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Speaking| of Sports Industrial league games last night wero oneg that all enjoyed and one of the biggest crowds of the season 4 Was on hand, And In each game tho so-called “under dog" was victortous for the Stanley Works were picked by & majority of the dopesters to fall be- fore the Landers boys while the TLockmakers were not thought capa- ble of trouncing the league leading . &\F. boys. Henry Zehrer, former High school player, put up a great game for the Stanley Works and it is not too much {0 say that his aggressiveness ‘and youth swung the balance of power to that outfit, Heretofore the untiring La Har has had to do all the fast running about himself., Last night Zehrer kept him company and this fast stepping duo kept their opponents worrled and on the hop most of the time, season if he could find & man who could run like La Har the team could come through., It dfd. Incidentally, Zchrel's scoring was no mean factor. He got three nice field goals and made good on four of out seven free tries, There is another player on the Stanley Works team who, while not noticed especially, was in the game every minute and did a great deal foward winning. This is Johnny Schroeder at guard. Johnny broke up play after play and it was almost impossible for the opponents to get down into 8. W. territory with any degree of conslstency. Nyborg, playing his first game with the Lockmakers, played a nice floor game and “Goody’ Preisser, when he went in, squirmed under and around the Corbin defense like a wiggly eel. Johnny Sikora, formerly with the Stanley Works, is said to be plan- ning to join the S. R, & L. squad when his eligibility at this factory becomes effective. Johnny used to play forward with the Stanley Wor Next week the Tockmakers play Captain Pelletier has sald all It was one of the most unique games on record, all things consider- ed, besldes belng one of the fostest played, 3 — The modern record in the fajors for consecutive victories by pitchers Is held by Rube Marquard of tho National league. Marquard, while a member of the Glants back in 1912, won 19 games in a row, A I Jae ,Wood, Boston, and Walter Jolinson, Washington, are tied for the honors in the American. Nach turned in 16 straight triumphs, rank- ing next to Marquard in this respect, Johuson, on another occasion,.grab- ibed 14 wins without a reverse, A 0l i st K Dazay Vance, Brooklyn ace, cop- ped 15 in succession last season but there he stopped. Jack Chesbro, hurling for the Yankees in 1904, came through with 14 straight, as did Ed Reulbach for the Cubs in 1009, £t Rn M Edgar T. Appleby of New York, [W international and eastern amateur champlon at 18.2 balkline billiards, established a world record in New York last night for anm amateur championship tournament when he ran 164 in a siogle turn, The for- mer record 154, was held by John A. Clinton, of Pittsburgh jointly with Applehy. Fi [t Paavo Nurml, Willle Ritola Willie Plant feature an entry of more than 500 for”the Greek- Amerfean A, C. track meet in New York tomorrow night. Nurmi, who today is on his way back from a journey which encompassed Hamil- and 1ist | Mc W hitting Paul Berlenbach of Long Ts- land and Battling Siki, the man who conquered Carpentier, in Madison Square Garden Friday night, will be the last heavyweight contest in the ancient structure which fs to be X 1 in M It also will be Ber- lenbach's last important test before Bri R Tpinard to America last summer for a serics of races, Morrls would suc- ceed Everett Haynes who has gone to Germany to ride for the Lewin stable. J. Trancis Kelley, a sophomore, w, Foldl Peterson Hoffman Henry Pupple® | Robinson Fisher Shepard On the Alleys ROGERS' 5 0'CLOCK COMMERCIAL LEAGUE brahamson Myers . ogers ndorson ander unter rohecker raus reigle miti atozmakl acker lon son ckinson ane Cormick ojack nen adley hm ‘afnir and the Rule Shop tackles Borthwick ;-;. \“Hx:\—l‘lj-"-\:[“ ¥ has been elected baseball captain at |C. Carlson . ¥ AR . W York university for next season. This gives the Lockmakers a i';wl‘l‘]‘];‘;“l’:% fr""’}‘o"lfd during the | ehance 1o go into a tie for first place | Sehcdule just ended, Foreuncie el e Columbin’s haskethall~ team has [Afr - Tonight the National Guard team | &% “’f"z‘t"'.'“"""y 0 ”]" 1:“""“3\‘" 1 in [A) Gantner . play the West Sides in Meriden. h“”(’l"‘; ”" "”'j !]Fto Iflz.' ate _’mskm» Tomorrow night they take on the| apflaatonightiwhonitlt fmeels I Lyrics in Hartford Cornell in New York, The Hanover |surohecker LAl g 2 quintet howed fo Princeton, the |lnee ; 0 champ ast nig < e V. L. Eddy s Natons i Guara | Tesirves ll][l"(:jll!frll, last night for the second st have made the llves of Boys' club | HMe mond yers miserable all season. The In Tarker & Buckeys. Commuter Fiy BOWLING ALLEYS 08 28 1 i i 8 0'CLOCK COMMERCIAL LEAGUE toh, Toronto, Buffalo, Milwaukee Mohican Coffee Grinders nd Cleveland, a special | Peminaki ey an b and, will run tn a special | Pormnekl o two mile handicap event. Abetz <88 90 —— sanada SO LD ] The battle between the hard- |Mcntgomberis .87 108 1 . he meets Jack Delancy of Bridge- {Stergo 9 port, Conn., at the Yankee stad Carlson i e mtost of | BemEston i E B oor contest of |japnson [l the year, Sinto . 107 i D. Swanson , 116 Louis Morris, leader among Ameri- 7 ais can jockeys a few scasons ago, may Spinetta Market. become a tider for Pierre Werthel- [Pawlow . mer, French sportsman who brought |/t S making his world record for 14 clubghaginetuscdgthafRescevesina (g e it S U IV Vi 220 0 Faide Battery, game, saying it was above their| 4 L By M'Kinaey AN cliisn (1lie Tt caervas aet up aryeillof York Monday night, Lloyd Hahn, “afraid” and a weck ago thoy shout- cd so loudly that the club manage- ment snapped them up. This put another aspect on things and the Reserves decided they had gone too far. Within a week they notified the club that it had better consider the game cancelled, The clubp season is nearly at an end, Tomorrow night they visit Poquonock for a return game with the St. Joseph's, whom they defeated here Monday night, This team has not been defeated On its own flapr product of Nebraska but carrying the colors of the Boston Athletic as- sociation, passed the quarter in 58 3-8 seconds, three-cighths in 1:31, the half in 2:03 and negotiated the full distance in 3:03. After running a 2:03 haif he registered a 60-sccond quarter. SHITH BUSINESS IN AN EAST WALKOVER Takes Fourth Straight in Prancing B, Giddex .. . Larson .. LADIES P& Page Maples Brecker anlon elance €Iy Corbins, 39 a7 i 8 Hines, - h} t 73 T 3 d a attle 1s West Ends, I romment Neat " Monday might | © 10 Victory Over Pinard's Mys. |3t pao LD may find the club opposed to the A, tery Five by 39-6 Score 3. Madone . 1. A, while the wind-up is set to % ? L. Madone came on the 23rd, when the Gascos | Pinard's Mystery Five proved no | Fawings will he the club's opponents, mystery 1o the Smith Business Col- _— lege yesterday afternoon, for the Perfectos, Other teams arc also drawing | business college lads solved the <onth Fnds their seasons to a closc, but the in-| “mystery” defense with e and |58 arsn D dustrial league schedule runs te|ran up a 39-6 score. Maiorano, the |F. Lin 56 April 21, That is the day when the | diminutive star forward of the vie- [\ Tinh i major leagues begin. their bascball f tors, proved the chief -slcuth in |l ey & srason unravelling the “mystery” and Sher- — lock Holmes himself had nothing o ) The South ehurch quintet stacks|on this lad, who piled up more than |y <uiiian East rj”"" up. against the Lewis high school| twice the total made by the losers. [s. Petrucri .. 4 junior varsity from Southington 10-| Santy proved his right-hand man |M. A. Perking night at the Boys' club. On Satur-land also double the “mystery score. |5 AU/ - day afternoon they will play a re- | Mozooki outscored the losers and | turn game at the Y. M. C. A, With | Cote very nearly equalled their to- the Spartans, over whom they al-ltal. The biggest mystery ahout the | ready hold one victory. mystery” boys was how they - thought themselves in a class to An extremely odd and fast game | play the Smith outfit was that plaved hetween Boston and [ Moozooki sank a sucker shot a Brooklyn in the National Jeague on . 1t was a regulation inning affair and lasted but one hour and 12 minutes. Pitchers Fillingim and Cadore did not register a single strikeout NOT | .nd the final whistle left the busi. | tssue a hase on balls. And Gowdy | ,ices college lads with their fourth |X and De Rerry, the catchers, did not | g uighe victory, The score have any chances to accept, though each had a passed hall,’ No ecarned runs were sccred by either team, T e TE e i e B e | Mozooki, If 4 1 9 Santy, ¢ AR e Why Does the Barber [} ¢ A e Cote, 1g .. 1 2 4 Strop His Razor? Pinard's Mystery Five G BTt De Vilie, 1t 1 n 2 Egidio, If 1 o s Mongillo, ¢ 1 L) 2 (‘ausano, rg . 0 o o L. Da Angelo, Ig 0 0 0 Beacher, Ig 0 v 0 Because he knows the | = : value of a keen edge. He 3o without stropping it. Beore by halves Valet AutoStrop Razor Smith 18 21—39 strops its own blades. Mystery 2 — ¢ TIRES, niost as soon as the whistle sounded and the winners proceeded to roll | up nine baskets in rapid order, the [low “mystery” hoys counting once hefore | M1 the end of the half. The score con- tinued to grow in the second half, Smith Business College G ¥ Cheethan, 16 7 AUTOMOBILE TUBES & ACCPSSORIES ‘Washing and Polishing Gasoline And Motor Oils QUAKER STATE OIL 30c a Quart £1.10 per gal.. in 5 gal. lots Alex Auto Supply #8 ARCH ST, Met CAsINO BOW NG SPECIAT. MATCH Shamrocks, rney Orangemen. e ) JEALOVY %9 88 81 i 58 TR ] 9”1 LEAGUE ALLEYS 88— 25 B 24 91— 29 201w T8 205~ 879 Zwick 230 112 305 | Kramer 69~ 232 81 249 [Leupold 105 331 96— 243 — — —_— 248 753 Behaffer 93— 208 251 [Tyler T8 240 88— 239 [ Needham 94— 270 80— 248 e 269~ 518 405 ' Russell & ¥rwin, 3 W, Schlelcher , g {Holcomb ..., Kehieldler Gilletts Linn 7141 Walthers 57— 268— 85, 30, / PLAINVILLE RECREATION ALLEYS Enfnir Beariog. CONMMERCIAL BOWLING ALLEYS COLLEGIATE LEAGUE 913 Yale, R [T 104 23 5 Newton 51 &mithy 5 Lones 27 a5 |Haines 100— 254 4111365 101— 290 100— 302 10— 348 4911415 55— 268 4541330 80— 248 31— 994 261 [Loster 42 4 Holy Cross, Fiank St Anorty Slip Lieo Flond Kuba Gregor 169 453—1462 Ren ., 12 105~ 313 Curlick 8 97— 283 Whitey 82 I Charles 0 Hence 6 189 445 Princeton. Carry. 5 111 Peter 13 Happy Mike Reaner Kupeo Joa G SET NEW RECORDS Ritola and Frigerio Make Marks in Track Mect At Cleveland—Nurmi Takes It Easy. Cleveland, March 11.—U#h Fri- gerio, 1924 Olympic walking cham- pion, set a world's record of 25 minutes, 21 1-5 seconds for 5,500 in a track carnjval featuring Paavo Nurmi here last night Another world's record was hrok- en when Willie Ritola, Finnish dis- tance runner, ran three and on quarter miles in 15 minutes, 38 2 seconds, Nurmi failed to break his record for the mile and three fourths, cov- ering the distance in 8 minutes 3 2-5 seconds. ' \Penn. Track Captain Is Laid. Up With Bad Leg Philadelphia, March 11.—George Hill, Pennsylvania track captain and intercollegiate outdoor sprint cham- plon, is nursing an injured ankle that may keep him off the track for several weeks. He received the in- jury in the semi-final heat of the 70 yard dash at the indoor intercol- legiates in New York la.. Saturday night. Examination, it was learned today, revealed scveral torn liga- ments. Hill returned to his classes vester day, on crutches and with his foot ankle in splints. He hopes to e in condition for the Pennsylvania relay carnival the last of April 10— 2908 27— 815 Melnzman 103— 301 C. Walker . B— 248 C. May , 80— 290 207 839 Caswell | 80— 272 T. Walker .. 91— 280 Warner ., .07 1 86— 30 Maron 9% 88— 28 Murphy = Robertson " 11— 32 5 W =N . 99 101— 20 462 618 530—150 Plainville All-Stars, Brook® ....ieeeee 101 92 91— 28 Freeman L9812 10— Anderson 0 121 St Murphy 708 11— Hoftman 90 97 10— 2 498 515 503—151 3 0 0 5 ‘ 7 [DIKIES WIN FIRST TOURNAMENT GAME Hartford Tcam Does Not Exert I sclf in Defeating Datt College In Kansas City Meet, The Hartford's famed “Flylng Pentagon,” upheld Connecc- tleut's honor last night in the first round of the national amateur bas- ketball tourney at Kansas City, Mo., by defeating the Platt college five, 21-16, in a slow and uninteresting game. The Dixies played cautiously and carefully held their full speed In reserve. Ahe Sllverman atartd the acoring with a foul and a field goal and the Dixles moved slowly into a 13-0 lead, which they held until just before the halt closed, when Platt counted four points. In the second half the Hartford speed boys stuck to the defense and maintained thel margin to pull out ahead at 21-16, Captain Tommy Murphy led the Dixle scoring with four field goals and a fre shot, Abe Silverman showed no partiality and tossed in a pair of cach vari Bobby Haf- ner chalked up two field goals and Bill Hofferth made one. Wardy Waterman, the ethetr Hartford boy in the game, did not score, lafner also Dixies, showed pretty guarding by kecping | | (D0 YOU LIME CHOCOLPTES, Copyright 1935, Liggett & Mvers Tobacco Co scoreless the two men him, The game would slaughter had the Hartfc tended itsolf, FAVORITES LOSE IN DUSTY Loop (Continued I'rom Prece: sent against | “Darby” Carra have been a|oted and tossed in t ord team ex- | ket G suminary b broke away, plv- he winning bas | (e} kel | Walthers, re, 1 0 | Pretsser, re, 0 ) | Carraz; I, 3 ! Kamenicky, c. 0 J & 1 ding Page) réonal fouls; Wall \j' rs ( zza 1, Kamenicky 1, Yankaskas 3 TODAY'S BOWLING 1 r|Five Man Teams Composed of Bufe falo Players Alone Taking Part In Blg Tournament, Buffalo,N, Y., March 11.~Bowling in the A, B. C. tournament today *|will be confined to five man teams I from this city There are five five squads, scheduled, a total of 140 [ra t to climb, Walthers got a one hand- | | botg 1 P Ls cd double decker and after Arbu ; i »u 4| Thero were fow changes In the had scored one from the free line on | Nyborg 2,—total '|Mtanding of the ten high yesterday, Walthers' foul, Carrazza again rang g 3 : three individuals winning places in ell and the score was 12-10, P, | LT the charmed cirele. They were Joe ; ‘ C " Soeere tying for third with a score “Goody” Preisser replaced Wal-| hoohte T 1,0 Phil Coleman taking fifth thers and his vim and dash gave the | 124200 16 ( ) I place with a 584 count and F, Burow Lockmakers still a greater .m‘m»‘: RAbs i, “ | placing tie for seventh position with tage, LI ' =|575 total for his string. All are local Thirteen minutes had passed wher L J 1 bowlers Chlef Larson lolsted tha bal = | Vollmer and Schueslter, alse of through the net and ths scorc was| o 1 e this city, wer for the day in tied at a dozen points each. I ”‘[‘“‘. al z 2, Jasper|ths doubles with a 1097 set and Nyborg fouled Parl thfhagate(ists 2 . |Obenauer's jewelers topped the five ter missed and Yankaskus' for . L, Jasper 3,1y un teams rolling last night, Thelr Jasper a chance to tie, but he A A core was 2605, The Jeading scores missed, ~ far ar n event 279; I'rom this point on 1 Moore, international outdoor |two man event lividual event played hard, fust ba 1 shating champion for six all events, team guarding porfectly entered the final minute indication of overtime, only seconds of ) retired for ime or 1, | skating att hereg Such popularity must be deserved N one great success after an. other, George M. Cohan has won nation-wide distinction as actor, playwright and producer. None may challenge his record for clean hits. Such success must be deserved. Chesterfield CIGARETTESM l' - — season and te expeets cution to George N Actor, Produce To be chosen by millions, even a cigarette must have “made good.” Chesterfield's reeord gains, for example, are no accident, but rather the result of sheer merit — greater fragrance and a more pleasing taste. and Composer THE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS ‘ BRING RESULTS A. Cohan er, Playwright, more and more smokers every day ¢ / (B 9HES TAUNG TO SQUARE HER: BY OFFERING ME- CONDY ~TH' LITTLE. l DARLING- LOVE_ (HocoLATES e AN—— J WELL — HERE'S AN EMPTY BOX “TO HEEP THEM™M N