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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 41

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 41

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Brooklyn, New York
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41
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BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1930. 7 Brooklyn Athletes Will Cut Figure in I. C. A. A.

A. A. Championships Big Colleges Ready for Real Baseball League Play Connie and Patrick Have Same Elastic Boro Cuemen Lead in Club Team Contests New York University Faces Big Assignment Defending 1929 Title player who smokes cigarettes to excess Is sure to have defective bellows. But the smoker must be the Judge of that himself. Patrick thinks highly of the pre-game steak.

Other days the player can munch on most anything, unless lie has a tendency to run to fat. "If he's a drinker he isn't on my team," concludes Patrick Just as grimly as Conacher lays down his more elastic liquor laws. "I don't like too many liquids of any sort. Sure, he can smoke. But in moderation.

Six major college baseball teams Yale, Princeton, Pennsylvania, Co Ideas on Training lumbia, Cornell and Dartmouth are preparing for the first real league campaign by representative Eastern By HAROLD ft El RR universities since 1886, the last year the American College Baseball As After a winter of watching the players In the National Saengerbund Tops Liederkranz in Two Style Matches for Trophy Hockey League go flying tirelessly up and down the Garden sociation functioned. The present college league resulted from negotiations which began in 1923 and ice for 60 minutes of an evening a natural question arises. What do the human machines use for fuel? By GEORGE CIRRIE Old Home Week it will be for a lot of Brooklyn and other Greater City boys when the I. C. 4-A's lay down their championship board track next Saturday night In the 102d Regiment Engineers Armory and run, leap, heave and vault to And out whether N.

Y. U. can defend Its year-old indoor title or whether the heavy favorite Perm Is to walk off with the trophy. The Violet, without Phil Edwards and Fred Veit, faces a tough assignment, for not only is Penn eagerly expectant but Harvard, champion in 1926-1927; Cornell, champion in 1928; Georgetown, champion in 1925 ano The answer Is beefsteak, the good old rib-clinging, warm But sleep, digestion and wind are not the most important adjuncts to the hockey player. The most important are his legs.

Why. do you know, there are dozens of little muscles in the foot aline! Every one of the dozen comes into play when you skate." CHICAGO BLACK HAWKS DO THEIR FLYING HIGH The Rangers tried gym work In ing and strengthening steak that brings on high blood pres' This year's billiard championship match between the New York Lie-derkranz and the Brooklyn Saengerbund was the first of a series of annual matches for the Lleder- Hciicate; Pennsylvania, William H. Hammctt; Princeton, Dr. Charles W. Kennedy, president of the National Collegiate Athletic Association, and Jerome Bradley; Yale, John M.

Gates. Tlie history ol college baseball daks from 1806 when Harvard defeated Princeton and Yale tn the first championship series. Through the next 11 seasons, championship competition was confined to these three universities, but in the winter of 1873-80 a league, the American College Ba.seball Association, was formed by Princeton, Harvard, Dartmouth, Brown and Amherst. Yale declined to become a member, being unable to compose some differences with league members on eligibility questions, but joined the circuit a year later. In the post-war rise of the Jesuit college teams at Boston College.

Holy Cross, Fordhain and Georgetown, an informal quadrangular league was arranged, but soon fell apart. Then came the Quadrangle Cup circuit, and finally the new Eastern Inter-collegiate League. sure and makes high-voltage Every afternoon before a game, promptly at 4:30, the hockey players tuck their napkins under their chins, pick up knife and fork and go to work on the T-bones, letting the juice fly where it may training. But the work developed It's about the only training they three times in second place, and kranz-Brooklyn Saengerbund Billiard Championship Cup trophy, donated by the Liederkranz Billiard Club of New York, and to be competed for each year between Liederkranz and Saengerbund six-man teams until it has been won five times. The annual match is Dlaved all the muscles and took away from the leg muscles, and the experiment was abandoned as worthless.

The Yale are weU heeled with men who can whittle down the available do for the strenuous evenings they spend on the Ice. By that I mean I'm speaking dletetlcally of the Chicago Black Hawks think other' wise. At the beginning of the pres little address to the boys. He told them they could eat anything they wanted to, smoke If they cared for It, and drink if they felt the urge. "But, fellows," added Conacher, a mite grimly, "I want you to do It points and contribute to their dlfr tribution.

The Jntercolleglates are remain' which led In 1925 to the organization of the Quadrangle Cup League by Columbia, Pennsylvania, Cornell and Dartmouth. Yale and Princeton cast their lot with the Quadrangle Cup group at a meeting held In the Columbia University Club in New York last April, but it was lound impracticable to launch the new circuit until 1930. Independent schedules ol the six members, however, called for 29 of the 30 games a round-robin league chart would have provided, and the league was considered last year to be playing an "Informal" season. No second Yale-Dartmouth game was provided in the independent schedules and none could be arranged. In addition, one Columola-Yale game and one Columbia-Cornell match succumbed to rain, leaving 27 championship games for the six teams.

The following are serving as members of the league executive committee: Columbia, Reynolds Benson; Cornell, Romeyn Berry and Charles H. Blair; Dartmouth, Harry R. Americans and Rangers alone. The In two rounds, one at 18.2 balkline ent season Tom Shaughnessy, then manager, sent his Hawks flying away to the training table of the Black Hawks and Maple Leafs have ing loyal to the restricted seating and a second at three-cushions. conditioning stunts of their own Notre Dame football team at South before me.

I don't want you to drink behind my back. If I catch one of yeu at It I'll Just punch the ever P. 8. A. L.

half-mile champion. Another relay star at Georgetown, Louis Ricca, Is also a Brooklyn boy. Among the first-year men competing next Saturday are Mike An-dursky of Penn and Bennle Kros-ney and Artie Katz of N. Y. all New Utrecht sprouts.

And nothing quite so pulls the uncles and the aunts' and the cousins by the dozens as sonny running as a freshman in his first college colors. MANHATTAN HAS STORMY CONTINGENT The Greater City contingent in One round Is played at the Brooklyn Saengerbund clubhouse and another at the Liederkranz Billiard Club of Manhattan. capacity of the armory, instead ol moving into Madison Square Garden, which they could fill to the rafters, because the college directors devising that would turn a football squad and a heavyweight champion a bright and envious green. In the progress of a game, Ameri Bend. Shaughnessy was a graduate of the Rockne school.

Now his successor, Billy Tobin, is continuing the practice with variations. Every lasting daylights cut of the man The first round of the 1930 match cans and Rangers wash their mouths insist the meet Is lor the athletes, which is very high-falutin' Indeed, and also because the eight-lap track, morning the hockey players knowfc, as the Hawks go up on the roof of out with bottle after bottle of water. was played at three-cushions at the Liederkranz Club and the second was played at the Brooklyn Saen who double-crosses me!" 60 Connie put the boys on the honor system ind not one of them has attempted to cheat on him. He has his club playing game hockey. SALLY CHAMPS WRECKED Knoxville, Tenn, (n The Knox-vllle Smokies.

Sally League champs In 1929, will have an almost entirely new club this season. The 8moklei disposed of eight players. Including Shortstop Eric McNalr, sold to the Athletics. their Chicago hotel at 7:30 in the finest indoor racecourse in the world, won't fit into the Garden, gerbund at 18.2. The team members were as follows, the Stelnbu- There must have been quite a sizeable puddle behind that section of the dasher where Bill Dwyer's regulars and spares sat on last Thursday night.

It was warm as summer and cold, gray dawn, and go through setting up exercises under the paling stars. which is very practical. WILL BE A BIG NIGHT FOR THE OLD TOWN glers making it almost a family affair for the Brooklyn group: Lie The old morale is high. Often the Americans are beaten but they have yet to quit. Just as often they beat better clubs through that same old Its said of the Toronto Maple cludes Joe Hickey, who at Evander Chllds hardly stirred a zephyr, but who at N.

Y. U. makes even Ray Conger step on the gas to win a the parched athletes emptied no derkranz Jacob Kllnger, Kurt Leafs they chopped down hundreds of inoffensive trees in the vicinity of But no matter whose flag goes up Bauer, Paul Schnabel, Paul Engelke, fight that In them. at the peak of the string when all mile race. And Joe Hagen, out of Elgin, Ontario, where they did their a.

assDenaer and F. Llndemann; Saengerbund Chas. J. Steinbugler, the shouting Is over. Old Man City training.

The boys should have gone Stuyvesant, who has carried Columbia to the front In the two-mile for DEPENDING ON YOUR BRAIN? kodc, eteinDugler. Geo. E. Steinbu LEGS MOST IMPORTANT gler, Frank J. Steinbugler, A.

Aug, a little bit further and sawed the trees into hockey sticks. But once the season starts Connie Smythe's the two past years. PART OF THE PLAYER ocnecicer. John L. steinburaler.

Then come Eddie Everard of Stuy Then Take Good Care of Your Body! Bauer had the high run in balk Manager Patrick of the Rangers has much the same ideas. "You line, 36 unfinished, and Schnable young men don't doanvthlng but play hockey. They got quite a late start this year, but are coming along nicely now. vesant and Columbia, Marvin Stern of Clinton and C. C.

N. John Downing of De La Salle and Georgetown, Harold Klumbach of Morris was top In the angle game with can't dictate to grown men what 55 they must eat and what they run of 6. The Brooklyn team won seven of the 12 games played. The Conacher bears out Patrick in the musn't," admits Lester. "Many of Regular work-oula will keep you "on-edge" mentally "on jour loes" physically.

At Central you can eirrcise with a claw or alone, as you prefer-in gyms renowned for completenaM of equipment. A tour of this great building will convince you of the many benefits that await you. results: fewer than IS bottles of water before the overtime whistle blew Its final blast. After the game In the dressing room the pop flows like water and still dry mouths chew thirstily at slices of orange. ONCE ON ICE OTHER MAN LOSES APPETITE Lionel Conacher, playing manager of the Dwyermen, doesn't even eat a steak before a game.

"I don't eat anything all day," Connie declares. "I like to go Into a game under nervous tension and If I'm loggy with food I can't do that." He lets his players make their own training rules. When the Americans assembled at the New Haven farm last fall to get Into shape for the 44 -game grind, Conacher made a Svent Sgfng. contention that only certain-muscles need attention In fitting the player for fast work on the steel blades. 'You remember 'Babe' Dye, one ot w.

Medrrlt. W. PU. 4 ion 1 S78 High and Holy Cross, Milton Sandler of Townsend Harris and N. Y.

TJ. and a comer and Frederick Backer of Horace Mann and Penn. FRECHMEN CANNOT BE OVERLOOKED Three cushions Balkllno a 103 69J the greatest of aU Canadian athletes. my players have homes of their own down here in the States, like the Cook boys who live in Flatbush. I can't run a training table for Bill and Bunny.

I might ask them J.o eat the same good, wholesome food every day. But their wives would rebel and I wouldn't blame tnera ior it, either." ToUl He was with us last winter. Several years ago he injured his spine, but Phone, call or mail coupon AO IF for illustrated booklet giving full detail. The freshmen offer Jimmy Healey Albany-N. Y.

Race Brooklyn Central Y. M. A. 55 Hanson PI. Sterlmf7000 of George Washington and Penn, Leopold Mothner of Townsend Harris and N.

Y. Tommy Campbell will have had a big hand in things, a bigger hand, lndeeed, than ever before. On this side of the East River proud papas and mammas will put on their coats and Journey through the roaring subway to the Bronx to watch a flock of home-bred boys. There is, for instance, Markoe Kellogg of who studied his early algebra at Flushing. And there is Johnny Mara of Georgetown, who read Roman history at Newtown.

Johnny Trachy of N. Y. U. came from Manual Training H. and so did William Newklrk of Penn.

Rutgers' Eli Fischer once attended classes at Erasmus Hall, and N. Y. Walter Gassner answertd fire drill alarms In Flushing. And 8ol Furth, Bensonhurst's favorite son, once wore the colors of New Utrecht before he went to N. Y.

U. to become a track captain. NEW UTRECHT WILL BE WELL REPRESENTED Arthur Briggs, who runs- anchor leg and how! on Georgetown's relay team, went to De La Salle by way of Bishop Loughlin Memlrial H. and was a P. S.

A. L. crosscountry and mile champion, while his teammate, Jornny Mara, was a Has a New Class He likes to have his Blue Shirts never even felt it in making those cannonball hockey shots of his, but the minute he attempted to go on with his baseball he felt the twitch tn his back. He couldn't swing at the ball." AddrcM. sleep at the right time.

Wind comes to the player gradually. Of course a of Stuyvesant and Manhattan College and Sidney Schlefler and Harry Hoffman of Clinton and N. Y. U. Among the major regattas listed ior 1830 by the American Power All in all.

the Old Home week In Boat Association the outstanding the Bronx will be quite a family events are the Miami Beach, March a ana as; Albany-New York mar. party and when you consider that most of our boys are expected to make a lot of points look sick and that Briggs, Kellogg, Everard, Downing, Mara, Knoblock and athon, April 26; Block Island race for cruisers, July 12; Newport, July 25 and 26; Gold Cup, Aug. 16 and 17; Harmsworth trophy. Aug. 29 to Fischer once held schoolboy records, Sept.

Intersectlonal outboard championship, Middletown. Conn. they ought to make It a hot time in the old town for the seekers of Sept. 5 and 6, and Cincinnati, Sept. 8 and 7.

knowledge hailing from others parts, a hot time, that is, but not The terms and conditions of the CoprnsSl 193 to CairdarOtponaoa MULT I RANGE JM HRYLERj Albany-New York race will be euh sianuaiiy tne same as a year ago, out a separate class has been est ah Ushed for the new type of junior runabout, which will probably be limited to Inboard boats with mo Planning Open Tournaments tors rated at 65 H. P. and retailing ior not more man si.ooo complete. The principal prize, as before, is the Haynes Griffin $500 cash award to the driver making the fastest time in Division 3, regardless whether the boat Is Inboard or out For Cueists Officials Think Time's board powered. HONOR BOSTON YACHTSMAN An unusual tribute to a retiring officer was that paid to George H.

Come for Amateurs to Clash With Pros voter, commodore of the Massachu Calls Baseball Rule Code Not Perfect "The conduct of baseball, from top to bottom, last to West, is governed by so many rules that it seems difficult to abide by pne without getting tangled up in another, and there are many obsolete and meaningless phrases written into the regulations today. "But excepting those fundamental clauses in the administrative and playing rules of the game, every section of the code is Justified as the move to end an offensive condition that the leaders of baseball sought to remedy by Inoculating the game with a new rule serum." Thus discourses the Houston Chronicle, whereupon a Western writer asks why it ts "that there Is so much complaint about the golf rules being woody, as if other sports had blameless codes." i Jones9 Putting Hurt by Copying Bob Jones calls putting "a game within a game." He says that there setts Bay Yacht Clubs Association for 1929. At the annual meeting oi the association he was presented The example of the tennis organ vlth a ship's clock by the delegates ization in holding an open cham and officers. pionship in which amateurs would play with pros as in golf seems to be contagious. Now the cue wlelders want one.

and a movement is ac tually under way to provide open tournaments in billiards. This is due to the rapid development of ama teur billiards. ST The cue pros are comparatively few. Out of a total of mora than 5000,000 U. S.

billiard players, O. A. torer, director of players lor the Nation. .1 Billiard Association, says CHRYSLER TT CROWN COUPE, 17, P. O.

B. DrtU (Sptcitl Ejmifmm Extra) his records show there are not mora i than 300 who could be classed as Is no need to emphasize the im portance of putting, because nearly professionals. "Out of this small total of pros," Mr. Storer added, "there are not half the shots played by an expert performer are on the putting surfacesometimes more than half. more than 50 who would class as possible championship contenders Qhe Perfect When he played the last round in the 1926 British open he used 39 Chrysler's PROVED performance gauges all performance balanced shots on the greens and only played 35 other shots.

He took 40 putts in one round at Columbia in the 1921 Dog Food national open. The experience of Jones, thinks the Washington Post, ought to be encouraging to the multitude of golfers who are defeated in their matches because they miss short putts or encounter too many three' Here's good news for you and your dog. Ready at last the perfect balanced dog biscuit, full of the putt greens. He admits that he was how faster car speeds are achieved at slower engine speeds, producing a floating, coasting sensation. Feel the added power Chrysler has developed by larger and more powerful engines combined with the new fuel-feed principles of Down-Draft carbure- Get into a new Multi-Range Chrysler try for yourself thia time-proved performance that is today's yardstick for gauging all other performance.

Feel how much more smoothness there is in Chrysler speed how much more quickly and easily a bad putter, or an indifferent one, food elements so necessary to the in the events in which he partici dog. pated in bis adolescent days. at balkline, three-cushions and pocket billiards. If open tournaments had been allowed last fall I could have interested hundreds of amateurs who would not enter the sectionals, which were for professionals, ior fear of losing their amateur standing. Officials of the N.

B. A. are planning, and quite properly, to give the simon-pures a chance against the pros without endangering their amateur standing." The national amateur 18.2 balk-line championship will be held at the University Club, St. Louis, starting the week of March 10. Beginning on March 17 the national three-cushion amateur championship will get under way at the Lick Springs, Ind.

The player who represents the coast certainly earns the trip. The winner of the Pacific Southwest and the Pacific Northwest winner always meet foi the right to compete in the national. The coast representative, as a rule, is a genuine opponent. Last year Charles E. Jordan of Los Angeles won the three-cushion title and M.

C. Wallgren of Everett, finished second at balkline, then won the title in a challenge match last fall. Since then Jordan has turned pro. He was In a putting slump until P.1-i9nnr Kpn.T.-Ritltie is tint rmlv ha played tn 1933 at Skokie where V- i I. his putting enabled him to tie for a paianccu iuuu, us wuuiyvainvn ia second place in the national open entirely different from any other with John BiacK.

doe biscuit ever made. It costs MULTI-RANGE CHRYSLER ENGINEERING ADVANCEMENTS He was the victim of experimen tation, trying to copy all the good less because it goes farther. It is a delicious, evenly baked, easy putters whose play he had wit tion, adopted from the latest practices in aviation. Chrysler superiority is definite proved on the road open to any test and closed to all argument. And nothing can alter the fact that it brings a pride of ownership that is all its own.

nessed and endeavoring to keep in mind all the thousand and one things which had been told him about his body, his club and his hands. When he went back and Chrysler glides up the steep hills. Feel the snap in pick-up which the Acceleration Range of Chrysler's new four-speed transmission gives you, combining the best features of ordinary "second" and "high" and as you shift into the Speed Range notice to-feed ration. Your dog deserves the best. Feed him Chappel's Ken-L-Biskit.

Do not accept a sub stitute. Look lor the name on the putted with the natural freedom of Ltrg't Powerful Seven-Bearing Ctunler-Weigbttd Crankshaft Multi-Range four-Speed Transmission and Gear Shift Down-Draft Carburetien Rubber Spring Shackles Chrysler Weatherproof 'j-Wheel Hydraulic Brakes. Hydraulie Shock Absorbers Roomier Bodies of Dreadnought Construction. package when you buy. For sale his boyhood days there was a dif ferent story.

by many grocers and leading deal ers in dog supplies. Girls' Title Play SALESMEN chappel Started Two Stars CHRYSLER INSPIRES PRIDE ALL ITS OWN Rockford, 111. WANTED 4 nerjret(B salesmen for Queens, 2 for Nassau, and 3 for Suffolk County, to represent Montgomery Ward must have outside selling experience; men selected will have opportunity for Advancement. Apply 9 to 10 a.m. and i to.

0 p.m. Made by the maker's SIMONS, STEWART FOY, INC, of the fa mous Ken- Ration Food Prod- Miss Margaret Curtis of Essex County, former national champion, is the chairman of a committee recently appointed to investigate the Held for a girls' golf cnatiiplonship in Boston. In the course of her research, says the Boston Globe, Miss Curtis discovered that the Women's Golf Association of Detroit has sponsored competitive events for girls for years with much success. Miss Curtis ought to know besides that Miss Maureen Orcutt, the present metropolitan champion, and Miss Martha Parker, the New Jer-spy titleholder, began their golf careers In the girls' metropolitan championship held for years at Englewood under the able direction of Mj s. Frank Enos.

Salesroom 1425 Bedford Avenue Maintenance and Parts 1590 Bedford Avenue Phone Sterling 2800 ucts, the Dor Foods Supreme. THIS is a typical example of the many excellent jobs advertised today in the "Help Wanted" Columns. Turn now to Classification 32 and 33 in The EAGLE'S Classified Section NEW YORK 1745 Broadway at 56th Street Susquehanna 2300 Bvl TT-..

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963