New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 11, 1923, Page 8

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)

NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1923. GREB FAILS TO WIN TITLE FROM TUNNEY—NAVY AND U. OF W. GAME ASSURED—SATURDAY NlGHT BASKETBALL LEAGUE MEETING TONIGHT—VILLA WINS BOUT AS DOES RENAULT—“WOP” MANOLIAN FIGHTS THE SHEIK THIS EVENING—NOTES Tunney Successfully Defends His ’YA[E OPTIMISTIC Title As Light Heavyweight King Relies On Body Gene Tunney | wccessiuily de- New York, Dec. 11 o Greenwich Village, fended his American lightheavywe lg) t title last night in a bristling match with Harey Greb of at Madison Square Gard atta arned him a Whirlwind 1 the last rownd nney foreed the fighti Pittsburgh, from t spectaci- ked the start lar rallies by Greb. effectiveness of the and grad T Wild drive to the times Greb's tac champion but though 1 landed with long aw and body, they sel- dom d th p steady | despite quent a a rip- and cs be- crushing ribs At body finy \ f the closing r | Greb unleashed a threate NNEY champion. in the closing Tunney about | cham- | moment to topple the Setting a terrific pace vound Greb pummeled the head and body, jarri pion to his heels with sev But it was Greb's last desperate s @ bricf comeback, and failed terbalanee the wide marg had pited up on points. A majority crities 1ounds to Tun four and to coun n Tunney | ¥ led two ¢ 1t pair Grel [ twer ¢ 1t y-poun oy third « Amet from it to the to the led weig vland Todd, British European middieweight ehampionship made his American debut in the semi- final but lost th t Tommy Loughrar heavyweight, after less battling, The Enghishmar a clever, shifty boxer but « overcome a pound weight and disadvantage and reach. Loughran pac harder pur was made at 165 pounds ran came in Al 1 Briton scaled 1-4 Round One. was the for the wor iean 17 ¢ Vi vious e Gr both limit nwic 1 ts i aw ulso going Tunney 8 is tonight Gret holde cision to phia ligt 10 rounds of Iist proved nine heig " ked a Greb shot ! ft to ribs toc sparred on pound d Greb body and G vild with his nd b iy to i} Round Two aw oth pound rushed G ) o olting Fownd 1our HRound Sis ing Greb's shi th mpton on T v'a sover ney's Gren's the end of 1 Round Seve Greb landed a stiff and rushed swings to 1 back eautioncd aga 1eft stopped A elinch whe I.mln-| Il:hl Greb started a wild attack bn battered hadl) bor ody by champion. TEPMey drove some body pun abs star body Greb Gre ng. Greb's pdcd "t t th | tactics. I They | body { ously t year | Greb Attack to Defeat Harry Greb—Tommy | Loughran Wins From Roland Todd of England ping blows to the stomach complained TR Grebs right they mixed furiofily fhe round cnded n a clinch Ronnd was wild 1o feree o found Nine Greb with both Tunney crossed me sl with v ont at g the b his left a clinch and h wallop to head. Th about w the bell Rouud Ten Both found the mark exchange but the crowd for his apparent holding. right into Greb's ribs. right to the bo and h home left chin, Tunr up his body a left to th a lively pace his wa of dancing to the attack hea Tk at the end of th Round Eleven Tunney ripped in with a two-fisted clinched often with Tunney short range. Tunney booed Greb | Tunney's but was jarred by were OVER NEXT SEASON 'Newcomers Probably Will Offset, Graduation Losses Tunney of f Greb's Huaven, Dee. 11.-—In spite the he tolls which graduation and ineligibility rules will make in the Yale football squad this year, the ont- | look for the 1924 season on the gri iron is not as dark as would appear The los from graduation are 17 in number, as follows: Ends, Deaver, Huiman, Lincoln; tackle Blair, | Greene, Milstead: guards, Diller, Nof ris, a “Y" man last year but not this. | and Pillsbury: centers, Hubbard, Lan- dis: quarterbacks, Murphy. Neidling- er, Richeson: halfbacks, Haas, O'- Hearne: fullba Captain Maliory In addition Neale and Stevens, ! haifbacks .and Milstead, will be ineligible because each has now played three games of varsity foot- ball. Neale played at West Virginia Stevens at Washburn (Kansas), and | Milstead at Wabash coming to Yale. Howe | available { year from New avy they as hands. do- ody and fought ooked a ey were | rang. furious tackle, Gr e swung ney kept before | ver, a fine nucleus will be} for the ¢oaches for next| this year's varsity outfit. | This fortunate situation of affairs is| setting e round BABE FEEDS THE CHICKENS, MUCH TO THE THE HOME-RUN IS STILL IN TRIM SHOOTS TH attack. Greb's left sa Funney’s stomach but the crowd boo cd both boxers for their ¢ ireh swung home a left, Ano grazed the champion's chin a ney ne back with i attack. They were trading bio when the gong rang. Round Twelve jabbed with his le around Tunney rights to the Grel umped abe right to the ¢ arred Greb on the chin ropes as they ng re Greb changed jaw clineh stepped eft to the ody befor The wrestling imb lack white & rom a punch Round Thirteen pounded w © most of the e wild to the . b took unging w Greb der T an the ! Round Fourteen hey wer Tunney Greb's 1 entlessly burger's shot swings home a right hung o hment after bell ra ossive b t to the is tactic pt 1 misse i Fifteen toppe hran Beats Todd rip-jrang jolting body They he champion drew ey's left 1 with | due to the unusually large squad of | | ordinarily first string caliber men | The number of “Y" men who will re- {turn and eligible next season is eleven. They are man; tac Eckart BY BILLY EVANS “The % perts. iy 1 had prior to and the simple life. the The If you | staged the | history of reply When the ! | th simple did it. usked Babe Ruth how greatest comeback in the sport, that would be his a chat wit be he ends, Ringham R. But styn Hart, Lu- vorth: guards, had the old deter rh spring center ) em thro 1 met t ido During the expectations was a positive -| The Babe is through. Brunnell.| That was the opinion quarterback: Richards and Bentow,|pressed by his fellow Kles: Wolfe, e¢nd, and Hikock, |gporting experts. guard. | "Near the close of the 1922 season [0WA HIGH SCHOOL GETS Lo at eaRe e i s e IN BAD WITH TOLEDO, 0. | ’r. zed that he had been a failure, [In all probability he was then glving — | Ite- which we rou season his play had fz and ir “bust.” | freshman | an undef ed | most promising of Kline, fullback; back: Failing, il was ch Huggins cellent phy lighter than at any t scaling just a trifie gratulated him on h ed. “The simple life d did it,” he replied, the world T am goin the wise zuys who through. 1 am liglh time in my major le “When in one season you we all year,” said Mans season. Among len the are Captain | geries he below thes \ fhack con ly ex- and fre i | thought to his intended comeback. Strong For Simple Lite “Me for the simple life,” he told New York when he bade Broadway and its bright lights goodby. nk into | linching. | ther left | | Coach of Cedar Rapids nd Tun. Fleven ported to Have Assaulted Paculty DE bunk,” echoed his departure best of intentions but wonder over you made t} LIGHT OF BABY DOROTHY. E HEAD OF the sport ex- | h the Babe just for the farm I realized he had 1 if | mination to carry faster. in the | the New | a chest measureme fre Babt 1 Hc g camps inager much er arm town or result Rutl Miller throwing 50 per ce am through swinging I'm going to look them over, make the | pitchers pitch to me.” Ruth in such ex dition. He was ime in his career, 200. I con- look- The comeback of aseball history. he topped it off by stead of the bust of series, The ence, ow well he wn on the farm and you can tell | g to fool a lot of insisted 1 was iter than at any [fit by hunting, ague carcer.” around the house, 9 home runs | ing the simple life. ighed around 240 ager Huggins, Babe in ‘\..nq ws furl Representative 11 During an I"red L. Street Toledo Dec altercation between Jr., facnlty representative, of High school, Toledo, and a group of Washington High school officials u" Cedar Rapids, la., over the sum guar- | anteed the Towa school for the inter. | sectional football game played here! A Saturday, l.co Novak, coach of thelto Towa en, attacked wnd roughly |armo handled Siebert in a motel here, o The cording to a statement by Willlam | hawks, Ita Jirk, graduate mankger of Scott Pirates Novak is said by Kirk to Tonight struck Siebert, knocking him to teams Wi floor Siebert stated today that | management athietics will be considered | gown to by Scott with school employing Novak as coach The teams, it an agreement should receive $5 and if the erowd additional $2.5 The money tu | CITY LEAGUE ASSURED ft as he atter a| ut but hin A Greb's | Tunney clinched could fell not | Representatives of Baskethall Teams Will Meet this Evening at Y. M. C, A, to Make Final Arrangements, Game Aq {One More team eity basketball league preliminary it the Saturday nights is assured Il Mo- o Middletown, Dec. 1 and the arrangement Wesle football schedule for cight game season i1 four ¥ games or liams D, teams ANRETS, oley entered are the and Bagles of thesc Nutmeg's at the Y. M. C. A, to get A schedule will b mapped out ¢ letails arranged It probable that the first game will be played this Saturday cvening The management will award cup to the winner have the no sentatives with the rem bis meet o Manager has today by tra game changipg the playing he relations phidiesy art and W urther iy at blood eye is ( " ed was safd, sett on that Cedar Rapids ah for the game reached 10,000 an| would be paid them ed over amounted to 855 The ible urose when the | fowans made demand upon Siebert for | losing additional money claiming that Sfe- | substitutes, the Notre Dame university | Williamstown, bert had misled them as to the I team next year will have fts| dictown, 15 ng capacity of Scott stadium 1 again in competitior The the game eral strong line timated at nls Knute Rockne sald today. MHis quartet of returning stars ON WITH ST. LOUIS BOUT Exe- The scedule is: tady, September Middietown, October New York, 11; Am town, 18; Massaci a silver DAME STILL STRONG Ind., Dee. 11.—~While at Amherst, regular players and six |dletown, November ng. e NOTRE rushes, South ok but Greb s in a e chal. body Greb to v's head Bend, college four tr 8; and seat- | footha BREAKS Wi regular backfic in addition to Coach e receipts of were o8 P ors, Annapolis, University M on the gridiro ced by today dat an mer nous selation es who cor Jimson Weed, o jeed by gyp apple, wa proposcd rod sidered | near th big poison tobier 18 t 1o the Governor's Atterapt 1o Prevent I‘ 'WESLEYAN ARRANGES ITS ’ SCHEDULE FOR NEXT FALL Changes Amherst and Wil- games according to an announcement | st and Willlam colleges Union setts delphia Adopts lded for 1924 Philadelphia, Dee, ates | Ham (Wild of the New the wreck of | were an athletes’ niin 1. ~=Under a new . Haven yan university's 1924 calls for an 1 stead of seven The ex- by | Am- Arpenter, n arranged dates with body is rive here today. It the home of his aged t Schenec Rochester at Columbia at | at Midadie Agricultural 3: Tufts at Mid 1; Williams at | I Bowdoin at Mid- | | city. Thursday at the ol Peter and Paul. herst Renault Kl ros Cowler W ho Is Poor Fighter| Rochester Y., { Renault of « madu. Cowler of England T NAVY (B Navy ichigan will next season Navy Michigan round fight condition and not | no to me followe solar the heart blow to the down in the clan and threo Were necessary found too Oc- | er 11 inois or . hibition Causes Surprise To | was | | . Chalbp. ‘Me and Mine ey Louls, Dre Cha ay from Chi- | Dempsey artived ve cage | WAS P AT YouR Towwn LAST WEEW IKE, How Dip You HAPPEN B LIVE THERE WHEN You CAn LIVE IN A REAL Towwn & MINE - — ' v we-d Hyd fistic pre surpr at the action of Governor tempting to s e saying his only interest ) «tin Rangers Will Hold Their Reception This Evening WHAT GUBE W AvD UB A CITY ANYWAY 7 TAWE A PEEP AT OUR SCHOOLS, LOOK AT Tue PUBLIC LIBRARY wE COT - - LOOK AT THE Be TerminAL FACILITIES = oo AT - WHY SAY YouR Toww 18T I8 IT nd guests sident S Quigie and put performance. Later njoyed The Ranger younger organiza- 1 the keep it at Do Something. Anyway ! " you $6.5° h fived ne Wi Teicgram him doiiah fi cents - IS THAT 50'? wele LisTen . WE'VE @oT Tue BEST LITTLE HE ciTY ON The MAP - = DO Ybu Kvow IT HAS MORE WEALTH PER CAPITA THAam ANY CITY IN THE WORLD HOnESTLY HE'S The MOST AMUSING FooL | EVER HNEW: - WOOF WHAT A BORE --- HE'S ALSO AFFLICTED WITH A SAD CASE _OF Sour THEN AN INDIAN INTO A SHEET OF TIN. | “True,” replied the Babe, “but all T |did that year was make home runs. This year I am going to be a regular ball player, do a bit of everything. Staged Real Comeback “I.oss of weight has made me much Reducing the waistline that T have nt. Incidentally I He did everything id he would and then some, being the hero in- has profited by experi- He is again spending the win- ter at dear old Sudbury and keeping doing More power to you, Babe, MOURN FOR “WILD BILL" ) Veteran Athletes' Association of Phila- } Death of Famous Player. round here tonight of a scheduled The aged Cowler was in| Canadian heavyweight, fourth round 1o revive TO PROVE and | nt has given me movement with | improved my at every pitch— Babe tuth is He the 1923 world the chores general by lead- say the Resolutions on 11.—~Resolutions expressing sorrow at the death of Wil- | Donovan, manager baseball elub in| the 20th Century limited | adopted last night by the veter. | association of Philadel- | expected fo ar-| will be taken to | father, Jeremiah | Donovan, where he lived while in this Funeral services will be held | vy, cathedral £ Sts,| o Dee. 11.-<Jack the fourth | in ot the youthtul| A right over| with a wicked | plexus sent Cowler | A physi- attendants | him. four I'Mm wnoT | had said it would not | contest uniess the teams handled all |the Navy and Washington lare . | lace knocked out Tom | PADDOCK ISSUE IS AGAIN LOOMING UP Famous Track Star Likely to Start Another Wrangle New York, Dec. 11.—Another clash in athletic governing circles over the suspension by the amateur athletic union of Charles Paddock, sprinting star, for competing without A. A. U. sanction in an international college meet in Paris last spring, may grow out of the annual meeting of the Na- tional Collegiate Athletic association at Atlanta, December 27 and 28. The N. C. A. A. which sanctioned Paddock’s participation abroad des- pite the A. A. U, has challenged the latter body's failure to reinstate the Californian in a notice distributed to members announcing that the case will be laid before the convention. This notice points out that the I'rench Athletic federation has lif- ed the suspension it imposed a re- sult ‘of Paddock’s part in the Paris meet and declares that the attitude of the A. A. U. has raised an issue involving two principles. Theé prin- ciples are defined as “whether or not the colleges have to request authority of any super-organization to enter in- tercollegiate athletic competition in this or any other country” and “whether or not all amateur athletes of good character who are citizens of the United States and have never represented another country are eli- gible to enter our Olympic tryouts.” LAST BARRIER GONE Football Game Between U. of Wash- ington and Navy on New Year's Day Definitely Assured San Francisco, Calif,, Dec, 11,—An agreement that the University of Washington and the Navy would have full charge of-arrangements for the New Year's Day football game be- tween the Washington and the Naval academy elevens, was reached yester- day after an eight hour conference here participated in by representa. tives of the Huskies, the Navy and the Pasadena Tournament of Roses com- mittee, This action is thought to have re- moved the last possible barrier to the Fast-West game as the Pacific Coast Conference at its meeting last week sanction the details, including the establishing of prices and the sales of tickets, The egreement is interpreted to mean that virtually renting the Rose bowl from the Tournament of Noses committtee dur- {ing the annual winter festival in Pasadena. BUFFALO GETS DE Chicago, Dec. 1l~=Dewey Hill, |catcher of the Toronto club of the International league, was purchased by the Buffalo club, The terms were {not announced. PANCHO \ll;l:A (.P‘T!; DI}( ISION Philadeiphia, Dee. 11.~Pancho world's flyweight champion, pudges decision over Patsy of Philadelphia, last night won the Wallace, |after 10 comparatively slow rounds. Both men entered the ring over- welght, Villa’s weight being announc- ed at 112 1-2 pounds and that of Wal- at 116 1.2, Exercise With Pleasure — Rogers — Recreation Bldg. BOWLING BILLIARD: TALKING ABOVT THAT - = I'M SPEAKING OF REAL HONEST- To~GoD PEOPLE - YouR OWN KIND oF FoLKS, RED BLOODED AND TWo FISTED - - =YoU Hpow WHAT'S TIME on LIKE THAT - The USE OF WASTING A BIGOTED GUY t ALMOST BELEVE HE THINKS HIS Town 1& REALLY SUPERIOR

Other pages from this issue: