New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 10, 1924, Page 8

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383203 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 1924, RED AND GOLD HOOP TOSSERS PLAY ST. THOMAS FRIDAY—ALL NEW BRITA!N TEAM HAS THREE HARTFORD GAMES BOOKED—TWO WORLD SERIES STARS PASS FROM BIG SHOW—KAPLAN OFFERS $12,000 FOR A BOUT WITH DUNDEE f233sdiadtastsssessss i High School Has Tough Job Ahead In Game With Sai.t Thomas Friday Seminary Boys Have Fast TRO0P {0 DEFEATS THE Outfit But Locals Are FIVE FROM TROOP FIVE Practicing Faithfully TR Regaining in/ al Score at Boys' Club Gym is Hopes of Laurels Lost Year Ago. To $—Lighter Team Proves To Be the Faster clean Troop 4 team of game featured by the both te heavier Lineup for high ) i v i ‘ ¢Saturday a N. B M. S Beloin roop At the end of ed by the second half club last night the first score of § to started with double with game half Troop 4. The a crgsh, decliers and two more. At Trooj Left Forward, L. Forward. . Wodarski Walsh | Diner sent in two Lipman d 't ud. arker and for the points Belser . aht owe o of the was Neipp Center, Erichs played the lose for the Troop 4 Lrickson was a rev- winners Diner and Lipman played the b game, each putting in five field Yahm, Ri off and Rudmay played well The lineup and s follow three are s roop 10-——Rudman, Diner, 1f, e New Brita 5; Ribicoff, ¢, 2; Lipma Yahm task on th il roop Clark phrics rf. Stevens I game W1l the The guarding of elation. For the Zehrer Yeft Guard, Gorman Gura Right Guard r 4 Horton, Stahl 18, Pavker, If, 4; hands to hold the ' Erickson rg, and confiden e, ning 3 game wi 1 dle gymnasium 8 o'clock Last Year's Record, year the championship team New Dritain high scl met the scminary t Yrom ng of th am was not West M lled at| at the and will be ca o . 3 their fir 4 hand [ the Britain t« ' am | Jwoey o SPORTS begi game th H in eve ¥ aut Hartford pub-'a bang at the n twi All six teams representing the age! the fought the whil honor of their respective cli and {fouglht they did. In their anx 1o heipgheir tewm to vietory many pers | fouls were called, but as most would-be foul shooters did not eyes on the basket they gained Jittle in the line of points by this method In fact therc 80 much stling about tor there was little scoring of the ry ment seminary team def ss leagus 0ol yesterd or- open: ain team lic high schoo the Hardwa only onoe ve hdve three their captain an Deschamps, wh the Hartford Followers of that the noon. school for an left They lost *Mike ter, and “Dutch” playing with hool ted am claim Long, sonal |of th have * high s m ary t their will b mi am oy 0y one of was the doune in Practic The Red and in a hard weck ratior of victory relied upon to carry the h Hardware City Yoy 1 as a unit, but as individuals| They will am was Very Hard. 1 team i any ¥ I are lineup will of the afternoon o big the score, 4 game, It basketball ot a good gain surprise junior by ar's T'he pulo a team, last pes o e was ye are not ex- Henjors 1kt like it “Duke' for the to sounds was mor than Rogin winners. perienc they seem to do fairly be drilled along the work this week, 1or hit so badly by grad done ably w son. There is lineup. The s of mate team, and Despite this, ceeded in defeating t school and the Wes team, and in holding t team to a on¢ t tory over the be appreciated at it was only two days [ W lines of ume, L team that talked ation they have r th on 1 in the e ri wr ] 88, " this game was defeated gonid-freshman rema 8 sca y o was h howey the afternoon was wid-ycar and ams, For long overtime they The of unior time Bani neither boys en the senior wmid it looked would hav team scored, year manag-d points to give them the Junior mid-years, 4 ‘harley” Covert | today he happe point te “ as if an to be played sinee third cnough Scor Weaver but th N 10 scorc game, nior mid-years, telling every- wed o won n how SCOT o o 3| the lon Point Makers Basketball LERNEST AL lineup Frank | | { ! Dr who is BLOOD that is trou BY w8 injured in OLD GOLFER LEAVING Walter Fairbanks at 7 Plans To Leave S and Return To Merric and To Live night in a gar accurat ba Signal No. 4, Variation 15. Center tips ball to the right guar Who receives the ball the and dribbles to the ket No. 45—1If the right With interference he may pass from B to the center C, who has placed Simeel? in position for the play Left forward (1) circles around to draw guard away, or free to re- Sover balt from missed shot, or re- eelve back pass Right forward gocs guard. This play has been use sdvantage when opponent’s are sticking the forwards. forward, whe the Maroons Chicago right th haif Alyen ot poir guard meets s INDIAN PUG WINS Havans 10.~"Chief” quah, an Indian Okiahoma knocked Antonio Fierro, Cuban heavy- welght ch in the second round of 2 round The Indian weighed 196 pounds and " Mato- from out Jan American night the beck to Pight A out to good guards resh eggs, 6lc doz , 301 Main strecty—Adv. Positive | Russell Bri rf, | Hum- | §! MeManon | HIGH SCHOOL || D s o 8 | ball | 312,000 15 OFFERED T0 TEMPT DUNDEE | Armory in Meriden Meriden, Jan. Dwyer, of Bridgeport, matchmaker of the local National A, C. wired Jimmy Johnston, manager of Johnny Dundee, | | the junior lightweight champion, an | >f $12,000 to meet Louis (Kid) | i n, of this eity, for a bout with the above title involved. The offer)| was made yesterday morning-and if| | Dundee comes out of his castle it would be staged here at the armory | the middle of February. f Kaplan has been tailing Dundee for a bout for a good many months now. | When Bernstein %as champion the Io-l cal hattler sought him for a title bout | but the now uncrowned champion was t to give the Meriden fighter| preferring to take on op- pone of lesser worth. Dundee, since defeating Bernstein, has not shown any too much & ss to meet mem- | bers of his profession who would be to fight him on equal terms. Dwyer has had this in mind for| some time and the recent offer is an| attempt to force the champion to/ make good on his statement that he was willing to meet anyone, Dundee received an offer last summer of| 500 to mect Kaplan at Hanover | IuI\ but the bout with Criqui was | thrown toward the Scotch-Wop with | the title involved. Since then Kaplan, and Montieth have been on the trail of Dund has dodged and ducked with only the| | ability that cventually makes a cham- | | pion. This offer to pin him to the wall, to make him give definite | answer and when one stops to consider the amount—well § is $12,000 no matter how one Ed Van Every, writing in the York Evening World yesterday duced the following stutement Dundee, wherein the junior light. | weight champion expresses his views as to who he will meet, *1 let the pub-. e and the promoters pick and 1 box ‘em. Maybe old Johnny Dundee is starting to slip, as the wise guys all pointing out, but they'll find t old man there when they try to walk off with the featherweight und junior lightweight tit It Dwyer s | match through boost for the us well as local 10.—George a o , able J arns it New pro- from ‘e, Wi ceeds in this | 8¢ it will be a decided local fight game. State , will remember it was Dwyep who staged the cards here on which Kaplan met Herman, Shu. grue and Wagner, at different times, His fights hiere have drawn the largest vgates” of any ever held in Conneeti- | cut and, with Dundee and Kaplan to- gether, the sporting spotlight of entir gland, from the furtheres in Maine to the Connecticut-N¢ would be interested counting the attention it would draw outsids the northeastern cors r of the United States Louis is back from his sojourn in Pittsburgh wherc he met Cuddy De| Marco and recetved decision as smokey as the city itself, according to tories received. He is ready, as usual, to take but the Dundee offer is the “big shot” nore than a local standpoint, putting fa th Kk state line of ne | trom w STUFFY LOSES CLAIM Jan. 10.—A 810, fled by John irst baseman of th igainst the was denie last missioner Landis. Mr. Landis ruled | ut Mclnnis had ben declared a fres « nd club, which receyear contract d which con- player could W 00 back ¢ (Stuffy) Boston Boston Ameri- night by Com Chicage salary Melnnis Nationals claim o cans 1 nt by the Ve assumed the Boston Red Box ar fled that the d on ten days age had f the tract be r peci R frosh 1 Mai doz. Adv, 61¢ street itively el Bro; HARR STAYS COMBED, GLOSSY store Miilions U Cents Buys Jar at Drug stays combe you like Ha combing cream v atural gloss to your hair— hair riGroom” hich gives and well-groomed that f touech to husiness asions Tens: also heavy greasy, ustrous harmf{u Kaplan's Mazager Secks Bout af &= mmn bearded . but somehow he ‘gpll‘u working out with his partner. whiskered glove artist is a lightweight | Was Star TesGlants yesterds of the ably :nding him to the te ment for Pitcher Wayland 000 star purchascd last Saturday, fused hander, of the had a good season and lapses in djscipline influenced Manager ; part with him 41 and threatened with casion for to Boste tions of [in the up where he deft off | i ona 1h, bril | fArst Williamstown, Massachusett 14 12 Juquesie This Bearded Bat ler Carries Something of a Kayo Punch | | | KING DAVID, AND HIS SPARR ING PARTNER, JIMMY HURLEY You see herewith King David, the and you are 1 to believe that he newsboy battler of Los An-|carries a terrific wallop, At any rate, sparring [ he has scored seven knockouts fn a The be- row, and a knockout is a knoekout| any place you find onc, | GOLF BOARD IS AGAINST CHANGING STYMIE RULES Present Plan Will be Followed Again Jimmy Hurley. ACK SCOTT RELEASED FROM GIANTS' ROSTER But of 1922 Series Now | Lven Louisville Passes This Coming Season, Chair- Him Up, man Says New York, States Golf opposed to any chi 10.~~The United associution is definitely ge in the rule which compels all stymies to be| The attitude of the governing links body was revealed today by Howard I, Whitney, chairman of the rules committee, In a lefter rejecting a proposal by 1. Ellsworth Giles, | editor of the Pittsburgh Golfer, that| the stymie be abolished and the medal play rule substituted, It scttles the| stymic fssies, ohesrvers belleve, for 1924 at least, Unter the proposed change, the stymied player would have the pri- of asking his opponent to re-| his ball, the opponent having the option of lifting or putting. 1t the stymicd player did not ask for the re. | moval of his oppounent's ball and| struck it would be penalized a! York Jan. had York, Jan, 10—The New ¢ announced they New aivers on Jack Scott, pitehing hero present | and prob- a deal world's serics, of him In minors, champlons of in part Dean 1022 would dispose Slayed; The National league red Scott to Louisville but club res right- association the veteran American to accept he him out Scott injuries that kept for sevoral weeks, in 1023, winning games, but several John McGri ) Seott suspena Despite game losing seven was a fine on one to report for a trip allure he stroke This plan is undesirable, according | to Whitney, because ft would | Eeott's conie after arm ended his major of the ! big fastor Glants' pennant victory and Yankees with the most ant twirling performance h orld’'s series that ye Last fall he a8 knocked out box in his staft ag American champion back, a sors as believed to have ague carcer, was one 1922, He climinate “what many believe to be he finest shot in golf, the xhort pitch | into the hole.” He points out that| experiments in - stymie rules been made, adding that “the U, G. A. decidede to go back to the| old form of playing the stymie as no change that had been suggested up to the present time is, in thelr opinfon, an improvement on the old nn!hurll of play.’ was a 1“ the inst ague BASKETBALL Jan. 1 Williams, COLLEGE Clark, 1 ambridgr CUBAN TEAM TO ENTER. Philadelphia, J “1he sity of Havana will enter @ one-mile relay team in the University of Penn- y|vania relay races next April, George Orton, duaté manager of | Pennsylvania relays, announced | Har T'echnol Ja 10 Institute ard, . Univer- of West Point University Jan, 10 N. Y of Delaware Md., dJan. 16.~Navy, £9; Mh versity, 27 yeste Ariny Annapoli Me and Mine SAY- /l KNOW WHERE | CAN GET GOOD ScCoTew | ; FOR FORTY A CASE- / [{ You BUT TuAT Y 'UNDE PRICE - wWiHERe' h ANY BRAND - - RIGHT \ FROM THE OTHER SI1DE . FINE STUFF DEeL 3 4 3 ) You'lL JusT RING FELLOW VP AND TELL HIM | SENT You, You may BE A3LE To GET IN ON THe SAME PRICE AS | Do/ Tis & { star, who is to umpire in the Ameri-| | one of them. ! American league park in New York, with Hurst and Delehanty as the cen- | pitcher, then in his prime, | With the count two balls ! strikes, | Hurst ruled a ball. | Hurst, | weok, LisTEN - A CASE THE OTHER DAY FoR THIRTY-NINE -FIFTY RETAND = INSIDE Good Mmcus! WHAT A TIRESOME FooL HE ALL HE KNOwWS "WHERE You CAN GET 1T (ELARANTY ALVAYS | A POPULAR PLAYER New Umpire However, May I_lave Rough Road Abead Jim Delahanty, formerly big league can association the coming season, was always very popular as a player. Jim may find it difficult to retain that popularity with the athletes now that he is a judge of play instead of i Ik During his career in the American leaghe, Jim was much in favor with the arbitrators, They liked his rough but always honest style, Delahanty was in his clement when | he could start a friendly argument. He had a way of working up a dis- cussion and then dropping entirely out of it when the going became héat- ed. Often Jim would mildly protest some decision, just to see if he couldn’t come out on top in the battle of wits with the umpire. In particu- ler, Jim liked to pick on the late Tim Hurst, despite the fact that the two were the very best of friags: L L2 1 i ¥ Billy ans, umpire, in discussing him, recalls: “I never will forget an cpisode that took place in the old h L tral figures. I | | t 1 li *J Chesbro, the great spitball was piteh- ing for New York, Jack Kleinow was| the catcher. Delahanty, with Wash-| ington at e time, was the Dbatter, Chesbro had a very deceptive spitball that broke sharply in the last few fect it traveled, If an umpire called it too | quickly he was always in trouble. and two [} Chesbro threw a spitter xlm\l A couple of run-| ners were on at the time and Ches-| bro and Klecinow raved at Hurst for not calling Delahanty out on strikes, | which would have retired_the side. | Jim was always a dangerous hitter, | highly respected by the American league pitchers. In an effort to ap- pease Chesbro and Kleinow, Hurst got | himself into trouble, 1 |E ¥ 1 say the ball was too low," said ‘80 sure am T that T am right I will leave it to Delahanty. What about it, Jim? “In a matter of fact, conveying the | impression that he was bored at being drawn into the argument, Delahanty replied: ‘Why, you little blind bum, it wus right through the heart of the plate, six inches above my knec' Delahanty simply so replied to make Hurst rave and he succeeded. ‘Right through the heart of the plate. Well at do you think of that? Get ready, Delahanty, and take a swing at| the next one, it's a strike no matter! where it fe' knowing that Hurst never bagked down, took a chance and threw a Righ last ball that was a foot over Dela-| | he anty's head. Mr, “Delahanty started for first, believ- | ing he had been passed, only to hear| | the raucous ‘strike three' from Huret,| Then it was Delahanty’s turn to rave and he did.” | PHILL mo( K Rkl)h '"L’\DI. f Cincinnati, 0., Jan. 10.—~The deal| for Pitcher Jakie May, which was sup- | porad to have been concluded last! hos suffered a temporary cheek through the refusal of the Philadel- phia club to waive elaim on Walter Kimmick, one of the two players promised to the Vernon elub in the trade, Walvers were asked on Kim- mick t October and Philadelphiad was the only club to claim Irim, | BOVGHT LIQUERS WAS SPECIAL WERED ANY- Tuem RISH - VL Give WHAT s ALL-NEW BRITAIN Babcock Wojack Larson McNamara one of a scries of three capital nightat the o shooting eyes state Mantelli, Murphy, Waterman, Torrant, Ogden, ¢, |return game | Atmetic | who participated in the Oxford-( | summer, | Cole, West Newton, +{and Bayes M. Norton, Vincyard Haven, Mass., i | The Rutge Chesbro and Kieinow, | @ ¢ WELL WRAT TP You OFF THREE GAMES WITH HARTFORD QUTRITS Locals Play West Sides Tonight, Dixies Sat., Kaceys Next Week The AI-NoW Britain five goes 1o Hartford tonight to meet up with the West Sides quintet and it is a disap- pointed bunch of players they will be f they do not return late this eves ning with a victory under their beit. After dropping four straight games by narrow margins, they feel they are | due to come out of their slump, get he breaks and another run of vic- ories. The teams will line up to- night as follows, with Brennan cani- ng them': W. SIDES Murphy Bennett Right forwal Herman elletier Beckwith sees Harmon Right Sturm Dixtes \-mrdn). Tonight's game with Hartford is straight with teams for Raturday Arch street armory, hey will again try conclusions with he Dixie Speed Boys who have one ictory over them this season. The dixies took another game last night vhen they defeated the All-Torring- on outfit, 39-18, The Dixies lined up ast night as follows, the accompany- ng figures also showing how * their were ugainst the up- city outfit, Field IFoul ir. & 0 i, 1 fofferth, c. 1 . 1 o 0 Tafner, rg. . 0 Tolmaquist, Total 3 Nest Week. And then next week the All-New ritains go back to Hartford for with the Ka 3 Three straight wins would Kaceys u lovk | pretty good. ATE l(\ HONORED Jan, 10.——Major sports have been awarded by the Yate association to two Yale men Yale-Harva mbridge track meet last he recipients the Horace W, Mass, low hurdler, sprinter. 'U“Illl/\\l IIA()(IRI n New Brunswic basketball night defeated Fordham, lose, hard- mugm game. team 29 to 25, H()( K Boston, Jan, 10,—Harvard 7, Massa« | chusetts Institute of Technology 0. HAVE YOUR CAR OVERHAULED = NOWee Don't Wait till Spring CADILLAC A TALTY Wrecking Service—Day and Night J. B. Moran Garage 313 12 Church St Tel. 2842-2, 'BRIGGS | WANTED T \! To WAS Tue ! THiS FELLO W | HAS -+ ONLY Q0 A CASE DELIVERED - - WHERR You WANT JusT TewL'im T SENT- You HIS CARD - A Bore! we NEVER TALKS OF ANY- THING FLSE - NEVER THINKS OF ANY THING ELSE BUT "80 mucH W CASE LOTS”

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