New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 17, 1926, Page 8

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, JULY 17, 1926. I I A2 L L ST LAST YEAR'S CHAMPIONS SWAMP BOYS’ CLUB TEAM Paradise Park Has No Difficulty in Running Away the Game—Smith Takes Close Contest From Bur- rits—“Lefty” Cohen Twirls a Nice Game—Sand- berg Strikes Out 14 Batters in Seven Innings—Tie For First Place Result ATHLETICS DRIVING T0 \JACK DELANEY IS CUT DOWN YANKS’ LEAD THE NEW CHAMPION Mackmen Take Both Ends of Double Bill From St. Louis| (iefs Unanimous Decision ol —Hugmen Barely Beat Out Detroit — Indian: . ) Blank Washington Senators—Robins Hammer St. JlldgCS Over Paul Berlenbach Louis Pitchers to Win—Pirates Stage Second In-| =~ ning Rally to Conquer Boston Braves. Bt oot M B s G et stot s eorerse s s BB Iptises i3 s ret e asnassset e ss senar et stass HAGEN THE KING OF PRO GOLFERS July 17 (#—The world's light-heavyweight ring crown, jolted from champlonship heads five times in t ix year: % & . Jcague Standing und it was only through the good |tound a new resting place ° today Y , A = : : s ) : W L Pet ling of Sandberg that the team paraded ten games ahead of tho| ¢~ |atop the handsome countenance of | Paradis . 0 1.000 Amerlcan league pack a few weeks | it Jack Delaney. Washington .. 1000 | _ ago, today felt the hot breath of alto J. & 3 on_ba A sensational victory under the % ' Club o 00 {of the ninth, on third from scoring. desperate sprint by Connie Mack's| Clevelar g 'y | unanimous decision of the judges —— / e . 4 Smith Ceeeees 1 .500 [Coming into the last of the ninth, e I v Ogden 2, 1gh T ¢ diade he = 7 i .« 2 3urritt 0 0 oh Athleties to close the diminishing |b%! e s 2 Paim. | brought the roving diadem to th: V2 ) i Burritt B { ol ~vak Seagian 13 46 10 ik zap between the two clubs. ero 1. Losing pi Johr Umplres | Bridgeport, Conn., boxer last night N ELLOE ING HAGEN, ¢ 7 | Willow Brook ......0 2z .000. 3 The margin was shortened to five | —Allin, and McGowan. Time—|__a triumph before a capacity Too LITLE ATTBENTION 1S i £ 1 o g | The adise Park baseball team |Sandberg struck two out. He then .nd one-half games yesterday with | | throng of 45,000 which paid $420 GIVEN' TO HK GOLFING' e ~ : sl A {of the New Britain Boys' baseball lked two and they scored on a a double-barreled victory by Phila- | = 000 o see the rivals of tv |league showed its 1925 champion- With the tieing run on thirg, \:wlrma over St. Louis while the | ATIONAL LEAGUE standing grapple at Ebbets Field for ‘s!vm style yesterd T sposing of {sandherg tightened up and slrvl:i( Hugmen were barely escaping an- | BUSTON {the third time. ! M ‘ the Boys' club t« WA UE Sit et ast et saving the: same other defeat at the hands of the|, 4 ol A % By ths Assoclated Press. The New York Yankees, who e was able to keep a man in the last e verdict for Delaney, who only Hillpark while the Smith team {ror his team. Tigers. Third inning batting ral- | wisson 1seven months before h: led to ‘ 2 . S broke into the winning column with | gmith started off strongly in the les accounted for both Mackian Gautreau |1ift the championship from his rug- . '3 v a close victory over Burritts. |qrst three innings scoring nine n triumphs, the first by 3 to 2 and the | V*1sh. 1t {ged rival, was as popular as only The games of yesterday put Para- (41 Three came in in the first, four h a victory could be for ring dise Park ed for he lead with |, ), second nd two in third. second by 5 to 4 Burrus, 15 . E | The Athletics now have won 12 |Brown, cf . 5 0 I'\‘,Arrlor who had gathered around v hington nd Smith d the score remained this way until . 2 % of their last 14 games as against i&h 20 | him probably the greatest following 4 3 3 ? g Boys' club deadlocked for second l4po fifth when the Burritts staged five out of 13 for the Yankees, ay > Mial® o] of any challenger since the days of = $o 4 3 : place A inslaa Sally abd ratnen s Haba Ehmke, obtained recently from |R. sm | Knockout Brown. And it came as & ) 3 v e ey _ £ by o B} Takes Easy Game ks Bithicorai ardinithy Boston in a trade, finally has come | = = —lfandom likes its heroes crowned— Yy 3 BT e S | The paradise Parks had an casy | {1 LI searad one Aot through to support the mound | ed for Wilson In with a spectacular rally in the last [time of it with the Boys' club ye TG ini il oleht efforts of Lefty Grove and Eddic Batted for Welsh in 9 five rounds of the 13-round struggle |terday afternoon in the Boy's league, | Ry ritts came into the cighth de- Rommel, the former Hub pitcher | SETTHBIRAH . |after Berlenbach appeared to be {sponsored by the Rotary elub, €op- |icrmined to win and they pushed veeterday turning in one of his best 2 2 | closing in to duplicate the powerful {ping the game by a score of 31 to 2. |t HEC 0 B S hen the — ninth performances. He allowed the | finish he brought off last December | The winners hit the mlll hard at all |.ame through. Smith was shut eut Browns only six scattered hits. a |against. Delaney |stages of the game and Wwere never |,ng RBurritts sent in two and the Bgbe Ruth led the Yankees'|pidloh It | Delaney's impressive exhibition of |in danger oflosing the lead. lother on third died out with the successtul ninth inning stand |Grantham, |ring craft, punching power and 4 | b ) In tl danf h_rnvnrr‘rnrvvlp: last strike out of the game, against the Cobbmen, which started | Rhyne, ss . | stamina was a conquest of more ; % 2 ; {Pieneiatotad Iy U8 & !"l’“ Patks | Dobkowski started for Smith but a three-run rally to turn the tide |5 & |than a stout-hearted, iron-armed s 4 X o . %1 {but the 1925 champions did not 810D | ratived with a sore arm. Squillicot in favor of New York, 4 to A | songer, { gladiator of the old pugilistic school. here for in the succeeding in Stairod for ths inalng tears benind double by Combs, Lazzeri's “triple {1t was a triumph over a tremendous runner after runner _crossed the (1"l TSy puouts ana three and Dugan's single did the rest. | weight advantage, surmounted plate. Tt seemed that nothing could |yeiere sandberg struck out 14 in In the only other American : 7 | despite the fracturing of a small stop them. Garro, Lefty !r\m‘n‘xv'vyd e Binings aad pUoEeY & A eague melte, Levsen outpitched| T te— Y Rawl- [ hone In his left thumb during the Jack Shea led at bat for S R e e e Walter Johnson to blank the Sena- dise Parks while Kovalewski col- [;pea 5 hb e imber of walks he tors, 8 to 0. Fifteen bingles| yns—Burry Crifice—F ] Margin of 12 Pounds. d the most hits for ”‘"y BLIDE 1 |1ssued, 10 taking first on free tickets. caromed from the Indians’ clubs, |ca Dou | While officially the weight of Ber- fty” Cohen was on the mound | Pierkowski for the Burritt team Jamieson leading the department ; Songer, Rhyne am. Le | lonbach was recorded as 174 1-4 for the Paradise Pa nd served |, men stealing second with four safe blows. a and that of Delaney as 1661, post- them up in proper shape. 'f“ let ”:'" while Malain starred in the field at Slugging bees developed in two | oy s 1. Winning ponement of the fight cne day be- j ‘7 3 | team down “”_" “l“rh ""\’ |second base. Villa was the heavy National league conflicts, with the | cardon and Moran, 1 | canise o ti ralit motually Eave!the da: e He 'flm‘“'} *'\I Mw»«'{ "f;‘uu with a home run and a Robins hammering fi §t. Louis | tending title holder a margin of 12 ers, and held the 108ers |yp,e0 pagoer, The score:— A L e (BY JOE WILLIAME) in hand at all stages of the SMITH pitchers for an 8 to 7 victory and pounds over his opponent. When [1in d at the Kensington grounds | ..me He logt control for a time in AB. R H. ; % s S0t ferReo It is ali very well to go ..,,,, T . : the Pirates outslugging the Braves 4 2 0 [they enfered the ring Berlenbach &8 ali very g |tomorrow afternoon at 8:15 o'clock. | {10 fifth frame. With two batters [Dazata, rf. . o = : e T [The Lenoxv have been pulling big [ratired, he filled the bases, foreed |Nogency o5 1t Wilbert Robinson's warfare with sy 3 ol over his class limit, while the chal- | fighting heart of Walter Hagen, “hqv tni | retired. 2 oo lenger's mark was put g s it their homs games this |in a run and let a wild one go over Delaney's margin on points was his pitcning, staff rewfhed = Husky | Wheat oonsod Al R ! ! | nas just staged another uphill climb | 1 it was a difficult matter t0 [{he head of Garro fhat gave the o 2 n t ks t th to come to Kensington for | goye' elub their two runs. . AABitely “foF allagsd f it e e i ¢ critics | 10 Win a notable golf match from m {Boys' clw suspended indefinitely 8ed | \arr SIN s 1 | decisive in the estimation o I i (anall. ‘4hé or GEeat Britiin's [ 2 ¢ tomorrow. The team 18| he Paradise Parks et ontinell Jess Petty yesterday. Aess was [Felix | Herman, neglect of training rules. | Butier, ss ringside Uu until the last five| l st lone that can be reckoned on to give | geferi of Zujko in the first in- \' | Waner, lemo Mocwabuorum Songer. second roun: v s i sec Hargreaves, s, however, the 25 little to| finest gunners— ha?:‘;‘e:n ;::lllnclfiwwr;mz’g» |]nl|:zn“g|;v "‘» 4 e 3 ‘ :;\':,:::'1@?wm."u:;nxrve nes I‘I_m hi:‘ vl g N ma( o tew an ysemi-pro outfit in the a!ning and sent him to the showers. victory over the Braves. A home | yoiweer 0 advantage of the challenger in the ¢ Rhyme with two on and a|Wit, o 0 0 o Iy rounds fading before the| triple by Waner which cleaned the S 1 attack of the |Bies ¢ AMERICAN LEAGUE |, (ninth and tenth. o w|which his trlumphe are habitually| ! e 0 | The Bridgeport man opot e fev. | received one would seem entitled to| TOMOrrow's home games will bring | tear edke will probably by | EARATE (FIRST GAME) s sensa ";t}.‘gw Iy I the €1 | ihe opinion that Hagen's sole claim (0 Lhis Cify two of the most popular mound for the visitors. He | R | sout by 2 o SSIMAB R e o ife | to prominence is due to the fact|20d most feared bascball nines in twirled in the city champlonship Bk of 3 3 : hrong by drigng e Sl he can be four down in a|the State among the semi-profession- s last year and in the second Melillo, 2b 3 smash to the pit of the champion's| W' ¢ S B (OCC al class. The Falcons ue to |zame, was hit on the head by a ba [risrrds 51 el “m.“y',ler:r,d\:r:‘:o;“:;‘ The truth is this Rochester Ger- |Meet the Taftville A, C. team at St. |ted ball in practice. Despite this, HeNenns 4 of batle. Delaney ippez | man is one of the fnest all-round |Mary's field while Kensington w tched the entire game and al- Rice, rf . i 0 | be tiring unde i the. sledg 'h“‘“‘;".’A:: shot-makers the sport has ever|P1ay the Lenox A. C.. of Wallingford. ugh beaten, gave a good account B s TaR e SR pady RUnaIoR. o ‘";,',l'«f,‘,lh'“.;f,’ el Mnm«n and is indubitably and with- | Falcons vs. Taftville himself. ; ; b e Raquatto, R Hanahan, R this point he stepped f N tla. | out reservation the greatest putter| The Falcons are in Taftville to-| Manager Pat Buckloy #ad his 7 : hree hase hits—Villa, Markavick. Homa 5 Sothoron, p .. .. 0 wed X to pummel 1 lin the game. {day playing the team there in the|charges out during the week for 3 - 5 run—Quadritio, _Villa ruck out—h Totats ot & OFarrell, ¢ ...l 0 0 0 0 0|holder with lightning lefts anc Hagen Ts Greatest first of a series of home and home snappy practice sessions and the i 30YS' CL g |Dobkowskl:3, Danberg 14, Kakmaravlng AuApELPaLY G 5 i e Elghta last five| _There has been a lot of expert lhl.mr The second game will be | Kensington outfit looks sweet just | AB. R. L PO e e key | Delanes repeatedly in the Iast We | vipping about this player and that [staged in this city tomorrow after- |now. The ofticials of the Kensing- kas, If ..o g e mj.m'h nailad ‘r‘ *";"’:"." “q:‘x‘ O‘I’mj"m‘\ player possessing the perfect putting [hoon. This means that the Falcons |ton A. C. have made arrangements e oy 2 LICENSED AS PROMOTERS i"vh('flfl nous "-“I>:|lj’\‘] {he | touch. There is still a legend in (Are UD against two stiff contests over [to have a Connecticut Co., bus |Kovalewski, ) ] ;'h' fourteenth it appea a el \-»" American golf that nobody putts as [the week-end and Manager Joe Ven- | transport the fans from this city and |2Zujko, p, r . ; | |passing champion = would CEUMP | well or as beautifully as Francis|iski has his men all et for two other points from Upson's Corner to [7cmproyykh ® - 0 0 | [lon. former world’s bantamweight |But Dorlanbaptiogriio, as senos by | Ouimet ot Boston. {wins, Just who his pitching selec- |ihe baseball field and back again |Schmarr, ; champion today was licensed by the | out two years ago in four T""“‘_‘}'; “y' Undoubtedly there are a number [tions for the games will be is a after the game. The first bus will Tllinois Athletic commission as a Delaney and “"'j, “'“l, Zm”\',:m:‘ of good putters in the game, There |problem that he was unable to d leave from the center of New Br o aep: i boxing promoter. Another former ot 0 |8t Louls ... worth (3, macom, | thelr second battle st W | gre's few great ones. But Hagen, |clde untl Ihe could look the men lain at 1:45 o'clock tomorrow after- | Cury Neis) boxer, Howard Carr, known to the Phlladeiphia 58 0y, 'Thres base v sHiott. weathered the storm of PUNCRES| o gt 45 the greatest Most |over and see how they shaped up. | noon hound for the baseball field | —, (ring 25 years ago, as Kid Howard, a Two base h o run—Marriof P s | without golng down. = matches are won on ' the greens.| The Taftville lineup the land after that free transportation | featherweight, also reccived pro- e e sial o | Grimes, Douthit 1 s o s ’I“““l‘”‘l his title | Practically all of Hagen's are won names of many of the best semi- will be afforded the fans from the |moter’s licence. to Gerber ler. Lef ase o Botto: | The dethroned kflf held aar but | here: |pro stars of the eastern.section of [corner to the field. The bus will | — s—oft Grimes 3, | ONly a little more than a year, b It was Hagen's putter that over- the state in it. The team takes the meet every trolley and bus that plies ||/ "1™ i GREAT GIRL SWIMMER between New Britain and Berlin, Pruhan (2), Kushlan ] : New Zealand seems to have an- Louls 5, Philade! Base on balls— | St. Louis oft Ballou 5 Ehmke ruck out—by | M : Alexander 3, Sherdel 0. Struck | his brief career was an eventful one | oy 14 ‘Bohhy Jones in the south |fleld in the followlng order: Red Sox-New London by Coh ko 1, by Schmarr [other great gir 1 swimmer in Kath- The Corbin Red Sox will go to ! on balls—off Zujko 3, Schmarr She recently covered Ballou 1, Elimke 4. Umplres—Ormsby and McWeeny 2, Alexander | .10 1o achieved the reputation of : \d he achieved the repu last winter. It was his putter that [ton c; C. Jarvis p; Cardie 1b Cohen 4. Wid_ plich—Zusko 1. it by [leen Miller. Dineen. Time—1:37 § S L che Rel, | being the most active champlon in| onapiag him to overcome a four-|ban 2b; Yerrington ; o WECOND: GAME), Umpires—cLaughlin Klem Wilson, | pugilism. O uadlan of o5 fhole handicap and beat Mitchell inLathrop If; Gaudette cf, and Leo | New Laadon tomorrow to play the |pitener—(Gotawalin). Umpira—dike Lynch |the 1 1-4 miles across Otago Bay in 2 Delaney, a French-Canadi 19| the recent mateh overseas. !Jarvis, rf. Yobert r Co. team of that city. | Smith Beats Burritt record time, despite a rough sea summers, has been boxing since 1919} " i ig the first phase Miss Miller is 17 Philad INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE b i record studded with | Kensington-Lenox A. C. nager John Tobin will use a new | The smith baschall team barely [most of the way. 0) Complie & il golf Hagen mastered. You may be -Kensi aseball tea Jatte row 1 /nn and r- | pulle ame the fire f and > past yea steppe R e { may be| The All-Kensington baseball team battery tomorrow in Flynn and Mur- |pulled a game out of the fire from [and in the past year has stepped to Biia g 922 e was|interested in knowing that. Ho|will meet the Lenox A. C. of Wal-ray. [the Burritt team on Diamond No. [the front rapidly. Blus. 50 3 [ stunning defeats. In 1 i |caddied in the Rochester district, | here along the \ml of eulo- | concerning the American's au»ri | | Paradise 1gton fans will have the |py With the b tunity of sceing in action a|this frame Garro hit a circuit to left o last year was one of |field that rolled to the second diz es loaded in etermine v as a golfer. sington Meets Lenox A, C. ays of their home town he score Tim OB Blshop, 2b ... French, rf Simmions, cf & Lamar, 1t 3 0 Totals T Dykes, 3b o 00 or Fournier in 9th Panle, 1b Alexander In 5th, Cechrane, o ed for Vick in 6t Galloway, s 2 for Hallahan in 7th nmke, D . 0 z2—Batted for Sherdel 3 Brooklyn 3 T 18t. Louts Chicago, July 17 (P—Johnny Couw Fotherglll, Helimann, Gehring: 0|Two Good Battles Scheduled To Be morrow Afternoon. League Standing W 1 Landers SEa Fafnirs Stanley Rul “orbin | Stanley Works IR. & E ; R. Machine > g on Works . 1 7 Only two fnmes are scheduled in [the Industrial league for this after- noon at Willow Brook park. Lan- ders, lenders’ in the league, are |sehednled to hattle the P. & Cor- bin nine on Diamond No. 2 while the Stanley Works are to play the | Stanley Rule club on Diamond No. 1 Both games will be played at ¢ | uled gar Un Works and R. & E. s to have been played Thursday night pire Herby to the L'nion Works when after wai 50 min- the R, “& E. management ine uniformed men Fafnir-New Rritain hine Co. racket has been post- poned bhecause of the fact that the nir t s crippled through in two games today should be tles. Landers will n - Iy fight to stay in first place while |the Corbin con nt 18 confident [that it can take measure of the leaders Stanley Rulc t hard to climb up the lad- to a tie with the Fafnir | is in second place | game behind Stanley and by not playing tomorrow have a chance to tle| | ed like that. They | have paid more attention had they Rule Shop has also an postponed game to play witl New Britain Machine Co. be. fore it can cateh up to the schedule Zack Wheat, veteran though he is He's been [the big gun on the Dodger attack us far. Zack, like old wine, seems ~1{to impreve with age. 2{can etill lace the agate for Palmero i ttedt or Ogden Played At Willow Brook Park To- |a | succeeded by Jack O'Brien game was forfeited by Um- | {turn his head at the summons, twlca stopped—once hy Augie Rat- ner and once by Young Fisher. But a year later Delaney redeemed him- | It by outpointing Ratner, while| Fisher faded into obscurity as De- | Janey rapidly climbed the ladder. | Delaney's victory marks the pass-| ing of tha title to its eleventh hold- | er. =k Root. the first chAmplon, | was knocked out by George Gardner, who held the crown until the great 3ob Fitzsimmons strode upon tI -sined battlefield. Bob in turn was Jack Dillon mounted the throne after a period of inactivit e outpointed by n vinsky Then cam s entier, Bat- tling Siki, Mike MecTigue and Ber- len | Official Figurcs | New York. July 17 (P — Officlal figures excluding war tax, for the Berlenbach-Delaney fight last night wera announced as follow | $152,000 8,112 $419, e He Got Name July 17 (@ Ovila of « little fishing own da, became Jack De- the ignorance of news- | ney throu boxing announcer in | light heavywe earlier battles, He { preliminary boys nouncer pronounce the t of his he informed the crowd and the newspaper men put “Jack Delaney.” for it’sound- probably would known the boy then in a prelimi | nary tiit was to become a world champi N all his friends call him Jack. and it is doubtful if he would | (Continued on Following Page) | and, like most caddies, a putter was = the first club he owned. It natur- Iy first stroke he perfected. You may be interested further in knowing that as a teacher Hagen advised his pupils to learn with the putter first and then advance by de- | grees to the distance-getting clube, | His theory is that control of the ball is the first essentlal. i Hagen has a pair of remarkable eyes. T once heard them described as “vard-stick eves” This is a tribute to his uncanny accuracy in jndging distance, especially on the greens. When the stakes are large Hagen won't miss the cup more than an inch or so from any dis- tance. Usually Off Behind So often is Hagen behind in matches and tournaments, which in the final stages find him out in front leading the attack, that a popular suspicion exists that he actually prefers to let the other fel low get away in front cer- tainly doesn't seem to bother him. Yet 1 recall that he was genuinely happy when he finished eight or nine holes ahead of Jones in st half of thefr match in Florida | last winter Someone suggested that his posi- tion was nnusual. “You'd probably feel more natural if you were three four holes down, wouldn't you, he was asked Don’t make me ugh,” Hagen. - “Anytime T can get the lead I'm going to take it. T wish 15 up on Bobby." WHITE STARS WIN The White Stars won their fifth victory of the present season over the Lyman streets yesterday by a 21 to 5 score. The Stars played lke major leaguers and easily stopped the older team. Joe Golas starred in the box for the _winners while Lukowski, a former White Star twirled for the losers. Wilk was the hitting king bringing in four runs in |seven times at bat. One of his hits was & homer. The White Stars wil] |play any team in the city averaging 12 to 18 years. Write Joe Golas, 20 Horace street answered | 'The mental hazardist followed that putting was the | .,,,, fiw«cn 4

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