New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 10, 1930, Page 11

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Speaking of Sports | The Sacred Heart and Kensington | baseball teams will meet Sunday aft- | ernoon at 3 o'clock on Diamond No. 2 at Willow Brook park. This will be the second game of the series of | three between the two clubs. In the first meeting, Kensington von by the score of 4 to 1. Pechuk and Partyka engaged in a swect pitching duel and these two are scheduled to meet cach other again | Sunday afternoon. | Manager Val Gay of the Heart ensemble, stated today the team would continue to play this scason. The team will appear on & home diamond next Sunday and the | week following but after that, all| games will be played on the road. | The club hasn't even met expenses in its appearance at home although the crowds viewing their games, have been large in numbers. Sacrad | that The Kensington team will most Probably fold up after Sunday, ac- cording to “Wink"” Venturo who has been acting as liaison man for the | club. This team also a real prospe:t | this season to cop the championship, has been meeting with financiil | bumps this season 2nd the treasury can't stand the drain. The Burritts will probably pliy this coming Snnday in Poquonock or | against the Poquonock team in this | city Manager Stanley Budnick who is enjoying a vacation from his la- | bers at the Stanley Works, planned | to visit Poquonock today to make arrangements for the game. The Burritts will practice to row night at 7 o'clock on the Wash- ington park diamond. All members of the City Le team are asked | to be on hand. The Burritts meot | the Sokols Sunday, one of the tough- est teams in the lezgue. The West Tinds will meet the Holy Cross team while the Pirates are scheduled to Senecas. pla The game last night in the Junior City L bet ionais and Republicans, was postponed be- ause of the rain and wet grounds. e two teams will play off the con: next Wednesday night if gue test ar- ball team will hold tice session tomo:- row evenin o'clock at Walnut Hill park. All players are requested | tc be on hand. The Pirate an impor! The American Legion boys’ base ball team will play the South Man- chester aggregation at Walnut Hill park Friday night at 6 o'clock. New Britain tossed the Silk City outfit for a loss in the last meeting be- tween the two and the visitors ire out for revenge. It was a lucky break for the Bris- | tol team that it met New Britain so eurly in the season, At t present time, the local club is travelling at a fast rate of speed and it is doubt- | tul if the Bell Towngrs could win from them now The Seneca Reserves will practice &t Willow Brook park tonight at 6:30 o'clock. The workout will take place on Diamond No. 2 T league halted some Ten" batters, shav cious pointsin their averages. two leaders, Haber and Dudack, re- tained their relative positions at the head of the league but others did not fare so well sday's games in the Industrial of the “Big oft some pre- The | Dick Schroeder of the Stanley Works team remained in third place | because his team did not play. Ha- | ber's average is .524, Dudack’s is 15 and Schroeder's is .500. Venturo slid dowr Budnick of the New chine, remaining idle, went into | fourth place with .459. Venturo is fifth with .452, while Krause is sixth | with .441. Ferguson th with .393 and Kl hth with .3 & red the cha up to Jasper to fifth placa. | Britain Ma- | s seve 1 “Goodie” Preisser, Mickey Haber and Bill Mangan are just outside the circle. Preisser is hitting .368. Haber { has an average of .363 while Man- gan is hitting for .350. Vinceut of Tanders lowered his average to .353, eliding down from 10th place and These averages among the lead- ers are sure to take another change tonight because a good many of them will be playing. The Corbin team will idle but er and Dudack will be in s well as the other members of the Fafnir and Gasco teams. Landers also will be in action tonight. ROSENBLOOM VS, WALKER | be Ia | Light Heavy Champion Cannot | Enter Bigger Class and May Meet Middleweight Champion. New York, July 10 (UP)—Refusal of the New York state athletic com- mission to allow Maxie Rosenbloom, world light-heavyweight champion, to’ engage in heavyweight competi- tion, may result in a light-hea weight championship bout between Rosenbloom and Mickey Walker, middleweight champion, at Atlantic City auditorium, August 30. Negotiations for the bout are un- der way—both fighters having ex- \hausted competition in their own \class and being denied permission to fight overweight bouts in New York. Walker is under suspension fin New York. If Rosenbloom accepts the bout he plans to renounce his title and thus avoid punishment by the New York commission for meet- ing an ineligible fighter. Ed Ulbrickson, No. 5 on the Washington university freshman erew, is a brother of Al Ulbrickson, |Chicago |Philadelphia . NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1930. Baseball Standing AMERICAN LEAGUE Games Yesterday' New York 12, Philadelphia 6 ‘Washington 5-1, Boston 2-5. Detroit 6, Chicago 1. Cleveland 9, St. Louis 5. Standing Pet. 662 646 | 554 | 487 | 444 392 .392 Washington Philadelphia New York Cleveland Detroit st. Louis . 38 36 §esd GIUCI REAL DARK HORSE OF TOURNEY (Diminutive ~ Italian-American Finds Heat to His Liking Interlachen Country Club, Minne- apolis, Minn., July 10 (UP) — The terrific heat promised for the tional open golf championship has brought out a real “dark horse” in | the drive for the title, little Henry fella, there aren’t any. Ciuci. Boston 30 385 | iames Today | Philadelphia at New York Washington at Boston. Cleveland at Detroit. Chicago at St. Louis. Games 'Tomorrow Chicago at St. Louis. | Cleveland at Detroit (Other clubes not scheduled), NATIONAL LEAGUE Games Yesterday Cincinnati 4, Chicago 3 (10 innings). Philadelphia 5, New York 4 Brooklyn $-6, Boston 0-4. St. Louis 7, Pittsburgh 6. Standing w. . 45 45 Pet. Brooklyn . 608 Chicago New York St. Louis . Boston Pittsbur, Cincinnati Games Today New York at Philadelphia (Only one game scheduled). iames Tomorrow ati at Philadelphia. Louis at Pittsburgh, INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Cincin St. Games Yesterday Jersey City 4. Montreal 0. Baltimore Toronto 0-7. Newark-Rochester, wet grounds No results received on last night’ Duffalo-Reading game, Standing V. Baltimore 5 Roch er Toronto Montreal . Buffalo Newark Jersey City Reading mes Today Newark at Montreal. Jersey City at Toronto. Reading at Rochester. Baltimore at Buffalo. EASTERN LEAGUE Games Yesterday New Haven 12, Alb 3 (Called end sixth, rain). Allentown 7, Bridgeport 6 Providence Allentown Bridgeport Vew Haven . Springfield Providence .. Albany e Games Today Albany at New Haven. Allentown at Bridgeport. Providence at Springfield. YACHTS T9 MEET The diminutiv ITtalian-American from Stratford, Conn., has found the high temperatures just to his liking. Where the sun's rays have been burning up the other 141 contest- ants, Henry has been burning up the course. Donning a yellow sweater, a pair of gray wool trousers and immacu- lately pulling his tie up into his col- lar, with everyone else playing in as few clothes as possible, Ciuci sped around the Interlachen Ilgks in | yesterday, three strokes better than | par, for a mew course record. | While other players, rated much | better than the little Italian werc faltering under the blistering, ray of one of Minnesota's hottest suns, Ciuci hardly worked up a sweat. | Today was even hotter than yes- terday. Henry took his 115 pounds, most of which seems to be in his wrists and_ forearms, around the course in T1. Ciuci has seemed in other tournaments to lack just the necessary ability to cut three or four | strokes off his score and finish in front | The heat has done well by him here and it admittedly has hurt the chances of some of the heavily built stars. Observers pointed out that Ciuei will find it much easier to cover 72 holes with the tempera- tures in the 90's than will the fel- lows who w gh 40 and pounds s most recer important vi Florida open He has won the rampionship twice r tournaments. has finished better in the national open, with a score of 2 and than | seventh cach time CINCINNATI PUTS (UBS IN SECOND nued from Preceding Page.) 0 0 Vittorio Campolo, Argentine Heavy- 3 INRAGE TODAY Weetamoe and Whirlwind Set OFf on Gourse at Newport 10 (A—After hav- qu of thr contenders separately past three days, Weet r Morgan-Nichols candi- date for the d of the Amer- | : ent out today for her ce with Whirlwind, the —Hammond boat the sole exception of her victory Tuesday over the Yankee, the Boston entry, sailed Secre- tary of the avy arles | Adams, Whirlwind has been a sore | disappointment to her supporters. | If Weetamoe does not show heg the way back to Newport this afternoon it will be little short of amazing Today's other match bring- ing Yankec to- gether again, fur- nish a more ex won her fi prise Monday, on of the present geries. A good breeze would favor \Yankee but the past threc days racing has been | sailed in light air and there was little in forecasts to indicate strong- er winds for today's contests | Weetamore and Enterprise are | the light weather boats of the | fleet and they won yesterday in the | calmest weather since the series | opened. A continuation of such con- ditions this afternoon would give those boats q decided advantage. | Beginning today, the schedule calls for three days of railing over a triangular course of three ten- mile legs. It is possible that this course may prove more agreeable |to some of the candidates than has |the 30 mile windward leeward |course of the past three days. Cer-| |tainly there will be more opportu- | nity for skill and seamanship, for | there will be two marks instead of | | one to turn. | | Although Weetan has a very | | substantial paper lead over the {other boats, having taken three | straight races to each of the others one, the Enterprise and Yanke: still seem very closcly —matched Weetamoe's victories over Enter- prise and Yankee nave been by | |narrow margins and are conclusive | |in the opinion of observers, who | point out that she has had her |own kind of weather in races w‘ | date. wport, July ing met and v other three ed each 1se ic ¥ by race prise cted to dav ory Francis | 1 0 0 ol 0 0 0 0 xx—Batted for Cunningham Boston 0 Broof hit: W Bares use Boone Frank ccond Game) 100 001 010 FOR BEST RESULTS USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS "OPEN TO | ———4 CLAIRE | GEORGE VOIGT UTSTANDING weakness | George Voizgt's game { He's stylist comparable with Mac Smi the old Scotch master. And by the way, George and Mac, the stylists, are paired together lat Interlachen, the cighth from the last twosome to tee off in the Na- tional Open, That'll afford | comparison. 3 Voigt is the Metro- politan district's only amateur play- ing from scratch. Match or medal play, it makes no George. N | difference That old saying ‘“‘a wasted on Voigt In ments he was both medalist champion. U. 8. G. A. offici frowned on George while copping all those victories cause in five out of meetings trounced Roland Mackenzie .. ed team ever since then. . cool, concentration also golf instead has He his par . but he ndance, ough to wage st old vidual. . Voigt ab fall tried and failed c in the U. S. Amateur. won his way to the qu . to be knocked off by Tk into the Johnston entrance " TERRIS HAS RETIRED Open stwhile Lightweight ship Contender Convinced He | No Longer a Top Notcher. New July 10 (UP)— lightweight nder, today from boxing. The rweight, veteran York pionship co: his retireme old than 100 ring pping of ¥ atte: Nebo, Florida T nced top rankin is Apt a career nst 1esday, th = for 9 ve of 1 to quit the g Iy enjoy fighting to take beating f o couldn’t have hit in when I was o SERKS TITLE SHOT welght, Anxfous to Fight Carnera | and Sharkey. fering to meet Carnera imme 1y with winner to fight in September. “If successful agai | Sharkey, I will guarantee to |in this country until next y | give any worthy contender a | to dispute my right to fight mpion for the title,” Ca American Tennis Ace Exj Win Premier Honors in Natlonal Title Play. Amsterdam, July 10 (UP)—W liam Tilden, United States and W | bledon singles champion, today ¥ favored to win honors in the | national championship tenn ney. Tilden advanced to t n both the m doubles yesterday Wetselaar of Hollax In the singles, and te Daniel Pre Gern Lefradt ar 6-3, in tI H More than $0 per cen Southern association talent this has had major league experien IN Say, | Over a two year period he won 17 straight tournaments and 63 consecutive match play victories. medalist never wins the championship” was 10 tourna- and he was be- and Mack was a Walker Cup player ... while George never had been select- . Anyhow, he's been with the . Voigt is a unimaginative sort of person knows battles s will be his second Champion- cham nounced , took t in a Pete Sl GOLFERS \THE MAJORS INSIST ON UNIVERSAL DRAFT B AMI—:NT iAImther BMeball War | Looms After Yoguls' Mee Chicago | tront in | in BILL MEHLHORN URLY Bill Mshlhorn has been good copy for many golf sea- He's known as Wild Bill th, | or Tarzan of the Lin He has the broad shoulders and bow- ed legs of a full- and they got that way hold- inz up a hod when was a youth lhorn also 2olf via thr route, one of leagues a considered American which den either acc: a | sons In back thei He's most E ors the top flight but when he's right — look out he's the roamingest golfer in the world. ion come subj The d major les players to ed. or bu: From t Bill Mehlhorn Has played from to Hawaii He fin- he money in 26 consecutive 1aments and would have won most of them if championships were decided on the best three out of four rounds. little b ack rider from n Bill's wife faced the parson with 3 of “Sally” and the Fol 1926 Bill climbed a tree and sneez- ed Bobby Cruickshank out of the [ Texas Open championship. Bobby wouldn't speak when Bill offered 1pologies later. He also yoo- hooed to Leo Diegel from a tree at npia Fields He set s record in v to would t George the Seals, the als . was on us crat off be “Final s said, Coast have take The worki draft in of Twice previous to to He f-bridge duos vder Cup team went over | . ithout him bec like him rterlachen, Wild Bill has good chance provided, of doesn't blow up. . . . He, ay in the wind. His | , s and long iron shots stav low and go straight d Inter- lachen will reward accurate hitters. ove of HUNT BEATS FRIEDMAN Patrons at Bout for the First Time is t league ow comment of Sid Hickey, 1 would neeting o: & are Protected by Foul Checks in American of 10 (P —Viewed nly grasping their foul I Babe Hunt, Ponca Okla., heavyweight, achiev 1 second victory over Al Friedman of Boston here last night | Hunt, whose decision over F man at Chicago several months ago precipitated a noisy debate among |the customers, was awarded a news- ion after rour illing Oklahoman, who weighed sa ars his om 10 me od, medioc form today be 1930, unless the lat { of the San Francisco cl not without league more than directors of ing new A wars took July 10.—(®) the baseball s the three g" minor nd two smaller ciry an ultimat from and Nation leag nanded that minors e universal draft or hunt alone for players r first midseason esterd . and the class A Western December 1 - agree to be- versal draft eans that the release no minor groups i y any players fror he Pacific coast, officials b said they the univ severed ect to t tic step gues will t submit to a battle, A c major | move that withou ay in ituation,” h whole, Put- “rests with the Pacific as a but we n up the challenge now. ng agreement (a modified ement) we have had with the past several satisfactory and we attemnt to revise it | the big league | ot tion of the control of e West-' erely ors base- n the part peg n which to " Gear 1 ans noth- are drafted > generally is | ¥ of the ion, > action ners, but on the 1 sur- Jor make no probable ude is league. however, said the prob- be the | disc “hig” minor: associ gue and P lub of t id the “The minor leagues are in a bad and instead of trying to force omething down their throats, the majors should be offering to help them If th solve the question, as the hen would like v those leagues which sys- tem are goi . erence from both major: could iron out gx will e to the out of bet existence een practica and diffi- J. Wyle of the Tt not believe affect President L Eye league, said the situation would his circuit, but i start a row between the m T the big minors.” Five of the eight Three Eye league are oper or controlled by major league or- he did seriously ganizations, f Major league owners, with one ex- ception, approved the resolution. The ie dissenter, whose name was not sted further attempts with the minors, but the dicated th felt such MAJORS SEEK NO-HIT HURLER Fla., July 10 ((P—Thorn- w strikeout king of who hurled game recently, bid for big leaguc which Tias er South- ted to have is HERALD SIFIED ADS Pride imp 670 Ly, IR PP els the nest Qualify N 1646 the shoemakers of Boston, pro- voked by “much bad work produced by 34 sir craft,” petitioned “Ye Governor of Ye Bay Colonie” that “all boots might be alike made well.” So began America's pride in Craftsmanship. Prid: lives. Itisthes ter, New Ham —now the largest strictly in the World. in the production of the finest Quality still h in 1874 at Manches- re, Roger G. Sullivan founded 7-20-4 hand-made cigar industry Quality workmanship and the finest tobaccos have been traditional with 7-20-4 since its beginning. It is the same spirit today, after fifty-six years of public con- fidence—which refuses to lower its standard of man- ufacture at the sacrifice of the finest Cigar Quality. ~ The Cigar nds, was awarded six rounds, two to Friedman who scaled at OUT The fight had agreed to do it Quality By WILLIAMS all over again without pay if the fight ended through a foul. HAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS (Including games of Ju National Lezgue Batting—O'Doul, Home runs—Wils Phillies and B Stolen bases- American League Batting—Sim Athletics, Runs—Ruth ees, 94 Runs batted in—Gehrig, Yankees, 390. mons. Do Triples Home Stolen 1= Pal Kansas City—Babe City, Okla point man, Bosto N A WANDERER Brooklyn's batting een service ¥ 14 ns 10 different as been play- behemoth, h different t leagues, altho ing baseball HERE T 1S-RIGHT HERE . Z MOTHER NATORE, LIKE | ANY OTHER MAW, HAS PATCHED TH'SeAT UP BUT,UNLIKE SOME MAWS,| WHER' THe SHE LSES TH SAME 2t MOMENTS WE'D LIKE TO LWE OVER NDA GOODS AN YOU HAFTA LOOK CLOSE THE WORN SPOTS. BRTe BesT, BUTAK WELL, AT WoRN PLACE 1S WHUT GIVE ME WOoRN J:Q‘\‘\’VLL-RMj 01930 BY NEA SERVICE. INCY SALESMAN SAM AWRIGHT THeN' You AN & HERE AN’ BAKE —1\ G A& MOV(E AN' cOooL C~ (HUH! (F I'D KNOWN THiS WAS W' PICTURE \'DA STRYED IN TH' STORE WITH 1ce Box THEATRE S OUR CoolING SYSTEM 1g THE HoTTEST IN Town / UG !‘W”ii ©1830 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. By SMALL (25%1s aLL \'Ve oot an |25<¢ 1S aLL You'LL oeT! HEAH. WELL, THE ADMISSION 1S 50¢ ! | \ KNow, BUT l've seeN | THIS tMoVIE ONce | SLrRE=eOY !

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