New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 26, 1927, Page 8

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2285559855505 8 55! MEETS RENAISSANCE FIVE AT STANLEY ARENA—NEW BRITAIN ROLLER HOCKEY TEAM PLAYS WALLINGFORD FIPIFTPTTIVTRITITIITIVIITITV 59999 PEPPIIITIFIIVIIINI PO TITIONT NEW BRITAIN FIVE PLAYS COLORED CHAMPS TONIGHT Renaissance Five of Harlem, New York, to Appear at| Stanley Win—YVisito! Strongest (‘ombination Referee. Renaissance New Britain Slocum .. Slomu Ricks Baugders . ... Zakzews) Jenkins ... Sturm Mayers Leary The Ren 1 champion colored 1 1 team of the world, of Harlem, N. Y., considered one of the & attractions available in these parts, will appear at the 1 At on ch streat ton o New Brit- local entry Basketball atest court State Fans who saw the New York team in action last on in their two appearances against the state cham plon National Guards, will remem- ber the sensational team play and shooting ability displayed. Although the Guards at that time were rated among the best teams fn Connecti- cut, 50 clear was the superiority of the visitors over the locals that seemed to only toy with the Britain team in the game The New Britain team will make an especial effort tonight to win be- cause the players realize that a vic tory over the Renaissance Five will be a real feather in the team's ca Because of this wish, a real battle | s in clash, The New York crew carries the same squad that last r proved to be the s son. The two forwards, fast floor orkers and almost sure shots for the hasket, pair up with the same lanky center while the guards, who are themseclves crac shots and players, will occupy » same posi- tions, New Britain's regular Uneup will start “the gam Sloman and Ru- benstein will t t forwards w Zak ki at center and Captain “Buts) Sturms and Lear: at guards. Kil Holst Frank Cassid will form the terial for th m The game will be started at 9 o'clock & will follow relim- inary to bhe playe ick Dillon will THREE FATES 8 store when the two teams LEAD IN SCORING Arbour, Darrow and Yakubo- wicz Head Dusty League “Hank” Arbour, “Hammy” Dar- row and Andy Yakubowicz, three members of the league-leading Cor- bin Screw team in the Y. M. C. A. Industrial Basketball le leading the players in scoring i the games played so far this year. Each has scored six ficld goals, but Arbour with three foul fosses and Darrow with two successtul efforts from the foul line, are first and sec- ond respectively in scoring. Although Dick Gorman has play ed only one game with the . & F. Corhin team, he is tied with Paul LaHar for leadership in foul shoot ing. Gorman who ed in P. & F. Corbin's losing battle agains! the Screw shop team last Tuesday, seoms certain of winr game: he Corbin highest s gue. It two games it has played. champs, the Stanley Wo d 34 points and 1 ird individuals now tt Corbin ¢ s New Brit ain Ma and nders plays SW) (PB) o i Ha ninsky (P& z (SW) . mar Holt Er 1 i Marsa (L) Whitman Pelletier (SW) Walthers (CCL) Haigis (SW) Tu ¢ (L) Luty ('S) Matulis (FI) Girrochowskl (I Charlow (SW) Dahlman (W) Carlson (SW) ... Zaleskl (CS) Beloin (FB) Bengston (SRIL) 0'Toolo (SRL Arena () Corazzo Schaefer (SRL) Arena (NBM) €. Charlow (L) Ka Ky (L) weaes 1 (C8) sation of the entire sea- | Arena — Hardware City Quintet Out to Proved to be Sensation of Last Sea- | son—Same Line-up to be Used — Locals to Throw ! Into Action — Dillon to | chalk lines the time honorcd ques- 5 [tion of service football supremacy. | ‘Top Church Bowlers by Margin o Two Ping in Standing 222ttt o s & ¢ rearrangement of the 1 hurch bowling league stand- ing made necessary by the voiding of several forfeitures E.B. C. Army and chorus, the St. Matthew's German Lutherans continue to top the cir-| D cuit by @ two-pin margin. Although | six losses previously chalked against | the Army were removed by the| hoard of managers Monday night | because the team non-appearance 18 due to lack of notification re rding the league, the into difficulties in its match with the Iirst Lutherans and dropped | two strings. ending its winning Meanwhile the St renely on by from the Navy. The South | church won twice from the Bach | {chorus, and the Orchestra took a| fo from the Stanley Memorial | No records were approached. | The original forfeits were due to | |the falure of the Army to appear {on the first two nights of play and | that of the Bach chorus on the opening night. It was learned that | these non-appearances were caused ¢ the fact that the sponsoring or-| streak. moved ! king the odd ga team ran| Matls | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1927. aaraaa sl 222 2 e L R L A A A ALl R A Al A L L A A A | EVANS PiCKS ALL-STAR GRID TEAM SERVICE ELEVENS " READY FOR FRAY Army and Navy Teams Mest Today at Polo Grounds New fighting Army und in the on a field of battle barred with thin Nov. #)—Two Uncle Sam—the York, rms of Polo Grounds today to setti: Onto that battle ground strode a sven, the cream of the youth, moulded into . LEADING LEAGUE 72 e bluffs of West Point. ield, the scagoing sons | the nation, ast to coast, that had saved hand-picked from marshalled a grim its bid for For while the steel-shod hoofs of the Army mule have lashed all but Yale into submission this season and drummed into 18-0 defe the flashy t of Notre Dame, the gray Koat of Navy, prougs dulled by inex- ! perience, has lost huge chunks of hide to Michigan, as well as Notre ame., But other Navy elevens, equally “green” as this one, have f great Army teams in the course | their twenty-nine year warfare, and, in the heat of America's keenest idiron rivalry, have risen to new {and glorious Lieights. Oftener, how- ever, the rollicking roar of “Kavdet, Kaydet,” has sounded in triumph at | the cloge of historic ruggles. Army has met defeat but 12 times while winning 14 games in the series. Three have been ties, includ- ing the blistering conflict of last fall, when two mighty lines and two sets of lightening backs matched point for point in a 21-21 deadlock before 120,000 fortunate fans in Chicago. From that eleven, Army has saved most of her huskicst weapons, while Navy—pitched camp | 9555555598858 88 5880485925558 55558185505 550505869850558. ALL.NEW BRITAIN AND HARTFORD GIANTS CLASH AT MEMORIAL FIELD TOMORROW-—HARDWARE CITY BASKETBALL T:AM Raskowski (BY BILLY EVANS) Picking an all-star t a matter of opinion. the Midd stricken by gradua- tions, have heen forced to rebuild | from 1i tried materinl an aggre- ! ganizations had not been notified of | Sation that has devcloped slowly on | the schedule before those dates, and the managers threw out the games. | The scores made in those will stand. | The league schedule has shifted ahead on Monday night three matches will be | rolled to play off the discarded for- citure. The Army will roll the South church, the | will meet the Orches and Bach chorus will face the St. Matts The revised standing and records: W, % P.C. St. Matthaw's .16 E. B, C. Army 11 Orchestra .... 10 | First Lutheran 10 E. B. C. Navy 9 South Cong. .. Bach Chorus n Memorial High individual anley Memorial High individual | Murphy, E. B. been | ngle—W. Wright 148, three Army, 3 High team single—E. B. C. Army, string— High team three string—E. B. C. | Army, 1654 | The latest averages of men above 90, as compiled by League Manager Clarence M are as follo; C Myers W. Howarth | Murphy 106.13 106.10 105.5 *hner 103.3 BT g tnno g conas i B Wrightl: o e 103 W. Newton ... 102.10 TRIGhtars S onontoun Al W, Preiser .. 100, TRObGTKOn R 100, W. Linn o Saeess 0D Kallerman .... 2 99, GaTinn i o8 I ihorthon et 98, Linberg H. Carlson Dahls! Denke I'riske Jonsen A. Foberg . W. Carlson . Weed Migatz Tensenen Willis K. Parker De Lar Marra W. Clarkson . Lt D) b clated Pross. Mickey Walker, middle- it champion, won from Paul former light hampion, 10. Tommy F and, de i, 10, Patsy from Heavy Andrews, Jerry (Red) Dolan, feated Joe Guinan, 6. Billy Light, St rom Jack Silver, San s York ~Johnny Risko, Cleve ted Paulino Uzcudun, ale Okun, New York. Harold Mays, Bayonne, Rosy Boutot Philadel- phia, defeated rt, Pitta- Big Boy Deterson outpointed Bearcat . Omaha, 10. Mike Mandell, knocked out J. D. Peakes, nning, Ga., 1. Joc Malloy. wpolis, knocked out Al Taylor. NG Milwaukee, Wis.—Howard Bent, aukee, defeated Mike Rozgall, 10, Phil Zwick, Cleveland stopped Sammy Sancrez, New York, Orleans, Worcester, Mass.—Johnny Shep- pard, Woburn, Mass, defeated P Zivic, Pittsburgh, 10, week and on next | Perry First Lutherans | ride .‘)'flr. ted My smr; Pollock, the shore of Chesapeuk here are the vete, Bay. 1s Born and matches | HArbold, two of the greatest ends in Army history, guarding the flanks. | h¢ living v The All-American Sprague and giant roaming the tackles, Hammack and Seeman, bulwarks of | past elevens, in the guard holes and | Hall at center. Behind this array with | tories, | plucked the Notre Dame from the fire, the bruising Murrell and crafty ave at quarter. “rom end to end, Navy must de- ! pend on an unseasoned line that has | never known the crucible of a cadet' battle, but her backtield Whitey” Llo; a wingman last who raced 95 yards touchdown in the Soldiers Fleld fray. The veterans Clifton and Rans ford, stalwart assistants, are on his flanks with Captain Hannegan di- recting the play at quarter, | Among the 76,000 people who will {cram every inch of available space | {In the National League Ball park, | will be members of the presidential | cabinet, admirals of the navy and | generals of the army, rubbing el- |bows with the cadet and middie | corps and losing dignity for two | hours at least in the glamour of the | nation's fall spectaele. There have been 700,000 applicants for their seats. But at 2 p. m,, when the starting | whistle blows, the mighty Army cleven that has been installed a & to 3 favorite and the bitter under- dogs of the navy will be just two | football teams, with past perform- | ances cast aside and paper-figured | supremacy smothered in the crash of raging youth that isu't bothered by statistics. The probable Army Harbold lincups: Navy eft end Sprague .. ...... Bagdanovich t tackle | Hammack t g . Smith .. Hannegan | Quarterback Lioyd | Left halfback | H. Milson . . Clifton Right halfback Fullback | officia Referee, W. G. Crowell, | §warthmore: umplire, A. H. Sharpe, Yale; head linesman, John C. He! nessy, Brown. Field judge, C. G. Sckles, Washington and Jefferson. | summer weather for the game. The forecast was fair and warmer, al- TIED IN TOURNEY Stewart and Kasprow Tead Cue Art- ists Having Scored Two Victorles Over Opponents. Two players are tied in the carom billiards tournamenet being conduct- | ed at Rogers Billlard Farlors. Ste lart and Kasprow have two wins each. Stewart defeated Adams 100 to 74 allowing Adams a 15 point | handicap. He also defeated Gagnon 100 to 1, both playing at scratch Kasprow defeated Tony 100 to §2 | Tony having a handicap of 15 and | Olson also defeated Tony allowing ! him 25 points. Kask beat Wallace 100 to 74. Monday's games are as follows: Adams va Wolfe, Kask vs Wolfe and Kasprow vs Gagnon. Tuesday night's matches are as follows. Olson vs Adams and Tony vs Wallace, | Captain “Light Horsc" Harry | the | Wilson, hero of a dozen Army vic the shifty Chris Cagle, who | boasts | for a | Sloane | Ransford ‘ Indications were for almost Indlan | | though there were some slight signs | greatest coact ly in their selection of pl In football, as in any ot even the stars h 2 th Should a coach touted athlete against hi would fig ) to cordingly woul lall-star choice. In picking tion of 1 | valuab sistar staffs of nine of t ir comprise the Western circuit. i Only one play the unanimous choicc of the v coaching staffs, He was | recognized as the best end in the West | Joesting of Michigan eight of the nine votes sely enough the one that f to vots | for Joesting didn’t even give him | second team considerati At all other positions, with the ex- | ception of one of the ends and | quarterbacks, the men named en- | joyed a fairly comfortable marg There was a wide difference of opinion as to who should be Ooster- baan's running mate. While the | Michigan end received the unan moas vote of the.wise men, five | other plavers were named to play | the opposite wing. Of these Fisher |of Northwestern received thres votes while Hayeraft of Minneso |and Cameron of Wisconsin each got two. Stnce there is little or no differ- ence between the modern bhackfic players, many of the coaching st juggled the players to suit their fancy In naming a q rback, Almquist of Minnesota getting the cdge over Crofoot of Wisconsin for | that position. | Difficulty was found in agreeing on the halfback positions. but th consensus showed that iilbert of} Michigan and Welch of Purdue were | | best liked. It is rather interesting to note that of the four halfhacks named on the first and teams, Purdue was honored with two of them, the brilliant and re- | liable Captain Wilcox and the sen- sational Welch, who did his best geners received Harvard. Lewis of Northwestern, despite the | fact that he been handicapped | all season because of injuries, was | ranked next to Joesting with Hum- | bert of Illnois and Armil of Iowa | receiving favorable consideration | As a concrete illustration of what a tough job it is to pick an all-star | team, no one staff of coaches named | the consensus sclection. The best { showing was made by onc of the | coaches, who named in his first team lincup nine of the eleven players selected fn the consensus. | RISKO BEATS PAULINO ters Spanish Woodchopper in Sa- | vage Bout. | New York, Nov. 25 (m | ranks of the foremost heavywe contenders boasted a new and tally unexpected figure to |Johnny Risko, baker Loy | Clevelana | Meeting Paulino Uzcudun, rugged Basque champion of Spain, at his | own game the “India-Rubber man' | of the prize ring outslugged and tered the invader last night in as savage and fierce a ten round heavyweight contest as Madison Square Garden has ever seen. With the ods all against him, Ris Ko punched out victory that carricd the right to meet the winner of the Tom Heeney-Jack Sharkey match here next month. Only Jack Demp- sey stands between the survivor of that fray and a shot at Gene Tun- ney's heavyweight crown in the plans Tex Rickard has formulated. | In whipping the Spaniard, Risko from Hanson stuff in Purdue's decisive defeat of | Reitsch Baer ALL-BIG TEN E Position 1 Nelson Qosterbaan WVEN Player . Chicago ' nig i Crane, Illinois ht, lost to Tommy . Nowack, Tllinois | ¢J, . Cameron, Wisconsin PHLLSLIH888885805820568085856500055804858558 MONPAY 'ALL-NEW BRITAIN MEETS Contest — Team Plays to Stage Preliminary T MICKEY WALKER TS DECSION Berlenhach Puts Up Terrilic Fight But Loses Verdict | Chicago, Nov. 26 (P\—Mickey Walker, stepping out of the middle- Tweight ranks he rules to slug with a former heavyweight champ- ion, took a 10-round ision from aul Berlenbach. the Astoria As- | | sassin.” Fifty thousand worth of customers, or 9,000 as the turnstiles turn, jammed the coliseum to watch Walker, who won his middleweight title here, punch his way toward the bigger fellows’ crowns. He aspire to the light heavyweight heavyweight titles, Twice Walker dropped Berlenbach to the canvas, once for a one count and again for three. An opportunc hell the second time, which was in round four, saved Berlenbach from longer count. Berlenbach fought usual bodypunching fight, it was stiff enough to put Walk to strategic retreat several times. Walker tried hard in the earlier rounds fo put his man away. This effort showed its effacct in the final |three rounds in which Walker tired. | Berlenbach outweighed Walker 173 1-2 to 161 pounds. My Sullivan, protege o. the Gib- bons hoys of St. Paul, engaged in important welterweight Freeman of for a nine dollars land, being down count in the first round. Crofoot, Wisconsin Lewis, Northwestern | Timm, llin AU FAVORED TOBE 7 REGULARS Goltege Stars Gathered Together for Anivzal Grid Batile alumnl football te its showing in a_scrimma morial Ficld in Willow Brook park Thanksgiving morning, has been sct as the favorite to win in this after- woon's batile with the High school regulars. The alumni team is com- posed of such an array of college stars who formerly cavorted in the uniforms of the Red & Gold that both the line and the backfield are choked with all sorts of power. The Johnny Grip Fordham backfield star and his pa s to “Toots” Politis, Fordham end, give promise of making things in- teresting during the game. Bel aleski, Beloin and the others who are counted on to show their stuff, are all powerful backs or lineman and the High School Independents are in for a rough session. The High school team will be at its full strength for the game. The team has worked hard in prepa tion for the meeting with the of former days and ther® are many showing of Z | DoGGoNIT, | HURRIED MY APPROACH ~ (Rl dreath | brought to an end Paulino's victory | string that included wins over Knute Hansgr, Harry Wills, and Tom Heency. Paulino weighed 198 pounds six mare than Risko. who figure eleven has received, through with a vic- | the team will come tory. sale burg is tr vided betw EYDSY or the Nows DON'T_You STar l-A;"£ 5 contest thi tart prompt ch it ituted as an s game will be a spectacie well the rth watching. The procecds of the of tickets will be fund of which Attorney Harry Gins urer, and it will be di- ‘n the Children's Home and the Polish Orphanage. THE PLAC Milford, Conu., woman's campfire, according to Chic d of a hand of wander- crs. When police asked two male members of his trespassing on nearb v John, hi because of the that fternoon The alumnl game annual affair Nov. 14 (P place is by could not l"iR YOUR W4 TRAPPERS We Buy Raw F HUDSON FUR SHOP 13 FRANKLIN SQ. drilling the wilt v at 2:30 o'clock and a fairly large crowd will turn out to being will turned into a OR WOMEN— C Lim about camp seen Of fust property cp the men on campground—"but it you ¢ of my women outside the camp pinch them.” s of All Kinls South Church Baskethall Five to Meet Broadbrook A. A. Quintet at “x” The South Congregational Church basketball team will open its sixth season on Tuesday night, when it play the Broad Brook A. A. t the local Y. M. C. A, in first encounter of the Senior Hartford County “Y" league. The New Britain church is defending its title in this league and realizes it will find the going rougher than last winter, since a number of strong teams have been placed in the ficld sea rs after the cup now held nd quintet » Broad Brook team has as its t Anthony Brandall, who formerly starred for the West Crom- well and East Berlin teams, w the balance of the outfit is compose players. The South church, he | Plaving its first game under the cap- taincy of Wilton Morey, will prob: Lly use the same starting line-up that carried it to two championships son, while there will he sev- men available for reserve last ¢ reral new !auty. The church team ls scheduled to Istart play next week in the inter- | media gue with its younger [feam, its carded opponent Leing the Kensington Bovs' club. This game may be postponed at the re- jquest of the Kensington ma [ment. Tf not, it will be plaved at the | Boys' club at 6 o'clock Thursday |evening, A junior team s being sought for (he preliminary. GIANTS IN SECOND GAME ?Hal'd\\ are City Eleven on Short End of Score in Initial and Formation Changed— Kickoff to Take Place at 2 0’Clock—Same Officia's to Handle Game as Last Week—Blues and Pawnees itle Battle. -§ Hartford Giants O'Connell All-Xew Rritain e Bingham Left End | Allison A : Verwaiss Left Tackle Irwin 3 Hunphreys it € Rogers e YNeil Center Noble % 3 Gnixdow Right Gt Sullivan Stton Ui Connelly ... . Sedil y Right E . Connelly ..... Grahay Quarterback FFoley . . . v Sturt Left Halfback ifolson Davis Ao Manning Irullback The All-New Britain football team will meet the Hartford Giants to- morrow afternoon at o'clock at Memorial field in Willow Brook park in the secon zate of a ser to seftle the professional championshin of the state. The two teams me? last week and Hartford took the verdict by a 13 to 0 score. The local eleven went throtgh pirited workout last night low Brook park and every the changes in formations nals was perfected under the siper- vision of Coach Dave Dunn. Tk team worked so smoothly th Dunn predicted that Hartford wuld face an entirely different lineup fun- than it did last week-end. New Bfitain will throw its enire strength into a fast offensive Sin- 1y afternoon. It is helicwd that the Giants, through their une. ted aerial attack of last Sunda Kot the jump on the locals that reu Iy won the game and a strict guar will be taken this tomorroy so that no play wiil be pulled with- out New Britain having a defense inst it. The Giants have an especially strong lineup with one or two of the places in the team stren ened. Showing surprising strength st a team considered its peer in last Sunday's game, the Capital City cleven breezed through a winner by the score of 13 to 0. The N Brit ain team, man for man, is deter- ed 1o reverse the verdiet Sun \fternoon 1inst The officials for the mame will b the same as last week, Willia Halloran of Providence, I 1, & member of the Nation Foothll Luague stail of officials, will he rer crec; ill he nmpir AW Hartford will be head li The New Britain Blues ¢ nees will stage a preliminary to the main atteaction. This will | started so that 1 b iwo a'clock. This is for the semi-pro ch the city. CELTIC TEAM temarrow ina draw t will undor o} s\ Why We Dub So Man-y Golf Shots—Hurrying I TN YOUR FOOLISH To WHY PLAY GOLF Tu(S AFTERNOON - You WON'T HAVE MUCH TIME BECAUSE You'lL HAVE T HURRY - - You'LL HAVE To PLAY FAST- - HURRY NOW - BACK EARLY DIDN'T HURRY T00 FAST ~ DID YoU HAUE A NICE TIME HURRY HoME JUST AS - \ FAST AS You CAnI N\ YoU'vE GOT T0 CLEAN UP AMD GET IN YOUR DINNER CLOTHES ™ ‘/ %0 BE SURE AND ) DEARIE - YoU ARE | HOPE You SssS — A TR g i 8B o NO e L ER-KE] - =5a®

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