New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 15, 1926, Page 15

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§Speaking of Sports @ SITIIIIIIIILILIL:: Merwin Jacobson is certainly making good this time in the major league. Yesterday in the game be- tween the Brooklyn Dodgers afid the St. Louis Cardinals, “Jake" was up four times and he crashed out two hits, a triple and a double. The triple scored McWeeney and Few- ster to give Brooklyn a two run lead. His double went for nothing in the game. Besides his work at bat, he had three put outs in the field. Jacobson by his fine work both at bat and in the field, has become solid with Manager Wilbert Robin- son and he has lived up to the promisses he has made of making good. The greatest fight held in this century is the way they are term- ing the Delaney-Berlenbach fight tonight at Ebbets Fleld in Brooklyn. A rugged, plodding type of fighter, the champion, agalnst a master of art, the challenger. have strung all along with In fact we can't see any- thing else. We saw both men fight in Hartford, Berlenbach against Ray Neuman, a punching bag and Delaney against King Solomon, a tough and clever battler. Berlenbach in that meeting seemed to us to be very slow. De- laney on the other hand, was so fast that it was with difficulty that one could see him land his punches. We Delaney. didn't put Solomon away, it is sure, but he gave him a terrific beating and it was only through Solomon's cleverness, which most people at the bout failed to recognize, that he was able to keep away from that deadly right of Delaney’ Delaney Tonight will tell the story. There has been so miuck talk about the chances of Jack Delaney beating Berlenbach that fans shouldn't lose sight of the fact that Berlenbach is also liable to w.n. Whether wins or loses, it must be said that Berlenbach has been the best cham- pion of the world has scen fn many years with o one exception, and that has been Louis (Kid) Kaplan. He has fought everyone selected for him and has been afraid of no man Meeting Delancy tonight, Berlen- bach reaches the h holding because he then all one after the other. tho ¢ expect and want lan: to win, it is with a tou regret that we think of Berlenl losing his title. The Astoria has been a fighting champion, inch of him, and to have the such a man from the pinnacle, is « real loss to the fight game. O lcourse, Berlenbach will still be ti game. have met Al- will boy ve 1 se We just heard th t the weather is unfavorable for the fight tonight. 17 rain should stop the contest, it \will he held tomorrow night instead. New Additional Britainites vill attend the fight in Brooklyn to- | hight are Frank Arata, Peter Pero- kas and James Parsons. There arc everal others whose names could 10t be secured today. In the Herald oftice today pre- iictions are rife among all the help hat Delaney will win. Only two bredicted that-Berlenbach would win rom the Bridgeport battler. ght is held tonight, the battle itself ill determine the winner. ght is held tomorrow night, iean simply that there will be an- ther day of dope guessing. The fight will be announced to- ight, if it is held, and if it is post- oned until tomorrow night, it will o announced just the same, The hain bout will start about 10 oclock nd about that time will be the our set for the first news from jne ringside. | We would like to make an appeal all car owners to Church | reet as little as possible tonight ecause it's a tough proposition try- | b to anounce against a buzzing of hotors. We expect that the biggest | frowa in years will be on hand for o fight news. Because of the arcity of tickets in this city, there e many who will not be able to at the bout. b use The Fafnir-New Britain Machine seball game scheduled for Satur- v has been postponed indefinitely cause of the crippled condition of e Fafnir players. “Chick” Stanley | br one, is reported to be suffering om an attack of rheumatism. Who he others are, is not known. No finite date has been set for the pm 1t is not known either just when e Stanley Rule-New Britain Ma- hine game will be played. This has | Len postponed since July 3 and Il probably be played some eve. ng next week. The Stanley Rule Tevel team is also crippled by of Smith, star third baseman that he will be 1- to take his regular position next | ¢ | The City league will play its regu- - games this Saturday and the tie me between the Pirates and the | est FEnds will be played off next sday night. Kensington starts twilight base- 11 tonight against the Landw‘fl‘ m, leader of the Industrial league. | nager Pat Buckley is anxious fo | / out the scheme to see if it ! brics. | | The Falcons play Taftville Satur- is a Prescription for olds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue. he | ights of crown | ring | who If the | If the | it will | won day and Sunday and plays the Lenox A. C. ford Sunday afternoon. Baseball Standing AMERICAN LEAGUE Kensington of Walling- Games Yesterday Chicago 10, Washington York 7, Detroit Others postponed, rain. The Standing w New York 53 Philadelphia Chicago Cleveland Washington Detroit .. St. Louis | Boston Games Today Detroit at New York. St. Louis at Philadelphia. Chicago at Washington. “leveland at Boston. NATIONAL LEAGUE Games Yesterday New York 10-5, Pittsburgh §-2. Cineinnati 5, Philadelphia 2 Brooklyn 5, 8t. Louis 2. Boston 6, Chicago 4. The Standing W Cincinnati Pittsburgh St. Louis Chicago Brooklyn New York Boston Philadelphia | 43 Games Today Boston at Chicago. New York at Pittsburgh Philadelphia at Cincinnati Brooklyn at St. Louis. Yesterday’s Results Hartford 3, Providence 2. Waterbury 7, Springfield 5. Bridgeport 4-8, Albany 1-6 New Haven 11-1, Pittsfield 2-2 The Standing Springficld New Haven Albany Hartford Waterbury | Pittsfield | mes Today | Springfield at Waterbury. Pittsfield at New Haven. | Albany at Bridgeport. | Providence at Hartford Games Tomorrow { Hartford at Albany. | Providence at Bridgeport | New Haven at Pittsfield. | Waterbury at Springfield | INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE in | Games Yesterday City 5-8, Rochester 3-4. -0, Newark 4-8, Syracuse 6-2 Toronto | Jersey | Buffalg | Reading 12 Baltimore 14, ! The Standing ‘ L Baltimore Toronto Buffalo ... Newark v | Reading . | Today’s ey City at Rochester. ewark at Buffalo. Baltimore at Toronto. Reading at Syracuse. MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS the Associated Press, (Including games of July 14). National League Batting—Bressler, Reds, Runs—Blades, Cardinals, Hits—Brown, Braves, 114 Doubles—Wheat, Robins, Triples—Wright, Pirates, 13. Homers—Wilson, Cubs, 18. Stolen bases—Young, Giants, Pitching—Rixey, Reds, lost 2 Sy 18, won 8, American League Batting—Fothergill, Tygers, Runs—Gehrig, Yankees, 82, Hits—Falk, White Sox, 124 Doubles—Burns, Tndians, 35 | Triples—Gehrig, Yankees, 1 Homers—Ruth, Yankees, 27. Stolen bases—DMeusel, Yankees, Rice, Senators, 14; Hunnefield, White Sox, 14. Pitching—Pate, lost none. 433. Athletics, won 8, INJURED BY BASEBALL New Haven, July 1 | ward, was seriously injured at the {outing of the Young Men's Republi- can club at Lighthouse Point yes- terday, when he was hit in the eye by a pitched ball. Pott was playing shortstop for the City Hall team in the game against the Aldermen and was bat- ting at the time of the accident, A fast ball p\s‘r‘hwd by Alderman Wil- liam Earnshaw struck him in the eye and he fell to the ground un- conscious. At the New Haven hos- pital it was found that the eyeball had been cut, RAEUS CLUB WINS AGAIN The Raeus club baseball m the second game of a series among the civic clubs of the city by beating the Lions club yesterday )y a score of 8 to 1, V kowitz, |Greenstein and LeWitt were the bat- Stevens for the and worked tery and losers. for the winners Brennecke SURPRISE FOR STEINE Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Steiner of 176 Glen street were surprised at their home last night by ahbout 40 of their friends, fn honor of their 1§th wedding anniversary. They were given a beautiful floor lamp. Guests were present from Terryville, Bris- ilious Fever and Malaria It 'kills the germs. tol, Hartford, Lancaster, Mass.,, and Springfield, Mass, and New. Britain. 5 |park, ° | Springfield ®—Arthur | Pott, registrar of voters in the 19th i NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THUR DAY, JULY 15, 1926. NEW BRITAIN KIWANIANS WIN OVER SPRINGFIELD Ability of Locals To Come Through In a Pinch Scores Victory For Ashley’s Crew. Exhibiting an abiiity to |through tellingly in a pinch, [baseball team of the New |Kiwanis club won over Ifield Kiwanis club team afternoon by the narrow margin of one run, the score being 13-12, The |aftair was staged at Walnut Hil Succeeding in overpowering ew Britain boys by a slow | ch they could not get under, the | pitcher held the locals scoreless until the fifth inning, whil Springfield succeeded in piling up almost a dozen runs in that time. Stan Ashley, captain and manager lof the New Britain team, and Don | | Leavitt made up the battery for the | |locals and, although Stan pitched a |wide variety of plate scorchers the | | visiting delegation succecded in con- | [necting consistently throughout the | carly part of the game. This, coup- | ficlding and infield |; crash the Britain the Spring- yesterday | the wh all led with lodse misfires, nearly cost New Britain the | game in the early stages. In the fifth inning things looked | brighter for New Britain, when sev- | eral connections were made with the | pill and two runs were scored. As the game progressed the New\Brit- ainites learned the secret of the | slow ball and they piled the horse hide all over the lot, tying tI in the eighth inning. In the last in- ning the winning run was brought i and the locals were declared victors. | The Springfield pitcher was taken out of the box shortly after the fifth and New Britain took advan- tage of this state of aifairs. Two |auxiliary swirlers proved e meat for the heavy hitting locals and the |outlook changed from that time on springfleld played itself out in the t five innings, having no reserve to fall back on, while New Britain |took almost that time to warm into playing form. TEN OLD CABBIES BOSTON'S TOTAL Years Ago They Numbered in Hundreds July 15 (P—There's one ancient and honorable profession that is standing its ground here al- though occasionally its followers ad- | mit business does get rather dull | A census of hackmen showed that| [in a city which once boasted han- soms by the hundred just 10 wearers | of the siikatoppers and brass but- tons survived. Thése who back bay, responded to the thiere more t n competition hasn't made much dif- ference. They scem able always to pick up a fare here and there and Murphy, a grizzled old fellow, pre- dicted that as long as the “best families” remained patrons won't be hard to find. John “Freddy” Kennedy, Boston's |only surviving night hack driver, | who pilots a laundelet that once was the envy of less prosperous con- ferees, was another who saw no rea- | son to despair but he admitted things, weren't all that.they were, The col- | lege boy used to be his mainstay and still are, but in the old da it was different. “We'd go the rounds and take on a little beer” he reminisced, and then he added wistfully, “some- times T'd have a few mysel But down at the North Station, where in the palmy days as many as 50 vehicles could be seen, John Me- aughlin, 72, who has been on the seat for 54 years told a different | story. “We're just making out, that's all,” he lamented. And that is how Boston's cabbics nd today. GREATEST MARATHON Event 18 Years Ago Was Run With Boston the ave business in of them all for “‘cabby 40 years, motor did and some 1,200 Boys Carrying Messages From New York To Chicago. Cleveland, July 15 (#—A r race, probably the world’s greatest, was run eighteen years ago by 1200 boys who carried a message from the mayor of New York to the mayor of Chicago. Their time wa minutes and thirty seconds. Cleveland Young Men's association, announced plans to observe the twentieth anniversary of that event on July 15, 1928, with a second race over the same route. 116 hours, toda CLAIM FORFEIT VICTORY The manager of the White Stars *laims a forfeit game from Finne- gan's Alley Cats by a 9 to 0 score because of the failure of the latter to appear for a scheduled game. Should there be any dispute over this game, the diamond is the place ' on which to settle it |cape |criminal procedure and judictal {omme | |ington score [a |and more a judicial investigation | |unger the trained and impartial mw\ m\mm of a judge to ascertain lhc‘ truth.” Every |ec ]\ WAYS OF GURBING GRIME SUGGESTED - Commission Advises Curtailing| Prosecutors” Powers provision offered as a rem- weakness in criminal pro- s law in one or more stat mmlnr Hadley said. The report | s offered as an outline of a code of | leriminal procedur: y state v be urged. The “third degree” was the first |subject considered by the sub-com- York, July 15 (#—The finger |mittee It was recommended that | commission |¢VerY person charged with a fel- | ¢ ak spots in |ONY be taken before a magistrate or other judicial officer and after be- ing 1 of ights, per- ake public statements ang (and a questions regarding the | i said, would o e police, “no excuse for conduet- | ¢ A in ilated and oppressive ex B minations.” er SR T | STRIKERS IN RIOT | Meeting At Hudson, Mass, Beyond Speaker's Control. |t Hudson, July 15 (®) A n 58 the Firestone-Ap- | for |c N the national crime was pointed at the w criminal law yesterday. From a six months study to de- termine why 90 per cent of major | criminals are not apprehended why 75 per cent of those caught es- punishment, the commitee of W his ministration emerged with 20 dations for putting the inal in jail and keeping him there. | The provisions, contained in a r port made to the commission, rec- ommend, among other changes in criminal law, that jud be allow- [m ed to comment on evidence, that slep Rubber company strikers in the torneys be permitted to draw in Elm street theater last night broke | ence from the fallure of a def |up in disorder Andrew Mar ant to testify in his own behalf, that [chant, chairman the strikers the power of district attorneys to [committee, had control of the quash proceedings be modified and imeeting and then declared it closed that activilies of professional bonds- |Tmmediately the gathering becam men be curtailed. roaring crowd of milling men, “Under 00 of whom out of work bert 8. H MHU\‘ [ cause they are locked out, and while university, 700 or more who were present wero | {1 (trying to talk and yell at once, the lefforts of Rev. John T. Mullen, D. |t} restored quiet and pre-|w |a Gets | ir meeting of de after of ci about | st Her. Was provisions,” are neellor of of of the of man the trial game mce less and D, lly between opposing lawyers [vented more serious trouble, | en- fin, wis| Oharges Troesponsible Men Sti ca suit ailed service for nd [pany expects to press it, was an ef- ort | day showed subway service to be a little better than 61 per cent of nor- m.n The subway company has im- | pounded the wages due the strikers to apply on the damages it claims. basis of the suit will be that the | strikers broke the eontract which| I‘WM as members of the company's union had made not to strike. R T.DETERMINED 10 FIGHT I7 0UT: INDICTED FOR LARCENY Pittsfield, Mass., July 156 (P—In- dicted on three counts of larceny and two charges of embezzlement, rborough Rapid Transit company|Thomas F. Conlin, former clerk of ill make “another Danbury hatters| the Qistrict court of central Berk- it necessary, out of its present | shire in this city, entered a plea of $239,000 damages against|not guilty yesterday and was re- whose walkout has cur-|leased in bonds of $5,000 The com- | the past several| plaints involved funds which Conlin | James L. Quakenbush, counsel| handled as clerk of court or the company, has —_— announced. Many of the 62 men named in the| iit are prosperous, owning homes| small business places, he said.| nd would, he made to pay. N\.fl the comps would attempt to| the small farm owned by one| Mr. Quackenbush replied } tainly it will.” He denied that the suit, and the| termination with which the Up Trouble New York, July 15 (P—The In-| il for rikers 1S, PURIFYING »me, July ti, secretary party, is v FASCISTS 15 (M—Augusto general of the fascist aging a nation-wide battle, ake n, com- | to intimida strikers. Any day, “Damages in th der he said an end to irring up trouble g 600,000 to The suit wa. case propose yonsible to ut mer 1 diccommod 700,000 persons. s broug for he said 1o purpose of imy ng upon “the X XX we ikers na hat a co il coll Transit c attached whatey er. ract is sacred here W nmission THERE’S something vety solid and sub- stantial about Prince Albert. Dependable .+ . as a good friend should be., Uni- formly mild and mellow. It always tastes the same—which means that it always The reason for all this is the excellent quality of the tobacco. tastes great! Prince Albert quality has made this one brand the most popular among pipe- lovers; has earned for it the title of the National Joy Smoke. Get yourself a tidy red tin of P. A. today at the nearest P. A.-sunshine shop and know for your- self what a grand and glorious smoke it is. PRINGE —no other tob @ 1926, R. T. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. ¢ SALESMAN $AM (Arrfi f CeNT STAND LONGER-1T'5 90 {5AM's TRAGIC] | END, LAST Fuwno‘%v | | Fawne oot | OF THE. BALLOON 5000 FEET, WD THE BLALMNESS |BELOW, G022 [HA AUM0ST |GONE. CanTY HIGH UP Iy T PERULESS SHIES, ALONE | COLD, WERRY AND 1T AL ArBITION N LREL OGONE, \IHICH HNOW S EVENTOALLY Wil COME_ HE. e DARK, UP HERE DLL ALONE. AND MY BEST PAL GONE. 5000 FEET BELOW -~} (ANT STAND \T T ANY " TR GREAT SOTT ! IT MusT BE 5AM'S SPIRIT |- | 05T ga 80(:«: Tur- — with the personal support of Pre- mier Mussolini, to purge the fascist party of its “extremist elements.” This campaign against local fas- cists who insist on continuing what is regarded as petty squabbling in disobedience or orders from Rome has resulted in the crushing of a dis- sident movement at the Ligurian city of Sevona. HUFF STILL CRITICAL London, July 15 (P—George Huff, director of athletics for the Univer- sity of lllinois, was still in a critical condition this morning, with little change from yesterday, it was an. nounced at the nursing home where | he is a patient. Mr. Huff underwent an operation for appendicitis early this month. IMER SCHOOL The highest mark of the summer school season was reached today when an enrollment of 750 students was announced. MOTORISTS! July Rain Insurance! except Saturday and Sunday during July that it rains before 6 P. M. after you have had your car washed at the TEN MINUTE AUTO _\l'\'I)I‘Y (Division of the Franklin Station) phone 4100, we will give you a SH the following Monday or Tuesday. ght rain insurance without any strings Square F.E.R, Jr. A Ll T e S always count The very first pull will tell you that Prince Albert was made for you. Cool, as a breeze off the water is cool. Sweet, with the uncloying sweetness of sun- ripened fruit. Fragrant in the tin and fra- grant in the bowl of your pipe. Fragrant, as flowers are fragrant. Men who thought they were all set on smokes have tried Prince Albert and be- come converts from the very first puff. There’s a bare possibility that you have been fooling yourself. The pleasure you'll get from a jimmy-pipe and P. A. will top any you think you’re getting now! ALBERT acco is like it! | DONT BELRNE N | GHSTo~ GO AWAY — LEAVE. ™ME ALONE ! — SOFFERING (ATS, NOW 1 KNOW ‘M (:OIH(:— £ DAFEY ! (HBS c-uzD GONE. cnary : DOES HE REALLY HERR 98M% VOWEOR 15 1T ONY Hig mwnfiraM A9 Ll‘fl'a«s N e NKY B\.aumess OF THE. NIGHT P.A. is sold everywhere in tid tins, pound and hal, dors, and pound eryst with sponge-moistener top. And always with every bit of bite and perchi removed by the Prince Albert processs ound tin humie -glass humidors PACTOGAPR_ 510! o6 e 5o EXACT 4P0T WHERE. 011- 19 HAUING HIS TERRIBLE. EXPERIEN(E N TH STRAY em.\.oou

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