New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 4, 1922, Page 8

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FREDERICKSON TAKES LEAD I THE STAN W BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTORER 4, 1922, LEY WORKS BOWLING LEAGUE — CASINO QUINTET TO ROLL AT MERIDEN TONIGHT — BUSH AND SCHANG HAVE BEEN A BATTERY IN FOUR WORLD'S SERIES — TWO PLAYERS ARE INELIGIBLE — LEE WORTHY WINS AT LEXINGTON TRACK R BUSH AND SCHANG | SHakeue A7 sakvkRD— GAME T0 BE SEEN N'FOUR SERIES - | This Pair Has Had Plenty of Experience Oct. 4 mound in 1 series New York Joe stepped to the game of the Grounds this fourth appea in the games with Wally Schang at his hat tery mate. Rut for the fact that Bush | had to ta 1 pogt-graduate course| with the Bo Ya might | have he r g his fifth s¢ with Schang as his mate, as the was behind t bt for Toas Y in last years' games, Bush and Schang started geries partners in 1613 with the letics. Incidentally their that game w the New York Giants, but not the Giants ‘they faced today. Bush won the third game of the series 8 to 2, limiting the National leaguers | to five hits and two runs. The game was played at the Polo Grounds and Schang in the eighth inning hit into the lower right field stand for a homer, the same stand that will be the tar get during the games now being play- ed. When the op at the P oon it marked wor tery nee titular as wor At) opponent in! An Unsuccessful Year The famous battery was not suc-| cessful the following yvear against the Braves, the year the Hub team sur- prised the baseball world by winning four straight games from Connie Mack's men. Bush worked the third| game of that series and threw the| contest away in the 12th when he threw wild to third in an attempt to force Mann after Moran had bunted The ball went to left field and the for mer Springfield college athlete trotted | home with the run that gave the Braves a 5 to 4 victory. Again With Loscrs Again in 1918 while with the Red | Sox, Bush and Schang were a losing! combination. Bush was on the mound in the second game and the Cubs got to him for three runs in the second inning for a 3 to 1 victory. Lefty ler, Bush's opponent for 10 innings in the 1914 series, was the man who scored the victory for the Cubs in that| game. | Today for the third time in his ca- reer, Bush was opposed by a pitcher/| who helped make Boston haseball his- | tory. Artie Nehf, who will start for| the Giants was one of Geo Stal- | lings' most effective twirlers until sold | to the Giants. Previously Bush had | opposed Tyler and James in the 1914 peries and Tyler again in 1915, when | the latter was with the Cubs. | looked like a seriou RECORD FOR SINGLE Indiana Horse Does a Mile in 2:0413 At Brockton Fair Brockton, Oct. 4. — The Indiana pacer of Ed. Allen, Single G. broke the track record twice yesterday at the opening of the Brockton f He smashed the old record of 4%, | which he made last year, doing the distance in 2:04%% in the first heat.| In the third he trimmed that down | to 2:04 1-4. In the first heat fingle G. raced his first record breaking time from be- hind Mary O'Connor. In the second | heat he beat Grace Direct to the wire with a tremengous last eighth. In| the third heat, the second record breaker, he led all the way e e s i e ‘who were Coach the | rayed | Walter Hagen and Gene | which they Coach Bob Pisher Drops Eight \l('n‘ to the Second Team—FPitts and ! Braden Are Shifted. Cambridge, Mass, Oct, 4 Boh Fisher of the uad dropped eight men to the ond team and man was rais from the second team to the varsity vesterday's practice The men dropped include a quarter- halfback, ) ends, two wekles and a gnard W, Tower is man promoted the varsity uad Coach Harvard foothall see- one at ba a G he to made several 5 on position among his men Fitts, one the best unters on the team as shifted from 1lfback to end ar Braden, Worcester a and Har- vard freshman s ted from end to back "1l Hubbard, cond string tackle will be tried out guard | The varsity squad had a long de- fensive workout against the second nd the play of the sworthy, especially as experimenting this week in order to obtain a man to take Pere Jenkins' ace, Jenking will | esrobably be out until the Dartmouth game and Eskie Clark, the center, wwho has an injured knee, may zr‘v‘ into the game Saturday when Crimson eleven meets Holy Cross | i*isher drastic chang Roscoe of rmey ha at team ends is hack BUY FLASHY T0GS Hagen And Sarazen Will Be Arrayed In Stunning Golf Clothes in Coming | 72-Hole Speeial Match., | {.—The Prince of| was never ar- goif Sar: their special of the richest knew | s already known among the | s the hest dressed foday it was learn- that he has me eri- oidered on the stoc he will wear when he meets Sarazen at Pitts- burgh next Friday. i Not to be outdone, Sarazen has brought two new svits. He will wear one of them at Pittshurgh, where the first 86 holes are to be played, and the other in the concluding round over the Westchester-Biltmore course at Rye, Y Oct. his glory striking New Yo Wales in all in such sport during match for the game Hage rotogravur American golfer one purses ever ns TIGERS TRAINER HURT. N.- 0, Oct.’ 4.—What casualty and one affected the Tigers’ 1r- Princeton, that would have football chances considerably, oc vesterday afternoon on University Field Jack Cleaves, veteran backfield man, in running ward pass, crashed into Keene patrick, the trainer of the Orange Black gridiron warriors, who crouched on the side lines, shock dazed the Tiger trainer, he soon recovered consciousness prattice proceeded as us Bill Roper dispensed mage vesterday rnoon and devot- ed a large part of the time to signal irill. The men spent a full two hours in going through the various plays in have instructed for the purpose of smoothing out the| vle of play and getting the line and backfield co-ordinated | and with serim been {Foothall Game and Dedication of | here Oct. 181,500,000 stadium, | dedication ceremonies. BY RECORD GROWD Stadium on October 24 Columbus, 0., Oct. 8 (By Associat- ed Press).—When the rival glevens of the University of Michigan and Ohio | State University trot out in the field | 21 to dedlcate Ohio's new indications are that a record breaking crowd of 6(3,- 000 spectators will be in the huge structure to witness the game and Advance orders for tickets point to @ complete sell-out of the 63,000 seats, and if this result, the attend- ance will set a new record for foot- | ball in the middle west. Last year | the Buckeyes and Wolverines played before a record crowd of 42,000 in the rededication of the enlarged Ferry Field at Ann Arbor H Simple but impressive ceremonies will mark the dedication of the new adium, with color raising cere- monfes and a parade of comprising the pre-war program. Governors H. L. Davis of Ohio and A. J. Groesbeck of Michigan men in pub- lic life, educators and athletes will participate in the parade around the field Amid strains of alma mater songs to be played by the 110-piece Ohio State band, representatives of west- ern conference universities will pull 18-foot. pennants presented by their respective schools, up 30-foot flag stop the walls of Ohio Stadium. an colors will go up first, the Scarlet and Gray of Ohio State last With thirty huge pennants of the ‘Big Ten' universities snapping in the breeze the 100-foot con- crete and st wall of the stadium, Miss Eloise Fromme of Urbana, O., dium girl during the fund raising campaign of 1920, will hoist the na- tional colors on the field flag pole while the Michigan and Ohio State bands play i Spangled Ban- ner,” follow ch artillery pie manned by university cadets will bark a salute guns, s part of the prepa hove of ation for ded- unite every Ohio State grid the original eleven in | 184¢ being made by formep cap- tains. Each captain will head colleagues in a parade down the new stadium field Dedication of Ohio stadium will | add something new to the architec- tur mode: stadia. In being horseshoe-shaped, the Ohio plant re- sembles that of Harvard, but in hav- ing two decks the Ohio plan is unique The advantages ascribed to the double-deck feature include bringing of what would be rear seats much closer to the play. field and the sheltering of 21,000 seats in the lower deck Nearly ten acres are covered by the Ohio stadium, which measures one- third of a mile from end to end and towers 107 feet high Intramural facilities for 10,000 students will be provided by tenn's courts, 23 baseball diamonds and 11 gridiron to | be laid out on the recreation area to be developed adjacent to the stadium proper. since which 50,000 in rate Machines make cigarets hour e now at the use of an GASIND QUINTET T0 Local Pin Topplers Will Help Reopen Up New Bowling Alleys | help open the Starlight alleys at Mer- notables | ¢ 1 0. W. Nelson Tunk H. Geanger . Livingston V. Geanger G F. Hensler .. Volg Kosswig ..... Henzel Danberg Hoffman X % Holtman the first attempt in his- | g, his | F Newton Grogan Calazia Spencer L FREDERICHSON OLT IN FRONT AGAN Popular Star Leads Stanley Workers in League Games ROLL AT MERIDEN will | Frederickson, one of the stars of {the Stanley Works howling league, has jumped into the lead for the high {individual average honors, the latest statistics of the secretary showing {him to be hitting at a 105.2 clip. “Freddle” also leads in high three string score, with 329, W, Johnson | leads in his single score with 130. The Shipping quintet is setting a fast pace, with eight victories and one de- The Casino howling quintet iden under a new management, on Thursday night. The local team will have the following players: Foote, Lemeris, Frisk, Johnson, Ryan, Carl- son and Anderson Two new records were made last night in the Stanley Rule league, Ar- thur Odman rolling a single score of feat. 118, and his team, the Rules five, hit- ¢ ting a new figure f At | The league statistics compiled by 1362, Eure for total score, With | g, -retary Dan Polltis, is as follow: At Rogers' Reereation alleys, the Pon ORI S, North and Judd and the Odd Fellows' Lea leagues bowled last night. (el The scores: ::: 1566 | 556, 556 | 338 Shipping .. Steel 0Old Office New Office Foremen Factory ... . Non Producers . All Stanley .. Laber Bureau ....... 111 Mechanics .. Vel 9 .000 High single string, W. Johnson, 130. High, three string, Fredericksen 329. High single game, New Office, 526. High three game, New Office, 1447. IFrederickson .. .105.3 Molyneux L1021 W. Johnson 99.6 Patterson 99.5 Begos .. 97.8 Wilcox 97.3 Gavitt 96.6 Luebeck 96. Duplin 95.8 Schroeder Bertini Humphrey Hayes . Hoffman Keough Miller Elliott Angello MeConn Christ Emmons F. O'Brien T. O'Brien Maddocks Smith Jones ... Suenk Schroedel Burke Cochrane Gangloff —_— — — Gursky 401 476 1403 Rawlings = Ste Haugh Miss Rock 90 86— 262| Ely .... Miss Leupold 86 88— 250 L. Truslow Miss l.undgren 80 95— 261 R. Truslow Miss Mallory 91 100— 289 Tyler Miss Hoffman L5 92— 276 Pritchard . e U Al P 436 432 470 1383 Northrup Huber Doyle Linquist Conlon Ensworth Merwin Sleath Loughe Hart Politis Herdlein MacSpedon Hanson Guenther Karpinski Olson Warner R Mordn: i A i 5 g Millerick 83 91 i L. 0. 0. F. LEAGUE *. Carlson Landgreen A. Abrahamson Carlsot 59 83 110 470 14387 Sequassen Radcliff . % 105 289 254 273 268 287 1371 Gerstaecker e 106 1 82 54 86 Vater &, & Hepp . Green 106— 306 181 169 260 261 8 89 98— 89— 78— 89— 440 447 1336 Phoenix 79 71 . 74 e 105 83 230 239 269 287 246 Young 105— 89— Sangren ... 89— 431 1270 411 428 Lexington 82 104 79 79 88 126 104 “Gordan Schroeder . ... J. Schroedér 85— 98— 98— 105— 85— 271 2511 282 320 | Anderson 279 NORTH & JUDPD LEAGUE. Nails 87 86 102 70 88 98 86— 95— 100— 95— 8 348 3756—1081 Snaps. 87 84 85 97 274 156 268 | 288 95 Magson Hammerburg West Polinski Sedwick Kiley Stedman 89 91 93 97 370 81— 71— 92— 104— 854—1077 Salmon Howe H. Byett New Guinea has an area equal to that of France and the British Isles 'camh]n-d. (Continued on Following Page) Ther;’_:A—t Least One In Every Office WELL |\VE GoT A LITTLE MONEY To BEGION: THE |[S==—r=ar \ WORLDS SERIES Tre SERIES O'HEARN'S TEAM WINS Knapp and Bench Score Touchdowns Against Eleven Captained by Charles O'Hearn, LEE WORTHY WINS FAMOUS FUTURITY Ben White Pilots Colt to Victory at Lexington New Haven, Oct. 4.—Charley O'Hearn and George Becket, the Yale quarterbacks, yesterday picked elev- ens which struggléd half an hour through the daily practice, Captain Jordan Neidlinger and Bill Mallory did not line up. Becket's team won, two touch- downs to nothing, Knapp and Bench scoring. ' Becket's backfleld was Knapp, left half; Bench, right half, and Knowles, fullback, while with O'Hearn were Haas, Wight and Boltwood. Becket's line was made of Cutler and Hulman, ends; Storrs and Diller, tackles; Cruikshank and Quille, guards; Lan- dis, center. The other line was Lu- man and Deaver, ends; ‘Hidden and O'Brien, tackles; McKay and Lufkin, guards; Lovejoy, center. Blair later teok Luman's place. ' Eddie Bench made a touchdown after he had recovered a fumble by his own team on the other team's one-yard line. Following Bench's touchdown Becket kicked a goal. The teams then scrimmaged with the ball fn the possession of O'Hearn's elev- en on O'Hearn's 30-yard line and by a series of line plunges rushed the ball to the other 30-yard line, where O'Hearn tried a long forward pass, which Knapp intercepted and pre- vented a score. Knapp made an 80- yard run and touchdown. Yale football coaches regard North Carolina, which plays here Saturday, as stronger than usual. Myron Fuller, Yale line coach, was coach there for two years. GOVERNOR AS MASGOT Lexington, Ky, Oct. 4—Frank H. Ellis' Lee Worthy, driven by Ben White, won the 13th renewal of the Kentucky Futurity in convincing style yesterday afternoon, equalling the record for the stake and the world's record for three year old colts in the firet heat. This i{s the same winning combination that landed the junior division of the same stake on Mon- | day. Peter Earl Gets Flag., | The bad behavior of Peter Earl, jcausing him to be distamced in the iopening heat, was a great disappoint- yment to the crowd, as it had been ex- pected that a great battle would be staged by the pair. Peter Earl was |acting badly when the horses were first scored and upon finally getting the word made a break and almost ran over the outside fence near the eighth pole, getting so far behind that he could never catch up with the field. Bunter, owned by Howard M. Han- na, Jr., of Cleveland, that has been one of the main contenders all sea- son, made Lee Worthy trot the open- ing mile in record equaling time. Bunter went into a pace at the start of the second heat and got away bad- ly but trotted very fast and finished third. Best Race of Day. The 2:06 trot was one of the best races of the day and was won by the western trotting geiding David C. The main contender in each Heat was the four year old Clyde the Great. & The 2:14 pace was a likely battle |with three heat winners contesting for the event. The 2:03 pace was won by John Henry in straight heats. Peter Manning will start today to beat the track record of 1:57% and Nedda to beat her record of 1:59 1-4. Kansas University Football Team Has Had Had a Successful Record Since Allen Acted in That Capacity. Topeka, Kan, Oct. 4. — Governor Henry J. Ajllen of Kansas will be the! maseot of the Kansas unfversity foot- ball team when it plays the, Army eleven at West Point next Saturday. The governor will speak tonight be- fore the Kiwanis club of New York, Thursday morning at the convention of the American Bankers' association 4nd Friday night at the Lotus club. During the time Henry Allen has heen governor, the Kansas university team has won every game he attend- ed, although doped to lose two of them Alfred Hill, secretary of the K. U. Alumni asseciation, explained, | *“We have hopes that his mascot qua’ ities will hoid at West Point." GRID M OUT FIRE. Easton, Pa., Oct. 4.—A fire which destroyed an old icehouse and caused $8,000 damage a few blocks from the campus, broke up the Lafayette col- | lege soccer pr here fied ad helps you to tsoever. sell anything wl OLDEST DRIVER WINs ‘W. H. Nelson, 8t Years Old, Captti 2:15 Trot at Danbury Fair Danbury, Oct. 4. — The" victory the 2:15 trot of W. H. Nelson, ¢ years old and sald to be the oldes driver on the half-mile track, was ti feature of the card at the Danbur fair yesterday. Nelson drove the.mi in 2:11 1-4 in the third heat. A rec ord crowd attended the races. Dei fect weather and track conditior made the crowd unusually enthusia tie. The great Marie won the 2:19 trc Zombrona Relle, the 2:19 pace, ai Battle 8., the 2:15 trot. All pur were for $600. COMPOUND COPAIBA AND CUBERS DRUCGISTS. on TRIAL BOX BY MAIL 20° IMITATIONS ~ AT E 93 HEl !ugb’d LAN E oF WHo DO You TN Wit ; WIN THE WORLDS P TeE i MANAGERS [: MokiEY MAKING SCHEME vi‘ N\ new fall model Modeled for autumn and winter wear—com- fortable blucher—instep hug—European tips on full wide toes. Sole stitching runs around very low wide heels. Russia calf- skin — Black or Brown. Taxg 1T BACK You WELL - | Jovr KilLer' we'vE i GoT A CouPLA BUCKS o THE SERIFS MEANT - - WAS THiINKING OF -~ | REFERRED To ANOTHER SERIESS DIDN T MEAN THIS THE WoRLDS SERIES 1S FA\XED David Manning’s Wintk-Cver SHOE STORE 211 Main St.

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