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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 31, 1930. PRIMO SUPPORTED |WASHINGTON TEAM ENTERS IN SET-UP TOUR FIRST PLACE DEADLOCK st | Swamps Vance Team in Rotary Baseball League Under Nebrasl_(a Commission Gh'argesf 22 to 2 Score—Winners Outclass Losers in Every Unfair Treatment of Italian Department of the Game—Y. M. C. A. Scores First > X Victory by Trimming Burritt Crew, 13 to 5—Vic- B :,J‘m‘n;;i;?‘:e:‘; torious Crew Stages Rallies in Two Innings. nation from the National Boxing as- sociation, in protest against “unfair treatment” of Primo Carnera, today furnished additional evidence that organizations regulating boxing are incapable of—or uninterested in— protecting the interests of the pub- lic_which supports the sport. Primo’s “set-up tour” with fits | charges of dishonesty and framed bouts was made possible by the le- niency of various commissions which approved notorious “tankers” as op- | ponents for the giant Italian Despite Carnera’s gonvictton on | charges of engaging in a fixed bout lin California and his subsequent na- [tional suspension, he has been al- |lowed to continue fighting. Now |that he is faced with deportation | because the labor department has taken cognizance of the unsavory|g. E | scandals in connection with his tour, .lroa;’"g thed BucsltEicontingent “Jf"j:‘,'m boxing organizations, and promoters| = | are joining politicians in the clamor| . Games Friday Totals S rotet | more games are scheduled |y o ] : {In the league for Friday afternoon | Bugitts Within th < the N. B. A. ¥ ; Uity 15 1a8l veels the . B Al Jt 5 gfolpee: Nanmes will miest Wis| w0 and the Tllinois boxing commission | & - : il = | cenger. Three have lifted their “life” suspensions 0% Brook and Paradise Park will|pages on baile: play Nathan Hale. on Carnera. Previously Primo had ! truck out: By ! Washington 22—Vance 2 S been allowed to fight in Michigan, | | e Nebraska, Pennsylvania and severat| Outclassed thoroughly in every PHIL“ES BIEH[S department of the game so much so tween the two teams, the Vange nine | was swamped by Washington on1 Diamond No. 2. The final score was. | other states despite his suspension. | 9 that there was no comparison be- |22 to 2. The game developed, into a | |In at least one instance, his bout farce after the first inning when with Godfrey at Philadelphia— waiving of the uspension gave box- it was found that neither of the pitch- | ers employved by the Vance team. | |ing another black .eye and brought :furfht‘r charges of “fixing.” Mique Malloy, Chicago promote used all of his boasted “infiuencs | to have the Carnera suspension lifted | in Illino could get the ball anywhere near the plate. The Vance team was unable even | to threaten to score until the Wash- | itgtons changed pitchers and then let down the bars. The result was | Baseball Standing AMERICAN LEAGUE Speaking of Sports TUNE IN on station WTIC {Hartford} every Tuesday evening from7t07:30. Diamond Orchestra Games Yesterday X ; New York 8-10, Boston 2 St. Louis 3-6, Chicago Detroit 6. Cleveland 5 Philadelphia 7, Washington 4. -"‘1“1 el un £ TR U John Kiernan in “Sports of the Times" York Times today, ing paragraph of Britain people: his column in the New has the follow- interest to New Standing W, L. Pct. 867 02 | 574 | 510 466 | Philadelphia Washington New York Cleveland . Detroit .. Chicago .. 8t. Louis . Boston “Hal Stevens is exhibiting a copy of the New Britain Evening Herald of April 22, 1890, that he found in old picture frame. It includes | an item about the Giants defeating the Philadelphia Quakers at the| Polo Grounds before 425 spectators and continues | * “The young Giant, Rusie, pitch: | ed again and did excellent work, striking out eighteen Quakers. He must have been holding be for a bigger crowd.” [at second base. and Recano led the The summary: Y. M. s League Standing Messenger, Lech e “Y" stickers. P.C. 1.000 | Paradise Park. | Nathan Hale.. | Washington . Burritt Yo ACtA Vance o | Willow Brook. . Smith . o AB A K 1 o Games Today New York at Boston Philadelphia at Washington, Detroit at Clevelan St. Louis at Chicage. el By swamping the Vance team in the Rotary baseball league under a 22 to 2 score yesteray afternoon at Walnut Hill park, the Washington | [team entered a triple deadlock for | first place with two games won and |} none lost. In the other contest of | Gavin the afternoon, the Y. M. C. A. won |Donat |its first victory in the league by de- | APS® There will be an important prac- tice of the Pirate baseball team to- morrow evening at Walnut Hill park. All players should be pres- ent without fail Tms SEASONS DIAMOND GINGER ALE WAS STARTED IN 1928...w/hen the Yankees won the Worlds Series from the Cardinals_. : 'WO seasons ago, when the Yankees took four straight and won the Series from the Cardinals, the 1928 Vintage of Diamond.. Ginger Ale began its two years “on the bench” for the delightful flavor which cannot be imitated. Ginger extract, from genuine ; Jamaica Ginger, was put away to age for two years. Then, when: time had finished its long process, we added pure fruit juice and ~ crystal spring water by our own secret method. You can taste the result. That's why Diamond Ginger Ale is popular with those who think first of quality and flavor. LOOK FOR THE VINTAGE DATE ON DIAMOND GINGER ALE BOTTLES, AND BE ASSURED THAT AT LEAST TWO YEARS HAVE MELLOWED THE FLAVOR. You can get more for your money if you buy Diamond Ginger Ale in the Games Tomorrow Chicago at Detroit Cleveland at St. Louis. New York at Boston. (Other clubs not scheduled). The Sacred Heart baseball team will play the Avon Town team at the Washington Park diamond Sun- day afternoon at 3 o'clock. NATIONAL LEAGUE Games Yesterday New York 5, Boston 2. Brooklyn 9-9, Philadelphia 5-4. We have at hand an item that!| pjttshurgh 6, St. Louis 5. tells us that Washington College, | (Other clubs not scheduled) Chestertown, Md., at a recent mee:- | ihg of the athletic council, voted to | Standinz do away with baseball and substi- | i tute lacrosse in its stead. Th2 |Brookiyn W change is made because of the Uni- |Chicago gatisfactory support of the diamond |New York pastime. |5t. Louis | Pittsburgh | Boston |Cincinnati Philadelphia coamoonmnil A hase This college has an ancient baso- ball tradition behind it and the move comes as a surprise. The question to be answered is whether interest in baseball is seriously wan- | ing throughout the country. Every- one is asking “How long is ba ball going to last 45 44 31 Games Today Boston at New York Brooklyn at Philadelphia. (Other clubs not scheduled). | Fans Puzzled at Team's Inability 10 Get Out of Gellar Mique has cabled Mussolini ask- | ing the Italian dictator to intervene with the United States government | |in Primo’s favor. He has received | no answer and now threatens to fol- {low the Nebraska example and Baseball has remained the same | for the past 30 years and this is a | long stretch for the public to keep up its interest in any one branch of | Games Tomorrow Louis at Cincinnati. Pittsburgh at Chicago. Brooklyn at Philadelphia. Root Beer New biggest league se York, July 31 (UP)—The mystery of the 1930 major st Sarsaparilla sport The Kensington baseball team an- nounced last week that it play the Chicago Bloomer team this coming Sunday. So far, the Kensington management, if it plans to go through with the game, has been keeping the matter a secret Girls' The P. & F. Corbin baseball team faces no easy task next week in the Industrial league. On Tuesday, Cor- bins battle Fafnirs and on Thursday the team meets the Gascos. Both of these teams, and in fact, every team in the league, wants to beat Corbins. Not only that but the following Tuesday, that is a week from next Tuesday, Corbins meet Landers. Three hard games in a row are echeduled for the league leaders and if they win all three, then they are without any exception or: question, to be rated as de edly the champior HORNSBY RECUPERATING Baseball Star Expects to Be Ready of the league. to Play Second Base for Chicago Cubs Soon. ago, July 31 (P—Rogers Hornsby is certain he will be ready t5 play second base regularly for the efore the season is over—re- gardless of what anyone else think. After his workout yvesterday h» said he felt like a player report- ing for spring training. The bones are O. K.," aid Horns- by. “As soon as the muscles and ligaments Joosen up I should be able o} T can't set any date, but I feel like a fellow reporting for train- ing—just eough overweight to quire plenty of work and cager for the “season to start.” SELECTS LAST PLAYER fer No. re- Bearch 1 Rider on United States Polo Team Appears to Have Beor: Zaded. New York, July 31 (—The search for a man qualified to ride at No. 1 on the United States polo team in the International matches with Great Britain in September appears to have ended With Eric Pedley, a hard riding, harp shooting Californian, perform- fng at that position, polo critics are venturing to predict that Capt. Tom- | Hitchcock my star to ride tet. Yester ley at No. will rame the coast t the head of the qua tay Hitcheock had Ped 1 on the “whites" rode as brilliantly as he b day ccoring seven geals made by defeating the * did last of the 16 to 11. MAY MOTORIZE TTAM Stillwater, Okla.,, July 31 (P — When Oklahoma A. and M. athletes 80 on the road in the future, they may go in a bus. Plans are being formulated to buy a $5,000 convey- ence which is expected to save the &chool money. Nearly $10.000 was spent last year for the transporta- tion of athletics, NEW YORK EXPRESS Four Times Dally WAy TRIP Return Ticket Good 30 Days Brand New Latest Ty pe Parlor Car Coaches Deep upholstery, air cushions, inside baggage compartinents, elecirie fans, ice water, wnd card tables. No finev built. We guurantee your comfort Leave Crowell's Drug Store 71 West Main St. . 11:00 AL . 2:23 and 6:25 M. y and Sunday Running Time 4'4 Hours P’hone 1851 Make Reservations Farly Bonded and Insured YANKEE STAGES, Inc. 50 ONE 33.75 ROUND 9:00 A [ would | ely and assur- | may | and he 16 | Hitchcock’s team in | | Boston at New York. : INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE | | Games Yesterday | Baltimore 17-5, Newark 12-8 Reading 4, Jersey City 3. (Other clubs not scheduled). Standing W. 68 65 Rochester Baltimore . | Toronto .... 61 |Montreal ........ 58 |Buftalo . o | Newark . 47 Jersey City . . 45 | Reading 40 | Gemes Today | Newark at Raltimore | Jersey City at Reading | Buffalo at Montreal Rochester at Toronto. | Games Yesterday | Allentown 3. Springfield 1. | Albany 12, Bridgeport 1. | Standinz W, Pct 700 | 456 438 419 | Bridgeport Springfield . | Allentown .. Albany ‘Gemes Today | Allentown at Springfisld Bridgeport at Albany AYOIDS GONFERENCE | of | | Joe Jacobs, Manager Max | | | Schmeling, Has No Intention of | ! Meeting W. L. Stribling. | New York | (Young) Stribling, now rated as the |outstanding challenger for Max |Schmeling’s questionable heavy- ! weight title, remains in England for |a conference with Joe Jacobs, t |German's manager, he will have a long wait | Stribling and Manager “Pa” werc | said to have postponed their sailir home from lLngland, pending th arrival of Jacobs. Jacobs still is in |the United States and has made no plans for an early sailing for Eu- rope. He may get away the middle |of August, and then it may be l.1~‘ ter. | CARNERA VS, CHEVALIER | Chicago, July 31 (#——The propo: ed “battle of vindication” between | Primo Carnera and Leon Chevalier, | take Uncle [has been approved and will place August 14—provided shores before that time. | Promoter Mique Malloy gained sanction to put on the bout after | the National Boxing association lift- | ed its ban on Carnera, imposed aft- {er the giant Italian’s last bout with Chevalier, - The lllinois body did not, how- ever, lift its suspension of Leon 5 Carnera’s head manager, and Sce will not be permitted to act in the nezotiations for the bout. Fraternal League standing w. P.C. 1.000 800 o 200 | Royal 5 2000 In the Fraternal Soft Ball league Tuesday night the Re¢ Men defeat- ed the Royal Arcanum 12 to § and | the Panthers nosed out the Check- | |ers 11 to 10. I‘ AMATEUR TITL New York, July 31 (UP)—The| third-fourth competition for the women's amateur golf championship | will be held at the Los Angeles| Country club, Beverly Hills, Cal., on October 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18, Red Men WOME Vindication™ | £ Sam does not shoo Primo from his T withdraw from the Fascisti in pro- test of “unfair treatment” to Primo. REDS ARE AGAINST NIGHT BASEBALL Cincinnati Team Makes Six. Errors and Loses Exhibition | Indianapolis, Ind.. July 31 (UDP) —Dan Howley and his Cincinnati | Reds today were included among the opponents of night baseball. | The Reds, first major league club | ever to appear in a night game,| made six errors in their exhibition | with the Indianapolis American As- sociation team at Washington pa last night, and lost the game, 17 to & Both teams made 15 hits, Indians bunched their blows with | Cincinnati errors to score $ runs in | the seventh and six more in the eighth. Big Tom Anglev, Indianapolis catcher, was the hitting star of the | |game with 5 hits in as many trips to the plat. Most of the big leaguers | found hitting _difficult, Cuccinello, Dressen and Durocher being th only Reds to hit in their accustom. | ed style ‘The chief reason it success is that major demand major league baseball and you can't play the big t game: | when you can't see the ball half the time,” Howley said after the game. Bob Meusel, veteran outficlder, gave up after three innings with the won't be a is league fans [remark: “Dan, once that thing hits | vance |®he ground it looks like an aspirin | Wa be the solution of | tablet when you can see it at all. This stuff may owners, but up where they expect they'll save mor lighting plants.” LIVELY BALL ST USED IN iAJoRs (Continued From Preceding Page) in the big time good fielding ney by not putting in | were S Waner Waner ham, norosky L, Totals Louis Pittsburgh Two base hits hree base Lit: Wilson er. Bases on balls: Off H 4. Struck out: By Haines 1, but th |} | Glownla | two runs, the total of scoring of the losing team for the afternoon. Washington started pounding the basepaths in the first inning. Walks, kit batsmen, passed balls, errors of al! sorts and misplays enabled the team to get three runs. These were followed in the second with five more and fn the third by another five, making 3 in all. In the fourth and fifth, the team scored only once | but in the sixth, the last time for | the Washingtons at bat. the team swelled through the Vance defense to get seven more giving it a grand total for the afternoon of 22 runs. Glownia, pitching for the Wash- ington team, was altogether too good for the opposition. He was touched for enly one hit in the five irnings he pitched. Wnuk followed | him and he was touched up for four bingles, The summary: ) o Batagoweki, Howard, c Rival, Green Egger, b p blatt, rf rt B et |l osuomunosay lousimususcoad S8 e nn e wlosossnsan Totals 3 5] 5 o lsbumsummuanusng b o Rzevnick Wnuk, p Miynarski, Gacek, AR by st s S fastosiiad |l snooammomaowss (s Ao Totals Twn bass hite oft Klopp 7. Glowni 1. Struck out: By Klopp 2. Glownia 5 July 31 P—If W. L. ;“T\llncml problems of minor league |Rival 9. Wnuk 2. Umplre: Paul Y. M. C. A. 13—Burritt 5 A seven-run rally in the second inning followed by a four-run splurge in the third enabled the Y. M. C. A. team to down the Burritt playground on Diamond No. 1 J Coyle, in the box for the winners, hurled a steady game for the Main | streeters and let down the Burritts with three widely scattered blows. The final score was to 5, the game being called in the last half of the seventh | The losers tallied single scores in the first, second and third innings; held scoreless in the fourt added one more in the fifth and an- 0 | other in the sixth The “Y" went scoreless in the opening inning but chased across even runs in the second when the Burritt defense collapsed. Several misplays and five base hits caused the damage. The winners continucd where they left off in the following inning and added four more runs on | two hits and two errors. Another run was scored in the fourth and the sixth saw the final marker crossing the plate. The losers experienced a busy afternoon in the field, making 18 as- sists and mussing up eight. Me- | Grath was the biggest offender, fumbling four at third. Fuschillo !gave a brilliant fielding exhibition | to cight hits on is the failure of ths | Phillies, with two .400 hitters their lineup and & team batting av- | erage of .328, to get out of the Na- tional league cellar. The Phillies have lost eleven | | straight games and despite the sav- |age hitting of Chuck Klein and Lefty O'Doul. leading major league batters, they continue to sink deep- |er into the mire. A partial answer may to weak defensive play and ineffec- tive pitching. particularly the lat- ter, but Phil Collins's record routs the supposition that a fair pitcher | |can't win for them. Although he was hammered for 14 hits and beat- en by Brooklyn yesterday. Collins |has won 10 games and lost only four this season for the last-place outfit Burt Shotton. a capable manager, | piloted the Phillies to fitth place last season and had visions of get- | ting the club into first division this | vear on the strength of its power- tul attack. The Phillies are back where they started from. and appear to be get- ting worse daily. The situation has become so intolerable that Shotton intimated that he will break up his team, sacrificing O'Doul and others |to get capable pitchers. Brooklyn is understood to be seeking O'Doul for the 1331 season,| with Dazzy Vance mentioned as a possible bait for the Phillies. Vance, who is 37, has pitched only fair| baseball for the league-leaders this | season, winnin;; 10 games and los- be traced a ing 10. Shotton plans to rebuild the Phil- | lies around Chuck Klein, who seems to be about the best offensive play- er in the National league this sea son. Klein leads the National leagus in batting with an av ge of .4 leads his league in runs batted in with 110, leads both leagues in hi: with 161, leads both leagues in | runs scored with 114, leads the Na tional league in doubles, with 33 and is second in home runs, with | 29. Klein's chief rival for the Nation al league batting crown at presen is his teammate O'Doul who is hit- tinz .403 O’'Doul won the title last vear with an average of .. 3 Every player in Phillies line- up is a .300 hitter with the excep- tion of Tommy Thevenow, who batting .294 and Denny Souther. who is batting s The Phillies the is proved one of the worst road clubs in the history of the National 1 this season winning enly eight out of 44 games | abroad for an average of .152 2 | YESTERDAY'S STARS | & o | Bartell, Pirates—Dr and winning run single in Cards’ gam Ilitzsimmons, Gia Held Bra drove in 3 of Giants' 5 runs with double and home run. Gehrlg, Yankees. ledoff Yanks' 10thakainst Red ‘Wright. Robins Hit safely six times in two games with the Phil- lies. | By Home six ox No in run rally big bottles — dry or golden. The big bottles hold five generous glasses. DIAMOND GINGER ALE CO. Waterbury, Cona. 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