9. section of Madison 8 | Icansas fight tomorrow night by Ike | Dorgan, chief of the publicity depart- | ment of Madison Square Sporting club, “Rut", sald Dorgan, “that does not mean that the public will not still have a ghanee to see the fight at rea- sonable prices, and without paying ribute to scalpers, “Theré are still avails v seats at $2 each, 2,000 tier seals at $4 ench and 1,800 seats on the plat- form at 85 cach. These seats will | not be placed on sale till 6 o'clock to- | | I hle 2,000 gal e | of first come first served. “There are about 14,000 seats in the Garden, of which ahout 9,000 are ri The prices are § f $10 and 8156, As 80,000 people want | to see the fight, it is plain that about 000 persons are doomed to dis- appointment. “Of the reserved seats Leonard and Gibson received a block of about 400 to dispose of to their friends, “Dan Rogers of Buffalo, manager of n m*l\\ Kan: received 400 for the Duffalo contingent, which will come here on three special trains. The mall order demand for this fight has heen nearly as great as at the Pempsey-Carpentier fight, It's | dednet |are in a {among the Pennsylvania and Virginia, The ref- eree will watch the bouts from a seat ontside the right and the boxers must break at his command The matehes will be directed on points and the judges will award or points according to Jows und the action of the contestants in the right. A knockout however will wip the match, Dr. R, Tait McKenzie, physical di- rector at 'ennsylvania, sald today the new system was heing instituted with a view to “drawing a wide line of de- marecation between collegiate amateur boxing and the professional game," MANY TEAMS ENTERED I W P I th | P W \ ti a Sisty-Four High and Preparatory Schools Have Quintets Represented . b ) in National Inter-scholastic Tourney Philadelphia, Ieb, 0. -Sixty-four high and preparatory schools ha entered feams in the national inter- scholastic basketball tournament which opens at the University of Pennsyvania February 18, Twenty- eight teams will play in the opening contests. The tournament will continue until March 11 with games every day and night except on Sundays. MUST WASH UNIFORMS (hicago, I¢h. 9.—Athletes holding {0 the superstition that their uniforms should never be washed while fthey batting streak will have to change their ideas if they helong to the Chicago ionals, following an order issned by President William Veeck that suits may not be worn| Jlonger than a week without being| cleaned. our uniforms have heen ordered for each player, two for game home and two for those abroad. P t M m o n. h o in a at d LUCKY SHOT WINS Springfield, 1eh. 8.—Central High school had one shot at the Tech High goal in a hockey game here yesterday | and the one shot, which was good, won the game, 1 to 0. Crandall, Teqh's tender, was credited with no stops. The single goal was the re- it of a freak in the opening minute of play, when the puck followed the path of the sun into the goal, the glare blinding Crandall, who lost the disk. h fi u N h i tl W a e EPIDEMIC ()I’I GRIP. All Sports /\1 l‘hllll]h Andover Sus- pended As Result. Andover, Mass., I'eb. 9. —All sports 2 at Phillips Andover academy were or- dered suspended today as the result of a minor epidemic of grip and colds students. Dr. Piersons Page, physical director and medical advisor, said that only a few of the |2 60 odd student affecicd to date were seriously ill. The order cancels a hockey match scheduled for today against the Har- vard second team and the events of Andover Day at Yale Saturday. i iy qa h WINS SNOWSHOE TITLE 8! Winnipeg, Manitoba, [Feb. 9.—An- drew Shields of the Nbrthern Lights Snowshoe Club, Winnipeg, is the new marathon snowshoe champion of Can- | ada. At the carnival yesterday he mushed over the fifteen-mile course from St. Norbert to Winnipeg in 2 hours and 29 minutes. Three minutes behind him came H. D. Whellams, un- attached, ol A at Madison Square step Carpentier to agree Garden, tormidable hoxer the combat W, in the next few days. gaged in a trucking business with his G. Harper has made the request, Yankee owners ster, Ruth and W H. baseball squad for séns, arrived here foday to begin in- dgor work with the candidates. for. the New York on March 13 With the object of developing & ght heavyweight in this country who vould meet o) the requirements fm- osed by Georges Carpentier, Tom ibbons and Harry Greb, two of the est men in tHe division, will meet in he first hout of un e'imination series Garden on March winner of this contest will fst on a match with Gene Tunncy, resent holder the light heavy- eight championship of America, There would be little doubt that the ictor would he acknowledged the tle holder in this country. The next wonld he the task of getting to box the winner to this country for The of nd later to come the mateh Aside from these details the Gib- ons-Grebh mateh should be one of e most interesting vet staged in the Greb is a whirlwind fighter, nd as Gibbons has developed into a should e well worth seeing. Tex Rickard announces thal the rofits accruing from the hout will be irned over to the New York I'ree itk fund. .t HARPER WANTS LAYOFF Southpaw Hurler Asks Yankee Man- agement For Leave Of Absence Washington, Feb. 5.—The Yankees 1ay he without the services of a vet- van southpaw when, the next pen- ant race gets undef® way on April 2, Harry Harper, the only left ander with the team last season, who s out of the game most of the time wing to injury, has applied for an hdefinite leave of absence. The re- uest has not been granted, but A efinite announcement is likely with- Harper is en- rother at Hackensack, N rm has made some contraets J., and the in connection with the proposed tunnel nder (he Hudson connecting, ew York and New Jersey. Harpery as declared himself in fayor ofres, haining out of baseball to engage in s work. Tusiness Managoer Bdward Rarrows last night admitted that but the are hoping that he to arrange his affairs 50 the club. A confer- scheduled for river ill be able s to stay with nce with Harper is later in the week in New York. FEWSTER STILL UNSIGNED ankee Outficlder Secs Huggins . Washington Abont Contract Feb. 9.—Chick who will probably play “un position for the Yankees until \ieusel arc eligible on May over to Washington yester- In 1rew- out- Washington, eld 0, came day afternoon from his home in Balti- niore and had a leng conference with Manager Huggihs, = Fewster signed for. the Méming season, has not but he 1sists that he {$ not a hold-out. He eclares that @ held off signing until e could talk things over with Hug- ins. The outcome of the discussion as not announced by either Huggins r Fewster. HANS LOBERT AT WEST POINT West Point, N, Feb. 9.--John (Hans) lLobert, couch of the Army the last three sea- rmy’'s baseball team. How To Start The Day Wrong G, 1 ER- WOOF | MORNING ~- | A COUPLE LIWE come FEEL LIKE A PRIZE' FIGRTER THIS GOOD ™MoR CoulD Lick DEMPSEY You SURE DID THAT wAS ONE OF THE FUNNIEST JGHTS I'VE DOWN |~ NING MRS, GREEN- LOVELY MORNING (B Nl e BRIGGS - -AND S0 § COMPLETE IF HE couLD Do THAT FaLL onN THE STAGE HE'D MAKE A FORTUNE 4 JusT BECAUS ONLY A GIRL =y STAND FOR (T THE DAY WAS LY DISORGANIZED E I'M AND UNPROTECTED HE THINKS HE CAN USE VILE LANGUAGET, NEVER HAD To NEVER MIND ouvIA- weL FILE A COMPLAINT AGAINST HIM ‘HE'S GOT (T COPAING Tr HU THE BuAasT !

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