New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 16, 1922, Page 8

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 16, 192z Y NEW BRITAIN FOOTBALL ELEVEN EASILY VANQUISHES STRATFORD TEAM, 18 TO 0— HIGH SCHOOL TEAM GETS ANOTHER BAD TROUNCING — NUTMEGS OPEN SEASON AT BRISTOL WITH A VICTORY — FOOTE AND FRISK TO BOWL HARTFORD STARS—YALE MEN PAY TRIBUTE TO IOWA e JOWA VICTORY S SHOCK T0 YALE ‘Game at Bowl Saturday Was Chief Upset of the Day held time Oct, 16 for the New York Football undisputed first during the season last week and with sway IAGED FOOTBALL FAN SAYS GAME IS ROUGH Mrs. Richardson, 88 Years Old, Came To Bowl From lowa, To See Her Boys Win New York, Oct, now l've seen the life that football is pretty said Mrs, D. N. Richardson, old great grandmother who brought relatives from Davenport, la, to see her Towa hoys win their hig game 16 first “"Pears to me game of my rough,” 8§ year NEW BRITAINTEAN HINS VERY EASILY Stratlord Eleven Goes Down to an 18 to 0 Deleat The New Britain football eleven ex- perienced little difficulty yesterday afternoon in defeating the Stratford NEW BRITAI Locals Prove The Softest of Picking schooi they stacked Prep school eleven at Kent last Sat- urday afternoon. to 0, and had it not been for the fact that HIGH IS SOUNDLY THRASHED For The Kent Prep School Eleven —Losing 47 to 0. Once again the New Britain High went down to a defeat when up against the Kent The score was 47 the Kent management sent in OFFER NO ALIBI FOR YALE DEFEAT Bli Men Praise Hawkeyes lor Display of Sportsmanship New Haven, Oct. 16.—While Yale football coaches decline to comment at length on lessons learned from the team 1 8 to 0, before a fair sized Iowa defeat of Saturday, they admit- NUTMEGS’ OPENER A WIN OVER TROJANS New England Champions of 19821, Playing on Muzzy Field, Show Up Well Against Hartford Team The Nutmegs of this city, New Eng- land champions in 1921, opened the season yesterday afternoon at Muzzy Ileld, Bristol, meeting the fast Tro- jans team of Hartford. The opening was a successful one for the locals, as far as the contest is concerned, the FOOTE AND FRISK T0 ROLL HARTFORD MEN Special Match Arranged for Wed- nesday Night at Casino Alleys On Wednesday night at the Casino alleys, Frisk and Foote of this city will bowl Gaines and Burnham of Hartford in a special match game for Capital City team golng down to a 13 to 0 defeat. While the Nutmegs outweighed the Trojans, the Hart- tford team showed a dash and speed that kept the Dunn-Scott combination on the jump throughout the battle. second string men after the game had gone along but a short time, the re- sult, as bad as it was, might have been worse. There was nothing fluky about the hig scoring done by the Kent team. $60 a side. The winners will be de- cided in an eight out of 15 game match, / The statistics of the Stanléy Rule and Level bowling league, compiled by the preliminary games out of the way some important contests were decided on Saturday. Outstanding among these was the Yale-lowa contest at New Haven. Besides being an inter \gainst Yale Saturday. Mrs, Richard- son is staying over in New York a few days before returning to lowa in the private car she chartered for the trip. ted that if the Ells are to face the West Point and Harvard matches with peace of mind more compact interfer- ence must be constructed, They in- sist, however, that the absence of crowd at Vibberts field. The visitors were practically the same team that held the locals to a 2 to 0 victory in the opening game of the season had added here several weeks ago. Against the b2 sectional struggle the game interest because both teams are, should be, among the strong elevens of the country this year. Further- more, they are coached hy brothers, former member the same Yale team and both of whom have coached at New Haven their graduation Little wonder then that the game at- tracted great interest and that there was much speculation on its outcome Tha Iowa loop was a great shock to Yale and its followers, although to elose students of the game the victory was not unexpected The Western Conference champions were pointed for the contest and the Elis were not. The lawa team had in- finitely more to n from a victory and it came st determined to achieve it. While the Hawkeyes still have all their conference games before them, this particularly in view of their present championship, can hardly mean as much to them as Princeton and Harvard mean to Yale This is not intended in any way to belittle the victory of the Towans. They outplayed Yale and Yale, as it always it, was playing to win. The point that is being made is that, de- spite sectional and partisanship argu- ments to the contrary, there is little or no difference in football as it is played east and west, or north and south. Yale Might Reverse Verdict Man for man, Towa and Yale ap- peared to be about on a par. Both teams are well coached and if they were to meet again in a post season game it is not improbable that Yale would reverse the verdict, quite likely by another close score and surely not without another great struggle, for as the Hawkeye slogan so truly goes. “Jowa fights.” Another gruelling gridiron battie which was fought out on Saturday was the West Virginia-Pittsburgh tus- sle in Pittsburgh. This pgame also aroused great interest among follow- ers of the game, due chiefly to the tradition which attaches to it. Prior to Saturday it had been 19 years since the Mountaineers had downed the Panthers, but they toppled the War- ner-coached combination from its pin- nacle then by a score of 9 to 6. Like the Lafayette-Pitt game of the pre- vious week, it was a tough one for the Panthers to lose, for it was a field goal in the closing minutes of play which finally brought to the West Vir- ginians their long awaited triumph. It was another late rally, but of a different nature, which gave the Army & 10 to 6 victory over Alahama Poly in another of the day's inter-sectional contests. Until the final guarter roli- ed around the scrappy little team from Auburn had a 6 to 0, and what appeared to be winning advantage. Then the defense of the southern team suddenly crumpled, and by a series of successful forward passes the Cadets managed to pull the game from the fire. Among eastern teams there were few upsets in the day's play, but there was a distinct rprise in the outcome of the Brown-Syracuse battle at Providence. The Hill team, play ing on its own grounds, flashed a r markable defense in the pinches or which was able to check the fine of-: team fensive play of the Salt City , tells and this, in its uitimate analy the true story of the game. Syracuse followers had a reasonable right to expect a victory Brown, but Meehan's eleven lacked the necessary punch when that punch would have meant a touchdown and thus had to be content with a scoreless tle Big Elevens Victorious As was expected, Harvard, ton, Cornell, Penn, Columbia, etle and Dartmouth won their games from smaller rivals, although only the scores rolled up by Cornell and laf- ayette were anything to brag about Princeton had a real battle on its hands in the maroon-clad Colgate team and only some clever forward passing and one long one saved the Tigers from defeat. Harvard was able to beat Bowdoin by an unimpressive total, but it is only fair to state that many of the Crimson's first string players were out of the contest Columbia also met a tartar in Wes- leyan and the invaders from Middle- town carried the Morningside Heights team through a finely played game to lose in the end by a 10 to 6 score. The tackling of the losing team was the best that has been seen here this season, and had its offense heen as good there might have heen a differ- ent story to tell. In the south two games attract at- tention, not so much by their out- comes but because of their scores “Point-a-minute”” Centre struck an unlooked for snag in Virginia Poly and just managed to eke out a 10 to 6 victory, and Georgia Tech's "'Golden Cyclone” swept over Alahama by the surprising score of 33 to T Games in the middle and far west also ran true to form, except for one upset—the defeat of Illincis by Butier Northwestern, which has aiways been considered something of a weak sister in the western conference, gave ‘Chicago a'tough battle but the Ma. roon finally pulled through on the long end of a 15 to 7 score In the Missouri Valley conference, three teams, Missouri, the Kansas Ag- gles and Drake are still undefeated Oklahoma and Nebraska remain un- knewn quantities, neither having play- ed a conference game yet. On the Coast all the big teams came through gheir early skirmishes unscathed. over Prince- Lafay- Purple and violet are the mourn- {ng colors of kings and cardinals. 1o “I wanted Jowa to win because my boys and girls all live around me in lowa,” she said, "but when 1 saw those young players stretched flat ev- ery once in a while my heart just went out to them, Seems to me some- thing better could have been done for them than just douse them in the face with a wet sponge. They need- ed mothering and I wanted to give {t to them 1 forgot all about the score." Mrs. Richardson and her party plan ing their brief stay in New York “I'm curfous to see your town again,” she said, explaining that her last visit was in 1892 yles and femininism,"” she re- peated. “Well you can take a good look at me and guess how much I care for these new fangled ideas. I'm a few months or so past the stage now where I'd take up a lot of fancy stunts,” ORIOLES ARE CHAMPS Baltimore Team Take the World's Series Honor Beating St. Paul 1 to 3. | St. Paul, Minn,, Oct, 16.—The Bal- timore International league cham- pions won the junior world series by defeating St. Paul American associa-| tion leaders, 4 to 3 here yesterday, giving the easterners five games to the St. Paul's two. Umpire Derr of the International league was escorted from the field by police after the game when the crowd swarmed on to the field to protest a {decision made by Derr, in the ¥ighth. The score: BALTIMORE 0 wry Tacobson Walsh, rf Bentley, p. .. S Boley 5 0 3 Rishon, 21 Seon 0 0 0 1 Riggeit Golvin, Morrison cf.- Kruegei Morse, Roone, Dressen Gonzales, Jeehan, Titt, p. Haas, M 14 110 100 Malsel, Golvin home rune Boone Raltiniore st. Paul Two base hits three base hit Krueger, Wa stalen hase, to Golvin, Boone to Md Bentley Bishop, Haas; ices, Lawry ! double plays, Morse to ta Golvin; struck out Sheehan 1, by Merritt 1, by Bentley 4 balls, off Sheehau 4, off Bent heehan 11 in 6 2-3 Innings, 2 1-3 innings; left on ba imore 11; losing pitcher, s Derr and Murray; time, 2 BRAVES GET SCHMEL Clever Infielder of Waterbury Club of base off 5B umpt The Bastern League, is Bagged by Grant at Chicago Meeting, Boston, Oct. 16.—Secretary Edwin I.. Reily of the Boston National league Lasehall club vesterday received & telegram from President George W, Grant, who attended the draft meet- ing held yesterday “hicago, that he had secured five players by selection. They ar Padgett, drafted from Memphis, Tenn.: R. E. Smith, from New Orleans and C. A. Schmehl from Waterbury, Conn., infielders and A Felix, from Shreveport, la., and W M. Bagwell, from Independence, Kan., outfielders. Morgantown, Morgantown was recovering from the effects of an all-night cele- bration of the West Virginia football victory over Pittsburgh, which began as soon as the final play was herald- ed from the bulletin board. The cele- bration reached its height when the special trainload of rooters returned from Pittsburgh at 3 o'clock. It was the first victory for the Mountaineers over Pittshurg nineteen years. None of the st Virginia players were seriously injured in Saturday's game, though all were bruised and battered, O'CONNELL MARRIED L.os Angel Oct 16. — Jimmy 0O'Connell, outfielder of the San Fran- cisco club of the Pacific Coast league, who was sold this season to the New York Giants for $75,000, and Esther Margaret Doran of Casper, Wyo., were married Friday at §St. Thomas's church, COL. ASHFORD G MEDAL S8an Juan, P. R, Oct. 16.—With the 66th infantry ordered out for the oc- casion at the direction of President Harding, Col. Bailey K. Ashford, med- ical rcorps, United States army, was presented recently with the Disting- uished Service Medal for “exception- ally meritorious and distinguished service” in France, This is the first time that the Dis- tinguished Service Medal has been presented in Porto Rico The average duration of life in England is now 57 years. club that Manager Kiniry presented vesterday the boys from down state were outclassed in every department of the game. Up to the last two minutes of play in the fourth period the visitors were in possession of the ball only twice. 1In three attempts to gain through the line the Stratford- ites made no impression and were Jones, as he powerless to check him. touchdown made by Kent came after one minute of play in the first quar- ter. touchdowns in the first quarter, the Kent fullback, ran about pleased and the locals were The first The Kent team piled up three The teams lined up as follows: KENT N. B. H. 8. Captain Jordan, O'Hearn, Becket and Bench from the was responsible for Yale's failure to present the full strength of Old Ell's attack. coming, but warm praise for the Iowa team and for the sportsmanship dis- played by the Hawkeye was throughout the campus. backfield Saturday No Yale alibis were forth- heard |t Junior forced fecurth a round of theaters and dinners dur- [to the visitors. | forward pass was executed giving the Stratford |only first down of the day. fully, With |the New Britain team showed to its best ad | with is pionshi his da Loy or two secured there is still provement |consensus of opinion seems to he that P [the new additions, the local now |go forth and grab the Worked Peterson Peterson plaved his first game with |the locals and if ever a player earned from |used time after time and on only one long gains. all-around variety. Peterson was used to catch the for- to punt, After the locals had | Howell the third touchdown in the period the kickoff was made On this occasion a success- team its Cheney Ballard Locals Look Good. three new men in the lineup|Wagner vantage so far this year. While | Davis plenty of room for im- the team work the in Noyes Quigley, [ Clare ... team as able to cham- eterson, Malone and be state composed will D. Hard. s pay it was the blond-haired New Haven. Pete was occasions did he fail to make His playing was of the Malone's Great Play. . McCabe Right tackle Right guard Richardson Left tackle Left entl Quarterhack Rakowski .. Thorne . Dedoorian Bojnowski Reynolds McCue .. O'Brien Murtha CUBS WIN TITLE National League Wins City ionship Of Chicago. When Alexan- Huber Champ- The Iowa spirit was shown by Half. back Miller, who went down under a huge heap in the third period and seemed unable to rise. Coach How- ard Jones asked if he had not better quit play. Miller shouted back, “Wait till I see whether I can move my leg." A moment later he called out, “I can move it and 1 am going to stay on the field.” This response provoked a cheer of admiration from the big Yale section, which at other times lustily gave the Yale cheer for Captain Gordon Locke and Quarterback Leland Parkin, who broke the Yale defense for the solitary score of the day. Last Intersectional Game, Yale is not so much saddened by the defeat as by the reflection that the new Princeton-Harvard-Yale agreement will preclude intersectional |games after this season and that there seems no chance eitlier to visit |Iowa or bring the Hawkeyes here again. Yale's football statisticians recall | that yesterday was not Howard Jones' first offense in bringing here an elev- en from another university that scar- ed Yale. A year after he left Yale, Howard, then head coach at Syracuse, o | caught }jand ' showed ward passes thrown by Captain Bar- nikow and he got about 90 per cent of them. It was this player who }:mrml the first touchdown. Malone, |playing along side his old running mate, Frankel, fitted like a glove in the locals' line. When he has had some more practice “Bollicky" will be a tower strength. He electrified the crowd on one occasion when he a kickoff and ran the ball back to the center of the field. Owing to a penalty infilcted hy the umpire, {the ball was brought back to where ! Malone started from, and an addi- tional 15 vard penalty was imposed The crowd, however, showed its ap- | preciation of the fine work by Ma- lone, by giving him a big hand. Ed- dle Quigley, the new quarterback, got |into the game in the fourth period |He had only adjusted his headgear when the ball was snapped to him he signalized his entry into the a neat run. "Quig” he is fast as greased of game with that lightning. Politis, Cieary, Rogers, Koplowitz and Jim Conley turned in their usual brilliant exhibition. Hickey, Barni- kow, Barnes and Carpenter worked well in the backfield and Frankel, who is fast rounding into shape, played his best game of the season yvesterday. Subs Get a Chance, The management gave the second string men a chance yesterday, Joe Kenney, Tinti, Paulson and Leary getting into the fray. In the last two| minutes of play, Rogers was hurt and as Coach Barnikow had sent his reg- ulars home it was necessary to finish; the game with ten men, which was| not very hard to do at that. | Touchdown for Conley. Peterson, Hickey and Conley did the scoring for the locals. Conley scored his touchdown after Politis had | a ball blocked a punt {on the as |goal 1i It was one plays of the game. At the end of the first half New Britain team had the ball linches from the goal line when | whistie blew The lineup: New Britain. Koplowitz it rolled back of the|te of the neatest four the | P Stratford Morris| Goodman | Cleary ¥ v AR | Left Tackle. Politis Purak | g | Rogers | It Center, Malone FERE . Conley Sarnecky | Hickey | Quarterback. Barnikow ..... 4§ Stastord Left Halfback. | Peterson ip Eoid Stasko Right Halfback. |Carpenter va Stoll Score, New Britain 18, Stratford 0; touchdowns, Peterson, Hickey, Con ley; substitutes, Paulson for Koplo- witz; Leary for Cleary; Tinti for Po- litis; Paulson for Conley; Leary for Frankel; Barnes for Carpenter; Car- penter for Peterson; Barnes for Bar- nikow; Quigley for Carpenter; Ken- ney for Malone; Bishop for Purs Virelll for Hayes; Kecko for Sar [necky; Metz Stasko; Wheeler for Stoll; umpire Ma-| honey; Markham referce, head linesman, GIFT FOR COOPER Marion Fans Present Pirates Pitches | With a Diamond. Marion, 0., Oct. 16, — The hurgh National leaguers closed their | barnstorming trip here yesterday, de- feating Marion 7 to 2. Wilbur Coop } er, who started his professional career | here in 1911, pitched for the Pirates. | Refore the game he was presented | diamond stickpin, the gift of the fans i \fcQuiilan, a Southern league pitch- Pitts- | er, was in the box for the local team I The nine innings were played in 1:05. ! ander White Chicago's city champions for the Cubs | The C'ubs won White Sox three. that the Cub veteran ace able to win from the three series. today is the first since 1909 when the w was a pitching duel hetween the Cub star and out-pitching his youthful rival. After Leverette wavered and walked Grimes. Heathcote, replacing Barber, who had been ordered pr uncorked a single to Grimes to third. home with a smash to was enough to The Cubs, however, ac started it with a single to romped home easily on Statz's double off the left field bleacher fence. men in position to score as the great Alex tightened up, and his mates per- formed in grand s the pinches, Cubs Sox rell; Leverette, Faber and Schalk | Football Stars Defeat and Conley pounced|land's & Slavia have so heartened sporting cir- cles here that Poland is now the | to games in one for Hayes games has been formed. " Lett Guard. Hotz|ment's old policy of maintaining eco | | nomic gradually Kostic | the der Blanks Gleason’s Team 2 to 0. | Chicago, Il1,, Oct. 16.—Grover Alex- | vesterday whitewashed the | Sox 2 to 0 and won the title of | a four games to the It was the first time has been White Sox in The victory of the Cubs hite Sox won the title, The game, the seventh of the series Dixie Leverette, the former The break came in the sixth inning two men had been retired out of the game for otesting a decision of Umpire Hart, right, sending Miller drove Grimes right which for Alexander. put another run Alexander left and win ross in the seventh, The Sox failed to hit when they had e behnd him in Scor 070500 0001 1 0 %= 1041 000000000—0 70 Batteries—Alexander and O'Far- POL. wedish-Jugo- slavia Team in Contest. Warsaw, Oct. 16.—Victories by Po- ciation foothall team over ams representing Sweden and Jugo- certain represented at the Olympic Paris in 1924. The Polish ayers defeated the Swedes two to and the Jugo-Siavs, three to one A special committee to make plans participation in the Olympic be JAPAN LOSING SUPREMACY Tokio, Oct. 16.—In the serious vor- x of competition which is beginning | be started in Manchuria and Mon- | lia among Japan, Russia and the| nited States, the Japanese govern- remacy in these provinces| is being lost, according to critic in close touch with quarters, writing in the politica official ichi Nichi FAMDUS'~QUALITY] small score of hospital Johnny Haas. ered somewhat for knee was wrenched, regarded out of football for the sea- son. reserve material tackle is meagre. headed the Salt City team in an in- vasion of Yale Field. Yale then had escape, winning by the 1-206::08 Iowa’s splendidly conditioned elev- narrow en, playing with a single substitution, finished the game without injury, ac- cording to Trainer Drfl Feisler, fore the squad left for home. be- Two Yale players were added to the list, Emerson Quaile and Quaile has been both- by an injured knee Saturday his other and he is now two seasons. He is needed at tackle, as Yale's for both guard and Haas' face was cut in a scrimmage. He filled Captain Jordan's position. As Jordan will return to the game when Williams appears’ here next Saturday, Haas will be called upon for only re- serve duty. Ed Greene, who played left tackle before Quaile was hurt, showed satis- factory form, and, with Lester Miller again in condition, the competition for the position will be between this pair for the final games. and Becket will not be available be- When a Feller Needs a Friend O'Hearn, Bench i i fir B8 (L ¢/' AR /’l’;, 7 (P, Aw GEE Wz | DON T WANTA TAKE HER TO SUNDAY - $crooL The first touchdown registered by the champions, resulted from a long forward pass, which was neatly handled. The other tally was the re- sult of a blocked punt. For the Nut- megs, Scott, of Bristol, last year one of the favorites on the local gridiron; Neale and Nelson, showed up well. Scully, Deegan and McDonald played well for the Trojans. BOUT FOR SIKI Senegalese Is Matched to Meet Joe Beckett at London on November 23 In 20-Round Mill. Paris, Oct. 16.—The next fight in which Battling Siki wili take part will be staged in London, November 23. On that date the Senegalese conquer- or of Georges Carpentier’ will meet Joe Beckett, the English heavyweight in a 20-round battle for the heavy- weight championship of Europe. This was decided on yesterday when Major Arnold J. Wilson, the English promoter, obtained the signatures of both M. Hellers, Siki's manager, and Siki to a contract under which Siki will recelve 1550 pounds for his end of the purse. Sikl has returned to Paris from Holland and had a long talk with Manager Hellers prior to the signing of the contract. The diffi- culties which had threatened to sep- arate the manager and the fighter had heen smoothed over by an announce- ment that the French boxing federa- tion was inaugurating an inquiry as to why Sikf obtained only 75,000 francs as his share in the purse for fighting Carpentier, when the winner's end was advertised to be 200,000 francs. GREEN'S INJURIES FEW Dartmouth Emerges From Middle- bury Game Almost Unscathed. Hanover, N. H., Oct. 16.—Only minor injuries were reported in the Dartmouth football camp today as a result of the game against Middle- bury. Jim Taylor, guard; Roger Harris, halfback, and Eddie Lynch, end, were the only men to suffer at [all, and their hurts are so slight that they will be absent from practice for not more than a day or so. The small injured list is particularly gratifying to the coaches, as the game Saturday was hard fought and most of the regulars were Kkept in from start to finish. tore the West Point game on Oct. 28. No Yale lineup changes are expected previous to the Weat Point contest. Ves MRS. MORGAN - Y&S Secretary Myers is as follow: S. R. & L. STANDING| e 2 833 Pce, 667 .588 500 500 417 .250 .250 Levels Teams Squares . Saws Hammers Rules Scréw Drivers .. Bit Braces Planes L 4 5 0oL} [} 7 9 9 High Records. Individual single string, A, Odman, (Rules), 118. Individual three string, A. Campbell (Hammers), 316, Team single string, Squares, 472. . Team three string, Rules, 1362. Individual Averages. A. Campbell ............ A. Blankenberg .. Art Johnson C. Myers McBriarty ... T Wright .... Odman E. Rund W. Kilduff 0. Maier . W. Chant .. A. Stotts . Supernaut Stanley Howe . Fanion L Reyna ‘W. Lawless B. Fuller .. Covel Kolodney Sani . Rancor . . Adolph Johnson Connors Schultz Schwab Chas Johnson .. Wm. Glover,.... Murphy ... Wilcox Sinkouz Howard Draper 80.9 E. Anderson . veeens. 80.5 Hinchcliffe .... eeen.. 280.4 96.6 94.6 94. 93.5 92.11 92.9 92.7 90.7 90.2 89.5 89 8§7.4 86.3 86.9 85.1 §4.6 83.5 83.5 83. 83. 82.10 82.4 82.2 . 82.2 82.1 81.9 81.7 81.5 81.2 81.2 80.11 (Continued on Following Page) United Barber“ .. Shop .. 10 WASHINGTON PLACE, Cor. Main 4 Chairs, no waliting, first class barbers, all having over 20 years’ ex- perience. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED INVE ED | KNOW CHENOWETH WOULD Love To SToP FOR LITTLE EDWINA- HE WAS JUST ABOUT To START-- YEg 1T 1S A LOVELY Dav-- YES WELL HE'LL BE RIGHT OVER - ) KNnow HE'LL BE DELIGHTED - Il U i (i I, ot it il WHEN YoUR MA MAKES YOUR ENGAGEMENTS WITHOUT i | CONSULTING You Copyrieht, 1928, N, Y Tribune lne. 1-3 VU Lt o

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