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Klplln Meets Wallace other two 10-round bouts Joe Glick baseball game here yesterday. 3 s |of Brooklyn will meet Luis Vicen- | Thompson, on the mound for Yale, In Garden on May 10 tini or spain ana. Bruce Iowers, [allowtd only three mits Weafer, H. New Rochelle, N. Y. negro, wili . pitcher, played woll for fve meet Jack (Kid) Berg of Englaid. |innings, holding Yale to one rgn. INVADE THE WEST Speaking Dt : : : J AMERICAN LEAGUE | Honeyboy Finnegan and Masie Ro- of Sports Games Yesterday New York #, Boston 3. Philadelphia 9, Washington 4. The Holy Croas baseball team will Detroit 7,. Cleveland 6. stage a practice semsion Saturday| BSt. Louis-Chicago, rain. afternoon at 2 o'cleck at the Wash- ington playground baseball diamond. The workeut will be for both the scnior and junior teams. Al can- didates are invited to turn out. New York. April 25 (UP)—A car- nival of tightw ights will be held in senbloom Secking Places on Paddy | Madison Square Garden May 16, with Louis (Kid) Kaplan of Mevi- |den, Conn. former featherweight champion, meeting Billy Wallace of Cleveland in the main bout YALE BEATS B. V. RATI AN BEST TRAINER New Haven, April 25 \€P)—U sing| “Doc" Woods. with the New York @ third-string battery. Yale defeated | Yankees, is rated by most players In .he Boston University 5 to 0 in a slow | as the best trainer in basehall. 1 What the Men will Wear this Season is definitely shown through- out our entire stock. Harmon’s 1 of Bouts, Chicago, April 25 (UP)—Honey- boy Finnegan, junior lghtweignt, and Maxie Rosenbloom. light heavy- weight, Invade the middle west to- morrow for fights in which they hope (0 earn consideration for places on some the “big money” boxing bills Promoter Paddy Harmon has planned for the summer. Finnegan, possessor of victories over Ray Miller. Bruce Flowers and Joe Glick, has his eyes on a match with the winner of the proposed fight here May 9 between Tony Can- zoneri and Andre Routis. Rosenbloom meets Charley Bel. anger, Canadian light-heavyweight ! | champion, on the same bill. Il Philadelphia . ... 8t. Louis New York The Holy Cross Athletic club will |Cleveland . meet tonight at 7:30 o'cloek in the nieeting hall Holy Cross churcn on Farmington avenue. Details of organieation will be discussed, a re- port of the by-laws and eonstitution committees will be heard. Accord- ing to reports, the membership in the club is gaining by leaps and bounds and the organisation bids !n‘lr to become the largest in the city. ORI S| New York at Besten. Washington at Philadelphia. £t. Louip at Chicago. Cleveland at Detreit. EATS BATES Medford, Mass, April 25 (UP)— In a game that developed into a pitching duel, Tufts defeated Bates, % to 1, here yesterday. It was not | until the seventh inning that Tufis overcame a one-run lead ROGUISH EYE Although advance weather reports cannot be relied on to any great ex- tent, falr weather is promised for Sunday. 1f the predicition comen true, there will be plenty of basc- Lall activity over the week-end. The Falcons are the only club that has a game scheduled so fa Al the other clubs in the city will be out for practice sessions, it is thought. at Chicage. Cleveland at Detreit. Washington at Beaton. New York at Philadelphia. Good clothes—for spring- for summer—Test them by direct comparison—measure style for style, fabric for fabric, value for value. NATIONAL LEAGUE 3 SLAND | Kingston, R. 1. April 25 (UP)— | Transforming six hits into six runs in the fiest two innings, Maine got H |away to a lead which enabled it to Highly fancled by expert turfmen as the probable winnes of the {noot Rhode Istand State. 10 to 6 | clamsic Kentucky Derby is Roguish Eye, owned by J. J. Coughlan. Roguish | here yesterday. Eye, a son of Flittergolf-8Bly Wink, is a hig, strappling colt, heavily | 4 bodied and requires a strong hand. He was one of the best two-year-olds of the 1928 season, making his greatest race in the Belmont Futurity In| Cambridge, Mass., Ap (Up)— which he was beaten hy High Strung. Winner of three of the seven | After trailing for most of the game. races he ran §n 192, he was made a 10-1 shot in the winter books, but | Amherst came from behind to even | may go to the pest with a greater following to win. the score at 2-2 in the ninth inning ! and then niade four runs in the 10th to hand the Harvard baseball team | |its first Beating of the season by the ' Games Yesterday . | New York 9, Philadelphia 2. Pittsburgh §, Chicago 4. (13 innin, Golf will hold sway in reality] Brookiyn 5, Beston 3. after Saturday. The tournament| §t. Louis-Cincinnati, rain. scaron at Shuttle Meadow opens of- ficially on Saturday and one of the Standing biggest entry lists for any opening w. day in recent Seasons is expected 10| New York be received. Boston Activity at Sequin is also planned | Chicago for the coming week-end in an of- |t Louis .. ficial sense. Both courses have |philadelphia AMHERST Bl".A'I::Il ARD 2 5 Fine quality means longer wear and satisfaction must result. “ been kept busy with devotees of the &ame who are out at every oppor- tunity. Amateur fight fans have their ap- petites whetted for another spicy card at the Stanley Arena tomorrow night. With Chick O'Day of Meri- den appearing in the final bout, there {8 gome certain action promised in the feature. Joe Zotter is again performing tonight in Hartford. He has lse- come one of the most popular per- formers to appear in Hartford and after his sensational victory last weék over Mickey Blaine of Holyoke, he has become one of the outstand- Ing drawing cards being used by Ed Hurley. Very soon, the outdoor season will get started and plenty of activ- ity is being promised for both Hart- ford and New Britain. Match- hiaker C. F. Wagner put in a bid for prrmission to stage bouts at Willow Brook park this coming season but no definite decision has as yet been teached between him and the park Loard. CHURCH LBAGUE MEETS Board of Managers to Gather Nest Monday to Wind up Detalls of Basketball Season. A meeting of the Inter-Church jeague board of managers will be held at 7:30 o'clock next Monday evening at the Y. M. C. A., when the last details of the past basketball season will be taken care of and plans wil' be begun for the coming baseball meason. The circuit expects to be repre- sented on the baseball diamond again this summer, and an effort il be made to complete the ar- rengements and begin the actual play at an early date, in order that the games will not run into the darkness of late summer evenings as in the past years. All churches interested are asked te have repre- sentatives present Monday night. Several detalls regarding the bas- ketball season remain to be settled. and the managers of all teams in this league are asked to he present. 1t fs hoped that each team will make & final report on the number of wea- #on tickets sold and make returns of the money, in order that the league can know where it stands fnancially. WITH THE BOWLERS — FRATERNITY ALLEYS DD l‘l:' Witzke Grisweld Leupold W. Newtox Anderson A. Odman Linn 1. Odma Huck Seifel 98— 323 120~ 316 108 102— 339 510—1560 Maussler . 106— 208 #quires . ah " 268 Carlson 1 H. Newton Low Score B. Lindberg Anderson Dahlstrom Frisk ... 3= 430 K. Lindberg — 31 108— 273 114} 211823 COLLEGE BASEBALL By the United Press Columbia 6: Manhattan 2. Fordham 5: Seton Hall 1. Princeton 3; Holy Cross 1. Yaie §; Beston U., 0. Lafayette §; Army 4. N. Y. U, §; Stevens 4. Tufts 3; Bates 1. Amherst ¢; Harvard 2, nings). FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By the Associated Press Caaton, O.—K. O. Christner, Aks ron, knocked out Jack McAuliffe, Detroit, (2). SIGNED BY BRAVES Brooklyn, April 25 (UP)—Al Nix- on, formet Philadelphia Phiilies out- flelder, has been signed by the Bos: ton Braves, Judge Emil Fuchs, pres- ident-manager of the club, An- nounced. (19 in- J. H. Patrick. owner of the Los Angeles club, is offering a suit of clothes 10 every player on his team who Rils a home run. Pittsburgh Cincinnati Brookiyn s x .. Games Today Philadelphia at New York. Boston at Brooklyn. ‘hicago at Pittsburgh. Cincinnati at St. Louis Games Tomorrow Boston at New York. Philadelphia at Brooklyn Cincinnati at St. Louis. Chicago at Pittsburgh. IN'l‘l'll'lNATl()NALV LEAGUE Games Yesterday Toronto 3, Jersey City 2 N rk 4, Rechester 1. Reading 8, Montreal 6. Buffalo 8, Baitimere 4. Rochester Reading . Baltimore Toronto Buffalo ... Montreal . Newark Games Today Toront~ at Jersey City. Rochester at Newark. Montreal at Reading. Buftalo at Baltimere. EASTERN LEAGUE Games Yesterd, Hartford 5, Albany 1. (12 innings). Allentown 2, Springfield 0. Providence 9, Bridgeport {. Pittsfield 8, New Haven 3. Standing . w. Hartford ........ 1 Allentown .. 1 Providence . .1 Pittafield . ... 1 Springfeld Albany ... New Haven Bridgeport Pet. 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 000 000 000 000 sames Today Bpringfleld at Allentown. Hartford at Albany. New Haven at Pittsfeld. Bridgeport at Providence. Games Tomorrow Albany at Hartford. Pittstield at Bridgeport. Providence at New Haven. Allentown at Springfield. BY VERNE WICKHAM Don't be the kind of a golfer who is always calling across the course to his .partners, “Hey, can I move away from this post?”, “Can I lift out of here?”, “You don't have to play out of this place, do you?", and no on. Know the rules concerning lift- ing the ball. They are well defined and explained in the rule book and all peculiar local rules are found on the back of the score card. Spots that ale under repair and may be lifted from are usually marked. There is lit!le excuse for fog- horning all over the place for rul- ings. To do so marks the golfer s either uninformed on the rules. Or as trying to take advantage of his partners’ good spor{smanship. If your baM is within a club's length of a bench, direction flag, in &round under repair, casual water in the fairway or on the green, go- pher hole, tree basin (lacal rule), you may lift without any penaity, but if it is in an unplayable lie in the rough. next to an Out-of-botinds fence, wagon tracks (uniess local rules). casual water in hazards, you cannot 1ift it without penalty. There are eother loeal rules and decisions in the rute beek. Learn them, and don’t always be asking vice from your partners. CHOORE TRACK MEN New Haven, April 25 (UP)— Coaches George Connors and Frank Kanaly have chosen 12 Yale track men to enter the annual Peénn relay meet Saturday. They include Fred Sturdy. who hopeés In this, his senior year. 18 break the pele vault record #ct by his former teammate, Sabin Carr. Card Friday Against Bouts, Chick O'Day, the Meriden battler who is scheduled to appear in the feature bout of the amateur fight tournament at the Stanley Arena to- morrow night against Frankie Kov- alicki of this city, is considered one of the top notch lightweights in the simon pure ragks of the state, In his first appearance in this city two Wweeks ago. he scored a clean kneck- out over his opponent in the second round. He displayed a snappy attack thet wore hix opponent down and when he crashed over his right cross, the fight was abruptly ¢nded, He Is in perfect condition and will most probably represent Meriden in the state title tournament to he staged in New Haven on May 11 and 16. His opponent, Kovalicki, will give him plenty of trouble tomorrow night. He has had plenty of ex- perience aguinst tough opponen's and the bout between him and O'Day should be a pippin. Bernard Flood. 111-pound bundle of lightning. is scheduled to appear in the semi-final against Kid Sabula of Meriden. This will be Floed's toughest test since he started along the ‘road of fistic thorna and jaus. The local boy has shown plenty of #uts in his recent batties and two weeks ago, he gave “Sunny Boy™" Hayden, far ahead of him in experi- ence, one of the toughest battles the Rristol boy has experienced in some time. Sabula is one of the leading battlers in his division in Meriden. Dominick Frisco and Casey An- telek will resume a feud started some time agn when they clash in one of the preliminaries on the card. The New Haven boy fis a hard puncher and a pretty boxer and he in prepared to give Frisco plenty of work. Frisco hasn't been beaten in some time in his local experiences and he is guarding against over- confidence in his meeting with the Elm City battler, One of the features on the card of 10 bouts being nged by Match- maker C. F. Wagner, is the sched- uled battle between Ed Burnski of Meriden and Mike Sinko of this city. RKinko failed to show anything at all in the line.of fAghting in his first few appearances but suddeniy. two weeks ago, 1 e appeared as A re- juvenated person and proved the sensation of the night. Rurnski was kayoed by Patay Borselle in the second round of their melre aAnd he in out to make a comeback against Sinko, Several other wood perfotmerg ar down on the lists here tomorrow night. These in- clude Bill Silverman, “Sunny Beéy" Hayden, Joe Trush, Al Andrens and several ethers. A full card of 10 fights is planned. Alert business men know the value of Herald Classificd Ada. CHICK 0'DAY CONSIDERED TOP NOTCH LIGHTWEICHT | Meriden Battler to Appear in Feature Bout of Amateur | City—Bernard Flood to Receive Hard Test in Meet- ing Kid Sabula — Frisco and Antelek to Renew | Feud—Burnski to Clash With Mike Sinko — Ten for appearance | AL TH' HIRED HELP (N TW OuT “Th PUT" ON TW FeE@O BAE - NO REASON WHY | SHOULON'T! { Frankie Kovalicki of This BUNIONEERS OFF " ON 60 MILE Thek {Twenty-Eight Pairs of Legs Plod | Ooward Over Missourik | e ik | Maplewood. Mo., April 25 (P— Twenty-cight pairs of bronzed, leun legs resumed their jaunt through Missouri this morning as C. C. Pyl bunion derby left Maplewood, M., for Sullivan, Mo.. the point, 60 miles distant. | Pat Parrison, curly-haired blon., | set out for Bullivan with the 26th control - the Otarks is Harrisoo’s home a~d plans have been made to greet hin royally when he arrives, For the other 27 plodding pil- |&rims It was just tho start of an- other duy. Yesterday's short jump from Collinsville, 11, to Maplewood, 42 miles, was the shortest of the runs and more or less of a holiday | for the pavement pou Today they again setti=d down to the serious business of running tor | money. Pete Gavuzzi, hearded Jtai- fan speed merchant of Southampion. England, was still in the lead in elapsed time this marning. Johnny Salo, the flying cop of Pas- saic, N, and Ed Gardner, negro of Seattle, Wash., were hattling for sec- ond place with the policeman hold- ing an advantage of 43 minutes. The ten leaders in clapsed tirie as the jaunt to Sullivan started were: Pete Gavuzzi. England, John Balo, Passaic. 159:55:4 163:34 22 Ed Gardner, Seattl”, Wash.. 164~ 22:55. Giusto Umek, Trieste 08:48. Paul Simpson 1188:26:22 fam Richman, New York. 183:10. Philip Granville. Hamilton, Ont 186:43:42. M. B. McNamara, Australia 4042, Harry 211:20:22 Herbert 213:27:18. DE SOTO SIX J. B. MORAN'S MOTOR SALES 13131 Church st Tel Haly, 178:- Buriington, N. 195:- Abramowitz, New York New Hedeman York. I!lorc of 6 to 2 here yesterday. | pressed determination of leading the | | pacK Into town. The gateway city to | BOSTONIANS BROCKTON | A §6 SPORT SHOE For Oniy $4.95 In Six Different Styles Brockton Shoe Store 284 MAIN STREET The “New Leonard” Building SHOES FOR MEN Wll’fll you pay from §7 % SK.35 for a pair of Bostor you get morg for your money than with any other shoes we knew. Your feet will be dressed in style. You'll be comfortable as well as correet. You wen’t need a new pair for longer than you expect. Exeellent shoes—Bostonians, And we catry a variety of styles for your selection. BROCKTON SHOE STORE 284 MAIN ST. The New Leonard Bldg. Hats Socks Shirts Sweaters Knickers Breakers Shoes Variety, Quantity, Quality and Price—they are all here. a e. Come in—browse around bit in an atmosphere you lik ~ Globe Clothing House WHERE WEST MAIN STREET BEGINS OUR BOARDING HOUSE ~You SAY THE CotuiSiod Z GETWEEN THE AuUTomMOBILE AlD MILK WAGON OCCURRED AT 3:20 W THE MoRNING, —«~ AND THAT THE DRIVER OF THE AUTOMOBILE WAS ENTIRELY AT FAULT 2. VERY WELL , wane Now MR. HOOPLE . ame ISH'T T TRUE THAT You HAVE ACCEPTED RIDES HOME ON MILK WAGONS, FRoM YoUR NocTURNAL WANDERINGS 22 G STy ] [T HOTEL SNEAK WHERE TH' SaM MILL HAVE YOu BeEN? TW BUL2ZER ON TH SWITCH~ Don’t Believe in Signs A DON'T | SaY! THAT S BOARD HAS BEEN GOIN' TA BEAT TH BAND! WHATS EUNNY aBouT WELL,COME. HERE AN YA CAN SEE FOR. YOURSELE — -MY NocTURNAL WARDERINGS 2 ~UMF = KAFF. KAFF =« ESAD, MR. ATIORUEY, ~- I AM AN ASTRONOMER fu ~ THE STUDY OF MY SCIENCE REQUIRES THAT I BE OUT AFTER NIGHT-FALL ~- < INDEED, ALMOST UNTIL DAWN,w« THAT I MAY NOTE AND OBSERVE THE PoSiTio OF STARS AND PLANETS = HARR-RRUMF = ON HAT PARTICULAR A MORNING , THE W PLANET et s THE g quesTiod @E MAJoé \ Kow$ | EIXED EVERN THING UP BEFORE \ sTePPED OUT T eaT! A ?