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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD; MONDAY, MARCH 24, 1930. WHIPPET BASKETBALL TEAM WINS INTERMEDIATE COUNTY “Y” CHAMPIONSHIP AT STO RRS — SOUTH CHURCH DEFEATED IN TITLE CHASE—LUTHERANS KEEP SLATE CLEAN BY DEFEATING SPRINGFIELD—BOYS’ ' CLUB TEAM LOSES OUT TO BOSTON WHIPPET QUINTET WINS STATE TITLE AT STORRS Takes First Honors in Intermediate County “Y” Tour- SOUTH CHURCH IS DEFEATED IN FINAL FOR STATE TITLE Hartford County “Y” Champions Defeat Danbury in Exhausting Overtime Game in Afternoon — Bas- kets by Wosilus and Parker Bring Victory—Locals Are Worn Out and Fal County in Evening. Worn out by the bitter fight for, the county championship and com- pletely exhausted by a furious semi- final contest which was won only after an overtime period had played, the New Britain South church basketball quintet proved casy prey for the Windham coun star team Storrs Saturday ht and for the third year in suc- cession lost out in the last I for the inter-county title. Tt was the fourth str that the championship I Windham county. Parker's basket in the last onds of the extra_period gave locals a 29-27 triumph over Danbury Y. M. C. A. team from Fairfield county in a semi-final game in the afternoon, while the Wind- ham outfit loafed through a sloppy game to a 22-16 victo the ex- pense of a helpless Willington team which represented Tolland county. The pace which the Hardware team had been forced to set d the afternoon proved too muc it curled up completely in the ning affair, giving a very sad exhi- Y the the bition and suffering its worst defeat | 38-18. Afternoon contest was a furi- opened the scoring | after Bell had tied | nd Fairchild of the season by Win in The afternoon ous one. Corban for Danbury and, the count, Carboni gave the losers a 6 lead popped a goal for New Britain the quarter ended, and Beil opened the second one wWith thres Wessels following with a basket to make it 9-5. Strwit and Davenport flipped field goals for Danbury, but again Wessels came through. and Fairchild's foul gave the Fairficld county team only an 1i-all tic at the half. ew Britain sent in new guards in second half. Corban and Davenport ot loose for scores. but Bell's bas- ket and Jacobi's foul brought the lo- cals up to within a point again. Car- bonin and Corban flipped field goals for a five-point lead, and this wa increased by one when Fairchild fol- lowed Miller's foul with floor shot. Miller then got a basket and Bell a foul, but Davenport made it 25-18, Danbury, as the period ended. Wesscls opened the fourth quarter| with a one-pointer and then Miller dashed through the Danbury defens for two baskets and a tie score. Time out was hurriedly called, but on re- sumption of play Miller again raced through and New Britain led by 25- Leahy, however, tied the score near the end of the game and an ex- tra period was required. Leahy open- cd this with another basket and things looked Dlack. Dan Wosilus, however, got under the basket for a pass from Bell and tied the score. He received a jab in the stomach as Tie shot and he collapsed. Parker re- placed him and a few moments later cut in to take a pass from Pond and flip the winning score. The sum- mary: New Britain South Church Tt Dell, rf 3 Jacob, 1f Wessels, ¢ Barta, 15 .... Miller, r-1f . Pond, rf ... Parker, 15 ... D. Wosilus, 15 . Totals 1 20 Danbury Y. M. rn 4 0 Leahy, rf . Maloney, rf . Carboni, 1f Fairchild, ¢ . Davenport, T Corban. 1g Strait, 13 . 6 Totals 3 Referee, Moore and Darrow. er, Zetterman. Fail in Evening Contest The locals’ second battle ot the do ~was something clse again. The pla crs showed the effects of the hectic encounter of the afternoon and wilt- ed under the assault of the Windham county team, ich used a quick break- v when it ball and caught the tired players flatfooted time and . Hardware City players were n their attack clic 1d the defense for the most part s wide open. lc the fresher condition of the winners helped then to force all the brealks = dd har luck to the other woes of the New Britainites. The Hartford county with a patchwork line-up and Miller began a slow first qua foul, but Denning and Bosqu baskets and the local regulars rush- cd in, Bell making the count 4- the period ended. Windham ri a 10-4 lead in the second quarter and two pretty basket's by Barta cut it down only temporarily, for the half-time t as 14-9 in favor of the winners, Parker and Jacobl kept New ain in the running carly in the muu stanza, but then T. Coty, A E nd Mannifan opened up and Windham | ran away. Switches i up proved of no avail to thi another calamity befell them was forced out with The last period was a the Windham boys runn 14 points to a lonc bas Scor- wh tac church again Ve ~ able to make team started | s 1 Is, and when n injured knee. slaughter, » r Ne loc wild Han ost a in did points were t urcd. T summary Windham County 1°1d Wither, rf i) tiide, v R Leen | City | Jacoblf The foothall fortune: as | coll points, | sot the | up | Miller | | Easy Victims to Windham Bosquette, 1f | Adams, 1t Auger, 1t . Cod Marion, | Hannifan, New Britain South Church Ild. 11, Miller, Attt 1 | 7 | | Referees, Duffy scorer, Zetterman. WEWAN T0 COACH AT HOLY CROSS Former Mentor at West Point | Succeeds Cleo 0'Donnell and -Yusku | | Worcester, Ma March 24 (A— of Holy Crozs ed by Captain 8. A, retired, ge are to be gu | John J. McEwan, U. former head coach at West Point and the University of Oregon. Announcement of the appoint- ment was made by the Rev. John M. Fox, S. J., president, yesterday. He succeeds Cleo O'Donnell, coach fdr 10 years, from 1919 to 1929, who remains with the college as director ot athletics. The terms of the contract, the amount of salary and the length of the appointment wera not made pub- lic. He will start a spring training son here Wedn As a player and coach, the record of Captain McEwan has been out- standing. He was chosen on Walter Camp's first and second All-America teams three times while center on the Army team from 1913 to 1916. He served on the Mexican border as an infantry officer after gradua- {tion until 1919, becoming a major |in the United States army at the age ot 25. He is 37 years old at thz present time. Captain McEwan returned to West Point in 1929 as football line coach and became head coach in 1923, his 1925 team defeating Nowre Dams, In 1926 he went to the Uni- versity of Oregon. His 1928 team won the northwest championship and last year's team tied with the University ot California for the Pacific coast conference champio- ship. RISKO TO BATTLE CAMPOLD TONIGHT Small to Meet Argentine | | | | | | New York, March 24 (P—Johnny Risko, the rubber man from Cleve- |land. gets another opportunity to- [night to prove to the New York not too small to beat Victorio Cam- | polo of the Argentine. Risko battles Campolo in a ten- round feature of Madison Sq Garden's cha |of Cavalry Cancer hospital. long ago at Miami | enjoyable evering |@bout. Kid McPartland, the referce, called it a draw, but most sports | writers credited Kisko with winning cight of the ten rounds. i | The Cleveland tr {n mee Risko spent an hor the Neayyweights i his long ring caveor, |rules a G to 5 tavorite to whip Cam- “| polo tonight. | who s beaten rlem negro, meets Winnipeg light in the ten-round semi- Newark mid- 101 Philadclph @ in the first ten The Garden also will welcome™ the thful on Friday Jimmy Me- rnin, Vancouver Trishman, ttles | Young Jack Thompson, negro wel- | terweight from San Francisco. | Other outstanding bouts on the | national schedule this week include | ten-rounder between George | negro Philadelphia to- ween Primo C Trafton, pro foot- ih:xll player, at Kansas City Wednc nd another between T Philadelphia, and Eddic Shea o, at St. Louis Friday night Ted Gullic Will Be Regular W ith Brow ns West Palm Beach, Fla. March 24 | | (P —Elongated mountaineer, stil |1eague contract. is Kk to a Loui ment it he continu brilliantly as he ut lea nq western affix doc his contr Coce i our of | T-inning time yeur, spent Texa Wanis to Prove He Is Not Too! | the ity show for the House | Not so | cuffing Campolo | first-rate | akes on Vincent Forgionc | God- | Ozarts | Larr today |ord inning CUBS WILL HAVE STRONGER LINEUP Chicago Team Seems Destined to Repeat in National March 24 (®—The although present- by York, National League, ing the prospect of a much better balanced pennant race this season than the American, nevertheless ap- pears likely to be dominated again by the powerful Chicago Cubs. The Wrigley strong @ tavorite to repeat its 1929 victory is the House of Mack in the Ameri- n League. The Cubs won the flag last year by a margin of ten and a half gam over Pittsburgh and, instead «f standing pat. scem to have fortificd themselves for a substantial lease on top. The Bruins, with notlting king in their offensive power. have been strengthened as much, if not more, than any team in the league by the acquisition of Lester Bell to play third, the return to fori of Catcher Gabby Hartnetts arm and the bolstering of the twirling ff with several fine recruits such as Nelson, Moss and Teachout. Six of the remaining seven Na- tional League clubs, however, not only figure o make it extremely in- teresting and perhaps precarious for the Cubs but to put up a sensational battle for the first division berth Only the Boston Braves, undergoinis resuscitation at the cxperiencl hands of Bill McKechnic, appea definitely slated again for the depths The Pittsburgh Pirates look 1i the most formidable opposition for the Cubs. The furious Phillies a the real “dark horse” of the The New York Giants remain gerous, in spite of unrest, the S Louis Cardinals, their one-time championship staff now very shaky, face a fight to withstand the. ex- pected rush of two much improved second-division outfits of 1929, thu Brooklyn Robins and Cincinnati Red very team in the league has un- dergone some shake-ups, four have new pilots. All have put the accent on a Dbig punch and the league's parks will resound from start fo finish with the bombardment of long-range batting guns. The Cubs had some trouble fight- ing off the Pirates last year and it may be even more difficult to shaic loose from the Bucs again. Injurics and illness, long a Pirate jinx, havc again beset the club in training but there is sufficient all-around strengti plus the prospect of fine pitching, to make Pittsburgh a contender | from the outset under Jewel Lns. The Phillies collected most of the slugging honors last scason. They probably will do so ain, with O'Doul, Klein, Hurst, Whitney and the rest of Burt Shotton's cloutiax circus improving. Consequently their pitching is at least 30 per ce Detter, as Shotton believes it will b there seemis no way to keep the club out of the first division. The Giants looked like world beaz- ers in training last year and finisu- | ed a bad third in the race. John NcGraw's pupils have been very un- impressive in Texas this spring, and | s0, paradoxically, they may burn up the league. Second base, howeve still s a problem and the Giant pitchers must stage a come-back to | put the club anywhere. | Dan Howley has rebuilt the Reds, added more batting punch witn Meuscl and Heilman in the outfield but needs some pitching support for the scasoned Rted Lucas and Jakic May. Uncle Wilbert Robinson, frec1 of the worries of front-office tu moil, seems to have inspired his flock. 1f Glenn Wright's arm fui- tills training camp hopes, the Robius will be at least troublesome. Most of the critics fail to share abby Strect’s optimism over the| chances of the St. Louis Cardinais being pennant factors. The club dropped from first to fourth place last year ‘and has not gained the needed replacements in ‘pitching 1o cheek the down-hill momentuni. USE WILDCAT GAGE Touse of is as 15 dan- | | i Wilbert Robinson to Put His Enti Pitching Sta Into Contrivance at Camp. Clearwater. Wilbert Tobin thing of i March 24 (/P,,‘ wildeat ca the major of service this | kind in 1 lot For the b © contrivanc meshed cage and 15 high drop and a fe nefit of ti cons > uninitiate I sts of a rop 75 fect lof 15 wide | On onc end is a back | feet in front a regn- lation home rlate. Suspended cither side of the plate arc bags, the top of cach be high and the bottom knec the other end of the inz slab. TRobbic makes h g0 through their tull reperto to pitch each ball hetwe PRENCH WARMS UP o1 two san.] shoulder Pittshurgh Pirates Hurler Intends | to Improve the Record he Sct Camp Last Wednesday, San Tran nch March wrmed against Oakland ention of tmprovin turned h Pirate I'renel 24P p for du the i isco. in <o hurl azainst Misssions and The work o third basen stood Pira als, day held Stua n. both in the plit out doubl ader | stanton, |1 |ot | zoals to Ott | help in | |« | second the | crday with Al i nament at Connecticut Agricultural College — De- feats Canaan of Litchfield in the Afternoon and Woodstock Academy of Windham in the Evening— Wojack and Poluch Lead Mates in Scoring Both Victories. Going directly into the semi- finals’ after drawing a bye in the first round of the tournament be- tween County Y basketball teams for the ¢ championship, the Whippet basketball team of this city” won two .consecutive victories at the Connecticut Agricultural col- lege at Storrs, Saturday, to take first honors in the intermediate class. The New Britain team defeated Canaan of Litehfield county in the morning game and then met Wood- stock Academy, winners of the game with Fairfield and represent- ing Windham county, in the, after- noon session. This also, the locals won. The score of the morning game was 41 to 13 and of the afternoon contest, 30 to 14. Tn both contests, the Whippets displayed decisive superiority. Morning Game Toth the Whippets and the Canaan quintet- were handicapped by nervousness in the session staged Saturday morning. ~Canaan slipped in six points to lead 6 to 4 at the end of the first quurer. Then the Whippets started to hit their stride and after a furious onslaught, the local team led 16 to § at half time. Hutchison, giant center for the Litchfield team, who, with 17 points the day before, had been his team's hero, was completely checked by the Whippets' defense. At resumption of play, the Whip- pets set an cven faster pace than in the first half and, after a few min- utes it became cvident that the Litchfield players were starting to fold up. What had been a hard battle, turned into a walkaway for the locals. Every man on the win- ning team starred in his position. The summary: Whippets fla Capt. Paluch, rf 3 Nicholson, rf 0 Wojack, 1f . x AR Hattings, 1f . 0 Karosis, ¢ 3 Lane, ¢ 0 Wilk, g Olewnic Sartinsky, Boehnert Totals . 9 L.\n:!ml\ \l C. A. fld rf Place, 1f THutchison, ¢ Blodgett, Osborne, rg Coe, 1z Huggins, Jg. Totals R0 13 Where pmm Storrs; when play- ed, March 22, '30; score at half time, 16-S Whippets; referee, Murphy; timer, Karosis; scorer, Lochnert; umpire, Dragot. Win Final Game The final game between the Whip- pets and the Woodstock Academy quintet, was practically a repetition of the scmi-final contest. Although the score indicates lack of excite- ment, the crowd was on its feet most of the time. 1t was the work of the back court guardians on the Whippet team in keeping the Woodstock forwards in check that was the strongest factor in the victory of the locals. The Whippets failed to display their real strength until the final guarter when the Whippets riddled the Woodstock defense. The teams had played on fairly even terms for, threc quarters of the game. The work of the Whippets proved to be the real feature of the entire tournament. The regulars as well Bs the substitutes, are crack shots and good floor workers. The excellent {team work of the local quintet and the cooperation of thc players with cach other, gave the quintet a de- cided edge on all of its opponents. The summary: Whippets o Capt. PYaluch, rf .... Gotowala, rt Wojack, If .. Helenski, 1t Kavasis, ¢ Lewis, ¢ Wilk, g . Baenhert, Sartinsky, Olewnik Fl. Pts. 10 g . g . Ig 135 Woodstock Academy Fid. FL Sl 1 0 0 Sloviak, rf Wetherell, Child, ¢ |Gyford, ¢ . French, 5 Morse, 1g hid 0 Score at half time, 11-7 Whippets. Referee, Combe. Umpire, Yuscevitch. BOSTON BRUINS TOMEET RANGERS Indications Are That Two Teams Will Meet in Finals ew York, March ston Bruins secm headed for the of the Stanley cup playoff rics for the second time in su ssion and the indications gained from last night's games point to the New York Rangers as their op- ponents in the finals again, The Bruins have to win only one more game to go into the final series the trophy of the world's pro- ional hockey championship and they have three chances on their home ice to gain that victory. Bos- ton followed up its gruelling victory of Thursday night in the playoff between the first place teams of the National Mockey leaguc by defeat- ing the Montreal Maroons again Saturday, 4 The Bruins were vastly superior to their rivals in the sccond game as Dit Clapper and Cooncy Weiland worked their smooth passes and Marty Barry tired his powerful shots. They got three goals befor the Maroons tallied once and were in trouble only then they tried to take things casy at the finish. To add to this superiority, the Bruins have | their record through the regular son of losing but one of mes on | their home ice and they ar able to continue that pacc. The Rangers, under-rated in the predictions because of a poor show- ing at the finish of the son and injuries, played hockey last night to climinate the powerful Ottawa nators in the third p series. After a 1-1 draw in the first half of ‘the two-game playoff and a poor start in the sec- ond contest, the Rangers hit their nest stride of the year to s two and take the a 6-3 margzin The return of Frank Bo not seriously hampered ¢ adly injured shoulder, did much to the New Yorkers while the young “money p * of the Ran- r sccond line d on in their favorive playofi tashion by scoring two of the goals, Battling for the ri ngers in the semi-final series, T dicns of Montréal took a one oal lead over the Chicago hawks in the opening Plac nothing the finals to 2 ca- apy Se of the Chicago, single counter in thitd period. The Black not ten Montreal's flying nehmen all season, but they car- At scord hattle until the final when the Wildor : rizht wing by Pete Lepine rhe sccond half 1 serie Montreal Wednc game d on a middle penal of ave and 1 scored on and Al Leduc of the two game. will be played in day. rochells opening an 24 (®P—The | championship | score five | ht to meet the | Black- | ks | Canadiens their | SPORTS SUMMARY the Associated Press. GOLF Miami Beach, Fla.—Mehlhorn beats Horton Smith by one stroke in $15,000 La Gorce open. Jasksonville, Fla.—Mre. Lee Mi |conquers Mrs. John L. Holmes, 5 land 4, in finals of Florida State { Women's championship. Chicago—Professional Golfer's as- sociation selects Albert R. Gates as dictator. St. Augustine, Fla.—Florida am- ateur title goes to Jack Ryerson, i former Yale player, who beats ficld- ing Jackson, 10 to 8. TRACK New York—Karl Koski, Ne York, wins national A. A. U. mara- thon with Jack O'Reilly, Toronto, second. New York—George Spitz betters interscholastic high jump mark with leap of six feet 4 1-2 inches. GENERAL Providence, R. I.—Roger Turner retains national amateur figure skating title—Maribel Vinson again wins women'’s champioiship. | Agua Caliente—Victorian Agua Calicnte handicap and §95,- £00. Worcester, Mass.—Capt. John Mc- Ewan signs as football coach of Holy Cross. Cannes, France—Tilden wins Can- nes singles tennis title, and the| doubles with Coen. French Lick, Ind.—National am- ateur threc cushion billard title | goes to Joseph Hall, San Francisco. New Haven, Conn.—Kojac win; two titles at intercollegiate swim ming association mect but su suprisc defeat at 50 yards. Thiladelphia—Penn. State castern intercollegiate boxing title, Western Maryland second and Navy third. New York—National Indoor Tolo champions begin: Princeton Army win: optimists conquer New York riding club. Chicago—Dc La Chicago, retains National interscholastic basketball title, de- | feating Jasper, Ind., academy, 25-14. Cleveland—Rosenblums of Cleve- {land Dbeat Rochester, 25—16 and take 1 lead in Tro By alie & Catholic Ameritan | Baskctball Icague playoff scrics. HOCKEY Chicago—Les Canadiens beat Chicago, 1—0, In_ first gamec of cond place Stanley cup playoffs. New York—New York Rangers ‘vlhnin ¢ Ottawa, 5—2 in third placc | play-offs. | Three Score?‘emir&te Golfers Start Tourney | Southern Pines, N. €\, March 24— [ core teminine golfers started today threc days of competition in Ithe second [ play women's tournament The first 15 holes of thc cvent were for today. The players include such Igolters as Glenna Collett, champion: Helen Hicks, Maurcen Orcutt and Mrs. O. 8. Hill, Inorth and south c¢hampion, hrec 64-hol: sot stellar wins | retains | and | demy, | annual mid-south medal | ational | former JUNIOR GHURCHMEN RALLY T0 TRIUMPH South Church Younsters Reach Gounty “Y” Semi- Fials A surging second half rally which was not to bo denied carried the South Church Juniors to a 24-17 win over the Southington Y. M. C. A. Juniors in a junior County “Y” bas- ketball tournament game at the East Side Recreation center in Manches- ter on Saturday afternoon ahd brought the local team through the sccond round and into the semi- finals, On the short end of a 14-4 orc at the half, the junior church- men came back with an attack which swept the Southington team off its feect and ran up 20 points while the losers were getting a pal- try three. Near the end the Pexto ‘Town boys were so rattled that they could not cven approach the basket with their wild shots, and what had looked like a New Britain rout be- came exactly {he opposite. Stanley and Cormier were the heroes of the vietory, the former holding Palladino, star of the open- ing round, to one basket and col- lecting five himself. Most of these came toward the end in the thick of the winning rally. Albryght topped Southington with five points. The floor was so slippery that fast play was rendered extremely difficult. The Broad Brook Tigers sprang the second surprise of the afternoon when they ousted the Manchester Freshmen, defending champions after a furious battle, the final score | being 25-23. Che South church team will meet the Enfield high school entry dur- ing the coming weck, while the Bap- tist Boys’ club, the sccond New Brit- ain competitor in the tourney, is to ack up against the Broad Brook team, which is now favored to win the county title. The South “Y” summary South Church Juniors Fld. ¥L Tu 1 1 3 B 0 church-Southington Wheeler, Stanle: El 1 Steed, ¢ Meligonis, Cormicr, g le. v 10 Juniors Fid.. Il 2 0 Southington “Y" Ifano, rf. entine, , 1L, e, c. Palladino, Albryght, ] Vi i, 0 0 0 1 Referce, Ne¢ VICTORIAN WINS RACE Horse Lands High Into Class of All at Agua Callente. Agua Caliente, Mexico, March 24 (P—High into the class of the all time big money winners of the turf today was Victorian, which breezed home yesterds ad of Alexandor first Agua Caliente to boost his carnings to 3 third among the racing immortals. The Rancocas colt Don- uay was third. Fourtcen lo started. The victory metted the Warm $95.400, th winner” 1k There was nothing uncxpected in the triumph, with the castern five- year-old speedster coming up from seventh place at the start, to win pulling away from a fast field. His time was 2 minutes 3 1-3 scconds. Time Big Money Winners of Turf | Sensational distance John Crowley, Boston Boys' club center gave his team a big early advantage and enabled it to pin a 35—24 defeat on the New Britain club basketball team in a game played Saturday night at the Hub {institution. It was the second time this season the Boston five had de- ated the locals, for it had _nosed lout Captain Tony Kerelejza, aitd his mates in this city a few weeks' pre- viously. The team started evenly, but John Crowley suddenly began to pump his shots from the middle of the !floor, making six spectagular goals before the first half was over and shooting by BOSTON BOYS’ CLUB AGAIN DEFEATS KERELEJZA’S MEN Stellar Work of John Crowley in First Half Gives Hub* Quintet 35-24 Margin Over New Britain Boys’ Club—Lécals Hold Foes Even During Second Half , —Meet Bristol Boys’ Club in Fourth Game of eries Here This Evening. : the Bell City quintet tonight and of squaring accounts for the season. Bristol, however, will bring the team which, when in high school,» won the state championship and which, as the Dixies, was undefeat- ed in the Bristol City league this past winter, 5o a hard strugsle is in prospect. ¥ The Boys' Club Russwin Reserves will other in {he preliminary. will follow the games. The club scason will end next Monday night with the first team meeting the McKinley Athletics of East Hartford and the Reserves play-y ing the South Chureh Reserves. Reserves and face ach Dancing giving the home outfit a safe 22—11 |lead. New Britain, with Kerelejza and Compagnone leading in scoring played the winners to a standstill /in the second half, each side getting |13 points, but the damage had been done. All told, John Crowley garnered 16 points, while Daly with nine was “rother important factor in the Boston attatk. Kerelejza of the locals matched this total and Com- pagnone made six points, Goffa made two nice baskets. Winférs and Pa- luch shonc on the defense. | The game was very clean, New Britain being awarded only 11 free tries, of which it madc six, and Boston getting but nine, pulting in seven of them. The summary: Boston Club °ld Boys' Sweeney, rf James Crowle | Daly, 1¢ | John Crowley, D. Crowley, rg Dooley, rg Baker, Ig Doherty, T Ig New Boukus, rf . Rametta, f . cmbrowsl | Kerelejza, Grusha, If Gofta, ¢ Compagnone, Winte; Paluch, Britain It \ g Iz Referee—Kelly. Mect Bristol Tonight New Britain | Zembrowski Right Torward L. Zetarski | Forward | Karwoski Bristol Rao | Grusha Left Kerelejz Center Compagnone Right Gua Avallone | | Paluch S. Zetarski Left Guard Substitutes—New Britain: Gofta, Boukus, Rametta, Winte Dristol: Martino, Bordeaux, Cavalieri. The Bristol and New Boys' clubs will resume |game series at the local club this cvening with the Hardware —City outfit striving to obtain an even | break, the best it can hope to ob- |tain mow. After losing the first con- test in this cily, the locals went over to Bristol to take the sccond one, but in the third meeting, also in Dristol, they again bowed in de- Britain their four- . | feat. Its loss to Boston Saturday night has failed to discourage the New Dritain tcam, for it made an ex- cellent showing against a very fast team on a strange floor. It has hopes, therefore, of truning back WINS COURT TITLE National Catholic Basketball Cham= pionship-for 1930 Goes to the DG’ La Salle High of Chicago- Chicago, March 24 UP—The na- tional Catholic basketball champion-, ship for 1930, for the second con- sccutive year, belongs to a big well- coached team reprgsenting Dec Ta salle High, of Chicago. De La Salle, reaching the peak of¥ its form in the championship con- test, of Loyola University's seventh annual national Catholic title tour- t last night, overpowered & mall, fighting team from Jasper. Ind.. Academy, 25 to 14. Dc La Salle may be the Jast school to bear the title, the north central confer- ence of colleges and secondaiy® schools, having frowned on national interscholastic tournaments and meets. Calmly whittling its way through | the upper bracket of the tournament in which 32 high school and acade! teams from 23 states competed. Do La Salle had been the favorite 1oy win the title after it defeated th high-powered St. Navier, Louisville, | Ky., high school five, in the second | round. BALL BRILYS Press. B Associated Clearwater, Fla,—Columbus (AA) 11; Brooklyn (N) 4. 4 At San Antonio—Chicago (A) §; New York (N) 1. At St. Petersburs. (N)7T; New York (A)G. At Winter Haven, Fla.—Philad phia (N) 15; Winter Haven 0. At Los Angeles—Los Angelos (PCL) 7; Chicago (N) 4. At Sarasota, IYla.—Indianapolis (AA) 3: St. Louis (N) At West Palm Beach, Tla.—St. Louis (A) 2; Buffalo (TL) 1. At Miami, FFla.—Cincinnati (N Philadelphia (A) 0. At San Francisco—Pittsburgh (N) —6; Seals (PCL)) At New Orleans—At Cleveland (A) 11; New Orlcans (SA) 1. At Chattanooga—Washington (A) 7; Chattanooga 1. Today's Schedule At San Antonio—Ncw York vs. Chicago (A) At Tort Mye (A) vs. Philadelphia (N). At Tampa, Fla.—Detroit Tampa (SEL). At St. Petersburz. Tla.—New York (A) vs. Toronto (IL). t Oakland, Calif.—Pitt (N) vs. Oakland (PCL). At Bradenton, I'la.— vs. Boston (N). The greatest the world is By the At I'la.—Boston < ) 15 5. 3 f ™'y T"la.—Philadelphia (A) vs. urgh | . Louis (N) carthquake arca in? / aid to be in Italy. OUR BOARDING HOUSE ,M = ‘ = | I HAVE A YouNe “TABLE ! v LADS GO i (N RESTAURANTS FULL oF | | WARN( ! 1930 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. comiN@ HERE 10 HELP ME WITH -THE HOUSEWORK AND So WHEN Vou N'I’o \oUR SoNG AND DANCE , DoOAT -TRY -TO KID HER WITH ANY oF \oUR, FAST PATTER AND NONSENSE ! «v SHE'S WORKED | EAR-TROUBLE LISTENING To | MEN SMART CRACKING | WITH -THEIR MoUTHS LADY FEAR NOT, MRS. HOOPLE ¢ «v WHEN I AT, I NEVER LET MY FooD CcHILL. oN —TH” KNIFE 5 WHILE PLAVING CHIK “TENNIS WITH “H' WAITRESS ! AND GoT BRUNET, OR SUBTECT o FoaD! I P T e 7 2 22 T R NG = — «13 SHE BLONDE, BY AHERN'" = 215 SHE THIM ANT THIRTY, «OR FAT A7 FoRTY 2 SAY, LISTEA ! w.ToDAY AT LUNCH T SPeTTED A HAIR IN MY cHicked SouP AN TH” MABEL SAID IT WAS OFF ~TH” ROOSTER'S COMB ! AN -ToP THEIR LINE “TeDAY !