Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 18, 1922, Page 3

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NORWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY, NOV. 18, 1922 YALE FACES PRINCETON TODAY WITH APPARENTLY BEST TEAM IN YEARS New Work, Nov. 17—(By the A. P.)— With Yale and Princeton in the leading drama, football will stage another host of spectacles on eastern gridirons tomorrow. While the Tiger and the Bulldog grap- ple at Princetor, their contests of scarce- Iy less_interest will bring together Har- vard ¢hd Brown, Pittsburgh and Wash- Ington and Jefferson, Penn State and Pinnsylvania, Colgate and Syracuse and Dartmouth and Columbla. Victory In several of these games ‘will hinge on the mood of the pigskin gox Thiz is pagticularly true of the Y. Princeton contest. In no respect does one team stand out as strongly superior to the other, and as was the case in the Princeton-Harvard clash last Saturday, the human equation—the fumble or the brilliant individual feat—may tip the scales. Princeton with sensational victories sv- er Chicago and Harvard, is a team tried and ready for its closing battle of tho eason. The players will enter the contest confident, but not dangerously so. They realize the worth of their opponents. Princtton has a strong offense, with good running plays and an overhead at- hotel in Trenton, N. J, and motor buses will take the men to Princeton tomorrow at noon. Neidlinger is scheduled to start the game at quarterback for Yale, Wight will be at left half, Jordan at right and Bill Mallory will be on the side- lines and are not expected.to play. Backfield men who will be available for substitutions are Bench, Hans, Knapp, Knowles, Beckett and Kelley. With Saturday classes at Yale can- celled, the bulk of the student body and “faculty will head for Princeton the Palmer Stadium. At the station after the team had been cheered, and® the megaphone yielders had wrought the crowd into A high pitch of enthusiasm. Head up his hand. Silence fell, said, with emphatic earnestness: men, half and Scott at full. Charlie O'Hearn Mealey tonight and tomorrow moraing“to be | on hand to support the Blue team in Coach Tad Jones came out on the rear platform of the train, and_held and J;",‘f‘: | Rutgers, N. Y. U and Maine have enroll- you are tired of hearing talk. | TODAY'S SPORTS, Racing, Meeting of Southern Maryland Ag- ticultural ~Association opens at Bowie. Meeting_of Green River Jockey Club, at Evansville, Ind. Meeting of Jacksonville Fair As- soclation, at Jacksonville, Fla. Horse Show. Thirty-seventh National show closes in New York. Billlards. : International 18.2 balkline cham- plonship, at New York. Athletics, National junior cross-country run. at New York. New England intercollegiate cross- Horse | 'HOREMANS DEFEATS SCHAEFER IN BRILLIANTLY PLAYED MATCH, 500 T0 321 - New. York, Nov. 17.—Edouard Hore- mans, the Belgian, defeated Jake Schaef- er the champion, hy the tally of 500 points to 321 in the minth game of the 18.2 balk line billiard championship tournament tonight. The titleholder was careless and a bit slouchy at the start. This proved costly, for Horemans by wonderful masse put together runs of 144 and 111 that smothered the champion. He went down to defeat for the first time since he won the title a year ago at Chicago. country run, at Boston. Michigan * intercollegiate country run, at Kolamazoa Boxing. Mel Coogan vs. Pat Bradley, rounds, at Sydney, Australia. Marty Cross vs, Panama Bans, 12 rounds, at New York. R cross- 20 Joe Dartmouth his dropned out this year but ed. Horemans’ average was 35 10-14 and ihe also had runs of 73 an d55. Schaef- ler’s average was 22 13 1-4 and his best | iruns 167, 45 and 38. The standing of | the players: | Player { Hoppe .. Schaefer Horemans . Conti . Cochran Hagenlach HR 192 195 244 204 140 178 ‘Ave. 5- 9 5- 9 10-14 12 55 55 35 48 35 31 6-15 Jake Schaefer won the bank for lead in the night game. He missed the open- ing shot and Edouard Horemans, the | south in total scores this yea CENTRE AND AUBURN ie's gridiron fame in the last few year: has placed them well at the top, will meet tomorrow in Birmingham in from the ranks of claimants for Dixie title. These teams lead th neither has lost a game this st that would effect its southern rank: ing. There remain only three other el evens in the same class, North Carolina University, and Geor: at Athens, North Carolina university opposes Da. vidson at Charlotte. ACADEDY 'CLASHES WITH MEET FOR DIXIE TITLE Atlanta, Ga., Nov. 17 (By the A. P.) —The Auburn Plainsmen, one of Dix- perennial great elevens and the Centre colonels whose meteoric rise to contest that may remove one of lhe}:n; the ason | Vanderbilt, Georgia Tech and North | Carolina_State meet in Atlanta and VOCATIONAL TODAY s 1 e MINCED HAM, Ib. = - Meat Department FRESH KILLED FRIERS, b FRESH KILLED FOWL, bb........ 34c PRESSED;HAMG b - ccc oo cice - 24€ ERANKFORTS, Ib..% ... ... 0.0. 19¢ . 35¢ The S&W Self-Service Grocery Co 272-274 Main Street Norwich, Conn. OFFERS THE FOLLOWING SUGGESTIONS FOR YOUR SATURDAY’S SHOPPING Grocery and Fruit Dept. UNEEDA BISCUITS, b......... ASSORTED SUGAR WAFERS. Campbell’s Tomato SOUP, can. .. 5 Ibs. GRANULATED SUGAR Bird’s Eye or Blue Tip . 5¢ . 8& - 8¢ 35¢ PORK SAUSAGE, b............ 25¢ ASTMAN’S WILLIMATIC PORK FRESH SHOULDERS, b. ........ 17c FRESH PORK LOINS, Ib."...... 28z ARMOUR’S PICNIC SHOULDERS, Boundb 5o Cl. 12 e STARHAMS 1b. ... .. J. oo o 20 New competitors in the Varsity encoun- ter are Bates, Carnegie Tech., from Pitts- burgh. Pa. Y. U. and Rugers. No! competing are Cincinnati, Holy Cross Lafayette and Williams, all of which tool part last Fall. Carnegie Tech., is the only entry from beyond the A'leghpnte!.’ The' following are the varsity tea entered, with the number of entries from each: Bates 10: Bowdoin 11; Carnegie Colby 12; C. C. N. Y. 10; Columbia ; | Belglan, likewise put a zero as the top {contribution to his string. Then Schaefer | got the orbs on, the short rail in his !second inning. He made six and then {flubbed a short difect carom, trying an extended reach over- the table. Horemans followed with some pretty {cue worke His 13th shot was a long | masse four feet in length. Next he play_ ed a trick drive and kiss that was pel fectly tirapd .which mad the crowd laugh Cornell 20 ; Dartmouth 2 Y. U. | As he went along to a nurse he made fre- ; Penn State 12; Pennsylvania 16;!quent use of his famous masse. At 33 Princeton 20; Rutgers 16; Syracuse 17; |he had the globes directly in the mid | ana Yale 20. dle of the table. tack capable of holding the secondary defense deep in its own tefritory. In ad- dition there is the football alertness and keen ball-foliowing intuition which has stood theTigers in such good stead. This fime_we are going to Eive you victories. We expect tough games against Princeton tomorrow and Har- vard next week, but this Yale team | is going to win" Man for man along the Jine and in the | backfield the Princeton combination com- | pares favorably with Yale. In physl condition and reserve material the Tig- ers loom up as formidable as the B i mot a trifle stronger. Plaving on their own fleld is another advantage, Offensively the Tige are perhans stronger thin on the deftnse, especially The Aaqidemy eleven, which was | so decisively beaten and slugged by the Bulkeley huskies last Saturday will clash today with the Vocation: school team in New London this af- ternoon. Vocational scored over the | Academy earlier in the n but af ter. a season’s hard drilling today's result may tell a different story. The team has been working hard all the week devoting much time to trick plays and line work. Williams, Me- { Namara, Mileski and Kilroy will pro- STAR OR P. & G. SOAP, bar. ARGO GLOSS STARCH, pkge. . TARBOX STOVE POLISH, can Quart bottle GRAPE JUICE. . ... ARGO CCRN STARCH, pkge. AUTOCRAT COFFEE, b....... 5c .. 9c UNDEFEATED WESTERN TEAMS HAVE HARD GAMES TODAY Chicago, Nov. 17—Tomorrow's play in the Western conference il isee | three undefeated contenders for the “Big Ten championship opposed by teams that may relegate all’ or some | . 40c 8c . 35¢ His touch and speed ! # close following the ball on the poss bility of a fumble may offensive weapon In various games this on nse has been e Tigers' final stand on netratc heiw ow ard line in the Chicago battle prov- ed that they,could hold in the suprem test Yale wi pose Princeton with a tea which appears to be the best that h: be termed an sehson “the of them to the losing column for the final games of the season a week later. Chicago plays Illinois at Chicago; Michigan meets Wisconsin at Ann Ar- & d, ' | Columbus. Big Ten followers believe Iowa will win and the defeat of Chi- cago and Michigan is not consider- ed_unlikely. Illinois, by defeating Wisconsin last Saturday, 3 to 0, spilled the first dope ne m bor and Iowa opposes Ohlo State at Colleges in the freshmen run are C. C. Y. Cornell, Harvard, Lafayette, Maine M. I. T, N. Y. U, Penn State, Penhsyl- ania, Princeton, Rutgers, Syracuse and Ya'e. The race will be held over the cham- pionship course at Van Cortlandt, three miles long, most of ‘the running to be over the level grass of the polo field. the varsity men twice. There. are only The freshmen will circle the course once, | was' without flaw and he easily went| along pas the fifty mark. Brilliant masses and dainty, prettily conceived kiss shots were freely sprinkl- ed through the rim along with bits of line nursing as he neared the hundredth { itally. At 100 he had a line nurse, the | balls being so perfectly bunched that they | might have been spanned by the hand. 1 i bably start in the backfield but there will be an extensive change in the line which will give it more defen- sive power and likewise a punch that will open up holes in the opposition. A large part of the student body will attend the game which starts at 2!30 o'clock at Morgan field. HARVARD TO USE There was nothing hurried about Hore- imans as he moved into the second hun- | REGULARS AGAINST BEARS DEVONSHIRE FARM SAUSAGE, Ib 30c PORK CHOPS; ... ... ...... 30c ARMOUR’S STAR BACON Butter and Egg Department MIXED TEA, 2 lbs. TOKAY GRAPES......... 25¢ EXTRA SWEET CALIFCRNIA ORANGES, dozen .... LARGE SIZE CALIFORNIA ORANGES, dozen ........... 42¢ represented the ,Blue in several ve: Although defeated by Iowa early in- the season, the Elis showed flashts of un- usual power even at that time and have indicated a steady increase in strength and football resourcefulness in each succeeding mage. Holding the Army to & 7-7 tie just two weeks before the sol- diers played a scoreless tie with Notre Cambridge, Mass.,, Nov. 17—Harvard's | varsity football team, which, in other years has had a day off to see Princeton and Yale play, will be on the *job for the dred points. He studied position care |fully. At 135 he brought off a spiral {masse that was a jewel. Three shots {later _he ticked off a bank that was ja rarely ‘clever exposition of English. {TOSt part tomorrow to meet Brown |” It was a masse on a tight lineup on| The defeat by the Tirers last wezk, | the end rail that finally sent him away | the strefigth of Brown and the need fcr ! hard preparation for the Yale game next from the table on his miss at 144. At the 5 b end of the inning, the second, Hora.|Week were all considerations in the de- one or two grades to break up the level running, but three hurdles land two other barriers will be erécted on the course. of the season. The Illinois and Chica- g0 are traditional gridiron foes and 3! victory by Illinois would not surprise 3 many western conference observei. A | Following out the adcision of the I crowd equal to that which witnessed | §- A.-A. A. A. two yefs ago, the cham- the Chicago-Princeton game, 32,000, | Pionship classic will be staged on a Mon- will again pack Stagg field for the day, the purpose being to give it a da: contest. All seats were sold two weeks | 0f its own. Formerly, the race was hell b ““*%| in_connection with one of the biz foot- Good Selected Storage EGGS, doz.. 30c Parkdale & Armour’s Veribest Selected EGGS, in cartons, doz. 37c Superior Creamery BUTTER, Why use Tub Butter? GREENING APPLES, peck ...... 37c EXTRA FANCY BALDWIN APPLES 15 Ibs. SWEET POTATOES. 25¢ Dame gives a fair line on the power and of the Bulldog. « The center combination of tht Yale line Is an_extremely strong and aggressive trio. The tacKles compare well with those of the Nassau eleven. There appears to e little difference in the playing of ends. Yale forwards are likely to hurry the Princeton passing with their sav- txo charging and the battles of the lines will undoubtedly be a feature of the game. Although it is understood that seither Mallory nor O'Hearn wi'l appear In the Eli backfield, Neidlinger, Jordar, Wight and Scott give the Blue a quartet hat can advance the ball either afoot or sverhead. = Princeto’ will be in the position of wtilizing everything she has in the way of plays and strategy while Yale will ai- ways have in mind that she must face Harvard a week later. 1t appears reasonably certain that the punting and passing will be emphasized by both teams. This offense, while spec- tacular and frequenly productive of long gains, also is conductive of fambling, Next in interest fo the Yale-Prince- ton game will be the meeting of Wash Ington and Jefferson and Pittsburgh. W. and J, with its record of wictories un- broken for tht past two and a half years, Is a most formidable foe and should win. Pittsburgh, however, always has given the presidents a terrific battle and de- ite defeats by West Virginia and La- tayette, the Panthers can be expected 1o force W. ana J. to show its best. foot- ball in order to win by more than a one Jouchdown margin. The same appears to be true of Penn State and Pehnsylvania. The former has % more consistent record to date, but Pennsylvania, although erratic, showed remarkable form in defeating the Navy. if the Quakers should hit tht top of their #tride again tomorrow, Penn State will bave & hard and uncertdin battle. Harvard, i represented by itg first string players should defeat Brown. hut with the Yale game just a week away the_is not likely to play any harder than 8 necessary to hold a small but sate margin. ¥ Colgte will undoubted'y give the. big Byracuse team a slasiing battle, but & victory would be more or less o a football upset. . Darmouth appears too strong for Co- umbla to overcome. The leading games in the east fomor- row, with the results of last season’s con- test’ follow : Yale at Princeton, 13-. Penn State at Pennsylvania did not Deet. W. and J. at Pittsburgh, 7-0. Brown at Harvard, 7-9. Colgate at Syracuse, 0-14. Dartmouth at Columbla, 31-7 Virginia at West Virginia, 9-1. Fordham at Holy Cross. affnot meet. Bates-Army &t West Point, did not neet. Willams at Amherst, 20-0. Budmell-Georgetown at Washington. i not meet. Albright at Cornell, djd not meet. YALE TEAM GIVEN BIG The probable outcome of the Mich- igan-Wisconsin tilt is yore or less a matter of conjecture. Michigan has not been scored on so far ttA; season. Th Badgers, however, hope not only to eliminate Michigan from the onfer: ence race, but to narrow the gap in the standing of the institutions. Out of seven contests, Michigan has wo four, two were won by Wisconsin and last year's game ended in a 7-7 tie. A capacity crowd of 42,000 is indicat- ed by the seat sale. ENORMOUS CROWDS EXPECTED AT PRINCETON TODAY Princeton, N. J, Nov. 17—The Princeton football squad was announc- ed as in fine conditign for the 46th gridiron battle with Male on the ‘eve have been taken for the classic. The Tigers, having defeated Harvard, have a chance of winning the Big Three championship. Although tomorrow’s crowd will be several times larger thin ever at any game in Palmer stadium, 1t is reported the demand ‘for tickets will be f¢ times the available number of ‘The Tlgers refieansed their entire repertoire of offensive plays in final practice today. The Yale squad ar- rived in Trenton this afternoon and will have Palmer stadium to them- selves tomorrow at 11 o'clock for a final workout. Princeton will enter the game with an unbroken string while Yale will be minus Mallory and O'Hearn be- cause of injuries. Neither Coach Jones or Yale or Roper of Pringeton made ;‘t‘;y comment on tomorrow’s possibil- es. z HAMPTON AND DIVISON . WIN AT PINEHURST Pinchufst, N. C., Nov. 17—Outplay- ing the field by a margin of three strokes, Harry Hampton, Detroit pro- fessional, and Jack Davison, New York amatepr won the annual amateur-pro- fessional best ball tournament here today with a total of 277 for 72 holes of play. The first money purse of $500 wént to Hampton and the major trophy to Davison. Bob MacDonald, Chicago pro, and ‘Willie Hunter, former British amateur champion, captured second money with_a total of 280. Johnnie Farreil and Harold Blo¢h were third«awith 284, ! Tom, Boyd and Alex Armour*fourth with 285 and Emmet French and Don- ald Parson fifth with 287, RECORD FIELD TO COMPETE IN RUN A record field of colleze harrlers has been entered by Eastern institutions’ for the annual intercollegiate gross-country championship run at Van Cortlandt Park on the afternoon of Nov. 27, according to the entry list made public yesterday by the L C. A. A& A. A. From eighteer -co: leges 287 entries have been received, » of the game tonight. Over 55,000 seats | iball games, being run in the morning. It was discovered, however, that the foof- Dball game killed interest in the cr untry. and the track association de: d to transfer the event to New York and hold it on some day other than Sat- urday. Van Cortlandt Park was named as the permanent course. and the first ace under the new conditions was put on there last November. Columbia Un versity is co-operating with the I C. A. A. A A. in arranging the details of the championship run. LEAGUE MOGULS MAY ENDORSE DRAFT Eastern League moguls, who will mest in special session next Monday are ex- | pected to indorse the present system of | drafting players by clubs from leagues of a higher classifizaion than the O'Neii | circuit. Opposition to the indorsement will be strong and led by Georze Weiss, president of the New Haven champions. How It Works Under the present sygtem eight play- ers may 'be taken from the Eastern League by draft, allowing one for each club. 12 the draft is, made by a major league club the Eastern League owner gets $4.000; That is he gets $2,000 n cash at the time of the draft and if the player makes good the following sprin; the other $2,000 is turned over. If h does not make good the player is re-| turned to the club from which he was | drafted. In such a case the club is §2.- | 000 ahead of the game. ‘Weiss, leader of the faction in the ! Eastern League, which opposes the o eration of the draft system, is positive in his stand that the draft has cost the club_owners dealy. He asserts that if ' jan Eastern League owner approaches o | big league club and attempts to pur- | chase a payer the price gsked is general- | 1y above the $2,000 involved in the firke ! payment if the payer is drafted. i No Chanes of Selling "Em | He also asserts the draft rule takes | money out of the coffers of the clubs hy ! permitting major league owners to pick ' the high-class performers at an invest-| fmentof noly '$2,000 instead of being forc- ed to. purchase the minor league star | for a price well over $2,000, and then | take the chance of developing him ints a big’ leaguer. . ‘While the ciubs have not'yet announc- ed their stand on the draft question it is said that Worcejter and Waterbury are ‘wih Welss, on the proposition to fight | against the rule at the annual meeting of the National Association of Profes- sional Baseball 8lubs in Louisville next month. One more club would give oppo- | ment of only $2,000 instead of being fore-| ern: Beague and it ie likely that this tia | may develop, as ne or two club owners have intimated that they.were not strong for the draft system. BEARS WILL SEND STRONG TEAM AGAINST HARVARD Providnce, Nov. 17—The Brown foot- EASTERN | | ball team, {to count there was evidence mans led 144 to 6 and Schaefer came to ithe table, missed a short single cushion, which resulted in the Belglan going right | on. i | Schaefer was careless as he stepped to | the table. e pald the penalty with a {a miss which resulted in Horemans back- ling his 'great run_with another - cluster * !that tallied 111. It was of the same character ay itS predecessor Wim. ....e=s in abundant profusion before he failea . on a two cushion carom in one of the corners. At the end of the third inning | Horemans led (Y: champion by 255 to 6. | Schaefer was badly off form. He play- | ed open table and cushion caroms with | {all the bad breaks of a player out of | luck and stroke. The champion talifed 29 and 19 respective in his fourth and fifth innings all of which represented hard shooting. At the close of the fourth inning, Horemans led by 310 to Schaef- er’s 35 and seemed to have the title hold- er.at his mercy. | Encouraged by a'fine and promising | and Jordan, half back; Scott. fullbaci, ends \leave the first-ray of promise he had ex- perienced, Schaefer put together a vari- eggted run of 167 on his sixth tit: at| the table. This run was built upon a nervy single cushion draw in which the cue bali travelled twice across the table | before catching the second object ball. | At 30 he established a nurse. Apparently he did not care for it for he deliberately went to the ends of the table for his, tallies. After passing into triple figures e kept his stroke pliant by frequent Head ball drives. It was showy billiards with plenty of action and clever cueing. At the end he missed a little nip shot of single cushion character at the foot of | the table. Horemans began to snow signs of wavering in the seventh inning. The pressure of the champion’s game was | telling he collected 37 in a somewhat resultory, manner. The last count was an easy right-handed dfrect carom. But Horemans who never uses his right hand it he can help it tried to dicover a left- handed strike to count. TUnder compulsion he shot right-handed the second right hander in three matehes, counted and got sewed up With-a result- ant miss for his pains. So wide did he leave the pheres that neither Schaefer! nor the Belgian could count during the ! next two innings. Schaefer was first to overcome separated orbs. He brought them togeth- | er for 45 and on Horemans again failing that the champion might make a garrison fini i | despite being, behindeat 277 to 439 forlg, Horemans. There was exchanges of safety to-| ‘ward the end of the match which brought | about real evidences of £ g tegy. and | cool, daring execution, Horcmans after | desperate efforts recovered despite Schaefer’s attempts to wreck his close play. ¢ ‘While doing this the champion had partially closed up on his opporent. But the Belgian was not o be denied and he closed his victory with a run of 47, most ; of which were scored by pretty work on | the cushions. ‘The scores follow: i Greenhaleh, Brown. cision of Coach Fishr to send nearly al his regulars against Brawn, a second-string team. €aptain Buell, is almost the only regular who wi play. Althouzh the baqifield named 1 start azainst Brown. Spa Churc! 11, Coburn, Hammond, is not that of th: Princeton game, Owen and others w: be kept at Cambridge and. inserted fo strength if needed. YALE-PRINCETON GAM J.. Nov. 17—The prob Princeton, able lineup for the Yale-Princeton foot- ball game tomorrow was announced to day as follow: Yale—Heilman or Deaver, right end; Diller, right tackle; Cross rizht guard Lovejoy. center ; Cruikshank, guard; Miller, left tackle; Eddy, end; Neidlinger, quarterbac Princeton—Gray and Stout, Baker and Treat. tackles; = Dickinsor and Howard. guards; _Alford, Gorman. quarterback; . Crumm _ani | Caidwell, halfbacks; Cleaves, fullback. | FAST SOCCER GAME AT TAFTVILLE TODAY The big attraction at the Providence! street grounds this afternoon will be th ame between the West soccer team. put through at the Rhod> Is'and boys, On their firs not let this hapnen agair. Manager Parson will make u5 from the following men: Thomnson, Alexan. instead of till limping as a re- isult of the leg injury of a week ago, center; team | Finlayson, F.| o T Ib. prints 45¢ BREAD—BREAD—-BREAD 10 Ibs. RED OR YELLOW ONIONé 2! Large Loaf, Sanitary Wrapped Sc 5¢ AIT ON YQURSELF—IT PAYS—GET THE HABIT ®| -1 OWEN DOES $HOW uP o-| George Owen, the Harvard backtield man, is having his troubles The loose handling of the ball in the nceton game is being charged to Owen, more than anyone else. Owen by the way, was not the ter- ror of a year ago. The reason was that Owen had gained a reputation as a line bucker that really came from slash- ing through openings made by decep- tion to the secondary defence. These openings againkt Princeton were not on tap. So well did the Tiger line play that Alford.was available as a loose center against the pass, and still Owen had to hit a line. He kept his feet well, he ran hard, he did everything a back should do. But for n A & Fnfl Pol'sh | the first time he had met a real line. iteam of Crompton R. I, and the Iocal | The local team has been | a stiff workout this week | and are a1l ready to take a second crack ! less directly: HERE’S A CLASSIC As Rudyard Kipling says jore or “The men of the plain it | flee into the hills when the fami loud roar and eyeballs of fire seeks the bean pot and the succulent pig.” And it shall come to pass that the sons of Eli will leave the land of der J. Greenhalgh. Strons. Jones. Wragg. | wooden, steel and plain nuts and trek Parsons, Doran, McCluggare, Heber, and a dark horse wil! start at halfback. CONTI WINS BRILLIANT GAME FROM HAGENLACHER! New York, Nov. 17.—Roger Conti, th French cue sta verse. The score: , 56, 204, 110, 30—500; average 8-12; high runs 204, 110, 64. Hgaenlacher 3, 77, 81, rage 29 7-12; high runs, 81, 77, 65. PACIFIC CONFERENCE TEAMS @ won his second gam jof the intésnational 18.2 balk lLne bil the | iard chanfbionshiv tournament to®ay by taking the measure of Erich Hasen- : lacher. German champfon, 500 to 355. It! { was Haeenlacher's fourth straight re- Conti (spot ball)—20. 0, 8, 2. 0, 0, 6, ;white ball)—4, 0. 65, 0, 11, 19, 14, 19, 62—355; ave over the big river info the country of the Edwardses, both wet and dry. And if the sons of Eli rise in their might and smite the enemy right and left { home bearing with them such spoils > Sun. SPORT WORLD BRIEFS > What promises o be a banner win- ter golf season is in full swing at the Southern ant} California clubs. Evidently Battling Siki needs a manager who can teach him to be- GET INTO ACTION TODAY| p.ve Said manager might use a stout San. Francisco, Nov. 17.—Six coast conference teams go into actio against each other tomorrow, but it i doubtful if the games will have bearing on the 1922 championship r: Pacifi tick in his course on ring'etiquette. = Travers-Chapman bout Tues- any! gay night at Boston attracted the -ace, | ‘which praetically has been won by Cal crowd in such eat numbers that it AS WELL AS LAST SEASON | star | 1-! but incidentally with a long-to-be- | appearance the local team‘was led down, ed tiger leaves the jungle and with !to defeat by the small score of 5 to 2, | but they will take up their pilgrimage { 1 of war as gurgle with a splosh-splosh | gcene of when the vehicle of their conveyance games beforé the curtain falls on the | strikes the high bumps—New York | season. The Red and Blue‘eleven plays ! as Willimantic-Stafford Springs Jitney Service REVISED SCHEDULE, EFFECTIVE NOVEMBER 19, 1822 Approved by The Public Utilities Commission Leave Willimantic, Leave Ea Leave Mans Leave Merrow ! Leave South Willington . Leave West' Willington . Arrive Stafford Springs RIR S d Depot Leave South Willington . Leave Leav Leave Eagleville ADL remembered football victory. The Williams eleven will play at Ambherst always makes. i%5 best show- ing of the year when it plays at home against its Williamstown rivals, and the team, which has been making rap- | id progress, probably will be far from | casy for Percy Wendell's outfit, which | seems to be approaching last year's form. new Stadium will be the three worth-while football Penn!' Penn State on Saturday. The follow= ‘mitaries for the Army-Navy cfush, | Nov. 25. On Thanksgiving day Penn wl}i have its annual tussle with Cor- nel Exeter and Andover will meet to- 7. In 1921 Exeter won, and this sea- kon has had much the better of the | Andover 7 to 0, were going so far as competitive scores show. The Yale fre en, who beat ten, 26 to 0, by Exeter. Exetes also deféated the Harvard freshmen 20 to 6, the Crim- son yearlings in turn. beating the Tig- :r fi-eslunt ;n, 19 ;oads, after the 1926 eam at Nassau ed a score- less tie with A.ndnvu'.pm 4 { were in town visiting relativ week end. Lucius Exley, son of Mr. and Mrs, Na- han FExley, who has been at work in ork for the past vear, has lately entered the University of Cincinnati for a course in mechanical enginesring. At the grange meeting evening the foliowing officers were elect- ed for the ensuing year: Master, Mrs.: Dorothy Bennett; overscer. Milo Appley;: lecturer, Grace Dawley: steward, Cu Kinne; assistant steward, Herbert 3 in, Mrs. {ecasurer, Mrs. ‘Cora Hawes; secretary. Levi Clark; gatekeener, Merritt Hawes: Pomona, Mrs. Mabel Kinne; Ceres, Mrs, Grace Towne; Flora, Mrs. Ida Sager; |ing week-end will see Philadelphia |iady assistant steward. Mrs. Emma Ap- { flooded" with naval and military dig- | fley. At the next meeting on Dec. § Plainfleld grarge is expected to be pres- ent and furnish the program. SEE! The Jarvis Family IN STELLAR COMEDY ACROBATICS 3 # Wednesdays -1 Addie Waldo;" i § Ao turn away at least together with Coaches Rob- N inson, Staff, Snell, Oden, ‘and De Vitalis Trainer Huggins and 20" substitutes will leave for thé stadium tomorrow morning ready for battle with any team Harvard: sends into action. e ifornia for the third year in succession. The champion Berkeley team has a breathing space on its schedule, as Ne- vada is coming down to, take its annual footbgll lesson from the “Bears.” Edouard Horemans, spot ball: #0144, 11, 55, 19,078, 37, 0, 0, 0, 2, 0, 12, 47—500 poins; average 35 10-14; high runs, 144, 111 and 73. - Jake Schaefer, white ball: three more than the record-breaking field which started in_the 1921 title chase, | The number of teams entered is the same | as last year, four néw ones having been !added and four having dropped out. SEND-OFF BY STUDENTS New Haven, Conn., Nov. 17—The fale football squad, including coaches, fraineds, handlers and managers, eaves this afternoon 6n its invasion Young Fisher, the “Syracuse Ca man,” has been making an excellent showing in his recent bouts with a CANTERBURY GREEN. A large delegation from this parish: Was present at the church conference at Tonight at s New Jersey to meet the Prince- won eleven on Saturday in the 46th| meeting of the Bulldog and the Tig- w. The squad will stop tonight at a The freshmen title race also shows numerical prosperity.,There will bb thir- teen teams this year, as compared to last,_yeat's eleven, but the. number ‘of in- dividual entries, will be less—150 to 185, The men had their last practice this afternoon and a talk by Coach Robin- son on the general scheme of attack and defense *in Lyman Gymmasium tonight. The linenp will be &s follows: Johnstonc and Schmults or Sheldon, - ends, Capt. Gullan and John Spellman, tackles, Bar. rett and Spragud, guards, Bckstein, cen- ter, Myers, quarter, Sweet, left half, Faulkner, right half, Adams, fulk. Thig is the strongest combination that the Bears can put on the field. From | tagkle to. tackle, it is held here, Brown is superior to. the Crimson. Capt. Mian | Gulian is in a class by himself, while John Spellman is nearly as -good, Bar- rott, Spragué, and Eckstein are all pow. ! erful on! defense and aggressive on of- fense. McDermott and Rubel fit in nice- ly in the wid-rush line and Homer Metz- e Miles Imlay are dependable tac- The ends have been 2 problem all fall, None of the six men available is in a class with (Hartley and Holder, the Har- vard veterans. Jg n, howevey, has im- ; proved with every game, while Schmaults | and Sheldon looked better than ever this week /after Reggie Brown took thent in | hand for special drilling. Sayward ie also likely to see action, and he may turn out to Ye the prize of the lot, ~Myers will have Eisenberg and Higgins ag his understudies .at quarter. Ira Swaney, who weighs under 150 and is thie lightest man on the squad, and Ru- dolph Payor, the Freshman star, are sure , to appear in the backfield. Carter, Perry - Paasch and Pohlman are the other backs of merit. Five thousand Brown rooters will go from here to the game. e v I Kotsonaros Wing From Parker Boston, Nov. 17—George K 0, 66, 0, 29, 10,167, 20, 0, 0, 45, 38, 6, 0, 0—321 points; average 22 13 -14; high Tuns 1667, 45 and 38. - ‘Referee, Albert-J. Cutler. TIGERS AND JAIL BILL PLAY AT PARK SUNDAY Sunday afternoon at 2.30 at Mohegan park, the fail Hill Warrlors will make a | second attempt at the Tigers® scalp, Last Sunday the Tigers sput one over 6n Jail Hill by the tuhe of 12 to 0. The Jail} Hill poys dre styengthening ~up with; heavy men.and are practicing’ regular. | AcCording to dope it looks bad for the | Tigers, but i takes mofe than the Jall Hill eleven to worry the Greemeville i boys. The Tigers will use the same Hneup that sent Jail. Hill down to defeat a week ago. The Tigers have been 'phactie- ing during the week and have scspmplisn- ed some very trick plays by they hope to dazzle the boys from the hill. “The management of the Tigers wish to state that they accept the challenge of the Hardigs for a good clean game 6f football at the Fairgrounds Sunday, No- vember 26. : 4 o RN T TEAM € LEADS I¥ | . - % % Y ATHLETIC LEAGUE Much interest is being shown. by the ‘members of the young men’s gym class at ‘the. Y in the.athlétic tournament m:vl Peingigonducted as & part of the class work.. V: s games and ' athletic} events are and Indiviudal as Well as team records upe kept. The tedms are as_follows: ) Charnetsky's team, Texipestea’s team, C L l'lsm- Westerly Team Caneels Game. The game scheduled with the Itallan- American: team of Westerly for this Sunday has been calcelled, leaving. th Jgil Hill team without a game. Th ‘esterly team is not considered strong enough at the present time to meet the local squad and Manager Grills nas asked that the game be put off a week to give time for more practice. This is very satisfactory to*Manager Thompson of the local team as some of his play- ers are st'll on tne fijured list as a re- sult of last Sundays battle -with the Colonial$ of” New London, Bosketball Games Wanted. ‘The North Hudsops. In a light heavyweight basketball team (140-150 !bs),xnhy!n.:b:fivery Tharsday at Emne!. son )] gymnasium, West Ho- bbhn.,pNh. J.,- desire te book home and home series games with teams in this . locality, Communicate - with Managér Frea Kutschinski, 3376 Boulevard, West Hoboken, N. J. BEZDEK NOT TO_GIVE e DECISION AS YET “Philadelphia, ' Nov. . 17—Hugo Béz- dek, director of athletics and coach at Pennsylvania State college, an- nounced today that he would not de- exa-.i on. t\;: auu:l to manage the Phil- elphia National league baseball. club . /Criqui_Kakoes Calloott. - Liege, Belgium, Nov.’ 17.—Bugens Tope, m@t':m “out. Ben 6‘:&:“ y X ! tt in the second round of 'a bout here. . number of older and more experi- enced middleweights. s e o) Boston’s next boit on the calendar will find Lou Bogash, Bridgeport's as- pirant for the middleweight honors, Westminster on Tuesday. Those who at- tended were Rev. Mr. Humphrey, Mes. Humphrey, Mr. and Mrs. Hale Bennett, Mre. Arthur Bennett, Mrs. Hawes Mrs, Sager, Mrs. S. B. Hadley, Miss Sapa Hadley, Mise Baidwin from the Lishon parish and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Her- pitted against Bryan Downey, west- | rick. i ern contender. The winner of this go| Thad Wilson, who has been several | will according to reports from Boston, | months in northern New York, employed | be matched up with Harry Greb. Benny Valger is down to box in To- { Jeagle as wastern performer and is rated high in that part ef the country, After his bout at Toledo, Valger will resume training for his scrap with Rocky (Kansas at Buffalo on Thanksgiving Day afternoon. » E lowa has adopted m mascot. The Hawkeye, football is _ leading jaround a wildcat.\Years ago Iowa put a real live bear in the saddle at its compus only to have the lowa Aggies come along one nice fall 'day and not ledo next Monday night with K. O.]returned from New York after atten his opponent. Jeagle is a ! the funeral of Mrs. In engineering work, returned home this week. Me. and Mrs. Nelson and daughter have aing Hubért Graves and only made off with the young grizzly, DANCE AT T. A. B. HALL " TONIGHT . Foresters’ Big Fair MUSIC — FUN — FROLIC Dancing to Your Heart’s Content 5 | In Olympic Hall, Norwich § = Admission 10c — Dancing

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