New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 24, 1922, Page 12

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LOVE RUBBER GOODS * ’ AUTOMOBILE SUPPLIES WE GUARANTEE SATISFATION SPORTING GOODS, GLOVES iggest Line of Men’s apnd Boys Gloves in the City Footballs Basketballs Handballs Sweaters Gym Shoes Auto Tires and Tubes Chase Auto Robes’ and Suits & 3 Lyon Bumpers ° McKay Tire Chains Aleohol=-75¢ Gallon Rain Coats Boots and Arctics Rublgrs and Foot-Holds Oil Clothing Oil 'and Rubber Hats Bicycles : Velocipedes Toddler Wagons Combination Skates Bicycle Tires WE GARRY A FULL LINE OF WARNER’S GENUINE LEATHER SUIT CASES AND TRAVELING BAGS” ° BUY YOUR CHAINS NOW AS YOU MAY NEED THEM ANY DAY — DONT TAKE A CHANCE. ON THE FIRST BOUND VATH CLERKIN, The Eagles of the New Britain Boys' club will open the basketball ‘season at the club this evening, op- posing the Eagles of Southington. The | locals will have the following plavers in the lineup: Schultz, Grip and Bwanson, forwagds; Anderson, cen- . ter; Captain Hdt, Deredorian, Sok- olowski and Stohl, guards. Dancing will be held at the close of the game. The Redwings basketball team will hold a meeting at 7 o'clock this even- ing in the club rooms. New uniforms | will be given to the players. Manager' _ Jeseph J. Regula of 133 Beaver street | would like to book games with teams averaging 130 pounds. P i s ‘Louis (“Kid" will meet * lyn in the Kaplan of Mgriden Sullivan of Eok- at Madison uare . Garden tonight. If the Meriden boy | battles in his usual style the ew York fans will no 'doubt be plea#éd ' with him. 4 i The All-Hartford and the Sub- marine, Base football elevens battled ! t0 a 6 to 6 tie at New London yester- | day afternoon. . - “Kid'* Lewis of Hartford was rded ‘the “decision over Bobby N le of New York last night. » i i /I Jim Clarkin continues to replace rs of his nartford baseball , the total of exsmanagers will on equal the number of "ex-com- missioners in this city. . | JackifgClarke of Seranton, Pa., was given decision over Pal Reed of | ingham, Mass, at the end of a 13-round bout last night at Worces- ter, Mass. Ly 3 \‘Mickey Travers. of*} ‘Haven and | meo Roach’of*Holyoke, Mass., will ¢.at Holyoke next Monday night. Frankie Quill of, Boston gave John- ny (“Red”) Allen a pummeling in a 21-round bout last night at Pittsfield, Mass. 3 In the event that.Charlie Buell is| not able to play against Yale tomor- | row, George Owen will be the acting captain. v ] Fred W. Moore, graduate manager of athletics at Harvard, has denied a| report that Pe‘cy D. Haughton will return to Harvard as football coach | next season. Mr. Moore says that re- gardless, of the outcome of the game with Yale tomorrow, Bob Fisher will be continued as gridiron mentor 'for| the Crimson. Charles Gariand of Pittsburgh, sec- retary ‘of the United BStates Lawn Tennis assoglation, died yesterday. Stanislaus Zbyszkd defeated Cy- clops, the latest European wrestling sensation to invade this country, at| Springfield last night. Each grappler | gained a fall but Cyclops was unable to continue the match after ‘“Bis- cuits” flopped him. Talk of a match between Georges Carpentier and ' Joe Beckett is heard in European boxing circles. E. B. Kirby of Cornell and Hal Douglas of Yale, two grack cross- country runners, may not compete in the intercollegiate event at Van Cort- landt Pdark, New York, next Monday. Kirby is out with a sprained ankle and Douglas is not in condition to run. Harry H., e, owner of the Bos- ton Red X, ‘denies that Frafik Chance - has ‘purchased stock in.the club, Frazee admitted that he had negotiated with Chance in regard to | managing the club next season. T e A U LN SVl N - N BASKETBALL SCHEDULE | Dates for Games in the Y.'M. C. A.| lmAnAm‘lgedbyChnrlea! Miler and Captaifs. GChairman Charles Miller of the Y. M. C. A. basketball league and the captains of the Tour teams have ar-| ranged a schedule of games to be played on Saturday nights at the as- | #ociation gymnasium. 3 The schedule is as follows: Dec. 2—Pirates vs. Senecas; Inde-| pendents vs. Vikings. 1 Dec. 9—Independents vs. Senecas; Pirates vs. Vigings. Dec. 16— Vikings vs. ates vs. Independents. Dec. 23—Independents vs. Vikings; Pirates vs. Senecas. J Dec. 30—Pirates vs. Vikings; Inde- 7 pendents vs. Senecas. Jan. 6—Pirates vs. Independents; | Benecas vs. Vikings. Jan. 13-—Pirates vs. Senecas; Inde- pendents vs. Vikings, Jan. 20--Independents vs. Senecas; Pirates vs. Vikings. Jan. 27--Vikings vs. Senecas; ates vs. Independents. Feb. 3-—Independents vs. Vikings: Pirates vs. Senecas. i Feb. 10— Pirates vs. Vikings; Inde- pendents vs. Senec Feb. 17—Pirates vs. Benecas vs. Vikings. TANTS $100,000 DAMAGES Music Composer Seeks a Big Awa.rdi Senecas; Pir- Pir- Independents; From the New York ‘American League Club. New York, Nov. 24.—A jury before Justice Wasservogel in Supreme Court i& to decide how much in damages a man may collect for his ejection from the Polo Grounds more than fwo years ago. Louis 8. Hirsch, a music composer, wants $100,000 from the; American Leagne Baseball club of New York, more commonly knowh'as the Yankees, because May 20, 1020, he was escorted from the grounds by #pecial policemen. Hirsch says that he was lifted from his seat by a uniformed attendanf and roughly handled in the nearby aisl by another policeman, who leipea start him toward exit. Attendants and _other employes said that Hirsgh had ! {ehanged his seat several times/in vio« Jation of the rules. Hirsch efplained { that N left his first seat to avold dis- agreeable smoke. The trial will con- tinue today. A HARTFORD COLLEGE TO CHANGE HOURS Trinity Students Will Be Compelled to > Get Up for Farly Moming Hartford, Nov. 24.—“Oh, how I hate to .get .up the morning” promises to be the most popular song at Trinity college, if a change in the hours of classes now being considered by the faculty goes into effect. It is now proposed to commence recitations at the college at 7:40 in the morning, instead of at 8:40 as at present. The plan will probably go into effect next year, and possibly at mid-years this year. An arrangement will be worked out so as not to in- terfere with the attendance of all students at morning chapel. The new plan is designed to pre- vent the present. large number of “conflicts” which prevent some stu- dents taking certain courses that they desire, by providing an additional recitation hour. The early morning classes will probably be in advaneéd eourses in which comparatively few students are registered. It is recalled that when Trinity was founded 100 years ago, classes commenced at 6:30 in the morning. Willard Offered $30,000 To Bex Floyd Johnson los Angeles, Nov. 24.—Jess Wil lard, former heavyweight boxing champion, has received an offer of 330,000 from Charles Murray, boxing promoter of Buffalo, N. Y., to meet Floyd Johnson in that city the latter part of January, according to Gene Doyle, Willard's local representative. Willard has taken the amtter under advisement, Doyle said. in FORMER PIRATE DYING. South Bend, Ind., Nov. 24—Edward Anderson, former Pittsburgh National League outfielder and at one time manager of the Terre Haute and Wheeling teams of t old Central League, was said yesferday to be in a serious condition In a local hospital | drooping Harvard team is simple—at YALE DEVELOP A SO0L Lawrence Perry Says This Alone Can Defeat Harvard Lawrence Perry, writing in the New York Globe, says of Yale's chances tomorrow: “Yale's problem, looking forward to next Saturday’s game against a| least, it is simply stated. She must develop a soul. ‘This is easier said than done. But if it can be done anywhere in the days that remain, it can be done at Yale. Yale is Yal time honored and bulwarked in pnda Behind her lie the traditions and the inspiration of 50 years of football. Now is the time for Tad Jones and his assistants to abandon further ef- forts to teach football to the team— it knows all the football it needs to know—and to instill into this outfit all the stern mentality that in former days hag carried Yale to the peaks of success. Manually, Yale has it in her to_beat Harvard. decisively. Give her the elixir of indomitable purpose and she. will turn the trick. Are there tastes. PATRICK - ' OVERCOATS "‘Bigger Than Weather” dissensions "among the Yale players? This is extremely doubtful. mistrust of the coach by the players? I think not. 'or on ‘naifield have 1 seen greater affection and esteem for gQpe man than the EN athletes hold for Tad Jones. ‘“Tad Jones has given Yale the re- quisite tools. Let them be employed with that spirit of team . enterprise which so signally marked the efforts|. of Princeton this year and there will | be no failure at the Bowl next week. “There have been numerous explan- ations why Yale lost to the Tigers. But in reality there is but one. There was no team soul. This was mani- fested chiefly in Yale's faltering at- titude when opportunities for scores were presented, and in shakiness in long gain plays which require’ for sucocess above .all things a mental re- siliency that is evidenced only when 11 men believe, not only in them- selves, but in one another. “With her long gain plays smoth- ered Yale had to use h running plays far from the Prin®ton goal. In war this would be analogous to using the bayonet in zones where the application of artillery is imperative. Against \Harvard Yale has got to be- ‘lleve in the merit of her plays and in the ability of every man to put them Phrough. In brief this outfit has to be pulled together between now and Baturday. One for.all; and all for one is the motto. From now on. Tad Jones should throw science to the windd and don the role of Savan- orola.” ' Appearance Our Thanksgiving Suits and Overcoats are. the sort you'll want — they’re good clothes, well styled, and fairly priced. The variety ranges the zestfuL styles to those for men of conservative BURBERRY OVERCOATS “Warmth Without ! Weight” CLOTHING Is there CANGER MORTALITY CLINBING UPWARDS Gt. Records Show 76,000 Deaths in 1921 * ‘Washington, Nov. 24.—The depart- ment of commerce announces that the returns compiled by the bureau of the census show that over 76,000 deaths were due to cancer in the death registration area of the United States in 1921, and assuming that the rest of the United States had as many deaths from this cause in pro- portion to the population, the total number of deaths from cancer in the entire United States for 1921 was 93,000, while for 1920 the number is estimated as 89,000 or 4,000 less than for 1921. The trend of the cancer death raté is upward, the rate for 1921 being higher than that for any earlier year in 23 of the 34 'states for which rates are shown in the following table. The cancer death rate in the registration area in 1921 was 86 per 100,000 population, against 83.4 for 1920, In comparing the death rate from cancer iin one state with that in another, the An 'bestment, in Good the way from - Hickey Freeman and Kuppenheimer _J_l'{ats- and Caps UNDERWEAR IVs not safe to wear your Featherweights KNOX Hats and Caps g WOOL HOSE ; There is nip in the air. Better Keep your ' ankles warm. from stomach trouble. Little hope is feit for his recovery. — 'NECKWEAR A Man is Known by the Tie He Wears Therefore Select Yours With Care. * FITCH-JONES COMPANY CITY HALL bureau uses “‘adjusted” rates in order to make allowance for differences in the age and the sex distribution of the population, because generally speaking, only persons in middle life and old age have cancer, so that a state with many old persons may be expected to have more deaths from cancer than a state with comparative- ly few old persons. The highest “adjusted” cancer rate for 1921 is 99.6 ger 100,000 popula- tion for the staté of Massachusetts, and the lowest is 4'{‘6 for ‘the state of South Carolina. For a few states adjusted rates have been calculatgd separately for the white and coler®d states. In this group of states the highest adjusted cancer rate for the white population is 95.9 per 100,000 population for New York and the highest rate for the colored population is 90.6 also for New York. The lowest adjusted can- cer rate for the white population is 51.5 for Tennessee and the lowest: for the colored population is 36.4 for Florida. ,Summarize briefly, the adjusted rates show that the northern gtates have comparatively high angfythe sotithern states comparatively low cancer mortality, whfle,thg.én“ ttle difference between the ‘ad} ans cer rates of the white and colored races of the same statogh (RIng @her words, the white and 4 £08 seem equaily susceptible to cancer, but’ both races seem less suseepiibic in the south than in the north. QUEEN IN MINES Belgium People Acclaim the Courage of Elizabeth, Their Queen, Who Takes Dangerous Trip. Brussels, Nov. 24—Elizabeth, Queen of the Belgians, whose courage i3 lwell known, has just.given another example of her fearlessness which has invoked the admiration of her people. Her Majesty recently visited the mining district of Limbourg, and while there expressed a wish to go down into one of the mines. Several |officials protested, stating that some |parts of the mine were flooded and |that there was a certain danger in making the descent. ., The queen pefsisted, and dressed fn !‘p miner's outfit and a leather cap, she lwenf*doWn to a"depth of about 3,000 feet. The party explored a large sec- tion of the mine' before returning to |the surface. i When Her Majesty re-appeared, safely. at the top the crowd assembled gave her an enthusiastic greeting. WOMEN RECOGNIZED i Parls, Nov. 24.—As a, consolation to the women for is recent action in . aveiding a vote on'the suffrage ques: tion the senate today adopted ‘& pro- | posal making women eligible to mem- | bershlp on chambers of commerce. re\Ta\3reNI /01 8N4 7\ 10T/ Y I

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