Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1928 B N P e et e e e d INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE BASKETBALL TEAMS GETTING READY FOR SEASON OPENING—HIGH SCHOOL TEAM TO MEET TOUGH OPPOSITION IN H'LLHOUSE SATURDAY—NEW BRITAIN BLUES TO PLAY POSTPONED GAME WITH MERIDEN MOHICANS—ITEMS ; ROGERS HORNSBY TO BE SEEN IN CUB UNIFORM Braves Get Five Players and Largest Sum of Money On Record For “Rajah”—Only Two Regulars Included In Chicago Trade — Subject of Deal Is Most Swapped Player In the Game—Has Had Brilliant Diamond Career — Details of Transfer Are Now Completed. JUDGE FUCHS T0 .~ MANAGE BRAVES President of Club Prevailed | Upon to Return to Bench i Lioston, Nov. 8.—(P—Judge Emil | E. Fuchs, who was a New York city ! magistrate before he became presi- | dent of the Boston Braves, has re- | turned to the bench—in the National | league. Atter selling Rogers Hornsby, his last season’s manager and the lead- ing batsman in the National league, [to the Chicago Cubs for five young !ball players and some cash, the 1920, B |judge, who received his carly base- True to Veeck's statement thatiy, . ".iiing on New York sandlots, the Cub team would not be wrecked | f FARE OF T AR K it to get Horpihy, only two ‘(f""]" ¥ lto emulate John McGraw of the New were inciuded in the transaction. o “! 5 York Giants and become a manag- One was Freddie Maguire, who was [ o7f =50 moved to make room for Hornsby at |1 director: B Ny sccond base, and the other Percy| 1he Hornsby trade, rumors of Jones, voteran southpaw. The other | ¥Mieh had been circulating since the three players were Louis Leggett, | \WOrld series, failed to excite Boston's rookie catcher, recalled from the | Pasebull public much but Judge Cubs' farm at Reading, Pa.; Harry|/uchs’ statement that he intended Seibold, a recruit Lurler who starred 10 Tun the Draves ball club on and with the Reading club last season, | ~the ficld was reccived with and Bruce Cunningham, a pitcher dmazement. § stgired fhom Los Angeles | The Braves exccutive announced Hornsby's transfer to the Cubs the trade by showing baseball writers gives him the unique record of be- | Vhich Hornsby had addressed to ing the most traded star baseball has DI ever known. In 1926 he managed | 1 wantto assurc you as we part,” the St. Louis Cardinals to a world Hornsby wrote, “that when 1 firs edbies title. suggested the Chicago trade 1 was In 1927 he was in York | actuated by a fecling of friendship. Giants uniform. | Loyaliy and unselfishne Hornsby had a gr ed from you the best tr the Giants in 1527, successtully man- advis aging the team during John Me- and Graw’s absence, but the opening of that 1 lu the 1928 scason found him at Bos- With deep regr ton. In the middle of th race had in me and Juck Slattery 1csigned manager and appreciated m and Hornsby was named to succeed | "1 will give Chicy him. Hornsi ale to Boston for my ability and all I can do to heip players Welsh and Hogan proved a my new club. 1 know I shall always biggor prise than his shift from remember with Kindness and appr Si. Louis to the Giants. Mystery ciation your courtesy and my 1 siill shrouds reasons for the deal. lationship with vou. I wish you the It 1s probable the cubs will take great sucecss you deserve.” over Hornsby's Boston contract. Then the judge announced that he | \diich calls for an annual salary of cn prevailed upon by Charles aproximately $40,000, F. Adams, vice president of the Hornsby made his major club, to become manuging dircetor, | Lut in 1915, coming up from the | “I know my short-c and 11 Ilas, xus, club for a reporied tate the burdens and hard- 00, Tn 1615 he played 18 games v said. “The only advantuge | t shortstop for St. Louis but from (1 start with is the good will and 1816 10 1921 he played three difier- ".,,,,,.‘;‘ of our players, who have | ent inficld positions and once wricd [always trusted me. 8o many of them, | the outfield. [year atter year, have aitied their | J7rom 1922 to 1926 hie confined Nis [ signatures to blank contracts repo cfiorts to second hasc and g | ing that peviod established numerous | e atting reco In 1922 he set a league record of .424. wound up the ast scason with an average of 7 and only twice since he joined the majors has he finished below the L300 marl PLAY MOHICANS HERE Chicago, Nov. 8 (@ — Rogers Hornsby, the transient star of tional league baseball, will next be seen in a Chicago Cub uniform. Five players and a sum of mone s the largest amount ever in in a baseball deal, will go to the Boston Braves in exchange for the “Rajah”, who has worn the uni- forms of three clubs in the past three years. a- “The long rumored deal, was com- pleted last night in a telephone con- versation between President W. L. Veeck of the Chicago Cubs and Judge Emil E. Fuchs, president of the Braves, Veeck declined to divulge the ex- act sum of money involved, but in- timated it was between $150,000 and $200,000. The highest price previ- | ously paid for a player was $137,000 given by New York Yankees to the Boston Red Sox for Babe Ruth in a New ment and together with such Kindness ncere thoughtful friendship ve you and your sociutes AR B it year with 10 fhicient faith and confid to fill in their vearly without protest or compiaint. “Another advantige will and sympathetic friendly feo of the Lioston public, which I en- joy. and whom 1 shall cxpect to re- in patient with me, for I can e myself as manager with mueh |less cmbarrassment than 1 would | anyone cls To my friends, the | Lasebal! writers of the country, who | Game | 1ave never violated a confidence r I | posed by me in them. 1 say that 1 all “play the gam " and take| | good-naturedly their hindly dizs and | | request that they yend 1ent Tuntil T have had a faic opportunit: to prove or disprove tie wisdom of of scept- | is the good | New Britain Blues to Play Called Off Last Sunday on Ac- count of Rain. ind Prevented from playing a sched- uled game last Sunday because R Crelnatnt anteana vain, the New Britain Blues and the oo paving acoepted the Mohican foothall team of Meriden | iy’ e full respensibility, will clash this coming Sunday after= | ciieian. noon at Memorial fileld in Willow | Arer announcing that he had en rook park. The Nutmegs will be|ooveg johnny Evers, who helped to way again this Sunday playing 10 |jring 4 world npionship to 1o | apleton, 8. I, and this will legve [1on iy 19714 when he S the field clear for the Blues. Lof the 1 e Tls Al et iR The game should be a thrilling yudge ) s pressea tha hopal] struggle between two evenly mateh- | that Jave f e ) 1 teams. End runs, hard tackles | i, Lis dasive Bustling and line plunges, long and short ..t forward passes, punts, drop ks | Judge and all the other plays in the game gop which thrill will be seen as the two clevens unleash their strength against each ofher Both teams are fle, They have adily for two weeks. W are composcd of <cheol nd sandlot have a stone wall line that will he lied on to stop Kyveski. The Mahi- s won Tilues in eri den last they ha lost a blame | g a 1eha would inspire and act 1l of the cabionts, in the No nd twilight cirenits, basebail school former ms the Tueh's i first man- was fo invite young players h fand Lo to attend 1gue a ry out keyed up for the practicin The Mohi- former high and they k heen for tely. the of open in 1 heave mad “witho! Sgning or ol contract who mposing th - o « futun vith ory man in his ability 1o final- T ontiden onit yonng from ind fhis season T " Iv Player. o he Blues will practice & o'vlock at Willow Brool members of the team be on hand, to e it n 10N th Pl Al to af the the hope talent for nationa! park " a cvelop Wt of discuss was. g cash coived Hornshy, all amo i except nt s THE JOHNS¥! Y/ & Suon Lonis Leggett, Inter the Cubs farm, and pitcher who > club Cunr m Iy prehased of the sident-mana value of With th bs took Br yearly s Hor iwrchase r his contract with the was said to call for a v of $40 PERFEC INSE (Up)— terdan 1 most of y inst iion 1o P Th full Crin on will | ngth for Saturd Fitch-Jones Co. at game. 1 receiv- | | Methodist, ave the best 1] you always trusted , zo ‘the best of | [ deem it [1ecords clean. | bac [ | i Brown | venture {50t to ! ititle of George Manolian, cial | Ofv[m HUGE CROWD WL WATCH GRID GANE Navy-Michigan Contest fo Be Seen by at Least 70,000 People New York, Nov. 8 UP—When a crowd of 70,000 persons goes to see a football team that lost fits first three games play a team that lost its first four, there must be some- thing of imyportance behind it. That attendance has been predicted for the Navy-Michigan encounter at Baltimore & ‘urday and the attrac- tion for the uge crowd lies in the prospect of . arilling battle between two teams thui have come back bril- liantly after making poor starts, a tle that shewld be as close as any ame in the east. With their morale impaired by the gic death of Miles Fox during an arly scason practice, the Midship- men got off to a slow start and dropped close games to Davis-Elk- ins, Boston College and Notre Dame before they won their first game from Duke. The next Saturday they burst into the limellght with a vi over the highly rated Pennsyl- vania team and followed it up by trouncing West Virginia Wesleyan, T to v, Michigan, suffering from a com- plete lack of Friedmans and Ooster- baans,, also has had a checkered sea- son, losing to Ohig Wesleyan, In- diana, Ohio State “and Wisconsin. st Saturday the Wolverines sud- denly came to life and eliminated Hlinois, previously undefeated, from the Big Ten race. Michigan serics has a briecf but surprising history. In 1425 Michigan walloped the Midship- men by a 51 to 0 count. Next year, with the same teams, Navy turned the tables, winning 10 to 0. In 1427 Michigan won again, Overtopping this inter: battle interest is unother east-west encounter, which may have an im- portant bearing on the racc for na- tional championship honors between Army and Notre Dame. The cadets have gone undefeated in six games, three of them against Southern Harvard and Yale. To their hard schedule with- defeat they must take Rockne's team in their stride and go on to games with Nebraska and Stantord. In spite of an in-and-out season, Notre bame looms as a formidable obstucle in Army’s path. It can re- arly season failures by one triumph and is ready to stake cvery- thing on this one game. Awong the all-eastern gamos (L orguetown-Carncgie Tech encoun- ter Lany and the Harvard-Penn game at Cambridge lead. Georgetown and Carnegie rank anong the few unde- fiated and united and will be fighting to keep their Penn and Harvard oth have been defeated, by the fighting Navy team and by Army, but little interest has been taken from their mecting by these set- tr compl out 5 a fifth undefeated and united team in the cast, will not have an e: time with Temple, which was tumbled from that list lust weok by Schuykill after going hiough five games without having a point scored against it. The traditional rivalries nl Dactmouth and Pitts- burgh and Washington and Jefferson also will be settled for 1828 this we Villanova, the Although they no longer are con- tenders for high honors all four teums are strong and should put up 200d sirugglies West Virgin nes from strong teams after los- ing its first game to Davis-Elkins, ies on another dangerous oppo- nent in Oklahoma Aggies while Syra- cuse completes the intersectional [sehedule by entertaining Ohio Wes- leyan, conquerer of Michigan and five Ohio conference opponents. Yale and Princeton have breath- s inst Maryland hington and Lee. The opponents Cornell and Columbia, St. Bona- nd Johns Hopkins, also would be considered as casy were it for tic gam that these same teanns inflicted last year. Wi ol Matches Are Played OFF in se-Cushion Sport at Rogers 2 played last i Ttogers Rilliard Parlors three-cushion tournament. fon, Kasprow. Ziegler and W . retumed Milton e ted Walla vated Stokes mes were in standing on anl ith the in games Pis. 67 65 50 63 4 “ 42 Peterson SR 3 Monday - night's games will be as follows: Stewart vs. Stokes, Miller Mack, Tony vs. Wi Kas- cgler and Peterson vs. MELLO BEATS MANOLIAN Boston, Nov. 8 (I'I')—Al Mello of Lowell, New England welterweight champion, added to his laurels the New Eng- pion, ‘n last night and occasion came over @ knockout. 12 and Mello Iand middleweight ch their 10-round bout here Mello won the decision easily n more than one to putting nolian weighed on a ncutral battlefield at Al-| rams in the cast | between | a which has won six | nuniber of points, is as | coach, clevens Oregon to Texa; to leay hands, prictor. versity Notre and son Az the Pac b h s und added team “Doc" serve in 1) an M. 1 come a “1 wa a lover He fi coliege cleven o h a until Oregon In | Nebrasl defeat, Stewart od 3. title as 11017 w {the middle west. I IFortun I | an, ka in to Clemson He lina. teams ¢ e i star oached which | achedul | Southw ship, These the T total of four ye to the mall ated o. Bos | conside tion offices the Su at [sure it lure hac | id s and soccer games boxing legally | the state | grant 1 L Roge alleys two ga | 1 1541 1 |New 1 ! good m WOl erd he rhea scrubs. El Paso, the crack of a timekeeper's pistol here Thanksgiving day, 3. Stewart will retire Eleven years ago, one of his 1'ni- Dame, beal the Michigan Aggics Uklahoma and Tulune, art studied medicine at W medical college,” he cxplains. coaching offer, and, as I wa cepted.” at there, he went to Alleghany college in Pennsylvania, 1912, signed g Nebraska eleven that year had as'figure be s to back, and ; America. forgotten in xas cleven mana |Sunday s Sports Go pesday’s progressed bowl the in a state Monday Boston, soston Colls given 2 thorough tist WILL RETIRE AS COACH *Doc! SAW PLENK) OF THE © COUNTRY, BUILDING WINNERS AT NINE INSTITOTIONS 1+ @O'BY °X., Nov. 8 (@) — With | % SUNDAY SPORTS BIL IS PASSED J. as a foothall | rs of placing | from | After on college gridirons to South Carolina and Ohio s, “Doletul Doc” has decided e his profession to vounger He will become a hotel pro- E of N lowed on Sunday in Mass. a clevens crushed lo! Missouri, Kun-! Nebraska Wesleyan on suc- urdays. In 1915, his Or team beat everything on coast and came cast to after that ad defeated Michigan. ~ In is University of Texas team defeated in the southwest and triumphs over Vanderbilt, 8 (®—Although by concen- returns for im the ballot, the sports Boston considerably e tration placed on portant oftices on count on the referendum at clection, had progressed sufficiently today to assure its supporters that the me: had swept the state, s a result, p sports, particu- ¢ basebull and soccer games but tern | including boxing or automobile: school in Cleveland, racing, will be legally permissible in he lust of the '90's. He 100K 'a cities of the state next year which ). degre ul preparcd 10 be- [ clect to grant local licenses. practicing physician, urns from three-tourths of the s in debt when 1 got througl vecinbia D ihe Wliletsliowan “1 Dad vote of no," 304, lways In this city the vole was bet of every Kind of sport, Lac- (.r (han three to one in tavor of the referendum which will mak possible major league | games here nest season Heretofore both Boston clul have suficred the finaneial handic of mot being able to realize on the large crowds which patronize the zame on Sundays other league i iie 1’8 general " was not a nickname. Stew- Jarly not total a 758, a0, rst coachicd at Mount Union Ohio. A professional Musgillon, .. next claim- ttention for four om remaining there He next groomed tiw Aggics for four years. 6 when E. O. Stiehm r coach at the Laiversity of years without a dled o in vote on referendum was so y that there was no question but that it had complicd with the legal requirement that the y Jeast 30 per cent of the total vote cast for any office or act in the san cleetion. ka after five he the Cornhusker school from the St s Missouri valley nd his team ol tably nionarch of | claim to the any ofher as und. ok e = . ¥ SUTTON 18 INJURED Hanover, N. I, sy Dartmouth’s long st today centained the Sutton, first-string suffered failud 1o smile on the Ne- | 15 to 1ui {ewart went colleg South Caro- improved the Clemson jniude iy onsiderably and, in was | the University of Texa colors trom the latter yoar, in niine ek, otice i who Professional Sports to Be Al-| law | il DEMPSEY IS ONLY HOPE OF BOXING Return of Former Champ fto Ring Would Revive Interest New York, Nov. 8 UP—Talk of Jack Dempsey returning to the ring seems to most observers to be in. spired largely by efforts to brace up ; the sagging fgrtunes of the fistic | game. 1 They have sagged, especially from | the box office viewpoint, this year to | a marked degree by comparison | with the heydays of the boom | cra that started in 1923. That was their memorable battle at the Polo Ground By a strange, if not ominous co- come-bac | gentine Bull and the old Manassa | Mauler climbed back ropes next year. { would furnish an odder comparison | with their fighting powers of 19 There wus only one battle could touch the original, any more than the famous Leonard- | Tendler lightweight rivalry of the {same period could stand being re- | producea. There appears little question, on | the other hand, that Dempsey's re- turn to the would stimulate lagging interest in the heavyweights. No new figures have come along to | capture popular imagination as the |former champion did. The ring- |around-the-rosy appears to be on again in ch the same fashion it has been going on for the past few indoor campaigns. | It is no sceret that Tex Rickard ' 'would have much preferred last summer to h: staged a third and final Tunney-Dempsey fight than the Tunney-Heeney match that proved a financial us well as artistic | top. So long as Dumpsey is around the [borders of the “racket” there will insistence that he take “one more” fling. It is a busin propo- sition and the punch is the main | factor involved. It disregards entire Iy the fact that two additional years of idleness will take just that much more toll of Juck's other old ring ts, and stamina hese waned rapidly after the Tone big shot in Chicage in the sev- enth round Demipse c spocd | s lie won't fight again fand he may nean it But it is just as well 10 note that if he said any- thing clse now the winter's ballyhoo would be sadly handicapped. Come- backs alw tart in the winter. Whether they actually bloom in the spring is semething else o guess about. A Just when things look a trifie dalt lin the ring racket, however, some fist usually bobs up m the west to administer few resounding wl lops. w | In recent years K. 0. Eddie Tob- crts and Jimmy McLarnin, the bab faced Kid, have come cast in an- swer to promoters’ prayers for “gate” attractions—otherwise known as boys with a “sock.” Now Jackie Vields is in tht limelight and appar- ently headed for the welterweight title if he can get Joe Dundee, the champion, info the ring with him Fields has the punch that mad Roberts and McLarnin stand out. On the other hand Dundee always hud a habit of doing his best |when it comes down fo a pinch, es- pecially in N York. timore Joe won the welter title here and he sucecssfully tuined the tables on Ioherts after being knocked out by e Tacoma tervor in San Francisco. ields may tind the sime barrier, if ind when he gets a title erack. {team out of it this year" is the cry of the teams of other factories in (the Y, M. C. A. Industrial league, which will enter its fifth season in the ficld of winter sports next Tues- 7 e e day night at the Stanley the year Dempscy and Wirpo fousnt (CHY RBEL 86 Lle CAUEY. MERS American have won once. In 1924, the first incidence, Firpo also figures in the 8eason of the league, Corbin Cabi- talk. It would be an odd |Pet Lock was the victor. In 1925 turn of circumstance if both the Ar-|P. & F. Corbins took the prize. In 1926 Russell & Erwin was the vic- through the jtorious team and in 1927 the cham- 1t probably alm:pionship went to Corbin Bcrew. staged almost exclusively among at Dempsey- [least wo of the American firpo fight. No revival of that epic ware factories. In 1924 the race was between Corbin Cabinet Lock and|This year the probable lineup will P. & F. Corbin and was the tightest |start with Alden Hewett and “Russ" ever held. When the schedule was|Haigis at center exhausted both teams were tied for (to take a forward position and El- |the championship. time the P. & F. Corbin team ran won I much Cabinet Lock, had retired as cham- ipion at the close of the previous season. win Screw and P. rivals and had it not been for four successive defeats in the early pa of Level tea mmight have broken the Rulers ha and Joe z0 and “Han ed by Mike Luke arrays in Geor; other strong DUSTY LEAGUE TEAMS TO START ON TUESDAY NIGHT tle Will Be Fought to Keep American Hardware Teams From Championship — Every Season Title Has Been Won By Teams of That Concern—Cor- bin Cabinet, P. & F. Corbin and Russell & Erwin Combinations Have Led the Circuit — Fafnirs Favored to Win, Bat “Keep the American Hardware Probably the best hope of the anti-American Hardware teams is Fafnir Bearfng, Last year it finish- ©1in a tie for second place with the following lineup: Gierochowski, center; LaHar and Havlick, fore wards; Matulis and Wilson, guards. LaHar, last year's star, left the em- ploy of the company, but the other foir will be back this year. Three nei; men have joined the team, Howard Belser, a member of the tezm until he enter 1 Fordham uni- versity; Frank McGrath, a former high school star who was awarded the Burns Memiorial ct the school and Julius Mieczkowski, a member of last year's championship team. Stanley Works finished fourth with its twin-team combination. arcna. Hardware corporation In every race the battle was Hard- A new player is Corbin Cabinet | mer Swanson is to be his running o b s G Riayon |mate. Carlson, last year's captain Not to be outdone for the second |and Arnold Reckert, winner of the Burns Memorial at the high school last year are to be the guards. The New Britain Machine team (will b= strengthened with the addi- |tion of “Rock." Rockwell who will be in the lineup with his cld team- | mate, “Stanley” Arena. They played |tezether on the State Trade school |team two years ago. Rockwell was !with P. & F. Corbin's last year. Russell & Erwin's will probably {be built about Morelli and Saxe, gurrds 't from the championship team. Stanley Rule will be strength- . |ened with former Boys' Club play- right there and then. The c:-. Corbin Cabir. t Lock will have d such stars us Al Sloman |the same pl vers as last year with a “Streak” Bengston, forwards; [fc - new additions. *Jimmmy"” Rey- Plurin, center; “Darby” Coraz- nolds is coaching the Landers team Arbour, guards. land +is lincup is . acticall- set with Corbin Screw that year was rep- the p= il exception of center . resented by the “Kids' of the league, | Corbin Screw, chaupio:s of last but between seasons the “kids” grew | 1, will have every playcr with the year wita the ada.don | execption of Julius Micczkowski, Arbour as pivot man fors.ard. In his place will be found the team rode through |Joe Lu member of the Russell mpionship Last year |& Erwin championship team of two marked the return to the league of YC#rs axo. Fred Saunders, former the Corbin Cabinet Lock team, the | M&h school star. is also on the champions of 1924, but the tearn | S4Uad: it was an casy mark for the other &' James Mullen Prevented by Hlinols far ahead in the second year and the championship without eftort. Its old rival, Corbin The following ye won a race in r Russell & Er- which Corbin Corbins we the year the Stanley Rule X of Hank" and coach, to the cl asd quintets. One of the interesting features of the league is the fact that the I . Corbin’ team has never finishe worst than second in all the tuw: it has been in lcague competition. That team, also, has not been the strong team it was during the first two years. In those days all the team would have to do was to mak 1 appearance and the game was won. Practically the same lincup has regresented the team throughout its four ycars. Ray Holst has always ' been the center, Joe Jasper has becn the forward and later he was assist- nd the combina- tion made one of the best forward basketball history. Ben Paris has been the guard and was paired up with “Hank™ Arbour, but since the latter has left the com- any's employ, several players have n tried at the position. Probably Hallin has been given the ence more than any of the candidates because of his play as stationary guard Dick Gorman who has also been on the team m has been uscd many times at the place. This year Harry Mills, a newcomer who made a mark last winter, is favored to cap the position. Boxing Commission From Pro- moting Fights. Chicago, Nov. 8 (—James Mul- len, Chicago's lcading boxing pro- moter, has been deprived of the | privilege of promoting boxing shows |by the lllinois state athletic com- ission, The commission pended Mullen |voked his license for failure to pay the state tax within the required 48 hours after his Shade-De Vos show at the Coliscum, Nov. 2. FIGEMM I By the Associated Press. Cleveland, Ohio — Rilly Wallace, Cieveland, outpointed Bruce Flowers, New Rochelle, N, Y. (12). yesterday sus- indefinitely, and re- prefe Milwaukee, Wis. — Vie Rurrone, New Yorl outpointed Young Na- tionalista, Los Angeles, (10); Jocy Clein, Milwaukee, outpointed Red il (6). 1. 1923 Texas eleven was nd Oscar Eskhardt, his mentioned for All- winter Stewart i the Orange basketl swept through e without defeat estern Conference a to win the champion- y, ? { o triumphs, apparently, were | short time for, wh 1 1o lose conference: contests in rtwas transferred Colluge of Mines, a nniversity, lo- border 11 : S five « Texas Mexican ranch on the t . . | In Effect in Mass. 1 Nov P - Although rably retirded concentra wd on refnrns for important | on the ballot, the it on | nday sports luw referendum general clection had sufficiontly today to at the e As a result baseball it not including racing, will be 1 all cities of which elect to < supporters 1 swept the state or particularly or antomobil: permissible next year ocal licenses, 5 MATCH i TICKETS, NUMBER 0 TONIGHT tecreation Five Wil Wooster Iive of Hartford league match at Rogers here tonight In Hartford night, the local team lost mes while the total pinfall for Ncew Rritain d or Hartford. All defeats for ritain have vn close and a natch is expected tonight. s RK ON AERIAL ATTACK ov. § (U'P)—Derfection ttack was the goal of 1 in practic MeKennes 1 with the had been st the ria was 1d game Ain’'tI* a Grand and‘ E‘;lorious Feeling HAve A SUMMONS FOR You FOR VIOLATIONS OF THE TRAFFIC LAWS WAIT OFFICER, THE NUMBER ON THESE DELAWARE Fiva Tim Don'T You ISN'T THE N MY CAR STreeT © ILLeGAL PARKING oN By BRIGGS . You'LL PReBABLY BF FINED ®50 AND Go To JAI. FOR TeN DAYS AVENUE esS LIVE ON WEST FERRY