New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 26, 1925, Page 11

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L Interest in the fndustrial meet to bs staged September 12 at Willow Brook Park, Is growing apace cvery day and entries for the events have started to come in. Scelng that this is the first meet of its kind cver staged in the city, there has been a great response to the announcement that silver cups are being offered for those who win flrst, second or third in the events, Dates on the entry Ulanks state that the meet will be held on Sep- tember 5, but it will be remembered that it was declded to change the | date from the Bth to the 12th be-| cause of the fact that the fifth is the Baturday before Labor Day, All entries for the events must be | in by Séptember 9, Any of those who do mot know where to file| them, may make out the blanks and place them on file with the Sports editor of the Herald, The blanks should be accompanied with an en- trance fee of 25 cents. The cups for tha events are being Pittsfield—Waterbury Albany, Aug. EASTERN LEAGUE 26—Pittsflold hit Hinkle at opportune times, profited by Albany's loose f them, 7 to 8, here ling' hitting and the flelding of He: mann, Belanger W tured. The score: Dittsticld 0 Albany Mills and Caulway Munn, Iding and beat sterday, Col- Thomas fea- RH.E. 3 010 010—7 15 . 000 000 012—3 11 Hinkle and Worcester—Springfield Springfield, Aug. 26 (A—E. Gar- land Braxton pitched his 20th win Ponies hit Wer |of the season vyesterday when the hard in the eighth {inning and beat the Panthers, to 2. Dost's double and Oberc's home run in the in the five run rally. The scorc: Worcester . Springficld Wertz and Niederkorn, Sith; big inning were features R.H.E. 100 000 100— 000 200 05x Braxton Bridgeport—\Waterhury 26 (A—Water- Waterbury, bur straight by defeating 6 in a 13-Inning g Aug. 10 10 an dridgeport, n here yes- | Rush "re- 0 nd ran its winning streak to ten AMERICAN LEAGU Yesterday's Ttesults Cleveland 4, Philadelphia 8, St. Louls 8, Washington 2. Detroit 14, Boston 4. New York 7, Chicago 4. The Standing Won Lost P.C. Washington 76 43 639 Philadelphia . 4t et Chlcago vers 66 £5 546 St. Louls 62 58 517 Detrolt ..., 59 60 496 Cleveland o BT 67 460 New York - e 49 68 410 Boston .. . 35 84 204 Games Today Washington at St. Louis Philadelphia at Cléveland, New York at Chicago. Boslon at Detroit. NATIONAL LEAGUE Yesterd Results New York 7, Cincinnaty 6, Boston 2, Plttsburgh 1. Chicago 19, Philadelphia 10 Brooklyn 5, 8t. Louis 4. The Standing ay afternoon. Andy v engraved at the present time and |jjaca] Touchstono in the third - | Pittsburgh “,,°l“ [3‘;“ they will be ready by the end of this | ning and received credit for the vic- | New York .. 60 54 week or the first part of next week. tope, it belng his fifth straight and | Cineinnatl .. ov.. 63 55 These will be placed on view In the |pis' 4tk win in 19 games since oln- | 1. Loty o . 50 62 484 B, C. Porter Sons window 80 that|j,g the Brasscos. Manager Wilhlem Brooklyn -. 1 61 483 those intending to enter Into the|of the Bears, sent his sonthpaw star, | ohieago 54 41T e events may look them over before [Iunny Hearns, in to relieve Raberts | pyiaft oo R they slgn up. i the Sth but the local team got t0 | pogion 54 &8 442 him for the winning run in the 13th The meet {s attracting wider at-| tention than was ever expected by those behind the movement and re- quests bave coms in from the B Conatruction Co. and the Amerjcan Paper Goods in Kensington to allow the athletes from thoss factories o enter and requests have also come in from Trumbull's Electrical Mfg. Co in Plainvills and the Standard Eteel & Bearings Inc. in that town for en- tries. All these factories will be al- lowed t6 g2nd athletes Into the meet |« and entry bianks may be secured at sington Baseball team announced to- day that his team wonld go to New n | Brid Touchston: | Hay to Leary The score: zeport .. 002 100 I'wWaterbury .. 210 000 Roberts, Hearne Hartford—Ne! Haven, Aug. |yesterday's ga chort by one |tha visitors winning, and Rush and Cosgrove and successive tridge and Cosgrove. R.H.E. 100 000 0—6 120 000 1—T Haven 3 (P to 8. s rally in the ninth inning of game with Hartford fell m of fving the score, a Pocr in the fourth few | Games Today Pittshurgh at Boston. Cincinnat} at New Yeork Chieago at Philadelphia. Louis at Brooklyn, EASTERN LEAGUE Yesterday’s Results Waterbury 7, Bridgeport £, Harttord 9, New Haven ¢ Pittsfield T Springfield 7 Albany 3 Worcester 2. Yesterday's Results tha Herald office any time, fielding Ly the Profs e ——— {and fifth cost them the game. . The S&tanding With the number of factories| ‘The seorc: RH.E. Won Lost P.C. planning to send repreeentatives to (Fartford 011 241H00N—=08 O Sl Nyaterbury T3 3 compste for the prizes, the m is | New Haven 010 1¢ B8 S RR0 et ord s £ 54 5 assured of great guccess, | Owen, Dailev 1K ! New Haven 5 59 = iHyman and Lerian. Bridzeport (X} (3 There ems to be a littie 4 nl- | ST f Springf 63 52 ty with regard to the entranca feo | gy \ 64 required in tha industrial meet \ fi L) Thers is a charge of 25 centa for an i b N AL A4 9 79 358 entrance fee, This m ns slVi\M'.! Bl 0. - that {f & man wishea to g0 into all | I Games Today the events on the card, he will he | i I ! ) at Bridgeport v g nterir ;) e e Albany a artford. charge is not for ever % New Haven at Waterbury. (2). Manager P. Buckley of the Ten ‘l INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE | i London Sunday to play Trumbull team there the chartered ter the team and for those fans who wish to trip. This will he an opportun for sdbme to make a Sunday | noon at the shore and arrangsmenta | for meats should be made Lefore fo- | norrow night, | i Manager Buckley 15 showing fine {1 #portamanship in latest move- |y ment, He has turned down several | teams that would he good | tions for the Pereival | grounds for this Sunday, stating | that he wonld rather tal on the road With the ]l kerles which will he on at field Sunday. Manager sction In this matter is a eredit to |- the Kensingfon team he takes it despite the fact that he €0 as not to an-Carbin Durt last Sunday fn attendance by | the gama in New Britain, This, of course, was agreed upon meeting of managers bt the "o agreement to stop play in Buses wil he [ {15 #ington for this Sunday and f 14y’'s action 1 done voluntarily, The Corbin Red Sot wera out at | il Walnut 11 park last eve anid | ok the team will practica fomorrow | CHICAG night at St Mary's field. Manazer AB ‘,‘ John Tobin plans fn ha | rough spofs polishad I, Al day and he confident wind up tha series » \ L i The Falcons will he away on & il Gay Reptember 6 i 1 they will play for the ¢ S 10 of Faleon societies in this u Tha loeals hate won o ! B former vears and they expeet to win sk 1 #zaln this vear | 2 T Louts (Kid) Kaplan and Ratted far Con Herman are balh laying off t e ( ing t in preparation for 11 \ sy L hout n vaterbury The erities tomorrow who said that 1 eruld not ke | weight o 5 pounds, find now ti Kaplan s | Hilter i 1and M down to 126 1-2 ponnds and he is| ! Kirong at that welght. He will| aos easfly take off the surplus wéight RE when he steps on the los tomor- | W ‘ row Afternoon at % o' 4 e |3 . The fight tomo has |, 2 hoen the higrest event |y i : Watérbury has ever had and it is|roo attracting the bi crowds that 10 Waterbury will ever have seen at a e SRl prize fi 1 om all over | statq Mas s and N xar 108 York will ba there and | Hor- g man and Kaplan will have enough | T ks . i 1d orT backers in th rowd, 2 A:\‘ The first fuled to|T \ etart at 1 t savina | ('F o time and th at 10 o k. Ti 6f the arena is 25,000 and | re #till available, > 1 TECHNICAL RNOCKOUT a5 | Halitax, N. &, Aug o« ny Brown. u feat o e ! " denee, R L. last night sc ; S technical knockout over Roy ¢ holm of Halifax, in e \ ad, 1 round of what was to have ¥ g 10-rbund bout threw a towel i thelt ment { fi | To Prevent Baldness | T fro further pu Baldness can be cured. Ston fal scalp, banish all dandru \ helr grow by ueing Parieian & 1 beat tonic And scalp treatment, It's guar- .~ W snteed Eold By all drugglets - DUGAN OUT i\ 26, P with the prior te White Sox. veste: PO A. B Syracuse £, Je City 1 Rfyracuea 2, Jergey City 0 Buffalo 9, Reading 4 Rochester 3, Providence 6 Toronto 5, Raltimore 4. (18t) (24) The Standing Won Lost P.C. Raltimare SER I Toronto .... 81 B 5 12 a2 as 7 6l Nt 62 5 453 AN 0 429 88 381 Games Today City at Svracuse Raltimore at Toron(o e Buffalo. Providence at Rochester, Jereoy ling at | hit lot 1o 1,600 Shots Taken But Not One Hit Is Made York, Aug. 26 (A—Tort Til- anti-aircraft gunnérs yester- day fired a new type of fifty calibre Brovning 1 hine gun at targets towed by airplanes from Mitchel Iield and failed to scote a single out of 1,600 rounds. Farlier in the day, Nhowever, the giners tried out a new 30 calibre gun with a new type of Ammunition fl|an.x registered 16 hits out of §,000, Officers in charge of the firing de clared that it was only “practie ork to accustom the marksmen to the use of the new guns and ammu- nition. OFFERED RETURN BOUT T.08 Angeles, Aug. 26. (P—George Biake, manager of Fidél Labarba, claimant to the world's flyweight hamplonship has announced he had | received an offer from Jimmy De- orest for a return match with I'rankie Genaro at the Polo grounds, York, September Labarba teated Genaro in a ten round bout ast Saturday. RENAULT WINS EASILY sire, Ohio, Aug. 26 (P—Jack tenault, Canadian heavywelght box- er, easily defeatéd Marine Tolliver Wheeling, West Virginla, heré last night, winning the decision after rounds. Renault was complets master of the situation from the opening gong. SALESMAN SAM FOR SEASON D s an ay's game Baseball at a Glance MANUEL ALONZO From Spain. Young. But a star, Membeér Davis cup team. Ranked No. 11, national singles 1923, Palred with Wallace Johnson placed No. 6 in doubles same sea- son, Carried Tilden to four sets before losing natlonal clay court honors two years ago. Beat Howard Kinsey and Wal- lace Johnson among others, terzone Davis cup play against Brit- ish Isles, 1924. Rated No. 4 1in ranking, 102 Paired with son placed No, 1 in doubles, scctor, same campaign, Plays good all-round game. Aggressive, Alert, S8teady. Rervice strong. Accurate, Net and baselino games good. Improving rapldly. Needs experi ence mostly. | Daghing style makes him popu- lar with fans. They like pep and snap to his play. John- 4.4 BEER DOESN'T SATISFY DRINKERS {That Is What Canadians Tell 0. §. Investigators | Toronto, Aug. 26 (P'—Tha epe- | elal committes of the United States congress, appointed to inquire into the workings of the eighteenth amendment to the United States con- stitution were guests at a dinner last night of the Onfarlo prohibition union. The Americans, who are headed by Representative Grant M. Hudton of Michizan, at present are touring Ontario to obtain informa- tion on the aale of 4.4 beer in the province and the workings of the temperance law in general. “We first asked whether 4.4 beer had satisfied those who wanted a stronger alcoholic beverage,” eald Mr. Hudson at the dinner, “and fully per cent replied that it had not Wa were told that, after a trial of it the populace turned away from it as being no bétter but mors costir, than the old 2.5 beer, “Our next question was whether the sale of 4.4 beer had decreased the sale of bootleg lquor. The uni- versal reply was that it had in. creased, rather than 4 it Al&o we inquired whether the beer had weaned the drinker of hard Ii miid heverage, and we 1t had nét. In faect, vir- person we interviewed whole aystem most nn- decreass quor to the learned that catistactory With regard ta prohibition fn the Tnited Statss, Mr. Hudson asserted that sanfiment in its favor was be- stronger. The next largest ma- coming steadily W the congress would s Jority on record in &upport of the sighteenth amendment and there was not tha slightest chance for the| presept laty to he repealed or aménded Wayne Wheeler, general-counsel of the Anti-saloon Teagne in the United States, also spokoe at the din- ner. He said the attitude of the Can- Adfan delegation going to the United Hlates to confer on means for mak- Ing the rum-smuggling tréaty effee- tive had had a heartening effect on the friends of law enforcément in the United States, ST | EXPECT GOOD HARVE 26 (P Sydney, N. S W. Aug. The chief inspector of reports that the prospects for the wheat crops In western, &outhwesf- ern and the Riverina districts never were moré promising. In the less |important northwest area he says that a fair harvest is expected Won both singles matches in in- | Middle States | same | | hefore the ball is securely held the the " NOT GAUGHT ONE \Evans Explains Theary of Big League Umpires in This Case | (By Bllly Evans) What is regarded as neces- rary to complete a legal eateh of a thrown ball on a play at first base or a force pla e | Major league umpires regard the hands as the meana of completing |a play on a thrown ball. That is, the ball must be seourely held fn the hand or hands of fielder making the play. | 1t on a play at firet base, or a force play at any other base, the { ball arrives ahead of the runner, he 1s out, provided the ball is ecurely held by the fielder prior to the time | the runner reaches the hase, It a ball 1s thrown to the first haseman and it reaches him severa) feet fn advance of the runner, sald rinner fs out it the ball is securely held tn advance of him. However, if the ball which reach. ed tho flelder in advance of the | runner is juggled, and in the interim | the runner reaches the base, ha is safe, T have received many querles in which the player juggles the ball then has it roll up his arm, and prior to the runner reaching the hase, the fielder has the firmly under his arm or lield agninst his hody by his elbow. The question is, does such a hald- fng of the ball completa tha play and shonld the runner be callod ont 1f the flelder has the ball under his arm or on his elbow? Ar T stated above, umplres work on tha baseball ls plaved relative to the actual catching ball. TFor that reason thev would not regard such a happening an the completion of a play at first | or a force play at at any cther base. To complete catch, tha ball must be securely held tn the hand or hands of the fislder making the { plag. is the way (he umplres view it. IR, CHANDLER DS AFTER LONG SIFGE Was Well Known Chemlst-- Sick Abont 10 Years Hartford, Aug. 26.(P—Dr. Charles Frederick Chandier, widely known chemist of New York City, whose | summer hame was at New Hartford diad at tha Hartford hospital last night of kidney frouble, following an 1!lness which lasted tew years. Dr. Chandler was brought to the hoepi- major leagus theory that with the hands | of tal from his suminer home last Thursday, his wi rematning with him until his death last night. He | was 8% vears old. Dr. Chandler was born December . 1836, in Laneaster, Mags., attend- ing tha Lawrence Scientific School and tha Unlversities of Berlin and Gottingen, receiving the degrea of A. M. at the latter in 1856, 1o also re- cefved honorary degrees from five educational institutions, as follows: . D. from New York University in | : T Lo D. from Union College tn | [ 1 8D from Oxford in 1900; D. from Gottigen in 1906 and | T. 1. D. from Columbia University in 1911, Four Arrested in China For Smuggling Arms fhanghal, Aug. 26 (P—French po- lice today arr ed an international | | on charges of emuggling arms. Besides confizeating arms the quintat voveee and then he | Dear Mr. Skeptic: ( Think this over!) Do you say, “Automobiles aren’t built as well today as they were five years ago? "= in spite of the fact that the life of the average automobile has increased a year and a half since 19192 And do you long for cigars “as good as the cigars of five vears ago?” Then you are a confirmed skeptic. Or else you haven’t tried the 1925 Blackstone. I Not for years has Cuba grown such fine filier tobacco as that used in the 1928 Blackstone. And constantly improved manufacturing methods make the 192§ Blackstone even more uniformly even- burning and free-drawing than any Black- stone Cigars of years past. | Blackstone was a fine cigar §2 years ago. It was even finer 10 years ago. It is at its very best in this year of 1924! » Havana’s best filler crop in years —in yourigzs WAITT & BOND Blackstone CIGAR police seized $40,000 in bank notes| with which (he men were said to| have fntended buying munitions. T quintet was composed of an . an In ALPIN TRAGEDY SETS WORLD RECORD. ockholm, Aug. 26 (A”—Arnn‘ in six minutes, 18 2.5 seconds, and| yesterday made 800 vards in 10 min- | utes, 37.8 seconda. Tt is claimed that| | both these Agures constitute world's | | records. ‘ 666 18 a prescription for {Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue. Bilious Fever and Malaria. It kills the germs. | DO 15 EAT-SLEEP AND WOR | FUNNY _WORLD WE LIV gl \T% WINDY Rerge on Monday swam 500 meters |, Pola, Italy, Aug. 26 (®)—Two Al- pine guides were killed vesterday | i eight members of the Alpine Soclety of the Jullan Alps were en- trapped in “the Grotto™ r Ping- uente. The accldent to & sudden rush of water. The guides 11 to the bottom of the cavern and were instantly kil L] Bunions | Quick relief from pain, | Prevent shoe pressure. Ardrugand shoe suoresecerywhere DrScholl’s [ Put one on~tha | zino’Eadg pain is gone | How Could Sam Know? K ARIGONT = WORR - \JORK-\QOE’K‘.‘.~Tfim K DRAGONT= THERE. GOES ™9 MATTT ) T3 & ( 5 W=coly, ! ' By GLUYAS WILLIAMS City Sights—The Sidewalk Clock. BENG CENTRALLY LOCATED, IT MAKES A CONVENIENT RENDEZVOUS, AND HUSBANDS ARE GENERALLY WAIING FCR \WIVES UNDER IT, AND PEOPLE ARE SETTING THEIR WATTAES BY T, OR FINDING THAT THEYWE GOT T HURRY TO CATCH THEIR., TRAIN. AND OCCASIN ALY THE CLOCK GETS OUT OF ORDER. AND STOPS, WHICH CAUSES NO END OF (ONFUSION AMONG THE TOWNS PEOPAE WHO DEPEND ON [T TOR THEIR TIME © McCQure Newspaper Syndieate - S=RIGHT BAOUND TH' CORNES A ) a7 changed to Blackstons

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