New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 5, 1928, Page 5

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Lpart of the state’s twa Usited States Mot Univerites Wil Mot 6ive * Uy Vusin O T Now -York, Sept. 5 M—With few oxceptions one-half the football world will continue to know how the other half lives as a new seasen is hidden only by the declining shadow_&f baseball. 'To acout or. not to scout is answered. by most cel- leges In the affirmatice. When football coachea and form- or football coaches get together at luncheon they talk football .agd when two are named Jones they differ as to the merits of non-scout, ing systems. * Yale mentor, coach of the Army, and Knute Rockne were honor guests at lunch- eon yesterday, with Christy Walsh as host, at which other guests were permitted to ask the coaches ques- ons. : “What do you think of no-scout- ing agreements?” the Yale Jones was asked. “Great,” was Tad's reply. has found it highly desirable.” “Better in theory than in prac- tice,” sald Biff replying to the same Question. Rockne permitted it to be a two- man..discussion but contributed this comment: “I would not want to play some teams without acouting them, but others wouldn't matter for it ‘would do me no good.” Yale does not believe on giving its opponents the once-over and has agreements not to scout with all its major rivals. The Army does not &eout Yale but gets all the legiti- mate information it can by watch- ing other opponents play regularly scheduled games. “The non-scouting agreement has been effective at Yale and after two years it.can hardly be called an ex- periment there,” said the retiring head coach of the Elis. “It is not a question of ethics, morals or sports- manship, but has been found worth- while from a practical standpoint. It has produced better football. A team in my opinion will develop a better offensive when it is forced to £0 on its own rather than plan on the basis of what it knows of the other team's system. Certainly that has been our experience at Yale.” Captain L. M. Jones, a name “Biff" seldom hears, expressed him- self as cheerfully carrying out the policy of his athletic board in re- fusing to even peep at a Yale for- mation before game time, but frank- ly does not want more than one contest in the dark. “I think it sounds better than it works out,” he said. “Especially in early season games is it helpful to have some idea of what the opposi- tion is likely to spring. It is neces- sary, of course, to be prepared for almost anything when one meets teams from every section of = the country but it helps to have an ink- ling of the way your opponents have gone gbout their job in previous games(! P “Bift* suggested that it is a stéain on the ¢motions to go to play & game against an opponent with the only available information the color of the player's Jerseys. “The night before the Army-Yale game last year,” sald the Army coach reminjscently, "I was con- vinced from a chat with ‘Tad’ that it he despised anything in football it was any form of shift plays. I nearly fell off the bench the next day when Yale lined up with a shift, modified it is true, but nevertheless a shift.” “Your ‘didn’t tell them, Biff,” re- minded Tad, “that early in the week you wrote me you:had gone back to your shift.” The far-flung arena of . foptball territory covered by Notre Dame makes its scouting system expensive from a standpoint of rajlway fares alone, 'but as are former Notre.Dame players, traveling is no novelty to them. Chided as to the many-miles covered by his players, Rockne came back with thc obser- vation, that “a football player can study his textbooks just as zealous! in a Pullman berth as in his dormi- tory bed at home—if he wishes." He added: “Traveling is . broadenin; you know. After a student finishes a football season at Notre Dame he is well equipped to be a traveling salesman or a newspaper man.” TINMERMAN FALS 70 WIN AT POLLS Wisconsin Governor Denied Re- nomination by Badger Yoters Milwdukee, Sept. 5.—(—A tra dition of 33 years was broken in the primary election Tuesday when Gov. Fred Zimmerman was denied nomination by the republicans in his quest for a second term. Zimmerman suffered a crushing defeat that placed him a poor third, the choice of the republicans lying between, Walter J. Kohler, consérva- tive, and Representative Joseph D. Beck, progressive. The ' possibility that Kohler, prominent manufacturer seeking po- litical office for the first time, might be the first conservative nominated in ten years on the basis of returns which (continued to give him a margin over Beck who had the sup- “Yale Night School SEPTEMBER 17TTH sehators, John J. Blalas snd Robert M. LaFoliette. ¥ Outcoms n Doubt The outcome was still in doubt with a race so0 closs that only the compiete returns may. settle it. Both Kohler and Beck were polling twice as many.votes- as the governor who defeated the progressive and. con. ssrvative ‘candidates two years ag The nomination of Seaator Robert M. LaFollette ' who kas been in the ssnate since his father’s death three years ago was conceded. He easily defeated Mayor George W. Mead of Wisconsin Rapida, ~ conservative re- publican, by & twe to one vote, The democratic candidates who will sesk election in the' fall for governor and -United States senator were nominated without opposition. For _ United" Btates senator, the democrats named former Repre- sentative Michael K. Reilly, of Fond Du Lac, Mayor A, G. Schmedeman, ©of Madison, former minister to Nor- way, was named for the guberna- torial race. They were selected at a state conference, held in Milwaukee in July, - Progressives Win Returns showed that the complete progressive ticket with the possible exception of Representative - Beck was. nominated in the republican primary. These included: Lieut. Gov. Henry A. Huber, Attorney General John W. Reynolds, Secretary of State Theodore Dammann, and State Treasurer Bolomon Levitan. They were the running mates of Senator LaFollette and Beck on the progressive ticket, and opposed those placed in the field by a conservazive republican conference which indors- ed Kohler. The conservative candi- dates for other state offices ran far behind Kohler and there was no doubt of the outcome of the contest for the minor state ofices from the start. ‘The vote in the republican govern- orship race in 1,708 of the state's 2,760 precincts was: Beck, 116,717; Kohler, Zimmerman, ¢9,921. For senator- on the republican ticket the vote in 1,481 precincts was: LaFollette, 141,612; Mead, 76,853, 129,565; Krassin to Continue Hunt for Amundsen Moscow, Sept. 5 (#-—The assump- tion based on the finding of a pon- toon of their plane, that the Amund- gen party met death will not stop the work of the icebreaker Krassin in searching the northern seas, The Russian arctic rescue eommittee an- rounced yesterday that it would per- eist in the search: for both the Al- lesandri party and -the- Amundsen group as long as-there is one chance in a hundred.: that they live, Man Seriously Hurt In Train Accident New York, Sept. 5§ P—One man wae seriously injured and train serv- ice in and out of the Grand Central Mation was tied up for an hour last night when two empty passenger trains collided in the Mott Haven yards of the New York Central rail- road in the Bronx. Jerome Johnson, & negro laborer, was taken to a hospital with one arm and both legs badly crushed. SURVEY DEAD SEA Jerusalem, (M—Mineralogists are surveying the Dead Sea, believing it to be Palestine's most prolific source of mineral deposits from a commer- clal point of view, A concession for its exploitation has been agreed to in principle, ' CHILD FATALLY RURT Bangor, Me., 8épt. 5.—UP—Mae, T year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs, J, Andrew Gass of South Brewer, was fatally-- fnjured by an itomobile which struck her as she passed around the rear end of a street car from which she had ‘alighted. AR S RS Specializing in Automobile In- surance. 8ee us in regard to your financial responsibility for state registration. Room 320 Raphael Bldg. 9 West Main Street. - Phone 4847, OPENS Telephone 207 WATCHAN SLAIN BY ME. ROBBERS Tries t0 Protect Savings of $1,170 on Board Ship Portland, Me.. Sept. 5.—(P—The victim of an attempted robbery aboard the schooner Edward B. ‘Winslow last night, Henry Gustafson, 57, of Boston, watchman of the ves- sel,- died, VAth three bullet wounds in his body at the Maine Genersl hospital about midnight, two hours and ¢0 minutes after the murderers escaped without loot. Guatafson, alone on the vessel at the - Portland Terminal company’s wood handling wharf No. 3, foot of Emery street, when the attack oc- curred, had invited two strangers aboard when they played upon his camaraderie of the sea and had evinced -interest in the story of the recent rough voyage of the Winslow from’ Florida with her cargo of lum- ber. ‘Wounds Fatal He received fatal wounds in at- tempting to protect his savings of two years, $1,170, hidden under the mattiess of his bunk in the fo'castle from the strangers when one clubbed him over the head with the butt of a revolver'and then shot him three the deck. Apparently the robbers lost their nerve through the stiff battle which the mortally wounded man gave and NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD; times as he battled both men across | e and although every available police- man sought the murderers (hey. were still at large when he died. Armed details motored through Portland and South Portland, seek- ing two strangers with light com. plexions, wearing caps, lighter color- ed trousers than their coats and aged about 30 years. Hold Men Augusta, Me., Sept. 5. UP—Three men riding “blind = baggage" were taken off a train from Portland here early today by police acting on in- formation from authorities of that city and were held for questioning in connection with the death there of Henry Gustafson, schconer watch- man. > ' ‘Two of the men, suspected .of be- ing the actual -slayers, refused to give their names to -police:although they admitted- they were seafaring men. The name of the third man was not learned. - Ellsworth Pays Fine Tribute to Amundsen New York, Sept. 5.—UP—Lincoln Ellsworth, companion of Roald Amundsen on two aerial adventures into the Arctic, last night paid tribute to the famous Polar explorer who was lost while attempting to rescue the crew of the Italia. five companions set out from Trom. soe, Norway, left little hope, Ells- worth said, that the noted Nor- wegian was still alive. B Two years of close intimacy, Ells- worth asserted. had never dulled the hero worship in' which he held the sturdy Norseman. fled. No' oné saw ' them leave the vessel “except the helpless victim Both packages Italy has a population of 338 to the square mile, but without wn’tf..‘ contain' ‘Alice Bradley's meous and suggestions If you prefer Vanills or Choc® to the hostess: either Fro-joy late or Straw- Joe Cream, you m!d it in d‘e‘conv enient pint package- thwfl“ S N7 Y WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1928 The finding of bits of wreckage of | | the plane in which Amundsen and | COWHIDE LEATHER 50c IRLS' FANCY STRIPED WOOL FELT TAMS .......... 79 CASH YOUR FACTORY PAY CHECKS HERE WOVEN HANDKER- CHIEFS s 3c “BACK-TO-SCHOOL” - SALE Largest Variety! Lowest-in-the-City Prices! Boys’ All Wool Boys’ Blue Serge Knickers Sizes 8 to 17 Raphael’s “Bld(-to-Sclad(" Sale '1.85 | Made of fine quality blue serge. Pants | fully lined and cut full. Practical for | Fall and school wear. 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Made of good heavy satine, extra full. 980 Raphael's “Back- to-School” Sale Girls’ Blue Serge Skirts Sizes 8 to 22,

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