New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 12, 1923, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Speaking of Sports At last Knute Rockne's wonders have been humbied. Their defeat at the hands of Nebraska came as a great surprise, ' Maryland’'s showing against Yale also was a shock to the Blue admirers and showed that the teams is far from®in- vineible and that both Harvard and Princeton have more than a fighting chance this year. i Cornell and Syracuse are favorites this year for the gridiron crown but Meehan's pets will face the supreme test this Saturday when they face Nebraska. The ' All.New Britain and West Sides game, set for mext Sunday at Clarkin fibld, seems confused since it is announced that All-Hartford and Williams will battle at that field on that date, However, New Britain and the West Sides are contracted to play on this Sunday and if the game cannot be played at Clarkin field there seems no reason why it cannot be staged elsewhere, ecither in New Pritain or Meriden. One thing is certain, these teams must Jmeet as scheduled. two Ed. Leader expects a big water year at Yale and already Has 19 crews in the making. From that bunch he ought to get together at least one that would be the goods. The Williams eam from New Hav. en fared ill against the Steam Rollers yesterday. Not only did they fail to register, but also were defeated by a score of 16 to 0. That makes New RBritain's 10-3 de- feat look a little better. RBoth Jenkins and McGlone, Harv- ard stars injured Saturday will be all right when the Yale game rolls around on the 24th, “F.J. A" the Meriden Record sports writer says today in his “From the Press Box" column, regarding the New Britain high game: A Disappointment [ ward pass. SILVER CITY BOYS PLAY HARD GAME ‘Conunurd from Preceding Page) ball on the 20-yard line. They hit the lind twice but did not gain an inch. A kick was called for but was blocked jgnd recoverad by Nelpp who ran the ~amaining 10 yards for a touchdown. | Bcore 13 to 0, Meriden reeeived end galned seven yards. They then punt- ed as the quarter ended. P Loose Play In Second In the second quarter the team played rather loosely &énd with the ex- ception of a 25-yard run by Grip, the quarter was uninteresting. In this quarter, Buckley, atar quarterback, entered the game. Grip kicked off to Novokowskl, the Meriden ecaptain, who carried the ball to the 30 yard line before he was tackled by Damico. Buckley then kicked to Grip who fail- ed to gain. After trying two unsue- cessful plays Grip was called upen to punt out of danger but was tackled before he was able to do so. Meri- den’s ball on New FRritain's 10-yard line. They gained about four yards on three line bucks, and they got labout a yard or so on the'r last down but they were given the benefit of a five yard penalty, ard from this point they took just one play to put it over. This was their initial first down, and the first seore for them. The try for [the extra point failed. Score: New Britain 13, Meriden 6. Makes Final Score New Britain chose to receive, |Zehrer caught the ball on the five. yard line and carried the ball 45 yards e, le of the fisld. The Re 3h4 M0 trick Do MAKR both """“:’:\d‘h(:o::mbdroulm the ball to the 18« meet on the gridiron, but experts say | o0 ok where ierochowski car- 1% 0 bad footonll. |¥iea it over for the fnal score of the |game. Grip missed the try for the extra point. Eeore: New Britain 19, Meriden 6, The half ended with the [ball in Meriden’s poss-ssion on their 30-3 A few zerial monsters ALL-PLAINVILLE LOSES T0 NEW BRITAIN ELEVEN Mohawks From This City to 0 Victory From the Boys in the Little Nearby Town J. J. RYAN Coach Ryan of Wiscons| former Dartmouth star, feels thdt team is going to upset the hope @ Tllinois for a Big Ten championship. Ryan has welded together a stropg aggregation and hopes to liave it at the top of its game in the contest with Illinois at Urbana on Nov. 10. 1'p until Wis- consin met Minnesota it was doped as a strong’ championship contender. The scoreless tie with the Gophers was a bit of a setback. Wrest 13 The Johawks of New Britain dis- playing their best form of the season easily defeated the All-Plainville team 13-0 at Trumbull fleld yesterday. The smallness of the scorc does not in- dicate the superior play of the win- | ning team, The All-Plainville team was on the defensive Wie greater part of the game only threatening the Mohawk's gozl line at one time. Captain “Buck" | Jackson of the Mohawks, playing at | fullbaek, time and again ripped througih the center of the opposing | line for gains averaging from 5 to 15 yards, in this player the Mohawks have a line plunger second to none in the city The Mohawks first score came on he never used tohacco or alcohel in any form. Wil the dodo kindly move over and make room for the Big Three among the antiques? Yale has finally come to the for. Well, it took a long foilks that the MeCarthy injured in the last |play of the third period, and Gilana offtackl Blgdvy e Lok Th SlRae A NoR | A ",n,"' le play, Rice carrying New Britain came wvithin scoring dla- | o 050 plunges by tance of the goa!, Meriden lhou‘h;,"ri, benten, fought hard and prevented & ¢y, fio1d to the Plainville five yard The featoy of the last quar- | o0 ter two int itedy passes h)" v third baseman cnters |%ehrer, and the hing of 4 lONE|on the Plainville 15 yard line when Bor;:o:bx;f‘r:clal;ha-rhnn|. Must think [Fass by Gierochowski within three | time was called. he's going to get In world series next [Yards of the goal is the whistle blew| In the second perled the work of year, |ending the game, Jackson again stood out., The Mo- The star of the game was Glero- | hawks forced the opposing team to In determining the Germans' “pres. | chowskl but the work of the line was| kick from its 40 yard line and Rice standing on his own 30 yard line re- was time to convinee some world was round. Man with four children plays foote| hall on collage varsity. Some of the colleges pay well, we hear, |score. the real feature of the game. The Joffre Should Have like this one czn rus: France’s latest type transport plane. 80-horsepoie 0rs, ] notice, are on the upper wing. This particular ship's official desigration is the Bleiiot IV, the |15 yard line This play followed a num- | time of the game The Mohawks threatened to | | acore again in the same period being | age yesterday to his home here, An added word which he said he |couid not ‘“refrain from eaying,” the | former” president’s declaration, an |adioiner to the brief address he had just concluded, came impreasively, af- ter he had eflenced the strains of & hymn a band had commenced at the end of his last sentence, “I am not one of those,” he de- clared, “that have the least anxiety about the trivmph or the principles I have stood for. “1 have seen fools resist Providence before and 1 have seen their destruc- tion, as will come upon these again." A Wilson appea on the portico of his § street residence to deliver his second addre in less than twenty~ four hours and third he has made since Jeaving the White House. | A little bent with his four years of illness, he stood with bared head, af- ter waving a response to the outburst Jt's |of applanse which greeted him, while Senator Carter Glass of Virginia, de- livered the address on behalf of the visitors. Although faltering a little once or Mr. Wilson stood unassisted be- enator Glass while he delivered he first portion of his address in which he gave to the men of whom he was “proud to remember” he had force their way beén commander-in-chief the credit of making the “armistice possible,” Predicting @ new turn in the na~ tion's foreign policy, Senator Glass in }WlLSON PE‘{ED!GTS HES his address, declared *“we shall soon PR[NGIPLES “ILL wn" LL .-l(,mpnih.] to put aside the covert Had It In ’14 4l g e, Two, yvou'll * 10T 1 jornudable army 16 ¢ : r motors, It’s equipped with four 180-horsepe twice, decorative assit fea- d as e most in- At the game vho,\-r ustrations and other { 2 formerly of this|tures, but it is ot It smiles, the 80 dull th, Harvard gra S !lhan will Harvard | saw Dr, Fau!l | elty. “Doc™ w ‘port. The doctor i; # | re- | @ bool 4].{ domitab! able to RANGERS ARE DEFEATED Goal to St. Mary's Team in \\nfl--,‘ “"‘""W" That Fools Who Resist Pro- | and feeble civilities of an ‘unofficial observer’ to reveal our identity as & nation which means openly to take its 't and give direetions to things that involve the security and happiness of all mankind.” bury in Sunday Contest. vidence Always Are Destroyed— Playing St. Mary's of Water- bury on their own territory, the Ran- ey {gers of this city met defeat at the ST [hands of the Brass City lads vester-| Washington. Nov. 12——A rezaffirma- Why They're Leaving. day, 7-0. The Rangers played the St [tion of faith in the uitimate triumpl The Turkish government has oPs! |Mar,\"s team to a standstill but the| of the principies for which he has dered the prnmi-mm\_ law rigidly en< | breaks were against them. The Ran-|stood was spoken by Woodrow Wil- 'forced in Constantinople. A_!\ofhe: |gers made two first downs to every 80n to a throng of fricnds and ad- [scheme to drive out the “Chgistian’ {one of St. Mary's but still were un. mirers on an Armisticc day pilgrim ~liouston (Tex.) Post, |able to push the pigskin across the {goal line. The break that beat the Rangers and also the decision ren dered by the official oceurred in second period the game. Kenney, St. Mary's quarterback, punted the | ball out of W: the rers' Rangers at this made two futile Appears Rather Feeble populatior cr to TI'he Jackson who | attempts to plug the enemies' line 4 the ball from the center of | . but Pat O'Brien, the Ranger quarter- back, in punting the ball out of dan- ger, was interfered with by one of his own men, thus making the ball roll to the Rangers 7 yard line. At this point the referee gave the ball! to the Brass City lads after a Ranger man had fallen on the pigskin, St. Mary's Rangers Kasprow | “These who say Meridc iigh lose to their ancient and rough-riding rivals of New RBritain Saturday at Hanover were plainly disappointed. Cousidering how they played against Hartford “the week before, Meriden fell down with a dull and sickening ent cupacity” will the allies use Jight or dark brew? Meriden quarterback decided on many |occasions to kick rather than try the line when he was on his last down with only a few yards to go. Mueh should be cxpected of this part of the team in the two remaining games of Harry Wills denies his hands are bad. Well, the trouble must be that | he doesn’t play his card right. ceived the punt and ran it back for 86 yards through the entire Plainville team. From this point Jackson car- ried it to the ten ‘yard line with a series of line plunges and Northfeldt skirted the right end for the second | | Dunn . “vene .+ Bobieck Right Tackle Canahan evan Anastasia | Right Guard | Connelley . Argoey | Center thud Saturday. With the exception of Mastriano and Buckley, who got in for but a short time, Meriden had littie to boast of. A weak line, handi- capped the hackfield and what breaks that did occur the backfield failed to take advantage of. The local team did not display foothall while New RBritain did. 7They had plays that wers deceptive and gained the de- sircd results by using them. But New Britain played her usual rough and slugging game although there was no necd of it | { The Record writer who covered the game concluded with this pert para. graph: “Due to the rough piny of New tritain, there was quite a hit of railing at the officials in charge, who seemed extremely lax in calling and penalizing the unclean work of the vigitors,” . here is no truth in the report that Ehelby bankers are bidding for Olym. pic games, Exchange says Harvard plays like bunch of amateurs. Maybe a couple of professionals would do seme good at that. Bill Brennan has returned to the ring and is again ready to be knocked dizzy by some of the game's worst Nghters Oldest horse in world discovered in Pennsylvania And of course —GRAND OPENING— COMMERCIAL OWLING ALLEYS Walish, | | score of the game. Rice's attempt for the extia point was blocked, The Mohawk line, under the direc- tlon of (oach Stanton Ashley, has been greatly strengthened, and out. charged the heavier Plainville line time and again. The work of Wright at right end for the Mohawks was of ~e 'R, Baldwin | & high order. For Plainville the work of Archie 1 &t quarter and the work of Marinelll Piastony at halfback were the outstanding features. Viaosnt The lineup: Mohawks—1#, Wright; the season. If the line plays as well ogainst Hartford as they did sgainst Meriden Saturday, they should hold |the Capital City team scoreless. The |summary: N.B. S, MeCarthy ... Eddie Roush has demanded a new three-year contract, thereby officlally | opening the hot stove league, FOOTBALL REVIEW LOOKS INTERESTING (Continued from Preceding Page) 1o, and its uncrossed goal line marks a new epoch in Syracuse gridiron ane nals. Syracuse plays Colgate here Bature day and closes its season against Ne. braska at Lincoln, Neb., Nov. 24, The game in the west will hold the attens tion of the football world, with Syr ruse, a ranking castern team, meeting | Cornhuskers, conquerors of |[4CRFer woui. i Notre Dame. | Left halfback Gicrochowski | light halfback . Navokowski Meriden’ ++ Bartlett Lef!‘ end Bojnowskl .. . Left tackle Left g m.xd“ -+ owsae Walsh W. Baldwin Deodorian .. Neipp Center Damico tg., Griswold; rt, Durn; re, Behenke; i 1h, Dunigan; rh., Capen- -y xfh,. Capt. Jackson. Plainville— ¢., Kramer; rt., Warner; rg., Bugby; Schosdler | o “Dibler; Iz, Warfleld: It., Johnson: le,, Nanm qb., Areble; 1h, Mar. R Johneon [ yneny; b, A. Nanmeee, N Substitutions — Mobawks: Turner « Nitos | for Wright, Tanered for Morel, Northfeldt for Dunigan, Rackliffe for Tancred. Plainville: Balley for Mar. Right guard Rogin . . Right tackle Taylor w. Right end Grip .00 Quarterbac r— = Mastriano PAWNEES ORGANIZE, ) The Pawnes quintet has organized | WAlker ineny, for the seagon and are out to play . - Fullback any team in New England weighing | Score—New Britain, 19; Meriden, ¢ in the 120-125 pound class. For the |Substitutions — Giana for MeCarthy, 'MANY INJ”REI] 'N Pawnees, Lippmann and Vinke Huber for Taylor, Buekiey for John. | hold down the for¥ard posjtions, |00, Johnson for Buckiey, Sakon for Richmann is in the pivot position and Johnson, Lamb for Walsh, Walsh for Burke and A. Finke do the guarding. 1Amb. Referce, Sexton, Taft Prep. “A world.-wide challenge is sent to Shool. Umpire, Parker, Middiebury, a1l teams in out pound limit,” the | Head Linesman, Barnikow. manager says, Reply to Willlam Licber, in eare of the Boys' club, ain, Conn, M A supper will be held at the Fipst Baptist church next Wednesday eve. ning at 6:30 o'cloek. | | manager, | v New Drite Baran fullback Officials; R | Redman; head linesmah, subgtitytions, Beck for Roberts, John- son for Maloney, Pickett for Roberts, Maloney for Jehnson, Cox for Larsen, Bughne!l for Batter, Dixon for Beck, Pastore for Bovs, Knaut fer Johnson for Lmbler, Hickman Jackeon for Watkinson. | Heore by quarters Hillhouse . | Hartford PRAISES PRINCETON. Attorney Eaul Waskowitz of | eity and Yd Suisman, forward on the | Yale basketball team, atténded the Harvard-Princeton game turday The 1oeal lawyer expresses th@opinion that had the bet@e team and Yale a tough® battic ASPIRIN Say “Bayer”’- Genuine! n R 0 7 0 7 0 of the new Prineeton will give 510 MAIN ST. Holfelder and David, Props. Wednesday, Nov. 14, s 7. u. Two Complete Floors B 9 Alleys 2 Boxbail Alleys Special Attention 40 Ladies Altraction for opening night—S. N.E. Tel. Girls of Hartford vs. Genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” have been proved safe by millions and preseribed by physicians over twenty- | three years for Colds and grippe mis- éry. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost only few cents at any drugstore Each package contains proven direc- | tions for Colds and telis how to pre- i pare an Aspirin gargle for sore throat and tomsilitis. Corbin Girls : . Edward Gilman, Mgr. It, Brennan; lg., Restelll; ¢, Morelli; | HARTFORD GAME (Continued I'rom Preceding Page). | . Embler (Capt.) | Mr. and Mrs eferee, Hiskell; umpire, | was removing the first relick from the McGrath; | Pharaoh's tomb 8| “ane of the this § Doran ... ++ Nevewick Left Guard Lord .arau ves Puppel | oft Tackle Butler « Hennessey Sealed for You Wrigley’s is made of pure chicle and other ingredients of highest quality obtainable. Yut itis no use to make WRIGLEY'S 100% in quality and then reach you in poor condition. S0 we put it In the wax- wrapped package and Seaceo It TIGAT to keep It good —for you. Lett End Kenney sesees <ess O'Brien| Quarterback | w Conrad | Neumann RATAL TS L oe Left Halfback Seifels snrmkyJ Fullback Referee, Penddy; umpire, man; head linesman, Bil four 10 minute periods, GIFTS FROM TUT'S TOMB Number of Egyptian Antiquities Have Been Presented To the New York Metropolitan Museurt of Art. New York, Nov. 12.—Prasentation | of a number of Egyptian antiquities taken flom the tomb ¢ Pharaoh Tutankhamen in the valley the kings apd other prized art gifts was announced today by the Metropslitan Museum of Art The Egyptian relics were given to the museum by the widow of the Karl of Carnarvon under the terms of his |will. Other relics were presented hy V. BEverit Mary jwere in Egypt when Howard Carter Preed. Olson; | ~keeps teeth white — helps appetite. Save the Wrappers Thev are good for valuzble presents mistes for a hot breakfast | The FEar « narven's gifts include a lotiform of turquolee blue glass, inserib the cartouche of Thehu-Times 111 of the VIIT dvnasty Another recent loner is J. P. Mor for Herding. gzan, whose gift is an illustrated bank known as the Aldine Hypnaratomachia Poliphilt. The K bow & described a greateet yente of bec QUICK QUAKER cooks in V2 the time of coffee! the printer's » ) ts 2 styles — regular u've always known, and Ouaker Oats r Quaker Oats, QUICK QUAKYR ats the guickest break- in 3 to 5 minutes < ‘)JU'C‘( Q\‘:,L»m makes fast dish. b s Is k= scarcely longer than simp Cooks periect toasted bread. tlar Quaker Oats, the Cut before flaking, ked. And these r—that’s the only differ- 2 Kinds of Quaker Oats At Your Grocers Quick Quaker and Regular Quaker Oate. Get whichever you prefer. nartly ce and small flakes cook ence. All the good of hot ick Quaker,

Other pages from this issue: