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n;mmmm:wmu Speaking of Sports NI T IgNIIIN The New Britain High-Hartford High football game will be played at Clarkin fleld in ITartford on Sat- urday afternoon, November 20, ac- cording to a definite announcement by James C. Moody, director of ath- letics at the New Britain High school today. The game was orig- inally scheduled to be played at the velodrome but it was changed after- wards. Ed Dailey and George Mulligan ire at it today trying to iron out the {Sturm will fill NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1926. The addition of to the squad gives New Britaln a strength in the backfield that cannot be beaten. Xilduff, Shechan and the guard positions & e | and all three work harmoniously to- | Murphy sether no matter hoy they are |Brooks & Sanderson paired. £ WITH THE BOWLERS | Levels, Wesoly 1 105— usl‘ P | — s For the present, Taylor, Reynolds 163—1351 and Joe Jasper appear to be favored | = for the forward berth. Solmansky, a | - 8 Hudson, N. Y., man, is a big, rangy and fast boy. He looks good at cen- | B ter, but he looks better at forward. | Just where he will be used is o question that will be decided within a few days. 263 13— 317 10— 316 125 85— 312 508 509 459—1484 | Screw Drivers, s 253 231 287 275 105— 80— G4— 94— 91— 405—1377 I ter last year, is the other candidate | |for the pivot position. There nro! | many in this city who would like to | Chilcott see him get a real chance, and it may be that he will be placed at| center for the first few games. fHe| will be all over his stage fright of | unpleasantness that exists between the Hartford and New Britain man- agements. A Hartford paper this morning stated fhat two games might be played, one on Armistice |1ast season and after the first few Day and the other on Thanksgiving | 83mes, should show whether he has | Day. the goods or not. Armistice Day will be a poor date | wherever he is put. { for a footb.ll game from a New | Britain standpoint. The day Is not| Ppite has quite the Atlas team and being recognized as a holiday here | has a five of his own. | »and many who would want to see New Britain and Hartford clash, would be unable to do so because they would have to work on that date. i Can You Think of the | Good Old Days When— Thanksgiving Day would probab- | ly be an ideal day because of its| “Bert” Loomis, Gcorge Xron being & holiday. Armistice Day | George, Clark, Sheldon, Woods and will be a holiday in Hartford, but|Peterson represented New Britain the other day is a holiday in both |in the Y. M. cities. Even at that, we think that | den? two Sundays would be the proper | dates for these games. l “John S.” driven by Bd Bother, | {dld a mile in 2.20 1-2 at Charter ‘Ofll\', the sccond fastest time made on the track up to that time? C. A. meet at Meri- | It seems that, at last, negotiations will be started for the meeting .of the two camps. New Britain fans had_about given up hopes that New Britain would ever meet Hartford, | ‘“Roddy” McDonnell always in- but today's developments have | Sisted on wearing kid gloves when changed all that. We expect to have | playing football? in some other part of today's issue, | an account of the meeting and what | "Iz Hoffman, decislon was arrived at. |came a star in | league, went over The picking ot Armistice Day and | track” diamond Thanksgiving Day as the probable | dates for the games came from Hart- ford because Manager Dailey of the New Britain team stated that he hadn't thought of dates because he | didn't knpw whether his team would | meet Hartford or not. who later be- the Connecticut | to the ‘“double unannounced one | day and belted so many that there were no balls ing? remain- A team made up of Bristol, Plainville and New Britain men | was leading 2 to 1 in a game with the Cuban Giants in Bristol, when the latter left the field, to the “razz” of 1,000 fans? | He struck another snag vesterday afternoon when, after booking the Newport Torpedo station eleven for the aftraction -cxt Sunday, he re- ceived a telegram calling the game off. Subsequent telephone talks with | the manager of the Newport team | Was in such poor financial condi- gave Manager Dailey the information | tion that Wilmington refused to | that because the team would play | Dlay a scheduled game because the the New London Sub-Base team $75 guarantee was not forthcom- week from Sunday and as this the important game of the season, i port management did not| Thomas ue & Co's horse, chances of injury by R.SG., % two heats in the | Britain this Sunday and | 2:48 class at Danbury and divided r have the team remain first money with the hor: that won the other two heats, Mr. McCue reeing to this arfangement | ther than remain in Danbury over | the weck-end to decide the race? J The Hartford team in the Atlan- tle association of baseball clubs | ing? Me won would rat idle than pl ger Dailey will know definite. on whether the team will - not next Sunday after- James Tevlin's singing of “Fleat- 1 this section of the! N8 Days:” Thomas H. Kehoe's re- attraction at the | ¢itation, “The Eviction,” and Jo. wmory in Hartford next Mon- | $CPR Ward's singing of “The Ola sy he cham- | PUMp on the Green” were features | o 0f Y. M. T. A. & B. soclety anni- clever heavy verkary .ol ances? in the star bout of the fight card of the season. any night on, - nd Pat McCarthy, ight of Boston, meet first indoor IMMIGRANT PURCHASES | | McCarthy impressed the fans who | watchod him ot tno voioarome| | BLOCK FOR 11 MILLION | against Johnny Risko of Cleveland, | and in our opinion that night Me- | Citths Moy il dc- | Philadelphia Man, Once Penniless, cision. He is a clever fighter who| Wil make Persson or any other| .o $4.000,000 for Cripplea | heavyweight travel to beat him. Children. McCarthy is a real Irishman and| Philadelphia, Nov. 2 (A —Joseph loves to fight just as his ancestors | Caplan, a penniless emigrant from did. He has been winning consistent- | England in 1890, yesterday became ly in his recent battles and there ONe of the largest individual hold- are many hera who will back him to | €S In real estate in Philadelphia, S saninsk Pemion when he accepted conveyance of a | building held at a sale price of | $11,000,000. | Built in 1912, the building cost | the late P. A. B. Widener, traction One thing that has arisen to ques- tion Persson’s appearance in Con- necticut is the automatic suspension he suffers after losing to Bud Gor-|Magnate, in excess of $8,000,000, of | man last night in New York on a|Which one-half represented the pur- | foul. Whether this suspension till | Chase price of the site. The ground, | be effective in Connecticut or not is | Which formerly was occupied by a | a question, but we are inclined to be- | MInt, cost the government $31,666 | lHeve that it will not affect the fight- | {n 1829. er's appearance in Hartford in the| The Widener building is an 1S- Teaat: | story structure in the Italian Renafs- sance style, containing Clarence Tanpher announced to-|Square fest of floor space. | day that the Natlonal Guards bas-| Of the sale price, $4,000,000, ac- ketball team would open the season |COrding to the real at the state armory on Arch street|Who handled the transaction, has on Saturday night, November 20. He | been sot aside with a trust company has collected togather a formidablo|AS an_endowment fund for the Wid- looking team and by the way in|ener Home for Crippled Children. ‘vhich the squad is going through its | r. Caplan, who has been a resi- paces, it appears to be a strong con- | dent of Philadelphia since 1906, is — U/, ANTHEN HALTS ROW | OVER FOOTBALL GAME Band Torces Hosiery ' o Students in Battle Attention and Everywhere Ends Clash. BUT WE'VE GOT WIL- SON BROS.—IT'S DIF- TERENT. Houston, Tex., Nov. 2 (A—Play- ing of “The Star § gled Banner” by the band of the Texas Agricul- tural and Mechanical college, which brought the cadet students of the school to attention, ended a | clash of Aggie and Baylor univer- | sity students between periods of a football game at Waco, but not un- ;(il after Charles M. Sessums of | Dallas bhad been injured fatally [Smurd ¥, witnesses said yosterday. Sessums, first believed slightly injured, died Sunday of a fractured | skull. Virtually all A. and M. students are members of the Reserve Offi- cers' Training corp TAKES GRA PLACE. ‘While Illinoi naturally misses the great Red Grange, still Coach Zuppke's backfield is far from a | weak combination. One of the play- ers who is doing much to make the iTHml rooters fory the brilliant Grange is Halfback Russ Daugher- ity. He has been a star on both offense 1 defense. When a few {J| vards are neoded for a first down | L1 scldom fails. 55¢ r. 35¢ to $1.00 pr. NY SAMPLE SHOP 357 Others MAIN ST, | s Solmansky will make a good man | g Moffett homers |3 500,000 1} estate brokers| Ritter Valentine Hincheliffe Weed Demorest 244 205 264 264 323 Wilcox B Clark Henry Connors Argosy McBriarty Campbell’ Mitre Boxes. 5 a1 267 8 252 McKenna Scarfe ) | 01— 303 103— 284 55— 263 | lis picked. Crocker Squires wanson 3 9 ks 9 0| Winger 70 Flelschauer D Wileox | Linda Saimond Bordonaro Kaminsky Fazzani Adam Salak oworonski Budnick Quenk O'Brien Ankuda Ties Wendro Lar: 457 493 Pritchards. Rawlings 5 sL 89 O'Brien ... 89 s3 Heinzman . 81 103 Keogh -..... 80 —eeeeeeeeeas “HAIR-GROOM” Keeps Hair Combed, Glossy ' Well-Groomed all Day “Halr Groom" is a dignified comb- ing cream which costs only a few | cents a jar at any drug store. lions use f{t <vuuso it gives that natural gloss aml‘ —~/well-groomed ef- # tect to the hair— | that final touch to | good dress both in | business and on social occasions. Even stubborn, unruly or sham- pooed hair stays combed all day in | any style you like. “Hair Groom" | is greaseless; also helps grow thick, | heaty, lustrous hair, = 2 o Miller 494—1379 Walters coville H. Bertint H. Johnson MeCoun Gangloft Curtis Politly Molyneuax 516—1447 STANLEY RULE GIRLS' LEAGUE No. One. Blum >, Conlon . . Sunburn . . Schultz . Burkharth . Becker . Burke .. . Conrod . Francher . . Borkoska ;| Gierochowski 1 chowski taking the center berth but 4 |evenings and ;land all the players Asman , Baliski 5 in the coming games. ARENA FOR CHICAGO Tex Rickard Looking Over Prospec- tive Sites For Structure Similar to Madison Square. Chicago, Nov. 3 (A—Tex Rickard, New York promoter, is here to look over prospective building sites for a contemplated structure similar to New York's Madison Square Garden to hold athletic contests and to cost between $3,000,000 and $5,000,000. Rickard saya he is unable to re- veal all his plans at present and that it may be several days before a site He came here several months ago to inspect building sites and had almost decided on a loca- ton when it was found that all the necessary land could not be ob- tained. PURSE FOR MATCH Chicago, Nov, 2 (P—Ed. gler” Lewls and Joe Stecher been offered $75,000 for wrestling match here, to decide, if possible, thelr championship claims. The offer was made by John Krone, veteran promoter, { T Jove CITY But between S 18. dicates! e =, —difference of opinion. tomer’s preference and agreeing with a shirtmaker's tradition there can be only one opinion—no dif- ference what the maker’s opinion We don't know a manufacturer who believes a shirt cuff should be large enough; do you? But we don't know a customer who admits it ought to be small, either; They reach us made our way—your way. Cuffs measured fairly, no attempt to save three yards of material in a twelve-dozen lot. Small thing, of course, like the hand of a watch; but it in- Tt indicates that everything in haberdashery and clothing is a g'oo<_1 bit better at Fitch-Jones. 1 National Guards to Open At State - BASKETBALL SEASON | | | Armory On Saturday Evening, November 20. | | The National Guards basketbal\! team will open the season at the | {state armory on Arch street on Sat- | ay evenig, No ber 20, accord- | |ing to an announcement of Manager |Clarence Lanpher today. The op- ponents of the local team have not | |been selected but the decision rests | between Branford and a New Haven | |team for the opener of the season | here. | | Joe Jasper, star forward of the | American Legion team of last year, | {has joined the ranks of candidates for a place on the National Guard | |five and he will probably be retained | during the coming season and will | be a good addition to the aquad. | (The team has not been lined up as | yet, but just at present, three good | guards are in prospect in Sheehan, “Butsy” Sturm. |Kildute and Rey- 5 |nolds, Taylor and Jasper form the wall with Solmansky and disporting themselves | {in center. It may be that Solman- |sky who hails from Hudson, N. 1l be used at forward with Glero- forward no definite deciston has been reach- ed on this yet. The team s practicing Wednesday Saturday afternoons are showing great fo Taylor is heavier this |year and he gives promise of having lone of the best seasops of his career He and Jas- per form .. good lo.king combination | it forward and with the center posi- tion decided on, the National Guards shape up as a real contender for ! state honors this year. Rickenbacker Co. in | Hands of Receiver Detrolt. Nov. 2 (#—The Security Trust Company of Detroit and B. 1% | Everitt, president of the Ricken- | backer Motor company, were ap- pointed recelvers for the Ricken- | backer company in a “friendly” ac- | tion brought by the Columbia Axle | company of Cleveland, Ohio, in Fed- | al court here. | Mr. Everitt, in a statement lssued | in connection with the proceedings, | said the axle company brought lhe‘ action at the behest of the motor company in order to prevent the case being taken to the state court. The statement sald the liabilities | of the Rickenbacker company are less than $1,500,000 while the assets are more than $7,000,000. The statement said the company wished | to conserve its reserve at this time. | FIRE IN PITTSFIELD Pittsfield, Mass.,, Nov. 2 (BP)—Fire late last night burned out the in- terior of the three story brick store and apartment building owned by Henry S. Blaisdell at 411-419 North street. A general alarm was sound- d shortly before midnight, bringing out all the apparatus available. It was estimated the loss would reach $100,000, HALL meeting a cus- so there you are. SALESMAN $AM DAWGEONIT= | GoTTm GET DFOME WAY — GUESS 'L\ T WANSAS CITY HAVE To B MY WAY ON THIS FREIGHT Globe Clothing House SHOE DEPARTMENT WEDNESDAY SPECIALS 10~ Globe Clothing House COR. MAIN and WEST MAIN STREETS NEW BRITAIN. DISCOUNT ON ALL SHOES YouRE EGAD, GENTLEMENwm = eufléb ALREADY, {E ELECTED, IT_ WILL MATOR I WE'LL PrRONE. THAT THIS GREAT WAITUP TlLL ABOUT COMMUNITY 16 DOMINATED FOUR A.M. THEN Go BY mj@zu.\csuce C,= o T G BY JOVE, T WIL gg“éi%fis‘a%sc CALL UP THe NEWSPAPERS INE THEM TRAT GET T FULL COUNT- ‘_g‘% e e w~ T GAY YoU'VE 66T A LANDSLIDE LEAD OF SIXTY OR 60, MATOR| we Y’ KNOW T4 GANG 1S THRowIN’ A PARTY AFTER Il ower BT THE GHOUTING—/— ervice, mc. = o el 7 ~— PR Whewt!