New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 18, 1930, Page 11

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Speaking of Sports Richie Fink deserves considerable credit for the fine uphill fight he conducted this week to be up in studies. He took two tests and made himself eligible in the sub- Ject that prevented his playing last week and then discovered he was low in another study. He took a test in this study and late Friday afternoon it was found he had pass- ed his third test of the week. The lineup sent to the Herald from Stamtford does not contain the name of Shannon, last year an all- star guard on Coach Cassidy’s team This should be good news to the Red and Gold followers. Among the large group of New Britain fans who are going to Stam- ford is a Herald representative who will send back the result of the same immediately after it is over. For information call the Herald's numbers, 926 and 925. It looks as if sport followers will have to stick by the radios during| the coming week-end if they do not ‘want to go out of the city for their games. The Kensington baseball team will be playing in Portland Sunday, the High school will oe playing in Stamford, the Rams will be opposing the Sokol Rosebuds in Bridgeport, the Blues will be in ‘Windser Locks, the Pawnees will be in Bristol, and the Triangles will be in New Haven. Six cities will view New Britain teams in action. Is it possible that the five foothall teams fear financial loss and that New Britain will not support its teams? The Hardware City is rated by Dick Dillon and oth- er official as the greatest sporting town in the state. Unemployment seems to be hav- ing its effect on the sporting gen- try. We wonder if miniature golt will hurt basketball or if basket- ball will hurt miniature golf this winter. Both may suffer. The greatest football interest to- day is in the outcome of the Notre Dame-Carnegie Tech game at South Bend. Both teams are very strong and the winner will undoubtedly make a big fight for national honors. Billy Ross, who injured his knee while practicing with the Vermont academy football team, is back in perfect physical condition, according to reports coming from Vermont academy. The annual football classic of this Bcction—the game between New Britain and Hartford Public High schools—will be played at Hurley stadium this fall. For the past few years, ever since the high schools abandoned Trinity fleld, the games in Hartford have been played at Bulkeley stadium. "This vear, however, the scenc of the game has been moved across the river, and we have an idea that the | Hartford bridge will see some traf- fic immediately before ~and just after the game. G. G. The contest is scheduled for Sat- urday, November 15. OBSERVERS EXPECT YALE T0 TRIUMPH Blne Eleven Favored to Beat Brown Despite Injuries w Haven, Oct. 18 (A—Yale and Brown met today on the football | fleld for the thirty-first time with old Eli still the favorite despite a flock of injuries and resultant changes in the lineup. Two Yale quarterbacks have been put on the shelf by injuries in the past week and Sandy Wiener, bet- ter known as a tennis player, was selected as the probable starter. Coach Mal Stevens, however, may make a last minute change and send Albie Booth's backfleld in at the start, rather than take a chance on a fourth string player against the tcam which beat Princeton last week. The Brown starting lineup has undergone only one change. Bob Chase. sophomorr. . has been se- lected to start in place of Captain Lincoln Fogarty at left half. The lineups: Brown Ferrebee Richardson Mackesy ... Schneider . Gillies . Scheln Jonnson Gurill Chase ... Gilmartin Rotelli 8,000 S(;—e—College Teams Battle Vainly in Dark ‘Washington, Oct. 18 (UP-—The foothall tecams of George Washing- H. B. H. V. ) F. E. Position Yale Flygare Hall | Hare T.oeser Linehan Vincent Barres Wiener Sullivan .. Dunn Crowley NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY. OCTOBER 18, 1930. WITH THE BOWLERS FRATERNITY ALLEYS Alexander Rebillard Kiely ... Klisselbrack Baldwin - Drummond Belden Prelle Berg Rydberg Jackson Suneson Burrows Squires Holt Ward Bradbury| Strom Abrahamson CORBIN SCREW FOREMEN'S LEAGUE Automatics UNIVERSAL CLUB Al Holcomb Deminaki Peterson Vollhart . Paluilis Dery Recano .. Prendergast Sarnoski Odman Huck Montaule Storrs Konopka Low Score Low Score Katzung Cunningham Lamb Kelton Fagan Uliaz Kozuck Goodrow Low Score | Low Score Matson Nestor Johnson Nelson Butler Poplaski Botticelll Guenther Mottola Frank Eddy Dagata Avery Arell Schiffert Venberg . Carlson Seifel Hillstrand . Page Deutsch Surko Low Score Sepko F. Gaudette Carswell Humason luminum s 408 ing Machine 34 86 102 196 Cutlery 103 88— 70— 89— 7 61 29 445—1396 83— 251 91— 269 12— 318 83— 289 115— 328 489—1435 104— 91— 268 254 275 270 327 4821394 92— 301 489—1135 LEAGUE 91 94— 106— 108— 110— 415—1242 267 315 300 360 98 132 421 92— 272 29— 295 567 94 180 191— 107 83— 317 269 303 203 494 Food Chopper 101 §7 470 Vacuum Cleaner 83 13 119 91 38 494 266 281 281 100— 316 498 485—1433 56 102 115 54 9 95— 264 457 Hollow Ware 93 516 Vacuum Dottle AL C. No. 300 265 317 333 287 MATCH 1 297— 557 88— 148 86— 161 83— 157 80— 159 317— 625 PALACE ALLEYS s PECIAL MATCH H. & E. Laundry, Hariford Dougherty Duncan Carney Pisano Pinto Hills Charamut 95 Charamut Serrel Dooley Howard Aldrich Goslin Siattery Holihan Ward Kelly Restella Smith Tomlix Wallace McAulifte Zelek Johnson Collier Frank Hogan Cavanaugh Morgan Chase . C. Aldrich Waldron Rogerson Josephs 337 Protectors ...100 353 Hand § .10t 367 76 87 102 106 116 86— 97 108 334—1063 51— 92— 92— 14— 349—1069 242 260 266 Sets s1 124— 322 366—1005 93— 229 §9— 273 76— 281 94— 286 352—1069 FIGHTS LAST NIGHT c +*THE FORMER_. OHIO STATE SPEEDSTER THE KANGAROOS SOME REAL SPEED ... HAS ACCEPTEO AN INVITATION TO RUN N AUSTRALIA THIS WINTER I HE H4AS RUN THE N100" N 9Z sec, ~— STARTING WITH BLOCKS FORDHAM TO CLOSE TOUGH GRID WEEK Meets Holy Cross, Which Hopesl fo Check Rams’ String Worcester, Mas: Oct. 18 (P} — Fordham’s football team tackled | second tough opponent in one week today when it met Holy Cro: Fordham was expected to use same team that started against Bos- | ton College last Monday in spite of the brillinat showing of Janis and Bartos in defeating the Eagles. Holy Cross presented a veteran team which was expected to cause Fordham some difficulty in making it 13 games without a defeat. The Crusaders counted heavily on their aerial game and on the kicking of | Baker. Fordham Conroy Holy Cross McCool Miskinis Pyne Sichol Farrell Tracey Foley Fitzgerald Elcewicz Cavaler] Fisher . O'Connell J. Murphy Left Halfback Garrity McMahon - Right Halfback Pieculewicz Baker F Officials—Referee, W. F. Halloral, (Providence). Umpire—J. Adams). Linesman—. herst). Field judge—. (Harvard). N. TYoung, (North Noble, (Am- F. Sherlock, 1y o Yesterday’s Feotball & Scores By the United Press. Drake 20, Grinnell 7. ‘Wisconsin Reserves 26, Ripon 6. Coe 19, Monmouth 0. Detroit 23, West Virginia 0. Centre 6, Xavier 0. SALESMAN SAM Penn 14, Upper Towa 0. St. Louis U. 7, Butler 0. Bowling Green 13, Defiance 6. Clemson 75, Newberry 0 Sewanee 13, Mis ppi 7. Miami 19, Denisoy 6. Capital 13, Otterbein 0. Baker 6, Bethany 0. El Paso 31, Texas Teachers 0. Doane 20, Midland 0 St. Viator 12, McKendee 0. Ball State Teachers 21, Indiana Central 0. Chillicothe 14, Kempter 6. John Carroll 39, Adrian 7 Loyola (New Orleans) 25, Loyola | (Chicago) 0. Oklahoma City U. sgies 0. Findlay 20, Toledo 0. Iimory and Henry 7, Maryville St. Mary’s College 21, University {of California at Los Angeles, 6. | San Diego State College 14, Occi- dental College 7. “THE ARH OF THE LAW” HAS J1EAIGHG T 10WA Two-One Armed Sheriffs Have Hekl 6, Oklahoma | Jobs In Monroe County for i Past 30 Yoars | Amia) 10, Oct. has been, literally, only 50 per cent normal, but it has been highly effi- cient. | Two sheriffs, each having only |one arm, have enforced the law in the county for the past 30 years The first one, John Doner, eftective- ly subdued law-breakers back in the |days when murders annd stabbings were common. One story which old- timers relate tells how a huge ne | gTO, after committing a double mur- der, hid in a corn field and kept a { mob of 150 men at bay until Doner |arrived. The sherift ked into the corn field unarmed. so the story | goes, and brought forth the nesro, “handcuffed and submissive. The second sheriff, Albert |son, in his youth was a volunteer aide to Doner. Later he became the | second one-armed sheriff in the | county. Tamer days had come anl Robinson's deeds vere not so spe tacular. The * present sheriff, how- | ever, is feared by liquor iaw viola-| |tors, and his sleuthing in a murder [case which went months without| |solution finally to be cleared by | Robinson with a resultant convic- | tion, brought fame to him as well |as his predecessor. | 18 (UP)—"The | Clark 2rm of the law” in Monroe county | Robin- | forced. In reality it will do no such ( cHp sHoTS | By JIGGER When the United States Golf asso- | ciation ruled last month that any- | one paid to instruct on a miniature | golf course became a professional, the status of the new game was of- ficially established. A new announce- ment to the effect that any plaver | receiving a money prize lost his standing as an amateur golfer set- | tled the question as to whether or | not little golf was a species of the | real thing. President Ramsey, by his ruling, certifies that it is. That may cause embarrassment later on and we are inclined to think | that the dignity of the ruling body | of the roval and anclent game in this country was not enhanced by designing to recognize the new | amusement | Golfers generally do not think of it as anything else than a new form | of diversion and Golfers’ association refuses to call it golf or admit within its ranks the | miniature pros. As stated in this column two weeks ago, the practice of giving money prizes for low scores on the putting courses is going to raise a| new crop of professional golfers if | the ruling against the practiee is en- thing for the recipients will not be reported. Just the same they will | not be simon-pure golfers. It reports are to be credited, the so-called city golf championship now being played at the city municipal course is not strictly an amateur af- fair. 1t is sald that at least two of the entrants are employed on near- by golf links and thus are classified as professionals. Not that it matters much. A ci championship played over a nin hole course with temporary green with a non-representative list of en- | | tries, will bring the winner nothing | but a hollow title Tt is about time, though, that & | real golf championship be started as | an annual event. As a starter this season, a 36-hole match might be arranged between the winner at the municipal course and Ted Hart, champion of Shuttle Meadow. It | could be played on a neutral course | such as Sequin. Then we would have | a real city golf champion. Germany's present population fs | 50,000,000; if the present drop con- tinues in the birthrate, experts state that this figure will have fallen to 46,000,000 by 1975, VIRGINIA VAN WIE Faces Chiampion Glenna Collett for Women's Golf Title Los Angeles, Oct. 18 (P—TFor the second time In three years, Miss Vir- | ginia Van Wie, Chicago, and one of the middlewest's foremost links styl- ists, today found herself pitted against Glenna Collett in the final rounds of a woman's natioral golf championship. Miss Van Wie climbed to the | heights in 1928, only to be plunged {o the depths by a 13 and 12 defeat Ly the great Gicnna, who was win- ning her third national tit.c. Two years huve elapsed, during which tims Miss Collett sct 2 rec- crd by taking her fourth champion- hip in e Miss Van Wie Now 3 Wie e once again back to challen Liss Coliett. The Chicago lass yesterday out- | Arove and even outputted Mrs. O. S. | Hill, Kansas City, to win 2 and 1 in | the semi-finals. Glenna gain Beats Par Miss Van Wie's triumph was not as impressive as that of Queen Glenna, who turned in the only par obliterating round of the four semi- finalists to defeat her neighbor from Long Island, Miss Helen Hicks, five and three. | The fact that Mrs. Hill was off her { sgame may have been something of a deciding factor in Miss Van Wie's advance to the finals, but the failure of Miss Hicks to sustain her par passing pace apparently had noth- ing to do with Glenna's victory yes- terday. The queen was out in 80, one under par, and finished with a | petential 77, duplicating her own | fcat Thursday and that of Miss Hicks Wednesday. Ten persons were killed every day on French roads in 1929, the v toll of injured being 250. ANNOUNCEMENT A large assortment of 1930 Bosch Radios will be sold at big reductions FOR DEMONSTRATIONS TEL. 3071-R CALL INFINALS TODAY Learn AIRCRAFT WELDING A. RADUNE Teacher | 168 Columbia St. Tel. 3327-W the Professional | ' GRAND OPENING Tab’s Golf Course Under Exclusive Management SATURDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 18TH 1 O’CLOCK Difficult and Tricky Shots — Finest Playing Greens Special Broadcast of Football Games Weekly and Daily Prizes Refreshment Sogda Shoppe It’s Condition That Counts / S IN A USED CAR it’s just as important. Lackiyg in one it puts a dent in the line — in the other it puts a dent in your pocket boolt. EVERY ONE OF THESE IS IN FINE CONDITION WE GUARANTEE IT — Several of Each Model — CHEVROLETS OTHER MAKES Down Payment $95 1929 Ford Coupe .. $95 1929 Essex Sedan .. $150 1925 Dodge Coupe . $60 1929 Whippet Coach $1 15 . $99 $69 Down Payment coups $179 coscn ... 9169 cosct ...... 9119 Coupe .. $1 19 1 Oldsmobile Coach $99 | § Cabriolet ..v.. $89 4 $95 1926 Nash Coach-. $89 $69 1926 Franklin Sedan $165 Many Others At Low Prices PATTERSON-CHEVROLET “Where the Car Buyer Finds Honest Value” 1141 STANLEY ST. TELEPHONE 211 Open Every Evening 1929 Ford Coach G. M. C. Truck .. 1925 Nash Coach .. Sedan . 7 Coupe .. OUT OUR WAY HO, JOHN, BRING THAT WiITH ME. HA HA'BRING THAT WITH ME SOME BODY ULNDER HIM ' TAKE THINGS TO SOMEBODY ABOVE HIM -0 FIGURE OUT. == =| LABORS NOT, NEI\THER DOES HE THINK, WHAT (S T ¢ HE GETS HE TRWILLiIAMS, ©1830 BY NEA SERVICE, INC.REG, U. $. PAT. OFF. THE GO BETWEEN No Matter How Trifling By SMALL ton and South Dakota universities played a scoreless tle last night before a crowd of §,000 in Griffith tadium. George Washington penetrated three times to within the opponents’ 10 yard line, but fumbles halted progress each time. South Dakota reached the 19 yard line the third quarter for its most formidable threat. (I D ANY THING YA SEND e WILL SURE BE | APPRECIATED - — |CREDIZ = e / 673 maIN ST— AND MY BIRTH- oAy 1s pec.i3! WHATS YOUR ADDRESS —AND WHEN WERE YoU BORN — HeT \S, WHEN S YOUR BIRTHDAY ? OH, NO A Won (! \'LL GINE \T To Ya'l \Ts Poley pUTNEY ! TRERES NOTHIN' AT PRESENT— BUT CHRISTMAS (S COMING — WE. MAY NEED SOME EXTRA HELP THEN - 'LLTAKE ‘YOUR NAME — By the Associated Press st. Louls—Mickey Walker, mid- dleweight champion, knocked out Tiger Johnny Cline, Los Angeles, 1 (2). non-title. Chicago—Gary Leach, Gary, Ind. | knocked out Jimmy Moore, New | York, (7). New York—Justo Suarez, Argen- tina, outpointed Louis (Kid) Kap- lan, Meriden, Conn., (10); Jimmy Slavin, New York, stopped Kol Kola, Porto Rico, (5); Archie Bell, New York, outpointed Johnny Pene, | Spain, (8). Erie, Pa.—Larry Madge, land, outpointed Joe Trippe, chester, N. Y., (10). Hollywood, Calif.—Cecil Payne Louisville, outpointed Ignacio Fer- nandez, Philippines, (10). 7 Yale’s Conquerors Face North Carolina Eleven Athens, Ga., Oct. 18 (®—North Carolina’s Tar Heels furnished ro- bust opposition for Georgia today in the Bulldogs' "homecoming” game in Sanford stadium. Special trains brought numerous alumni to get a glimpse of the team | which whipped Yale last Saturday for the second successive year. High state officials, including Governor I. G. Hardman, had places reserved | of the United States now have in the stadium. Both elevens were | 200,000,000 copies of books printed reported in excellent physical trim.r:ach year, Cleve- To- It is estimated that publishers

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