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'HURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1926, Speaking of Sports | The stock of the New Britain high school football team took a decided slump last night and that of Hartford high was boosted several points because of happenings yes- cerday. v the New Brit- ain team hi when Frank McG 2nd a tower o ! and defens: in_ practice th, regular center gth on hoth of. suffered a 3 yesterday after- noon and an examination by Dr. Urank Zwick revealed that water on he knee had developed which means that he will be lost to the team. Coupled with MeGrath's injury zomes the information that Bruce, ‘he star guard, is liable to be out of :he game with an injured knee, was hurt in the Weaver game and the bruise has not come along as good as it might. It has not been lefinitely stated, however, whether he will be in the game or not. kne On the other hand, the Hartford team will present its entire strength with the exception of Butler* who suffered a fractured arm in the Hill- house game. Dcegan, Gallivan and the other stars will all in game and Taylor, although injured will he in for a part of the strug it is reported. ves New Britain in a bad e with McGrath out, the center of the line is liable to be < and this will cut down the rength of the team both offensive- and defensively. "his 1 way becan st w 1ch Cassidy will do to fill the gap so made, is a ques- tion that s bothering him just now. He hasn't revealed his plans yet but, although worried, he feels con- fidc that he wiil bring a team to Hartford that will win the game this ar, The Hartford Dlues Dritain will meet in f sories a st game a from Hartford Velo- s hot-stove league I Dbeen smok ¢ as hard as ever and many are the arguments that n be heard in almost every quar- to the relative merits of both sunday 4 drome. T c ter will probably have a Tech star, and Don our Horse- ain - will be addition of Hartford Wrekoff, Geor iller of the famous men” while New B strengthened by the Morris, gnard last year. Toth te est lineups in the game me everything professional foothall ill he at stake pres cither team a the o notwiths ms will use their strong- heca it ther title of and just at rems to have the claims of nding. ins to stat neup in the vesterd ' some- 7 lilke the ly season first ing eleven, this being the first tim t it hore heen in somw weeks csemblance fo wh od the “regula “rtet used by oble, ion v The 105 con- “oote and hich plunging 1 twice and much use, but. » hast ball car- Blue has. TFoote has shown vear, nor has Kline, but h the four men working togeth a dangerous backfield is created. It is likely that this dang increased hy more deceptive plays and more equal apportionment of the hall-carrying than characterized the one-man Eli attack of the carly games. Kiine, the combinat sub- dued Dartmouth. Noble ha in nay not he of over The line, outs position, has at 1 of the pivotal t achicved final- Around a garage you're bound to get huré CAPPLEDBY AR - SHRLNEIRHSLE le gone after few applica- ions of simple remedy he came in from work in the eve- 3, & garage worker of Shreveport, La., felt a pain in his left leg above the ankle, and the next morning .it was badly swollen and worried him when walking. “I applied Sloan’s Liniment to it that night,” he writes, “and the pain nearly all left. I applied it again and the next day the swelling was all gore. For all aches and pa I find nothing to beat Sloan’s Liniment. I keep bottle in the garage where I work.” Sloan’s gets results because it stirs up the body’s own powers to heal itself. Just pat it on, and at once you can feel the fresh blood tingling through the sick tissues. Inflamma- tion, swelling, stifiness, pain, begin to give way at once. Get a bottle today and have it on hand, All druggists—35 cents. ar came | He | the | All-New The the | practice | The | will be | [ {ity. With Webster and Sturhahn | Garade guards, Richards and Benton at |ceieien tackles, and Scott and Fishwick on the ends, a strong forward wall is Princeton discovered this| yyen turday and had to resort lo”‘uu-rsun s for almost all its gains; this|Stohlson |augurs weil for Yale, for the Har.| | vard passing attack is not believed |as strong as Princeton’s. The cen- ter position was cared for by Look vesterday, but Garvey may be the | %% [choice of Jones to start Saturday | peg |and will certainly be passing back | Kawee before the final gun. | 70 a7 102 93— 24 102— 102— Bisson | Las | coach Horween quad shrouded in | the present week, His starting line- | up can only be hazarded at, and Horween himself appears to have |reached no decision yet. It is he- lieved, however, that French and | Guarnaceia will not be on the field | t the kickoft. These shifty backs | will probably be saved until a scor- {i1 ; opportunity looms or a desper- |ate necessity avises, then rushed in ;frr'sh to attempt to break away for scores. kept his crecy during elson Lipetz Warner De Calvin Montana Corbin Eiton iHandicap Yale's stock is going up during |the week, but a prediction would | {not only be futile but foolish as {well. Weather forccasts are for rain, and on a slippery field any- thing may occur. Chant Patrus | Hewitt | Alfred Fish, son of T. Fish who is|Hewitt | steward at the Shuttle Meadow club, is training under the tutelage of Vay | I'lood, former champton of Australia for his appearance in the 110 pound class at the amateur bouts, Friday | night. Rober Murph Curlick This is Fish’s sccond appearance | 1 in the ring here, he having boxed |1 under an assumed name two weeks | ago, winning in his first public ap- | pearance. Fear of parental objection caused | ! | the youthful mittster to adopt a | | -de-wallop,” but when the gen- | eward heard of the boy's prow- | a cloutsmith, he mere “Go to 1t, son ness as smiled and sai [ A number club sports hand to sce serve the lefts and righ factorily as his dad s es at the club. of Shuttle Meadow | enthusiasts will be on |} whether the lad can s as satis- s the edi- | | | i Val Flood, the b tutor in fisiology, will be remembered by many of the older fight followers as | | one of the leading exponents of the | manly art who plied their craft in | the ¥ nineties. Hauslor Johnson A, Koss SPORTING UNONS Amateur Athletic Body in Con- & ¥, trol of Olympic Plans | Fersi™ | Beterson 403 Mixer Tops SE70NRs i a 4Tt {HORWEEN T0 STAY WITH HARVARD ANOTHER YEAR Head Washington, Nov. 18.—(P— An open break between rival nation ! sports governing groups existed to- day, the culmination of a long pe- | viod of strife an aftermath to the launching of the 1928 American | Olympic organization. | The latest clash has left the ama- | teur athletic union more dominant than ever and in complete control | of the plans for this country’s par- | ticipation in the Olympic games at Amsterdam, Holland, two years hence. ¢ quadrennial meeting of the American Olympic association, a perpetual hody which merely sets in | motion every four years the actual | working furnished the etting for this climax to an authen- tic conflict that has found the A. A. ars agoinst a group the national collegiate athletic association and more re- { cently including the national ama- | teur federation and the Y. M. C. A. | It ended in a sweeping triumph for | the . U. forces who put into of- | [ fice their entire ticket, headed hy | William €. Prout of Boston, as suc- | cessor to Col. Robert M. Thompson in the presidency of both the Olym- | pic association and newly formed | | Otympic committee. There were all the elements of a pitched battle in the session of dele- zates of some two score athletic or- ganizations yesterday. Thrust back lin the opening skirmishes, the A. A. | U. mathered such strength as the | meeting progressed through a maze | of legislative matters that opposing | forces, led by Brig. Gen. Palmer | Pierce of New York, president of the | National Collegiate A. A., withdrew altogether from participation in the scssion and resigned from all com- mittee memberships tendered them. This is the first time such a pro- nounced split has marked the diffe cnces between these groups. Tts ef- fect on Olympic preparations, in iew of the wide influence of the C. A. A., in college ranks, is | ject to speculation. Tt is not likely | that the organizations led by Gen. Pierce will withdraw as units of the | | Olympic organization, but workin | for common imternational a scems indefinitely suspended. Former . Football Star and Coach of Crimson Announces Decision at Rally. Cambridge, Mass, Nov. 18 (P— Arnold Horween of Chicago who captained the Harvard eleven in 1920, and who came from the west this year to become head coach of football, will stay with the Crimson at least another year. The greatest football rally here in many yes announced his decision last night. Three thousand undergraduates crowded the Harvard Union to cheer Horween and the team which on Saturady will meet Yale at the New Haven Bowl in the final game of the Big Three. Aunnouncement of the lineup which will do battle with Yale war not forthcoming although some ink- chinery, seen game had been expected. Sever: positions were still undecided it was said and it was considered better strategy to keep Tad Jones' charges guessing. Horween recently was offered s contract by Athletic Director Wil- liam J. Bingham to remain at }a vard but he asked for time to think it over. Even now he has signed | no agreement and his decision will be only for 1927. The terms of the contract he w made public. The head coach predicted that for the first time this season the Crim- son eleven will be in perfect condi- tion when the whistle Saturday's game. “All have been overcome,” FIGHTS LAST NIGHT difficulties he told the phis. Fort Worth, Texas, (10). Detroit — Jackle Nichols, St. Paul, knocked out Johnny Debber, of De- troit (10). George Smith, Toronto, beat Bill Strob, Detroit (10). WITH THE BOWLERS ROGERS ALLEYS FAFNIR BEARING LEAGUF Balls 55 | Pichon Wheeler 394 419 Hinge Boxes e 68 Winchester st Apelgrin Cadrain 421 Outers 92 L102 Ralsonnault Todzle 104— 204 5 | game of Oct ars heard Horween | ling of the assignments for the big | s offered were not | Dallas, Tex. — Pal Moore, Mem- outpointed Dandy Dick Griffin, | | SPORT BRIEFS By the Assoclated Press. The padded-mitt game, already 3 ol hoasting Monte Munn, of Neb: of Centre, and the Sully Montgomery, other collego athletes among Farl Britton, famous running mate of Red Grange at Illinois, added to the roll. Britton has 2 er Humbert Fugazy New York soon. for a bout in N. T.” Lassman, York University Violets, intends to enter the ring upon graduation. Trouble has loomed on a eason. Quarterback Baysinger re- igned from the Syracuse squad fter attel ting to punch Referue ‘Svh\varlz during the rough Army 16. Harold Cothran, Lafayette's star ts le and a likely All-American prospect, has ~been dropped from the team for breach of training rules. Two Nebraska griders, Roy end, and “Jug" Brown, c fback, were arrested recently in a raid on stu- 5 | dent gamblers in Lincoln. A welterweight terror has in New York from Everton, Was | ington, in “Jimmy Jackie” Johnson, a youth brought from | spaces by Charley Cook, manager of Abe Attel, Goldstein and Iddie | Nuffman. ~ “Jimmy Jack” as wrought such dumage to gymnasium sparring partners of his own weight that now only middleweights | light-heavies will trade with him. Johnson makes his New York debut against Jack Kiernan next Tuesday. | SETILE GOLF DATES Differences Between American and Britain Associations to Be Troned | | " Out. New York, Nov. 18 (P—Long standing differences between Ameri- can and Rritish golf associati over dates for title fixtures involving | international linksmen were before | United States Golf association execu- tives today for definite settlement. Dates for the 1927 open cham- pionship in the United’ States have been tentatively set for June 24 and 25 at the Oakmont, Pennsyl- | vania club, the same week which the British ha ! nament. Efforts have been made by Ameri- can golt officials for several ye: !to have the British open pl | earlier in the scason, arguing that | the midsummer heat in the | States makes tournament play v | bearable while the h cour reach their peak condition much carlier than those in America, ROUT MAPLE LEAVES American Teams in National Hockey League Turn Back Canadians in | First Mecting. | New York, Nov. 18 (P—American in the National Hockey although boasting many an stars on their rosters have eded in routing completely the first i of the Maple Leaf repri sentatives. The opening night of leagie play league Cand ; : out a 1 to 0 win over the | 11 Maroons, world profession- hampion last season here. Boston Bruins beat the Can- adians of Montr 4 to 1 in Boston nd the New York Americans whip- d Pittsburgh 1 to 0. The Chicago Black Birds tripped | the St. Patricks of Toronto 4 to 1 im a charity game last night. | CeEEE e . | Leaps Off Cliff on His | Motorcycle, May Die | santa Monica, Cal., Nov. 18 (@ ! An unsuccessful attempt to leap | from a 500 foot clifi on a motor- | eycle and descend to carth in a chute yesterday probably will cost the life of Fred Osborne, pilot and stunt aviator. With a parachute strapped to his back, Osborne drove off the Hunt- ington Palisades, north of here, planning to open the safety devic as his motoreyele cleared the eds of the precipice. The parachute failed to open, however, and the | motoreycle dropped into a mass of ! telephone and telegraph wires, hurs- sborne to earth. Pl ans d he chance for recovery. has It blows for | FOOTBALL NEW BRITAIN HIGH s, Saturday, November 20, 1926 FIELD, CLARKIN Senior High School, « | | | SALESMAN $AM SRY 2AM-— 'M GRERTLY IN You ,BND \ WANT You To COME QUT T THE HOUSE- TONIGHT, AND MEET My WIFE AND DRUGHTER. INTERESTED OH »oy '~ LOOXING - heavywelghts, may find the mame of | INVITE COUNCILS T4 DISCUSS BREAK rested in Confab Be- 6 Yale Int giant tackle of the undefeated New the open | and | punches | s | p | Heavyweight 1y saw the New York Ran- RESERVED SEATS, $1.50 A limited nuniber of these are now on sale at the eral Admission at the gate——8$1.00 - “TRAT NIGAT - WIFE AND DAUGHTER ~ WONDER |F SWE'S 600D MOST BE GREAT To MPARRY A RIH GIRL sked Promot- | ov. 18 (A— ind Harvard ng about a the recent relations v Haven, Efforts of Pri student coun con hre Ihave d off the | gridiron for many star players this | invitation h two councils to meet in the off the Yale council here Saturds The invitation sent to Leo Dale president of the Harvard student council, and Joseph Prendergast, president of the Princeton student couneil follows of » student councils have \ interest the develop- nt meeting of Harvard and sw Haven to diseu the recent cach in athletic relations. On be- half of the Yale councils, we cordial- {1y invite you to meet in the offices of the Yale college council at any bour you may appoint.” The telegram is signed by James w president of the stude | council of the Sheifield Scientific | school and Russell L. Post, president of the student council of Yale col- | I | Princeton councils urday The Yale Daily News, comment- | ing on the proposed meeting of representatives of Princeton and | | 1arvard, says today: | “The announcement that repre- f senfatives of Harvard and Princeton | ill meet to discuss the pnssnvnnv; res athletic ope. Yale Uni- has greatly regretted the of events which led to the paration. There has been no time | w sentiment of the uni- | v has not been in favor of do- ! ing anything which might have prevented a break. Yet ther has obviously n nothing which | Yale could do. Even now, our only | possible contribution to the re-union is to say that, were it possible, we | | would consider it a priviledge to| elp in the re-establishment of am- | This we do say ning an acutc icable relations. most emp e set for thelr open tour- | | that quick. Champion Has No Written Contract With Rickard— Fnited | May Fight Tor Fugazy. New Yok, Nov. 18 (P—Gene ney has no written contract to fight for Tex Rickard and probably will defend his newly-won heavy- eight crown next summer in a battle promoted by Humbert Fugazy | The lack of a written agreement hety and Rickard was lisclosed yesterday. Tunney, in confe with Fug expressed een Tunney That young Miss down in Georgla who said she'd like to wear red flannels apparently never wore them. She'd be “tickled to death” all right. Suits with the seraioh and tickle taken out at $1.50 50 NYSAMRLE SEOPD 357 MAIN ST. “Suit” Yourself HARTEFORD PUBLIC HIGH HARTI'ORD Vocational Building tween Harvard and Princeton | | before tk ss to fight for that pro- tisfactory terms could be ranged. Rickard admitted that he had no m than a verbal agree- ment with Tunney under which the champion was to meet the winner of |an elimination series this winter | among leading contenders, discuss the T | his willir moter if Fug will m further with | he announced champion will explain his reasons itting with Rickard, Fugazy Tumney is reported dissatis- d with the financial returns of his fight with Dempsey in Philadel- phia when he received $204,000, ac cordinz to Rickard. 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