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n FEAR VOLCANIC ERUPTION Pichucalgo, Chlapas, Mexico, Oct. 20.—UP—Death of vegetation as .far away as four kilometers from the voleano Magdalena. and the odor of petroleum cmitted from a crater re- cently opened in the mountain side have led natives of this area to fear early eruption. There are fre- quent subterranean rumblings. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1930. ARUTE DECIDES ROLLER HOCKEY WILL STAY HERE :7t i resi Team Owner Insists On Retaining Franchise at Meeting | ;.. Held Yesterday in Albany—Eight Teams Ready to | Go—Seven of Them to Operate in New York State —Suitable Hall Must Be Secured in This City——l Williams and Donnelly to Be Retained On Local Team—Meet Again. | of his followers, and that on his| | 18th birthday soon will bestow the orders of the Golden Fleece upon | | Count John Ziehy, Cout Anton Sig- ray, and Count Ivan Csekonics. The | Golden ifleece is essentially a Haps- burg orde | FIRE AT CAMDEN PLANT | Camden, N. J., Oct. 20.—(P—Fire | cansed by the explosion of an alco- hol tank endangered the RCA-Victor plant here early toda: of the linemen ran back and the umpire stepped in, took the ball and gave New Britain a penalty for tak- ing too much time in the huddle. On the next play Quarterback Za- leski told Kloiber to kick. The team was ready for a punt but Kloiber changed his mind. He decided to make a weal: attempt at the line rather than take a chance on & blocked punt. He did and Stamford took possession of the ball. “It'’s a long 57 seconds,” one of the New Britain fans remarked. The Stamford team ran into and out a hurried huddle. Best threw a pass. It was incomplete. They ran in- to and out of another huddle. An- other pass. This was incomplete. An- other pass was tried. The crowd was in a nervous pitch, This was incom- plete. The umpire was counting the] seconds as they were going. It was Inine, eight, seven, six. five, four, ! three—and another and a final do- or-die pass. Best took plenty of time PUNTS AND PASSES | By the Associated Press. Potsdam, N. Y.—Clarkson is not boasting of its record of being the | only eastern college to lose five | | straight games this season, but at| least its team has scored. Iour schools have not tallied a point this | vear and Bethany has had its goal crossed for 210 points in three de- feats. Speaking of Sports L oo, Sty an nour GRAFTERS SENTENCED Moscow. Oct. 20.—P—One per- | n was sentenced to death today Budapest. Hungary, Oct. 20. (P— and 74 others were given various| Confidential inforation ri ved |terms of imprisonment after convic- here from Belgium where Otto, pre- | tion of graft in food and clothing | versity football team, scouted Stan- tender to the Hungarian throne, is |sales here. Most of the defendants ford, prior to the intersectional at school, says that he is not prm;wm—e private traders, speculators | battle of the teams. pared to forego his kingly preroga- |and employees of the governmental | tives, despite the lukewarm temper | retail shops. Gay Bromberg, N. B. H. S. grad- tate who has been starring in the Dartmouth line for the past three years, staged one of his specialties again Saturday as his team routed Columbia. The big guard fell on a Columbia fumble and helped the Indians to score a touchdown. OTTO PLANS DECORATIONS Dr. Boles Rosenthal, center and captain of the 1914 Minnesota uni- State College, Pa.—By way of celebrating the 75th anniversary of (the college, Penn State’s football team is taking on a new rival this week. Colgate's powerful team is to furnish the opposition for the home- coming game. HERALD CLASSIFIED Al By WILLIAMS One of the major shocks along the New England battlefront was the up- set of Connecticut Aggies by Trinity. Qutrushed by a bigger and heavier | team, the boys from Hartford playe an alert and aggressive game, for = 5 S and toole advantage of the breaks,| N¢W Haven. Conn.—Albie Booth's PO s o O ey |field goal Saturday was something | since the experiment was tried in | old Madison Square Garden . OUT OUR WAY big’ cet Jack Arute, owner of thé Britain roller hockey franchise the American Roller Hockey league. | notified the league Impo among the co ; managers L) j.c0q which fall short of the the meeting held yesterday after- | oot AN (R BN Clevan n noon in Albany, N. Y., that he In-| | the first of the little thre tends to keep his team in New Brit- | ety The feature of the contest was a 60 yard dropkick for a field goal by Phippen of the Trinity eleven. You don't see many dropkicks tried from the 40-yard line in these days of | moved-back goal posts, and you seei even fewer of them made. Phippen is said to have missed only one drop | since he began playing with the Blue | and Gold. | This was Trinity’s second win of | the year, and, while it does not | necessarily mean that its war-time | days of glory are coming back, it| does seem to indicate that things| are looking up “on the hill.” Pancgyrics about Albie Booth, Yale's potent little quarterback, con- tinue unabated following his dra- matic performance against Brown Saturday. Starting a game for the first time this year, Booth played nearly three full quarters, scored ten * of his team's 22 points, and is cred- ited with nearly 200 of the 234 yards Yale gained by rushing. His running back of punts is par- ; brilliant, for it gives him the flying start and the open field suited to his type of running. It was | truly comical to see the big Brown men falling, this way and that as the diminutive Booth scooted through them. Downed he was, to e sure, but only after he had been ‘ized in several pairs of arms and 21d firmly—not tackled, for any- one diving to tackle Booth finds himself pressing his nose inlo the| turf, and the only way to stop the| flying atom is to grab him high and hold on by superior strength. The Yale line looked much bei- ter Saturday than against Georgia, and the rugged Brown forwards could not cope with it. Brown's only real gains came on a triple pass and wide run around FI gare's end, which the Blue solved| only with difficulty. Officials are watching over Booth like guardian angels this year. Re- membering what happened to him several times last season, they are keeping their eyes on him with hawk-like intensity, and at the first sign of roughing they seize the bail and pace off penalties. This s hardly favoritism, but rather an at- tempt to check a tendency—that of roughing up a little star—which was all too prevalent last year and left Booth in a hospital at the end of the playing season. “Sandy” Wiener, Tilden's latest tennis protege, subbed for Albie and did quite well, but the team didn't ha the vital spark with Booth missing. There seems to be nothing in a name. A Brown player named W ley showed no cleverness and a Yale lineman named Rotan seized a fumbled Bfown lateral pass and raced half the length of the field for a touchdown. This Rotan, by the make a good fullback. the entire Brown team and he streaked across.the chalk marks, thereby showing himself better able to keep his footing than some of Yale's plungers are. Yale has a tough assignment the Army this Saturday. The Cadets. in beating Harvard, showed they | had taken “Pop” Warner's compli- | cated football system and had learn- | ed it in a few short weeks under Major Sasse’s coaching, with fatal| results to the bewieldered Crimson players. And the Army has a back- field quartet composed of men who had already starred on college teams before entering the military acad- emy. way, might He outran in And they call it Vermont acad- emy. The starting lineup Saturday had seven players from New Britain and Hartford, as follows: Joe Bog- danski. le; Holley, Ig: Casale, c¢; Ca- bitor, rt; Nelson, re; Westergren, qb; &and Kenney, fh. | The New Britain High-Bridgeport | Central High school game will be | played at Brtdgeport Friday after- | noun of this week. The Stamford High-Warren Harding High game will be played in Bridgeport Batur- day. s Members of the New Britain team will have an opportunity to see a college game or to listen to one on the radio Saturday afternoon. |of a novelty. | this respect with 14 points apiece. | Best threw a pass to Chicatell, who |off tackle play and two line plunges | were tried in the attempt for touch- It ‘vas the only on | kicked in an eastern college gam= that day and only the seventh of the season for the east. Other three- point booters are Bartos, Fordham; Bell, Arnold; Britton, F. & M.; Mor- ris, Gettysburg; Prunell, Princeton, and Scalzi, Georgetown. Atlantic City, N, J.—It will take only two days to prepare the ‘“field” for the unique indoor game between Lafayette and Washington and Jef- ferson here Satruday night but| preparations have been going on for | a long time. Forty freight cars are required to haul the earth which will be used for the playing surface. Pittsburgh—The rivalry between Pitt and Notre Dame this week is not entirely new. They have met three times, in 1909, 1911 and 1912. Notre Dame won the first two games by small scores while the third was a 0-0 tie. Providence, R. I.—There are no soft spots in Brown's schedule yet. The Bruins tackle their third major opponent in succession in Holy Cross this week. The Crusaders| never have beaten Brown, losing six | games and tying one. New York—-Although there tave been plenty of misses, getting the extra point after a touchdown is getting to be quite an art in the cast. Ellert of Syracuse and Dreshar of Carnegie are tied for the lead in Hunt, Cornell; Wilson, W. & J., and Macaluso, Colgate, have 12 cach. Princeton. N. J. — Saturday's Princeton-Navy game may not be important to the public in general but it means a lot to the teams. They have been meeting since 1892. Up to 1920 the Tigers won every game; since then there have been three Navy victories and three ties and only one Princeton triumph. STAMFORD BEATEN BY LOCAL FLEVEN (Continued from Preceding Page) A Britain team lost the five yards and | five more for a penalty. Dabkowski made one yard. Best intercepted a pass on his own 15 yard line and ran to the 25 yard mark. After three attempts at the line Best kicked to Kloiber, who caught the ball on his own 3§ yard line, cut down the slde of the field and then over the midfield between two Stamford players. The safety man caught Kloiber on Stamford's yard line. Fink hit the line and was not | stopped until he rcached the elght | yard line. Kloiber hit the line. fum- bled but recovered. On the next play New Britain lost five yards on a penalty. Kloiber got the five back but a lateral pass to Dabkowski as he ran out to the right did not lose or gain ground. Stamford took the ball on downs. The ball was In Stamford's pos- session on its 11 yard line as the third quarter ended. Fourth Quarter Dest took the ball twice and gain- ed nine yards after Fabrizzio had failed to gain. Best punted but of- flcials claimed Mangan clipped on the way down and the New Britain team was penalized half the dis- tance to the: goal. Dabkowski made two, Kloiber and Fink failed to. galn and Kloiber kicked a short boot outside on New Britain's 45 yard line. A long pass was incomplete but New Britain was penalized 15 yards. The tofml New Britain penalties for the first few minutes played in the last quarter amounted to 40 yards. The ball was on New Britain's 21 yard line. Stamford was penalized five yards for offside and after two plays in which no gain was made at the line, caught it and was not stopped until he reached New Britain's 15 yard line, Another pass was thrown to Chicateli and he reached New Brit- ain's five yard line for first down. Best took the ball and failed to gain. Saunders took the ball twice and Yadvinski took the ball once and none of them gained a foot on the New Britain line. An end run, an New Britain fans had their oppor- | tunity to reciprocate for the razzing | the Stamford fans gave them two years ago when the down state team | was successful. | | Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Kloiber made the trip to Stamford Saturday and were on the sidelines while their son, Ed, was featuring in the game. COLUMBIANS WIN The Columbians \ football team smased its way to its third tictory Saturday by defeating the Cardinal cleven 24 to 6. This was the first | defeat of the year for the Cardinals. The Columbians challenge any team in the state averaging 135 pounds. I'or games telephone FEdward Pank- | nin at 58§1-M, between 6:30 and 7 p. m. FRANKLINS WIN AGAIN The Franklin football team de- feated the Tremont Terriers 6 to 0 in its third game of the season Sat- urday. Charles Cillizza is captain |attempts at the line and then Kloi- downs. New Britain took the ball on downs as the game was nearing an end. The Red and Gold took its three ber started to zig-zag behind the line for the famed safety. The ball was taken out to the 20 yard line where Lundinowicz place-kicked to Stam- ford’s 45 yard line. The Black and Orange team failed to gain on a line buck, a pass was incomplete and a five yard penalty was given the team. Gramitt block- ed a pass. New Britain took possession of the ball. The referee said there was one minute and 30 seconds to play. The New Britain team took the limit of | time in the huddle, sent Kloiber into | {he line and then with one more down to go it was found Yhat 57 seconds were left. The players were in the huddle, nervous and anxlous. Kloiber sug- gested that they take too much time and take the five yard penalty. They broke from the huddle, lined up | Haven quarterback. and thre v a long pass that landes on the ground. The game was over New Britain won. A second of hesi tancy and then the players wer throwing their yelling and Stamford team was beaten. N.B. H. Gramitt Ludwinowicz Left Mlynarski Guard Parda R Bell Center O'Brien Right Guard Zimatravich veaae light Tackle Mangan oo Right End Zaleski .... Quarterback Yadvinsk Kloiber . Wit «.... Fabrizzl Left Halfback Fink Blo'; JFullback Score. New Britain Stamfor ber; New Britain substitutes, stitutes, Saunders for Blois: tell for Lync! TRIANGLES LOSE Loca! Football Eleven Down ¢ New Haven 19 t0 0 Meeting & team that was awa: out of its class, the New Britai Triangles eleven yesterday down to defeat before the Haven William3 by the score of 1 t0 0. The Elm City team unleashe played a strong defensc during th contest. test was all but over. Taking ac vantage of breaks, the New Havel team scored two touchdow firs. five minutes. First, Kelly, Ne intercepted forward pass on New Britain's tance for point failed. A few minutes later, a Triangl kick was, blocked and recovered b a Williams player on the one yar: stripe. Brown, New Haven ful a score. The try The try was again unsuccessful. At about the middle of the thir period, McDermott, Williams end recovered a Triangle fumble on and Tom Tookey, who played Stapleton, went through for third touchdown. extra poini with a drop kick. wit th. DEFENDS HIS TITLE Maxie Rosenbloom, Clown Prince Harlem, Battles Newark Boy O Wednesday Night. New York, Oct. 20 (#)- Rosenbloom, ‘the clown Harlem, defends his light heav weight championship against Al Bain of Newark in Madison Garden Wednesday night. Rosenbloom has found the 1 pound title something of a whit elephant. He has smacked aroun SMaxi prince nents. He will be an overwhelmin favorite over Bain. 15 rounds, regulation title distanc: The semi-final brings togethar Pe: Sanstol, Norwegian bantamweigh 10 rounds. llsewhere hedule the week's offers little of boxin, interes ner, Akron, O.. heavyweight ten rounder at Newark Thureda; Boston tomorrow, Con O'Kelly an Jack Gagnon, rival Boston heav weights, clash and in the Bosto Garden Thursday, Johnny rubber man from Cleveland, meet: Dick Daniels of Minneapolis. SALESMAN SAM in arms around each other. The fans were out on the field cheering. The mighty S. H. 8. . Lynch | - Shannon ) . Caughlin Grabenstein Henderson . Holowicki Best 2: touchdown, Zaleski: safety, Kloi- Picl- singer for Mlynarski; Stamford sub- Chica- ; Caputo for Shannon. TOHEAVIER TEAM went New a fine, shift, running attack and dis- Almost before it started, the con- s in the 35 yard line and raced the entire dis- for, back, shot over for the touchdown. inch from the New Haven goal line Tookey made the of Square so many light heavyweights in his time that he has run out of oppo- The bout is at and Joe Scalfaro, of New York, at Young Stribling meets K. O. Christ- Risko. 1 | | |ain, provided a suitable hall can o ! secured in which the game might be | | played. | Six teams were represented at the | meeting, including New Britain, and there will be eight teams in the league when the season opens, a cording to the information impart at the league session yesterday. Seven of these teams will operate in New York state, most of them be-| ing under the ausnices of the Amer- | |ican Legion posts and games will be | plaved in the state armorie: The New York teams which wili be seen in action, will be Albany, | Poughkeepsie, Kingston, Glovers- | ville, Amsterdam, Newburgh and Schenectady. New Britain will have the eighth team in the circuit. | Poughkeepsic and Newburgh were not represented at the meeting but | it is practically assured that there | will be teams in both places. Each owner will be allowed to retain two players from his team of | last year. Manager Arute stated to- day that he will keep “Kid" Wil- liams and “Red” Donnelly in this| city and will build up a team around | these two men. The league voted | cuts in salaries to the players, the| extent of which has not yet been divulged. i Manager Arute has not yet secur- ed a hall in which to play in this city but he expects confidently to be able to close a deal within the next week. The next meeting of | the league will be held next Sunday | in Hartford. | e o v o s d} 0 | [mportant Football Games on; Program for Week-End New York, Oct. 20 () — Tradi- tional mid-October rivals of eastern football again are opposed to each | other in this week’s leading games with only a few “breathers’ and still | fewer intersectional games of im- portance to lend variety to the schedule. The old “Big Three” engage in a trio of the leading games against | rivals of long standing. Harvard and Dartmouth have been meeting on | the gridiron since 1882 and again will bring out onc of Saturday's most important games. The Big Green team, still undefeated and the | highest scoring aggregation in the| east, may come to Cambridge a| slight favorite, but Harvard has shown plenty of strength to make it | an even battle although defeated by Army. | The Cadets tackle a second major game in succession, playing Yale at | New Haven in a clash that pits| Army's all-around strength against | the brilliance of Albie Booth. Princeton meets Navy in a game of | little importance in the champion- | ship ratings bul dear to the two| schools. They appear evenly match- | ed. The powerful Panthers of Pitts- | burgh hope to fill their stadium for | the first time when they take up the | task at which their neighbors from Carnegie Tech failed, trying to stop Notre Dame. Since Carnegic failed, Pitt has about the best chance of | any eastern team of beating the Irish. Carnegie plays Western Re- | serve Cleveland in an intersec- | tional game of lesser importance| and Boston College entertains Day- ton. Penn State and Colgate, meeting | for the first time, present a pair of strong teams although neither is in the undefeated class. Brown and | Holy Cross enjoy a similar ranking. | The championship of the Bronx and a chance among the elect of the| football world is at stake when New | York University and Fordham clash | at New York A" few other leaders play lesser opponents. Pennsylvania high. which gave the cloge game last year, Columbia plays Williams, and Syracuse plays St Lawrence. Cornell has an open date | in the schedule. | By way of variety. Lafayette and | Washington and Jefferson have | scheduled their annual game for the | Atlantic City auditorium Saturday | night. It will be the first indoor football game the cast has seen ¥ n 9 d o 3: n w a e y d 1= d 23 h e ot e d g i | meets Le- | Quakers a! t. a d n s GRIDIRON RIVALS . WEET IN BATILE - burg plays Bucknell Temple meets Villanova. On Friday night, Georgetown cntertains West Virginia hopeful of breaking last year's scoreless tie, Duquesne meets Catholic University and Davis-El- kins plays John Carroll and Cleve- land. WIN BOWLING MATCH Rogers Recreation Team Gives Onc of Greatest Exhibitions in Win \ Over Bristol Quintet. In onc of the greatest bowlir hibitions ever seen in this ¢ Rogers Recreation bowling team, one of New Britain's entries in the | state duckpin league, defeated the | Bristol aggregation here Saturday. The local boys came within 13 pins | of breaking the world's record for | a five man team. New Britain took thrce games from Bristol. The local team hit 1902 for total pinfall to 1 for Bristol. New Britain won the first game 593 to 565 'he local team took the second 6 1 and cop- ped the third G47 to 543. Gacek hit 147 to cop high single string while Kloss was close behind with | 145, | The scores: Swingles, Bristol R 102 Swingle Basear Tony TOR BE USE HERALD CL. N MY PLaTE - N H1S PLATE. PA ? PA WANTS HiS 100 ~ DONT “ou,/ / \ =55 HERE- MA -HERE-\ N PUT MY DESSERT Jf PUT MINE N /[ THAT END OF MYy PLATE, MA - RiGHT THERE , WAERE THER AT NO /LISTEN HERE . NOW — i/ TS BuSinesS OF | EATING LIKE A BUNCH of TRAMPS ,O0UT OF ONE | Tin CANL. TO SAVE GRAVY. I CLEANID| WASHING DISHES. AT SPoT ForR ™Y / DESSERT WiTH A PIECE OF BREAD HAS Gov o SToP = “ouLL HAVE uS AL EATING OLT OF A PAN , IN THE MIODLE OF THE TABLE BEFORE (Lnea v s rat.orr. WHY MOTHERS GET GRAY. ONE will always stand out No ballyhoo! Chesterfield says it with “MILDER...and BETTER TASTE” © 1930, Licoerr & Myezs Tosacco Co. HAMMER AND ToNos of the winners, and then they started to argue. One MIGosH! SAM AND THAT LADY CUSTOMER. HAVE BEEN GOING IT LoNG Time! ('D RETTER SEE IE | CAN STRAIGHTEN MATTERS N Sq. %, Eor A E\ Qs‘ Ay {cAN HANDLE THIS VERY TH! LADY AND | ARE MERELY HAVING- & OlsCUSSION OVER “THIS VACUU ™ CLEANER ! "GO BACK IN THE = P NICELY, Gu22! — ©1830 BY MEA SERVICE. INC. (( aNDO DON'T GET DRAWN INTo (Tl