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of Sports Tom Leary, guard on the New Britain basketball team, had to do some tall hustling to reach this city in time yesterday to play against the Meriden Endees last night. H: Played football in Stapleton, 8. L. in the afternoon and after a mad dash across the ferry and to the Grand Central, he caught the 5:55 train out on the fly. Incidentally, the Stapleton team yesterday defeated the Now York Giants by the score of 7 to 0. The “Stapes” are after the Providence Steam Rollers. When yesterday's score becomes known, the New Britain eleven doesn’t look so tough in its game agalnst Stapleton. The Nutmegs were defeated in Staten Island by two touchdowns, the score being 12 to 0. While viewing the Alumni-High school football game at Memoria} Field in Willow Brook park yester- day morning, the thought struck us that the opportunity of making ‘Thanksgiving Duy & big one for alumni of the New Britain High school is being lost every year. Yesterday there waswquite a gath. ering of fans on hand to watch ths game but there should have been thousands. We suggest that next year, prep- rations be made at the Hllrtv' the season for Thauksgiving Day morn ing. Those in charge should plan this day as an alumnus day anl bring all of the old grads back. Bands should be hired and a real day should he made of it. There's no reason why the game and the en- tire affair shouldn't be a success, The Hartford Giants and tha Nutmegs will play again Sunda This appears to most everybody as rather a foolish propesition but as| Manager Henry Zehrer states, he couldn’t allow Hobson of Hartford to make the “cracks” that he did and get away with them. Of course, it was Hartford that started out first to get the “ringers a3 we used to call them. Then, when New Britain retallated, Hari- ford became peeved. Now Hobson is strutting around saying that thy Giants as they played all season long. are a better team than the Nutmegs. Zehrer stated yeaterday that didn't care if nobody attended th» game, Side bets of $500 have bee.. posted, according to his statemenr, and the game will be played on the winner-take-all basis. He points out that the Nutmegs won the first game and he confidently expects the le- cals to win again, On the surface, it looks like w real, old time, knock-down ana drag-'em-off contest, Last Sunday the battle was a humdinger and it we 46n’t miss our guess, next Sur- day will be worse. Undertakers, ba on your guard! BURRITT TEAM T0 MEET PORTLAND FIVE TOMORROW Local Basketball Team to Battle St. Mary's in First Game of Present Season Tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock. the Burritt basketball team will open its season by clashing with the strong 8t. Mary flve of Portland. The visiting aggregation is said to he one of the fastest teams in the Deep River scction and is confident Get Your (\ he | of taking the locals into camp. This is the first time that a five from Portland has: been booked for a game in this city and fans will be interested in watching the type of play used by the visitors. Back in 1922, the Portland High school met the local High school five but no semi-pro team has since appeared 1in this city. The St. Mary team is made up of former Middletown High stars ani Industrial league players. The Bur- ritts wil have practically twe com- plete teams and cxpect \to start its Porland. The Burritts will have Havlick, Yakubowicz, Bucheri ani Micckowski at forwards: Saunders and Luty at center, Arhour, Darrow and Matulis at guards. A few oth- er men will also appear In the lo- calw’ lineup. The game will start promptly at 8 o'clock so as to make way for the New Britain-Bronxville [Favorites game. All of the Burritt plyers are asked to he at the Stanley Arena at 7:30 o'clock. {DUSTY LEAGUE QUINTETS BATTLE AGAIN TONIGHT Two More Undefcated Teams to Clash In Scheduled Games at Y, M. T. A. B. Hall. Tonight's Games Landers vs. Corbin Bcrew (girls). B. Machine vs. Landers. Another undefeated team is to be dropped from the winning colu tonight in the Industrial Basketball league when the Stanley Works and Corbin Cabinet Lock teams mect in the second game at the Tabs' hall. Last Tuesday the Stanley Rule team |lost its first game against the Cor- bin Screw quintet. In the first game of the night Corbin Screw girls, winners in their first start, will play Landers who were defeated in their initlal start by the P. & I°. Corbin team. A win for Landers will place that team in a tie for second place but a victory will put the Berew Shop teum iu the lead. Stanley Works and Corbin Cabinet teams have won two games. The quintet that wins this game will be the other undefeated |teama After tonight there will be lonly three undefeated quintets, | Corbin Screw and the winner of the Stanley Works-Cubinet gume. 1t Landers succeeds in defeating | New Britain Machine it will have |company in last place which it now holds without dispute. Kach team | will have fost three games. 1f the | Newmatics win they will be tied with Russell & Erwin for sixth place. RANGERS AGAIN LEADING NATIONAL HOCKEY LOOP New York Team |than any of Returns to Top Rung of Ladder By Defeating | Chicago Black Hawks New York, Nov. 30 (UF)—The New York Rangers returned (o the top rung of the National Hockey League last night with a 2 to 1 vic- tory over the Chicago Black Hawks. The Rangers came from behind in the last five minutes of the game to tle the score. They counted the winning point in the overtime per- iod. Detroit and Montrl fought to a 110 1 draw at Detroit and’Les Canadiens and Pittsburgh reached a similar game at Montreal. Both of these games were fast and hotly contested but in both citics the op- ponents were perfectly matched. Nearly 30,000 persons saw the contests, L Luigl Zaccheo, known in Arona, Italy, as “dean of innkeepers,” re- cently died at the age of 90. Rubber Tire Chains NOW! You’ll want ‘em. You’'ll need ‘em. drive for the state title by beating |/ Stanley Works vs. Corbin Cabinet. | in first place with onc more victory | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. WITH THE BOWLERS ROGERS L. N. V. BOW Eagi Al.ll\'= NG LEAGUE es A. Maye Marty ... Kawaleki J. Mays Newfield Bruzay Matis | Rekus Watkins Livisky Sarkus Melinosky Novilus Satulin Murphy LANDERS GIRL Lucky Strikes F. Menderteln avesenes 68 | ¥ Middieton | Mycroms . Thomas " Anderson Wieg: Prest Stanquist . Jenking 143 F. Siegal Anderson § . Anderson 171 206— 407 VRATERNITY ALLEVS OLD FELIOWS' LEAGUE Phenix A, Odman Danhers 1. odman Seipel eone | i Lesington Griswold ATt Long | veupald | Nowton Anderson | A Lindvers Anderson | Dahtstrom | Frisk : K. Lindberg U. CAPTAIN . 30 #P—Leonard Grant, intercollegiate 1 boxing champion. has been elected captain of New York University's 1929 football team. The big tackle is a graduate of Dean academy. He succeeds another tackle, Al Lassmun, as captain of the Violet. OUR BOARDING TNeH, T oL” WAR- HoRSE IS X BEGINING B SLow uP/ I -KNEW NESTERDAY, © HE CURLED TH' LIP OVER “THoSE SECOND HELPINGS, iH/A HE'P SPEMND “oDAY IN BED COUNTING CEILING CRACKS !- waaTH YEARS ARE TAKING “THEIR “TOLL , vt AN’ FROM avyweight | EAST MAY HAVE NO GRID CHAMP Experts Unable to Settle on Out- standing Football Eleven New York, Nov. 30 (A7—It begins to look s if the east will do without a foothall champion this |year. In 1927 the experts got out of difficulties by nominating Yale and Dlittsburgh as joint holders of |the crown. At the moment it would seem that six or seven teams should be rated about cqually and to name that many to one throne would make the royal perch a bit unc fortable for all. Of course, there's still a chance that tomorrow's few but important bottle will develop a ruler upon whom the large majority of fans and | experts ¢ | turn k Stanford, most observ- {era will be ready to toss out the | Notre Dame game and award the sectional title to Army. But there seems to be considerable deubt, even in the east, whether the Cadets can match the tricky game Glenn War- ner has taught his Stanford War- riors. | Then Boston College, in the event |the Kagles defeat Holy Cross, must be considered. The Eagles have es- | caped defeat and tie so far although 52— 147 [their schedule was none too heavy. | | Barring their defeat of the Navy arly in the scason, the Eagles will have considerable trouble pointing 1o a triumph a first rate opponent. | Georgetown, which onl; game to Carnegic Tech, strengthen its championshlp posi- [tion by stopping the hitherte un- | checked University of etroit eleven 'at Detroit. | The outstanding Thanksgiving day New York may features of the program were University's complete rout by the Oregon Aggies, 25 to 113, and Pennsylvania’s annihilation of Cornell, 49 to 0. | After New York university's tri- vniph over Carnegie Tech last Sat- nirday, critics were ready to award the title and everything clse to the Violent Violets, but the Pacitic coast boys romped through the New York- ened line practically at will. rong, the Violets' high scor- mg back, broke through for one touchdown, but in general the Beav- ors Kept him bottled up all after- noon. «xit from the collegiate gridiron, I'enn smashed Cornell into over- whelming defeat at Philadelphia and now are ready to dispute titular | claims by any other eleven. The red and Blue lost only to the Navy thiy scason, and numbered among its vic- ms d, Penn State and Co- lumbia, il personally accounted for four touchdowns against Cornell and kicked seven points after touch- down, After three ties in a row, Brown finally managed to gain the edg over Colgate in their annual Than HOUSE R . TH WAY -0 SELL Now ol A HoT WATER BOTILE WILL BE His BosomM CompAMioN! sTATE, 1 poaT Khow have to | ) agree. If the Cadets can | ropped its | With Paul Scull making a glorious “w WELL , YCANT TAK HILLS IN HIGH, DOME FoR -THIRTY VEARS WiTHouT LOOSEMING uP ALL TH' BEARINGS !~ WHEA A LFFLE “THING LIKE GIVING DINNER S auy - —Ted couNT, ID SAY FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 380, 1928. siving day struggle, but the margin was none too much. Ed Kevork- wn's field goal in the first - period was the deciding tactor in the Bruins' 16 to 13 victory. Touchdowns by Baysinger and Stevens in the third and fourth per- iods gave Byracuse & 14 to 6 verdict over Columbia, the first major tri- umph the Orange ecored this year. Columbia, on the other hand, wound up the season without a single vice tory over an outstanding foe. With fast-stepping Uansa in the lcading role, Pitt's Panthers admin- istered the usual defeat to Penn | State, 26 to 0. Uansa scored two touchdowns, one of them from a Penn State kickoff, to aid the Pan !thers to their seventh stralght vic- tory over the Nittany Lions. West Virginia scored two touch downs in the first half and then !clung to this advantage to dow: | Washington and Jefferson, 14 to « A touchdown in the closing minute {of play enabled Bucknell to tis Temple, T to 7 at Lewisburg. The intersectional card betwee: | mid-west and eart ended in & draw Tufts was defeated by Butler, 26 11 3, but Geneva conquered John Car ! roll of Cleveland, 19 to 12. A 25 1 {6 verdict over Franklin and Ma: shall gave Gettysburg the Easter | Pennaylvania Intercollegiate Con |ference title. Schuylkill swampe:! | Ursinus, 54 to 6, Maryland con {quered Johns Hopkins, 26 to 6, S | Johns of* Annapolis downed Pem Military. 13 to 0, Western Maryland | overwhelmed Muhlenberg, 59 to © 'and Davis and Eikins rompe: through Balem, 63 to 0. West Vi ginta Wesleyan was beaten by Mar shall, 13 to 7, and Vermont bowes to Bpringfield, 3 to 0 STRONG LEADS SCORERS Adds Scven Points to Total Giving Him 161 Points New York, Nov. 30 (R —=Several Thanksgiving Jay scoring splurges caused a big shake up in the list v leading castern football scorers yes- | terday. ! Ken Strong scored seven points as ' his New York University team was | losing to the Oregon Aggics and sent his total for the scason to 161. Paul Scull, of Penn, scoring 31 points against Cornell, jumped into thirq | place. Neal, of Western Maryland, | scored 31 points against Muhlenberg | and Warren, of Davis Elkins, went him one better with agains, afem. | = e YALE TEAM WINS New Haven, Nov. 30 (UP) Yale's undefeated soccer team kept its record clean yesterday by bat- tling the Army booters to a 0-0 tie in the bowl. A crowd of scveral thousand, witn:ssing a game other than foothall in the bowl for the ! first time in three yeurs, cheered Goldberg, Army goal tender, re- peatedly. The play was in Army territory more than three-quarters of the game. By AHERN ALL LIKE HES | New York University Star ) A-THARKS- GIVES AMN HIM SHORT! HAVE A- CARE KNAVES ¢ waeNod SEETHE ME 10 HiaH EMPER , «t AUD —rwfle».\ I THAT MY oWl STRENGTH YoR VIOLEMCE /- \\intcrl«x OVERCON] WINTER-TEX IS DIFFERENT From any Overcoat you have ever worn. I's warm enough for zero weather, yet it is not burdensome in weight. In the fleece finish it is almost as soft as Eiderdown yet it is guaranteed for two years’ wear. Winter-Tex is also made in the Saxony finish in the beantiful Herringbones. Double Breasted or Single Breasted. ‘50 OTHER OVERCOATS 352 to ‘652 GLOBE CLOTHING HOUSE COR. MAIN and WEST MAIN STS. Greatest advance ever New Britain made in tire chains—these new Goodyear Rubber Tire Chains. QUIET . . LONG-WEAR- ING .. TIRE-SAVING . . ECONOMICAL . . CO! VENIENT..GRIPPING! ‘We have them in your size, PILLS = /1-30 DAWGONIT- A (AT LENE AN | WoMaN = HEAE MY WiFE. Took (WMIE OF T SDAE WHILE | WAy GONE nm&, AND SHE JUST ABOUT RUINED TW INESS — SHE ONLY TooK (N $234 -ET ER- “™eX'S ™' BU9INESS — Made by the makers of Goodyear Tires and tubes — which we also sell, and service O'Neil Tire & Battery Co. 39 WASHINGTON ST. TEL. 900