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Speaklhg of Sports Manager Lanpher of the New Britpin basketbell five has arrang- od for Ken Saunders’ All-Stars to Dlay nary te the Meriden En. dee-New Britsin clash on Thanks- siving Eve. The All-Stars’ manager has ar- ranged fer 3 game with the Battury team eof Hartford. The Hartford. ites hgve 3 lineup made of former Trinity cellege stars and Bulksley High players. They opened thelr season lgat Saturday by handing the Wapping five § swamping. According to the mangger of the Hartford aggrega- tion, the Battery five is confident that it can beat any team In this city, Saunders will pick up his team from among the players in the In- dustrial league. He has signed Me- Grath, Fafnic forward, and Fred Baunders, Corbin Screw center. He also Intends to have Joe Luke, Hank Arbeur, Hammy Darrow and a few others. “Gay” Bromberg, who started his first game of the season at right suard last Saturday for Dartmouth against Cornell, will hold down the same position in the game today be- tween Dartmouth and Northwestern. ! *“Tubby” Beloin, who has appear- ed in practically every game for Fordham at guard in the last three years, will make his farewell ap- pearance this afternoon against Georgetown. Beloin was acting captgin of the team this year and many predict that he will figure iu the ratings for All-American stand- ings. “Toots” Politis will also be sing- ing his swan song as a member of the maroen team. Politis was handicapped considerably last year by injuries but regained his form this year and played a stellar gama at end. Politis. is adept at snaring forward passes with one hand. Waren Rrainerd, pole vaulter on the New Britain High school track team for the past two years, was in- jured recently in an accident while perferming at his specialty at Syra- cuse university. He is enrolled as & freshman there. Brainerd's pole broke while he was in mid air and he received sev. eral bad sprains from a hard land. ing. He has been in the university infirmary for some time but at the present time is nearly recovered. Many reasons have been advanced | for the amall crowd at the amateur fight program at the Stanley Arena last night but one that seems to be most generally accepted is that the fighters were all new and unknown to the general box.ng public. After secing some of the bouts last night, cspecially the last one, it has been predicted that after a few more shows, the fans will start attending in numbers again. H. & GRID RIVALRY BEGAN BACK IN91 (Continued from Preceding Page) eleven at Electric tield. The boys had no paid coach and had to struggle along mainly by themselves, with the captains holding the powers pos- sessed by the coach today. For a brief period the cleven did manage to secure a Yale player to come up and coach them, but those were lean days and it was seldom that there ‘were enough sybstitutes on hand to make a full scrub team for the reg- ulars to play against. The Yale man brought up an all- star team from his alma mater and New Britain sent it scurrying back again on the short end of a score, but the Hardware City boys' vanity disappeared shortly when the locale went up to Lakeville for a game with Hotchkine school. Hotchkiss had one of the strofgest prep achool elevens In the country, and New Britain came limping back so badly beaten the exact score has never been ascertained. After that the High school played a few independ- ent teams in this city and scored vic. tories over them all as it matle ready for Hartford. Soene of Fracas Switched The officials of the Trinity league were capricious in the extreme, and the place at which the game was to be played was switched several times even after tickets had been printed, but it was finally settled at Trinity ficld, Hartford. On the great day six special troliey cars took 400 New Britain rooters up to the field, where they formed a part of the crowd of 1500 spectators—then considered = large attendance. Amateur Lyricists Busy Tt was a big day all around, for New Britain had bcen defeated by Hartford the previous year, so thirst for revenge combined with desire for titular_honors in urging en the local team and its cheerers. The d Kallberg. Hartford was ently expecting a win but New Britain pushed right up to its line and, within ten minutes of the start, had pushed Chamberlain over for a touchdown. The second ome was even easier, as Hartford fum- bled the kick-off and Olcott recover- ed. Flannery circled Hartford’s end for a score on the first play. With Teich, Chamberiain and Flannery punching at the line and Curtin and Noren shooting off tackle and areund end, New Britaln worked up still again and sent Chamberlain through for a 17-0 score before the half ended. New Britala Wins, 33-0 It was & real old Hartford-New Britain game, with the crowd surg- ing en the fleld and holding up play time and again in spite of the efforts of three unfertunate apecial policemen who wers buffeted about by ‘the swirling ruffians who con- tinually broke out and surrounded the ams. This delayed play and the sun went down during the in- termission between halves. It was fairly dark when the second half began, but New Britaln still had time to put Chamberiain acroes again for a 22-0 count before com- plete blackneas forced the officials to end the one-sided affair with New Britain wildly joyous —and Hartford stunned. H. S. Rivalry That night there was great whoo- pee in New Britain, with a bonfire at the center and snake dancers pa- rading the main streets. One group of fans, at a performance the Ruswin Lyceum, enlivened pro- ceedings there by shouting their yells between acts. Same Score Meriden Meanwhile Meriden had won from New Haven by 5-2, but New Haven had protested the game be- cause it had ended in a free-for-all. It took two weeks to straighten out thig" mess, and, in fact, when New Britain met Meriden again at Elec- tric field it was without league sanc- tion, The score was the same a3 that at Hartford, New Britain slaughtering the visitors and wiu- ning by 22-0 on touchdowns by Chamberlain, Curtin and Flannery. This victory occasioned an even bigger celebration, and a huge bon- fire was kept blazing in front of tha South church until after 10 o'clock, by which time the firemen were dashing feverishly about the city in tin lanawer to false alarms sent in by the celebrants. Tt was long after midnight when the fun ended and New Britain settled quietly back to enjoy its championship. For champion it was. New Brit- ain held $300 in receipts of the game, and it would not turn this over to the league until it received {the cup. Under these circumstances the league could do nothing other ithan disallow New Haven's protest and declare that New Britain had won the title. UNDEFEATED ELEVENS WILL BATTLE TODAY Boston College Connecticut Aggics Scheduled to Scttie Issue and at Fenway Park Boston, Nov. 24 (LP)—The dwindling list_of undefeated foot- ball clevens will be reduced by one this atternoon when Boston College and Connecticut Aggies, both sport- ing unblemished records, clash at Fenway Park. While the Boston Eagles were favored to win, a hard battle was unticiputed becuuse of the fact that they must preserve all possible strength for their season's objective with Holy Cross next Saturday. Buch stars as Paddy Creeden, Pete Herman, George Wilczewski and Bernie Kilroy will watch the game from the bench. It will be left to the lcsser lights of the Ma- roon and Gold to beat the Yankee invaders whose goul line has yet to be crossed this season. ‘The probable lineups: Boston College Conn. Agwies Dixon ... . Wilson J. Kilroy Anderson . Sheehan . Ryan Fisher FOOTBALL GAMES TODAY Important football games today in all sections of the country follow: East Yale vs Harvard at New Haven. New York U vs Carnegie Tech at Pittsburgh. Army vs Ncbraska at West Point. Navy vs Princeton at Philadelphia. Middle West Minnesota vs Wisconsin at Madi- son. Ohie State ve Illinois at Ur- bana. Towa vs Michigan at Ann Ar- bor, Dartmouth vs Northwestern at Evanston. Purdue vs Indiana at La- several new ditties, including one which went like this: “We rambled up to Hartford on one autmn day To give Hartford the finest trim they ever got. Hooray! Now get into it, boy, and give them all they'll take, Then we'll show H. H. 8. our elev- en s no fake. Chorus 0! didn’t they ramble, ramble, They rambled all around, all over the ground. 0! didn’t they ramble, ramble, They rambled till our eleveng cut them down.” The Game Amid the singing of this and will cheering the game began at 3 o'clock, Hartford being halkan hour late in appearing. Curtin kicked oft and the game began. New Britain had Olcott at quarterback. Flannery and Teic as halfbacks, and Cham- berlain at full. The line, from end to end, was composed of Donnelly. Norem, Foster, Roche Brady, Cur- fayette. Miesouri Valley Missouri ve Kansas at Columbia. Towa State vs Drake at Des Moines. Ohlahoa vs Oklahoma Aggles at Btillwater. South Loyola vs Centenary at New Or. leuns. Maryland va Washington & Lee at Washington. Vanderbilt vs Centre at Nashville. Far West California vs Staniord at Berkeley. Southern Californla vs Idaho at Los Angeles. Oregon vs Montana at Eu- gene. Recky Mountain Colorado Aggies vs Volorado Mines at Ft. Collins. Colorado Col- lege v Wyoming at Colorado Springs. A COOLIDGE LAWMAKER Topeka, Kas. Nov. 24 UP—A. C. Coolidge, a distant cousin of the president, will be a member of the house in the 1929 Kansas legisla- ture. He is & republican. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. SCREN SHOP TEAN BEATS ANCHORITES North & Judd Girls Quintet De- Teated in Dusty League Start League sundln't R & F. Corbin o 0 1 P.C. 1.000 Corbin Screw. . 1.000 Landers 000 North & Judd.. 1 00! North & Judd girls made their first appearance in the Industrial Basketball league last night and they made a neat appearance in white uniforms. The members of the team had not taken part in much basketball and with the ex- ception of coaching by Jimmy Rey- nolds during the past few weeks they went on the floor with no ac- w. 1 1 L [J tual experience. They lost ta Cor-| bin Screw; 19 to 10. Despite this fact the team did re- markably well and scored more points than any other girls’ team did in its first appearance. Seéveral members of the team, especially Helen Rennock, Gloria Dery and Mary Martmartick, are comers. Corbin S8crew has shown a big improvement since last year and its forward combination of Mary Wa-| licki and Mary Hudak is better thay ever. Mary Wallcki has a wonder- ful eye for the basket. In the first two minutes of play she acored four fleld goals. She made one 45 seconds after the game started; one at the min- ute and 15 second mark, one 15 seconds later and one a half a minute later. Throughout the game she made five field goals. The Screw Shop center and forwards scored all the team's points. Mary Bartmar- tick and Helen Rennock were the stars of the North & Judd team. The defensive play of Valeria Slysa of the Screw Shop quintet was eas- ily the best displayed in the game. The summary:s Corbin Screw Fld. e 1 Ttl. Hudak, rf .... 11 4] 0 19 Ttl. 1 0 5 0 3 1 Dery, rt Nocera, rf Bartmartick, It Slasosa, It Rennock, ¢ . J. ValuKonis, rg.. Sockecka, g ... E. Valukonis, Ig Waskewicz, Ig ... 0 10 Referee, Coyle; Sokora; scorer, Butler. OUR BOARDING timer, ww GOES OUT oM ST | A, VERE FE 18, o w-TH' WORLD'S HEAVY- WEIGHT CHUMPIAN! NUTMEGS AND | Three gridiron stars who will fin- ish their college football careers turday afternoon, will be seen in action with the Nutmeg A. C. foot- ball team of this city against the Hartford Giants in the third and de- |ciding game of the series for the state pro championship at the East Hartford Velodrome tomorrow aft- ernoon. The trio of stars added to |the roster of the Hardware eleven are “Toots" Politis, “Tubby” Beloin and “Doc” Bautt. Politis is an end whose ability to snare forward passes has made him |oBe of the sensations of the present ;oqll“gnutc season. Beloin is a guard |who is one of the outstanding candi- | dates of the year for a place on the All-America line. Both of these boys are products of New Britain and in |playing in the championship contest against the Hartford team, they arc |making their first appearance |four years before their home town fans. d The third member of the trio is & | backfield ace. He is a triple threat man and a bulwark of strength on |the defense. In a season in which | Fordham suffered a series of ignobls reverses, the play of “Doc” Bautt has been the shining light of the team. He Kicks, passes and runs to perfection and after practicing with the New Britain team twice, he will be totally familiar with the |plays ard with the workings of the | backficld mates he will be thrown in with. With Bautt will be a former run- ning mate, Ralph Buckley who also starred at Fordham. Bautt played four years at the university o and | Buckley was last year, one of his irunning mates. “Silent John” Davis {will complete the backficld combine and on this trio the New Britain {club will depend. The team wil! lagain be directed by Vic Radzewich :at quarterback. Vic had an off day |1ast Sunday but he has shaken off {the jinx. | The rest of the team is in excel- |lent shape for a hard le. Conk- {lin has fully recovered from his in- |iuries and he will take his post at tackle with Werwaiss as his mate. Humphreys and Gnasdow will play {the guards with Beloin ready to step {in. “Red” O'Neil and Joe Rogers will {ulternate at center. Burns. former ha i 0! Villanova wingman and Politis will | pagr up on the ends giving New Brit- o'ain a pair of outside men compar- | lable to the great pair on the Giant team. | With four Fordham men on the \va Britain team and two on the HOUSE WELL . FOURTH DowA SATURDAY AFTERNOONS AN BouMces -TH" BooV ALL OVER A VACART' LoT PLAVING OFFICE FOOTBALL ! ~n RAH,~ RAH,RAH, For -THE N N R City | in! WE Wol T SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1928, GIANTS TO CLASH IN FINAL BATTLE Pro Football Teams to Meet At Velodrome In Deciding Game For State Championship—Locals Strengthen- ed by Addition of Fordham Stars—Hardware City Eleven to Work New Set of Plays -+ Capital City Crew Confident of Victory—Game Starts at 2:15. :H.r“ord crew, Grip and Graham. the game tomorrow will have a pe- culiar Fordham atmosphere. Plenty {of fight should be witnessed beforw |the contest i finished. Owing to the fact that the pro- | moters wish to get the game finiashgd | before darkness descends on the field, the kickoft will take place promptly at 2:15 o'clock. WITH THE BOWLERS ROGE S ALLEYS LANDERS CLUB LEAGUK B ves Holzomb <115 Venberg . st Hillstrand Carlson Seifel .. 15 0 H Lind { Dominski Katzung Godlewaki Low Man Schmelter Lynch Hayward Peterson ....... K. Lindberg Cardinaly | Cony 79 | Avery Dery Btaba | Faga &2l 1L 110 L.107 525 Senators a1l Mandl Ouellette | Putuilus | Low Man Low Man Trusiow Ik Olilson ¥. Frank Kloss irert Pelligrinf Elovetski Keltan - G. Peterson | vonart Ward Chides Butler Nelson ole | Hancock 17! tor their opponents. Captain Zeme | bebwski, Rametta, and Normant ¢i- vided scoring honors honors wilk s apiece. Mike Palueh i~ 143 played & fine defensive gu: 2 131 | held Frana to one score. 150 | mary: Davis 402 7 Martha Washi M. Jakubowics . Komakoski Noonan Barrows Koss 356 zton Boilard .47 99— 185 five points ¢ I 56 53 9 1) 8. Gould -r, | Doyer H. Goodrow R. 428 San Maa Hajmstromskie < Ryansky . Sehmitth M. Dyminskie . Peplauri Boys' Club Reserves Fd. FlL Tt — 151 | Zembrowski, rf. 3 | Rametta, If. . 25 | Kowalewski, ¢. . 14| Normant, rg. Paluch, Ig. .. Kellor-MacDonald McDonald-King King-Hanson Hanaon-Leville 2 . [ T FRATERNITY ALLEYS elrrure =21 - %0 New Britain Siniy .10 [gestity = | CORBIN SCREW FON i Chai Syuires e Al Commui Frang, rf. . Division MENS LEAGUE ' ity Five Seconds 100 it ns 115 92 ander rummo; Togan Miller ~oe st BE; € .o Brewster, rg. Flynn, Ig O'Day, Ig. .. s, MMERCE . imas (15 | - Belden Raldwin IKisselback Referee— Sowka. 'World lodine Capital Christ : | Celebrates Centenary :..'.’::‘n' Le Conquet, nce, Nov. 24, (— his little Finistere fishing village, fifteen miles from Brest, is prepar- ing to celebrate the hundredth an- niversary of the establishment of one of its twelve lodine factories, which supply halt the world with that invaluable medicament. This factory was founded only a years after the accidental dis- ¥. in the early 19th ceatury, of iodine - by B. Courtois, a salt- petre manufacturer of Paris. At BOYS' CLUB RESERYES { that time the wide application and - BEAT MERIDE“ QU[NTET} potent healing and antiseptic qual- ies of lodine were scarcely 152 Local Basketball Team Shows Com- Rybers Juckson | Seripture Hausman Morse }ward Barrows | Rebh Berg 301 Rutherford 13— 2| 10— 201 | -2 it - k Smyrna Sweeps Ahead On Tide of Progress Smyrna, Turkey, Nov. 24, UP—The | first electric trolley line in Asiatic Stung by defeat into @ complete Turkey has just been inaugurated reversal of their form of Monday jhere under extraordinary condi- night, the Boys' Club Reserves last | tions, night turned the tables on the Meri- | Preccding cach of the new elece !den Community Five Seconds in & | tric trolleys, with only a few yards st busketball game at the Meriden {one the tracks between them, am. Community hall and won & 21-13 [bled one of the old horse-cars of victory over their conquerors of the | fifty years' vintage, put there by early week. On Monday night the | order of the mayor so as te check Reserves had been able to score but | the speed of the motormen in the one field goal and had gone down by | new cars behind who might lese 12-4 in a slow game, but last evening | their heads over the new-fangled they had found themselves and they | electric machinery. got an early lead and kept it over 2| For five days the new trolleys much surprised Meriden quintet. | bumped slowly, painfully, behind he score at the half was 14-® New |the old horse-cars. Thes the Britain. mayor, satisfied that the electric Each team scorcd six baskets from [ motormen had learned the pace 135 | the floor, but the locals were -far |sufficiently, cleared the tracks of 143 | better from the foul line and counted | the ramshackle antiquities and 154 | nine times in this manner to once | their plodding steeds. "GET SIET” FORWINTER WITH A NEW nown. plete Reversal of Form in Scoring Victory . Little . Bryemmer E. Parsons Smedberg Anderson . Rodin Young A, Meskil Richards Zebrowsk! . Tutko . Potasky ‘4 . Park & Tiltonls Gorman £ 1) . Bentley Zaborowski Johnson ’I'O GET yourself “set” for winter— 3 to make sure that the car you drive will be free from the common, but an- noying cold weather ailments . . . buy today’s l’nadn‘.Sh. For with its ad- boiling. The thermostat retards the water flow until the engine becomes warm. Hence, lesschokingis required and less diluting of crankcase oil occurs. In addition to all these s Pontiac offers all the stamina and de pendability for which it is interna- tionally famed. When you drive this great General Motors Six, the ap- proach of cold weather brings no The crou-flow radiator minimizes anxiety concerning the losses of alcohol and water through of your car. I S R e e s iy C. A. BENCE 50 CHESTNUT STREET TEL. 2215 WHaT'LL WE Do? Safe!