New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 28, 1928, Page 13

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hich 1gers and s got ' five con- orth- gree- d by $100 s as 4 - will on at the 1 b to La r the d be- r tha . and elect- nday, llow- . B icki, , Sie Inick, Salak, Bud- is as latka, Beg- redar, Wwood, Ber- tinee clubs main- oy the pre- ester- riend < that than » pre- n the se no ion of a city, awing The othing there at St rnooi. [' ‘alker, 10cked Fran- iffiths, K. o L d Tom Jac e Li Sandy feated Firpo, George itchell, Donie, Love- Harry 6). Speakingi of Sports The war is on! The Burritts and the Falcons have agreed to play a baseball series of three games out ©of five to settle the argument that has arisen anent the superiority of both teams. Managers Cabay and Lasky signed articles yesterday and the first game is to be played next Sunday at St. Mary's field. . The feeling in the northwest sec- tion of the city is at red-hot stage Just mow. Friends who have been pals since childhood have felt a cool- ness crop up between them over the baseball situation and several clashes have already been imminent along Broad street. Manager Cabay and Manager Lasaky live acroas from each other on Gold street and each is think- ing of mounting a machine gun in the front windows to stop the hot shots from the other side. Backers of both teams are col- lecting & purse which will be wager- ed on the outcome of the game and from all indications, Sunday's at- tendance will break all records at 8t. Mary's field. The Falcons are in trouble. “Lef- ty" Atwood, star moundsman of the team, will not be with the club this coming Sunday when the first gam= 18 to be played. Atwood is laid up with iliness and his doctor has ad- vised him to lay off one Sunday This leaves the Falcons with Johnn Rose as a pitcher and he will have the experience of meeting his for- mer mates. Last year he reached the hall of fame by hurling a no- hit, no-run game for the Burritta. One the other hand, it seems likely that the Burritts will have Bruno Kania on the firing line. Bruno was once the mainstay of the Fal- cons and he will be facing his for- mer mates in the game. Johnny Cabay keeps on with his wise cracks about the Burritts. “Sun- day's game will be the easiest for the Falcons in five years,” he said today, “especially when the Burritis put Bruno Kania in to pitch. The Falcons will have an easy time in disposing of the Burritts and many of the backers of the team will be poor for some time after we get through with them.” Continuing he said: “I don't think the Burritts will have the nerve fo back up their baseball team with ‘money. All this talk about putting up dough is a lot of boloney to me. T don’t think the Burritts figure they have a chance of winning at all. « They know we can lick them and so do we. They are like a lot of oth. ers, they do a lot of talking but they are not there with the goods. A barking dog never bites.” Manager Lasky is just as bitter againat the Falcons. He said tcday: “They think that because they have picked a line of soft teams this sea- son that they are the best team n the city. They tried to turn us down on our challenge but we made them come acroes with a series of games. Johnny Cabay will be fit for Middle- town when the Burritts get through with his team next Sunday.” “The Burritts,” he continued, "will be fighting every minute dur- Ing the game. It “Lefty” Atwood is in the box we'll spoil his reputation ind i? he isn't, it's just going to be & practice session for us, this game Sunday. The Falcolns have swelled heads and we're going to take them down Sunday.” ti These are both preity strong statements but with the backers of both teams talking the same way, there is bound to be plenty of hot stuff at the baseball field Sunday afternoon. A real “freak” happened at Rogers bowling alleys yesterday when Al Houck knocked off a four pin spare and the No. 5 pin bound- ed back on the alley and spotted it- self exactly on the spot. The game between the Stanley Works and Fafnirs scheduled to be played at Walnut Hill park tonight has been called off because of the rain and wet grounds. Lok, TEAN WS Rogers Measure of Charter Oak Five in Recreation Five Takes Three Games. t Rogers Recreation Five opened up the bowling season last night by de- feating the Charter Oak Five of Hartford by 141 pins and three games. Joe Foote had high single with 165 and high three string of ¢ 406. This gave him an average of ) 135 for his night's work. The scores were as follows: Charter Oak—Hartford Walsh 112 119 95— 326 Sickles ...... 103 98 105— 306 t Howard . 103 92 90— 285 Gene 101 114 118— 333 Frisk 106 141 138— 385 564 546—1635 Rogers Recrcation—New. Britain Stedman 122 107 HI8— 347 ‘Tronosky 110 148— 379 Foote ... 165 115— 406 Gacek 12 125— 333 Rooney 97 113— 311 i 566 591 619—1776 p TO MANAGE HAN N | New York, Aug 28 (UP)—Billy Gibson was named as manhager of i Knute Hansen, one of the heavy- weight possibilitics, by Tex Rickard. Walter P. Chrysler and other mil- } lonaires who own the services of the big Swedish fighter. Gibson will : pay $11.250 for a 25 per cent share in Hansen and Walter Friedman. The former manager will relinquish all claims. g | Nearly 30,000 ofl wells are drilled annually, of which oser one-quarter turn out to be doy, while 31 per ! cent of the new wells produce less than 25 barrels a day. | READ MERALD CLASSIFIED ADS Baseball Standing AMERICAN LEAGUE Yesterday’s Results New York 4-5, Detroit 3.2, St. Louis 8-4, Boston 6. Cleveland 5, Washington 3. Chicago-Philadelphia, rain. WEADOWS 15 PUT ON RETIRED LIST Bespectacled Hurler On Pirate e $tall Has Sinus Trouble w. L l‘:;i‘;a;e'l’;')‘m ST New York, Aug. 28 (Pi—Another 8t. Louis Elfi 60 face, long familiar to National s 08 et league bascball fans, has passed out Wzahlngt.on y 57 6"1 of the major league picture. e emny s H. Lee Meadows, first be-specta- | Detroit Zn 5 cled pitcher in the big leagues, has “BO‘EYOII '_’ 50 1360 been placed on the voluntarily re. |tired list by the Pittsburgh Pirate. Meadows, in the major leagues for 14 years, is another victim of that arch-foe of diamond stars—sinus trouble. Meadows has suffered off and on with this complaint for sev- eral years. This year he has been practically useless to the Pirates. He Games Today Chicago at Philadelphia, 2. Cleveland at Washington. St. Louis at Boston. (Other clubs not scheduled). Games Tomorrow Chicago at Philadelphia. St. Louis at Boston. Cleveland at Detroit. (Other clubs net scheduled). and appeared in but one or {wo others. It has been his failure to deliver that has been responsible in part at leust for the difficulty the Pirates have experienced in trying NATIONAL LEAGUE o get into the running. Last year he won 19 games and lost 10 and Yesterday's Results was an important cog in the pen- St. Louis 11, Chicago 3. nant winning machine Donie Bush Pittsburgh 9, Cincinnati 4. developed. Meadows, born at Oxford, N. C., in The Standing 1894, started his professional base- W. L. Pt [ball career with Durham of the Car- §t. Louis . R 45 610 olina association in 1913. After two | New York 49 years with Durham he was sold to | Chicago 54 the St. Louis Cardinals for whom Cincinnati 54 he toiled for nearly five years. In Pittsburgh 54 1919 he was traded fo the Phillies | Brooklyn 64 d then to the Pirates in 1923 | Boston ; R 71 that deal Meadows and Johnny Philadelphia 33 51 Rawlings were exchanged for Cotton - | Tierney and Glazner. With a first di- Games Today vision team for the first time in his Bostno at New York. 2. Meadows at once jumped Philadelphia at Pittsburgh. 2. For the Pirates St. Louis at Chicago. (Other clubs not scheduled) career, |into winning form From 1923 to the start of the pres- ent season the be-spectacled right hander’s record showed §§ victories fand 54 defeats. | For his 13 complete seasons of {baseball he had 157 victories to match 179 defeats although most of | his career was spent with second di- Games Tomorrow Boston at New York. Philadelphia at Pittsburgh St. Louis at Chicago. (Other clubs not scheduled) \TERN ArT Ivision clubs. He appeared twice in INEERNATRONATRUFAGUE B v ot a0a vas beateniiboth times. In 1925 he pitched eight in- Yesterday's Results Newark 7, Rochester 2 Montreal 5, Jersey City 4. Buffalo 6, Baltimore 3. Reading 3, Toronto 2. |nings of the opening game against | Walter Johnson, Washington eventu- allly winning, 4 to 1. He was match- ed against Herh Pennock of the Yankees in the third game of the 1027 series, retiring after 6 1-3 in- |nings in a game which the Yankees The Standing w. L. Reading B [Bonsitart | Toronto L | o Buffalo 73 65 Rochester . 68 62 B Baltimore 68 L1} 515 Montreal ... 68 anT Newark 71 474 SE AT HAN[] dersey City ...... 55 4 346 ames Today Newark Rochester. Sk Toweser - Princeton and Notre Dame Have Hard Schedule Baltimore at Buffalo. | Reading at Toronto. | The annual fall hysteria, with its [fiying tackles, fumbled punts. triple | passcs and sweep runs, is only a |month away. The nation's football army mobilize next month and a thousand and one coaches will begin a frantic search for another “Red” Grange, other Benny Oosterbaan, and an- other Ernie Nevers From logging calips, ice wagons, EASTERN LEAGUE Yesterday's Results Hartford 4, Bridgeport 1 New Haven 3, Albany 2. (17 innin New Haven (7 inning Springfield Providence (1st). Albany 1. (Ind), . Waterbury 5-4, Pittsfield 3-9. The Standing L. pet |steel mills and gymnasiums will New Haven 84 47 come thousands :nd thousands of Pittsfield .. LT a6 young athletes bent on making a Providence 268 by place on the varsity eleven. Hartford 66 69 No drastic «langes were made in Albany 67 63 [the football r.lus curing the winter. Bridgeport. 66 65 and the gam: this season will be al- Springfield 64 mest identic! with the game as Waterbury 6 | played in yu Three Mmor Changes Games Today “Fe three minor changes, Pittsfield at Bridgeport. | fol o Waterbury at Albany. 1. The backward or lateral pass Providence at Springtield must be thrown a distance of two (Other clubs not scheduled). s hefore siriking the ground and briefly, 18 dead at poui of recovery. Games Tomorrow Eith muft or fumble of a Pittsfield at Bridgeport. wunt may be recovered bhut not ad- Waterbury at Albany viiced beyond point of recovery. Providence at Springfield. 3. No player on the side making New Haven at Hartford. la forward pass and who has crossed S the line may interfere with an op- poncnt until the hall has been WASHINGTON WINS A large number of schools will be gin football pracoe: the first we. in September., wle, Harvard and Princeton, the last of the eastern teams to begin trainit g open their ROTARY PENNANT camps September 1 (Continued from Preceding Page) A few minor gam re schedul 1 - for Saturd f P 2 but th: Patuch 0 o = o alofficial opening will not take place Bartinsky 11 2 1 0juntil Saturday, 29, whin prac- | ottt o8 b oa ltically all of the leading teams g o 0 1 a ofinto action Harvard and 0 0 3 1 i|Princeton do a0t open ther season L O luntil Oct. 6. Yale p Main: Totaly 3 2 12 s 3|Harvard s pringfield a NATHAN HALE I’rinceton plays Veriiont , AB R H PO A a| Notre Dame and ite Army hai et 2 h a1 & % %ltwo of the toughest schedules ever Kastancuk, ss 3 0 o 0 o 1lattempted by any football teams. Jarvis, If 1 1 1 0 0f{Notre Dame plays Carnegic Tech, st ¢ 0 0 1 9 Georgia Tech, Minnesota, Southern Camp, 1b 1 + % & 1 | Mortey, 3n 1% st o Gerent, «f IR S I Scheyd, of B 190 00 Tutko, rf S0 L N R Bl 013111 UHIGH PRESSURE Totals ¢ ¢ 13 ¢ 3 ) Burritt aon 303 Nathan Hale 141 0x—$ o Twns base hits. Camp, Jarvis. YOU'RE A WNE(K OF AN THAT Bl GUY BOLLY TAKE oee TuaT LODGES ARE HARD HIT | Radio and Automobiles Take Men From Their Old Time Away Haunts In Lodge Rooms, Tiffin, Ohio, Aug. 25 P—Member- ship in fraternal orders is being hard hit by the automobile and the radio, according fo State Senator William A. Clark, Urbana, Ohio. he former lodge man now takes his family automobile riding or re- mains home to listen to the radio instead of going to lodge meetings,” Clark, state organizer for the Junior Order, United American Mechanics, said in his report to the state con- vention here today. SOKOLS PRACTICE The Sokol baseball team will prac. tice tomorrow night at 6:30 o'clock al 8t. Mary's field. All members of the team are asked to be on hand. has won only one game this season ' he never turned in a losing record | will | California, Army, Navy and Penn State. The Army plays Southern Methodist, Harvard, Yale, Carleton, Notre Dame, Nebraska and Stanford. Princeton a Favorite A few of the outstanding teams in cach section for the coming season follows: East — Princeton, Pittsburgh, Army. Big Ten—Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa. Big Six—Missouri, Nebraska. South—Georgie, Vanderbilt, bama, Georgia Tech. Southwest—Southern | Texas Texas Agsies. I'ar West — Stanford, | California, Idaho. | Rocky Mountain Conference — { Denver, Colorado Aggies. Country-at-large—Notre Dame. Princeton, with its veteran ma- {terial, will be one of the {teams in the country to beat this |season. The Tigers’ backfield of Ed | Wittmer, Mike Miles, Ja#k Norman |and Bill Scarlett is one of the most | promising quartets for the season. | Wisconsin has high hopes of win- Darthmouth, Ala- Methodist, Southern team, coached by Glenn Thistl- thwaite. Pop Warner s his sq at Stanford this season is the great- est he has ever coached. Georgi ckficld of Johnson, Hooks. Dudley and MeCrary may turn out to be one of the nation's hest Nebraska will have a veteran team, including Blue Howell. the great fullback. Southern Methodist, with the bril- {liant Redman Tzame, will come east for the first time to play Army. Py WALKER SCORES KAY0 OVER ARMAND EMANUEL ‘.‘ll'hlk‘\lrlghl Champion Makes Suc- J cesstul Entry Into Light Heavy- } weight Ranks | san Francisco, Auz. 25 (- Uickey Walker, middicweight | champion, made a successtul entry pmo the light heavyweight ranks | 1ast night when he scored a sensa- tional knockout over Armand Emanucl, San Prancisco, i the {seventh round of their ten round I bout | With the same spectacular attck | that helped him win and hold the welterweight and middleweight [titles in turn, Mickey Walker | punched Einanuel cut of the 1.5 pound class, temporarily at least, | Two short right handers did the trick. The first time the right nded, Emanel reclined on the can- | vas for nine seconds. He got up | aroggy. and during a hard exchange in which he tried to regain ground, | bumped into another right to the | jaw that put him out for the full | |count. Handlers had to help him | to his corner and he was dazed long [after reaching his dressing room | A few months ago Emanucl gave | rommy Loughran a great battle, | losing a close decision A crowd of approximately 20,000 persons paid around $50,000 to the fight. I‘oggy and cool weats i held down the attendance, Jack Kearns, manager of Walker, | announced that he was ncgoti |for a title match with Loughran | He said it would be held either in Chicago or Los Angcles. MAN PAR BAD BEATIN | Golfing Wizard From Atlanta Plays Sensaticnal Game in Practice Rounds at Chicago Chicago, Aug. 22 (P —Tobby Jones, the golfing wizard from A lanta has handed “old man par probably the worst licking he has ever received. In three successive 15 hole |rounds on the long Chicago golf course, where he is practicing for | the Walker cup matches this week, | Bobby has averaged just 67 2-3 sirok:s or a total of 203 strokes, which for 54 holes carries a total par of 213, Bobby’'s remarkable scorcs over {the par 72 course were made hefore | members of the British and Ameri- | can Walker cup team members, who Aid they had never heard of such | uccessive series of performances |anywhere before over a champion- ship course. His tirst record breaking round | was scored Sunday when he carded la 68 or three under par for a new |course record. Then yesterday | morning, he bettered that with a and in the afternoon proved n't all a mistake by turning in onother 68, Only once on the three rounds | was the national amateur champion lin trouble and that was when " is | drive landed into some shrubbery | while playing his Sunday round. The | rest of the way |in a while four and five stroke: {and into the cup. Germany produces 2,000 varieties of sausages. PETE OFFICER, \ETTiNG— HOU, HESTRROM — ONtfaren — W hardest | ing | it | and for the three | | rounds, it was just three and once | COLLIERS GIVEN SCARE BY Y TEAW (League Leaters in Jusior Loop . Edge 01{ pucky Win League Standing | W L Pet Colliers e g N aT000 DBurritts L] 2 J750 Phantoms 4 2 667 Am. Legion 3 4 lans Y. M. C. A 2 1 e The pace setting Colliers were given quite a sca y the Y M. C. A. | team in a Junior City league game at Walnut Hill park and they were fortunate to edge out with a two {run lead when Umpire Lynch called | |the game in the seventh inning on | laccount of darkness. The final score | ning the Big Ten title with a veteran | was 6 to 4 | The winners were just able to | keep out in front last night and they had to go the limit before they copped the decision. The “Y" team | plaved fine baseball but lacked the | necessary punch to go ahead. Both | pitchers were in fine fettle and were stingy with their Lingl Three hits and & hit batsman were responsible for the first three tallies of the winners in the opening inning. | The “Y" team broke into the run |column in practically the same way in the first half of the third frame. The Collicrs scored two more runs in the last half of this inning on two {hits and a free ticket. The losers countered twice in the fifth inning |and had the bases loaded when the last man was retired in the frame. Two passes in the last half of this inning accounted for the last run of | the game. Recano, who was in the box for | the losers, pitched a fine throughout and de Ifate. He was a trifle erratic, how- ever, and passed five of the Collier | batsmen. Golas, the opposing | pitcher, although not up to his usual | standard, pitched 2 good enough | game to win and was pulled out of | several tight places by the brillia | support accorded him, The * pitcher sent nine of his opponents back to the bench by way of the 8. 0. route while Golas fanned eight | of the losing batters, | Sapkowski and Hayes played a fine fielding game for their respective teams while the latter also crack |out two safe bingles. Umpire Lynch |called the game in the seventh be- cause of darkness. The score: | RS TRICE AB R H PO A & Meliganas, rf .. 1 S0l oy ey 20 5 e 210 1 ¢ SRR o S ) 0 s g o0 o0 0 D Totals 1B 6 0 coLl E H PO A E T e 20y maatie ke Sy O S e e Forkowski, s+ .2 1 1 1 0 0 Florkowski, «f.2 0 1 0 0 Ao 0 1 a8 e i Ty N e g Spih0 ! 3 o3 o1 Tota 5 ey A 20 0. Colliers 010 x—6 Two base hite: H. Recano, W. Flor kowski, Marcineyi Struck out: By Re- cano 9, hy Golas § | FRATERNAL LEAGUE Enagles Surprice by Handing Pthians | Defcat While Mechanics Are | | Dumping Kaceys. | i League Standing | W AT { Tabs 3 K. of (. 5 | Mechanics 4 Arcanum ‘ Phocnix 5 Eagles 6 | Lexington 7 last night in the Fraternal Soft Ball league when they dropped a game to the low-flying Eagles by the score of 610 5. It was a wow of a battle all through with the birds getting the jump and keeping it. In the second game of the night, the Mechanics nosed out the K. of C., setting that team back also in [th anding, by a 13 to 12 score. ‘eys got away to a good lead strong reserve strength of the Mechanics showed up in the late |innings and won the game for them. The score was as follows: | nd the Lexington team will play the | Bagles. Both are postponed games. 'READ HERALD CLASSIFTED ADS | FOR B RESULTS game | ved a better | K. of (- .360 300 0—12 [ Mechani . ..000 129 1—13 Games Tonight Weather permitting, the Junior fechanics will play the Tabs tonight | EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1928 TENNIS OFFICIALS | MADE_RIDICULOUS Noted Author Gives Views\On‘ Recent Judgment On Star | R AR | Boston, Aug. 28 (P—The execu. | tive committee of the United States {l-awn Tennis association has placed itself in a ridiculous position by bar- | ring William T. Tilden, 2nd, for vi- olating its amateur player-writer rule, according to Samuel Merwin, author and close follower of the game. “It seems to me.” Merwin told the | Associated Press today. “high time | for somebody to speak up with a little plain sense on this Tilden bu ness." The author, one of Tilden's closest friends, then added: “The spectacle of an over-solemn- | ized body of tennis officials in con- | | |clave, charging, fulminating, spread- |ing personal calumny like nothing |on earth but a school of cuttle fish | emitting Sepia, is disturbing to hon- | est sportsmanship and distressing to | the sense of humor. | “Mr. Tilden is accused of writing for the press. What of it? He writes | interesting and well. With pen and |racquet he has done more for the ' game than any other player or group of players that ever lived. Probably the old British leisurc-class notion of amateurism will never work out in terms of the American temperament. | But taking the sport as we find 1t I | doubt if there is one among them all. player, and ‘officials,’ who ap- proaches Bill Tilden's fine and en- | thusiastic amateur spirit, or one who has so wholeheartedly, or at such | cost to himself, given his best to the game. “The present conflict appears, to the reasonably well-informed observ. ler. to be misleading. It isn't hon- estly, a question of amateurism. {That, in America, is a subtle and [ complicated problem which the gen- [tiemen of the U. S L. T. A. have| never comprehensively faced. Tt is, | T should say. politics. that curious {nitial attack, carefully held back until President Cullom and Chair- man Wear were out on the high scas, could not fail to disgust those who knew even a little of the con- | difions. There are men. no longer in power in the United States Lawn | Tennis association, who would relish | resuming the reins. It is fun to run | {a show, an, as all of us know who | | have looked into the relationship between business and publicity, it is far from unprofitable. “Then Tilden is fair game. of {course—has been for years—be- | cause he has had the courage to |speak out for the mere players. Now {the player is supposed to keep quiet | and do what he's told. Certainly | [those who do. in spite of a thousand | {0cd and persistent and almost ludi- crously obvious little facts. never | find their amateur status in question. $10.000 em Or if those others are cven admon- card of ished it is done most inconspicuous. ly. 1 have not known of an in tance in recent pire state stake heads & four cvents at the grand cireuit races today one of the greats est ficld of (rotters ever ussembled {Bere will get the word in the empire those of us who “As it stand and horsenien are predicsing a ollow and love the game may not 1ecord Smashing performance pro- have the pleasure of seeing the viding the weather remains clear. »eautitul Tilden strokes in tourna- = ments this year hecause a group of over-excited committeemen have got | Hunover. N. H. Aug. 28 (I'P)— into the mud and sunk heyond their ' is a chance. Dartmouth col- dapth. lege officials said. that Jess Hawley “Oh for a better sort of sports- Will be unable to return as head manship in the U. 8. L. T. 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