New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 29, 1929, Page 14

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1929. LANPHER SIGNS SEVEN STAR BASKETBALL PLAYERS FOR LOCAL TEAM—INDUSTRIAL L EAGIJE .‘SCHEDULE ANNOUNCED— CAPITAL CITY TEAM STRENGTHENED FOR GAME WITH NUTMEGS—CHURCH LEAGUE ELECTS OFFICERS—STAMFORD HIGH TEAM IS HEAVY LANPHER SECURES 7 STARS e i ’ i Sloman, Zakzew other Sea <, L Manager New Britai year when } men lesser ¢ JIMMY ZARZEWSKI Forward though the contests will Saturday n the will be arran The men personn I Zakzewski, Al Sloman and B Elwain, forwards; Bill Conroy ter; Tom Leary. 'k (Hank burr, and Ray i3 no certauinty t scheduled forwards son, will r ki play AL SLOMAN Forward up Jimmy | of n- 1 re ! S conid All! Bas- (Doc) nd / land tes champ fhafor ig ernational Games will also be play ‘burr Sig: of Iast ics will have which rs. FRANK ARBURR Guard 1 the DBris sury, Bridgeport, WALKER TO DEFEND HIS TETLE TONLGHT with n Wt in Tt a4 Tow. Walker, tonight vill go down jousts of poor decision alng grind has and challen physical condition. alibi from ecither hampion no Walker Is Favorite ho their opinions oney have made Walker a althou in som= they stack en. Tt will third defense of tho he won it fro Tiger 326, In knock- M London ision he i in red out the middle- down to “drying to trim \dage, Hud- ht yesterday proper pou ard Eullt (rp) 1 Crimson 29 dr signal « of rank Amerieai men five years in ned for An- year's the world's brought d against ns Gets Second Shot| 'PAWNEES ANSWER | P oousations, Sav il nts in last evening's Her ich were aceredited to for r Manager William May of the Pawnee team in announcing his resignation have been resented by mbers of the team and several rals were made in an interview ! with one of the team tod Mr. May spoke of the poor physi ] condition of the team. In an- swer to this it is said that the bovs are in good physical condition. In speaking of a statement that the former manager was not given co- operation it was sald that the man- lager did not get the proper guar- {antees and that he mismanaged the lteam. There was no spirit on the {team and Manager May was (o blame for it, the members declared | Another statement that he decld {ed to resign was not correct, it was aid today. One Pawnee said this itter was decided for him. He will make returns tonight and a sum of mon representative of five games i expected. The new manager of the Pawnees is Ernest Nyquist, New Britain business man, who will handle the | Bnancial end of the duties. Tha games will ‘be booked by Frank | Quart, former manager. e i as & Deny May's 0N 5 jth STAMFORD ELEVEN 1S WEIGHTY TEAN High School Is Underdog in Saturday’s Football Game The records of the New Britain and Stamford high school teams | which meet at Memorial ficld, Wil- |low Brook park, Saturday after-| {noon, are practically ecqual. ch | has won four games. Hawever, the | fifth contest for New Britain was a tie and for Stamford a defeat. Stamford lost its first game of {the season to the Middletown, N. Y. high school team by a 13 to 7 score. {Tn this contest four of Stamford's ilars were out of the lineup ince that time a powerful machine- | play has been developed and ' mix it with big, roug swept through the Dickinson, 'Lut Liitle Albi¢ Booth, h Alumni, Warren Harding Yale quar Colleglate Preparatory out of the m s school for vietorivs. T} foat of : 13 Warren Harding was by a 26 to 6 prief ! Alhie to but he remedied that all in the Drown gan 'he wa that had to leave is a good uln in A Service) "They thought he w | | too puny to football boys 115-pound monkeys i) for vsed Little bridle strap, for once and He proved Coach Mal him in he'll re- held on { ut s foam 2t the itain team arren Harding Ir 1ys the Stamford ongest outfit n high school circles this y ckfield men are hard ru ¥ have developed orward pa r attack. | Stamford Has Weight | principal hope of the New followers ig that it will be stul in holding the Stamford m to w The Red and | > will he depended upon | Food 80 0GC ply team s has | the be a maini i he ot the ners is fa v il Gt There He Goes! \ When they sent him into the at the be ing of the second quarter to giv a little breathing spell ed th & buzzing. Brown was leading at the time strong factor in this hope. Ac- "j‘ur'm bpor slone: m!’?m; Fi(\;ll‘r‘:;;(j I e lodging and kicking that finally 'n by two touchdowns. TIn reality the little riot did it single- 1 He warmed up to his iob and did all of the Yale punting. Two Touchdowns 5 score. as a i« is much hea He believes his t 2 of weight in some po ions, but as a whole the Stamford team has the advantage in this par- ticular department. The Fairfickd | county aggregation has a backficld| Tight plays—slashing off tackles, | which is heavier than the average | squirming around the ends, plung- | welght of the New Britain line. If ing through the lines and Yale had this is the case the Red and Gold | a touchrown. A moment later Yale {team will play & team which equals|was in the lead when Alble booted it in welght for the first time "lnv‘o;;‘ perfect drop-kick over the cross | the Blues game. e, Coach Boyle of Stamford said fo-| From that time on all eyes were day that he has six of last year's{on Albis Booth. Brown tried in |regular team left. This combina-|vain to stop him, but his white tion includes his fullback and two helmet kept bobbing through the | haltbacks. Bellos, the flashy quar-|200-pounders for gains. Finally | terback, has been graduated. | from Brown's 14-vard line, Albie | [left them with their eves popping | by sneaking through the whole | gang for his second touchdown | He followed with the extra point ve | FIGHTS LAST NIGHT ze Sammy zeant Sammy A hie st : Saturday. . knocked out J pa 1 he even Trown, m's 21 points T tle roain up those t it tolies a stran- foothall. . value of speed TTe also made him- of coctern fooiball though he is but a ag nlenty of experts hoosting him for the clc job on the All-Amorica. of all. they'll never Albie for being a g r, for the youngster ails from New Haven, seat of that Pt institution for which the %14 is deing those mighty things with the cowhide. against was con- his per- making nt Jimmy shg i York, ocutpointed Ve the reles and ophomore, he in his carnor, Johnny ed Jadick Eddie quarte son, Bos- Demave, e Manley, st outrointed Friedman, (10). Al Plan Bi~ Football Games For Benefit of Cripples Chicago, Oct. 29 (R—Soldier Field will be the scene of outstanding foot- ball contests each Thanksgiving Day or 19 year. starting in 1930, under plans of the Chicago unit of the Shriners' hospital for crippled chil- dren, Judge Walter Steffen of Chicago, commuting coach of the Carnegie Tech eleven, has been named chair- ver, N. H., Oct. 20 (UP)—) ynan of a commiltee to schedule Jackson Cannell allowed his| games under a plan ealling for con- eleven to enjoy & day | tasts between outstanding teams of the country, the proceeds to go to but subjected the | batteries to a|ihe hospitalization fund. the my Goodrich ommy Cello, | Billy Shaw, | Dom (10). Mich inted (10) pointed o t. Clemens --— Pancho Villa, ' outpoirted Johnny Los Angeles, (8). “ : 5 AN Il Dartmouth Players Rest | 3efore Game With Yalei H Coac first varsity of rest yesterday tmouth reserve zht workout in ng for the Saturday FENCERS AT PITT The University of Pittsburgh this car was added to the list of cast- will be stressed at futurelern colleges having fencing teams: practice sessions this week. The|pitt coaches anticipate a strong warriors are to go through a long fteam in the intercollegiate campaign 'rehearsal this afternoon. inoxi spring. Booth Is Yale’s Midget Miracle | which clinched the contest for dear | |2 number of traditional meetings of SUBSIDY GHARG W ARDUSE STUBEITS Some Suggest Abandonment of Intercollegiate Sport Oct. 29 (UP)—Radi- | cal have been stirred on the campuses of of the east by the issua Carnegie Foundation's last important univer- sities of report of week condemning the phasis, commercialization and g cral methods of intercollegiate foo ball. At Princeton stduents were found who even went so far as to discuss the possibility of a university in the future with no intercollegiate sports whatsoever—suggestions which 10 years ago would have constituted | the rankest of heresy. At Columbia university the cor- respondent found students unwill- ing to say which sport was the more important—football with its big business methods and tremen- dous income, or rowing, which is a dead loss financially. They are in- clined to put the two on a par, at least, and there was a lurking su; piclon that the day might come| when the crew would outrank the football squad In interest and e teem. Some frankly sald that foot- ball was an alumni sport while crew belonged to the undergradu- ate. em- Football an Alumni Game | At both universities there was! this underlying tone found on| every hand: football has been fostered to its present position largely through the | efforts of the alumni. They have| had the money to pay for H(l(((s‘ and In cases where there have been | abuses, to pay for players, for ll(h-[ letic scholarships and in general ict as “angels” for the sport. The undergraduate student bodies take no responsibility for this commer- clalization. They lay the blame upon the alumni. i “But if the alumni want to spend their money for football,” one stu- | dent at Columbia sald, expressing an attitude which seemed typical, “then let's let the alumni do it. We will yell for the team and be glad for its success—and then we will take all the money made out of football and finance all other sports, practically none of which are self- supporting.” Football Pays for All At Princeton every sport, includ- ing not only the major sports which are football, track, baseball, rowing, basketball and hockey, but | the minor sports down through la- crosse and squash, all are financed through the football receipts. Stu- dents agreed that at least 55 per [cent of the student body took part in one or more of these minor sports. At Princeton there was agree- ment that boat racing ranked close to football but hockey was making even greater gains and perhaps ac- tually threatened to take some of the popularity which football has held, among the undergraduates. NINE PREP LEADERS On the freshmen football team at he Unlversity of Dlttsburgh are nine J el | last s | entirely |plan to invade other athletes who were captains of their rrep school eleven. | T0 MANY INVADERS, % “DUSTY” LEAGUE SCHEDULE Ll il CALLS FOR % CONTESTS e Tenethy Season Will B n A Tantarn a=~] Canthan B A 2 hp nios tant intersectionzl slate of the irrent season on Saturday will find 1e east entrenched in its own terri ry ready to repel, if possible. at wcks from the middle west and the uth. vo Western teams, Jhio State and Chi and two rom the Southern Conference, Flor ia and Duke, will carry the ban \ers of their section into the more nportant intersectional frays of the Among the lesser lights, mpden-Sydney, Oglethorpe and outh Dakota will invad \board territory with only 1orpe conceded a ¢ nee of victory Pitt Faces Ohlo State Ohio State, unbeaten but ndia faces the difficult topping the charge of Pittshurg \l conquering Panthe Flc Alligators, one of the best team he Southern Conference, may ha the stuff to down a Harvard a jation perhaps a bit demorali ifter the Dartmouth debacle. Chicago, trounced by Purdue 2 cck ago, may find the Princeton ger a hitt too terocious ter its ireath-taking tie with the Navy. ¢, which has fared badly in in ctional games with Pittsburgh, Navy and Villanova, will find Boston college no casier. Oglethorpe meets the strong Vil- lanova squad, tied only by Boston college. Hampden-Sydney should provide Colgate with no more than v workout and the Army certainly <hould not be extended by Sou Kins and C negie Tech travel west for their fu Davis and Elkins secks revenge for | Stanle s 0 beating by John Carroll of Corbin, Rus and last year, Carnegie expects 08, jittle trouble with Washington of St Louis. 40 Ui . 2a8s0n. 30 be A program covering imes will AL CHA opens on 19, at the Y society hall on Main street. n will come to a close on nights o the which Conference S abes B. March 11. This vear's slate is longer that of last year as teams entered e §O. than the number of There are 10 tea he championship team will ded the P’erakos loving cup. The opening program will fea ture the Landers and New DBritain Machine, Stanley Works and P. & 1. Corbin, and Rus 1 & Erwin and Corbin Screw teams. The Corbin Serew team, last year's champions, will play the outstanding game wst the holders of fourth place scason. The Stanley Rule and Fafnir teams will not be seen until a week from that date. The Schedule The schedule, in full, follows: Tues Nov. 19, Lander: maties, Stanley Works vs. Corbin, Russell & Erwin cr ay. Nov. Corbin tule, D Frida; s vs. Russell vs. Gascos, ida in ve last P, Vs, Tues nir: 26: Gascos vs. Faf Cabinet vs. anle vs. Stanley Works, P. & F. Corbin rwin, Corbin Screw Fafnirs vs. Corbin Cab- 20: Landers Newmatics v, ell & Erwin vs P & VS, Dec. binet, 6. Corbin Se Fafnirs vs. Stanley Landers vs. P. & I°. Corbin, Dec. 10. Russell & I anley Rule, P. &. Corbin Cabinet, vs. Fafnirs. Friday, Dec. 13: Landers vs. Works vs. day, Dec. 17. Russell & Er- i Stanley Works v S Corbin C: Batte In the Bowl Rule, Despite this long list of inte fional conflicts, the real thrills of the day probably will be packed in Co! Corbin home-hreds, Booth and Marster Yale and Dartmouth, looks like one of the most spectacular battles of ihe year. Navy, which shocked Penn with a 6-0 defeat last season, hopes to repeat over a Red and Bluc heaten by California and extended in all its other games. Unbeaten Cornell faces Columbia at Ithaca, hoping for something bet- ter than the scorcless ties which have resulted the last two Grorz 1o clever looks g e 1 heking it adn York ! university a 1« ago but Holy Cross ay turn the tal own which won 6-0 in 192 1 d Syrac ocked u »n, hope for a decision one wnother this time. W Jefferson appears stronger than Lafayette bu performances go by the board bitter football riva Temple, wiich s W. & J. to a scorele confronts Bucknell but. Lehigh appes to many guns for Newmatics vs, Stanley Rule, team Newmaties v Erwin, & F. Corbin vs. Rule. i Fafn I8 riday Corbin C: 3% Stanley Worls crew vs. Btan n vs. Gascos awmatics 2 vs inisicied to N ,. s on 1 n State Russell P. & . Gascos Newmatics 14 G Corbin Corbin Serew Stanley Works 1l & Erwin nders vs Erwin Corbin vs. Cor- ay ton a 4 & DorE: fuesday, Jan. 21 Stanley Works R: 1 5COS VS, Ve D & Erwin vs. Corbin Jake Schaefer Content S With His 18.2 Laurels = Chicago, Oct. 29 (P> ake Schae- fer 18 content with his world" balkline championship and do fvory fields. Johnny Layton, king of the thr cushion artists, challenged You Jake to a three cushion batt Schaefer advised him today wasn't interested. “If you want to play me, my game,” Schaefer told him. not a three cushton billiard player and do not intend to start now."” rew Corbin ell & Erwin, Corbin Cabinet vs. ile va 28. Newmatics Corbin Screw vs . Fafnirs Corbin Cabinet. v, Jan. Russell & Er- Gascos, Landci Stanley wmatics vs. P, & Cor vs anley Works, Tuesday. Feb. | Corbin Cabinet, 4: Corbin Screw vs, Fafnirs vs. Stanlay Corbin Cabinet. | vtend Over 27 Plavine Landers Friday, Feb. 7 nley Rule, Corbin inet, Corbin F. Corbin & Lrwin Works v, Screw v, FFafnirs, Tuesday, Corbin Feb. 11 Cabinet, P & Corbin Newmatics vs, anley Rule. 1 Stanley Newmatics vs, ssell & Erwin vs. v ruary Gasco: R Works v s February 18 Newm & F. Landers tics va. us Corbin Stanley I Friday, ¥ orhin vs. Gas nley Rule, P va, i bruary 21: P. & Corbin Screw Stanley Works s V8 C S I February Corbin Screw, Corbin Cabinct, Russell & Erwin. February 28: Stanley Wor win, nley Newmatits Vs, Landers vs. Landers vs. s vs. Russell Newmatics vs. Stanley Tuesday, bin Vs March 4: P. & F. Cor- Corbin Screw, Newmatics Fafnirs, Gascos vs. Stanley Rule. Friday, March 7: P. & F. Corbin vs. Fafnirs, Landers vs. Corbin Screw, Gascos vs. Corbin Cablnet. Tuesday, March 11: Russell & Erwin vs. Corbin Cabinet, Landers vs. Gascos, Stanley Works vs. Stan- ley Rule, "DEMPSEY WOULD MATCH BATTALINO FOR FIGHT | Wants New Feather Champ in Chi- cago Show—iJack and Paddy Harmon Are Vigilant Rivals Chicago, Oct. 29 (P)—The rivalry between Jack Dempsey and Paddy Harmon in the Chicago boxing field ched the stage where neither promoter dares relax his vigilance, Harmon had Bud Taylor, former bantamweight champion, signed up for a return match with Earl Mas- tro, popular Chicago featharweight, November 15. The Illinois State Athletic commission decided the date was too close to Dempsey's Novem- ber 13 show and refused to sanction the bout. Dempsey, through his matchmak- Ray Alvis, then stepped out and cd Taylor for November 1%. Taylor's opponent has not been named, but Dempsey is after Bat Battalino, new featherweight title- nholder, or Santiago Zorilla Harmon is not complete atch for his contract w Long, Taylor's manager, the right to put the T: rem on cut of Fddie him ylor-Mastro th give {Boston College Coach - | Shakes Up Backfield Oct. 29 L varsity backfield shaking up yesterday | when Coach Joe McKenney sup- !planted the regular backs with three team B men. Joe Kelly was put in Jack Marr's berth at full- {back; George Colbert substituted for Joe Shea at halfback, and Pad- dy Creeden went into action n place of Joe Mirley at quarterback. {1t was indicate1 that this backfield lineup would participate ip the game with Duke university —Satur- day E)— OUR BOARDING HOUSE UNCLE JAKE ,HERE'S NOUR DOLLARS WORTH OF NicKeEL CIBARS ~a BUT OM TH” WAY BACK FRom TH' SToRE T STOPPED To PLAY FooTBALL Weh it Kips Al 4T STARTED To RAIN AN GaT NOUR CIGARS ALL WET! «wnTHEY'RE KINDA PEELING OFF FROM BEING WET =~ ~ MAYBE Nou CcAd DRY -THEM 1N -TH” OVEN ! Z BEFALLEN RUINED ! TiL HAVE BY HECK WILL ADD -To -THE AROMA REQU. 8. PAT. OFT. WHAT? wo Af ME. ~TiiS (5 21" WORST CALAMITY —THAT HAS By AHERN ME (N MANY A MooM ! «w~ A DOLLAR'S WORTH OF GooD NICKEL CIGARS ABSOLUTELY Now I5¢ ToR e HECK, To SPEND A PIPE 0 SMOKE ~THEM, AFTER -HENY DRY OUT! warsas NQ e wr HANGED (F TLL GO0 ANYMORE E%PEMS'E_' carn AFTER “THEY DRY, TLL STICK “EM TOGETHER Wil MUuciLAGE ! AN = N~ A | | N A\ N ©1929, '8¥ NEA SERVICE, INC. = =

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