New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 27, 1929, Page 10

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% 8 ‘A th inning rally resulting in four runs, gave the Meriden Insil- &' 5 te ¢ victory ever the Corbin Red Box'In a thrilling battle at the Insilos Stadium in Meriden yester- day afternoon. “Lafty” Buckland. pitching for the New Britain team, had held the In- silcos to three hits up to the fatal frame. The Meriden club appeared te be hopeleasly beaten but, of a sudden, the Silver Workers bunched a double and a single and Buckiand walked two and suffered an error be- hind him and the game was over. Schnable led off and scored all the way from first when Blanchard mufted Bucheri's toss on Thomas’ grounder. Thomas went to second on the play and scored on Casey Nagie's single. Theisin bunted to Buckland and all hands were safe as “Buck” tried to catch the runner at second and failed. Ralph Buck- ley walked filling the sack. A mo- ment later, Goodrich cleaned the base paths with a lusty double to lett. ‘The Red Sox out hit the Insilcos 10 te 5. but Nagle was strong in the pinches. Two wild pitches gave the Red Sox their first run and the sec- was scored on a wild throw. , besides pitching, got three of his team’s five hits. The summary: INSILCOR Themas, 31 sl @nzo50-0 Totals E] 1l assussans, Yankaskes, 1t . Vucherl, o . Buckiand, p Totals 7 x—None out when winning run scored. xz—Ratted for Hackbarth in th. Corbin Red Sox 110 011 000—1 Insilcos 000 001 004—5 Twe base hits: Nagle, Vucheri 2, Geedrich, Struck out: By Nagle 1, Buck- land 3. WATCHING THE SCOREBOARD By _the United Press. Yesterday's Hero—Urban (Red) Faber, veteran Cicago White Sox pitcher who held the hard-hitting Detroit Tigers to one hit, beating them, 2 to 0. A single by Gehringer after two were down in the fourth waa the enly hit off Faber, who has been pitohing for the White Sox since 1914. The only other man to reach first was Phillips who was hit by.a pitched ball in the fitth. The White Sox scorsd both their runs without the aid of a hit. “lonssmanna e ) % A g B Getting four hits, including his ninth homer of the season, Babe Ruth led the New York Yankees to a 18 te ¢ victery over the Boston Red BSox. Ruth drove in four runs and scered three, Winning their eleventh straight game the Philadelphia Athietics beat the Washingten Senators, ¢ to 3. Mickey Cochrane made five hits in five trips. The A’a have won twelve out .of thirtesn games from Wash- irgton this season. Allowing on'y six hits, Rip Collins, saging & ceomeback with the St. Leuls Brewns blanked the Cleveland Indiane, 1 to 0. Blue's double and Manush’s single won the game. The Chicago Cubs regained the National League lead from the St Louls Cardinals by beating the Cin- cinmati Reds, 5 to 1. Guy Bush pitched his fifth straight victory, bhaving the edge on Red Lucas, ‘Tayler Douthit's lusty batting fail- ed to prevent the Cardinals from drepping & double-header to the Pigtburgh Pirates and losing the Katignal League lead. The Pirates schred seven runs in the sixth inning to_win the first game, 12 to 8. Bur- Grimes stopped a ninth iuning and the Pirates won the second e, 7 to 5. Douthit made seven hifs in ten trips in the two games. wlesssscusom WHO B HE? Very good, Louis, you won the |dollar again today for guessing cor- rectly Peter Perakos. Your sister's answer was good, 100, but yours is a little longer, more twitting as it ‘were, 80 you get the vompensation. The editor would not have printed the silhouette Saturday if he had the slightest idea that the likeneas would have been guessed. A little poker game took surplus cash, but as this contest is on the level, let by gones be bygones. Here's Squilla cote’s prize offering: The silhouette in Saturday's Her- ald is that of Peter Perakos, part owner of the Cauitol, Strand and Palace theaters. Mr. Perakos is manager of the Palace theater and has been actively engaged in theat- rical ®ntertainment for a number of years here.. The Capitol and Strand theaters have given this city the highest grade of entertainment, and the efforts of the owners have been very successful. “Pete,” as he is most generally |called, in an athlete of 'no mean prowess, and is a great friend of Joe Hergstrom. Mr. Hergstrom was re- |cently victorious in a race at Wil- low Brook park with him, but a re- turn match was promised. Mr. Perakos' favorite aport is football and he is always interested in the New Dritain high school ac- tivities. He also has the manage- ment of the new Cameo restaurant on Main street. The silhouette in tonight's Herald although it is no pipe to guess. To- mgrrow at noon he's going to of- ficiate at a very important meeting. They are oll in league with him, if not in business, in a sort of a hoost- ing way. His business is going ahead in leaps and bounds, and is one of the outstanding examples of succens in his line of endeavor. He is a traveler of note, only yesteryear, he went to Constantinople. He is not a stranger in Mexico City, Paris, Berlin or Montreal. He speaks the French tongue fluently which helps him to get around Europe with a gusto. “C'est necessaire que vous regardez un petit peu—Regardez bien, C'est lui sans doubte, un Mon- sieur qui est tojours au Lions club, chez’ Burritt hotel. silhquette est tres facile, lui?” Je desire beacoup des lettres, et dites quelquechose tres intercs- sant, #'il vous plait. 11 est un Chevalier de Columbe.” Now' that is in English, not pigeon French, When it comes to grammar, the above statements are out of plumb, just sort of soldered together. 1.—1dentify likenesa. 3.~—Describe how he makes livell- hood 3.—Address communications to “Sithouette™ Editor, New Britain Herald 4.—Contest closes st 2 p. m. fol- lowing insertion—8aturday 10 2 m. 5.—Answers may be mailed or brought to the Herald office. 6.—Credit given for neatness. 1.—One dollar awarded daily for best answer according (o rules. 8—No telephone guesses. ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED At a dinner party yesterday aft- ernoon. Mrs. Rose Penta of 30 Con- cord strect announced the engage- ment of her daughter, Sylvia, te ‘Gflarg’e Barker of Lynn, Mass. No date for the wedding has heen s Hp hit & homer with the bases load oé in the first game. . With Bob O'Farrell and Pat Craw- fogd driving in four runs each, the | New York Giants won their stfaight game from the Boston Biaves, 15 to 8. Crawford, rookie infielder. hit & home run with the bades filled as a pinch-hitter in the sifth, The score was tied at the tigre, Brookiyn made & clean sweep of | 1Ky series with the Phillies by I-king} the final game, 5 to 4. Bressler's it drove in the winning run in the | nijth. | NEMORIAL DAY PROGRAM 10 BE PREPARED TONIGHT Véterans Will Arrange Final Details ¥ of Observance in This . City Thursday. : ‘The final meeting of the joint committee of Veterans organizations | planning for the observance of | Mémorial day. next Thursday, will be | held at 8 o'clock tonight at the ropms of Eddy Glover post, Amer- iean Legion. Final details with re- sard to the observance and orders for the parade will be completcd. The committee has been inform- o4 that all units of the National Guard will take part in the paradc. There will also be approximately 300 Reéy Scouts and a large number of Gl Bcouts In line. City officials will | | | | | drum corps will also take part. Niles. Michigan, will observe it hundredth birthday anniversary in August. | Aspirip fifth | ADOZEN different things may £ % cause a headache, but there’s just one thing you need ever do to get relief. Bayer Aspirin is an absolute antidote for such pain. Keep it at the office. Have it handy in the home. Those subject to fre- quent or sudden headaches should carry Bayer Aspirin in the pocket- tin. Until you have used it for head- aches, colds, neuralgia, etc., you've noidea how Bayer Aspirin can help. It means quick, complete relief to millions of men and women who usc it every ycar. And it does not depress the h:art. GASPIRIN is the trade mark of Manafacture Momosceticscidester d'% is the likencss of a man we all know, | Maintenant, le Qui est | -|Henley regatta. WEAR STOCKINGS EDICT OF COURTS Action of Wimbledon Oicials Ganses Widespread Commeont Paris, May 37 UP—Wimbledon's reported ban on stockingleas tennis players is attracting more attention at Roland Garros Stadium than the French hard court championships themselves, it would seem. According to word received here, officials at Wimbledon will permit no stockingless :players in the cen- {ter court at the British champion- |ships. That rule would either keep |Helen Wills, American, French and | | English singles champion, off the center court or force her to don |stockings. “Queen Helen" thus far refused to discuss the matter with respon- dents, but to a friend she said: “I relish playing without stock- ings. It gives one more freedom of action. I am not discarding stock- ings for a fad but to improve my speed. However, if Wimbledon offi- cials object I am sure I wouldn't do anything to annoy them.” One Wimbledon official, who was in Paris for the finals of the men's doubles yesterday, was inclined to take a good-natured view of the whole issue. He expressed the opin- ion that the Wimbledon authorities would not show intolerance if the girls could explain any improve- ment in their game due to the ab- sence of stockings. “You see,” he added, “five million more women are voting in' England this year and they all are young ones between 20 and 30. We can't afford to antagonize them.” With two of the three doubles championships already declded, in- terest in tre French championships turns to singles this year. The third doubles title—the mixed doubles— will be decided tomorrow. Miss Wills and Frank Hunter already have ad- vanced to the final round where they will meet the winner of the match between Rene Lacoste and Mme. Helen Lafaurie and Henrl Cochet and Eileen Bennett. Lacoste and Jean Borotra won the men's double championship yester- day, defeating Cochet and Jacques Brugnon in ‘a hard-fought five-set SPORTS SUMMARY By the Associated Press, General Chicago—RBig Ten Conference ex- pels Towa for alleged violation of rule against subsidizing athletes. Golt Berlin —Percy Alliss wins German |open title; Horton 8mith finishes second. Greenwich, Conn. — Women's metropolitan crown again goes to Maureen Orcutt, who beats Helen Hicks in finals. | ¢ Tennis b Rorotra win in French Mills and to finals of Paris — Lacoste and men's doubles crown championships; Helen Frank Hunter advance mixed doubles. ‘Washington — United States, beat- ing Japan. four matches to one, qualifies for final round play fn Davis cup American zone. Columbus — George Lott takes big ten title and pairs with Scott Dexinger to win doubles as well. 150- Rowing Philadelphia — Columbia : n pound crew bows to Harvard Track Evonston, 11l. — Eddie Tolan and Dick Rockaway better world's rec- |ord for 100 yard dash and 220 low hurdles as Illinois wins Big Ten championship. Haverford — New York Univer- sity relay team betters world's rec- ord at middie Atlantic states inter- collegiates; Haverford captures team title. Racing - Louisville — Clyde Van Dusen, Kentucky Derby winner, is beaten by Toro and Broadside on Grainger | now comes in a package 00D experts attest that pure | ice cream is the food richest | in "Youth Units”, a name applied | to vitamins and elements such as r’ phosphorus, calcium (lime), and | | soluble iron, which are vitall needed to keep the body oell{ | ‘young and vigorous. You get| | them in Frojoy— | three times as many as in -n‘ equal amount of milk. q Now in the new Frojoy 2- | flavor pint package— Cherry and Macaroon Ice Cream { CENERAL ICE CREAM CORPORATION L [ . JIC CREAM memorial handicap. New York — Metropelitan handi- cap is won by Petes Wrack. London — Aubrey Hastings, fa- mous steeplechase tralner, dies. Rascball Boston — Babe Ruth hits 9th homer. Chicago — Cubs regain lead. 1thaca, N. Y. — Cornell makes clean sweep in regatta with Syra- cuse., Pittsburgh — Preston North End club of England conquers Heidle- berg, national amateur champions, 4 to 2. VETERAN GRAVES MARKED BY LEGION Barial Plots to Be Fittingly Dec- orated Wednesday Night The graves registration committee of Eddy-Glover post, American Le- gion, has completed their prelimi- nary details in the marking of the graves of deceased World War heroes in the six cemeteries in the city. The ‘committee believes that every grave has been properly marked with an American Legion marker. They will be fittingly decorated on Wed- resday evening, May 29, between the hours of 6 and 8 o'clock. In the event that a World War veteran's grave has not been mark- cd, it is the desire of Eddy-Glover past that some member of the fam- ily communicate with the chairman of the graves registration committee, Fred W. Tyler, phone 5723-M, or the secretary, F. J. C. Ensworth, 5413-J, or make it a point to be at the ceme- tery on Wedneaday evening at the time mentioned and furnish the necessary information to any mem- ber of the committee present there. PEDESTRIAN'S LEG BROKEN Bimon Adamaitis, 58, of 19 Rhodes sireet, was struck by a sedan driven by Arthur L. Larson of Blue Hillx road, Kensington, on East street about 10 o’'clock Saturday night, and sustained fractures of both bones in the right leg. He was carried into No. 5 fire station and the police re- moved him to New Britain General hospital, where he will be under treatment for a few weeks at least. Adamaitis is employed the P. & F. Corbin tactory and was struck while crossing Fast street, Larson claiming that the lights of another automobile blinded him momen- tarily and he did not see Adamaitis in time to avoid striking him. ) i \ | | | I J | l 7 GLOBE CLOTHING HOUS WHERE _ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NAY ‘%1 1OVA IS EAPRLLED | FRON CONFERENCE vy | Corged Wi Selidiig [s Ao Chicago, May 27.—(—The West- ern conference, one of the oldest and most powerful of American col- legiate athletic organizationa, today was rocked to its foundation by the stormiest upheaval in its history. Expulsion from its membership of the University of Iowa, on a some- what veiled charge of recruiting and subsidizing athletes, precipitated the turmoil, which had grown to such tremendous proportions today that the life of the conference appeared at stake. This was glance: The faculty committee of the con- ference, composed of representatives of each school, issued an announce- ment at the annual meeting Saturday that Towa had been expelled “for violation of the rule prohibiting re- cruiting and subsidizing of athletes.” Names of the athletes so subsidized were not revealed. Paul E. Belting issued a statement charging he was compelled to give up his position thietic director at Towa because he refused to permit diversion of the school's athletic fund to aid athletes. One thousand Jowa students paraded the streets of Towa City yes- terday in protest of the expulsion, storming the residence of President Walter Jessup for explanation of the action and later congregating in a plan to rotten egg belting. A declaration was issued by Pres- ident Jessup that he knew nothing about the charges, the identity of the accusers, or the nature of the expul- sion order. Professor Lewis Pelzer, JTowa's representative, and secretary of the conference athletic committee, ad- mitted that alleged maintenance of a slush fund by wealthy Jowa City residents, for the financing of ath- letics, was one of the charges on which the expulsion was based. Emphatic announcement was made by the Chicago Alumni asso- ciation of the University of Towa, that “if Jowa goes out, the alumni will find out why some othera don't get out too.” Vigorous comment was made by Clarence Cook Little, who recently resigned as president of the Uni- versity of Michigan. He charged the committee permitted commercial the situation at a ing and subsidising of athletes was %0 bad in the Big Ten that the mak- ing of 1930 football achedules last week had to be postponed. % It was not definitely known to- day whether the expulsion is effect- ive immediately or on January 1, 1930, if it is to be immediately a re. vision of the entire 1929 football schedule is probable, as Jewa has conference games scheduled with Ohio State, Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Purdue and Michigan. . Other membera of the conference, generally, remained allent on the ex- pulsion of Towa biit announced they would gladly investigate any charge of subsidizing in their institutions. Such charges flew fast and thick at Towa City last night, COPPERHEAD BITES PLAINVILE PASTOR Sumner Johnson's Condition Fo- Yorable Despite Deadly Yenom (8pecial to the Herald) Hartford, May 27 — Sumner John- son, a student at the Hartford Theo- logical seminary and ucting pastor of the Plainville Advent Christian church, taken to the Hartford hespital Baturday evening in a seri- ous condition as the result of a £nake bite received in an accidental encounter with a copperhead early in the afternoon, was reported today as being considerably improved. His condition is not thought to be seri- ous, Johnson, whcse home is in North Adams, Mass., was strolling along through the West Hartford reservoir park with Miss Winifred Kirby, re. ligious education student, when he was attacked by the snake. With his leg gradu- ally syelling, Johnson, al- though realizing his peril, disregard- cd the danger of a counter attack and followed the snake hecause he hospital, where addi of antl-venom were injoctions Hoapital authorities stated today that . barring complications, he would re- cover, The reservoir is commonly a re- sort’for children. A foreman of the water department there said that in the 13 years he had been at the reservoir he had never zeen a ocop- rerhezd. Mr. Johnson was’ recently appoint. ed by the Plainville Advent Christian church to act as pastor during the zummer months. LOCALS LOSE IN TRIANGULAR MEET (Continued from Page Eight) yarde to win. ‘The pole vaulting event was the subject of an hour's argument after it was over. It was the event which practically decided the margin of victory of Hartford over New Haven. Jenkelunas tied with Bruenig of New Haven for first honors. Bogdanski of New Britain was third and Henry Gwiasda of this city and Flynn of New Haven were tied for fourth place and if this were the case New Haven would have been & full point behind in the final counting. The Jjudge of the event, a person picked from the crowd, left the fleld shortly after the event and as there were no fleld judges or in fact anything which resemgbled organisation the coaches had to conduct a yes and no argument, Scason’s Last Meet All the records will be investigated and credit will be given thore who accomplished the feats. The last meet of the season for the New Britain team will be againat Croshy high school of Waterbury in Wa- terbury next Saturday. Summary Bummary of .the events: 100 yard dash: First, Lines (N. B.): second, Roane (H); third, Un- ..AND AWAY WE GO STOPPING AT ALL POINTS OF COMFORT! NEW SHIRTS KNICKERS LINENS ...... ceeees. $3.50 to $5.50 WOOLENS ........... $5.00 to $8.00 GOLF SWEATERS $5.00 GOLF HOSE $1.50 to $3.50 SPORT SHOES $1.93 te $3.50 STRAWS $2.50 te $7.00 $1.00 te $3.50 25¢ to $1.00 UNDERWEAR $6.50 to $8.00 BLACK AND BROWN STRIPED WHITE FLANNELS ........cccvveeeea.. $8.50 WEST MAIN 95¢ to $1.75 STREET and Gwiasda (N, B.) Height, .10 foot 9 inches, One mille run:. First, Helm (N, B.); sscend, @Momkowski (N. H.): third, O'Connell (N, H.); fourth, F. Breen (H.) Time, ¢ minutes 54 seconds. d 380 yard relay: First, high (Beeves, Lans, Andrews and Roane); secend, New Britain high; third, Hillheuse high. Time, 1 mine ute 37 seconds, Discus throw:. First, ‘Neverdeskl (N, B.); " second, “Johnsen (H.)} third, Harrisen (H.); fourth, - Rvs- mick (H.) Distance, 115 feot 8.1-3 inches. Javelin throw: First, Middieton (N. B.); second, Flood (N. M.); third, Rogne (H.); fourth, Johnson (H.) Distance, 168 feet 1 1-3 inches 440 ya.d run: First, Flood (N. H.) second, Andrews (H.), third, Pfer. sick (N. B.); fourth Grysbowsk! (N, B.) Time, 53 ¢-§ seconds. Half mile run: First, O'Connell (N. H.); second, Reed (N. H.); third, Lane (H.); fourth, Pfersick (N. B.) -Time, -3 minutes ¢ seconds, 8hot put: First, Johnsen (H.): second, ‘Hanson (N, H.); third, Goldberg (H.); fourth, Neverdoski (N..B.) Distance, 43 feet 7 inches, BRINGS SUIT FOR $300 City Hardware Co. has brought suit against Harry Higgina for dam. ages of $200. The action will" he brought up for trial on " the firct Monday in June. According to the complaint the defendant purchased paint supplies and failed to pay the bill. Attorney. Leenard 8. Appell represents the plainti® and Con. stable Fred Winkle made service. DE SOTO J. B. MORAN’S MOTOR SALES 3133 Ohurch St. Tel. 3843-W BEGINS

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