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Speaking o Sports _ “Lefty” Haber was the outstand- Ing star in the Tuft's victory over Colby Saturday. The New Britain boy, who is better known as a base- ball player than a football man, played at left halfback. He was given the ball time after time and made repeated gains on a criss cross play. At one time Lefty ‘was given the ball seven times in a row and gained yardage on every play. It was a series of plays featuring Haber that finally put the sphere , across the goal line for the only score. Boston papers spoke in glow- ing terms of the local boy's work. Ray Begley, veteran baseball play- er and coach of the Landers team in the Industrial league, is seriously {ll at his home on East street. He is suffering from intestinal grip and complications. Ray has hundreds of friends in this city and throughout the state who will be rooting for a speedy and complete recovery. Fordham officials are hoping that the broken bone in Montjue Za- leski’'s foot will heal quickly. The local boy is captain of the basket- ball team and much is expected of him. He suffered the injury to his foot in football practice. Hartford High ran up against a tartar Saturday and was beaten 19 to 7 by Stockbridge school of Mass- achusetts. The Blue and White was so0 confident of victory that it start- ed its second team. Bridgeport Central High, which | badly defeated Hartford last week, was an easy victim for the Yale third varsity team. The final score was 32 to 0. New Britain is slated to meet the Bridgeport aggregation. A prominent Bridgeport paper stated yvesterday that Carnera was robbed in his fight with Jimmy Ma- loney. Jimmy did everything but throw the giant Italian out of the ring. belting him at ease and giving him a sound thrashing. It Maloney was not the victor in every sense of the word. then boxing should be banned immediately and ping pong substituted. Gay Bromberg had a soft time Baturday in his team’s 74 to 0 vic- tory over Boston university. The local Dartmouth star had a field day, making countless tackles. Li'l Albie Booth's brain slipped a cog Saturday and Yale's defeat at the hands of Georgia may be laid to this lapse. With his team lead- ing by 14-6 and the bhall on Geor- gla’s one-vard line and fourth down coming, the Eli quarterback failei to realize that the longest way around is sometimes the shortest way there and he called for a straight plunge. And Taylor ran smack into an unyielding Georgia line that was awalting him. But Booth is not alone in this matter. Whenever a team gets atop the goal line the quarterback seems only to think of getting the ball over, an in the heat of the fray he can be . rgiven for forgetting that the surprise of something different would probably bring greater suc- cess. Had Yale scored this time, It would have lead by 20-6 or 21-6 and not only would Georgia's following two touchdowns been insufficient but they probably would not have materialized because the Southern- ers would have been disheartened. But Albie played a great game aside from this single lapse, and the whole eleven men on the Geor- gla team had a tough time chasing him here and there about the grid- iron in their efforts to run him to *earth. They generally did, but it took a flock of them to do it, ani even then they had no picnic. And amid it all Booth kept a non- ehalance which we have never seen matched on a football field. Undis- turbed by success, failure or rough tactics, Albie went pertly and deter- minedly about the task of winning, and that he was unsuccessful may be blamed with more justice on his u;eakening line than on anything Nlse. The Blue forwards 18oked power- ful in the first half, but after inter- mission they wilted badly and Geor- gia pounded through them time and again for long marches. The line Wwill have to be strengthened if Yale 1s to make a showing this week, for Brown's forwards are a sturdy set, as Princeton found out Saturday, and not even a jumping bean like Booth can get away without a crack in the line to start with. Maguda is the Ilucky Pawnee player who will receive all the do- nations given of local rooters for the | first touchdown scored by his team this year. Although yesterday's NEW YORK EXCURSION Four Times Daily §6) 50 ONE ¢ gp 15 ROUND 3 TRIP WAY Return Tickets Good 30 Days PULLMANS OF THE NIGHWAY Comfortably Heated. Bonded and Insured. No Finer Built. We Guarantee Your Comfort. LEAVE CROWELL'S DRUG STORE 77 West Main St. 9:00 A. M., 11:00 A. M., 2:40 P. M. and 6:25 P. M. Dally ana Sunday Running Time 41; Hours Phone 1951 Make Leservations Early Buy_Tickets Befors Boarding Cosches. Be Sure It's a Yankee Coach. ( Ponents. | stenson has 117 YANKEE STAGES, Inc. game against the Bridgeport Mo- hicans was the third game of the season,“the Pawnees did not score in the first two contests. A large crowd of rooters followed the New Britain High school team to Pittsfleld, but it is expected that a greater crowd will be on the side- lines when the Red and Gold team plays Stamford High in Stamford Saturday. The only two defeats suffered by the New Britain team last year and the year before were at the hands of Coach Boyle's Stamford eleven. Sunday's game was the first pro- fessional contest John Cannella has participated in and it has been re- ported by his friends that he would not have turned professional had he not wanted to be with his team mates from Fordham university. In a recent letter to Manager Al Politis he said he disliked the pro- fessional end of the game but the thrill of once more playing with “Rog" Scully, Politis, Beloin, Bautt, and Grip was a greater attraction. COLLEGE FOOTBALL PROGRAM STIFFENS Preliminary Games Give Way to Tmportant Ones This Week New York Oct. 13 (A—The soft spots in the eastern football sched- ule which marked the earlier part of the season are few and far be- tween during the rest of the gridiron program. Their tuning up period cempleted last Saturday, the big |teams move on this week to an al- most complete set of major games. Fordham and Boston College open the week’s action with their annual Columbus Day clash today. On Sat- urday Fordham tackle Holy Cross, another stronz and still undefeated team while Joe McKenney's Eagles play the powerful Villanova eleven. A number of eastern leaders are scheduled to wander from their home territory for intersectional games with strong mid-western op- In the van of this group, Carnegie Tech, fresh from a great triumph over Georgia Tech, goes to South Bend, Ind., to play Notre Dame's 1930 stay-at-homes, who gave Navy a sound trouncing Sat- urday. Penn to Play Wisconsin Pennsylvania, still untested against a strong team, plays Wiscon- sin at Madison with an even chance against the team which laced Chi- cago. Colgate, the east’s high-scor- ing team, journeys to East Lansing to tackle Michigan State. On Fri- day night a farily successful West Virginia eleven plays Detroit with little hope of gaining revenge for last year's 36-0 trouncing. New York University souri provide the leading intersec- tional offering in the east with the Violet sophomores strongly favored over a tiger team that has not reached its usual standard. Haver- ford meets Kenyon fromm Ohio and George Washington entertains South Dakota in the other east-west clashes. Navy takes on a nearly southern opponent in Duke, Du- quesne meets Howard of Birming- ham in another Friday night fea- ture and Davis and Elkins ventures into South Carolina to play Fur- man. Harvard Host to Army With a 20-20 tie from last year to be ironed out to a decision, Harv- ard and Army meet at Cambridge | for the leading fixture on the all- east part of the program. Both teams have been hampered by in- jurfes but hope to get their full strength on the field for the fray. Yale, upset by Georgia last week, will try to regain {ts prestige by downing Brown, which overturned Princeton, while the Tigers hope to perform the same feat and to avenge last year's defeat by winning from a still untried Cornell team. Pittsburgh, victorious over one major opponent goes to Syracuse for its second big clash, meeting Vic Hanson's team, which has rolled up big scores against comparatively weak opposition. Datmouth gets its first real test against Columbia but | there is little prospect of a repeti- tion of last year's 34 to 0 score. Georgetown, another high scorer, plays Western Maryland, which scored a 7-0 upset last vear. Penn State has a comparatively easy prospect in a weak Lafayette eleven. Lehigh takes on Gettys- burg, which already has an upset against Villanova to its credit. Temple and Washington and Jef- ferson appear closely matched. CLAMS LEAD LEAGUE Show Way in Stanley Rule Circuit— Valentine and Wilcox Lead Indi- viduals in Averages. The Clams have a three game lead in the Stanley Rule & Level plant men’'s bowling league, figures released today reveal. J. Valentine and E. Wilcox are leading with averages of 111, although J. Thor- in one game. The figures follow: Team { Clams Whales Sardines . Sharks ... Oysters Crabs Shrimps . Lobsters High single, J. Knowles, high three, A. Campbell, 370; high average, J. Valentine and E. Wilcox, 111, Individual Averages J. Valentine . E. Wilcox . . Willametz A. Campbell . . Knowles . Maier . Stotts . Carlson Wolf Brown Hinchliffe . Argazzi .. Hamlin ~ ol sl 1090 106 106 103 101 100 100 100 100 100 USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS and Mis- | 104 | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1930. Glenna to Defend Title This Week l ‘\ Los Angeles, Oct. 13 (A—Queen | |Glenna Collett with four cham- ionships to her credit since her first appearance in national play in 1919 |came to the defense of her Ameri- title today over the menacing | ; 5 |Tos Angeles Country club golf |Southerner Gets 62 | course against a field of 99 aspir- | }ams. | | One of the greatest shot makers | lin the feminine, ranks the New | York woman will seek her fifth crown in a dozen years, with three former champions, nine intern: tional team members, and the run- nerup to her 1929 title among the | contenders With only one of the entrants, Miss Marion Hollins, of Santa Cruz, Cal, able to break through women's par of S§l in rounds, scores in the low were anticipated among the 32 qu ifiers in tod medal rov holes ALMAKARY, LOUISIANA | BACK, LEADS SCORERS Points in Four | can Games—Murphy of Fordbam Has 54 in Two Contests. By the Associated Pre: Almakary, Louisiana State Uni- versity fullback, sets the pace for the nation's individual football lead- ers, according to an Associated Fress compilation. Almakary has counted 62 points in four games to lead the Southern Cenference and the country. Second pracoilasield by Simmy Murphyier Fordham, who leads the eéast with in each of the coun- jor groups or confer- follow Miss Hollins Well Liked Al Miss Hollins, a former women's| g iy national champion, has found the | oo™ Muront” Foraham |severe course, 6,635 yards in length. | p,q hic Kitzmiller, Oregon, hb suited to her hard driving g“mfi%‘llocky Mt., Specken, Denver, qb. and has been fr'qufi\n_fly "fée““:’“! |Southwestern, Leland, Texas as the woman for Miss Collett to |~ oy b "o, Geiaer beat. Missousi Valley, Sauselle, Wash- Eastern entrants especially have | ington U, hb. .. A found the course something of H",Blg Six, Bausch, Kansas, fb. enigma, for the Bermuda grass fair- | 2 ways cut down the roll of their Big Ten, Yanuskus, Illinois, .. drives, and the greens of creeping | TRIMR LEAD | bent are treacherous. Harts, Bennetts and Siones in Dead- ik S 62 R ozs b4 . 43 38 ate, fb 36 24 22 The women's national tourna- | | ment probably will seek the final | {appearance of Mrs. Dorothy Camp- | bell Hurd, who as Miss Dorothy | Campbell first won the title in 1909, | repeated the following year, and was |crowned champion again in 1924. | She signified before the seven day | | test opgened that this probably would | A triple tie for first place in the |be her last attempt to win the wom- | Stanley Works bowling league is len's classic of the links. | shown by official figures released to- " The other national champion of |day. Stankiewicz is leading in the |the vestervear is Mrs. Helen B. Stet- | individual averages with 113. The |son “of Philadelphia, who captured |official averages follow: {the crown in 1926. | | Went Behind Mrs. Pressler The Pacific coast's chief hope for its first winner rests in Mrs. Teona { Pres: San Gal el, Cal.. who last | vear lost to Miss Collett at Oakland |Hills, Birmingham, Mich., four land three. Miss Hollins, while from |Santa Cruz, is representing the na- |tional golf and tennis club of New | York. |13 Mrs. O. §. Hill, probably the most | promising entry from the middle |3 west, and 1920 western champion, | will carry the colors of that sec- | tion of the country. | Of the younger set, Miss Helen | Hicks, 19-year-old girl of the In- [wood club of New York. and Miss | Edith Quier. Reading. Pa., are 3 | pected to ofer sol formidable <‘pxmmg, Others of T ants |include Mrs. Stewart Hanley, De- troit: Miss Maurcen Orcutt, Ha- worth, N. J.; Miss Virginia Van Wi Chicago: Miss Bernicve Wall, Osh- | kosh, Wis., and Miss Peggy Wattles, Buftalo. lock—Stankiewicz Leads Indlvid- uals With High Average of 113.1. | w. Harts Benn Ston, Christs Pritchard Kings Youngs Peltons P High singles string—Stankiewicz, ) gh three string—Stankiewicz, High team single—Christs. 551. High team three—Bennetts, 1586. Individual Averages Walters .. salak .... Rawlings Greco ‘He!nzma:\ Bates .... Wilcox Skarky Budnik Cabay McConn Pienkowski MORE LOSSES THAN LIPTON Geneva, N. Y., Oct. 13 — Appar- ently Hobart's football team was overlooked when the boys were call- ling Sir Thomas Lipton the world’s | best lozer. The defeat at the hands of St. Lawrence Saturday was HO-‘ {bart’s 17th loss in three seasons. | ski “BROKEN" ANKLE O. delphia, Oct. 13 - ! ikle did not keep V merman of Bucknell out of long. The fracture, which w posed to have occurred.in th | ple game Friday, failed to appear in |x-ray photographs and he left the Bennett Nelson | hospital yesterday. Merchant Tailoring 55 West Main Street i | FOR BEST RESULTS USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS jRAMS SEIZE BREAK AND EARN VICTORY | Radziewicz Rung 76 Yards on | Pass, Then Plunges Over A long forward pass to Vic Rad- ziewicz, who collected it on his own |20 yard line and would have scored had he not stepped out on the four vard line, put the New Britain Rams |in a scoring position in the game against the New Haven Triangle Pros yesterday in New Haven. Aft.- er four line plays Radziewicz put over the winning touchdown. The final score was 6 to 0 in favor of the Politismen. The New Britain team outclassed the Elm City crew and it is the gen- eral opinion of the Hardware City fans present that the score should |have been greater. The Triangles failed t6 make a first down through the New Britain line, the gains be- |ing made on a few forward passes. It was a hard fought battle and both teams put up a fine exhibition of football. The Triangles were game and it took all the power in the New | Britain backfield and a timely break to put over the only touchdown. The ball was on the four-yard line with four downs to make it. Three times the Rams belted the line but the ball was still on the wrong side of the final chalk line. The fourth play was less successful than the other three and the New Haven boys would 14 ve taken possession of the |ball had not an over-anxious Elm |City linesman been offside and New ‘Bntam given another opportunity. core Finally Made 1 “Rady had to fight, squirm, | wriggle and twist to get to the line but he managed to get it over by an inch New Britain was not as sful in forward passes as the New Haven team, that had been praticing them all week. Druehl, one of the state's outstanding forward pass tossers, was successful on a few occasions. ‘Unk” Conley caught a nice pass for |a good gain at one time. | The stars for New Britain were {John Cannella, last year's Fordham player who joined the team for the first time Sunday, Radziewich and Conley. The Fitzgerald brothers | were the New Haven stars. The summary: Triangles Coombs All-New Britain Conley Cannella Werwaiss | Coughlin | Huber . Smithwick Scully . Beloin «vsee.. Benzis | | Gatfney De Loughery ... . Politis L. Baut Druehl Belonki McLean Miski E. Fitzgerald . 1 F. B. | Substitutions: Triangles — Bock for Gatfney, Don Fitzgerald for De Loughery, Reynolds for Coughlin, Wrinn for Huber, Frankfurter for McLean, Bremen for McCoy, Bruce for Coombs, Coombs for Bruce, Gussman for Jones. New Britain— Radziewicz Collins for Belonki, Gripp for Miski, | Burns for Rock- Sandle for Smithwick, Conley, McCabe for Scully, well for Cannella. Ofticlals—George White, referee; Gene Frechette, umpire; Doc Grang- | er, head linesman .| WITH THE BOWLERS FRATERNITY ALLEYS POST OFFICE LEAGUE Waterbu A 104 109 34 11 | shearer Statstroman | Cordent | Lyons 2. | Slattery Braves_fiuy Schulmerich, Pacific Coast Slugger Los Angeles, Oct. 13 (#—Sales of Wess Schulmerich, hard hitting An- gel right fielder, to the Boston Na- | tionals for $40,000 and one player !is announced by Oscar Reichow, husiness manager of the Los Angeles club. Schulmerich, who weighs 215 pounds, has a batting average of 330, holding second place in the Pacific Coast league. He made 28 home runs this season. Schulmerich will report to the Braves next spring. . Jimmy Welsh, outfielder, who went to the majors from Seat- tle in 1925 comes to the Angels in the deal. | The sprint members of the track |team are football backs at Presby- |terian college, Clinton, S. SALESMAN SAM SovYa WERE UP TILL NINE O'cLOCK . LAST NIGHT DOIN' HOME WORK , =1? ~EAR ! WANNS Take A SLANT aT (T, MR. GU22LEMD for Winners — Runnin Check Throughout Gam | In one of the finest football games | [played in the present season the | ;mwnees of this city defeated the! | Mohicans of Bridgeport by 26 to U at Willow Brook park yesterday.| Fans who attended the game were | surprised at the exhibition of fooi- |vall displayed by the New Britain team and were loud in their predic- |tions that the boys from the eastern | | section of the city will make their lm:n‘k this year. | The Bridgeport team never show- | |ed itselt to be in the same class |vith the speedy Pawnee outft. A |forward passing attack second to | none seen in this city in many years | |and a wondertul collection of plays | for line plungers, off tackle smashes land end runs showed the Pawne:s [are of championship caliber. It they | do not have the handicaps ot weight land inefficient officlating during the remaining games on the schedule, | they should go far, it appeared after ! yesterday. A squad of 30 players on the Park City team was used at various inter- | |vals but the Pawnees could not be |stopped. “Whitey” Straus of Bridge- | port seemed to be the principal ob- stacle with several tackles. | Score Four Touchdowns | Quarti gave a great exhibition of | |end running and gained many yards | betore one of the secondary defe | players from Bridgeport could ge {him. Maguda was the Pawnees' ace. He made his team’s first touch- down of the season. The initial score came after Turner had been |stopped on the three-yard line fol- lowing a 20 yard run. It took just one line smack by Maguda to put [the ball over. | The next score came in the third |quarter when Ostertag crossed the ,last marker on a 30-yard run. The third score came after the Pawnecs |had marched down the fleld. Quar- ti made the counter on a line plunge. | A perfectly executed forward pass that was thrown about 35 yards was caught by Peterson, who ran 20 !vards for a touchdown, in the final quarter. Zeal, end, caught threc| |passes and went over for another score but the team was called back |and given a five-vard offside penalty. | The Pawnee line did fine work all |atternoon. Only two first downs !were scored on it. Bridgeport com- | {pleted one forward pass while the| | Pawnees were successful in nine| [long tosses. | The New Britain eleven hopes to | continue its winning streak against | the Bristol Maple Ends next Sun- lay. Practice sessions will be held on Tuesday and Thursday nights. | Virginia's football team averages 1178 pounds, 181 in the line and 172 in the backfield. | | I | | Miskinis PAWNEES SCALP MOHICANS AND SHOW GREAT PROMISE BURNSIDF FLEVEN Local Eleven Batters Bridgeport Team Into Submission and Wins 26-0 Victory—Quarti and Maguda Star | g Plays and Aerial Attack e. FORDHAM SEEKS 12TH Cavanaugh's Team Hopes to Contin- ue Run of Victorles Against Bos- ton College in Today’s Game Boston, (UP)—With vir- tually the s lineup it started when it won last year's battle be- tween the rival Catholic colleges, Fordham, undefeated in its last 11 games, was to meet Boston college at Fenway park today. The probable lineups: Fordham Boston College COBYOY cecvsbaroniioens . Dixon Left End Foley e e Bennett Left Tackle Tracey .... . Morelli Siano Anderson Wisniewski ... ....... Gorman Right Guard ........ Romanowski Right T | Elcewicz | Fisher Quarterback Murphy ioa Left Halfback McMahon ctescasns... Vodoklys Right Halfback Pieculewicz RS Kelley Fullback . Tronsky Features As Local Bowlers Win The New Britain Stars won a bowling match from the All-Hart- ford Juniors yesterday afternoon, taking two out of three strings. In the last game N. Tronsky needed a spare and eight in the ninth box if New Britain were to win, and he calmly got his spare and filled with an eight. His 142 was high single of the match, while DiBella got 138 for the losers. The scores. All-Hartton! Junlors SR 114 109 127 113 453 Stars 122 109 119 107 457 Di Bella Raymond Thomas Gusta, 11z AN ..103 423 Britain PRE0s 453—1345 New J. Tronsky De Lucco 101— 380 100 L Gacek ... N. Tronsky 143 @ FIRST MET IN 1889 Brunswick, Me, Oct. 13 — The Bowdoin-Tufts rivalry is not as fa- mous as many others, but it has been going on for a long time. They first met in 1889 and since then Tufts has wen 19 games and Bow- doin nine. One was a tie. TRIANGLES UPSET ° Outplay Heavier East Hartidd | Team for 120 Victory Both Prove Strong—Line Holds Park City Team in | | The New Britain Triangles flashed {a surprise yesterday when they de- feated the All-Burnsides of East Hartford by 12-0 on the losers’ own |field and gave away plenty of |weight in doing so. The home team's extra poundage went for naught, as the Triangles had the speed and put it to full advantage by slipping around and through the Burnside eleven for long gains and two touchdowns. Not even the les- ers’ former college stars, including Heim of Syracuse and Haskell of the Army, were able to gain, being stopped dead by a New Britain for- ward wall which yielded only cfie first down. | The locals kicked off to the 30- yard line. After line bucks had fail- ed, Hartford punted into New Brit- ain territory and the Triangles be- gan a march which culminated “ip the second period when Quiafti rushed over for a touchdown. A placement kick for extra point went wide. In the third quarter the purple line held the home team for downs took the ball, and marched it to the five-yard li from where Squilta- ciote carried it over. The summary: Triangles All-Burnsides Cassella Neir Left End Ravagnani Sivole | Left Tackle Ackerts Desamoins Raney Waters Left Guard | Center | Abbott Maturc Right Guard Giana McNally Right Tackle Carrubba Richards Right End Squillaciote Felgetts Quarterback . Gill ‘Wiison | Left Halfback Anderson Right Halfback Masidl: Cugno Heim Fullback Touchdowns: Quarti, Squillaciots Substitutions: Quarti for Gill, K& gelman for Cassella, Decorletto for Giana, Sheldon for Ravagnani, Wat son for Nein, Carlson for Waters Referee: Muraunick. o KICKS ALL EXTRA POINTS Niagara Falls, N. Y., Oct. 18 = Niagara has one scoring record tba! no eastern college has tide. The team has scored five touchdowns and McHugh has added all five ex- | tra points. HARVARD-ARMY EVEN BET. Cambride, Mass., Oct. 13 — Army and Harvard appear pretty well matched for this week's game bul they haven't been in the past. The mson has won 13 of their i games and Army only one. Last year | they tied. - 'OUT OUR WAY T WENT RiaeT LR TH' CORTAN! HURRY VP WILLWS— GET SOMETHING AND wiLe \T! 10-13 There Probably Is, Kid! WORK MYsSELE LAST N SURE! | WAS DoIN’ Home WASHIN' TH' DISHES, ETC — WELL, SEE (F | GOT ALL MY ExaMpLES RIGHT ! \GHT- WHY MOTHERS GET GRAY. NEVER MIND T “THAT MUMBULNG UNDER YOOR BREATH ! YouU KILL THAT SPIDER AND KEEP QUIET ABoLT \T ! T BY By WILLIAMS WASNT SAYIN' NOTHIN' MUCH = ON/ q—ATs WHY AINT NOTHIN' FER SOME FELLERS T HiLL PEOPLE ~THER TRAINED FER MURCER MOTHERS AN SISTERS WHO'S SCAIRT OF MICE N SPIDERS AN BUGS AN THINGS — AN’ WHEN THER GROWED LP ‘fl-\EV GOT TH' HABIT SO BAD WHY, HERE'S ONE THATS WRONG- | “THIRTEEN ELeVENS aWN'T 130! THass SUsT WHAT tAY DAD THEY HAFTA WLl TRWiLLIams, AeS. U 8 PaT. oFY. '™ BEGINNIN T THINK THERES Sclme- \lll";;l"m 1i‘lllliii'%%:j] | & ar e et M 25