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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1926. | Ton—113s | ed in watching Captain Eddie Barni- | Clarkson i REAI]Y I:[]R [iAME | kow sail into the Hartford line, We | Hoarth Sanborn 2 9 | Veckland | don't think that the New Britain |g i Week Belore Gridiron Classic cnongh clashes with the Hartford | team to make him want to play this game above all others and he should be there the same as he always is in =—mam any game that means a great deal. Nov. 24 (®—Soldiers’ | go's huge $10,000,000 | wdium, was ready today | }ror the 100,000 spectators who will | 243 Sl [throng it Saturday .for the Army- 238 | vdbers | Navy football game. | 91— 252 | Ward .. 5 420—1274 i % 14102 86 455 76 131 100 487 | Gunther Hulteen | Burke : Speaking of Sports L2IRIITIIIININIINNN ANTIIINININIILINLL Greek against Greek is a famous expression dating back to the da when ancient Grecian armies met on the field of battle and staged some of the most bloody encounter: in history, but no more bitter bat- tles have ever been fought than the one which will take place at the| Velodrome in East Hartford Sunday afternoon between the All-New Brit- in and - Hartford Blues football teams. 2122222888031 | the opposing linemen and with the . | team feeling this way, it's going to | be a great game. WITH THE BOWLERS COMMERCIAL ALLEYS EVERYMAN'S DIBLE CLASS LEAGUE | New Britain fans will be interest- Orches | 251 0. T 464—1363 Johnson | Bruno | Schultz | Carlson Faticont | Esmile Judd Hunter | Macy g Jack Chicago, | Field, Chict | municipal s 152 ikow is always Dest in the | critical games and Sunday's contest | will be one that is most critical for I both sides. We understand the bet- ting is 10 to 7 on Hartford and if it |is, a lot of New Britain money is We do not mean to imply that the ' going to he wagered on the outcome clash will be a bloody one, but we|of the battle. do mean to say that two teams of | football playrs will face each other| We have even heard that in Hart- 2day afternoon with one thought |ford, the people there are willing to ppermost in each and everyone's|het that Hartford will beat New | mind, and that will be to beat the|Britain against both the chances of | other team. Britain heating the Blues and a CORBIN SCRE WFOREM | Jensen Automatics Dennis Mac)Mullen Jim Ripple | who have labored | unceasingly for a year to complete the horseshoe at the south end of | the stadium, adding 22,000 seats to 9| its capac finished their work a { bare week before the game, . and other workmen concluded today the task of clearing up the debris and | making shipshape the site of one of the biggest rush jobs in Chicago’s Stone masons, 423 4 | Low Man White Army (EaRgetey Stcel 8 Gerlick Davis 1 Brill ! Dick Groat 8| 161 | 243 | 83— Penny Strom Squlre: | i Scheyd 434 Threaders 407 413—1202 | New Britain beeri thus, hese Hartford and lashes have al “hattles for blood” speaking in a sporting sense, No me could be played between representatives of this and of the Capital City other than one wherein the feeling runs high. Both sides will be ready for the conflict Sunday. New Britain will be n the best of form, but Hartford has a hard row to hoe. The Blues have a National league cheduled for Saturday after- th Ernie Nevers' Eskimos of Duluth and New Britain plays the Capital City team the next day. We inquired how it came that the two mes were played one day after the other and we were told hy members of the ran that New ‘Britain would be casy for the Hartford team Sunday. We know t didn’t come from the management beeause Mes: gan & Co. are well aware of what Is coming Sund about The Hartford management knows full well what to expect when the New Britain team clashes with the Blues, and those players who are considering the local feam an easy mark to shoot at, h had the experlence of heing in any Iartford-New DBritain games, “Big Toy" Donlon and Capfain f7ddie Barnikow of the local ecleven hoth hastened to answer tl Ack” reported to he made by Hartford players that both of these men will he put out of the game after the few Donlon said “T.et m com * was much shorter just emitting a long to the statement. The one* word of Ba a great deal to tho: know and the man who stops Parnikow next Sunday tainly someons whose light liid under a bushel all these years. The two New Britain players who d the season with Hartford are cager for the fray and we Peet that they will be like two wild men in the game. press the man, the game has been ternoon from This wi at it the time of ged for Sunday The cha 2:30 o'clock to 2 o'clock. effected because it is thought t will take a long time to play game The tickets which have been placed in Bridgett's Smoke Shop on Church street, are already going fast. New Britain will certainly be well represented at the game and most of the fans there will #e In a fighting mood and will be willing to bet their shirts on either team, The fans in this city will have a splendid opportunity to judge the strength of the New Britain team turday afternoon at Memorial Field in Willow Brook park when the entire squad will be out in uni- form for a strenuous practice. The line will be well balstered for the contest with four ends, four kles, four guards and two cen- ters while there will be seven back- field men available for play. w Britain’s line will play an im- portant part In the work of its back- fleld Sunday afternoon and with the line functioning the way it should, the backfleld will do its share, The men in the backfield are clever at all lepartments of the game while the line s being counted on to stop the liest that Hartford ean send into the fray. ew Britain's forward wall will be on its toes in an effort to outcharge —— Tomorrow Is | Thanksgiving and we're all thankful for a day off, too, in which to do justice to the of the king day—the Turkey. 357 MAIN ST. “Suit” Yourself being | Mulli- | former S but of these | Itie score and we are f{nclined to !think that there won't be any un- | covered money. | = | All tho south side of the fleld has |been reserved for New Britain and [the cholce seats are on sale now at | Bridgett’'s Smoke Shop. Those get- | ting there first, will have first pick of the seat CUPID THWARTED -~ ON'EVE OF GAME | Army-Navy Selections for 1,700 Men Mean Disappointments ! Chicago, Nov. 24 (A—New trou- bles added today to the worries of the committee charged with select- ing 1,700 girls to accompany cadets and Annapolis men to a dinne dan on the ecve of Saturda Arm vy football game. | The committeemen were just be- ginning to breathe easier, after an eraser had apparently saved them, when he completion .of the list of 1,700 was accompanied by discovery that a majority of the service men had made thelr own selections rartners. Revision of the list, however, plunged the compmittee into further difficulties today, for when Annapo- lis heard that hundreds of compan- ions chosen for them would thus be disappointed, some of the Middies filed last minute requests that their choices be ignored and that the committee use its own discretion, | They even suggzested, a member of the committee said, that the com- mifteemen not only make their “dates” for the affair but also break nts previously and person- ally made ¢ of them vide partners, we will, teemen finally *decided. break no_d want us to pro- the commit- “But his dance is really one of the |¥ minor parts in the two day gram, but,” a sighed, “it's caus pro- ed the most diffi- & As the lis' was announced last night, more than 1,000 names were those supplied by the guests, with every state represented. A major- ity were from the Chicago region only ahout 500 wer partners selected by the committee. men, who fortified themselves today with a reserve list of debs, co-eds and stenogs. OPEN | COURT SEASON | Boys' Club Quintct To Meet New | Haven Railroad Five On Home Floor Monday Night. | The Boys' club will open Its sea- son on the home floor Monday night with the Railroad quintet of New Haven as opponents. This team, | composed of employes in the home office of the New York, New Ha- ven and Hartford rallroad, gave the | New Britain array a tough battle {last year and promise to give even {more trouble in their second trip | here. The club will line up with Captain Nick Gill, Henry Kraszew- |ski, Pete Zapatka and Jake Par. | parian forming a formidable quar: |tet of forwards, John Kley at cen- | ter, and Pete Sl yingin” Levin, and Joe Goffa as guards. There will | be a preliminary game between the | Boys' Clgb Reserves and | Church Reserv this being an an- | nual affair which is always a tooth |and-nail battle, Dancing will fol |low the madin fray. tendent Dwight Skinner wil here a succession of fast teams for Coach Ray Anderson's charges to tackle. | curtain raiser will be as follows: December 6, Dixies of Bast Hart- ford; December 18, Meriden Paw- | nees; December 20, Laurels of South Manchester; December 27, New City | Five of Torrington; January 3, Wa- ‘tvr!rury Boys’ club; January 10, Le- [1and A. C.'of Springficid, Ma tween the halves of the Waterbury | game, Fritz Klambt, physical direc- tor of the club in the Brass City and an acrobat fresh from the | vaudeville stage, will glve an ex- hibition on the parallel bars. | Pittsburgh to Have Harry Greb Memorial Pittsburgh, Nov. 24 (A — City council has approved 4 proposed memorial to the late Harry Greb, former world's middlewe t cham- pion, but not without some dissent. Counciliman W. Y. English said he would favor a monument to Greb s a boy of the navy, but as a pu- | gilist—never.,” Declaring no city ever had erected | a monument to a pugilist, Council- man Robert Garland said he believ- ed the great majority of “thinking | people” in Pittsburgh are against the memorial. “Perhaps there may not be an- other city that has honored a pu- gilist, rved Councilman James F. Malone but remember, ‘Pitts- burgh first' and let the city be the first." Put to a vote, the project, spon- | sored by the Harry Greb memorial | committee, was approved, five to | three. ¥ FRATERNITY ALLEYS HART & HUTCHINSON LRAGUE Corbin of | | we | | weary committecman | ¥ On succeeding Mondays Superin- | bring | The six games following the | | Green | Paganein Dykens | Low Man | Kalberg | Laskowski | O'Neil | | Hamilla Vincent Smith | Schidler | | Kramer |C. May ... Leupold 99— 287 58— 282 Heinzman H. May Walther 350 300 265 266 | schaefter | Canawell Rawlings HART & COOLEY GIRLS' I Live Y-ers 195 208 266 191 B. Dahlberg A. Corridan M. O'Leary E. Johnson Rinky Dinks M. Zabrensky ... 76 7 A. Dahlberg E. Carswoll W. Adarnaltls KAENIR BEART 78— 15% 78— 168 26— 180 Martin Peterson Middleton Wiekwire Weigand Bergren Rechenberg . Dlemond Kilduft . Winchester Brophy Koerber Gringras Maerz Hazelnuts civeneees 63 67— 129 48— 99 103~ 188 | 8. Buckowski | V. Buckowskl | A. Crowley . 51 .85 198 28— 416 Butternnts Moore ki Hatch 213— 443 i 230 STANLEY BUSH LEAG Packards Adams .78 | Ryniec Kaminsky Grey Miller | Ginter Sack | Nick Roziansk! Forestand! South | | Staubly 470 451—1405 249 | Vollman o 247 | Hines Cavalll Kenna Romano 105 59 395 461 |Cody .. Martine Greco Bates Low Score Herdleln Busll SALESMAN $AM BY TR WAY PLANS ¥oR 3 | mastering the 97— 281 | 108 199— 395 | 68— 141 | 148 Taag | MOOD “’h\g as passengers, shot and k — | tha Chinese soldier guards, the pur- 76 |plles and furniture. 5 287 | HAT'LL BE AL PoR _TODAY, S6M — KE ARE OURl HE 5 | There are one Baldwin Rerg Holt J, Corr . Daly Kiely B. Corr 5 | AMERICAN ATHLETES ENGLAND LEARNING GAMES Both College Oarsmen and Football Players Have Trouble With British Methods Oxford, Nov. mer Amer n oarsmen now at Ox- ford are having their difficulties in intricacies of the English stroke, old football stars from the United States are having | a still harder time in learning the technique of rugby, the FEnglish equivalent of Amecrican football. | Four American football stars of | first rank are in the new group of | Rhodes scholars at Oxford. They {are George R, Pfann, former star Cornell quarterback; N. J. Parke captain of Dartmouth’s champion- ship team, and Caleb F. Gates and | Morris Legendre, both members of last vear's Princeton team. All four of these men are now playing ‘“rugger” for their respec- tive college teams. Gates at Bal- liol college, Parker at Magdalen, and | Pfann and Legendre at Brasenose | college. Al of them confess to !some bewiderment in _getting the hang of the English game. One of the rules of rugby is that short lateral passes, as in American basketball. On mastering the rule, Ptann and Legendre attempted to |add a few American improvements Ito the game. As soon as the ball was put into motion in one of the early plays, Legendre ran far oft right end, well out of the range of the customary short English pass. Pfann, receiving the ball, proceeded to shoot it to Legendre by one of the long over- | hand passes for which he was fam- ous at Cornell. While the astonish- 28| ed Englishmen looked on in won- der, Legendre snatched the ball |out of the air and ran for an un- opposed touchdown. Although the play was perfectly legal, it was de- cided by the Brasenose captain that such long distance passing would |revolutionize the game. Therefore thy American players were request- ed to use the traditional short un- derhand pass in the future, EIGHT SURVIVE RAIDS |Canadfan Priest and Seven Nuns Have Harrowing Experience While in China Hong Kong, Nov. 24 (A—TFather | W. A. Fletcher and seven Canadian nuns survived raids made by 21 dif- ferent gangs of pirates on the steamer Walihoi, bound from Kong- for Yeungkong. The priest land nuns were robbed and locked |in a small stateroom for sixty hours. he vessel was looted. Twelve well dressed Chinese, led of the Wai- , robbed the |ser, cashier and clerk | hol, beached the vi passengers and leisurely removed the cargo of kerosene, food sup- The Chinesc | passengers were taken ashore by |the bandits and held for ransom. After the first party of pirates left the Waihoi 20 other gangs of robbers boarded the vessel at dif- terent times for loot. The last gang | was reduced to stealing the shoes |worn by "the nuns and Fathor | Fletcher's hat and coat. The nuns and the priest are from the Mare Knoll Mission. Although the piracy occurred November 11 the news was only published today with the safe ar- rival of the missionavies at Kong- moon, ' | \ | | 24 (P—While for- there shall be no forward passing, | the English content themselves with | history. hund seats in the stands. S | eers said today Saturd expected to be crowd in history. The stadium was vears It ands throw from I in Grant Park. There in the 15,000 temporary s added for the Army Plans call are 83,000 pe by statuary will be fin! races on either side of the fleld will huilt to provide more temporary | b | seats. n hundred pected to begin bowl three or four ho game. in Grant Park where ! cated, and no pers Actual guc hodies of th academies will announced today. from mili total Fro) 5 cadets are coming on special ins, and from An hipmen. " BXCELLENT RIDERS French Cavalry Officers Make cmu! Showing At Madison Square Gar- | den Show. Nov. 2 ance New York, officers of I ride. Licutenant Y. M. | mounted on Pair 1I, ! gelding, rode over jumping course in M | Garden in flawless form last night I to win the remount service cups at of the Nation- | the annual exhibition al Horse Sho Pressing I first place wa. | man, who had won the event on Monday on Reveuse, a brown | ninvill el ongue carried off second honor: | Entvies from the new world, no- tably the United Stal ada, had been favore European riders also third and fourth place Cassimir Szosland of the largest ke Michigan’s shore present structure, for no more permanent but after the big game Satur- day two heroic approaches, topped | huge throng, guided by policemen, pouring into No parking will be allowed n will be allowed in the park without a ticket. know P. Freminville, his fellow-country- Lieutenant G. J. night. ired thousand tadium engin- day’s crowd is foothall started three but a stone's rmanent scats to which s have beeh | Navy classic. ished and ter- is - the urs before the the fleld is lo- student y and naval 3,055, officials m West Point the napolis 1,940 | 1 | | 4 (P —Cavalry how to a fine bay the difficult adison Square tion. e closely for De Folongue hief jumping Mounted | mare, De ¥ol- | tes and Can- d to win but carried off s. Lieutenant Poland won third prize and Captaln Sr. Marques De Los Trujillos of fourth. Attendance at the st night took on ti of a first night at an evening clothes and Spain took show le appear 1 opera opera agafn | nee with cloaks generally worn by occupants of the | boxes. Especially pr evening were many m younger set, including season’s debutantes. | ominent embers of the | many of the | DISPELTHAT RASH | Why suffer when ki n troubles yield so easily to the healing touch of Resi Biff Bang 10 Rounds General Adm, Ringside Seats for 2 | Boxing Galore 10 Star Bouts Friday, Nov. 26, §:30 P. M. STATE ARMORY ARCH ST. nol Bing 40 Rounds . 50e T5e ,000 d Lucky Strikes are distinctively different. Why? “IT’S TOASTED.” This is not a mere slogan, but a costly and added process, To begin with, Lucky Strikes are made of the world’s finest Turkish and domestic tobaccos, properly aged and perfectly blended. In addition, toasting for 45 minutes improves Luckies in three wayss 1. Finer Flavor. Toasting for 45 minutes develops the hidden flavors of the world’s finest Turkish and do- mestic tobaccos. 2. Smoothness. Toasting for 45 minutes removes all “bite™ and harshness, hence never any throat irritation. . 3. Freshness. Then the tobacco is suddenly chilled. This seals the flavor in and insures constant freshness. "The added process of toasting brings extra goodness which accounts for the growing popularity of Luckies. ¢ “It’'s toasted” That’s Why Luckies Taste So Good OUR BOARDING HOUSE M i ‘M R (VT ot T o= g GIRLG WAITH —qhouahT T ~ ey ARENT DoING 5\DE WIGE | ANTHING, e ap T JF OWTZE 1) WOULD BE WHILE SUSTICE |/ 40 \unteH -TiHE Houem”ms\l WouLD H BE CARRYING ON!:[ HOOPLE AND 11 \\0BYERVED BEFORE WE [ 1 uofed 1o DERBY HEAR |F “HEY/( DECIDED-T0 MAKE || gj3e5Tin! —TELL ANV A RAID ! wer COARZE \ou CAN GEE JOKES! 2] | voR JOURZELWEZ THERE 1N T EVEN A GLOPICION mm)/m:}l -HE WRETCHES! \F -THEY ARENT DOING ANNTHING, -THEY MuoT BE THINKING UP GOME W MGCHIEF! € GET HIT BY Tomor®ow — TH' MORNING You AUTOMOBILE — N LB o ™ ToP OF A BURNING— BUILOING — AND IN TH' AFTERNOON Hou GET GORED A BULL (T TREAE AINT GONNA BE. & PRIZE &ET KNOCHED OuT N DRoP 2.0 FIoHT— 5 OO FEET IN & PARA(HUTE — TUMP OFF A |00FooT |[AND GET BIT B9 A RATILE SNAKE AND BRADGE- WICKED BY & MULE. / R 20 % | ¥ e 4