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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1930. ! . 3 i — NEW BR lTA:lN RAMS TO MEET NEW HAVEN TRIANGLES IN RETURN GAME IN THIS CITY SUNDAY AFTERNOON — HIGH SCHOOL TEAM HOLDS FINAL SCRIMMAGE SESSION BEFORE BEFORE BATTLE WITH BRIDGEPORT TOMORROW AFTERNOON NEW BRITAIN RAMS WILL PLAY NEW HAVEN SUNDAY Local Professional Football Team to Meet Elm City | Crew in Return Game at Willow Brook Park— Visitors Claim Lucky Break Gave Hardware City Eleven Victory Two Weeks Ago—*“Pee Wee” Wer- wais Boasting That Triangles Will Stop Radzie- wicz—Players in Good Shape. Claiming that the LT i e e S AT | Five Year ( scored by the New Britain Rams in‘L Here | the game in New Haven two weeks ago, was nothing but a break” and “fluke Haven Triangles are coming o t city next Sunday afternoon secking revenge and confident that they will get it. New Britain took the Elm City eleven into camp two weeks ago in New Haven when Radzie- wicz, Torrington flash, caught a long forward pass on the 20 yard line and was pushed outside on the four vard stripe. w Britain went over with Radziewicz carrying the ball in the next four downs. w Haven's claim of a “fluke” | resulted from the fact that a penalty | of half the distance to the goal line 1 | was meted out to New Haven for o on New Britain's | down. The locals failed tfo sc the touchdown on the play but went p | over on the next maneuver. | “Pee Wee” Werwais who | for several years with New pe> football teams visited in this city the other day and he was loud in hiz boasting that the New Haven- L played Britain BRYC LONG W Britain I was the 1 take, Long w backs s of t During his Long proved to | eatest organizers of connected with the council He s as secretary of that organiz He has attained a high de- popularity in this city and of fricnds hoy th here will be TRADITION HOLDS GAIES SATURDAY Anciznt Rivals to Clash on Grid- iron in Aonual Battles | like 5 no- serv- complete is city Y. Mr. the ver to b it tary of th e secre- wais put it aNew Haven is coming @y with its lineup intact me. The team is t der the name of the ®e New Britain defea dhe suffered so sfrengthened by a stone wall line, the team has a number of crack Imcks who are both experienced and fast. <Jones is the speedy and a good field general Bruehl, former Hartford star, d McLean, Georgetown luminary a few seasons ago, are the halfbacks. | Druehl is a good ball carrier, can pint to perfection and throws ac- curate forward McLean is a star on any foothall field. . Iitz- | ghrald. one of the two brothers who starred against New Britain in the first game, will be at the full- Iack position New Britain will start smme lineup that began the first g@me. Conley and Politis will | o8 the wings with Carnella and Be A5 at the tackl ubby” Be- loin and George Smithwick will form their usual strong defense guards while Roger Scully in eenter. “Doc” Bautt will direct the team from quarterback with Belonki and Miskl at the halves and Radziewicz at fullback The kickoff will 0 o'clock A e has for veling ang Sun- th un- s and is the only his scason here, 1 of Industri tion gree ndefinite quarterback. He | | | | a pass: | | | with the New York. Saturda; 1l goc part of the s Oct 25 P games, castern ly into that| azon in which tradition holds a large portion of the interest in the games. Nearly ¢ clash has behind it long ye: other “big” games. with the vard-Dartmouth rivalry the ancient Saturday’s game will he the 37th struggle between the Crimson and | Green. So far Harvard has won to Dartmouth's ord has no bearing With | every will be o Har- most take place at i but the games that r seven, on BAN ON PLAY BY PLAY NEWS HAS BEEN LIFTED Committec in Charge of South Caro- Hna-Clemson although from both ous injuries. game, a current camps I “be stories proclaim mumer- ard has lost one ion 10 Army, while Dartmouth did not get a real test in running up a 52-0 count against Columbia. i Yale and Army which meet in Yale bowl started their series eleven vears after Harvard and Dartmouth, | in 1863, but it now ranks higher in the year's The powerful Army aggre may go on to championship honors of some kind | it it can pass Albie Booth and a strong Yale line Princeton and lonz Football Game Rescinds Its Orde Columbia, After starting an argument that drew remarks from the governor newspaper publishers and a score of sports editors, the committer in charge of foday's South Carolina- Clemson fgotball rescinded han placed on by-pla accounts and annual contest ate supported The committee Lad refus low press associations into the ficld and to allow v of the game to be broadcast placed on bulletin boards. Only wire, that of a telegraph compar was o have been allowed in the press box. under the i that was to have been used only carrying period scores. Details v to be released at the cnd game. : Dr. R. K. Foster, director of dent affairs at South irolina protests filed with ards, officials of the the athletic commit publishers and sporis ed the lifting of the bun Although every seat in t stadium of sold since in charge broadeast the grounds would ecausc dance at the 8. C., Oct » - 1 pla ro: sehoc L alzo ¥ are ri- and with both ms sl of improvement s bad starts they may produce yattle. Other rivalries on ridiron ich o the nineties or before Toly Cross gan i<hington and night struggle at Atlantic tysburg-Bucknell and Wesleyan Fordh e liron news the Als of stan casting n of T [ card date City, a Amherst- T York among hoth and A Univer- the and New numbered ient but d enr hip 2 of not an teams com thi impion rations. plents d inj of the of crow b roipeet iovernor Rtich t ools ani im terse 1 completely bounded Notre Danme gle Two candidates for sched- by by The day’s i clion pt vriters promy ttst st burgh recognition their argument in this Rocknemen Methodist, 18 stron, woode has been are st 1t d its ba ounts of that mmitte r nd Carnegic heir cos ] Southern ho orious pitt predictions FIGHTS LAST NIGHT v the As 4 New York world's light opped Abic 1), title outpointed Wil Wash., (1 P and Joe Scalfiro (10). nother CANNOT FOLLOW TEAM iniportant Wesleyan Student Body Must Re- main At Home Saturday When Barcelona Brown, N Pleven ones, Spain Battles Amherst Wic corld's linocked Angeles, ( Indtanapol Chicago, outpointed Loufsville. (%) I San Francisco, (10). ki hody Middlitow pread, | club able: boom |tribution to | Shamrock's designer. led | university, | none ling games, haven't scrimmaged through a scheduls game NEW RULES MADE FOR YACHT RACE Mechanical Devices Must Be Done Away With in Future h and orities #—B aun London. Oct s American yacht racing have agreed do away with the the to “mechani yacht, which came n- to America’s cup, fame i recent races for the in future interna- tional contests After a serics of which Norman Clark Neill and B. Heckstall-Smith, British representa- tives, met first with New York Yacht representatives then with the council of the British Yacht Racing association, the council yesterday voted to adopt L modifi New York Yacht club's rule rat- racing vachts of above 14 in length modification provides which inc p contenders. st weighing le bare, that standir shall not b up nor low the upper deck. and that the chts shall be fitted “reason- living accommodations. climinates many the ingenious but expen devie: used by the cup denfender nter prise in its recent triumph over Sir| Thomas Lipton's Shamrock V. The light and efficient duraluminum mast and the various below-decks vices for handling the hal- rds and backstays come under this ban, but the winch for hoisting the heavy and the unique Enterprise W the greatest con- | g engineering in Charles Nicholson, conferences in that all must car- The s J vac Americ ryoam pounds ast rigging set orked be- with This change of | ve sheets, mainsails with which quipped, called by v yea ations | FISTIC FINANCE ATLOWEST EBB Boxing as a Business I5 Back Where Tex Rickard Found It New York, Oct. 23 (UP)—A cycle started on OUT AFTER DIXIE TITLE | i | of fistic finance, which the upswing through ihe genius of ex Rickard, reached “tops” in the | 'Tunney-Dempsey days, and descend- {ed with a rush through the Sharl |and Schmeling fiascos, now is com- | plcte. back found dollar | Boxing, as a business, is |\where it was wrken Rickard it and envisioned his million gates. The petty racketeers who profit- hugely in the days of big guaran- tees and little fighting no longer puff their fifty cent cigars with their feet on the tables in million- |aires’ offices. The millionaires, be- ing business men. are ers—now that the association |longer is profitable. | Madison Square Garden has an- |nounced o more big guarantecs {for fighters.”” The boys, that is, must work on a percentage. |ously this is fair and business-like, |although it's taking some of tI worst offenders a little time to get used to the idea. BILL SCHWARTZ {ers did not originate with Tex Ri ard, but under him the reached its peak. Finally, it near- |1y broke him. It was Tex's idea always to have a string to his fighters. Thus, when 111u‘|\ Dempsey signed to defend his |title against Gene Tunney, for the |largest guarantec ever given a box er, Rickard also had it BENNY PARKER] iny will be allow- | The ne effect January 1 a ply with it in the rules goes info nd all yach! 195 MEEHAN DECRIES FARLY INJURIES N. Y. U. Goach Says Players Try Too Hard Against Big Teams (Pr—Chick | head coach New York an't for the big football teams will but big teams and the fellows will stay in their own clas The boys try too hard agaln major opponents in son and they're not ready : “They'renot in condition for gruel- learned enough. at Harvard, day out B ng from | another. t New Mechan York, Oct when ag rly T he s Look thir sufle hurt the still ey get th in- ason and jurie “It would take two teams to push | of all major | 1d there's not enough in- centive for the second eleven. 1 do 1930 clash. Both have good materlal { ¢hink, though. that there is a future for 150 pound teams.” Chick believes that the been forced to give round west and south in the matt football supremacy, because multitude of colleges castern material comy less numerous universi west. Why there three major col- leges in New York city alone, N. Y. | U.. Columbia and Fordhani, and within the city limits there are four ofhers. Philadelphia has Penn, Vil- lanova, Temple, Swarthmore and Drexel within hailing Out west the universities sometimes hundre ¥, cast has the of the the the the to o sharing red fo in are distance are scattered, of miles o st part A § you ean luntic coxst in an breakfast another and from Maine to IFlorida. to death that wn (e antomohile have 1t it one coller at o You'd starve the Pacific dinner trying GAME BROADGASTS A I"oothal tobe on 1 broadeasts &, as follows ern Standard Throughout) NBC Chain 45 p. m—Army v WHAM, WLW, KWK WELA, WSUN, WSM WOAI, KOA, KGO, (announcer Graham 1:45 p. m.—Dartmouth d—WEAF, WEEIL WTIC, WTAG, 'SH. WLIT, WGY, WGR, WCAE M. WOW, WOC—(announc lay) Mur CBS Chain Notre WARC WAL WHI WA turday 1re WIZ KSTT WM, WSMB, KECA, KOMO MeNamee ). Har- Bill Dt WX W3XAL WIAS WK It M, WSPD, WTAL WDBJ. WBR WILAC I, KFPY, WXYZ, (announcer, Ted Husing) Among broad by il by p. m WNAC 1 Pitt WEAN WCAO WL WAL WW N WDOD, KOIL N ndividual 1 vard 45 Dartriouth H WBIS Mi \ Ar- KJR, KR renee went rbilt thra h Minn has for the title promotion, Tunney did win, and guaranteed approximately a quarter of a million dollars for a return bout. Dempsey, of course, had to have another guarantee for his |share, and altogether Tex was |hock for nearly $1,000,000 before {the bout in Chicago in 1927. | bout went over the top, with a rec ord gate of $2,650,000, so everything was all right. Then came the downward turn. Tunney, after defeating Dempsey a econd time, promptly demanded n even larger guarantee for his next defense of the heavyweight championship. Rickard gave it; and was obligated to pay Gene nearly $500,000 regardless of the opponent The opponent proved McGugin, in 27U should be under Tex" favorite in over Minnesota. two of the most Coach Dan named his vear at Vanderbilt, produced the Southern conference race following a’ Renny rker, quarterback, and Bill brilliant Commodore BAIN NO MATCH FOR ROSENBLOOM Title Fights at Popular Price Fail to Draw Crowds team L vietory then was hwartz, are N P — getting ashville, Tenn., southern Iz tougher and toughe Robby Jones is one Uncle Dan McGugin, foothall coach to beat Oct. 23 ers are them. And hardest | Dinie, s | of the in Unele son at Tth sea- notice that | wdy to start Dan Vanderbilt, his Commodores a great drive for the Southern Con- ference title when he sent them out | to crush Minnesota : ! Power dozen | sophomore and substi- | tute back helped hand the Gophe g since Michi to 0 score fn 152 Red-headed Johnny Askew, servi ior New expe. York. Ocf (P—The first ment with chamuionship fights |and the gate. t “popular” prices in Madison [to be Tom Heeney and the gate e G shown that the |considerably less than Tunney's who | innovation is far from popular, |Euarantee, Madison Square Garden scored four touchdowns st the junless the contenders can show [taking it on the chin. e B e e (o AT i | Even with that lesson in ming, ophomores include 200-pound Char- | Bain, a Newark, N. J., youngéter | ¢ NeW 8roup at the head of Madi- lie feydendecker, tackle; Marion | who has had little experience among |07 Sauare Garden, successors to Talley and Jim Beasley, guards; |the light heavyweights, proved only‘“‘f' late Rickard, continued th» and Sclman “Good” Fortunc, full-|a chopping block for Maxie Rosen- |Practice of giving exorbitant guar- back, all in the ting lincup | bloom, the light heavyweight cham- |2N1eCs to the second raters who against Minnesota. A sixth sopho- |pion. last night and Maxie “defend- |2Me Aalong after Tunney's retire- more with punch is Allen Berry, [ed” his title by scoring a technical \"“;‘f," actainnheygalnays tated suard o ‘mu;u:mm in the 1ith round of a i\l,,"n‘il?";":‘l'r'::;,'l':g;"‘:d ;:’:Prsfii_';'s he 'S are oldovers du b ) S Le The o s Ee ey G S |suaraniecd more. than they sver N o yen with the prices scaled down |could draw in at the gate, and so Seva ere el ls cost Jesslihe system collapsed with consider- Shine o six dolla only 4,400 of the’laple loss to Madison Square Garden. fight faithful turned out and con- now has decl its pound punter, ate made-over tributed some $12,000 to the gate. ot Glized diselt and Seheffer a former halfback L i Alea ol And many of them left the arena | e all exsfiillbac before the bout s cer- The backficld packs a lot of punch ound to its cer-| TO E tain finish. with Benny Parker, quarterback Rosenbloom who flipped three touchdown passes ark young: against Minnesota, the key = Benny's not a brilliant runner he smart field general, blocker and a dangerous Red Leonzrd and with Askew and Fortune, the scoring puneh. he man behind est threat of all. ors with Pop Stage of Ficlding Yost of Mict esseans | beat- al n has other regu 10298 ling. ends, Bill Sch Joe 00 Captain which cried backs, and z T SATURDAY Syracuse, N. Y., Oct. IRy =— pan feticlassed | tistied with the racuse of- qrk youngster completely from the | fense, Coach Vic Hanson plans to do irst round. but it was not until a|considerable experimental work in minute and 47 se of the 11th | Saturday |weary round had passed that a cut |in the hope that a real fullback may over Bain's left eye, opened in the | he uncovered for the coming games third frame, grew serious enough to ! \ith Brown, Penn State, Colgate i Referee Lou Magnolia 1o halt | and Columbia. the unequal conte: Bain showed | The line which nothing that might make him a title contender except i the second 4nd round when a couple of clouts to Ltosenbloom’s hody hurt the cham- outclassed the New- |y man but wood passe Thot supply ) Jesse s, the team s the played on even hon Sharing | remain intact, but the backfield lated for a thorough overgoing. is game with St. Lawrence, | thoroughly { © &1 {tired of the conniving fight manag- | cruiting no | forth I Obvi. | Columbia, Mo. ‘lr:n\ The idea of guarantecs for fight- |Versity of Kansas | | | | ,in his column in the Topeka Daily | arrange 1 | vestigation, Edmonds says, follows a [that if Tunney won, the next fight |protest made by Prof. W. A. Tarr, | Missouri's terms with Pittsburgh last week will tionably has no place in the rules {ence rule concerning recruiting, and That | we are protesting his eligibility to |ing {amount T am paying Bausch. | cials e e el ROGERS RECREATION FIV CONTINUES WINNING WAYS New Britain Bowlers Take Two Matches Out of Threg From Wallingford Casino Quintet — Joe Tronos}u Hits 419 for High Three Strings—Russell of Visit- ing Team Hits High Sin, 165—Local Crew Is Le: Averages. CHARGES FLARE UP | INBIG 51X RACE Make Investigation Into Claim of Player Subsidization Kansas City, Oct. 23 (#—Rumors of an investigation into alleged re- subsidization flared Big Six Conference represent- and on the today as faculty the circuit prepare to meeting at | front atives of cave for a week-end While lacking, circumstances er of Big official information was reports were current that surrounding the Jim Bausch, ‘Uni- backfield star, from the University of Wichita, would be taken up by the faculty representatives. Leslie kEdmonds, Kansas sports official and Wichita business man, Capital today says that the eligi- bility of Bausch is marked for con- sideration at the conference. The in- representative on the | faculty committee. Professor Tarr is| quoted in a letter to Walter Henroin. former chairman of the University of Wichita athletic committee, as saying that the “University of Mis- souri feels that Mr. Bausch went to Kansas in violation of our Confer- mpete on both a basts of his hav- been recruited and receiving money to play. E. H. Lupton, jr. president of a Topeka insurance firm which em- ploys Bausch, today was quoted by the Kansas City Star as saying that the K. U. star was paid $75 a month as an advance against his commissions, the arrangement to be offective as long as Bausca remains in school. “I may say also,” the newspaper quoted Mr. Lupton, “that T am pay- ing a football player at the Kansas| State Agricultural college the same The Kansas Aggie boy is specializing in dry farming and upon graduation is to become manager of a farm own- ed by me and my brother.” Mr. Lupton declined to reveal the name of the K. 8. A, C. player and added that he was alding two non- athletes, one a student at Michigan and the other at an eastern medi- cal school. 'The insurance company president said Professor Tarr visited him last Tuesday. University of Kansas athletic offi- apparently were unperturbed by the reports Favors Abolition of Sacrifice Fly Rule Chicago, Oct. 23 (®—Thomas Jef- ferson Hickey, president of the American Association, today joined President Ernest 8. Barnard of the American League in the movement to rid the scoring rules of the sacri- fice fly. he sacrifice fly unques- and 1 am in favor of its elimination once,” President Hickey said. gle String of Evening With ading the State for Team Like the onrushing tide, the Ro- gers Recreation Bowling team con- tinued its winning streak last night when it took the Wallingford Ca- sino team into camp again, this time on its home alleys. The New Britain crew took two out of the three games rolled in the state league match. Joe Tronoski, lead off man for ths home club, hit a total of 419 to chalk up the high mark for three strings but Russell, lead off man for Wallingford, copped single string honors when he hit 165 in the last game of the night. New Britain leads all other teams in the Connecticut State Duckpin Bowling League in team averages. Nick Tronoski has a mark of .123, Gacek holds a mark of .121. J. Tron- oski has belted the timbers to the tune of .120. J. Kloss has chalked up .119 while “Uncle Joe” Foote has .118. The team has a grand aver- age of .601. New Britain so far in the league, has won 19 games and has lost 11. Seven of these losses came despite the fact that the New Britain team rolled over 600 in the strings. When any team is rolling 600, the other team must be even better than that to win and this is feature bowling in every respect. The scores of last night's games were as follows: Wallingford Casino 21 113 3 108 Biis Y 2100 96 131 110 Russell Crebase Hitcheock Rosenthall Crean 631 Rogers, New . Tronoski 137 Foote 113 . Kioss .107 N. Tronoski 19 . Gacek 132 Britain 138 132 126 128 120 607 644 G40—1501 STRIBLING-CHRISTNER Macon, Ga., Battler Start; Another Campaign Towards Heavyweight Title in Bout Tonight. Newark, N. J., Oct. 23 (A—Wil- liam L. (Young) Stribling, the Ma- con, Ga. battler, considered by many boxing experts as the leading American contender for the heavy- weight title, starts another campaign dirccted towards a title bout tonight when he tests his newly discovered knockout punch on the durable chin of Meyer (K. 0.) Christner of Ak- ron, O. It is Stribling's first bout since his return from England, where he scored a sensational knockout victory over Phil Scott. Stribiling, long known as a boxer without a punch, has displayed a real wallop in his recent battles, knocking out Otto Von Porat in Chicago and then Scott. Although Christner has slipped back some- what since he leaped into the lime- | l'ght a few years ago he still has censiderable 1bility to take punish- ment and a dangerous right hand wallop in the bargain. The Atlantan may get a test of hiy punch in this bout and if he can score the quick knockout that fans expect of him it will be considered ample proof that the wallop 18 there. Stribling also has signed foe a fight in Boston October 31 but after that he is expected to wait for the prospective winter battle in Miami, Fla.. which the Madison Square Garden hopes to stage. pion a little, | Rosenbloom. very good | pounds : M it Va Michi in b he poken U nele fime ccords apparently outh from H condition. weighed 1d Bain 171 | Pete Sanstol, Norw weight, and Joe York, fought a und 2 Giin New York reins at | over Willard Dix Wash., in another not 174 dy sinee n Vin 1 Kindly, soft his boy mong the + big brother Dan™ ranks I lawyers of Ten. but takes fime off financial loss to handle the Vanderbilt Like his an bantam- Ifaro of New 10 round draw. Bob light heavy, won of Bellingham, 10 rounder. Pop Stagz. he ought out by play — they for 1a1g DANIELS V8. RiSko s Cleveland cars TORS (UP) Jock the Pittshurgh | WiLL Avom sp | Pittsburgh, Oct. 2 intherland, coach of Panthers after today's practice will spirit s team away to some lone- Jme spot o remain in solitary con- fincment until time for the Notre Dame game on Saturday. The Pan- | thers have given spectators the cold shoulder all week, a reinforced squad of student managers guarding cvery inch of ground within half a mile of the practice field to see that no visitors watched the squad work. : Main Bout o Boston Garden Card Tenight. Boston, O« Minneapol a Dick Danicls, seems o tough the ke @ practic USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS oxing assignt 2 ouT (W John Risko of tin the Boston @R a0 21 “My best time yet at golf, John!” STANLEY ARENA CHURCH STREE TONIGHT HARTIORD GIRLS —vss NEW BRITAIN maki ttler, Daniels ing 1 goes into 1 old while Min tands pounds. ind broke into the the 1 three years tall in his o has put gam L student at ity H nesota t i 1 un GIRLS TERAN GUARD OUT Point, N ) il MIEIN BRISTOL — BRITAIN M on NEW N vill ot b turd Hillsin igainst d o in an out of the Harvard His pla will taken by Harley Trice, nounce Champlonship Trophy Glvea by City Champ ‘Tonight—9:30 Cocoa Cola A | probubly Saturda pUR BOARDING HOUSE w Nou SAY -THIS MYSTERIOUS NEW BOARDER DOESAT GO OUT OF THE HouSE BEFORE TEM AT MIGHT o -~ AND HE HAS A NERVOUS HABIT oF PEERING ouT THE WINDOW ,T6 SEE (F ARYONE 1S SHADOWING HiM OUTSIDE 2 o HM-m ~~ VERY MELL ! [ HAVE ASKED "SNUFFY “FAGAM, oF THE OWLS CLUB,To sTAND FROUT OF HERE ToMORROW ACTS SUMPY, THEN WE’LL KNow! HE'S TRY(NG —To BEAT A RAP OF SomE A NiGHT For o LAN HouR KIND THAT HE'S AFRAID By AHERN NoT-To HANG AT HALF MAST ou A LAMP- POST, LIKE HE'S USED -To DoING | ~TELL HiM To WALK ° BACK AN’ FoRTH | A FEW STEPS « THAT witL ¢ RS, U. S, PAT. OFF.