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FOOTBALL REVIEWS SHOWS ARMY AND NAVY lN 'HARTFORD DRAWS FIRST ~ ST.MATTS DEFEAT |[NATIONAL GUARDS AGAIN CHAMPIONSHIP T|E| BLOOD FROM NEW BRITAIN METHODISTS, 32-21| HUMBLE BRISTOL ENDEES NATIONAL TITLE MUDDLE Four Outstanding Elevens Lay Claim to Honors—Seryice Elevens Head Ml (ther| Luck Plays Big Part in Both of Hartford’s Scores — Wll] First Game of Inter- Ghl])‘(}h Locals Take MeaS“T'e_Of I"ast Year’s State Cl\ampim_ls Alabama-Stanford Battle May Cleax the Situation' 1 Dumb Play By Perrin Gives Hardware City Eleven | League Play at “Y" ‘ For the Second l‘l'me in a Week—Sheehan and Kil- Navy Regards Its Claims Superior in Spite of Tie| eams in Grid Race Two Points—Fumbles Mar Playing of Both Teams |+ duff Guard Opposing F?rwards Closely But C?m‘ot With Army—Notre Dame Eliminated Through De-| =~ o =" = = —Blues Fail in Three Attempts With Ball SiX! church Loaguo Standing | Stop Eagle-Eyed Shooting—Nats Show Superioriy feat By Carnegie Tech—Brown Also Enters Claim, |srcat service’ cievens, army and| Inches From Goal—Collins Stars. i o D B in Working the Ball Down the Floor. [Navy, riso tousy rom the tanglo and | gl g o0 bl . 3 T'n \.«‘ lations with Harvard, brought about |sagtern football championship of | (r¥ in tho National football league, cross bar by inches. The treacher- | Conter Cong. 4 g L i 1 Basiatbail | s hen. - sofs goilass h max of a record-shattering by apparent bitterness of undergrad- yq2¢ drew first blood in the annual inter- £aoH s ; ~ | Blue Arm\ g 0 .000 | the state in professional basketball | forwards when he gets going, hy n of thrills and spills | uate feellng and resulting in revival | -, ; city serles with All-New Britain n °U8 footing eliminated any chances | prypjty ar, 1 .000 | circles last year, but the team is|got a third to tie the score ever of greater dispute | of proposals for an organized eastern | Fitting and proper in the ey the first game played at the East Of trying drop kicks. Iartford was| The St. ‘“‘”"“ 5 Qarman Luthi-| o the w0an to bowins, befory ‘l'C\‘hc'“"'h Bang vy, Wingine 10 UHE) gl RESiousl GHGmplon: |WiB1g e 1 the greatest multitude that ever Wit- | ;1o oo Velodrome yesterday after- |on its elght-yard line on fourth down | ¢ran quintet defeated the Trinity | National Guards of this city follow- |1ike a leech. Those shots of Feld- ;‘nf‘n'!mnm) than any campaign in | huh’vid\ml :ri(lfilron scoring rec- :i\‘;S;'!v;Iimubi;m‘:::lzl..l;nn;cdullz];\c’;"‘t‘hm noon. A placement kick from the on a kick play when a bad pass from | \!h)lhxmllisle(‘:n n;)v |nnpl:\1(n'g ]falm;‘ :: én“gml’h;‘h'lqhi:;x: n_}‘s);-‘:&rr::iyo;’ (]?'n r:om:x"sm\\'dcr:o:‘\lciv;\tx:sc. ::l\:;rs;?:ng.“:nd years. ords for 1928 show Mike Wilson, " ' B £ -yard e 2 S the Inter-Church basketball leag CATA LS Soal LT B ght, T d have sf . Where Notre Dame’s “Four |Latayette's sophomoro haltback, a |ended the breath-taking atruggle of M“I:'l’,y“g;r:‘“l :,;”,? S ‘r}:f\::"i\",ff?:c\m]rf; fx:'o'?nhrl;"y.:-l:«i.:,p(; Saturday pisht at the Y. M. C. A, tho Guards invadel Bristol ‘and | " The count was evens up after six iboita astlal sitists dasorated ‘;“;'f\:‘f;‘jomy‘“gif,’:fl"udr:;"‘;"’::_"g Ele gtory, g 10 polnts “hlch\prm:}d‘:o‘be a win-on and Hartford s given tho ball | 1) r',"‘;m e tariaduiey ,.,b;g_ another tough battle, the local quin- | always ot his best in the pinohes heights without much controversy of 120 points, but yielded the aggre- | For while Lafayette swopt through |18 marsin. New Br hen Parein on first down after New Britain had | co4noq to be expected in carly sea- | tet returned the winner again by | litorally took the ball away from two RIS, he clos of the resular gate high scoring honors fo Fred |ul rivals in a string of nine stralgt s Teeeiad by Hiotsheimer benind | ot amenizod 10 vards. This staved | jon zames. The winnors showed an| the scoro of 39 to 32. Endees «and Dbroke the fce with 1 2146 season finds at least foun aut-|Koster, University ‘of Loulaville, who | victorles, and Brownishowed u rec. || nrs o DY e b Titones | another possiblo touchdown 1 | abundance ot speed and promise 0| Tt was a furious batile all the | beautiful shot. Malcolm fouled Slo- sianding elevens In the title debate. | pioked up 184 points on 18 toueh- |orq' almmed ofily by & the with Goi. | e Bartord goal line atter ¢~ | New Britain. | develop into one of the league's|way through with as fast basketball | man and left the game on four per- feputials from two or three ethers downs, 10 goals after touchdowns, |gate, the Army and Navy alone met |° % Hartford was again on the 17-yard | fratoe” (oaims when the men nave| being played as Mas been scen in | sonals. Sloman madethe shout count turther complicate the stituation. and two field goals. kdysianii e g opponents In the minds of many, the Now markin the last.quartor: but Wwas|gzrown accustomed to working to-| mid-scason by both teams. for another point. Shechan, finding A projected New r's }'1" at The 1 season's records of ma- 18 powerful as the cast and mid- Dritain team proved an old football unable to &dvance any and the game | gether, while the Methodists also| New Britain team had the better of Zetarski, Malcom's substitute slow Pasadena betwee A\[\‘ it 'f,’\f””'!'_ Jjor sectional college champions and it uoin‘x ”"H\,w & 2dage by being the better team ended with the hall” there. Bing- | yeomed to have latent power but| the deal in the start by j“m‘,,,,,,mo“,,.rm,. gotting warmed up, got away ern champion, and Pop Warner's some of their leading rivals follow: | S Deloat Uiet ot (hough on the losing end. A series ham played 2 wonderfl game at| missed many shots, |tho lead. Kilduff and Sheehan |from him and caged a field goal Tay. Stanford outfit, titieholders on the Won Lost Tied | i of “breaks” with “Lady Luck” ond for New Britain getting in on| Rilly Preisser sent the St Matts| cach caged foul shots after a minute | jor bogled through for another of EQallis ogast, may do b ldt 10 Clenr | Stantord ¢vuoesie 30 0 The curse of Army's sole defeat . qwping on their every effort, Kept every play and stogping tho rumner | into the lead with a field goal| of tho first half had been played, [spectacular dimensions and New the alr but it can’t entirely settle Lafayette ... . k 0 «_xt the scason at the hands of Notre 3 ’ esing the cov- (0on every try around his end. shortly affer the opening whistle, | Then “Tedders” who broke up the | Britain was again leading 30 to 23. RASyICsn., Thies. TNn aama) supre [Alabams . pame was wiped out Saturday when |ioq gon) line and stopped what ap- | The sccond game of the serjes Will [ and they staved there, The first| monotony. of sticking like o porus | Not content with this. Stoman and with I.{:_fn\'n‘!‘w the d\»"lnt\mn‘f'l, C- | Navy ves Carncgie Tech's inspired eleven .. .nyiy 1ooked like a victory for the |be played at the Velodrome on Sun- | half was slow. and erratic, ending! plaster to “Kisk Teldman by oc- Taylor worked a nice passing game i"frx»"‘”‘:;i:.;'mflo:o;n}:ng:n}he G Methodist . § b e weakl of ROt Do City cleven. An attend- day afternoon, December 12, The | with the Lutherans ahead at 14-T.| casional sallies down the floor, | down the floor #d Mert broke loose B i s e of e South Tend Rove ance which wea reported (rom the |Simmatys | Lhalal pnaial ralld g Bees ilivncdi & el oAl ming el an By mfmaelt folca e o aimpla pdil plonship clalm as any contender. Southern Califor. sal national supremacy. box office as being 4.5 s - Ropriioud netiof, phiel (D9 g 1 LSt n favor of the locals |ty make it 32. Marchinek caged two In spite of its spectacular tie With | Notre Dame 0 : paid-in admission, braved the chill AN Bl MeCann | found himsclf, and soon only four|at the five minute mark. In the | frey tries to make it 25 for Bristol. Biiicy in Chlcaepi ecoti et Lafayette, in its crushing | winds of a November day, to wateh [DoRlon .........1t.......... Daily | polnts scparated the teams at 15-14. | interim between shots, hoth teams | gloman came right back o cage a Braskiilx mervice classic, ‘the Novy |MiGhighn .. . |through the . rolled the struggle which has given Hart- Gnasdow .......1g........ Kcenan | At this point “Goody” Preisser be-|werc playing a furiously fast floor | rpcs shot himsoit and made 1t 33 still regards itself as very much in |Tonnessea ... . points, one of the highest totals in qrq o big edge for the championship | Roger: FAvE Neil | gan to cage goals from all angles| game wit th forwards and guards | Azain Sloman, working that fast al. the running when title laurels are Vanderbilt ... ... 1 the nation. Outstanding vietims in | ¢ tne state. Humphries ..... ++ee.. Gildeaand distances and the St Matts) both working up the floor for & itarnate hand dribble that is bound passed around. Simultaneously the |Army ... 1/a list that included Muhlenberg, |y wew Britain backfield, start- | MUrphY ...oo.. .. Nichols ; stepped away again as both teams| possible ehot only to have their op- | o ot jur Gno 8 {8 POTRG Army’s claims would seem to be on | Note—Southern California and | Schuvlkill, Dickinson, Albright and '\ ™ pamikow at fullback, llol helmer .....re...... O'Connell| began to play much better ball. ' ponents hurry them and keep their | cireles, came in fast around his the same level but the Cadets tasted |Notre Dame play next Saturday at quehanna, were Pittsburgh, ' eon and Colling at halfbacks, v X . Perrin | Preisser made 15 points basket clear. Siigidian] sllopedtin = mouble dsaie dofeat, at the hands of Notre Dame |Los Angeles Washington lAum Jeferson, Rutgers | o0 ®0eS arorback with Eddic 'r° ins 5 veh BBV k) 1:},,,\,. A ]\:,,1 ]_\m;l,“l ]‘:fl,”:fl ,“.\]‘“,«‘;:r:,w}};l;; - n\\[nml"l" e e el while the Navy, up to its final tus e and Lehigh. Nav: smashing | > a Y At o hompson \b....... Corgan |his brother y did well or Jimmy Malcolm caged a one-hander | = T sle, sank all opposition in nine mu‘-)‘ y |schedule carried the” Middies from | HUNt s’f:"x'.i"“ !m?ar(::pr-:lor %o the | Darnikow Zehrer | offense and defense and Reckert|from the side court that fair ," .”:\':;‘.’;]‘:);;:tf'o'; ey "/7mf:‘nrr| cessive games some of the most pow- F one powerful opponent to another-— | | tford '",“_“_l in all departments Score by periods showed to advantage, Deming Hew- | hristied as it sped through the hoop. Tadner, Aibtiiie peatioy il Bib. erful outfits of the east or mmmv |Purdue, Richmond, Drake, Prince- HBEECRCaon Hewing: foothall |Bactord Lty 0—10 Paul Braddon and Tengler|Shechan to get even with the man | JA#Per 8 1 ofipiay ROCing s EoRIRE . the New Britain ....0 2 0 o0— g|worked well for the losers. The|he was guarding, made it six but| a0 made it 37 for New Britain. west, [ton, Colgate, Michigan, West Vir- the 7 ; beess j : ery department, was the New : |y 5 Zetarski got a free try through the e e ’M l] ginia, Wesloyan, Georgetown—and x“"““:o")"\‘fc“n:‘&‘k“rf'ror el v iGoteuns vt e meore ] _' Malcolm flipped one of his mmaus“.[m(o;“n‘ B i At e T recognition in spite of having us ’mmrl an equal only in the Cadets at | '8 WORAE FEIET e Tl end runs, | LY after touchdown, Perrin (place- St. Matthew's long oncs clean through tho hoop | B WL AN S0 B0 Cle S 1 he end of the parade, team wi ment): field goal, Perrin (place- | Ttl.| giving Bristol four. Shechan came | oo £ r AV winning streak checked by a fina | forward passes and lengthy punts. i p g : shots because the time was short , ate. Notre Dame after 3 : y orward passes ced | ment); safety, Perrin: referee, Hal. | (+ Preiss right back with his man and on the | SHO!$ L ‘ 4 tie with Colgate. Notre Navy Not Matched Time after time, Collins raced T ee, Hal- | Fo next tap, got another double decked, | 21K one for his only score of the eight straight victories over rugged | Autleven Sirmye Tniths it ¢ the entire Hartford 107ani umpire, Hart; linesman, ¢ ame and Jasper followed him like e rield- 6aY6S Y, al an- | through almost the 3 Cen f Bimi E Klopp, ¢ fert Taylor pulled a spectacular | S2Me and Jasper followed hin 6 foes and a defensive record of yie Joe LUke H ¥es in 10 F]BM s, could not match in sustained oam for gains ranging from 20 to }‘f}t:";;‘nn'g'"“"h’r;“']':]“”;{“fqs:‘fi’;("r‘]-‘ *‘;:;\ W. Prei Shot one hand over his hend to ive | IENtNIng giving New Britain its 30th | | v d ac ase | " g auly.one tonchdown Had tu ease Goals Durind Contest Suillitnoe unil yowe nt i aaiet (T Wt ovda e e e Jorliie: i e | point. Teldman slipped away to get g accomplishments of the Middies, i S Eeslon Raleevilon ey s alrcady for argument until Carnexie B¢ ; ay to i Tie e Hoosic of no av Akl e SO0 5 | his sixth basket of the night and BriciRdiOnee Thie Urostrate EO0RUED FSCAR5s nondueled Byvarisabartl| k ik e hiat maove cams bala ‘2}"‘j~"~;’f°rb(n-1-’a. Thomas for | fifti of the half to end the game | Yale, the latter 33 to 0, but were |yesult of a very poor pass by Joo 1£§f"“'v\~.O}[llnf-:,hl" ° Flynn for | igorced to bow to the Notre Dame |1ogers, New Britain center. The "-""-‘;)A”‘o“ n” ain, Nanfeldt for | {team which Carnegie Tech, vietim |pall was on New Britain's 30-yard “,M“".I;y ;‘(;r "n’::‘ hfdnr 'l_'rl;mnnnon ‘I years. Michigan and Nor | representative team Saturday night Of POth New York University and |jing with fourth down coming :«h;[r: | memF‘(nr";)m‘m:"‘l’w" A Howott, It Sho finished tied for the we lin the Whaling City. After a G0. | Washington and Jefterson, was able | Collins dropped back for a pun | P. Braddon, ¢ conference championship, both mes | ) B 0 T 0B el tain team | 1O trounce decisively. was kicking beautifully alt the game, | | vengler, rg . defeat by “outsiders” the Wolver- |, "5 "o iie fook the floor | Brown, likewise, fell by the way- | getting at least 60 yards on evel BUYER UN[DENTIFIED Teinamann, 1g ines losing to Navy and Northwest-| o o0 0o lor feam and | side i the quest of regional honors hoot. Rogers snapped the ball back | — | 1o anc .ern to Notre Da latter the first five minutes was | if the £ool struggle of the year. The but it went three feat over Collin: — s 5 211 Sheehan again breezed through to | #1d¢d by Iteynolds who fairly shone Except for a tie with Missourl |, 0.y iron-mez of the Tear, scemingly [head. He chased it to the 10 ¥ard | 1f Cloveland Indians Are to Be Sold | o Thes, 07 ol G Preisser 3| take a nice pass from Sloman and |at center, kept the score in the lead the Mustangs of Southern Methodist he Luke brothers, “Micky” and |tired from a husky campaign that line and attempted to run it back | % Reckert 2, Klopp Suess 2—8; D.ine caged o goal. Then “Red”|for New Britain. Unive: uthwestern Conterence |, ., =, oo " ‘ rked | brought victories over Harvard, Yale 'but fumbled when tackled and Hart- | Acconding to Rumors, Purchaser | Hewett 3, A. Hewett 2, P. Drflddfl"‘ Reynolds, New Britain's “fina” at| Jimmy JMalcolm and TFeldman champions, would be in the thick of | = : he |and Dartmouth, found their keenest ford recovered on New Britain's 12« | 7. Fengler 2, Ileinzmunn 1—15. | conter this year. stopped keeping | 45ain demonstrated that they have the fight. They won all of their re- | Well fo . latiar to | weapon, a forward passing attack, | vard line, Thres bucks at the line| Can't Be Found. Personal fouls, G. Presser 2, Reck- | “Jiges® Donoghus £6d up long |10 Peers as forwards in baskethall pailog gum ;\'k"““:'l‘,“ R in'- ten double deckers. | dulled by the vitor of & charging | failed to gain enything and PO | Cieveland, Nov. 20 (Pt (o | Gt 55 KIoVR I W Prelsser 3. Suers) pipnougl t skl bweseeinta ity I negaterion iy S ke Migsouri Valiey cha s for the e lastaata dlnes Dhe Miadie ‘hile | bools ace cer the bar . T Mg 2—10; D. Hew , A. Hewe! ing the count 14, A Ma wi echan and Kilduff guarding ficky” scored six hims De- | Colgate line. The Middies, while booted a placement over Cleveland Indlans aro to bo sold, as | b parddon 3, Fengler 2, Helnz-| et on "\mpoi«ih‘ln" \32\:';11 ‘,{:)’;fi'{,’]} tiatn a6 olomsly-as twn snards could e et several defeats out- | ; Hied b Gusuytioe, ) marest, center, Say Yankaskas | pressed to do so, downed Colgate 13 | from the 20-yard line. rumor persistently gnys they &re, | mann 1—8. Referee, Tobin; timer, | tne hoop wnd. Feidmon added one | d0 50, got away to score 11 baskets side the confercnce fold. “Ghief” Lars s to T | & ¥ uarter, the i i : While fhe argument of experts |and “Chief” Larson smedred all of (to 7. Tater in the same a nobody will admit he is buying them. | parier; scorer, Ahlgren. from the free throw line. ‘Then |Dbetwcen them and scored 24 of their | Games This Week Sloman cleverly tapped one in oft | team's 32 points. Donoghue was the races over the relative merits or [New London's efforts to get near Wilson is Captain [ first, Hartford, near m“*""’"fl""}'_’:‘* Former Governor Harry L. Davis, jed a clever forward pa friend-of Manager Tris Speuker, who | T, proposed exhibition contest|the back board to glve New Brifain | ¢ handler of the ball that he ine h he basket and the latter team was = \ 0 ese title claims, ssin the |t Tlection of “Light Horse"” Iarry p i Tt ascn | forced to shoot from the middle of longe Flynn, taking %_\:l ?”N:nn“‘;'?n | as been linked with rumored nego- | 1oween the Iirst Lutherans and | 16, “Kisky" Feldman after a swift | always has been and got the jump Sturm and “Pots P tions for the club, admitted the | 0" Central Baptists of Hartford | interchange of paeses, then sank a | continually in center. The other 0 ble ducts of tie sea | wi the capta X A y A ) » ¢ records |points by this route. Dengston, the | s X " beantiful play of interference. ®AVe rumors but denied any conne i 1—Establishment_of new r_t;o:? ’r' il rm“um."“‘“ sent | llant career of the Cadet back to the :o"r;”“m"omommm, to sprint 80 | ¥ith them. -There m’« :l“’):;“‘;“m | had to be cancelled because of the | long shot for his first fiell goal of | men on the Bristol team played a for attendance and receipts, with ew 2 | threshold of his final campaign in rds for a touchdown. Perrin|oe talk about it, but 1 !\m‘n(*‘nn i"""'”'" of the Capital City boys 101“10 night. Kilduff ended the half | nice game, but New Britain, with yards CON={ apprar. Two league games will be | by coming down fast on a dribhle ‘J.nqn r and urm giving fresh e ing the total number of |in in the last quarter and very | ang ks An | e it sna Abe |shortly | to New Britain's| Itting honor. Tt was the power o Kicked the goal from placement|sidered buying the team and 1\ 4 5 i spectators at A ¥ King 1t 10 and giving Hartford the | don't know who has considered it played this Saturd The irst| and double pass to end the half with | punch in the second half, outgamed imaking | L [ Fflearis) rasnb fIlIe-Rola e b | T INYteath h e d o s {and ouffought the Bell Towners. et {the tearing Army thunderbolt, once nationwide ol B g e ; . an All-Amerlean back at Penn State, | o 2 0 oh« The local ' team’s passes bl doore the game. | he said. ) { featured by figures of 110,000 on 2 . g b ‘\";Q:il:i‘:f, two polnts came as | meet the South church in the first | Sccond Half The New Britain team will play in i vorked to perfecti irst that brought the Soldiers one of the i i e ek fE0I000 T sl SOr [RORKES e et e ball | touchdowns against Navy, and his t the dumbest | o\ citare Director Dudley §. Blos- | game, and the Blue Army fake on| Shechan started the sccond half | Plainficld Wednesday night gainst it Bt i) :n;\ “when :n“}- resorted to long |t0e added three points after scores. | the result of \0“"’1 :Pcn o h”h‘snn\ who, with his brother, John T. | the $t. Matts in the second. S e previous high mark of SauC00 BRCC- | enves. Both feams were oft in | Strangely enough it was tho failure | Pleces of foo e v | mho«om r;n becn named as a pos- e lightning on a dribble, passed [will be under professional rules Rers ot at Colamibus sasier 1 | thlr shaotng trom the-(re hrow ot Wison to kick s fid sunl In the 1L 11, 0 S RlaRE e Harttord | ooy o chaser obithe taam cdenlat g yive Vlllage Is “Dutch” Leonard and flipped one in. | which will put Sloman:right at gan contest at Columbus carlier in | PR S0 e oL eoring only | final minutes of play that cost Army | the bail “‘,3'1, L':“,‘ Terrinl went| ::""“":’: :’{”i‘f".:";' ihe Iidlane Threatened by Fire | cldman got away for a shot from | home. The locals expect to scoro o' F e on axLs dgk s w1 DO LA Tnenn e C ‘gm‘ ik I(‘) )‘ caught it on the | e r: HO‘T l‘ ; i IT i M?m | le,a gne‘ Y XIPE [jovond the foul line and Malcolm | another victory in their quest for the i ¢ agtmanemint oF ine SUE| TR B e it of ning ors. During the season, \Wilson |Bfter it and Perrin caught it on the | wero rovived recently when it was| Hammond, N. Y., Nov. 50—UP— | aded two more o o olar s | other ¥ Slinitesi 1¥2V themiplons 1o WS | o mary i i scored 95 points on 12 touchdowns | st bound. Instead :’ ’:(“coim |Eparian DAL usaiey da Tire early today threatened the vil- | bristled with speed. “Red” Reynolds| The scora:: and conferences, L New Britain rand 23 points after touchdowns to , dash for the fleld W m\l ‘T‘m e | ;\mx(M }'ml baseball if his a lage of Hammond.and was brought | again same thesch e oemreynold8 e e foatured by the fall of Dartmouth I take second place in the list of lead- sily have made 15 yards S owerec under control only after assistance | neat play and cleverly tossed one e in the east and Washington on the 12 |ing eastern polnt scorers behind | open. Perrin did a Charleston n]nd | arrived from Ogdensburg and Brier |in from the side court. e L : M Tk 5 Gt ) “Mike” Wilson. Lafayette's sopho- | s goul line and Holzhelmor tackled | The first Indian pennies ber [ il The damage confined to an| The score now stood 23 to 17 for | Malcolm, If . Bengston, I £ ..o.en more lash, who gathered 120 mark- | him. Biving New Britain tXo point# [date 1850, They were made of |apartment building, is estimated at |New Britain. “Kisky” Feldman got | Zetareld, 16 ... e Corampouais it ! touchdowns. its only score of the game. (ickel and this substances was used | $5,000. One fireman was injured, | really angry at the glue pot on his Donoghue, ¢ ... B s decime 1n ths | Yonkask 3 . { Big Three Smashu New Britaln was beset on all 5idS [yntil 1864, Since then the cent has |suffering a gash in the head When a | back, Kilduff, and essayed a long | Senorl et of torward R | fering of the Tig Three ail. | DY "toush e ;1;|;;:“:n;\n? [heciamadenot bhonze: | icen of cornice fet. |throw that was good. Immediately | (Continued on Following Page) S e agent thass. et | C! : ance—Harvard, Yale and Princeton “)"b"lo';f:Ysrlsgt“{O“fr ki e | | Brown and the Navy. e —left its stamp of dieaster upon the | (¢ 10°¢ s 2 t : | touchdawns while Hartford's two | 4—Emphasis on the development New Dofiaon season. Princeton battered the | 97FIEE L e " Rogers' bad pass | When a Fe“er Needs a Frlend By B G ©f cleven men attacks, as opposed to | poo o o T 3 Crimson of Harvard. Then followed | F*O0 FF5 Sy ™o itn down giving | Tully 12 minutes had passed be- | fore Bristol could get another point 2]and 1t was Malcolm again who took a slug from the center of the floor %/and caged the hall cleanly again. Marchinek followed with a foul hot, one of two he made good. in an astonishing 19 to 0 upheaval. Notre Dame’a elimination left the | mpo xew TLondon “Y” baskethall middle west without a real national | team, using an entire squad of 10 men, failed to stop the local “Y 32 with New Britain winning, 89 to 3 The New Britain team was slig | Iy superior in its method of play and the effective guarding of Shee- | han and Kilduf saved the night, 6 Malcotm got another free - try| While these two worked away to _|through the hoop bringing Bristor's | $toP Malcolm and Feldman, the — | score up to 8. | local forwards, Taylor and Sloman Trinity M D. Hewett, rf 3—Elevation of the fl goal as ‘ el 3 the victory and the severance of card LRI CEANG sty OUensIves, |5 i ol it : Hartford the ball and the forwar trend which produced fewer individ- sport sofaslons fwith l::‘;nph aver | o the two lucky breaks for | " BUY ual performers of the conspicuons VBl TH s s e e b rasttord) . e |l CHRISTMAS SEALS) stamp of Grange, D ., George Tocals' Opportunities Wilson, Oberlander or Flournoy. Eddie Hunt rocelved the kickoff in 5—Agitation against the use of the the second half and got through the shift play, culminating in the deci- entire Hartford team. As he was slon of o h i the western con- tearing away for thclgo:I llr;.r-. 'H;‘rlM forence “Big Ten” to enforce a two of his own men got in front of him second halt after all shift forma- i as he fell, he tions, a move inter likely four straight Saturdays, Yale was 'r‘w,.f;,\-]:m ";37n<;mnnd unable to | to mean nationwide abolishment of : i ‘z‘n‘;"’\‘l“"‘ip:;"'n““"' Army, Margland | ol " Had he been able to get to the shitt. ¢ i £33 . Mis feet, he would have scored with- | out a question of a doubt because no SP‘OMEFAS Hartford man was within 15 yards of him Pot&” Thompson on the first few Associated Pre. plays of New ust missed a German Track and Ficld Athletes en gariands are bei forward pass, tho vall bounding oft brow of the various section- | his hip. Had he it, he had a al and group champions t clear field for a touchdown. Alone, Board Rules, the country, a sprig mu y Again on a forward pass play, for the football team of the Haskell | Hunt got to Hartford's elght-yard i oyind - | Indians, of Lawrence, Kan. ¢ | line and on a pass which was low, nd fleld athlet v 11 Y from | dropped tha ball in getting away too Lo PO RRD ¥ | const to coast and won all but the | quickly. Had he caught tho ball, it s iopR b ferICn tie with Boston Collegs, an un- | would have heen a sure touchdown prtliEnCEsthigten ated easterner. A total of 491 | because he was again clear. s to 49 for opponents far ove Thompeon circled Hartford's left shadowed Lafayette's 330, George- | end and a tackler stopped him mo- town's 308, and Southern Califor- | mentarily. He got clear and cut 2 oy nia’s 305 through the remaining Hartford men 2 i I i L (L # dixectors et for uchdown, but the ree z it A ‘ '\\\{\\\\\\\\\\’\_\,\/ % i M Atiel Goldstein, former world | called him back bdrause he had | ; £ | hreadyanlysdalsrstiofbmi e O e 2 z ARl il i il T “l‘l! e e x T /HM 1 (:In]h IIOONG) drive to regain the highest | hit Thompson. ben's running in the 11 he i lesthomuacn, ‘ \ 3 | Ing performance. Dartmouth, cham- 0| pion of all football in 1925, was 0! ground to defeat in four major con- tests under a delugo of the same | passes that carried the Green to lofty helghts just a scason ago. On 6—Rupture of th rig ) I st | ! | | BARS SINGLE'TOURS Not to Be Allowed to Appear Here i expansion of international competi- 1928 Olym- ¢s last spring the hoard | NOROF in his division in a battle with | New Tritain shot forward passcs . E —— o i o the fact that he Sanchez, of Yucatan, bantam |all around the Hartford team but strange country. | C&Mplon of Mexico, T re to | many of them were dropped. Collins Dr. Otto Peltzer, | MEet in a 10 round mateh at Terth | was on the passing end and e had unning champion, | AMPo¥. N. J., December 6. the Hartford team hewildered with .+ allowed e his straight shooting. Littla could | P alone. Jim Maloncy, Boston heavy-|be gained through either line, | Weight battler, s in r 1n- | though both sides were weak at a OOd Ci ar | ating in Tex T ! times. Hartford was on New Dri | to weed out challengers ain's one-yard line with first down | Tunney's titla at Madison Square | coming and altho he first smash i aro Garden Thursday night. Maloney | brought the ball six inches all_wa S, Lol tackles Iranz Diener, German from the line, Hartford couldn't get | ! | champion, in his first k'.rm((\h over in three downs. A Umversal Bal'ber Shop ;(lllpn*lur of Arthur De Kuh, mis- | Collins aftempted three fimes to fng Ttalian yolngster, several ot s | kiek placements in the finst quarter 313 MAIN STREET. | ago. Ibut the three kicks went wide,