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NATIONAL GUARDS OPEN SEASON WITH PEXTOS Visitors Have Strong Compination to Battle New Brit- ain—All Members of Local Squad to Be Seen in Action—Buristol Endees on Slate Thursday Night— | Burritts to Meet Comets of Torrington in Prelim- ! inary Game—Dillon to Referee. l]AYT[]N TRIANGLES TOBATTLE BLUES Leaders in National Leagne Meet Maulligan’s Team Tomorrow Nov. 20 — Dayton's New Britain \muhlnr'lnn Sloman .. 4 Right Forward Taylor .. Reynolds 1 Sheehan . i Xilduft ..... Lot | The National G will open up | the 1926-27 bask season at the | state armory on Arch street tonight | when the Pexto A. C. quintet of Hartford, Southington takes the floor to battle |, - the team that New Britain has en- -"”‘l"‘”'ésmfh& 1’1'1-"(1 ; nom of ::A- h for the state | 5TeAtest football machines in the ;ere]d ::1:{12'tc&nu.~er1x10n or SEEALR oatisl imoiinea IR s a';(h" % bl n i 1 ord Blues at tho Velodrome h ¢ Southington team will e e an imposing lineup and one t e Ronn counted on t) give New B vt et tat i tough battle for honors for the night. |20 it S ELlY The team has been practicing for ¥EE SCHeTtt <ubs closs onto two months and Is now M rling perfo ready to step out and put Southing- “]‘h::;“‘z:"fmhmw s, ton back where it belongs in the bas- | (G 1000 €0 AN T Kothpl mane | Mahrt of Dayton is heralded as one The Guards have also been In|o¢ tha preatest fi-dd generals in ihe practice for several weeks now and {p.otecsional game and he has Manager Clarence Lanpher is hoping | cxcellent ball . rriers in Doblisr of for & real set-to tonight In Prepara- | onio State and Beckley of Mic tion for the start of the Bristol En- [zanseate” Abbott, formerly at Syr- dee series of five gamen in Bristol 1iieo i the strong man, backing 1 next Thursday night. Sloman who [ipo™rorcaide on dofonse and harl. has heen called So‘mnn:l:y ‘hnr]vtn. I o fore, will start at forward paired up | E3l with Mert Taylor. “Red” Reynolds | Dayton will meet a n will do the jumping in center with [[(TRUOIL B from 1 Sheehan and Kilduff at the ;:unm,‘” > ‘; ; e '1)'1’-"11 -\x]x.?r.u.. . positions. During the game, every [[1ArY Brain and Eddle McEvoy have man on the New Britain squad which SLEE e numbers elght men, will be put into Ll Ty Sena o i the game. Joe Jasper will take his T Sunday place at forward, Gierochowsk! will ainst the Buffalo Bisons that } £0 In at center and “Butsy” Sturm is among the ieading leather-toters will appear at guard. \d pass grabbers. Therefore Man- ning has carned a regular post. Preliminary Game Torrington (,u ard 1 excellent ree- asting victories The ¢leven com of Miami and tackles, pro- y aligned L Shrimp Toley, former Syracuse star, and Vic Radzevitch who earned his place on the fields of Connecti- cut also will see plenty of service and Chuck Corgan will handle the team {from his quarterback post. Student of Hartford and New Britain high schools have been in- vited to witness the engagement, Iproviding a cheering section should e v the BI to victory They will be assisted by Tasillo's band and the Dunn-Nally trio. The probable lineup, Hartford Me( Burritts Yacobowicz ... 5 Right Forw Havlick . Gesesen Left Forward ; Genum F. Zaleski Gennette Roberts e Martin Left Guard The Burritt A. C. quintet will ap- r tonight for the first time as the climinary attraction at the state armory to the main game of the eve- ning. For opponents, the Burritt management has selectec the Comets of Torrington, one of the teams that. last year, gave the Burritts one of the hardest battles of the ve locals have two mew m lick and Gennette, and have form a likely quintet this season. The first game will start o'clock and the second game begin at 9 o'clock. Dick Dillon ¥ referae. Dayton Dame) inn (Notre auers, (Miami) ckle am (Wittenberg) Guardo dine (Independent) ter Reiter (Marietta) | Right Guard Calhoun (Ohio State) it Tackle Fenner (Woittenberg) Werws Nichols O'Neil at O'Connell BLUES 10 TACKLE WEST END TEAM OF BRISTOL First Corgan ahrt (Dayton) 1 (Ohlo State) Left Halfback Beckley (Michigan State) Right Halfback | 1zeviteh Abbott (Syracuse) | FIGHTS LAST NIGAT New twe Foley . | Manning . Local Eleven to Try to Pin Defeat On Team Which Beat Them Last Year. ! The New Britain Blues will go to | Bristol tomorrow to play the W Ends of that c The West E have the edge on the Blues by vi of a 13 to 12 win last year but cording to the way the New Bri Doys feel, it will be a different story Assactated Prese York—Tod Morgan, E fro a 1ds ue | ac- untor | Carl ie An- Arnold feal Ans- New champlon New York (15) Wyoming, won Brooklyn, on kout (6) Les My tralia, heat Solly Secman, York (10) Itimore, lig Duane, derson, tyan, the team y and tion for n full have been on this put through a stifi practic Thu les M —Willie pion, de corps (8). Fla.—Willie wointed (10). fnical In e Ptomey, of fight. The : hating a very sic year. The Bristol team has d | ed some of the leading teams in the state including Crimsons of Hartford, setts, and o Blues are West Ends their f ams will line up West 1t; T8; York 1 fassachu- 5 All-Thomaston tw ont to st de follow o)t Ig: knockont b dianapolis and t the he for the La- ro, ©; imrau, re; Morlino. Maxie Holub, Ak- Jones, Atlanta, Ohio 1s d Tommy France, AV e Watkins, Pratt, qb; rh and Perller le; C. Puppel J. Argosy, c; Che Kredar, re; Kaspro 1hb; L. Puppel Dr. another pract tomorre and every mer BILLIARD Shunted Ou of Meto- Chuck Ohio—Chiet John outpotnted polls (12) Fidel Rignt Tos lo, dtan 0 Labar champion, Lynch, San was disqual- ornia when Lynch Harry | 1l Young to t d a techni ession Y K u. TO t of e When Wolfe He Loses Two Games To Wallaer and Rondeau. Good mat night in tours lors spru by downir tim o was battle. battle Rond 07 ina go Iy fough deau a'so §9. to 190 comebac Coneh ir Will Win Sehool Team Says It of Hizh Feam Plays Regular Game Today T8 idy the game following Herald 100 t i s 0 N ¢ wn sl il Ro and W ot had mors This am 1ght foot- v team r football Ronde Wallae: Kasprow DrAle .\ v 2 Zucchi ..... 00 Colokey 4 ’ 1s well tomor- past sea- high hool am T good them not tfords s sterling performers from Ohio | two | Hank | that | 'his opponent bel |low had a hard punch and when he lanything. | featherweight lonto the - [ pounds. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, NOVEMB ER 20, 1926. SLASHING BOUTS SEEN AT ARMORY Four Knockouts Feature Best Card of Season Last Night A card of nine bouts, a fiasco in ‘which Joe Howard's opponent was thrown from the ring by Referee Joe {Wurst of New Haven and {knockouts furnished the entertain- ment for the largest house to attend | the amateur fights conducted by the Mohawk A. *%, at the state armory on Arch street last night. The card, |despits the disappointment furnished in the Howard-Getz bout, was the best t heen put on here. 1 sensation of the night was the of Hart- of Hart- boys entered the pcating between Paul Te ford and Bill Katzmart, als ford. Both these iring to furn cit slugging matches ever seen either fn the amateur or the pro- onal ranks. Both possessed of : hammer blows, both kissed canvas a number of times be- T¢ in the second round, landed a pik: driving left over Katz- mart’s heart which paved the way or a knockout which followed a few moments later: 170, two nitial a Sprin ithe first landed hard punch fo Springfield’s mid-sec- tion and put him down. broke two ribs. Last night, Katz- mart, who was favored to win over rzo by a knockout, started out ith a destroying rizht and sent 20 to the floor three times first round. Terzo came back before 1 round had ended and caught Kit went down, Tn the second round, Terzo went after his oppouent like a demon. It 4 wild demonium both in nd outside the ring until with a last effort and everything behind it, wded flush on Katzmart's d the fight was over. Another bout that proved a sensa- jtlon was the initial appearance of Johnny Rose of this city against I Mike Williams of Fast Rose won by a tec in the third round ring science an” risking disqualific tion becanse of a backhand blow, {Rose showed that with training and right kind of tcaching, he will avel a long w before he Ithrough. Jast night. he displayed a sleep producer in band and had he known just how to send them in, the East Hartford lad would ha been done for in the first round. ish, matche inst an older and stroncer battler in Joe Gined of Hartford, was knocked out in the |second round. Fish was lending by a wide margin on points when the |end suddenly came. ke for the local boy to wait for 1se the older fel- the weeks ago. i ong, he 1 knockout Without Al {sent 1 in, it meant “finis” Fish {has a nice loft hand and when he used it, Gined was powerless to do Continuous use of this fwas winning the fight for h, but [the knockout turned the tables, Fish is being trained by Val Flood, |golf professional at the Shuttie M dow club, and in the days gone by, lone of the greatest exponents of the | bare-knockle art. |a comer in the oungster and it may |be that the knockout last night will Ao him nore good than a string of victories. Batt Pattalino of Hartford, champion, had state game colored hoy, New Haven against him, but Hartford fighting machine things all his own way. The Haven boy stood up punching during the first round and in the second, Battalino sent him ropes, dead to the world. Ray Hall of Hartford, met his match in Jimmy Moe of New Haven | wnother colored boy and lost the decision in four rounds Hall could not get going while Moe showed & the had ween Ed Getz of Hartford and Joe Moward, state middleveight champion, came the first round when Getz hit the canvas without being hit. He made a good attempt to look ‘“goofy" when he got up, but Referce Joe Wurst sent both to their cornert and waved Getz out of the ring. prize offcred for the losing pa pant in the bout was held up by A. A. U. commission. Getz was substitute for another colored fight- r from New Haven who sent in word that he had been injured i automobile aec The results of the entire card were 118 pounds, Teddy Darr, won from Wa Britain Jok a technic Williams, East Hart- pounds, Art Pollowitzer. won over Walter Gorh, , in rounds. Hartfo co bet as follow Hartfo deck, No 14) pounc scored Mik 14 nds; w Brit- knockout over o 1m Joe Al three 1, nocked in Bill ¥ in second ank Polo of Det 1 Jayoed Hartford t John A ronnds, +of N in z DeMar of out TWO IN Dubl ] HUR' tAID Wi Du ider s morning, ar e the elvil guard bar umpin, three mils si It is reported of the guards at the barracks we wounded, it two re four | one of the most ex- ! ppearance in the ring against | Id boy and at the tap of | Ter- | jaw | Hartford. | any | is | Eddie DeMar of | New | under terrific | in | " | covering el in | 333333800888 NEW BRITAIN HIGH AND HARTFORD HIGH STAGE ANNUAL GRID CLASS’C TODAY—MCGRATH AND BRUSE BOTH TO START THE GAME—NATIONAL GUARDS OPEN SEASON TONIGHT—ALL-NEW BRITA!N PLAYS NEWPORT TORPEDO TEAM—BOUTS AT ARMORY The punch | in thel | rt on the jaw and the big boy | | | | | football ten ground and defense and | with the ¢ Clarisin foothall itain 1 on ~rnoon classic High ams Clalre in ! m is starrir is clever 1 returns th ption of ! at th in punt At 2 Hartford, between and Ha; will the the ford take by frenzied thousands of students from institt It was a mis- | ridiro par | riot of blue anc the Hartfo | will be | Hardware ( Yo Harvard | eheering | bands, and lusty babel of so lflvfl footb: {ers, frenzi nd mad i packed in Proes on the { while mud-ca the jeeted mien will | for a brok: | of a go The impr frent for | the New B {sehool team In 1598 wa a search of m] that City te | ain lost the then a played |1t will b » fror te ms | emer, the « [ous to 191 school was | only ams pla nee then the s riva or sec! noise Val thinks he hag | telligible to th until a|tions of gladiat the has won which the third decade of four vie 28 teams of mightily glory of itions, v th colorful stands the one white rd section whil red and gold ‘ity delegatio lling tros ¥ of hs, school making inst will all Surro n racious (e sidle the hroats und that w Waving sla 1 partisans, hum the s one will 1d. ¢ groun try 1o find heart in the 1s ked other en At has b past fow in and H 1s met for th s disproved today old “Herald" f th the Hards met in game, 12 to 6, 18 games, two tie games. los m the g marks the rivalry Publ in = Hartford successul torics ov years. In ed to a tie the count a 10 victories to three in favor | ford. The only which we | Hartford which was \r- | Dunn and the 1921 | coached by impression school home field erroncous. between game second the Re 22 'to 12 was teams of recent sugeesstul in stopping | were the 1919 coached by nd 1 George M. that New never d until 1923 Tn 159 the two game on will 11 1 spectacle et a brok 0 o'clock the a nuz i plac the n of il e initlated e tre end Pr cotored hat all with ppy incr LEADS WARRIORS TODAY CAPTAIN TIMOTHY ( nory | fight thoush it was lost years ain's goal ¥ 1 and Gold team 1 score. In 1896 12 to 6 took y a rec ford wrtfor ird High n-Hart not me has heen for but sin nine riod the ind | Hart- vears tea David itai 1 in 184 in n| the games to | of | Vi- $3302322000222101¢ 31 Beses: S Rresese Phota by Johnson & Paterson LAIRE ir on the N, B. H e to on th Martford 6. Hartford Hartfo, H v Britain v Britain Britain Britain MCGRATH TO PLAY I'rank McGra ld Bruce, guard on th hool team, will Hartford IN GAME rt in the after- them, a very ived believed to be e, M noon. Inju which were serions v Coach G ind he inter he game this ¢ uries to their eve va in Both have ternoon LCOND STRAIGHT gecond n they at th End I. ound for swamped tht Wi Pioneer field on Ellis street runs in which considerable vas gain were responsible most of the scorcs. :x::::x::::;xr*. illATES FIXED FOR AMERICAN TOURNEY Open Goll Championship to Goiiict it British Lvent Nov ~—{P— The golf championship » 23 and New York, American open will be played June 23, at the Oakmont club, Pittsburgh, | despite interference of these dates with the 1627 British open, schedul- ed for contest in Britain on the same dates. “The decision of the T association rende cipation of golfing vo countries in both and may provoke an war dates for 25 ed States impossib ars of the | tournaments | toternational future fixtures | Golt over that will endanggr all intercountry | mpetition in golf during 19 :duled meeting of prof ot England and the U in team matches prior to the n open probably will not s well as the British in- this country for the ic. s Americ: | take pi vasion tional cl of made to have the date of the British open changed officials said, as American cxecu- tives of the golfing body had been given to understand in a conference with heads of the Royal and An- cient club of Great Britain ) summer that the date for the BFit would be advanced. lained that courses ed peak condition in America whilc heat of J to contestants her and dr The princ ments of Britain and the United States hith- erto have been scheduled two weeks apart to allow golfers of the two countries to participa both. The district qualifying rounds of the At 1 open will be played on Monds . 8. G. A. offici Jecided e amateur champion s place at Minne- kahda clu the week of August » public links cham- he Ridgewood club, Augus to 6 and t rden City, N. Y., on a ds undeclded. Bobly Jones , who holds hoth British and American open 1 defend only his American crown year. e will also scck to re- the amateur taurels taken from in the national champlonship year by George Von FElm, of Angeles RETAINS CROWN No effort wjli be rnament ricans comp nd r omfort and pionshin of the titles, Tod Morgan, Junior Lightweight Champion, Wins Decisive Victory Over Carl Duane, New York Nov. 20 (#—The junfor cight crown of Tod Morgan, attle boxing master, still re his blonde thatch today y jarred down over one ear. n heat off the third attempt f New Yorkers within a year to dislodge the diadem when he won a 15-round title tilt from Carl Duane, little Gotham Ttalian, in Madison Square Garden last night. Tt doing so, Morgan took more punish- ment than he was forced to assimi- late i knocked out the former champion, Kid Sullivan, in six rounds anu casily disnosed of Joe Glick in 1. Duane belted the champion about the head with viclous brought ream of Morgan’s month, 1 although unable to floor his ri poured such a stream of strai clean punches to Duane's head that there was no question of the holder's superiority. Mor, blood the coast frot hoy 'Strong Agg! Fpesadansinoradidotosite s AR st i s ese st et sy | NEW BRITAIN ELEVEN 0 BATTLE NEWPORT SAILORS regation From Torpedo Station to Be in Game—Locals to Use Heavy Artillery in Prepara- tion For Start of Series With Hartford Bhues— Visitors Have Won Every Game But One—Coached Bv Former All-Amc‘riéan Quarterback. COLLEGE CONTESTS ... All-New Britain | Holzheimer l|on|on Gnasdow togers Newport Gatfnoy sheldon Cottriss e { Thousands Pour Tnto New Haven na- | in | two previous hattles when he | hooks that | title | Hunphries . Murphy Connelly Sturm Collins | Hunt . | Barnikow The All- DRAW BiG GROWDS : Morauo Fleming Darchet a mps .. Coles w Britain football team {will have a tough assignment tomor- row afternoon when it meets th Newport Torpedo Station eleven & Memorial Ficld in Wiliow 1rook park. The scrvicemen from the Rhode Jsland base baast a splendid record this season, In all the games this ason, team has dispised of its opposit with one exception, that heing Holy Cross coll loven numbered among the un ball teams of the east. The Tor- pedo propellors met defeat | hands of the college gridders by the score of 7 to 0 but the game was ont st fought that the Holy has bad th n, sailors from Newport coached ard directed one of the selections of th ter Camyp for his mythi -Americ a few y He was one of the sensations of the country as a quarterback for the Naval Academy at Annapolis, M. The Newport te to its laurels b London Subms for Yale-Harvard Clash 20 A—With fow g 1o view, ading college elevens in action, dom of the cast flocked to at-searred flelds today to make most of the waning football scason, A N cpportunities York, Nov. remainin, w t rarks appeared on ough absent inst 1 familiar names ro. particularly Per vania, Cornell, Pittsburgh, s and Columbfa. T spectacle of Harvard battling Ya in the bowl New Haven was suf- 1ccess The color and ¢ of an ancient fend renewed for the last time in the name of the historic big three drew 78,000 people to Yale's mas- sive structure. Hotels were jammed roads clogged, and 92 special trains poured th r uman cargot i New Haven, despite four son losses for hoth the C: d the Blue and Princeton’s com- subj fon of both in the Big Three contests this seve which is aten foot n elovens of ars 5o plete previous i am recently added defeating the rine Tase team | wthet and two who are stars on the team out of the contest through in- Three cther conflicts, ona an tersectional classie, furnishe counter attractions. New University, carrying the cl [tion of one of the east’s few unde- or united eleven against at Lincoln, hoped to swéep | the last barricr to an unblem- ished record over the strennous of icets of the cornhuskers. George town, boasting an array that press- ed Navy to the limit to win, engaged {Fordham in an attractive engage- ment of leading Jesuit €chool rivals. | The undefeated record of Lafavette suffered ifs last assault of the ston, Po., where by host planned to rise to new ts to dispose of the arch riva The West Virginia mountaine had a man-sized opponent in Car | ne h at Pittsburgh but other ! eastorn leaders bided their ttme |POrt depends in rge measure the | confidence which the football fans {time agalnst minor foee hefare final \ppearances in major confli of this city will place in it against the Capital City eleven. { Thanksgiving Day. Army met Ursinus and Navy 'l"w kickoit '“""’”““ practice date with Loyola nal workouts before the hattle in Chicago, Nov. 27. took on w Hampshire a tonic for Colgate Thanksgiving, and Syra- lcuse met Nlagara as a workout for | Columbia. Holy Cross took & respite against the much-brffeted Boston University clan and Boston | weather caused | College had an casy opponent in [the games. Providence College. Rutgers clased | follows: inst Swarthmone and | Wranat, hed with Western | tackles; Coveleski and Snappy. guards; Roden, nter auarterback: Spinney halfbacks, and \\' Spartans, M Miller and ind Doyle, Murphy Olson, 5 to scor Manager Martin is bringing his s‘rongest lineup here tomorrow to meet Captain Bar powerful grid combination, New Dritain will have its strong: lineup in t game as a hard game Is anticipated The sailors will arrive in this city {tonight and will stay at the Delancy hotel, The far interoste New B3 | with the Har {week from tomorrow {showing of the & ty will be keenly % of t a ) in and on th m aguinst New- had | will take the rice Brown ms were I series about a to 1 month postponement The lineups will he Steamrollers, House ends; Abatti and P the scason 1 Bucknell fin: Maryland “Whippet” Carr, diminutive Sy. {cuse back and a leading candidat for an all-American berth until in juries forced him out of actlon in |the Army game five weeks ago, is | ready for the fray if needed against Despite his long in- activity, Carr still stands high among | rastern scorers with 59 points, al- though he has played in but three | games this season. | fulll 1 Woods, tackles; McCabe, quarterback; Skelly halfbacks, and Seine The Steamrollers would {sames for the mnext two \nrh\\ i“.‘h any teams averaging |pounds. Call Manager K. Rod | 162 and full- | Niagara today {back. It May Bv Co 1edy to Some Folks But lts Tragedy to Me. NEAT ™MoR NING l NINTH BALL AND CAME LAMME D | WAS DRIING OFF T TEE AND THE HIT A TREE TRUNK By BRIGGS OH H- BOY) 1T WT THE. TREE AND CAME 'T‘ACK AND_IJLAMMED (T MAY BE CONgOY FOR So FoLtrs BUT 4TS TRAGEDY = BACK AND ME. JUST UNDER I'LL B&T HE GOT SLAMMED IN THE EYE, ALL RIGHT ¢« THAT PART OF_’—\'fi ! Te ALIBI ISJ CORRECT THAT'S_AWFUL| STUFF THEY SELL NOW- 1T MAKES A GUY cgoceo = =1 "N JGOT T N \ [THe €YE BY WOW . | A Gotr BaLL! | SEE You THAT'S A LOST THE | HOT ONE! ARG\JMENT