New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 27, 1930, Page 9

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#5007 8 Bobby Jones and Gallant Fox Lead All Others — [BURBY JNESIS oo oo 1 Armour, Diegel etba es- S p ea k in s and Sarazen who played the stead- pall Of SPOIrts || m s v e v ey W”@HT_APEER | , e o NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1930. 9 t medium | new ball, larger and lighter, just hard to score with, but a brand new ¢ | Never Be Duplicated and Bouthern {ournaments to. re $ i followv. - classic lacing in an American Rolle ; Hockey League game played in Mer. | EOIf that will be bigger and better WAS 1den last night, the. scoms betng g |Pan ever in 1831, In that respect | B~ CROWNED THE to 2 The Amsterdam team. was |2 174%t: the new ball promises to HOME QUN o < Selthont the st ve8 of either SL"\'C\COm“ up to expectations. K(N(a A L2k (Gl BUREIE Pierce or Harry Thompson. The : J +:OF (9301 S < 4 5 G NEA Ser: s Writer Meriden rushers took particular de-| WITH THE BOWLERS 1 : | Robert Tyre Jones, Jr., of Atianta light in peppering Eddie Barnikow ; $ ; ; st dreams tries th with all sorts of shot \ : % ionships in rame is playe t due mostly KOGERS ALLEYS |the four major & :nts of Great = el the rm clir {owever, play- Earl Pierce ran amuck in the con- UNIVERSAL (LUB LEAGUE 4 | Britain and t nited St ! E 2 cr g with th test getting six goals while “Kid” Ray A | finding himse e Williams zot four. einert St 6 5 : - > | i |that no more worlds bot i T Wl Merjden will meet Newburgh to- | {ci=n . 3 i 1 Announte Jement AR morrow afternoon. Newburgh s i e ke ; 5 i \ 7 leading the league and will have in S e 4 : e i S DLA )S its lincup St. Aubin and Mulligan as Washing Muchine 4 Lk : A Y rushers. Harkins at center, Hehert [2idlie ¢ . i 2 i 2 el ? q ot halthack and Bill Blount in ithe goal. Play will start at 3 o'clock. 1 > Hollow ! s by vip Aalsont ot Smiversal Bowling | JE5or - 5 o1 9 2 | \ i ¢ N The ety Make Bashetball second Only to i = T.cague set two new league records| Matso N S i 4 1 : 2 ity y 0] i H Eaeruiact Gy olns £08s i 1 \ ) : : e oy Football in Popularity. ympic ope tion Alleys last night. He toppled = : / Aneon: e A ood Chopper b2 3 Sihai GO as follows: 167, 112, 127. 2 5 9 o holds the mark for high gingle with 1 pield souses and Fine Gyms yjonday—Important Kules Change | ,j_" 5 : x d in a majority e ! “ =Sl FORTHE FIRST TIME (N HEAWWEIGHT S el i o oo o B el st b l - 1 - WANDS ON A FOUL. the season tonight at the Bristol t 4 —_— state armory against an all-star ag- | 0dr 9 120 11 MAY. SCHMELING CARRIED THE CROWN i MOPPED LP TETS gregation of Bristol High alumni ¥ RETErE ¢ TO GERMANY.... T HADBEEN 4816020&5 EN players. The opposing team will R G MERICAN PROPERTY EVER SINCE = Consiet of players who have made T RIS THEN QUTT THE AMATEVRS § their court mark with the Bristol o " JOE GOSS IN 1880w+ W THE TALK High school and they are still see-| ing plenty of action either in or out of school Carroll’s crew i ik looking 5 < FUUTBALI STARS | Doyle . Koch | Unknowns e and it will receive a real test of | i | Colgate Baylor | rlia gth tonight. A good crowd of sevees 2 { 4 Left Guard Passanisi, rf .. . fans will turn out for the game, it . : 2 Atkins Kawalezyk is cxpected, because there has been ' e | Fordham Texas Chr v yn t zing about Bell Town S “ Al 3 \ . tethall this season. Woodwort] S .. Be Northwes California only one game, d SPECIAL b Holyok: wks whom BRG Wisconsin Oregon fashion. The la iaudett i San Franci 27 (UP)— Right End 5 Manager : Shrawe o 2| Football stars g red from 29 of [ I3 Raker Wilson Boys' Club Té e Ly | the jon's leading teams, includ- ttsk Baylor Lagles . s ing several All-Americas, made up Quarterback Wildeats 1d bring e G CENo the cast for the inual Last e Mil The town | Datils 143 | West game at k lium toda hwestern Oklahoma Surko e z With a crowd of more than & Left Haltback South Chy asketball team " | 000 assured San Francisco uni it “lark Win, moved out regular re 1 st night. | 40— 469 | of the Shr i 1 for er lgate v a Bell, captain of the past tv {pled children to real Right ., went to West Avon with the | e more than $15 the game. ) n NG A got in for the last qu . and | N BT The retu g ng Jim” ¢ Kanaas roved that he still had plenty of | Bausch, Kansas fullback, to the line- ” hall in his system despite his| S0t . So 6 7 up and the impressive showing of \ in Niagara Falls A 21 [the easterners in practice the p : == % = few days has caused odds on the ho led t fir: 7 ame to drop to even Barl- ionsh 1 it £ {ier in the week the Ga bein ding Shooting Stars $hoo Boys' ( loss in the Junior The Wildcats put Andy Kerr Colgate and Dick Hanley of N hwestern, has re- | its 22 stars from 15 tear wiasceCand ot e e Top Bags” Club Intermediates— l‘" e et coached by Dana X. ‘ = If; Jarvi o pic club, has drawn i | squad from 14 teams in souri valley, southwest and fe Intermediate League is rapidly draw-| Y 0 0 | Both teams were reporte CHIP SHOTS | b Shooing Stas Abead o =c COOD MIGAT L rale X-4 i hysical condition tod 2 ok B g MY Bov, HERE, 0 (/L.:,< »v\bt E i ; ~ 43 | who had been il with a cold, ) ; 9 o P [ gusT QuvT ' S1zE oF bi its uppeal to the gene public, o T e TR SHOOL AN THAT LouT! happencd within the ranks You e " : B A oS presented ‘ . : : v | JusT AN THIN' The collateral branches of golf's J Seboln e R L s e 2 e | o Ak e 2mily tree mushioomed into a sca- | S i e T ; | Aintenr! Athicto: Tnlon Fas Pro. UE CAM GET A | on's growth tl almost threatened ica guards, Botchey Koch of Baylor g | I 2% : CE [l Sre #ram For Stimulating Competition JOoB ANYPLACE o cast a bigger sbadow than the | and Ted Beckett of California, co- ek before. Wierbecki and [ e B e biarent steam, a phenomenon unpre- captains of their t ere the offensive heroes of in Plans For Olympics RGHT NowWe ' /| Gicted last spring by the wise men n the castern | was Len pers with Majko holding \ P f the cast or west Macaluso, Colgate's All-America georeless, Heinzman scored all the s e — fullback who led the er nation It was estimated that some three | in scoring. Frank Bal western end, and Wade Woodwor Northwestern guard, were two oth vlayers given All-A tion on a number of mythical teams. Coach Kerr called the present artir losers’ poi The summary: wit S e e Wolverines tternoor be busy times for | Gordon, rf 26 FRNE 1 v As a part of its program W. Valukevich, It . 3 ) 1 stimulating hockey tition Wierbe S 6 13| eparation for 19 winter eastern cleven the best Los M g .. 0 lvmpic games Amateur Ath- Old-timers in New England still yov o¢ the Shrine series, Majko. Iz . .0 ¢ inion has arranged a series of In that section of business de- | tell the story of the once great fight- guri0q back in 1 ; = — | Sund double i oted to athletic cquipment, full-|er who choose to die rather than g =y A ] 1 ea club tearn ized golf accessory sales provided |face his friends after losing his final ot At ih : ¢ Dinks week's calls fo nore profit than did merchan- | fight. he east the 1 ast two, 20-( 5 Fld ; ¥ Sea Gul dising of footk asch 3 He was Peter McCoy, a great wel- |1 19.7 Jact vear. SeP el holas club of | terweight in the days of John L. | .y, 3 Sullivan. John L. used to take Mc | Coy as well as Jack Dempsey the Nonpareil on his tours to meet all {¢p "ot 4150 has a more powerful comers. And as a high percentage | ¢oo0 iy S SOl T ars of the local challengers were little | mp o Cosiorn®rann pinneq men, McCoy had plenty of tOUBN | o¢ 1ore on speed, decepti 1 e Panthers an . g % 3 i rd tussle, but o | spirit ; The late George Stirling, poet| “uwo may not have Perhaps the cconomist disdains 10 { laureate of California—who also | oo 1o ‘the castorn tea iotice golf, as too unimportant a|took his own life—told me the StOrY. | ~oach Bible, “but we have tactor i trade balances, but for| After McCoy left the ring, he €S- 404 chred and those 20 a long way inuny a common individual, com-|tablished a gymnasium at Sag Har- | " poii poyo pire huierclally intercsted in golf, the | bor, aid gave boxing lessons. _\1:'u | back, has been named captain of Panthers howly discovered income producing | efforts were made to bring him back |y, (g 3 [ \ spects of the game of the Scots|into the ring, but McCoy declined. | oy 5y : have proved something fo cheer |HoOwever, so much inslstence w s A ubout in & year of stock crashes and | ¢,y ooticut's heavywelght champion, o SO B ST, s ) GOLF LINKS Lunk smashes. ; | regon State Lo Ll e N r four million golfers conceded liemselves putts on regular courses | i this country. and as many or horc made holes-in-one on the Biiniatures I n . |Heinzma : have the greatest team we | [\ 0% have ever had,” sald K “but Tlnich e hesitate to predict victory because oo 5 he spring, summer anc khining star that blazed brightly in sky otherwise made dark by the 1l advertised industrial depres- Jion eclipse evenings. and scorers for their res and the former also 1 to a basket. Miller was not irgh quarte scored upon. o summary 1 Fl raised in the gase of Jimmy Nelson, | 1) Wrobel, that McCoy fclt forced to take the | ) fight, or lose caste locally I enan o P. Jabohonski, Ig .. 0 Opposite St. Mary’s Church The latest angles of golf have not Although a welterweight, and far| = ‘ J‘ 2 i M. Kaminski, Ig ... ) Prizes Daily and Weekly eitracted the investigation of the | gutweighed and outreached, McCoy| ; psychologists and so we have to|hy his great cleverness easily beat | struggle along without their official | the slower moving Nelson. pronouncements in the ficld. . o o S LBMA S M e McCoy tried to remain retired. But 5 A N A Amateur observers of human be- | promoters and public sentiment were avior have, however, noted with |against it. Reluctantly, he signed to sympathy the magnctic power that | meet a younger man in another New ; - - . - — the big and little game of golf has | England state. A WART ON AN ELePHANT 1GOT & NEW HoBBY, GU22 —MaKIiN VLU TecL YA (N ey, You caN'T Do TeeT ! ‘(cu? SURE, BUT | exerted over folks. They opine that| It was not until the day of the TRUNK AND & — GosH| UP RIDDLES-WHATS TH' D(FFERENCE { A& TIEEY, sam! MADE UP TH' RIDDLE, DION'TCHAT ) DIDN'T MaKE UP it was just what was necded to keep fight that McCoy learned t the | GUESS SAM'S GIT tME L/ BETWEEN A WART ON AN €(ePHANTS THE. ANSWER. | state laws barred two ounce gloves. TRUNK AND A FRECKLE QN A ELEA’S McCoy protested that he was along sTumpeo! © in years, couldn’t hit as hard as he 5 used to, and would have no chance | In the ranks of big time golfers, against the younger, tougher op- winning four major champion- oot without small gloves. The in & row, and then ducking out | pionigters could do nothing about it the amateur class was the big- | poor old Pete had to go in with goest thriller of the year. It wasn't| ejght ounce glov possible but it happened | As McCoy had expected, he lost — the decision. T.ess sensational, but against the| McCoy never returned to Sag Har- Letting odds, was the case of Walter | bor to face his friends and admirers. Jiagen who putted through 1930 | He jumped overboard from the boat ithout winning a tournament. As|bound for home that night, \ptain of the Ryder cup team, he B s sht be regarded as the ranking SINGER STARTED EARLY 1 the year's record leaves him | Al Singer, New York Hebrew who it 1n the cold on such a rating. lost the world's lightweight cham- - pionship in his first defense of the Liunking the professionals in one- | title, held all the boxing champion- {vo-three order cannot be done on | ships from 93 to 125 pounds at one a basis of their performance. Al- | time while a student at public though youngsters have flashed to rmoul. Left Tackle the balance of malor and minor | troubles.

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