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HARTFORD.NEW BRITAIN SERIES CALLED OFF—SOCCOLI SCORES ANOTHER WIN IN TATE LEAGUE—INDUSTRIAL STARS SEASON'S PLAY—LEGION TEAM BANQUETED BY EDDY-GLOVER POST—NEW BRITAIN HIGH MEETS WEAVER IN HARTFORD INDUSTRIAL BASKETBALL LEAGUE STARTS SEASON Stanley Works Wins Opener From New Britain Ma- chine—Champion P. & F. Corbin Team Wins in Tough Battle With Landers—Teams Show Won- derful Improvement Over Last Year—Fairly Large Crowd Witnesses First Games—Big Fight for Title The Industrial Basketball league | Arel, rg opened up the 1926 season last night | Aronson, 1g at the Y. M. C. A., with two snappy | Recano, Ig . games played before a fairly good- |his crown, is to be determined by {recommended that a tournament of FIGHT T0 DECIDE FEATHER GHAMPION Blimination Tournament to Be Staged for Kaplan's Successor New York, Nov. 10 (M—A new title holder in the featherweight di- vislon that has lacked a champion since Louis (Kid) Kaplan forfeited the process of elimination. E The New York boxing commission football teal ference la HARTFORD - NEW BRITAIN SERIES IS CALLED OFF | Managers Not Wishing to Play Thursday Unable to Agree On Substitute Date—Thanksgiving Morning Game is Also Cancelled — Mulligan Wants Two Games Or None—May Set Two Other Dates Later in the Season—Locals Meet Brooklyn Horsemen. LEAGUE PLAYERS ries between the All-New and Hartford professional s is off following a con- all yesterday after- The Britain se LORD 15 FAVORED T0 WIN OVER DAY Waterbury and New Haven Bat- tlers to Meet for Title Waterbury, Nov. 10.—For the first time since he was graduated into the main bout class, “Eddie” Lord, promising mitt product of the south end, shows his wares before a home | town gallery in this city on Friday night. Lord tangles with Georgla Day of SOCCOLI DEFEATS BATITLE FOR GRID TITLE Rockne’s Eleven Comes East Saturday Seeking Re- venge—Yale and Princeton Indulge in Long Signal Drills—Bill Kline Called Home By Death of His Mother—Brown and Harvard Prepare For Game —Teams Driven Indoors By Heavy Rainfall. New York, Nov. 10 P — The trouble-laden road to the national tootball supremacy stretches ahead of one of two mighty elevens, Army and Notre Dame, as a reward of sibed crowd of spectators. Judging the 126-pounds be held with the |P00R and into last evening between from the exhibitions turned in byl the four teams in he two games, 4, |Winner succeeding to Kaplan's the Hartford and New Britain pro- {moters. Inability of the managers of {liner of the boxing show being pro- the league will be faster than ewx"’];\sr\x‘r. .. before and the race for the pennant | Parker, rf . gives promise of being the closest | Luke, It . | ever staged in the Industrial league. | Holst, ¢ . 1 | 0 The New Britain Machine Co., and | Paris, rg the Stanle - Works started off the | Hallin, rg . season with a game that was sizzling | Feldman, 1g with excitement. These two quin- | Gotowala, 1g tets last year were tail-enders b\lt( the play last night was fast and both are very different outfits from last| Field goals, Bucherl 7, Darrow 2, vear. Tre Stanley Works won the | Nester, Aronson 3, Jasper 3, Luke game but not before the pl 3, Holst, Parls, Gotowala 3; foul, tew t had been in | Bucheri 2, Kaminski 2, Jasper, e sccond game, the|Luke, Holst 2, Paris 2; goals from | champio P. & F. Corbin five met | soul, Landers 4-12, Corbins 6-16. up with the newly organized Lan-|Referee Dick Dillon; timer, Mullin; | ders, Frary & Clark team and prov- | scorer, Crean. {championship. |heavyweight champlon, drew the se- | | As the first step, the boxing solons suggested that Bennie Bass, of Philadelphia, be matched with Red Chapman of Boston, with |? the winner meeting the survivor of |¢ the coming test in Boston between Chick Suggs, New Bedford, Mass., negro, and “Honeyboy” Finnegan. The Massachusetts commission has already sanctioned the latter bout as a title match. Two prominent boxers were indet- |1 initely suspended yesterday by the commission for fouling opponents. Lew Tendler, Philadelphia welter- weight, and Harry Persson, Swedish vere penalty. The commission refused to sanc- tion a flyweight title match between ¢ will have a hard time this season winning the champlonship. MEET IN HARTFORD Cream of Simon Pures in Capi- Stanley Works Win | The Stanley Works registered the tal City to Be Seen in Action | first victory of the year over the New Britain Mac quintet by the Hartford, Nov. 10—An amateur | score of 32 to 21. Getting away to a fast game in the first half, Buttmakers scored 18 points to for the Nematics, Murphy who | boxing show that promises to be the | best ever offered in Hartford will | be presented at Foot Guard hall | Thursday, which is Armistice night. | played for a time with Landers last | in center for the Stan The cream of Hartford's amateur | Works last night and he was the | scoring machine that enabled the | Workers to get the lead that eventu- | ally gave them the game. He scor- ed five fleld goals in the first half nd was ably aided by his mates. K and Eric Anderson were the only Machiners who were able to find | e k n this frame. he New- :\m::s;& 1:”,‘ :l :{rfi,flf fu? 1;,,]boxing talent will do battle against players were rusty in shooting. {poxers from Holyoke, Springfleld, | The second half saw the two teams | Terryville and other Massachusetts | battling furiously on even terms. and Connecticut towns. The winners scored 16 points to the| Bat Battalino, state featherwelght | losers' 15. Smith found his eye In |champion; Joe Howar, another state | this inning and scored four double |titleholder; Pinky Kaufman, regard- counters and Erny Anderson shot in [ed by many as the best amateur two. Both teams worked fast onscrapper in Connecticut; Ray Hogan, the floor. The score: Eddie Camp and Ray Hall are amonz’ Stanley Works the bowe who will spread their wares Fld. on this Armistice night card. 5| Kaufman journeyed to Lawrence, | Mass,, last Friday and defeated the New England champion, flooring him | in the first, second and third rounds. Though Kaufman holds no title in this state, there are few in the East 4ot his weight capable of holding their | own with him. He is a comparative- ~7 |1y new boxer in these parts, having 32| come from Ohio, where he held the * |amateur welterwelght crown. There will be at least ten bouts on Thursday night's card, the idea > it being to make of it a gala amateur Brny Anderson, 1t boxing event in recognition of the Bacon, 1f . ) | holiday. Krause, ¢ . i Swanson, T8 Whitney, rg Eric Anderson, g Carlson, rt Merline, 1t Saimond, 1f . Murphy, ¢ Woods, ¢ . Flis, g Schwab, I8 . Abramowicz, 1g 2 Eric Anderson .. 1 N. B. Machine Fld. Ttl. | Emith, rf . H 21 *Cages goal in Stanley Works' bas- ket. Field goals—Merline 2, Murphy 6, I Flis, Schwab 2, Abramowicz, Smith 4, Erny Anderson 2, Krause, Eric Anderson. Fouls—Carlson 5, Sai- High School Will Have to Fur- mond 3, Erny Anderson 1, Kreveer | Dish Football Rivalry This Ye Works 8—22, N. B. Machine, 5 | ,‘i"“:“'zfi;pf‘“c‘;oflf“’“' T Decision of the managements of | Corbins Score Win. the All-New Britain and Mulligan | The P. & F. Corbin team, cham- [Blues football teams to call off their | plons of the league last year, held |series for the professional champion- | the edge omr Landers in the szcondlfi‘“l) of this state leaves it up to game of the evening and eventually | the high school teams of both cities | to furnish the Hartford-New Britain won the game. The Landers quin- (1O tet failed to get going in the first|rivalry in football this year. i half but outplayed the winners in the second. The first frame ended with Corbins in the lead 19 to 6, but the final score was 38 to 30 showing Landers scoring 24 points in the second half to 19 for Corbins. The Landers team showed fast pass work equalling that of Corbins. “Micky” Bucheri scored all of his team’s points in the first frame get- ting two field and two foul goals and he continued his good work in [the major outfits of the state. In- | the second getting five field goals |stead of the test which Weaver wa for a total of 16 pointa Luke scor-|to give New Britain, it will fall in ed most s points getting |line with the rest of the push-overs | ers for a night's|that have tackled New Britain this car. Weaver was outplayed in every de- | partment of the game in the contest | with Tartford High t wee 20 to 0. New Britain to outplay the Weaver team equally as well to prove to t} fans that it is as good an outft | Hartford, Many of the nni are of the on that some stiff dummy tack- | practice not be wasted | « that es and the travel to Hartford to play the Wea- ver High school team, and a week from that date the annual ¢ | between the Hartford and New Brit- | schools will be played. | Weaver High school showed a | great deal of promise in the early art of the season, but as the sea- | on went on it began to show noth- at would put It in a class with ai ing t Both teams were off in shooting hut this can easily be corrected hy practice. The manner in ers worked the floor them evenly departme plenty of which t last 1 matche Tanders 18 last n as ng fort. | stand out | detens | weakness The only at t at Gordon > only man on cpendable tack- body is that team who i3 a Members of still wonderin sccondary d 8ood Cigar“ all-ways! Saturday New Britain High will |, |ot his jersey. Elky Clarke, British champion, and “idel Labarba, who succeeded to Pancho Villa's world title at the death of the little Filipino. Clarke | must meet test opponents before facing the champion. Charley (Phil) Rosenberg, must defend his bantam- | weight champlonship against Bushy Graham, of Utica, N. Y., without any previous matches, the board decid- ed. A tentative date for the Gra- ham-Rosenberg match at Madison Square Garden has been set for Jan- uary 7 but is dependent on the champion accepting the challenge Graham has filed with the board. | When this Is done a license will be | given Rosenberg to fight Graham. The challenges of Joe Dundee, Baltimore welterweight for the crown of Pete Latzo, Scranton min- er, and Mike McTigue for a bout with Jack Delaney, the light heavy- weight champion, were set aslde| temporarily. The six-month period | allowed a champion before defend- | ing his crown has not yet expired in | the case of Latzo and Delaney. | SPORT BRIEFS | Ik it Harold “Red” Grange just can't seem to keep free from reports of entangling alliances. Today he rises to deny that he is engaged to Mary McAllister, the movie actress who starred with him in the movies. | Grange said: “I get engaged to somebody eveir onc: in a while without havin; thing to about it. I know Miss McAllister very well, but as far as geiting en- gaged is concerned, I haven't even | a prospect.” t I v “Lighthouse” Harry Wilson, ace of the Army backfield, and Mike Wil-| son, Lafayette's galloping sopho- more, who are making a family af- fair of tho race for high point scor- | » ing honors in ‘he east with Ha to stack individual talents each other next season. .afayette and Army in 1927, Cadet | Wilson probably will b ecaptain of his team and Lafayette may have the | prestige of a 1926 season without de- feat. | T r { | While Gene Tunney was training |, at Stroudsburg, | with Jack Dempsey that brought |, him the heavyweight championship | of the world, the popular ex-marine promised the townspeople he would return for a visit after the fight, win or lose. Gene, back from his Ber- muda vacation Thursda that promise this coming week-end | ! s the guest of Mayor C. E. Edding- | T A banquet will be held in his | t | er. honor Friday. side baseball, most of the The mystic number * figures prominently in coming Notre Dame cla ing of the pot h. \tial national cham- | who admitted he pions will be held on Nov. 18th With | with eleven stolen end. | game, said that in Charlle Born, crack cadet sporting the figure 13 on the back In thres of the an- |, nual games to date, 13 has represent- ed the team's score. Tod Morgan, of lightweight champion of the world, arrived in 2 York yesterday for ten-day trainiag period in prepara- | tion for his title clash with Carl e, of New York, in Madison » Garden, Nov. 19. Morgan d Joe Glick of New York in | carance there and more | tly took the measure of the vet- cran Johnny Dundee in the west. Seattle, Junior w FEDERALS ORGANIZE ° Junior Basketball Quintet Plans to Start Out On Busy Season This Winter, all team, The Federal A. C. bask of the foremoat city last ir, has organized f 1son and is looking for unes. On the squad this year ar itell and Morey of 1 ear's S hurch Resery I and McGuire e Klopp, form tional team for cen ers will * v signed up later. derals will try to sccure the hool gymnasium for gumes y would like {o hear f the | t School Reserves, Sou t toserves, Boys' club or teams of like Manager J-ck or games as soon one mior tear » comi $ ine ind le 2213 econd calibe MeGuir sible Approximately 350 million gallons t water are now being used anr ¥y for steam purposes on Americ rallroads, Hartford men wanted two games or none. casting about for another date, and played a little Days, not be a holid or Hartford, | could |change the Buffalo game on Sunday so the teams prepared to meet to- morrow. a small attendance greater loss than both | managers decided not to play tomor- | {row's game at all. | Mulligan {on ¢ |gers p | feeling: !both teams. of the Al with | Brook! will play with game will be pla 1 |Tield in Brooklyn, kickoff at 2:30 o'clock. 'LEGION TEAH BANQUETED Larry | summer, was presented with a gold n |six potnts In the lead 5o far, are due | tendered the boys last night at Le- [blood, against | gion ry | watch by As an add- | street. The preser wEAVER SATURHAY |ed feature of the slated meeting of | hy Commander gan cepting the gift, | fhis wer, will keep | Of th Ik Army- | which The 13th meet- | stressed all summer. | greatest all-arou Command hation Off | Dr. ry Ginsburg, N by given three resoundin ms to agree on a date for | me other than tomorco| Bysehall and Track Gups Pre- s mentor| - Sented at Industrial Gathering he two tea cancelling the s, Manager George Mulligan is The summer season of Industrial athletic activitics was officially clos- cd last evening with a banquet in the About 150 baseball ers attended and enjoyed a asty banquet served by Mrs. A. Kronholm and her staff of capable assistants. be that the serles will be | ter on in the season. | The games were originally sched- sled for Armistice and Thanksgiving but when the announcement Armistice Day would | either in this city Manager Mulligan at- empted to have Manager Dailey play | _President Robert Wilcox of the o wame Saturday. Manager Dasiley | Industrial Athletic councll was toast not have his team for mmfi}mstirjfgr";u eve‘sflns‘ 2ad hde ntre; b i | duced Johnstone Vance, head of the and he asked Mulligan 10|, 50 My, Vance 1n & few well chosen worc | athletic trophy to Captain Ernest | Hicks of the Russell & Erwin track | team which won the annual Indus- From appearances, there would be | (i) (101 meot, - at the game| " cupiain Hicks responded and stat- and instead of risking ajeq (pat his team was out to win the eams have | .up three times and thereby gain T, the | ycrmanent possession of it. Mortimer Camp was then called on and he made t may | was made tha date This could not be done, o Saturday. hursday experienced already th Then, Manager | ated that the second game | rhanksgiving morning would be | called off too. crs Frary & Clark base- | team. Captain Eddie Goeb re- There was no break In relations' ceived it and in expressing his petween the two teams and the man- | thanks stated that he hoped the In- ed with the friendliest of | dustrial League would be continued Efforts will be made by | because he belfeved that it develop- ttle an agreeable date for | ed better baseball players and better men, C. H. Barnes, general secretary of the Y. M. C. A of the Industrial since its organization in 1920. He cxpressed the hope that the year- round activities of the organizations would be continued in the years to come. Manager Rawlings of the Corbin haseball team urged all to back the Basketball League for the sake of zood sportsmanship. Secretary Bryce Long of the Industrial coun- cil asked for a vote on whether ayers preferred a twilight or ¢ afternoon league. The gue won by a big vote. as no prepared Prog after the dinner because of the f that the Industrial Basketball league opened the season. All present were given tickets to attend the games. | 5 [“Kip’s” Wife Asks More Counsel Fees Mangan, who coached the| New York, No 10 (®—Leonard over post boys’' tean “mch'lilp Rhinelander's upp.\'ul. from an the state cha order denying a new trial in his suit or annulment of his marriage to ander, of ne 1 interest with st an additional fees ship L both to s Immediately after the conerence | jesterday, Manager Edward J. Dailey New Britain team closed Manager McNeeley of the vn Horsemen for a game with he American League team in Brook- yn Sunday. The locals will stack 1p against Harry Stuhldreher again | his Sunday and “Shep” Bingham Britain, 'l ed at Commer Athletic council BY EDDY-GLOVER POST Mangan, Coach of State | Champions. Presented With Beautiful Gold Watch. Larr; won mpionship this quet | Alice Jones Rhinc today s hington |an arsument ag made allowance of $12,000 counsl . H. Peits ana |for the wife. j rief file the court, The suc ul mentor, in ac- | ™ 3 et aid that he would | Rhinelander when his annu his time again |Sult was tried a year ago, contend- thought of any |¢d that even the $6,500 counsel fees oot ANV | iready paid Mrs. Rhinelander was 1d foothall were ) Fhipn. Only in the Stokes and and added | ginan” cas o much been allowed, he submitted. sefore her marriage on Oct. 14, 1924, Alice Beatrice Jones, daugh- ter of a negro coachman, represent- ed to young Rhinelander that she was of Spanish extraction on her father's side, Mr. Mills said. the post at a L headquarters on W e willing to give xt year without Baseball e reward, he set foot in a theater. The constant effort to improve | heir playing ability and the sacri ice of 1ccomplish members er post boys' team 5y Frank Quinby of Milford, for-| presented the ‘Herald’ | the presentation | of the baseball cup to the champion- | reviewed the work ! | moted by the Sedgewick Guards as- sociation of Company G, C. N. G. This “home coming” bout of | |Lord’s should be the greatest test | | of his career for upon the outcome |depends his chances for the state | lightweight title. | Fighting before a favorable gal- | |lery and with the chance to prove to | | Waterbury ring fans that he is the greatest exponent of the leather | | mittens since Johnny Shugrue yield- | | ed his eceptre of popularity. Lord | should throw every ounce of fight- |ing skill into his attempt to win | over Day, | Beating Day, however, is a man's sized job. Like Lord, Day has jumped from the prelim class with- |in the past year and has established himself in the hearts of New Haven | fans as Chick Brown, Bunny Ford {and Jeff Doherty have in the years | past. | Lord Defeated | Only last summer at the Nutmeg | |stadium, Day handed Lord a beat- | |ing. Those who figured that Lord's | | cleverness would make Day look sil- | ly, were mistaken for Day rushed | Lord from the gong and kept on top of him so incessantly that for a time it looked as though Lord would be kayoed. But fighting like a trojan, Lord récovered from the effects of | ths early rounds and was beating | | Day to the punch, and handing the | New Havener a boxing lesson at the |finish. But the rally was to late land Day emerged a deserved victor. The count between Day and Lord now stands one all as Lord won the first fight in Hartford. Both | fighters are much improved fisticut- | te they stand now and Friday | night's contest should be one of the | greatest inter-city battles since the | days of long ago. | Lord is now training for the bat- | tle at Meriden while Day is occu- pied with his training program at New Haven. | | Besides the Lord-Day attraction, | |the Sedgewick Guards have an- other “lollapalooha” In the way of |a box office bet. They have secured | Baby Doll and Red Garren of the {eac. end in the openinz fight of six rounds. This is a grudge go pure |and simple and gloves will fly | through the air like forward passes |over the Yale secondary defense. | | These boys have been aching to get | !at each others and there should be no love lost. | * The semi-final of eight rounds will feature Phil Jackson of Bridgeport | and Frankie O'Brien of Hartford | whole Johnny O'Keefe of Hartford | | © |and Al Matero of Bristol participate |in another eight rounder to top off the card. | ' SIDES WIN The East Sides defeated the Paw- 13 to 0 Sunday in a hard ht gridiron battle. The East | Sides outplayed the Pawnees and held the losers to three first downs. | Ostertag featured during the game {with his kicking ,scoring two drop- ‘ku‘ks out of three attempts. He ‘:\lSD made the point after touch- |down after itkohad intercepted a |forward pass for a score. The teams | |will meet again this coming Sunday |in the second game of a three- |game serics. The Fast Sides will "pmcflt‘c Friday night at 7:30 o'clock. ne f 1 HARTFORD CUEIT victory in their annual clash of east and mid-west in the Yankee stadium | disposed |official averages of last week, Soc- Saturday. Almost the same Knute Rockne machine the Army humbled last vear 27 to 0, a new green team then, is coming back east hungry for re- venge and primel for victory by de- cisive conquest of all sectional op- ponents. Georgia Tech, a representa- tive southern ele.en, and Penn |vouths, grown bigger, stronger and more experienced have flashed a |sweeping offense and rock-ribbed de- |fense that need only surpass the best in the far-west to be conceded the country’s finest if Army is toppled in defeat. The cadets, similarly, have mop- ped up eastern opponents with prac- tically the same team that whipped Nogre Dame last fall. Victory over the silk-clad gridders of South Bend along with triumph over the Navy, conquerors of Michigan, when the service elevens meet in Chicago Nov, 27, will place the soldiers squarely on the national football pedestal. The rain that has flooded the east drove a few elevens indoors. The ‘l'cmaindpr held practice with wet | balls on treacherous gridirons to give |players a taste of conditions that may prevall for the big games on ‘!hc week-end. Coaches were cau- glou: in use of stars to prevent in- jury or re-opening of old hurts on |the eve of many major contests. . | While Army perfected a forward pass defense in the driving rain in the light of huge flares along the sidelines, Yale and Princeton toolk coli now stands tied for third place | [eir soakings in long signal drills, the first serious workouts of the with McPhartland, of New Haven | e ioon e ke S i e e and his followers are watching for | seio e Threo mnechs rinceton, with i i Saturday. him to go Into the lead in the sec- |15 % 4 it 56 | Harvard already a victim, needs on- |1y a win over the Flis to clinch the Muldowney Loses |triumvirate title for the second Muldowney, representing Rogers |straight year. Yale suffered a severs Billiard rooms, lost again last night {blow when Bill Kline, star fullback to Deno of Meriden by the score of [and veteran of thres years' play, 100 to 86. The local boy was lead- | was called home by the death of his ing at one time with the score 75 to |mother. 45 in his favor when Deno got| Excessive molsture cut short the going and gathered in two good runs |Brown practice for Harvard, but the to bring him the lead and he fin- |Crimson gridders, planning a deter- ished up on Muldowney with a good |mined effort to halt the Bear's surge margin to spare. |to eastern heights, hammered away at an overhead attack and defense. FIGHTS LAST NIG Navy, behind locked gates, also fea- HT tured the air game. The Georgetown struggle has taken on a new threat in Middie eves since the Hilltoppers Jacksonville, Fla. — Young Man- |defeated Syracuse and showed a uel, Cuban lightweight champion, |[powerful offense that will menace beat Tommy Jones, Macon (10). Joe |the Nuvy’s und.Zeated record on Sat- Beach, Newark, N. J., knocked out Joe Houston, Jacksonville (1). Toronto — Jackie Johnston, Tor- onto, bantamweight champion of urday. Columbia, refusing to take chances Canada, and Phil Verde, Syracuse, N. Y., fought a draw (10). in the rain, went over Pennsylvania Reading, Pa. — Babe McCorgary, formations in black-board drills but the Penn outfit took their wetting Oklahoma, beat Tiger Thomas, Wil- liamsport, Pa., ($). and tossed a flock of passes. Gil Dobie showed Cornell how Dart- mouth's passes wers thrown, while the big Green team was content Chicago — Ra; with a short signal session. There knocked out Ja was no let-up for Syracuse despite York (1). the weather and a long scrimmage Paterson, drove the team toward peak condi- Casper, Wyo. tion for the annual Colgate combat, fornia (10). ‘Two friendly foes of long stand- Los Angeles — Johnny Adams, |ing, Pittsburgh and Washington and n Bernardino, beat Tommy |Jefferson, made no effort at serious York (10). Delos |work, but New York university’s un- Orleans, defeated En- |defeated Violets played with a soggy rique Ros Los Angeles (6). |ball and learned to hold it under try- Patsy Flannagan, St. Louls, won |ing conditions that might prevail from Dick Dehoag, Hollywood, (4). New Orleans Amos Carlin, Jeanrette, La., beat “Kid" Como, of Lake Charles (15). Muldowney Loses Another to Demo of Meriden at Rogers Dominick Soccoll, representing the Elmore Billiard parlors in the state pocket billiard tournament, came through with another victory last night in Hartford when he easily of Earl Sigler of the Casino Academy by the score of 100 to 42. Soccoli, displaying the form that as brought him near the top of the head this season, took the lead from the start and played a safe game all the way. He was satisfled to get clusters of 13 and 14 and then would revert to the “safe” to tie his opponent up. The game was played on a 6§ by 10 table with extra small pockets especlally built for professional playing. ‘This makes five wins for the local boy and two losses giving him a percentage of .714 and a possible chance for second place in the first rcund. Soccoli meets Deno of Meri- den in Meriden tomorrow night and his backers look for him to cop an- other victory. There will be no home games for Soccoll this week as last night and tomorrow night he has been sched- uled to play out of town. With the Miller, Chicago, ie Snyder, New J. — Eddle Anderson, ,» beat Joe Souze, Call- William agalnst Davis Elkins. READ HERALD CLASSIFTED ADS FOR YOUR WANTS I mer baseball captain and coach at ale. He gave them several tips on fining their game by playing in- points he How to Start the Evening Wrong mentioned being exac Coach Larry the ones Mangan had . Quinby, ar-record fou cae B FRIEND wiFra v ARE GOING DowN B Tw CoRNER To BUY A CIGAR AND You'lL BE BACk [N FIVE MINUTES held a Keeler was the time and Ha e il Other speake Harry C. Joseph H. Po Patsy Fred Ensworth, Harry Wessel the ladies’ 4 Orren and Supper w ovided ich was at the conclusion of the prog Coach Mangan hat on er 17, h he | would t | ach his charges AS You EmMER A GUN ide baseball. FAMOUS BALL PLAYI'R DIES TrusT ME FOR A SMoWE OUIE ['VE £eeN HELD UP lied here vith the American last night Brooklyn A Pink out six cutive times at b team i ociation is ST TO HANG Cal, Nov, 1 a fo an Catholie ntenced to 14, for the mur Los Angeles mvicted last week X- Santa Ana liy oodwin mer he Amerie: « rdoy Tar was ry rson roit's new traf s forbidding *c ' and front seat bits any one to ic me- an person sitting in his lap. BUT You MANAGE CRAWL To THE CIGAR STORE ONLY To FIND THE PROPRIETOR HAS ALS30 BEEN CLEANED ouT BY BANDITS | HAVEN'T GoT A THING LEFT THEY Toow ALL | HAD= 0OF" GE FROM YouR HOomE 'S POKED UNDER Your NOSE “AND THEw Ybu ARE RoBmeD AND HIT ON THE DOME Witk A BLACW Jacw/ — T THEN You CRAWL HOME AND LEARN THAT ROBBERS HAUE STRIPPED YoUR HOME oF ALL IT CONTAINED -+ AND ‘You ARE WITHOUT A ClGAR' THUS THE EVENING (§ SORRY | WAS [} ekt Dk UTTERLY RUINED BUT | WAS RELD UP-- 1 DION T GET my MEANING You Ve NOTHING o ME GET BUsY and UNTIE ME ™