New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 24, 1927, Page 15

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15 Speaking of Sports Today Headed for Catalina Tsland | 13 $1— sense in Stanley Al Ventres of Berlin, who is the Havlick leading mat man of this sectlon, had a challengs to a wrestling match hurled at him by Fred Bru- no of Hartford at the National A.|{ C. wrestling show in Turner hall last night. Announcer George Dunn introduced Bruno from the stage and announced his challenge. iy Chicago, training camp, Low Score would rather go [Hewit — 86, Graymon 9 275 McCallum Mason Robinson Murphy Handicap Ventres, who without his meals than miss any weestling exhibition, was present in the hall and he lost no time in c.tting to the stage and accepting : challenge. Batterymen, He dnnounced that he has the undisputed claim to being the only legitimate middleweight wrestler in |Jorry these parts who has never been |De LaMarro beaten at the welght and he stated | V2" 4 that if Bruno would enter at the T middleweight limit of 160 pounds, he would be willlng to bet that Bruno would be the loser. La Flamme Beaulien 5 ' NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1927. WVITH THE B WL Judge Hungerford gmn\ld the con- yh“rll-s and cut-worms and pa OWLERS REC"RD PRI[;E l? R e e a0 o [;m]w N A Mm'm e CUBS OFF 10 GAMP | WORTH MILLIONS, SHE able to raise the money at *e time, “There is another factor in 7 ROGERS ALLEYS she was returned to the cell. | gunning at night 3 [ LIVED AL{)NE m HOTEL —— [ that is the element of cruclty, When | Twenty-Three Players Leave Chicago IA!'.\IL(MLEAG[‘E place, and Angelo Paldino, also 16 !hc crows are shot in their roosts | of 364 Elm street, pleaded not guilty | |Chicago's “He reen” Lo e o to throwing snowballs at the Jewish ik, e Center. |Chicago's “Hetty G Taken to " synagogue. Their case was continued {maiming birds in this manner. | Cpie Feob, 24—~ Twent | Hospital While Bell- Woman Pays $219 for Two Farmers Wamed 0F DAnger in|Seavecraws are emective tn protec : Feb. 24P Tnenty Fobs i ing farmers' crops.” nnual trek of the Chi - 4 ca- | i = 1 Words by Rum Sleuth |40 Locomotives Are Slaughiering Birds | _» thelr' Catating Tatand | CHICSE0: Fob. 24 (P — Hearing A a | estimated the crow casualtics in iR & Rapaem of |that their wealthy client was il Shipped to Brazil | raid of the shotgun brigade Tuesday | {icets yescrvid for men to be pieked | 20K oficlals discovered Mrs. Ada Philadelphia, Feb. 24 (P— Philadelphia, Feb. Sonles. | |Sawyer Garrett, 71, known as : ks X locomotives with tenders are bei = e a = St " o1 g been paid all sorts of prices, ranging [ logded on the stcamship Ten Jean. | '"OLSS agalnst the wholesale - s e 1! |scased of an estimated fortune of trom $50 to $300 or more per speech, {nie at the Baldwin Locomotive |SAushicr of crows in the organized | DIRRTE (AMD ()PENS Prosiaent Vecsk nad o dofl. | $5:000.000, living in a small Jail a new record was set this morning in | Works' Eddystone plant for the battle against the black legions in | : Tance that the regular [P°AT0M In & downtown hotel. police court when Mrs. Stanley Ma- |Central railroad of B They | Salem county, New Jersey, have fed ary Tail n(:;m"st | The bankers summoned nurses been made by the Delaware Valley Cosibes an0lO Ficlkle troupe there. and removed Mrs. Garrett to a than $100 per word, for the privilege| The engincs are of three types tee when noses were of hearing Policeman John C. Stad- [and are designed for both narrow al Socicty of Audubon socities. Dr.| Pittshurgh Team Gathering a eve of departure was |\®, astonishment. ler make a speech to Judge W. C.[and broad gauge tracks, the major- | Witmer Stone, dircctor of the acade- Znglish, 19 year old short. | Her have money!” exclaimed a Hungerford. Policeman Stadler spoke | ity being for road guage lines. The | my of natural sciences in this city, | Faso Robles. 1 from the Toledo as. Pel-hop. “Why, I always felt sorry o entered a protest. o T ' e i horted o |OF her — she didn’t seem to have Mrs. Makulak paid $219.18. 11,000,000 pounds. -THe vessel is ex- Paso Robles, Feb. 24 18 He was reported to ha The entire hearing consumed | pected to sail within a wee ing of the crows as an outrage . ih part of the g “Money is only figures to her,” about two minutes, Told in scenario, i S Stone said he did not believe es of the Pittsburgh Natior Aid 757 Bim by ThS Ciba |was the explanation given by a style it would be something like this: | Freight Derailment at ous farmers” would join in the club was registered for the miied g ol ol jfriend for the seeming straitened hunts. of the Plrate’s spring training camp THREE BOYS DROWNED |circumstances in which the wealthy es Department of ]horo today. There were pitehers, r W Edwin Miller, 16, of 42 Erwin| :xt night many are bound to | until tomorrow morning. three players leaving Chicago (odny1 Hops Gasp. Reports from Yorktown, N. Although, public speakers have 24 UP—Formal | nisht at 1700 t Kansas City and Los Angeles, |o ; ) Chicago's Hetty Green” and pos- | ied a salar: kulak of 126 Smith street paid more ' Will be unloaded at Rio De Janeiro. Ornithological club and the Nation- | hospital, while employes watched two words and on this statement|consignment weighs appoximately Characterizing the wholesale kill- | AAVRINGE o |enough to ke arm.” of 20 batterymen, officials 1 his reporting in an“e A R BT Scene: New Britain police court N s Concord Halts Traffic| """y, vuitea ¢ . [ Amboy, N. J, Feb, 24 (UP) [Woman was voluntarily living. udicd the habits |half of them rookies, and four catch- crow open 446—1428 | (not crowded), Collection of bottles. Concord, N. H., Feb. 24 (A—Main jugs, cans, pail pitchers, glasses, Bilan. e 263 |and other distillery equipment on |line tracks of the Boston and Maine IRagn 108 318 | taby railroad were blocked for several Montona 89— 265 | Time: hours early today by the derailment near this city of six cars of a Bruno answered that he was not | Ve Gata i L |Handicap °. 19 — 67| Judge W. C. Hungerford—by him- | freight train bound from Boston for White River Junction, Vt. certaln of making the middleweight | — self. wag injured. Agriculture has Lodies of three boys were | At her bank Mrs. Garrett was of crows for years,” said Dr. Stone. lers, The balance of the party of an ice-covercd pool |described as a lovable person as “The investigators have found the |35 which detrained was made up of 2 clay pit in Keasy, |Well as one known for shrewd fn- food habits of the crow are just as |scouts and newspapermen oy i ;\Mlmunt in real estate. She was heneficlal as th are injurious. Infielders and outfielders are led to the search. |Once known as “the belle of the This wholesale killing of crows or [scheduled to report next week had been missing sinee |north side” and five Chicago limit but it Ventres would meet | e No onelthe attempted extermination of any Among the moundsmen was n they left their Streets are named after members him at catch weights, he would Prosecuting attorney—William M. bird is dangerous, because you never [Specce, a husky righthand on the pond. lof her family. Since the death of SFeats Him 2| Greenstein in person. The New Englander, fast express know what the res played with Washington and ¢ I, two of them brothers, |her husband, she has lived in ses Clerk—E. J. Danberg. bound south for Boston, was held — “In . ere was [land in the American league and "|clusion, except for regular visits would |Eaney - . Babat Probation offices—E, J. Connolly. {up for an hour and three quarters. i AP | T e | Snedoker . 2104 Rum squad—Policeman John C.|The derailment was attributed to a crows suddenly appeared and exter- 443 Stadler and Danjel Cosgrove. broken brake beam. I'minated them. The crow Defendants—Mr. and Mrs. Thursday morning, Feb. 24, the jce 453 4681371 Keehner : 28 | Hedenberg 57 |Leonara . 5 82 90— 2 who was sent to the minors because " k A |of wildness. The Pirate leader says | How lives on Speece has achieved control. Or a sev Peterson, 4 today, [to her bank. It wa# when these Peterson, 9, and !-:rnpat;reaa-d that her financial advisers |made inquiries. Ventres stated that he take him on at any time and any- where and he guaranteed his | s friends that he would win the bout. Just when the meeting will ( come off has not been decided, but [g§¥ | it will probably be placed on one |mauiiek of the cards of the National A. Cai |Handicap which will be conducted in this city in the next few weeks. | | Witliam Last night's attendance at the Red .. 05— 28 wrestling bouts held at Turner hall |Simg* g A in which some of the biggest men [Hely . Le 85 94— 27 in the game in the world took | vpart, seems to indicate that wrest- ling will not be a paying proposi- tion in this city, 431 443 440—133¢ Patrus Crowell 17— 243 — 158 94— 301 105— Promoter Ed Lavrow of the Na- tional A. C. stated last night that he feels that there is a place for good wrestling shows in this city Trapeetion and despite the heavy losses in- »m; -104 curred last night in conducting the |\ihy show at the Arch street hall, he plans to stage another card here | within a few weeks. S1— 2 34— 84 441—1318 Because of the fact that a suit- able hall cannot be secured at the | present time, no date has been set | e for the show, but Promoter Lav- |Da Lorenzo row will be in New Britain next|7e6%% week to make arrangements. - The manager of the Springfield | 426—1282 Y. M. H. A. team has. served no- tice that his team will not play the Bristol Endees in Bristol mext |Iipetz 104— 204 Tuesday night it Jim Manning is |peConin i o i in the lneup. He stafed that Men- | ifapdicap ........ 50 dell would be kept off the Spring- | - —— fixld team's roster during the Qwen 77— 255 Nalson 88— 264 | Pryor Todzla RBisson Cookish Tuesday night the Bristol and the Springfield Y. M. team were in a gruelling which was never finished of a fist fight between lscaneon B and Manning with only a |Larson contest beecause Mendell minute and a half to go. oo tohlson Wilson | Pareison Handicap It was a repetition of the gquab- ble that took place here a week ago last Saturday night when the crowd surged on the floor during the game between the Atlas and the National Guards. ol =55 Tony The only difierence between theiJoe small-sized_riot in Springfleld and Prrrs the one in New Britain was that the | '*""*? game was finished here and things assumed a normal aspect after a| time while in Springfield the game | couldn't be finished and dancing aft-| er the contest was called off. Whesler Tasper Cometork | Champlain Andarson [woite Whether the game between the two teams in Bristol next Tuesday | night will be called off or not, re- mains to ba seen. Better to call off | games of this sort which have the potentialities of ending in a mini- ature rlot, than to run the risks of | siving basketball in this state a death blow. "“V;:‘fl"‘ o taneuf Feeling runs high in many games |cagella everywhere where the rivalry be-| am tween the teams is o intense and | Tanaicas “adrain Javes Pellotler many in this city fear that the feel- 161 414—1307 ing between Bristol and New Britain —_— is at such a pitch that an occurrence | TO JO]N ATHLETIGS field might be duplicated here. This however, doesn't seem to us to be possible. | William Shores, Right Handed Hurl- like that which took place in Spring- The name Saunders seems to be| F from Texas Fixpects to Arrive at gaining & prominent place in the Camp Saturday. sport world in New Britain, 1 Philadelphia, Feb. 24.—{P— Wil- There's Ken S8aunders, the pion-|liam, Shores, righthanded pitcher eer. Now his brother, Fred, is|from Lawn, Texas, expects to join gaining prominence with the high|the Philadelphia athletics at their school team. Then there is Bennie|training camp in Fort Myers, Fla., Saunders, captain of last year's Na-|on Saturday. tional Guard Reserves team and now The whereabouts of Shores. who a student at New York City college | pitched for Mexia, in the East Texas and last we have Hattle Saunders, lcague last season, had been stellar guard on the American Hos- | somewhat of a mystery to fery team. ‘.\[:magfir Connle Mack. Reports to- {day from Fort Myers sald a telegram had been received from the big righthander stating that illness in his famfly had caused the delay in re- porting and that he would be on hand Saturday. | Word also has been received by New Britain high school and New | Manager Mack that Joe Pate, the Itaven Hillhouse high school repre-|sole holdout In the Athletic ranks, tives will battle it out on the |would go to Fort Myers Sunday fo chalked court Saturday afternoon talk over the situation with \hck. in the Elm City high school gymna- | Pate s now at Tort Worth, Tex sium. Practice at the Athletics' mmp thig week has been confined chiefly to batting and pitching exercises to work out the winter kinks. Kenneth, better known as “Pete: is sometimes termed Coach Cassid; istant. He has been off scor- er for the high school basketball team for the past five years. 10TH WEDDING ANNIVERSARY Mr. and Mrs. Hyman N. Dubowy | of 11 Griswold strect are observing their 10th wedding anniversary by | Fighter Scores Kayo taking a trip to New York, Atlantic City and Washington, D. C. They Despite Broken Hand were married in New Britaln on| Wilmington, California, Feb. 24 February 25, “917. Mr. Dubowy is | (P—Billy Murphy. Towell, M president of the Congregation Tep- | Welterweight, broke kis left hand in hereth Israel synagogue of this city. | the third round of a ten round bout ——— | with Joe Rivers here last night. He ROSS HEADS MUSICIANS continued to force the fighting how- New Haven, Feb. 24 (P—Lance. ever, and scored a knockout in the lot P. Ross, 28, of Scarsdale. N.|seventh round. Y.. wag elected president of the Yale | = Musical clubs !ast night. The clubs | WOULD ALLOW BETTING are preparing for the intercollegiate| St. Paul, Minn, Feb. 24 (P--Bet- gles club contest In New York on ling on horse races under the Parl- March 12. M7 Ross has been this Mutuel system would he permitted season's suloia“. |in Minnesota by a bill introduced in the house yesterday. A similar bill — | two bottles through a police agent, Makulak. Attorney—TL. W. Golon. Prisoners, witnesses, lawyer§, po- licemen, spectators, etc. Greenstein: “Mr. and Mrs. Stan- ley Makulak.” Both stand up. Greenstein continues, facing the judge: “Your honor, these people are charged separately with keeping a place where liquor it sold. Offi. cers Stadler and Cosgrove purchased paving $1.00 for one bottle and 75 cents for another. The state nolles the charge agalnst the husband and the woman pleads guilty.” Attorney Golon: “Your honor, these people are honest, hard work- ing, industrious people. They have not been in business very long and the wife saw a chance to make a few dollars so she violated the law to make them. They realize their mistake and I have told them if they come back again it means a Jjail sentence.” Judge Hungerford: “Officer Stad- ler, how long have these people been selling?" Stadle Judge: Clerk Danberg (after court): costs are $19.18.” Mrs, Tysko Arrested Again Mrs. Mary Tysko of Pleasant and Stanley streets, a widow and mother of four children, who was fined $150 and costs for violation of the liquor law, when arraigned in police court Monday morning, again faced the | judge this morning on a similar charge. | Mrs. Tysko was fined $150 Monday morning by Judge Hungerford. Last night her store was raided again by | Policemen John C. Stadler and Dan- iel Cosgrove after a police agent had purchased a bottle of liquor. A small quantity of liquor was found there, the police say. She was unable to furnish bond last night and was lodged in the wo- men’s detentior. room at police head- quarters. Today she asked for a continuance until Tuesday morning. 'wo hundred dollars.” “The Have You Seen It? Your New Car Is at the Hartford Prosperity Auto Show State Armory Capitol Ave. & Broad St. Open Until 10:30 Saturday Night Ausplces of the Hartford Automobile Dealers’ Association “BRING YOUR FRIENDS" for ON THAT basis alone, I select the to- bacco that gives me pleasure in the great- est measure. (I wasn’t deliberately trying to make a rhyme.) That tobacco is Prince Albert . . . good old Prince Albert, known as The National Joy Smoke— and for good reason! Have you never known the thrill of opening a tidy red tin of this fine old favorite and inhaling that wonderful fra- grance? Have you never sat at one end of a pipe with P, A. at the other end and tasted that marvelous smoke? Then it’s high time to start! 1927, R. 1. Reynelds Tobaces Ty sy, T SALESMAN SAM PAWGONNIT! | FEEL LIKE A BANDIT WHEN | TAKE MY PAY FROM POOR OL GUZZ ON GATURDAY S — BUSINESS (5 60 P ROTTEN ! WHADDA YA KNOW? A CUSTOMERI! IF | DON'T SELL THIS. BIRD ANYTHING, HLL GELL HIM A CANARY ANYWAY! WaTcH EVERN THIN HeRE— Personally y | smoke pleasure/ Buy yourself some Prince Albert to- day. Fill your pipe to the brim and light up. Notice how refreshingly cool it is, no matter how fast you feed it. Notice, too, that it is mild without sacrificing that full, rich body which you demand in a smoking tobacco. I tell you in all sincerity: If you have never smoked Prince Albert, you simply don’t know how good that old jimmy- pipe can taste. No matter how satis- fied you think you are, try a tin of Prince Albert. No friend ever gave you a straighter tip, PRINGE ALBERT —the national joy smoke! Well Known AWRIGHT THEN | IF YA DON'T De- LWVER PosTAGE STAMPS, PLL TRKE T WITH ME — JEST CHARGL—_ T To MR.NELSON! P. A Ti 1614 evavgshond ta By ved tins, pound end half. i humi dors, end pound erystal'glass humidors with sponge-moistener top, And elweys with every bit of bite and parch ves moved by the Prince Albert process, OM, 6RE 'YoU THE FAMOUS WRESTLER — TH' GuY PeoPLe caLL HALF?

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