New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 25, 1923, Page 9

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Speaking of Sports | A ball player caught off third may | be in condition though run downa L s | MeTigue will defend his title against | Loughran in Phily toaight Babe Rufh's name is now mud in New Haven. Fully 10,000 fans waited | in vain for him to appear with the| Yankee lineup yesterday and when he | did not the New Haven management | refunded extra gate money paid to| $e¢ him in action | | He has refused to go on the train | with his teammates and started off in his aute, That was the last seen of the Bambino, | The Fim City nine trounced the| Yanks 9.5 The big leaguers made | five errors too. \ | George Edmundson pitehed the Al- | bany Bastern League team to vietory | in & no-hit, no.run gam against Bpringfield yesterday afternoon, Two Fpringfield players walked in the third inning, were the only members of their team to visit first base, The Springfield nine did not hit a ball out of the infield The White Sox pounded Dauss in the ninth yesterday and won from De. | troit 9.8, It was a severs hlow to the Tygers, who had led by six runs up to then. It was three pineh hitters who| turned the trick. 014 Man Grover Cleveland Alex. ander held the Reds to three singles yesterday when Chicage won, Incl- dentally, he broke Luque's winning streak of seven straight, Patsey Buckley of the Kensington team {8 after funday games out of tov Bowman of New Haven had a bl day Baturday when he got six hits in as many times at bat. One was a homer and another a double, The Dixies of Hartford defeated the Chainn yesterday, 10 to 4 The New Departure beat the Em- pire State team 6 to 2. Alonzo yesterdey lost the Great Lakes title to Tilden. English . British and power Willlam Camybell, driver, in o 50-hors FOR THE MONSTER TREMENDOUS Clean up Sale MEN’S AND BOYS' CLOTHING AND FURNISHINGS Watch Daily Papers ew York ample Sho 357 MAIN STREET NEW BRITAIN i 135 MAIN STREET BRISTOL | | Halke | rifies, Nets | Perkins, | den 1, NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 25 1023, In Question 0ar, yeslerday covered ane Kiln in 16 12 seconds, oF aprosimats miles an hour. Por this typ this breaks all world records 1omobile speed s [ for au NATIONAL LEAGUE (Continued From Preceding Page), o Giene 12 enneli) ne of o M lan 1 wich § in & lnnings it pitcher, by ) wild pitch. Genewich § pitehe wich: umpires Mot and Moran; tim same, 132 Dodlgers 8, Phils 4, Brookiyn, June Weinert's wild- ness gave the Dodgers a six-run lead in the first inning yesterday and they heat the Phillies easily, % to 4 S “‘fll -»Llul. dousey a5 a Mokan f. Witghtstone. Walker, Tierney Leach Henline Brier Holke, Ih. Rapp, 3h. Weinert Winters, p Mitehell % s so>ssmssosss Total - >> Neis, of, Jahnston Wheat M Foaurnier Palley, rf. Tayler, o, High, In. Olson, 2, Grimes, 1. T Juashureasiey lobenutnue Total T x-=Datted for Winters in ninth Philadelph 5 000 613 MOt Rroaklyn 400 300 00x—9 | Two N three hase hit, home mins, Tierney. Fournier; sac. dnuble plays, Tierney. Wright stone and Holke: Wrightstane, Tisrney, and Malke; Grimes, Johnstan and Fournier; left Aelphin 7, Rreakiyn 3 einert 1, W by Grimes 1 hits, none In no innings (none out in in 8, hit by pitehor, b ournfer), hy - Winters, (Balle (Mokan) winning piteher Weln hite, Walker struek out Weinert firat); Winters 4 Weinert by Grim Grimes; lesin Quigley and P Gilants 6, Braves 3, New York, June 25.—The New York Nationals defeated Boston 6 to 3 yesterday and turned in their sixth straight vietory, PITTSRURGH R £ ERRONIRZIZIRWNTI TR Pittsburgh. 2 E Righee, Russell, Travnor Grimm, Nawling: Goach, Morrigon, Baghy, p. ef, 1. . . M, 1b. e kL PR P alocssoomnmn Zissosnnmmens L) | St. Lonis, | Ab. e [ 0 Total = Tlack, Smith, Hornshy. Bottomley, £tock, 3b, Toporcer, Raldes, 1f. . Alnsmien, c. Pfefter, . Nerth, p. Barfoot, p. MeCurdy z Mann 72 Freigau z Clemons 72 of. .3 f. 0 o coos02 |l cocoonomanammunnm sso5535 | coomoonmsnanne al cocooococommumna? ol oomoss Sleoaioiiiooiin i z--Batted for North in eighth. 2z—Ran for MeCurdy {n elghth. 222--Ran for Ainsmith in ninth. z727—Ratted for Barfoot in ninth. Pittshurgh L. 000 200 400—6 8t. Louls . 001 000 030—4 Two base hits, Russell, Grimm, Emith; three base hit, Traynor; stolen bages, Smith; sacrifices, Grimm: double plays, Maranville to Grimm; Rawlings to Maranville to Grimm; left on base, Pitts- burgh 8, St. Louls 7; base on balis, oft Mor-! rison 4, North 1, Bagby 1, Barfoot 1; struck out hy Morrison 1, Bagby 1; hits off Morrleon 7 in.71-3, Bagby none In 11-3, Pteffer 11 in 62-3, North mnone in 11-3; Barfoot none in one: hit by plteh by Pteffer (Trayner), by Bagby (Clemons) winning pitcher, Morrison; losing pitcher, Pteffer; umpires, Klem and Wilson; time, 1:5b. AMERICAN LEAGUE Carey Senators 8, Athletics 0. Washington, June 25.--Washington enjoyed a batfest at the expense of| Philadelphia yesterday, winning 8 to 0. Philadeiphia, ab, s® Matthews, cf. ... feGowan, 1t Rowland, Bruge: Welch, rf. Gallowny, Riconda, Dykes, 2 Hasty, § Ogden, p. |l cwasnowormos Total SR WAS Rice, tf. .. Peckinpaugh, Goglin, 1f, Judge, 1b, Ruel, ¢, Evans, of. | = 1] meet at 8t | pitehing ace, or upon lof the two twirlers to zain a victory ) a4 wis 6§ Oleve White hox Win Detroit, Mieh June 25.-——After pitehing aletight ball for eight innings George Dauss, veleran Tyger veakened In the ninth, CF him for six runs and the score of 9 to & hurler » taking by the a game Heoper, ¥f. Moo ing, b BRITISH PRESSS o DIFFERENT VIEWS Some Favor U, 8. Liquor Action and Otbers Oppose It Lenden, June 2i.~The seizure of iquor on Rritish liners in New York continues to he the eutstanding fea ture in the press, most of the morning newspapers ogmmenting on the situa tion at somé# length The hasty condemnation of the su preme court’s liquer *Rling whieh | )\ marked some of the earlier comment is deprecated in a section of the press o [whieh pays high tribute 1o the exalted | 0|1y one Tetal 'R B 4 for Mask In seenth ax—-Patted for 1. Rlankenship Detrolt, abonoh Haney, b Tehnson, ole 1 Fothergill 22 » Total L) #-Ttan for Cutshaw Matted for Manus) Chicago Datrait Twn hase hite Ceops Cutahaw; atalen bases, McClellan, F Nasslor Calling 000 1089 003 0208 base hits Pratt Cutahaw 1o plays, Basslor to gney to_ Pra ft on bases, Detrolt 7 bate on balls, off Mack %, o ' atruck berteon 1, Mack 1 5; 1 wrton 4 in 3 ie Mok 51-8; off Cven, il ’“"—' Dauss 15 in 55 wild pieely Han winning pitcher, H, Rl pitcher, Duss; umpires, liol time, 322, thren Dauns M Clelian, to Rheely Cutahaw Chicago Robertaon out by I fn in 3 taon o Falcos Defeat Besses In Fast Ten Innings The Falcos of Holyoke had to e: tend themselves to the limit and ple an extra inning to defeat the Bease. Leland teom at 8t. Mary's terday by a score of 3 to 2. It was a piteh ers' duel between £hea of Holyoke and d of the Bess Travers pull ed a near sheestring catch in the | stxth Hyland had four *strikeosuts |while his opponent sent 11 DBessies {back to the bench Bease-Leland Team to Practice Tuesday Night The Besse-Leiand baseball ¢lub will Mary's playground tomor- | row night for regular practice, All |members are urged by the manage- \mem to be on hand. The manage- ment has beoked the fast Forsythe Dye nine of New Haven for a game later in the season. POND MAY PITCH FOR YALE. Is Expected to Face Princeton Yankee Stadlum Tomorrow. Duckie Pond, Yale's twirler who pitched the Elis to one Harvard, will probably perform on the mound again tomorrow in the third and deciding game of the Yale- Princeton baseball series at the Yan- kee Stadium. This contest will settle the baseball supremacy among the Big Three. Yale defeated Harvard in two of the three games played with the Crimson nine and Princeton has won both games played with the Crimson. Princeton defeated Yale at New Haven by a score of 14 to 5 in the first game of the series, but the Elis came back and captured the gec- ond game at Princeton hy 5 to 2. In the event that Coach Joe Wood of Yale decides that Pond is not ready for another severe test after such a brief rest, he will send Hickey to the tox. Coavh Bill Clark of Princeton will rely either upon Carney, his Caldwel!l, one over the ; ng Holy Cr nine this season. Caldwell was on the mound when the Tigers defeated the Wor- cester collegians by 1 to 0. Add atoms of health to your profit column by using Ierald classified ads, 3h, ab. . D Harris, Bluege, Mogridge, cumpan—o: lonoomocoemsy 3l 2 14 of 000 0000 | . 000 302 21x—8| Bluege 2; home POtal oo Philadejphia Washington .. vis Two base hits, Dykes, runs, Harris, Peéckinpaugh; stolen base, | Evans; sacrifice, Harrie, Rice, Evans; left| on base, Philadelphia 4, Washington 0;| Dase on balls, Hasty 2; struck out by OF- | Mogridge 4; hits off Masty 11 on 52-3; Ogden 3 in 21-3; wild pitch Mog- ridge; losing piteher, Hasty; umplres| Dineen and Hildebrand; time, 1:43. ‘ | Indians 8, St. Lounis 2. | Cleveland, O., June 2 Cleveland | bunched ite hits with passes in the fourth inning and defeated St. Louis| 8 to 2. 4 8t. Louls. ab, » J 3 MeManu Gerber, Bevereid, &-hliebner, vangilder, p. Pruett, P. Bayne, p. Kolp, . Colling % .. cssssmsssssamn cosomwaem Do smsscanasmowL] ol osssssssomans o e o | LU ] 24 ne in seventh. eland. ab. td P, 1f. 2. of. 1b. b, . JTamieson, Wamby, Speaker, Brower, Guisto, Summa, rf. . Connolly, rf. Sewell, ss. . Lutzke, 3b. . gmith, p. Etephenson 2 7 ol onomonssssumen [ R 2 wlouwsswsssssmusy olssscessasssss Total 2 27 z—Batted for Brower in fourth. elightful! Distribuivr MORRIS 348 Park Street countries are aleo invited at| sophomore | victory over Princeton and two over| legal and mora) status of the court, | y The Daily Telegraph calla attention | [to the faet that the issue is not mere hetween the U'nited Ktates and | Great Tritain but that several other The news. paper urges as the hest immediate |solution “recourse to arbitration and suspension of the new regulations pending decision of A chesen tribu. | nat." The Telegraph suggests the Hague tribunal the permanent court of internat justiee a8 a medium Is also advocated hy the 0 na! olutior phic | The Dally Chroniele endoraing Mr. | Lioyd George's attitude toward the ! situation urges the Rritish to avold attempting to taks & hand in the econ. fliet of wets and drys in Ameriea, “If prohibition law in the [nited States fails,' says this new worst possible thing would bhe fatlure sheuld he capable of being as- cribed to British interference.” ‘The Daily News contends that the [ problem s in nowise a simple one be- |cause of the real conflict of rights in- volved Hope that the British government ‘,vr' takke up the question instead of leaving it to the steamship companies i refterated by the Dally FExpress contends that “an attempt to foreigners tee total in their own |ships on the high seas is an assuilt len the very elaments of fresdem.” | What s presumably the official |view of the goclalist labor party is ex- |pressed by the Daily Herald. This | journal cays the United States is per- fectly within its rights and there wouid be no support in England for any hostile action toward America on a matter like this. The Herald supposes that some of |the first class passengers on the lin- ers think it a great hardship to be de- |prived of their wine for a few days| | hut adds that for the ordinary man to |be deprived of aleohol during the re- turn trip is really a very trifling mat- ter, CREW THREATENS MASTER Mcmbers, Returning From Rum Run- ning Crnise, Make It Hot For Skip- | per and Police Interfere, Halifax, June 25.—Returning from a vigil of three months off the New Jersey coast where she claims to have landed a cargo of 4,500 cases of liquor the freighter Strandhill has been boarded by a squad of Halifax police to protect her master, Captain H. K. Wilson from the crew which is not wholly satisfied with their venture. No pay and the short rations con- sequent upon the long wait to break through the United States coast guard | patrol raised the ire of the crew. | While returning here after nearly | three months on ‘“rum row" the crew refused to work and Dbecame 80 threatentng that Captain Wilson sald | he was forced to lock himself in his cabin for a time. Mr. a.ndD_Irs. Victor Observe Their Wedding Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Touls Vietor of 285 | Stanley street observed their 11th| wedding anniversary yesterday at their hcme and were hosts to about 40 friends from this city, Meri- den and New Haven. The couple were married in New Haven and have Mr. Victor is connect- | two daughters. of Landers, Frary & Clark's. A din- per was served by the Vietors and Mies Dubors of Meriden and M. ylor of New Haven contributed solo | numbers to the day's entertainment.| Many gifts w received by the couple and dancing was enjoyed. This statue of “The Virgin and | Mexiean WEXICAN PROBLENS ARE SHAPING UP Conlenence With U, 8. Likely to! Receive Delinite Olfer By The Asseciated Press, Mexico City, June 25.~=While Pres- ident Obregon was understood to be considering the formula for the so- lution of the subseil question as drawn up by the recognition commis- pion last week, the Mexiean com- missioners today planned to present a conerete offer covering the agrarian jesue which is the remaining obstacle before the conference The precise terms of the proposed subsoil agreement are heing kept se- eret, The U, B commissioners, how- ever, are known to have stood for the recognition of the rights of all Amer- fean landowners to tties in thelr property regardless of whether they had praviously declared an intention of exploiting it for petroleum The commissioners contended rights of petroleum com-| panies and Individuals who had scught tor or who had declared their intentlon of prospecting for it under the Mexiean laws of 1884, 1892 and 1900 were still intact and that all others were without petroleum rights except those who had complied with lative decrees subsequent to the adoption of the 1017 constitution, Charles B. Warren for the United ftates insisted that his government| was not championing the rights of that the yersons whose properth expropriated, Mexico up to this Las insisted that indemaification 18 18 the nature of a national debt and should therefare be paid with Donds: Mr. Warren contended that the PR jdent of the United States is INOOW» petent as trustee for the properties of mericans to aceept bonds inasmueh as ghis would 1sh 4 pregedent jeopardizing American interests throughout the world He pointed out t any country might thes a=e propriate property of United States citizens offering in payment bonds whieh would possibly be worthless Although not objecting to eNpres priation legislation bestowing 0o« muna! lands and villages, Mr. Wars ren objected to excesses committed throughout the republie under the color of agrarian laws, pointing to o8 timates that two.thirds of the Amers ican properties seized had thus been taken illegally, When the agrarian questions are cleared up finally it is felt here that recognition will follow within & fortnight after the American eom« missioners have reported to President Harding, In contrast to the atmosphere of hestility toward the United that has prevalled here in recent years, the press today ia displaying an air of hopefulness and thers is eve ident a4 desire for compoeition of the differences between the two nations. FRENCH CAPTAIN KILLED Duesseldorf, June 25.—A captain the A7th French infantry regiment was accidentally killed by o sentinel at Solingen, in thg Ruhr, Saturdey night, It was announced here today. The fatal shooting occurred while the officer was making his rounds, ed with the experimental department | ROTSTEIN w Britain, Conn. Child," standing in the Metropolitan| .o oi) companies but was represent- Mugeum of Art, New York, has been ing the American people. branded as a reproduction of the n-n'l-\l :! H\or‘a}f,nn“ r;uld"nr;l d}l\trr}\\m;n:v etween L] owners who ha X #inal in testimony in a French court. ercised the r!;hl: to explore for ol nnd‘ The charge has stirred up artists o!; those who had not two continents, The agrarian problem .gtill ‘ MENT ANNOUNCED The engagement of Carroll B, |Cleveland of Middletown, superfn. tendent of the New Britain Boys' elud and Miss Gladys E. Smith, also of hinges| Middletown, has been announssd. - When one hath Gone the Rounds —Then will he best appreciate the. Ovals; for experience bringeth knowl- edge, be it in smoking cigarettes or making them. Philip Morris blends only the choicest of mellow-matured tobacco leaf for English Ovals—and he blends it in the good old English way. Hence the raildness Hence the goodness Hence the reason why they ar2 In-com-pa-ra-bly fine! PHILIP MORRIS & CO. . EncLISH OVALS CIGARETTES

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