New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 15, 1926, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

22e1y g Spea>king of Sports fRniel Siasisiis s g New Britain fans outnumbered i0se from Weaver 2 to 1 in the same Saturday. 3] Head Cheerleader “Reggic” Ve- trano and his two assistants, “Butch” Mucke and Carlson handled the cheerlng perfectly. It is rumored | that the athletic authorities are plan- | ning on adding two of the fairer sex | 1o the cheering squad for the Hari- ford game. This would not be a good move | for the fairer sex is not so fair when | it comes to getting noises out of a | crowd. It would be better if cheer | leading be left entirely to the “men." ! Here's the prize one. Coach Ca: ' sidy went up to the gate and st ’ «d to go into the (Ii"d with the play- | crs before the game Saturda i | I “Here you, where's your ticket,” demanded the hard boiled egg at the gate. “Do you know who Iam,” Cas | answered. “I don't care, but you hetter have a ticket or you don't go in,” the gentle one at the gate in a volce that was not of the whis- pering haritone type. you apologize I will take the back te MNew Britain,” Coach told the over-efficient gate | n tender. Mr. Cassidy 4 his men got in tl‘f‘ | bus and were preparing to leave [ the Hardware City when the school New Britain ind the team to th. Members of the Hartford High school team who were obliged to Arink the hitter cup of defeat to the s in New Haven Fride ands—-rooting for W Two ex-car 1in and Hartford I will hold the lines hool teams »”‘“ annual NPT Foley of | members Jimry Roth Blucs, to he the final title nt to Princeton re in the T Satuy . on 10 V,Hv'flr hout o up their had run up an it Yale \<\ T howed a nd put up a pein: they 1 ot 2 "he Blue line was | - solid and was able to ndergast, but the Prince ! attack was too much, | passes to Moeser and | dly accnracy. ps the star of while Bunnell by taking the 1 occasions and Noble wa nt 2fJvs but was immedi- d had to be taken 1d, ane ove {aly injured rizht out a i in the comir Yale h sion 0f | and could not twgn them to | age much more thaly Harvard | 1s able to do. With a first{down on four yard line the team\went to cs, losing ground and then the Il 01 a mix-up in sig loft the ball field. Slagle, 2 handages. Harvard and s ~yzndicap; this most potent Jeat was withheld from th Jme. Tho score might nighet had he been in there. was Ot course, it may be pointed out that Yale's sho g against the Brown “iron men” was better than Harvard's, but it must be remem- bered that it was only in the Yale gama that, the miraculous Providence oven found itself and that it has nproved Yonderfully since time. Thed, Harvards' stand last vear against the Blue t not be iGrgotten, as history has a way of peating itsell. All in all, Satur- | aay's game did not give a prophet | much material on which to predic the coming tilt. Both teams have heen kicked aronnd and trampled on | o much that the game between | them is about as significant as one | between Plainville high school and | the TInternational —Correspondence school, but it looks as if it would be a tight game between two clevens retty evenly matched and keyed up | The Rah, Rah f College Boy— Couldn’t ask Ties for “Dog- gler” than these, Weo | | | | an | prices but | have them at are proud of the cnes at— $1.25 NY SAFLE SHop. 357 MAIN ST. “Suit” Yourself | defea | i i | preparation for the coming inte | last r ck Xept | ; c | in fc | Plonee that ! o | department; | unless NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, to wipe out earlier defeats with a final victory. The Boys' Club first and reserve teams will engage the South church first and reserve quintets in a pair of practice games at the club tonight at 7 o'clock. The club teams have al- | asy winners in these an- | ways been nual practice tilts and expect to re- peat their past performances, but the church mill make a fight. It will be the first workout for any of the | teams nga!nst outside opponents. CHEGKER CHAMPION WILLPLAYATY. MY Banks to Take on All (omers | Thursday Nigt Newell W. Banks, checker champion, will give an ex- iibition at the Y. M. C. A. on Thursday cvening at § o'clock. Mr. Banks is an expert chess player as well hecker player, and at the he will simultaneously. He will uy some of the checker games » blindfolded. Everyone who fs ed is invited to attend and the national as e Jn‘nlmn [ hm‘ kers he champion. Mr. Banks is at present working with J. Hefincr of Boston, in - tional checker matches. These matches have promise of being the greatest cheeker event of late yea cam will compose of 12 Mr. Heffner will captain | nerican team. The will be held at the Hotel Alamac in city during the in March. Friendly Indians Hit the Trail of th Frien zed in ‘the nvnt a few weeks ago, took their first hike of the season Saturday. Fifteen young “war- under the leadership of “T { Braddon, set out from the “Y" ) o'clock, and captured the cliffs ittle Meadow. After > top of a cliff a held, nd the “pow-wow" of the as foliows: Monday: ced The salesmanship foremanship c will | p. m. The Red Army of s Bible class will hold | 8 o'clock. The Daniel il mvct in the rtment at 7:30 p. m. The ment will junior class ; younger busine; m.; intermedi p. m.; senior beginners classes 108 public will meet ployed boy The em- brotherhood will hold in the boy's de- p. m. After the meeting, a Bible discussion group cot comprised of the employed | boys. At 8:30 p. m. they will ad- journ to the bowling alleys to spend the remainder of the evening. The in the phy rtment as follows; a. m.; junior older busine: ¢ m.; employed B club will and noon- m. after Wednesday: T} hold its reguiar day lunchcon which the mem club will use the bowling al Clark club will meet in the boys he physi- will conduct th church = Tl leys. The : The ional class vanced accountancy will meet &t T:45 p. m. The weekly entertain- ment in the furnished ol W, national! eh checker exhibi ind doughnuts will be sc three classes of the w ligious sehool will meet in th department at 3 p. m. The Achicvement ¢ meet at 7 p. m. and be ed in wood working. will cond chur er bu ployed boy Friday: foremanship meet at 7:45 p. m. boys' dey junor Hi-Y bowling at p. m.; junior Hi-Y meeting at 7:7 p. m. followed by a Bible class meet- ing at $:15 p. m ment: morning cld junior “A" class 4:15 p. m.; younger g 5:30 p. m.; employed p. m.; senlor class wrestling Banks, ampion following ..4:15 p. 5:15 p. the ational cla and sign 308 Saturday: Priendly club wili meet at 10 a. m. innior leaders corp, 9 a. m.; junior “B” class at 10 a. m.; junior class swim, 11 a. m. HAS WORST YEAR Chicago is experiencing one of worst football seasons since ftagg came o the Midway institu- tion in 1892. In their last four games the Ma- roons haven't scored a point, meet- ing defeat at the hands of Penn, Purdue, Ohio State and Ilinois. Penn and State won easily with the Thr Indi other pair winning by one touch- lown The Maroons copped their two frays, heating Florida Maryland. Then they stopped the dope is wrong, Stasg's charges are pretty certain of wind- ing up the chaso with slx st They'll be lucky to that matter, ma first and for SSES t football Tield when the other will find the new stadium game on historl it walloped Wiscor week-end. Next fall Wolverines with a capable of seating about §0,000. play chess and | ither chess or checkers against | matches | weelk | 11y ln\h an | nding | and | i i M. fyet to play Junior | 30 | department | writing will | 1 depart- | 9:30 a m.; | WOLVERINES FACE ' TOUGHEST BATTLE ta Eleven Next Saturday 15 (A—Michigan, Chicago, Nov. | whose early season hopes were the | brightest to win the 1926 Big Ten| faces the hardest test of | conference teams who have | um now two u~mu|nm undefeated in this season's campaigns. The Wolverlnes must defeat the {hardy Minnesota eleven at Minne- | apolis next Saturday to clinch or at| |least tie with Northwestern for the | | mythical midwestern honors. On the other hand, the Purple {tively light afternoon against Towa {at Towa City. Towa has lost all four {of its conference starts, while Min- nesota has a record of two confer- ence vietories, In addition the gal- loping gophers further added to| their record as a dangerous combin- | ation by running up the top heavy score of 81 against Butler Satur- day. finals by its close 18 to 16 victory over Ohio State, one of the big guns | of the conference, and while favored over Minnesota in the season's final, {may find the Gophers one of the most difficult barriers to their cham pionship aspirations. Northwestern's win over Ckicago, coming on the | heels of three previous Big Ten wins, |added to the prestige of the Evan | ton Institute as one of the midwest- | ern leaders. Outstde the confer both Michigan and have suffered defeats, the Wolver- |ines falling before the Navy, with | Northwestern a vietim of the pow- erful Notre Dame eleven, am for team honors are | even. GREENTEAR AND RUDOIPH | ence territory. Northwestern | World's Champlonship Pocket tribal records | liard Play Scheduled to End On Wednesday. | Philadelphia, Nov. 15 (@— ing the home stretch today, Ralph | Greenleaf, New York, and Erwin | Rudolph, Chicago, were tied for the {lead in the world's championship pocket billiard tournament whach | |has been In progress at the Elk |club since November 6. | Greenteaf and Rudolph each have won six games, lost none and have [three more to play. Pushing them |closely, was Frank Taberski, Schen- |ectady, N. T.. with five victories and | |one defeat. | Taberski who also has three games suffered his only defeat hands of Rudolph. standing: ter- {at the The Ralph | Erwin Greenleaf . Rudolph | Frank Taberski Harry Oswald . Arthur Woods ‘Thnnm Mueston . Arthur Pon; Pasquale Natalie . {Harol ! Pindle . | Charies Harmon High run, Tabersk age, Rudolph, 13 §-0. Today's card: Harmon vs. Pindl Hueston Rudolph; Taberski v: Natalie, and Greenleaf vs. Oswald. The tournament is scheduled t end Wednesday night. DNEUMONIA Call a physician. Then begin “emergency” treatment with RS B o1t BRNIE high av- men's department will | on coffee Here is your chance to get that “Guaranteed Ford at very low down payments. 1926 Tour., 5 Balloon Tires, Extras ...3 Car” 1926 Coupe, 5 Balloon Ti 1926 Rbt., Practically new, lots of extras 1924 and ’25 Tour.—A-1 1924 Coupe. Very good Many others at very Automotive Sales Used Car Dept., 86 Arch Street 248 Elm Street—Main Salesroom OPEN EVENI GS Physical Hlichigan Meets Hardy Minneso- | warriors expect to have a compara- | Michigan came through the semi- | so that| about | TIED IN POOL TOURNFJY: | Bil- 4| Stamford—Police refuse Runabout with pick-up bodies ......... NOVEMBER 15, 1926 'FLASHES OF LIFE; WOMEN SAID TO BE GETTING BETTER AND MEN WORSE lB) the Asso ed Press. | Phoenix, Ariz—There is a dxapu(v ' between weather — experts as whence comes bad weather in (h“ cast. Western irrigation projects, | S B. Dunn, formerly Uncle Sam’s forecaster at New York. | Storms from Alaska, insists R. Q. Grant, head of the weather bureau | at Phoc v Haven—Th who advocate \ml.l ion and nullification of the 1Sth amendment are to that degreo Col. Raymond Robins, g0 social economist, tells Wool- sey Hall audience. sts, for higher pay , soccer officials of the United States Association are or- ed to refrain from officiating in Washington—From a New Mexican es of the American Soccer desert a a scientist draws a moral | at cutting down trees. What is now a barren stretch was well wooded | 1,000 years ago, but the forests were >”‘ removed to make houses in the city | | Bigh as that of the college student of Pueblo Bonito. The verdict nf\‘” the same age, says Curtis Nell M. Judd of the Smithsontan | Wilbur, secretary of the navy. | instution i3 community suicide by | Bridg. United cter ates eailor i3 just as | deforestation. | Hartford—After working all aft-| Charles | | ernoon | on his automobile, Schmaltz took it for a accompanied by his son, Gustave, both escape serious injury ien express demolishes car crossing wit sight of wife mother Stovepipe Wells, Calif.—In the W | heart of Death Valley, the lowest spot of the U. S. A. 278 feet below | sea level, where the pioncers found [ naught hut a little waterhole in the broiling sand, there is now an oasis | | which is heing developed for sizht- | seers. A new artesian well gushes 1,000 barrels of water an hour. in and Hartford—Governor Trumbull Armistice night service talk at Bap- | tist church a the manner in which big industries have consist- ! T'»tix: \n'inf' N. J.—There's an ll]\ ently evaded responsibility in time | of WORK OF LI TEAM war, o [in from tho Attantie; THe great | curlosity 15 to be healed and kept in a tank built by merchants as an ! | added attraction for the resort. i | | Denver—Willlam Ben Collins is [m“ “bishop of righteous hell.” He and essistants are to try to convince | the country that hell is as real as it ever . The Liberal church or- | dained him because it notes a rising | | \4(]\1”“!‘\ to abo! BIQ, Three” New Haven, Conn., Nov. 15 (#— Glory for Yale in the defcat of the Eli cleven by Princeton Saturday is Yale Daily News which s that the game “disproved criticism made of the team oaches this season.” Pointing out that the football triumvirate, Big Three, Is now a legend, the holds that “its virtue will be inspiration to foothall of the sh popula. | future if judged by the final game | Arlington, V: day schools is predicted W. Rabson, economist. He think: religions education will be reduced | to the ten commandments and a few fundamentals taught in the public | schools. DI schools will b used for tea nal workers » people happ: the N New York—One of three persons living in New York is a Jew. The present Jew is 1,750,000, an increase of 50,00 in ten years. The number of | Jewish children is 38 per cent of the | child population. The figures come ;nw Jewish educational association. ! Redtora, One deduction | | trom prison records is that women {are getting better and men are get- | ting worse. Amos T. Bedford, sup- | erintendent of the state reformatory | for women, bases his conclusion on the fact that five vears ago there | were 5,500 males in state prisons and 800 women now there are 7,500 |mv\n and 700 women. out ;i fan ested and bowed down before a tcam compos- 4 of ters in the art of football. Yet there was glory in defeat. “Yale disproved every criticism New Haven—Winfield 8. Beche, ounder and president of the W. §. ebe company, hardware manu- icturers, dies at age of 75. New Haven—The church has failed to give a practical demon- | stration that a Christian fellowship possible, Rev. Henry K. Sherrill, Boston, tells Yale students. to In-| pping” of Joseph | klyn, said to have ne from New York cfere in | T. Lang 1 been New Haven—Pinned 11 and an electric ading newspapers at William Hartenztein, beneath truck, while | local station, 17, is (:H:lll)"‘ a tol—Collisfon hetween trolley results in & Charles XKonopka auto- | rious | of | n—Herbert Vissar, injured when hit PROSPECT 75 down res, Extras ... 100 down &0 down 50 down 50 down 50 down sh'ipe........ low down payments. & Service Corp. [3LAsseo WITH Su¢ STARS A CHARLEY TURPIN, HAroLD CHAPLIN BEN Now, saAM - SALESMAN $AM o TH_CLIEF- HE STePs ASDE AND Yoo FALL OVER, SEE 7 — CAMENA HATE TH' BURGLA You CHATE T!' BORGLAR Sl LES Go of | D. | at | | in | Calls Game Fitting End of “The| 1 m.; team and coaches this|and rivals Sat ng as fine a brand of (o as will be seen on any field. Not until the game was over was there any assurance of victory for either team, and in losing Yale won the approval of all who watch- ed the'grim battle. Fast, |hard-fought throughout, t! Jur lee Yale-Princeton game was a fi {ting climax and conclusion to The | Big Three athletic rivalry. It will orrow of the outcome dis ed |ana re | pe in {an inspiration { future 1f lin its long history. ‘Princeton and Yale we to foothall of 2 frier The football triumvirate is | v a legend, and its virtue will be the | judged by the final game | clean and | is | to start ivalry was apparently paraileled | by tual respect for the two in- stitutions. Yale was courteously re- cei 1 well applauded; Prince- knowledged the victor Yale a good loser.” INDUSTRIAL LEAGUR graciously W the Russell and and combinations which the others the leagu row nigh. De tomorrow night. They are & Erwin, Corbin Screw Rule & Level teams three are hailed as fast will make all ep to beat them out in campaign. are scheduled tomor- The first will be played Russell & Erwin and the Stanley all Two game tween |Corbin Screw and the second will {be be famous In fiction after the joy Two Good Games On Schedule At |1, ¥. M. C. A. Gymnasium Tomor- | row Ni; Three more in the baske Indus- Y. M ick Dillon will referee night and the remainder of the seae between the Stanley Rule & el and the Stanley Works. Two ore games are scheduled for of this week, one New Britain Machine nders and the other between Corbin and R. & E. tomorrow TEGAD, FELLOW | TUAT I RAID OUR WHAT AM'T 0 A Repeater MEMBERS, wr THE. COMMUNITY IMPROVE- MENT AND PRoTECTIVE LEAGUE. DEMANDS | DEAR OWL’S CLUB, AND FORBID ANY FURTHER MEETINGS Jos A WORD)- First quality tobacco,but inexpensively packed ~hence the price! OUR BOARDING HOUSE HOwwAwKD L, o WHY GeT W STEAMED UP OVER THAT24x GO AHEAD AR RAID UG WE'LL HELP YoU f WHAT NIGHT DO You GAY, $0's WE CAN ALL BE HERE? ©1926 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. By AHERN GURETHATS WHAT ) His CLUB NEEDS 15 A LIL FUN AN EXCITEMENT /e we (HY, TH "FIM FUR, AN FEATHER cLuB” HAS AN EDGE ON UG OF -TUReE. RAIDS /e WE BELIEVE the advantages of the soft foil package are so many, and its econ- omy so great, that we have elected to pack one of our finest pipe tobaccos in this handy form to at ten cents, retail gty By SWAN or Boy !~ (™ GlaD THATS OVER=- 'Y | NEARLY mu_zo” | HEY SAM - THAT Was B GREAT REHEARIAL | NOW WELL TAKE & Re

Other pages from this issue: