New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 6, 1928, Page 12

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P NUTMEGS TO PLAY IN STAPLETON NEXT SUNDAY—NEW BRITAIN HIGH ELEVEN BATTLES HILLHOUSE QF NEW HAVEN IN THIS CITY ON SATURDAY — PAULINO DEFEATS OTTO VON PORAT AT MADISON SQUARE GARDEN—SPORTS OF INTEREST. NEW BRITAIN TO RETURN GEORGETOWN-CARNEGIE GAME SATURDAY FEATURE Battle to Be Fought In Albany Leads List of Intersec- tional Games This Week—Neither Team Has Suf- fered Defeat As Yet—. See Army’s Cadets early 80,000 Persons Will Notre Dame at New York—Yale, Princeton and West Virginia All Face Worthy Gridiron Foes. New York, Nov. 6 (M—There are half a dozen intersectional contests on the eastern college football sched- ule next Saturday but only two of | them will take much of the center spotlight away from the Georgetown- Carnegie Tech battle of undefeated teams at Albany, N. Y. . | Nearly 80,000 persons are expected | to see Army's victorious cadets tangle with Notre Dame at New | York and close to 70,000 others are ! expected at the Navy-Michigan battle at Baltimore. Army's undefeated record will be | at stake in the Yankee stadium. | Notre Dame, beaten by Wisconsin | and Georgia Tech, has been coming | along fast, but there are few who | believe Knute Rockne's eleven can upset the Cadets who already have disposed of such outstanding teams as Southern Methodist, Yale and Harvard. Michigan and Navy have known defeat rather often this season but both have shown remarkable recu- perative powers. After three cessive setbacks, the have defeated Duke, Pennsylvania and West Virginia Wesleyan in a row. Michigan accepted four re- verses before staging one of the sea- son's outstanding up sets with a 3-0 victory over Illinois last Saturday. Yale, Princeton and West Virginia all face intersectional foes they are fayored to defeat. The Elis battle | Mdryland which lost 9-6 to Virginia Poly last weck. Princeton, unde- | feated but tied twice, meets a Wash- ington and Lee team downed by Vir- ginia, 20-13. Virginia, incidentally, bLattled ‘the Tigers to a scoreless draw a few weeks ago. West Vir- ginia Mountaineers, who play Ford- ham at the Yankee stadium today, face the Oklahoma Aggies on Satur- day. The westerners have found the | going extremely tough this season, losing their first four games without scoring a point. Syracuse, sixth | team to uphold eastern prestige against an eleven from another sec- tion, takes the field against undefeat- ed Ohio Wesleyan. The Ohio con- ference team has six victories to its credit so far, one of them being Michigan's Wolverines. The scheduls does not lack for big time battles among the home- breds. In addition to the Carnegie | Tech-Georgetown game there are | such outstanding attractions as Pennsylvania-Harvard, Dartmouth- Brown, Fordham-Boston College, | Pitt-Washington and Jefferson, Wes- leyan-Williams, Lehigh-Bucknell and Lafayette-Rutgers. Of these per- haps Penn's tangle with the Crimson of Harvard offers the most oppor- tunity for spectacular football. Aside from a 6-0 setback by the Navy, Lou Young's Penn squad has swept through its schedule like a whirl- wind but there is a strong suspicion in some quarters at least that Har- vard is going to avenge that 24-0 defeat the Red and Blue inlicted upon the Crimson last year. Columbia, Cornell, Colgate, New York university, Penn State and Holy Cross face secondary opposition in Johns Hopkins, 8t. Bonaventure, which plays Canisius at Buffalo to- day, Hobart, Alfred, George Wash- ington and Boston university re-| spectively. Johns Hopkins and St. Bonaventure upset the dope last year | by tying Columbia and Cornell but the odds are against any repetition this season. BOXER IS DYING AFTER KNOCKOUT IN FIGHT Buly Showers, Youthful Middle- weight, in Critical Condition tn suc- | Midshipmen | .0, q of never winning a Triangu- | was something which caused gloom |rest of the season. {led by its “galloping ghost,” “Wild- [that the Elm City eleven lost about |g00d men who are new to the line- |league, defeated New Haven 7 to 0 |veteran halfbacks who started will | Chicago. 10. Arthur De Kuh, New | Kansas City, LOGALS LOOK FOR VICTORY SATURDAY New Britain High Meets Hill- house of New Haven This Week ! Confidence in the New Britain High school football team grew last Saturday with the decisive defeat of the highly-tosted Adams team of Massachusetts and the student body will be out en masse to back the team in its first Triangular league game of the year against the New Haven Hillhouse High school team at Willow Brook park Saturday aft- ernoon. It will be revenge which the New Britain boys will be seeking when they face the Elm City team. Last year the New Haven boys broke a lar league game on their home grounds and the way they did it in the New Britain camp for the Last year the New Haven team cat” Wilson, wiped the field with New Britain and finished on the long end of a 24 to 0 score. How- ever, the ®illhouse team this year is not as strong as last year and New Britain has a chance to do damage, Despite the fact, however, seven of its veterans, it has some up and in every game but one this year the Hillhouse team has been the victor, Hartford Public High school, the other member of the Triangular in the last quarter of their game.! The Red and Gold eleven will have to improve over its form in the Adams game in order to win. Tha team was better than it was all year but it will probably have to cor- tinue improvement. The lineup which will start for New Britain will have only four of the players who started for the Hardware City team against New Haven last year. They are Frana Casale, Bill Kuhs, Eddie Sowka and ptain Louis Landino. Two of the be on the bench. They are Alex Zaleski and Mike Grip. Anothér regular who started, Tony Nevulls, has been out sick all season.. . New Britain's chances will = de- pend to a great extent on how well the tackles and ends take care of the skin-tackle and end run plays of the New Haven team. TIf the tackles play low and charge and if the ends play it safe there should be no worry on this count. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By tha Aewociated Press. New York—Pauline Uzcudun, Spain, outpointed Otto Von Perat, York, knocked out Tiny Roebuck, 1. Jack Shaw, Union City, N. outpointed Marco Polo, Pittsburgh, 4. Marvin Schecter Bos- ton, and Bill Bronze, New York, draw, 4. Jack Saunders, New York, knobked out Joe Jeanette, Hot Springs, Ark. Con O'Kelly, Ire- 1and, outpointed Al Friedman, Bos- ton, 10. New Castle Pa.—Henry Firpo, Louisville, outpointed Floyd Hybert," Ashtabula, 0. 10. Joey Goodman, Chicago Hospital Chicago, Nov. 6 (P—Billy Show- ers, youthful St. Paul middleweight boxer, was belicved to be in a critical condition today, suffering either | from concussion of the brain, & hemorrhage or a fracture at the base of the brain due to a terrific beating given him by Shuffle Calla- han of Chicago in a ten-round bout. Bhowers collapsed and fell un- conscious in the sixth round. After physicians had worked for 45 min- utes attempting to revive him, a pulmoter squad from a nearby fire engine house was used but it also | failed. He then was taken to a hos- pital. Callzhan had eral stitches taken over his eve to close a bad wound suffered in the fisht and then was taken into custody under no charge by the police, pending out come of Showers' injuries. Callahan floored Showers times with vicious blows fo the head. The bell saved him at the and of the fifth round and he reeled | to his corner. Restoratives were applied and he came hack for more punishment in the sixth only to be battered to the canvas with another | heavy barrage to the head. His | second tossed in the towel as a sizn Of Ry tendes gnd ho wap helged to his corner where he became uncon- scious. 50,000 Vote in Kansas | City Before 8 a. m.! Kansas City, Nov. 6.—(P—Elec- tion officials here estimated that 50,000 persons, nearly a fourth of the 208,000 registered voters, had east | their ballots at 8 a. m. to . Long lines of voters many of them wom- en, stood In line at almost every poling place. waiting for the doors to open at 6 a. m. Perfect Indian summer prevailed here. three | | 900 was done by a fire which swept !Torrington last Sunday was washed Norfolk, Va., knocked out Johnny Connelly Toledo, 1. Tom O'Leary, Wilkesbarre, Pa., and Bernie Dugan, Toledo, draw 4. Philadelphia—Fete Nebo, Florida, outpointed Mike Dundee, Rock Is- land, 111, 3. Babe McGorgary, Okla- homa, knocked out Theodore (Kid) Snowden, Pa, 1. { Columhus 0. —Tony Ecalanta, Mexico, outpointed Homer Ronan, Newark, Ohio, 12. Fred Mahan, Mexico. knocked out Bert Heath. field, Columbus, 3. Walter Palmer, Kansas City, knocked out Otis Wil- liams, Columbus, 4. Indianapolis — Jimmy Slattery Butialo. N. Y. stopped Vie Me. Laughlin, New York, 6. Joe| O'Malley, Columbus, Ohio, eutpoint- | ed Ray Hahn, Indianapolis, § | Chicago—Shuffle Callahan. Chica- 20 Heights, stopped Billy Showers, St Paul, 6 Vancouver, B. C.—Leo Kid Rey | retained Canadian featherweight | championship. defeating Vic Foley, Vancouver, 12 $1.000,000 FIRE an Salvador, Nov. 6 (P—Dam- | age estimated at more than $1.000,- | the central part of the city. Among | the buildings reduced to ashes were the Hotel Astol a daily_news- paper plant. a machinery warehouse, a shipping office, bookshop and | market PAWNEES TO PRACTICE The Pawnee football team will vactice tonight at 7:30 e'clock at st street feld tnder the di- of Coaches 'Turner and The ga scheduled in tion Gianotte ne : ernoon flushed with success, meet Georgia-Florida game, PLAYOFF OF TIE GAME FEATURE FOR SATURDAY JESSEN TacurLe Iowa Titans of the ron, clashing Saturday, November 10, will have se veral draw decisions of 1937 to spur them. veen Vanderbilt and Georgia Tech, Jowa and Ohio S tate and Army and Notre Dame. games are those OHIO STATE - ‘cpt. PUNDCENTER 1 GEORGIA TRCH _ VANDERBILT ~BACK, AT ARMISTEAD ARMY. VS NOTRE DAME @ ong the more important Above are stellar players figuring pro mineatly in the 1928 campaigns of these six teams. Other outstandin g games of the day will bring together Pennsylvania and Harvard, Michi- gan and Navy, Carnegie Tech and Georgetown, Georgia and Florida, South ern Methodists and Texas Aggies, Nebraska and Oklahoma, California and Washington, and Stanford and Sant New York, Nov. 6 (#—In football games Saturday, November 10, the players will go out determined to do better than they did last year. In seven important games on this date last season ties resulted and Satur- day will give the battling elevens an opportunity to reach a decision 12 months late. Johns Hopkins slipped up on Co- lumbia’s blind side to score a 7 to 7 draw, and Cornell was rudely shock- ed by a 6 to 6 tie with St. Bonaven- ‘ture. Syracuse found no relish in a game with Ohio Wesleyan ending with the same score. This same Ohiq Wesleyan team started its 1928 season by defeating Michigan, first of a serics of reverses for the Wol- verines. Neither Pittsburgh nor ‘Washington and Jefferson has scored on the other since 1925 when Pitt won 6 to 0, Two scoreless ties fol- lowed. Minnesota and Indiana fought out 2 gruelling 14 to 14 game, a ver- dict that cost the Gophers a share in the 1927 Big Ten championship. In the south a year ago Georgia Tech ano Vanderbilt played all aft- without either mustering enough drive to score and the same day Tulane and Auburn quit with the count 6 to 6. Army "and Notre Dame playing their annual game at New York will find the Cadets a heavy choicg, but Army won last year 18 to 0, when Notre Dame entered the game a favorite. Boston should see the fur fly when Boston College plays Ford- ham, a natural rivalry being inten- sified by the position of Major F. W. Cavanangh, Fordham coach, who formerly coached Boston. A sharp engagement should he waged in don- trast to an easy victory for Boston- ians last year. Dartmouth defeated Brown 19 to 7 at their last meeting, but may not be able to do it again. Pennsyl- vania ran roughshed over Harvard in 1927, but the score should be closer than 24 to 0 Saturday. Michigan 'and Navy, both off to bad starts, have improved and ¢hould have a pretty battle at Bal- timore. There was plenty of scor- ing last November when Michigan won 27 to 12. Carnegie Tech and Georgetown will give the fans of Albany, N. Y., a treat, playing a game a bit out of the beaten football path. Two 'Southern teams engage East- ern opponents when Maryland travels to New Haven to meet Yale and Washington and Lee invades Princeton for a bout with the Tiger. Yale beat Maryland last year 30 to 0, and Princeton won from the Generals 13 to 0. . Georgia. Tech Vanderbilt in At lanta in a game that may have an important bearing on the Southern conference race. Another great hattle in prospect for Dixie is the won last vear by Georgia 28 to 0. The story is different this November. The Al- ligators are stronger than they were then and the Bulldogs have lost some of their bite. The annual mecting of the two Carolinas—Nerth and South—will be interesting. for this contest is al- ways close. South Carolina won in 19 14 to 6. as will grow excited over the attle of the Texas Aggies and outhern Methodist The Aggies rode the Mustangs hard last year, and | winning 39 to 13, but this is another year. A game to bha reckoned with in compiling Western Conference title figures will be played between Towa and Ohio State at Columbus. The Buckeyes were abls to win their last encounter with the Hawkeyes 13 to 6. The Minnesota-Indiana game seems certain to be a terrific struggle. Chicago won from Wis- consin 12 to 0 last year, but the followers of A. A. Stagg are having their troubles now and Wisconsin will be the favorite. Nebraska and Oklahoma, who de1 not meet last vear, should have a hard fight of-it, and Missouri and the Kansas Aggies will be busy also. In the far West California and Washington play. with a thought to a 6 to 0 victory for Washington in their last encounter and Stanford s a reverse at the hands of Santa | ara. 13 to 6, to consider. Colo- rado will be in a state of civil war from a football standpeint with Colorado College playing Colorado Mines and4 Colorado Ageies meeting the University of Colorado. o vh e SRR a Clara. PRESS STAND AT YALE 10 HAYE A NEW ROOF Complaints of Sports Writers Drenched in Rain, Heeded by Athletic Authorities New Haven, Nov. 6.—(#—As soon as funds are available sports writers assigned to cover football games in the Yale Bowl will work with dry typewriters and paper on rainy days | according to Harold F. Woodcock, general manager of the Yale Athletic agsociation, who announced today that a roof for the press stand is contemplated. Local sports writers' complaints were augmented by those of their visiting brothers when they were drenched at the Georgia and Dart- mouth games and the university hastened to announce that conditions would be improved as soon as fi- nances warrant. The available funds for improvements have . recently gone into patching up'the cement of | the walls of the howl. PUNTS AND PASSES Fordham Eleven May Spoil Almost | Perfect Record of West Virginia | in Game Today. By the Aswociated Prese. By beating West Virginm today, | Fordham can ruin an almost perfect record. The Mountaineers never have lost a game in New York. Four | contests have resulted in three vic- tories gnd one tie. Mal Stevens, Yale coach, evidently | jisn’t satisfied with a mere 18 to 0 victory over his old rival, Dart- mouth. At least he told his Yale players yesterday that they were go- |ing to have a lot of hard work this | week to make up for their lapses in | the Dartmouth game. With navy showing a greatly im- proved game and Michigan's pros- pects looking up after its 3 to 0 vic- {tory over Illinois Saturday, their encounter this week promises to be jone of the big football attractior The ticket sale already is increasing | 1000 spectators will see the game. The Pennsylvania team and old { man injury battle to a tie this week. | Ralph Monk, Penn’s star guard, will not be able to play vard by Leon center, will be hack in the lineup. | Beloin (e) ... and navy offcials estimate that 75, | against Har- | Westgate, regular | FORDHAM T0 MEET WEST VIRGINIA ELEYEN TODAY Crowd of 30,000 Expected .to .See Major College Football Game of the Day New York, Nov. 8 (UP)—West Virginia faced Fordham at Yankee Stadium today in the only major college football game of the day. A crowd of 30,000 was expected to see the game. The game marks the first time the two schools have met on the gridiron and the first time that | coaches Irank Cavanaugh and Ira Rodgers have pitted elevens against : each other. Each team has lost one game. Davis-Elkins beat West Virginia, 7 Fordham, 34 to 7. “The probable lineups: Fordham. Position. Wisniewski . W. Virginia .. Vacheresse Miskinis ... Tracey .. Staon ...i... Right Guar. Right Tackle Politis ... Right. End. | Dellaire . Quarterback. McMahon ........... Left Halfback. Right Halfback Pieculewicz ....... . Keefer (c) Fullback. SCOUR NEARBY TOWNS IN INTEREST OF SMITH New Britain Enthusiasts Visit Plain- ville, Southington, Plantsville, Meriden and Berlin The peaceful quiet of several of the cities and towns surrounding New Britain was shattered last eve- ning by a party of about 25 New Britain Al Smith for President” en- thusiasts. Starting out from this city, the party staged impromptu rallies on the street corners eof Plainville, Southingten, Plantsville, | Meriden and Berlin. Their automo- biles, five in number, were gaily decorated with all sorts of Smith |and Robinson campaign banners. Brown isn't wasting any time in its preparations for the annual bat- tle with Dartmouth Saturday. Al- though the squad got a rest yester- day the weekly blackboard drill was advanced to last night instead of being held today There may he a better passer than Larry Dallaire, Fordham quarter- { back, but not much better. In five games this season, Dallaire has thrown 51 passes and completed 29 lof them for total gains of 478 vards. Dad White doesn’t infend to have his Amherst team lose to Williams becanse it hasn't had enough prac tice. He announced vesterday that | he would hold every man on the 1squad responhible for every practice until the annual enconnter Novem- ber 17. Pennsylvania will get a taste of i {own medicine next Naturday if Ar- | nold Horween’s plans work out. The {Harvard coach saw Penn beat Chi- cago on a long pass Saturday and came back to start his ewn men working on the same kind of plays yesterday. Joe McKenny, young Boston col- lege coach, is following in the foot- | steps of Gil Dobic as far as the | Fordham game is concerned. He said yesterday that passes and end {runs were the I | winning. “Fordham heaviest fina T have ever seen” he said “and no member of the Boston college backfield has a chance of breaking through it. The orator of the party was Ed- ward Broff of Stanley street, one of [the army of new voters this year. | His eloquence would have served well at many of the formal rallies | held throughout the country. | Large sized crowds greeted the |caravan as it travelled over the route. The cavalcade of five cars ;soon grew to immense proportions as new recruits were secured in all 'of the towns passed through. BOYS ADMIT THROWING DEATH NOTE IN WINDOW |Five Confess to Scaring Clinton Street Man—Thought It Was “Good Joke” Five hoys were taken into cus- tody yesterday by Sergeant P. J. O'Mara for throwing stones and damaging property in the north- western section of the city, They admitted that they were implicated {in the throwing of a stone with & “death message” tied onto ft, ! through a window in the home of | Steve Sorokey at 62 Clinton street lust Thursday night. They thought it would be “‘a good joke,” they said. Because of the fact that they are | under 16 years of age they will be | arraigned in juvenile court. The California Fish and Game commission is urging legal protec- tion for the horned owl. only one | of 21 speciex found in the state not |so protected. to 0, and New York University beat: TICKET APPLICANTS ARE DISAPPOINTED AT YALE [ Only 835 Seats Were Left For Sca- son Holders After Alumnl Mem- bers Have Been Served (Special to the Herald) New Haven, Nov. 6.—Applicants for tickets to the Yale-Harvard foot- ball game are being disappointed this year for the first time, for the game ig being such an alumni rve- union that only 825 scats were left for season ticket holders when grad- uate and undergraduate requsitions had been filled. As provided on the application forms, these seats were allotted by drawing and a few liicky applicants will receive tickets, but there were by no means enough to fill the demand and the vast ma- jority of season ticket holders have had their ehecks returned to them. H. F. Woodock, manager of the Yale Athletic association, has ex- pressed his regret that those who have supported the minor games cannot be accommodated at the big event of the séason. but it is felt hy the association that Yale men have the first call. This year has heen a banner one in attendance at the games in the Bowl. Not only for the Yale-Harvard games-have applications exceeded the available seats, for It was neces- sary to cut the number of seats al- lotted applicants at the Yale-Army game, which was also over- subscribed. 12 Freed by Judge And Told to Vote New York, Nov. 6.—(UP)—Twelve men who lacked the money to pay fines for ilegal possession of liquor were free today hecause the nation happens to be electing a president. Federal Judge Inch ordered the men, who had been sentenced to from five to 15 days, taken from Raymond street jail. He reduced their fines to $1 each and told them to vote. Spectators paid the fines of five men who didn’t have $1. * TO STAPLETON ON' SUNDAY - Hartford Game Scheduled Here Postponed by Agree- . ment For One Week — Rain Prevented Original Game—Manager Arranges Bus for Fans Wishing to Make the Trip—Staten Island Officials Anxious to Have Hardware City Eleven Appear There— Squad In Fine Shape. PALINO DEFEATS OTTO VON PORAT Drops Decision fo Spaniand Be- Tore Crowd of 15,000 Spectators New York, Nov. 6.—UP—Otto Von Porat's upward progress in the heavyweight - division has been checked, temporarily at least, by that rock of the Pyrenees, Paul Uzcudun. | The Norwegian, who had been cut. ting a wide swath in middle western fistics circles, found it was easier to hit Paulino than to floor him and consequently dropped a ten round decision before 15,000 spectators at Madison Square Garden. As a matter of fact all the floor- ing that was done last night was done by Paulino. The Basque wood- chopper caught Von Porats' long chin with a jolting right in the first round and dropped the Norwegian to the canvas for a count of nine. The process was repeated again in the fifth round. Von Porat waited until the last round to demonstrate the paralyzing power of his punch. He caught Paulino flush with several right hand ‘punches that staggered the Spaniard as he never has been staggered be- fore. Only a jaw as durable as Paulino’s could have withstood the effects of those few blows. As it was Paulino was glad to hang on as much as possiblie and wait for the bell. That round and the fourth, however, were all that Von Porat won according to the Assoclated Press score sheet. All the others went to Paulino, Tiny Roebuck, 240 pound Choctaw Indian, made an inauspicious New York debut.He was knocked out in a single round by Arthur Dekuh, big New York Italian. KING GEORGE LAUDS THE ANTI-WAR PACT Bellogg-Briand Treaty Praised By English Sovereign in Message to Parliament at Opening London, Nov. § (P)—The Kellogg- Briand *pact renouncing war took pride of place today in the address which King George read from the throne in ‘opening parliament. The speech was heard by a bril- |liantly robed assemblage of peers and their bejeweled peeresses.with commoners looking on and listening in from their balcony. “My relations with foreign pow- ers continue to be friendly.” the king began in deep clear tones read- ing from a scroll. “My govern. ments have been happy to accept the treaty of renunciation of war in the form proposed by the gov- ernment of the United States. To my great satisfaction this treaty was signed in Paris on August 27 by plenipotentiaries on behalf of all my | governments and in behalf of the | United States, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Belgium, Poland and Czechoslovakia.” READ HERALD CLASSIFTIED ADS ' Prevented from playing its sched- uled game against the 8. I, “Stapes” last Sunday after- noon, the Nutmeg A. C. foothall team of thig city will return te New York again this coming Sunday. By agreement with the manager of the Hartford Giants, the scheduled sec- ond game in the series between the locals and Capital City eleven, will be played on Sunday, November 18, instead of on next Sunday. Because of the keen disappoint- ment of the many fans in the fall- ure of the railroad excursion to New York last Sunday to material- ize, Manager Henry Zehrer of the Nutmegs has arranged: to have & special bus run to New York this coming Sunday. A special round- trip price has been agreed upon and anyone in this city wishing to go to Stapleton by this means, should tele- phone Manager Zehrer at 1108-M between ¢ and 7:30 o'clock any eve- ning. All applications must be im at the latest by Thursday night. The New Britain team will put iu a stiff practice session at Willow Brook park Thursday night in pre- paration for the game. The team members all report themselves in the best possible shapa and they confidently expect to dent the Sca- pleton scoring column next Sunday. McLean, well-known Georgetown fullback will be with the team this Sunday. He was ready to play last week but was stopped also by the rain. He is the only new addition to the eleven. There isn't any doubt but that Stapleton will be out to give, K New Britain a terrific trimming. The Stateg, Island team is the best com- bination assembled in years. Among the backfield men are Wyckoft, for- merly of Georgia; Newton, formerly of Florida; Tke Willlams, of the Navy; Triano, of New York U, and several others. The team has plen- ty of line material and a real tough game is anticipated by both clubs. SOUTH AFRICAN CABINET GIVES RESIGNATIONS Action ‘Grows Out of DiRterences Following Refusal of Member to Quit Pretoria, Union of South Africa, Nov. 6 (—The South Africap gov- ernment under the premiership ot J. B. M. Hertzog resignedtoday. The action grew out of differences in the cabinet precipitated by the refusal of W. B. Madeley, minister of posts and telegraphs, to resign at Premier Hertsog's request. The rea- son for the difficulty was Mr. Made- ley's insistence in receiving to depu- tation headed by a representative of the trades union council and in cluding members of the native and trades umion council and including members of the native trade unien which discussed with him the ques: tion of native workers in the pestal service, Premier Hertzog lollows the pre- cedent established by the late Gen eral Louis Botha in 1912, when, as premier general both reformed his cabinet to exclude Mr. Hertzog him- self, one of his minigters, Mr. Hert- 208's opposition te General Botha's naval defense policy and other questions resulted-in the action. I'm a great booster for the Herald Classified Ads says Mrs. Smyth. OUT OUR WAY "OHR WY HEAVINGS! ™' CONCEIT O SOME FOWKS. A__ MEo.u.s.par.orr. By Williams 3

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