Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD TUF‘}DAY SEPTEMBER I . 00 &y 25, 19 SRR TR s R e e STUHLDREHRER SIGNS WlTH WATERBURY FOR $7,500—DAVE DUNN NAMED ON CONN. A. A. U. REG!STRATION BOARD—CYLER EQUALS WORLD RECORD- IN BATTING—HELMY INSISTS GERTRUDE EDERLE WAS “ALL IN” WHEN TAKEN FROM WATER — BRIEFS iz tistitiatiete st iN THREE MORE VICTORIES AND THE PIRATES ARE CLINCHED Huggins Predicts Senators | Will Beat Pittsburgh in “ Series—Games Na- {1:“: i tional League Yesterday ‘ do Not Change Stand- ings Much. in a9 PHILADELP, A, By The Astoclated Prosa. New York, Sept. 22 pennant march in league race continues Bolstered by scven consceutive tories, the Plrates n to win but | three more of their maining ning games to nail the flag to their ‘Washington needs five of its ¢ uled 12 games to triumph in American lcogue. The Corsairs pounded out a 7 verdict over Phillies yes day, Hazen Cuyler, Pitisburgh out- flelder hit safely in 1 times at bat, running lis straight hits to ten. This leved to equal the National record made by 130 Konetel Brooklyn in 1019 ., the Indians hold record, however, 11 consecutive times at bat The Robins have heen eonsistently as the Pirates 1; Ve winning. Lrooklyn eighth straight to th which places th I ont of reach of the first division this sea- eon. Bob McGraw pitcher, pur- chased from Minncapolis for §$2 000, has joined Robbic's club, Five pitchers failed to Braves and the Ileds Jost Rain washed away the Giant game, The Athictics turned out T victory in their last meet the Bengals this year. The Mack- men have won 14 of mes with | the Tigers in their seric | Washington and the ean leagie clubs were not sc Miller Huggins m Yankees favors ti pions to beat the world scri He Benators' pitching staff s give them the edge. y for Pittshurgh is pre- dicted by John A, Heydler, Nutional league president, Pittehurgh will put into the serics probably the hest team ever entered by the National| league,” he said at Loulsville, 1<hurgh 005 AMERICAN LEAGUE |, l e b AB R i Pittsburg! the Ni unimp 's led, vie I mast hed- the 9 to his two ring of is off Quinn 18 in wild pltel Losing pitcher Iilde- 1 [ ans and NATIONA! LEAGUE PHILADELPHIA R. H. the with losi peen | its stay the Durning, Ameri- cduled. of the world cham Pirates in the helieves the and veteran Batted for Wiliiame in 4th, Batted for Mokan in 4th Ratted for Decatur in 6th 1“‘ felphia 5 300 i A, hase ‘ar Left on base—Phila- 1. Base on balls— Hon O'Rourke, (Continued On IFollewing Page) No question of any sacrifice in Tuxedo Quality Just bigger sales resulting in lowered manufacturing costs. Due to the FRESHNESS and erica o U unvarying g Because 1uxedo is pertect condition. Every supply sent to the dealer is dated - Stating the last day it can be sold — Guaranteeing you Tuxedo that's properly aged.perfectly blended, ALWAYS fresh. Cool, tragrant, swee bite in a boxful. oodness of Tuxedo. always in t. Not a »/«m ory : Guaranteed u, A ? [ - JINX HAS GRABBED deatisrntdis i st ittt M e sh e R s The Victor and The Vanquished Welters HIGH SCHODL AW (Two Players Are Out of Lineup With Injuries ‘ | A hard blow was struck in the | general dircetion of the New Britain | Ligh school football team this week when two of its best backfield men | |were forced out of the line-up anse of injurics. Harry Strom- quist upon whom the burden of di- recting the team was laid, is limp- ing ubout with a budly battered-up ankle, Tim Clalr who was to take {the team in hand if anything was to happen to Stromquist was also taken nto camp by “Kid Jinx.” Clair's | shoulder is injured. I they get over their injuries before Saturday, they will be used at fullback and quar terback respectively in - the game | | against t Hartford at Willow Brook park. | Otherwise it whl bring about a | | vadical change in the line-up of the | team which at the present time is to shape vm for the open- At the present time bar- ing all injurics i linc-up for the game will be as follows : Scully, center; Clark and McGrath, guards; | | Politis and Bojnowski, tackles; | | Gourson and Gennett, ends; Clalr, |quarterback; Bray and Zehrer, half- | | backs; Stromquist, fullbaclk. | There may be several changes in thoe lineup hefore the end of the | week possibly in the guard positions land In the backficld where therc keen competition, but that will de- pend on the result of this week's practice. At the guard position the | battle to date has been between An- | selmo and Druece, and it was an un- | expected change which brought Me- Grath from end to this position. In ; the backfield Lacava i a first class man, and it does not seem likely | that Te will he out of the regular lineup very long. ! ‘red Zehrer is playing the position that his brother Henry played a y ago when he cap- tained the team to the state cham- | pionship. He will be the only new | man in the backfiel All the other men will have had one or two yrars | experience. 17 1 Me he will be the only ofhe on the line which will be of veteran lars and from last year's team. A. A, U. BLECTS OFFIGERS ing game. same new man composed substitutes John G. Conifrey of New Haven is Elected President—Dave Dunn On Registration Board. New Haven ()~ At the annual of the Connect Amateur Athletic union Jast night, the following officers Conn convention Sept. cut nt were elected President Haven; f Kennedy. end, Capt T.ondo Rridgeport New w.J G, Conifrey vice-president Chester, N. Y.; sec- A. I Lambdin, Ne William Dwyer, secretary and treasure New Haven, yard of registration is com Captain - M. A. Baum David Dunn, New Brit- h M. Wirtz, New Ha- leg s to the national con- Pittsburgh are T. J. Tracy, John G iifrey, M. A, Baum, J. M. Wirtz, William Kent and Ca tain Lambdin Brown Foothall Team Has Secret Pr: arme lence, R. 1., » - foothall s having com- day pre- at Quonset where drills On Friday {0 the new following day which s still con- ture will Rhode Isiand State in the first con- test in an all-home game schedule. st Port in w w edy Pr Brown pleted liminary ov 1l rigorous n training Point, wer in | day at Andre | will be held until Friday the squad will n field wher 1 Bro varsity team ectural ir n st meet l |and harmony, with a punch at the jare."” 1 teams failed, {the team had played th is HUSTLE AND HARMONY PITTSBURGH'S SECRET STUHLDREHER IS Team Is Not Composed of Stars But of Hard Working Team-Plag- ing Players, Pittshurgh, Sept. (®y—Hustle | | Providence Contract right moment, front in the nant cha put the Pirates out National League pen- in the opinlon of leaders of the fast-flying Pittsburgh club. As they watch the team, composed | 29 Waterbury, Sept. v Mulligan, manager of the Water- Blues, professional football champions of Connecticut last year, announced yesterday from New York [for the most part of young men, go |that he had signed Jlarry Stubl- into the home stretch with an eight |dreher, quarterback and Idward game lead, Barney Dreyfus, the own- Huntsinger, end on Notre Dame's and Bill McKenchnie, the man. |championship team of last fall, to ager, fecl confident that harmony, |cOtracts to play with Waterbury in hustle and punch will bring the flag\"‘”ry game this season. Both men {0 this ci | ®ill be here to play the opening “WWral have o stars !game Sunday afternoon. ald McKechnie. "Our Although (he Providence Steam ounded on harmony. tollers and New Britain had pre- gether put these men [ viously announced the signing of Stuhldreher neither of them lad ac- tually secured his signature to a con- {ract. Both Stuhldrcher and Hunt- singer attached their signatures to contracts binding their services for fall, said Dreyfuss. “When these the season tonight in New York many fans sald the |Where they were guests of Manager players had lald down,” added the |Mullizan at the Walker-Shade wel- owner. They did not lay down, but |terweight bout. Althongh the terms a conditioin that was not congenial [0f Stuhldreher's contract was not had existed for four years, and after |made publie, it was stated that All- the explosion came at New York, |American quarterback of 1924, often it was agreed that certain men on !called “Notre Dame r last game | bury | out there,” success 1s | Pulling to- where they Pirate teams of recent years, from 1921 10 1924, were good enough to | win a penant, but “a condition that was not congenial” caused them to rin now| and ever paid a football play and. Stubldreher [foothall coach at Villanova | Huntsinger s his tant. To Get 8 Providence, R. 1., Stuhldreher, {quarterback at Notre made his first and last appearance lon the Steam Roller cleven of the i & Also Out, | (Continued on Following Page) in Pittshurgh uniform Of the trade, which sent Maran- ville, Cooper and Grimm to the Cubs, Dreyfuss said “it speaks for ftself.” SEGAL IS SUSPENDED Manager of New York Boxers Fecls 00, sept. All- 22 (A American Iron Hand of Commission—De- laney WITH WATERBURY Notre Dame Star Also Dodges; Knufe Rockne | on the field"” will receive fhe highest Dame in 1824, | Sttt WALKER IN SYRACUSE MEFTS ~ OCCTIONAL FOES Gridivon Warriors fo Tackle Fast, West and South Y We Syracuse, From the yracuse gridiron clashes are on Sept, 22 (P — 5 st and South, University has picked its foes, Three intersectlonal on its sehedule, 10 the Orange boys | face William and Mary at Syracusc A Journey into the Middi: West fakes the Orange against Indiana at Bloomington, Ind, the following ‘'he final interscetionnl clash October week, Orange entertaing Ohio Wesle Syracise van at With the coaching reins, exception, In atumni hand [than half of t year's letter men jback in the fold, the Syracuse pros- peets look hright on the opening game of the | Hobart on Saturday. LW Itey Inate and with onc i vl more eve ason with h0lds, Syracuse former!'y coach at | Bueknell is the head ocach of the | team from Onondaga. Tle is assist- |ed by Roy Simmons, captain of the Tot" Hoople, | nge st A. Kallet, sach, | HAYES AND SGHAEFnR . ON (‘OLLEGE ELEVERS even “Chick New Britain - Boys Win Payor of Coaches at Tehigh and Middlebury —Both Backficld Candidates, Johnny once miore favored for position at Lehigh, tadvance dope gleanced by those who a watch the ds The wholc one this year, scales at 160, of the qua I this, but y practice of the team. backfield will Le a light | Hayes, who tips the being the heaviest one or. Dartly heeause of mostly on account of the | excellent showing he made Jast | year's eleven, he was Coach Wen- Y0 X dell's choice at full when (he fenta- | u : e i | cuge teams have heen dvilled tive first-string team was picked, 1ia raduated f oo Bt inly in defense in the past hut aves groduated from Rew Brit-|pociolds has laid the stress on his ain high school in 19 heing a TR 6 (5 o P T | of 1018, After zraduation, he went to Choate, where distinguished himself alike In foothall and ball. At Tehigh he is also a mem- |41 Bioominaton, Indian: ber of the nine, heing onc of its | providencs College at Sy hardest hitters. while he made the | |21 Penn State at Sy foothall team for the first time last | Onio Weslevan at f14, Colgate a member of New | Ningara af 1in's high championship gridiron W team of 1921, 15 again one of {he e rominent backfield candidates at {yo 3o W L Althongh he plaved in Cuyler Eguals “.mld s the line while at Thigh he | Record in Batling shifted fo the backfield last season | Pitishurgh, Pa., Sept. 22 (P—By and made good, as will he horne ont | hitting safely the first two times up by those wha saw him run wild over |in terday's game with Philadel- Trinity at Hartford last fall. Schac- | phin, Hazen Cuyler, Pirate star out- fer will eapfain the Middlebury frack | ficlder, ran his string of consecufive [ team next heing one of the | hits to ten. This, (hest hurdlers at that in re- Al statisticlans, equals the cont yeurs, fional league record hung up by B Konefehy of Brooklyn, in 1919, The ajor lea record, however, fs i s Speaker of the Cleve- 4 Tndians, who in 1920, hit safe- y 11 consecutive times. former Ora ] |ehairman of the university [hoard; Lew Andr |eoaen: and Johnny guard on ‘HU 1924 Notre Dame team and one {of the most valuable cogs in Rock- Ine’s line last season ‘ The mate Jooks promising that the team which faced Mechan on opening day in | ‘ 11925 when the team went through to | |the Colgate game without having its goal line crossed by cnemy feet, Only a field goal marred the Orange record up fo that game, but the | Maroon staged the most siartling up- [set of the ason by moping the Hayes of New Britain s | fiell with {he Orange machine, the fullback | Caplain James Foley, a triple- according to tllei"""“' LR, 51 UM (ORG 0 fa He is @ product of the Suffield |school where The was a team-mate \\||Iy ddie Tryon of Colgate. /i Reynold's hig vroblem will be his wekfield is amply taken in Captain Foley, Carr, nd T Car, a star on hman team, will likely S take the kicking and his heen ahove normal in carly \re sehedule follows acuse: Oet. Oct. 10, W. 17, Tndiana Oct. 24, cuse: Oct, Nov. 1, Nov. o1 Co- he Vermont & M : Qct. hase- Nov. er Schaefer. 26, AL schonl Ve | : | spriv | | hasehs colleg Same rood furniture manufa zie for snail inlald work prices are used for Iture. shells on is scheduled for November when the | of the | athletic | freshman | more | according to l«’\r‘dl | SRR i R e e R SHADE LOSES DECISION TO TTTLE COMBAT hhlfl\ (alifornian Changes Style and Swaps Punches Therehy Setting Stage for His Own Defeat in Furious Battle, | New York, ‘Sept, 22 (&) | Walker of Eiizabeth, N and his ‘l“n battering fists, still rule the | welterweight division of the pugilist- fe world, By Mickey furfous rally in round of a gruelling | struggle with his 1 lenger, Shade of San KFrancisco, the champion demonstrated to the sat- isfaction of two out of (hree officials in the Yankee Stadimin last night that e is still entitled to wleld the sceptre in the 147 round class, George T. Kelly of Yonkers, N. | Y. one of the judges, thought Shade won. Richard Nugent of Luifalo, N. Y., the other voted for Walker. Then veferce Patsy luley deeided the issue by returning a ver- dict for the champion, Walker Better With but a few exc of the newspaper erities conceded Walker a clean-cut victory because | he finished the stronger after having foreed the fight over almost the en- {tire route in addition to dealing out the heavier blows. | Shade, onc of the most in the ring, 1or the most part ¢ ide the dodging, weaving de- Ifense by which he had often baffled opponents in other fights, He trad- ed punches, toe to toe, with the | champion, It was a 1e at which er was highly proficient and {the change in tactics spelled defeat {for the crafty Californian, Furious Finish After winning the e rounds, | Wallier lost ground under the sharp- shooting right handers of the con- tender in the seventh, eighth, ninth {and tenth sessions. The champion cleventh, but in the the final fifteen-round Man | i tions, most | elusive | mar st rallied in the [twelfth and thirteenth found Shade {still strongly pressing. Walker then “held his challenger even with heavy body blows in the fourteenth to fin- jish with a closing rush which found ade bleeding at the mouth and ear und on the verge of a knockout. Walker weighed 144 1-2; Shade 147, In the semi-final Jack Zivic of Pittsburgh took a judges’ decision jover the New York Junior welter- weight, Wilile Harmon, in v rounds. Frank Moody, heavyweig! of Wales, scored a technical knoc! out over Kid Norfolk, New York negro, in the fourth round of an cight round match, flooring the American hter three times. Johnny Grosso, Mt. Vernon, N, Y., heavyweight, defeated Joe Silvani of New York in six rounds, Round one—The champion concentrating on Shade's Shade staggered Walker with three [straight left jabs to the face. Shade almost floored Walker with a right to |the head. Another right sent Walker 1to the ropes. Both landed damaging hlows in a flerce encounter near the ropes. Shade's crouching position and his dodging tactics puzzled the champion. They were sparring at the bell. Round two — Shade's left sent Walker's head backward. They locked arms but both got one free and they pounded away In a fierce fashion. Shade almost upset Walker with an overhand right. Clinch fol- lowed clinch Shade crouched to protect from Walker's f was body. (Continued On Following Page) 22 (A—Harry : Charley (Phil) senberg, world's bantamweight ampion and K. O. Phil Kaplan, New York welterweight, was sus- pended indefinitely yesterday by the Yor Sept. manager of ‘The Days of Real Sport New York state boxing commission. Ownie Madden, with whom Segal is to have associated was ‘1\ aced on the commission's ineligi- | ble list while Pete Reilly, manager tof J Delaney of Bridgeport, was |aiso suspended indefinitely | The suspensions are the outgrowth | Rosenberg-Eddie Shea, the | | Kaplan-Wittie Harmon and _ ¥ddie | (Cannonball) Martin-Lew Perfetti | matches held recently in metropoli {tan rings. Chairman James A. F: ey of the commission is conducting | an exhaustive investigation into the | fights as result of scandal talk after- | ards Chaitman Thomas F. Donohue of | Connecticut box hoard called | at the commission’s office and re- | ciprocal agreement was signed | whereby fach body will recognize | the rulings of the other. Similar working agreements are to be adopt- d between Now York, Pennsylvania 1d Massachusetts and boxing boards of other states. WHEN ONG OF BANDITS COmME YOoUR STORE AMND You To “STicK'EM |of the DAY A CouPLE AND AF "IL[\ HAVE RABBE THE Ccm‘r:m‘rf cF YOUR SAFE AND SHew CASE AND WARNED You To"WEEP'EM uP 1 FoR FINE MINUTES AFTER THEIR AR * DEPARTURE THEY INTO You ©F TELL upP! HAS T(\ll H SCHEDULE Michigan State college, formerly Michigan Aggies, has & tough | foothall schedule this fall. ong | 'hers, the East Lansing team meets | Michigan, Wisconsin, Colgate, Cen- | tre and Penn State. A real card for the best of them. ARE A AG ON YACHT Antwerp, Sept. 22 (®—The former | man Kaleer's sailing yacht Meteor entered the harbor recently sailing under the name Allee, It is »w owned by Mile. Herriot of Paris. V. S, TEAM WIN Perry, 0., Sept. 22 (P—The international small bore trophy was won by the United States team which last Monday scored a record of 7.791 out of a nossible §.000. This was announced tonight upen r of the British team of made on its | ranges vesterday. Only these teams ' compatady | FRENCH F [ Car De War score © ANP AFTGER THREE MINOTES YOUR ARMS THING “AND AT THE END OF FOUR MINUTES YOUR + ARMS ARE NUMB ‘Ay \WD THROBBING - AND ACHING SOME - FIERCE - AIN'T ARE+UP — - OH-H-:BOY GRR-R-RAND AnD GLOR-R-R-RI10US «FEELIN'? BRIGGS AND You LOOK AT THE CLOCK ‘B Be SURE THAT You' L KNOW WHEN THE TIME IS UP FOR THE HANDS To COME DOWN" WHEN THE mvs MlNUTES INTFA