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e NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 20, 1924, M H5SSSHHLS. 2 HLLHHHEHDLLHBHHE HHLHSELEHELELLLELHLBLEBLSLBLHLEHHEHELLEDEAESLLLEBLLLEL5855558L888L5885559855505855L58E598888585598MELLEEH8 420058568 5L555, £20085885555555555 558550858 59855889 EASTERN TEAMS IN BIG LEAGUES NOT GOING AS STRONG AS RIVALS FROM THE WEST—GALVIN STOPS FIGHT TO SAVE BOGASH FROM PUNISHMENT — “WOP” MANOLEUM ON NEW HAVEN CARD — SPORT HAPPENINGS OF MOMENT 3 FPTTTETIOT V0PIV NET 00V "O"m""l‘.‘"“"’i‘"’V'I'T"""l""W'I‘V‘.‘Q‘i“l‘"'Q"V““'"C"“QG!‘O"”""‘U'N"mm"‘i"V'T‘N’"'Q‘VF’NW"CT'«VI"”'”W PTIIPPITITITIIIVRNT OLYMPIG RECORDS WINS P it OkND Wity not2 POP GEERS AT 73 IS OUT - AFTER NEW TURF RECORDS P R i WESTERN TEAMS SHOWING UP STRONGER THAN EAST to Outstanding Achievements of Two Athletics Take Second Victory in 17 Starts — Boston Whips Detroit 9-1—Pirates Trim Giants 6 to 3 N in cach game prose In home growi tives h , 10« opponent Philadelphia In the Am has won 14 : letics have w eight struggic teams ha copt the St won four both les 31 of 6u gam On a rainy terday the chamy tinued their slid out of Pirates, 6§ to 3, whi prevented from mecting rain HBoston Chicago MeGraw ing as his scended wildness Pirate run amidst four sixth inning t four runs which rally falled to pitched a good Only two games were scheduled ¢ to 3. the American leaguc, Boston def ated ., Detroit 8 to 1, and pulled a half game away from St, Louis and to within one contest of the leading Yankees, Wildness by three Tiger in the ™ with three hits for Heilmann had hits off Ehmks In the other gams won their sccond « by beating the Whit jommel twirted fin absence of several days f up. Bach teasm made hits Eddie manager of the absence recovering from nis Gearin, the B Glants Me v, an old k the Louis Drown their five gam s the unimpi plac st which the rising 1 Joh decorated almost Frisch and and a Virates inning ¢ with Watson walk Giants Lose Pa., May int Pittshurgh, 20 Watsor mate Morrizon timely in me four Iittshurgh defeated series yesterday, Morrison flective in the pinches, most continuonsly during Meusel hit a pitchers Score mixed Hox second inning runs Tiger six Red two of the six four two-hase appointed ucting White liring Johnny Faers, who is Colling was * PITTERURC Den A to ¢ the un operation pitcher, was released after 1 last summer 1 by the rec o8 with Mana nrre absent nee visite of e i trom beneh at Pittshurgh Athloties 1. Chicago 3 Philadelphia, May 20—~ Philadelphia came out of its slutp yesterday won the opening & from Chicago, 4 to 2 Rommel retnrned to f the home peveral and pite 1 fir Previons o nouneed that 1d eppointed tey White Brers who sppendicitin team after por Hox in the i MeCormic k TENNIS MEN ARRIVE Mor Oficinle Toke Part n Parley Tomorrow, Grorge 1 Mol mateur rules tion and Paul Hitting the sixth inning for New in the opening game of was Rain fell al- the game home run in the ninth Waston $in 8 ncing and Ascembling In New York Yo | Player - Writer Rule |1} " ombe ar avecitive today tion of J e Western in | | Americans Always Remembered May 20.--So n- ath- N York lthe Olrmpie 2 [resent the pealks of ictic competition American uthletes mamory of turns of continue to iternational the ns will tinger in those who cine reached th hletic hrilliane, four different roevent in two successive Alvin €. Kraenzlcin and Ray EAIL S mes of two the the the men pinnacle vidual ning events meets, i o have insc ' their pames on the Olympic rol .| honor. Krasnzlein ‘ ‘hvania | late 40's Olympiad sted the dasl 1he the 200 the broad star in o four events in the at I'aris in 1000 tape firstin the H10-metre high ‘matre low wump. His one on reeord | DNympic ga wl fete won more than three Py trinmph is fyr hee: * it wa la streteh of cight rs on the standing broad standing high jump and the | hop, step and jump. He repeated this triple triumph at Louis in 1804 At Athens in 1906 the Olympic co 8 mittee eliminat th standing step and jump but Ewry won standing broad and high the third time with apparent ease, Tn London in 1808 he won two |events again, passing out of interna- tional competition at the conciusion of the London meet There are many letes winning twe svents in an Olym- pic meet and some who have three events, Harry Hillman, present track coach at Dartmouth and a mem ber of the 1924 Olympie conching staff achieved the remarkable feat of win- ning three events at 8t, Lowuis in 1804, Millman won the 400-metre run and the 200 and 400-metre hurdies, 1In {the same meet Arehie Hahn was crowned as sprint champion with vie- tories in the 60, 100 and 200-metre | dashes, Triple second e 1 G0-muetre hurdles, hurdles and waon is the history any performancee the of the ath- events. more s achicved over 1n 1900, he ump. the standing one eve st the jumps for these instances of ath have | Olympie victories several times in trio of American stars performing this feat at St, Louis in 1904 when this country swept the field. larry Nillman, of Dartmouth, A member of % [ this year's Olymple coaching staff, captured the 400-metre run and the 200 and 400.-metre hurdles; Archic Hahn was crowned sprint champion With victories in the 80, 160 and 2¢ o lmetre dashes: while Lightbody, mid oldie distance erack, ran off with the 6|500 and 1,500-metre events and 2,500- mlmrnr steeplechase, One of the most " and the last one by Hannes Kolehmainen, Uinnish distance star, at Sftockholm Lin 1912, when he won the 5,000 and |10,000.metre runs and the country race Many do have recorded but the increasing tendency for athictes to speciall "has reduced the versatility merly was go prominent, Paavo Nur mi, g Finnish runner, who the 10,000.-metre run and cross coun try raee in 1 at Antwerp, may try three distance titles this yerar, while Charles Hoff, Nerwegian holder of the world's pole vault record and all.around star, may figure prominent. in several but these per- tormers are exceptions, Among America’s Ac & Gienn Hartra 1ot put en scored annals, a remarkable on record was seorsd cross- been e vietories in one event which for eat won for events Hareld ump: hopes, Cishorne, 1ilinois high . and all-around star discus and 1ista gtanford Jole N 1e nee rnner Charles mi¢ Murchison k. among the tanding candidat more than one eve MURCHISON SENDS EATRY, im- | won | ash to recoris, Finishing second in the Agnes Geraghty, holdsr of 17 Marie Hillegas of Philadeiphia virtu- ally clinched a position on the Ame can swimming team for the Olympiad The attractive Mies Hillegas is also (holder of the middle Atlantic breast stroka ehampionship, She is regarded ing swimmers of t ' BOGASH KAYOED one of the com o land, Referee Stops Rout After Right Head and Left to Chin Had nridgeporter Helpless | 20, Moody Bogash Frank Lou Bridgeport, May Wales, of this city in the eleventh round of a 12-round was the of knocked out echeduled bout hera last night. It in his carces of more than 175 fights, which ineluded batties with five champlons that Bogash was ever knocked off his teet, A right over the a left to the chin sent Bogash reeling to the ropes in the eleventh, Moody d with a & ing attack which knocked Rogash down for a count of six. The Bridgeporter arose and after ere milling Referee Galvin stop- first time heart followed by follow A s ped the hout YESTERDAY'S HOMER Giants . Home Run Leaders, R Yankees Vournier, Dodgers auser, Athletics Williams, Brogns Willlame, T'hi Heilmann, Tvgers Hartnett, Cubs Hornshy, Cards STONE-LOUGHRAN IV AN EVEN FIGHT Judges Disagree and Releree Rules It @ Draw May 20.--Ad Stone, Paterson, N. J., light heatyweight, and Tommy Tou v of Philadeiph * fought a fast ten-round bhout to a draw last night at tzline park, The referee rendered the decision after the udges had disagreed Stone’s weight was announced 174 1.2 and Loughran's 171 1-2, Both hosers showed the eftects of the hard milling. Stone's mouth was nd he had a broise while Loughran was bleed mouth and an old cut 1 beon reopened. The o had a big red spot from the continuous opponent’s hard Phitadelphin Ny swollen # on ng on hix faee Phi on pounding rizht The first Loughran fight brtween Terry Mel Pa. and Tommy Murray of this city and it was fast furious all the At the idges disagreed referce the decision to from the iphian a his Iaft slie of his liminary to the Stone. ten round affair P 1 of Allentawn, and end the way and the MeHugh After ten rounds of slugging in the (Kid) Wagr Travers of New an was unpopular, semi-windup Fddie er of was given cision over Mick " 1 The deei tators booing and groaning as the this ity ape verdiet was ant Ain’t It a Grand and Glorious Feelin’ tstruck ont lof the OF MASTER PITCHER Owen Carroll Reigns Supreme Among College Boxmen Six major league scouts recently watehed Holy Cross beat Princeton, 3 to 2, in 14 innings. The clash between these two great teams brought tegether the two un- defeated major college teams in the enst Ho great 1eigns supreme base on balls, 17 v Cross, larz through the pitching of Owen Carroll, now Carroll gave only ona allowed nine hits and men After ‘the game the six league acouts agreed that Carroll was ripe for the big show, that he could win two-thirds of his major league starts, Fach sought an interview with Car- roll and Coach Jack Barry, former star of the Philadelphia Athjetics, but all to no avail. No pitcher in the history of col- lege baseball has received as many big league offers as Carroll, However, he intends to remain at Holy Cross un. til he graduates, which will be in June of next year. Tnside dope has it that he is already signed to a Detroit contract and will report immediately on the close of his collage career Coach Jack who has de. veloped Carroll into a star, says he iy the greatest college, pitcher he has ever 7 i action, “Carroll is a bet. ter piteher right now than 80 per cent big leaguers,” says Barry, Corhin Team Has Two Day Trip Next Week Corbin baseball team has ar- ranged a tentative two days' trip for Memorial Day week-end, playing & game in Norwich and one in Taft. ville, The team will practice on Wednesday and 1'riday nights of this weelk at diamond No, 2, Walnut Hill, weather permitting, The management has a “heavy deal” in the works and all players must be on hand, he says, The YALE CREW MO GET REST, Haven, May 20—All Yale be given a three days' rest o recover from’ the atrain of their competition on Lake Carnegie last Saturday when Cornell and Princeton were defeated, according to announce- ment by Coach Leader, Carpenter and Spock of the varsity have entered the single scull competition, which will be rowed today over a three-quarter-mile Now erews will mer rowing men in large num- are sxpected to attend the dedi- cation of the Robert Cook boathouse at Derby next Saturday. The Yale 1028 rlass erew will race the Harvard spring regatta ehampions as the fea- ture event GARAGE and SERVICE STATION Repairing Al Makes—Cadillacs a2 Specialty Weecking Service, Day and Night NASH CARS FOR SALE RY J. B. MORAN GARAG Associated with A, G. Hawker |51315 CAURCH ST, Tel. 28422 major | ania.) World Mark on Track This Year. Raseball has its illustrious veterans. he Speakers, the Johnsons, the Cobbs The ring game had its remarkable ients, the Fitzsimmonses, the Brit- tons, the Kilbanes. Many other sports have produced notables whose enduring qualities keep stride with their blazing genius. But the most astonishing veteran of them all—the great, at grand- daddy of the sport world, is Pop Geers, 73 years of age, and 50 years in the harness. Did you ever stop to think that Pop was training and racing horses in Ten- nessee not so long after General Lee signed those immortal papers at Ap- pomattox Court House, and a couple of litetimes before many active par- ticipants in sports today were born? A story of Pop Geers' life on the harness turf would be a story of the Grand Circuit, since the days of the Grand Quadralateral Trotting Asso- ciation, beginning in 1871, What a world of speedsters his name has beon associated with! Belle Por Gittns Hamliir, Robert 1., Direct Hal, Fta- wah, Napoleon Direct, Dudie, Arch dale Billie Buck and acores of others ... Now Pllots Fastest Horse of All Time Is it Atting that the fastest harness horse of all time, Peter Manning (1:56 %), ahould now I in his stabie along with Ranardo (1:39 1-2), ene | of the gamest pacers that ever looked through a bridle? As A compliment to the association Pop agreed to ship to Fremont, O this month and start his 1924 cam paign at the little half-mile trak in the Ohin Short Ship Cireuit His schedule calls for a few Grand Cireuit engagements this season bu! he will eonfine his efforts largely to exhibitions with the two championa 1t is a combination of pleasure and ! profit and through them he has been able to eliminate much of the worry that is coupled up with the conduct of a racing stable. This should not be taken to mean that Pop has lost any of his eunning a8 a reinsman, because he can rate one as well as sver and knows how to “reef 'em’ through the stretch. Indeed, it ia whispered that th venerable Tennessesan has mads = amall wager, invelving soma choi Havana smokes, that he will sat a ne« world's record this year Well-Timed Doctor-—You are all right Your pulse is as regular as clock-work, Patient You have old of my wrist-watch Karikaturen (Christi - BRIGGS ten Will Start In Fastern Olympic Trronts = AND YOS LATER WHEN You'RE MARRIED, AND BOBBED HMAIR 1& ‘N STYLE You AGAIN HAVE THAT CHILDISH IMPULSE - AND THAT SAME MotHEA TurowsS A FIT wHEN YOU INS18T ON"PUTTING UP" THAT LONG WAD in HiGH SCHOOL DAYS on dune 7, Moy nost &pr WHEN, EVER S\INCE You WERE A LTTLE TomBoY, Tou'ue WANTED SHORT (4mir BUT MOTHER JUST DOTED LONG CURL . Pxper to & at thae Yar DEMPSEY .\ Detroit Defeatod N. E. MAG & SONS, INC. | COLLEGIATE CLOTHIERS 444 Main Street “Headguartars for Good Clothes” OM-u-H- SIsTEr! 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