New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 21, 1930, Page 13

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) Speaking of Sports —_ A good number of sport fans in this city were exceedingly pleased when the announcement was made yesterday that Jack Arute had de- cided to keep roller hockey in this city tor the coming season. There are a number of died in the wool roller hockey fans here who like the WITH THE BOWLERS ROGERS ALLEYS STANLEY WORKS LEAGUE Bennetts 97 107 109 98 115 526 Bates ...... W. Johnson Christ ... Helnzman . Walters 125 83 3 80 107 198 Greco Milko Skar 101— 328 Pordonars 104— 310 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1930. Five Arizona Hunters Sought in Deep Woods Phoenix, Ariz, Oct. 21 (#) — A search was under way today for five Arizona deer hunters, missing in the state forests. E. J. Abrahams, H. B. Nichols, and Jack Buzard were missing in the Sitgreaves forest south of Springerville. They left here last week and have not been heard from since. A party of Indians led by a dep- | uty sheriff yesterday searched the woods near Camp McDowell in a ALABAMA ONE-ARMED COACH Seek Parachute Jumper | In Jersey Wilderness || Brown Millg, N, J.,, Oct. 21 (®— ’ BOYS STRIVE HARD »% | FOR NEW MEMBERS between || | trooper yesterany, e mer s || Petit Takes First Place for Week at Y. M. C. A. \ believed to have landed in the i Search was being continued today ior an aviator scen earth in a parachute trackless wilderness of the pine belt. The region in which he fell con- sists of pine woods filled with un- derbrush and treacherous bogs At the New Egypt state poli Wilfred Petit took first place in ;(h\: weekly membership contest at flthe Y.)M. C. A, by four ) ) Thomas Hinchliffe, George Heck- man, Foster Rackliffe, Robert Rack - liffe, Herbert Brady, and Gerrlshi Smith, In the afternoon some of the mem bers of Boy Scout troop No. 13 went for a hike with Scoutmaster ‘Chuck’ Baisden. They went to Newington where they spent a few hours in thu woods and passing tests. : Briand’s Illness Still Defies Doctor’s Efforts Paris, Oct. 21 (P—Foreign Min- ister Briand's illness, described offi cially as a severe cold and by medi- game Dbetter than any other and vain effort to locate two unidenti- barracks it was said the aviator Eotilng {cal circles as an attack of pulmon- they feel that Arute is keeping the | faith with them in insisting on his | privileges as a franchise owner in| k% the American Roller Hockey league. | It was no easy matter for Man- | ager Arute to keep his franchise | here. With all other teams in the league now in New York state, naturally the fecling was that all tha | teams should go there to play. Man- | ager Arute feels differently about th: matter and he plans to play the| game in this city if a suitable hall can. be secured. i = | Too much credit cannot be given | the.Arute brothers because of their | sportemanship in this matter. They took over the New Britain team last | scason when things were not going any too well. They molded together an outfit that came through to win | the. championship of the second | halt of the league. The local quin- | tet, it is true, ran up against a team | that was better than it in the se- ries with Albany but that was no | tault of the local owners. ! This season, they plan to start| organizing their team with “Kid” | Williams and “Red” Donnelly as a nucleus. These two alone, a star in | the forward berth and an excep- tional star in the defens sector, | give New Britain a great start to- wards having another good team | this season. In view of the conditions here- abouts and of the insistence or the Arute brothers in keeping a team here, the sporting public of this city should be proud of the fact that New Britain has two men who are ling to take a long gamble in order that the sport might be kept alive here. We feel that if roiler hockey is played here again this vear, the Arute brothers will have no causc to complain because Wew Britain will keep on supporting the game as it has in the past. According to the best information avallable, the Lions club has aban- doned its plans for the formation of a corporation which will stage ama- teur hoxing bouts in this city. The formation of the corporation and the numerous details in connection with the opening of the program, have proved altogether {oo compli- cated. Then, too, times are too un- cerfain for such a venture, accord- ing to the opinion expressed ny a number of those who had contem- | plated becoming members of the corporation. / £ | Industrial basketball is scheduled | to get under way on November 18 with 10 teams seelng action. This should be onc of the most success. ful seasons in the history of the league. The first of the “Little Three” football games, the clash between Wesleyan and Amherst, scheduled to be played in Middletown Saturday, has been cancelled because of the infantile Iysis cpidemic ‘n ths Asylum This is the second game on s schedule can- celled becau of the disease. Am- herst officials requested ‘hat the game be cancelled. Whether the game will be played later has not been decided. The contest with the Connecticut Aggies will be played as & post-season affair. PRACTICE AERIALS Hanover, N. H, Oct. 21 (UP)— Forward passing, which gained Dartmouth two of its touchdowns in its impressive victory over Columbia last Saturday, was stressed in y terday's practice cession. Aarne ‘rigard, injured halfback, was in uniform, but may not play agzainst Harvard Sa g EARLY RECORD IS GOOD Since the advent of Carl Snavely as head coach four years ago, Bucknell university has gone through Ter first four football games each campaign without a defeat. ALL-CALIFORNTA GRID SQUAD Only one meniber of the Univer- sity of California. football squad comes from outside the state. He is Clarence Garrity, haifback, register- ed from Homedale, 1daho. Tiger Ca;t‘ain Leonard MecGirl, guard and center, is captain of the Universty of Mis- souri eleven this vear. He will lead the Tigers against a list of formi- dabla foes, including New York U., Colorado, Nebraska, Drake and | Kansas. Budnick Grail Pelton 118 20 G Bordni Schuster I Johnsen Pattison Salak Brinkowski Adams Senk Quenk mmons Kaminsky McConn Rawlings Maika Cabby Wilcox Staubley A. Johnson Dinda Merline Ginter 280 19— 309 583—1612 17— 318 11— 279 DIAMOND LEAGUE Braves W. Begay Kopec Perez Low Score Low Score DU Griswold Pepin Sagata Gaftney Larson Low Score Low Score Burnham Joe . Sartinsiy Casella H. Carlson L8 suss Peliettier Carlson Low Score Low score Keehnar Beloin Cully Hedenberg Robertson . Joe Lis3 Red John Liss Low Scoro Low Score 95 107 529 108 95 109 98 154 514 125 92 95 pIES 9t 532 121 104 90 93 97 & E. GIRLS' Strikes . Johnson . Brusick . Blserig Bracke: Scanlon Yurkunas MeGuire . Johnson Larson . Spring Jteckert M A nderson M. Iindelin Low Score Door Che M. Kuehn . Cullen . Maerz . Casey . Antowski McKnirney Kochal Johnson Lorenson Holteld, Fitzgecald Apeigren Escutcheo . Drackenberg . Anderson . Yurkunas . Kilbourne STANLEY WORKS G Globes P. Truslow C. Humason A. Jurgen Low Score B. McClelan A. Stingle G Wood J. Clem =53 cks 284 ony 52 83 94 St 326 IRLS 74 95 98 310 96— 258 107— 321 530—1558 95— 126— 16— 134— 294 13— 312 106— 315 75— 141 64— 141 72— 153 211—= 435 76— 133 85— 177 69— 143 200— 458 62— 131 88— 179 306— 590 59— 141 100— 183 85— 179 100~ 197 374— 700 LEAGUE 308— 618 HE PLAYS AND TEACHES , the Chicago Francis McElligott, pepper-box who quarterbacks quette university's football Mar- eleven, also is a~ instructor in journalism in the university. A FAMILY MAN, TOO Nollie IPelts, sophomore fullback- ing sensation at Tulane university, is married and has a two year old son. Telts is a triple-threat back and weighs over 150 pounds. LIGHT SCR Cambridge, Ma. The Harvard, varsity IMAGE Oct. 21 (UP)— and freshman teams engaged in-a light scrimmage yesterday. Ben Ticknor, Vic Hard- ing and Jack Crickard, who played the entire game against Army, were on leave of absence. fled hunters, reported lost. e —— WIDGET PUT 0UT OF MIDGET GOLF Lack of Private Putter Ousts Him From Prize Tourney Chattanooga, Tenn., Oct. 21 (UP) —Midget golf game for | midgets, competitors in the nationa! pee wee golf tournament decided as they prepared for sccond round play today. First round play resulted in the climination of the only rcal “Tom Thumb” entry—Herbert Barnett. who stands 45 inches high in his shoes and weighs 50 pounds. Barnett came from Greensboro, N. C., to try his Juck with the ama- teurs and professionals from all over the country on the Fairyland minia. ture golf course on Lookout Moun- tain, but he forgot to bring along Lis private putter. Barnett had to be content with a | regulation putter and it proved his undoing. Whenever he stepped up to drive the ball all of ten yards to the green the handle of his club got tangled up in his necktie or bump- ed into his chin, with the result that he took $5 strokes to make the 18 holes, 25 above the qualifying mark. J. K. Scott, Jacksonville, Fla., and Mrs. Murray Raney, Chattanooga, {led the men's and women's divisions rvespectively at the end of the first round. Scott had a 53 and Mrs. Raney a 58 on the dar 56 course. Twelve players scored holes-in- one. The winner will get $2,000 and the runner-up $1,000. A total of 1151 players remain in the tourna- They will play 36 holes to- and 18 holes in the final round temorrow. Among the leading scorers in the first round were: R. H. Skinner, Boston, Ernest Fossa, Boston, 59. is not a 57, and GRID TRIPS VIA BUS Travel: in the school's own mo- tor buses, the largest Oklahoma A. &nd M. football squad in history re- cently completed a trip of more than 2,000 miles in the middle west, during which they played the uni- versities of Towa and Indiana. They were gone two weeks, but daily classes were conducted by instruc- tors who accompanied the team, MORAL: DON'T FUMBLE Although Yale was victorious by a score of 40 to 13, the Bulldogs were unable to stop Maryland's at- tack once in their game recently. One penalty and a series of costly fumbles halted the Old Liners every timz except on the occasions that they scored. TECH CAPT. John Dreshar, brilliant guard NS APPOINTED Carnegie Tech’ and twice captain of the eleven, is the first football lead- er in Plaid history to be appointed. Howard Harpster, All-America quar terback in 1928, was the last clected captain. Defensive Star Georgetown University's initial vie- tory of the season was due largely to the splendid defensive play of Bill Morris, above, captain and cen- ter of the eleven coached by Tommy Mills. Morris was a’ démon on the defensive late in the game when Mt. St. Mary’s made a determined bid. Georgetown won, 14 to 6. By NEA Service : Tuscaloosa, Ala., Oct. 21—Jack of all trades, yet master of them all, is the way they describc Henry G. | Crisp, the one-handed coach and two-fisted fighter, who becomes di- rector of athletics at the University | of Alabama in 1931, succeeding Wal- {lace Wade. | A handicap that would have dis- | couraged almost any hoy seeking national prominence as an athlete and coach only spurred “Hustling Hank,” his nickname on the Crimson campus, to greater efforts. A story of his perseverance and will-to-win | goes back 27 years, an incident trivial at the time, when Crisp was | only five years old | Henry and brother Lewis. seven, | were playing with some Civil war | cannon balls in front of their fath- er's store in Ialkland, N. C. Soon | they were in competition to ec who | could tbrow them the greater dis- | | tance. An uncle, watching their ef- forts, marked a line 10 feet from | where they were throwing, and of-| fered a quarter to the onc tossin, the iron ball past it | The struggle that followed was in | vain and soon their thoughts turned | to other pastimes. Within half an hour, however, Henry was back. Picking up the nearest cannon ball, he let loose to mighty heave with every ounce of muscle in his five year old frame. He collected the quarter. . Crisp was 13 when his right hand was cut off at the wrist while help- ing his father fill the silo. Suffering great pain, the lad was put to bed, but the next morning, pain or no pain, he was out of doors learning to throw left handed. Trollowing a splendid record both as a - athlete and scholar at Black- | stone Military academy, Crisp enroll- ed at Hampden-Sidney college. His first football game was against Vir- ginia Military Institute. Following the game, the V. M. I. coach ap- proached Coach Bernier of Hamp- den-Sidney with this joking query: “Why don’t you cut one hand off all your players?"” Two years at Hampden-Sndney and young Crisp followed Coach Bernier to Virginia Poly, where he . . HENRY G. CRISP would have little chance of get- ting out if he fell in any of the large bogs in the region. Guiding their steps with flash- lights and huge flarc torches, farmers led by state poli wrehed throughout the night report has been received of a dis- abled airplanc landing in the vi- cinity. CITY COURT GIVES $3333 JUDGHENT ‘Lease on Property in Norwic | Tnvolved in Litigation i | Judgment for § 34 was given in favor of IR. C. Plaut and others of Norwich against Peter Gianaris of | this city in city court yesterday aft- !ernoon. Gianaris, who is president of the Central Lunch Corp., is said to have rented the first and second floors of 2 Main street block in Nor- |wich on a five year lease basis in 1926 but failed to pay the first cight months' rent The annual rental was $5.000. The judgment, given by Judge Morris D. Saxe, represented the full amount {of the cight months' rental price. Damage done to a truck in an ac- cident at the intersection of Main {and Chestnut streets several months ago was the basis of a city court ac- tion heard yesterday afternoon. Judge Saxe gave judgment for $75 against Adele Corello, owner, and Dominick Monico, driver, both of | Bristol and in favor of Joseph Ar- [bour & Son Co. Attorney Edward A. represented the plaintiff. | ny Burner corporation was given a judgment for $350 against Aleide J. Dary for a balance du_ on a burner sold the defendant. Kirkham, Cooper. Hungerford & Camp represent the plaintift. Judge Traceski gave a judgment for $353.15 for Paul Sutula against Peter DeNuzze. It was claimed that mone; was due on a note. Attorney B. J. Monkiewicz represented the plaintiff. outficld. Crisp drew his diploma from V. P. L in 1920 but returned there in the fall to work,for his master of arts degree. In January of 1921, Bernier took the athletic director's post at Alabama and his first act v.s to sign Crisp as his assistant. PR ‘Husiling Hank" campus has been has tutored fresh- alike in all Such Alabama Grant Gillis, Mack Brown The success of on the Alabama phenomenal. men and varsity branches of sport 's of the past as ‘upe Per Johnny and Lumy Smith were his pupils. Alabama students like Crisp be- | cause he likes them. Fans and sports lovers all over Dixic admire his frankness, courage, honesty and in- tegrity. He is never too busy to help a fellow. In every one of his “boys” he shows a personal interest. ROSENBLOOM FAYORED VIOTORY STRING 1S SNAPPED Irom mid-season in 1928 until |they encountered the Northwestern | university Wildcats recently, Tu- Jane university’s Green Wave swept everything before it. Fifteen con- Newark in Bout Tomorrow. | secutive games were won following |the loss to Georgiaiin 1928, OUT OUR WAY Light Heavyweight Champion Given Wide Edge Over Abic Bain of Rosenbloom’s defense of his light heavyweight championship against Abie Bain of Newark in Madison Square Garden tomorrow night ap- parently serves as excellent proof of the scarcity of first class 175 pound- ers at the present time. Dain is a fair workman, but he does not appear fo have a chance |against Rosenbloom. a canny vet- |eran who has slapped and roughed | his way to victory over most of the 'good light heavyweights in the last two or three years. The Bain-Rosenbloom bout is over {the championship route of 15 |rounds. Joe Scalfaro, New York bantam, tackles Pete Sanstol of Nor- v in the 10 round semi-final. In the opening ten, Willard Dix, of Bellingham, Wash., meets Bob Olin, New York heavyweight | GETS TWO PITCHERS starred four years on Gobbler elevens as a fackler and fullback I'rom his backfield position he call- ed signals and ran the ball. In the line he was the leader of the fense, s e e may still recall the “nubbing” Crisp gave them a trick of stiff-arming with his handless right arm. There was one game in which the referec halted play to examine the handage({‘ “nub” when opponents complained that Crisp must be using lead or some other hard substance under the bandage. Iootball didn't take young Carolinian’s time moleskins were stored s Thanksgiving he ketball togg Two of the three years he played on the varsity, V. P. L captured conference titles. Tn track he participated in the sprints and high jump. He even played one year of professional bagcball, draw- ing his salary principally because the fans thrilled at the way he coached on the base lines, to batters in practice and knocked fly balls to the far corners of the the his all of When de- | Opponents of V. P. I in those days | pitched | Szn Prancizco Clu’) Announces That Bill Herderson and Sam Gibson I'ave Been Signed. San Francigeo, Oct. 21 (P—Acqui- tion of two right handed pitchers from the New York Yankees, in connection with the deal that will send Frankie Crosetti, Seal short- stop, to the Yanks in 1832, was an- nounced today by Secretary George A. Putnam of the San Francisco club. The twirlers are Rill Hender- n. who finished the season with Cakland, and Sam Gibson, who ayed with Toronto of the Interna- tional League this year. Putnam said the Is more player coming the Crosetti whieh involved mately §100,000 in players | cash. had one deal for pproxi- and | WHAT FLAVOR. PLEASE | Less than five years ago. Al Sing- er, present lightweight boxing cham- pion of the world, was a soda jerker dishing them out across the count- er for a reported wage of three cents a drink. points during the week. With B!ilX‘ | two more weeks to go the standings | |are as follow Newton Whittemore, | 6 points: Harold Heckman, Radjunas, Francis Crowley ton Dixon and Wilfred Petit, 4; Al- bert Ogle, John Mack. and Harold Jurgen Harry Sandstrom, Ranal- do Anselmo, Hubert Essell, Howard | Reckert, Sigfrid Schreiner, Curtis | Hartman. William Souney, David| | Yankowitz, Willard Dolan, and | | Aaron Kirschnit, 2; George Rostein, | | Howard Johnson, Jack Boardman, | Joseph Huber, Frank Huber, George | | Cottrell, Oscar Hall, Henry Little- | john, William Franks, Aden Maben, | William Mack, James Meligonis. Wil- [liam Steed. Raymond Mahan, Myron | Dorfman, Frank Oparowski, Vanner | Anderson, Raymond Green, Henry | Deminski. Italo Recano, Alvar John- | | son, William Brown, Arnold Carl-| | son. Edward Smith, Carl Peterson, John Minas, Russell Peterson, Vic- | tor Bakanas. aand William Davis, 1. Club Meetings Another new club will be begun this week under the leadership of Bernard Wosilus. It will be for boys who arc interested in doing leather | work. The first meeting will be| held on Thursday evening at 7:30 | o'clock in the handicraft shop. Other meetings which will be held | in the boys' department during the | | weel are: Tuesday, Boy Bootblacks' club, 7 p. m.; Stamp club, 7:15 p. | m.; Junior Leaders' council, 8:15 p. m. Tuesday afternoon the two| Friendly Indian clubs will meet at 4:15 o'clock. On Friday there will be two meet- ings. Scout troop No. 12 will meet at 7 o'clock. The members of the Baptist Boys' club will meet at 6| o'clock for a period on the gym, and 1 at 7 o'clock will hold their club | meeting. Halloween Party rst of a series of Halloween parties for the members of the boys' department will be held on Friday cvening for the younger members | who are in the Junior "A" class. The | party will begin at 7:30 and will be held in the banquet hall. The members of Junior Leaders’ coun- cil arc arranging the program. A; prize will be given to the boy wear- ing the most popular costume. Last Saturday two groups of hik-| ers left the Y. M. C. A. and spent part of the day in the woods. The | first group left about 10 o'clock in the morning with “Bernie” Wosilu the assistant boys' work secretary They went in the woods past the | northwestern section of the eity | where they had luncheon and several | managed ‘to secure materials for | | making Indian tomahawks. Thosc | | who went were all members of the | Friendly Indians: Sigfrid Scheiner, | The | more difficult of eradication | cific thing. today was provin; tha' ary congestion, had been expected. As M. Briand began confinement to his fourtis his apart |ments in the Quay D'Orsay uneas ness was cxpressed in political cir cles over his ability to face th scheduled interpellation of the Tur dieu government's foreign policy 2 the opening of parliament Nov. ¢ The foreign minister, taken ill upo his return from Geneva Oct. 1, § spending most of his time in bec arising only for a few hours daily TROJAN JESSES NOW COACHES Jesse Hill and Jesse Mortenser former University of Southern Call fornia stars in football, basketbal! baseball and track, are co-coache of football at Riverside Junior col lege this year. Hill also is heat football coach while Mortensen ha compl‘tc charge of basketball, PIECE WORK HALFBACK Paul Snow, Texas Christian uni versity halfback, got the nicknam of “One-Play Snow” because Coac Francis Schmidt put him inte fiv. game last year to do just one spe After his duty had bee: filled, Schmidt removed Snow fron the game. INTEREST IS STILL THER! Stanford university's entire issu of 2,200 scason ticket books was sol: this year several weeks before th first football game of the season Th~ number was 400 more than eve. have been sold before at the Card inal school. SEVEN GIRLS DIE OF BURNS Pressburg, Czechoslovakia, Oc! |21 (M—Seven young girls have die from internal injuries and burn: {caused by an explosion in a cartridg factory. A percussion cap burst ar got fire to gunpowder phosphorus. EED MONEY to Pay BELLS Use our easy, dignified. cash on ecredit plan. Quick—Confidential legal rates. only 3%% per month. Mutual Industrial Service 141 Main — Over Ashle)’s Dally 8:30 o 6 SToP T LooKS LIKE TR TRAL'S CANED TS POSSIBLE WE MAY HAFTUH TURN AROUND AN' GO N UP AHEAD. SALESMAN SAM [G€EE ,BUT You WERE LUCKY TONIGHT AT POKER, ruz2! 23 K QUEENS! OKER. ARLORS VLl sav! BUT ('LLBE OLTA LUCK (F TH WIEE EVER KNOWS | GOT THIS tMucH MONEY ON Me! ¢ WIEEY GETS SoMe NEW clLoThes! Hey, Here ! HaT BELONGS To Me! e By WILLIAME \ JRWILLAMS SuPA] CANVON 1 01930 BY NEA SERVICE. WC.

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