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fedtuie Each Game 1s Held (0 One Hit One hit games are not so terribly rare, but a game in which both twirl- ers turn the one-hit trick Is some- thing of an oddity. On Aug, 20, 1836, Matt Kilroy, Baltimore left-hander, won & double ene-hit eontest hecause Chippy MeGarr spilled twe errors vight ahead of a passed ball by Itob- inson. The latter is now maanger of e Brooklyns, The seore BALTIMORE ah Manning, » ..o Muldoon, b O'Connell, ef ... Sommer, 1f ... Davis, b .o Maculler, &8 .. Scott, 14 Fulme Kilroy, Total Larkin, 1f 0 Stovey, 1b . Robinson, ¢ Coleman, rf Gleason, 8b . MeGarr, 88 Bierbauer, Groer, cf Miller, p 100 000 000—~1 R 000 000 0000 Two base hit, Davis: passed balls, Robinson 1, Fulmer 1; wild pitches, Kitroy 1, Miller first base on balls, oft Kilroy 1, Mil G: first on errors, Athletics Itimore 2; struck out, by Kilroy 10, Miller double play McGarr, Bierbauer tovey; Bler- bauer, Stov: Valentine, MAHAN WILL COACH HARVARD BALL PLAYERS x-Football Player Was Also Member Athletics of Crimson Nine—Has Worked ‘With the Squad Cambridge, Mass., Aug. 20.—kd- ward Willlam Mahan of Natick has been appointed head coach of the Harvard baseball team, it was an- nounced by the Harvard Athletic As- sociation today. Mahan graduated from Harvard in 1916. He pl d on the 'varsity base- ball team four years, pitching for that team against the Red Sox in the spring of 1916, the year after they secured the world championship, he shut the champions out without a run. He captained the football team at Harvard in 1915 and played with the team three yea Since gradua- tion he has continued to coach the halfbacks, but this is the first at- tempt he has made (o handle a base- ball squad. This fall he will again be one of the football staff and is, expected to find time to direct the fall practice of the baseball players as well. FORD T0 SELL GOAL Flivver King Will Offer Surplus I'rom Mines to General Public Engineer Duluth, Minn.,, Aug. 20.—Bitumin- oug coal from Henry lford’s mines in Kentucky will be offcred for public sale late this fall and carly next win- te ~cording to W. B. Mayo, chief enginecr for the Iford Motor company who arrived heve yesterday aboard the steamer Henvy Ford 1T with the sec- ond eargo of coal for the 1'ord dock. Mr. Mayo indicated that most the coal now heing received at the IPord dock will he used by the Ford plants in the twin cities and other northeast points. Mr. Mayo left for Iron Mountain, Michigan, where he will inspect the Ford plang, returning to De- troit there late Thursday, he said. Osh Ha;EaT(hquakc; 4,000 Homes Destroyed Tondon, Aug. 20.—An earthquake near Osh, in the province of Semirye- chensk, Russian Turkestan, has caused the death of 41 persons in three villages and rendered 8,000 peo- ple homeless, says a despatch to the Evening News from Allahabad, India, quoting advices to the newspaper Floneer. More than 4,000 houses were des- troyed. coke from OPEN BIDS FOR PARK WORK Bids on grading, bridge construc- tion and road work in Stanley Quar- ter park were opened at a meeting of the board of park comipissioners last night, but the hoard to no ac- tion, voting to first hold a conference with the landscape architect. Recom- mendations for the award of contracts will be made at a special session of the council later in the month. Have you a garage that’s empty and bare? Advertise — rent it — garages are rare, USE A ~ WANT AD [ |umpires of |s INATIONAL- AMERICAN Prass, 10 1 b Rignsy, 8 ? | Wings. ¥ i Bassler, ¢ 8 . ) 8 TN BeT Johnsen, P Totale ) a=0Re out when Winning WASHINGTON A B H PO ' ‘ 1 A MeNeely v Harns, 2 Hicw, of Geslin, If n 3 of |Judge | Bluege Ruel, ¢ 1 ' ‘ ‘ ' ‘ Perk, #8 Mogridge \ H » 1 T 00 002 R 1 Twe hase hits, Rive, Ceb Gosling _ stolen lases, Harrie; sacrifices, Mogridge Neely; left on bases, Lietroit 4; #; hases on balls, o N |25 struck out, by Owens. Rignes; Judge Winge. Washi Mogi Johnso wie 2:00, |time 2 (RECOND GAME) PETROIT AR, R 1l - ° |Haney, 30 ; lones, X% O Rourke Coabh, of Heilmann. Rigney, Pratt, 1h ... Winge, If ... | Woodall, « Passler, o Colling, » Manion, % Whitehill, p Manush, xx lesnesonncnmn- locosracomcnus= Totaln 3 ) x=—=Ratted for Colling in Sth, xx—Bated for Whitehill in 9th, xxx~Rated for ilaney in 9, MeNealy Haurrls, RNice, Iin, Judge wo hasa hits, Ruel, Pratt, nn; stolen bases r rificen, Harris, to llarris te Judge; O'Rourke to P n bases, Dotrolt §; Washingt on balls, oft Collins 1; Whitehill 1 1: Tuseell 2; struck out, Whitehtll 2; Zachary 1; Zachary 8 in 5; (ono run scored, @ _and none out in Oth); 6 in 4; Russell 2 in 4; hit by pitcher, Whitehill (Goslin); winning pitcher, ary, losing pitcher, Whitohill; ump Rowland, Connolly and Owens; time NATIONAL LEAGUE NEW YORK 6, CINCINNATI 2. NEW YORK A.B. R. 7 = < o h Groh, ies 2h Frisch, Young, rt Meusel, 1t Kelly, 1b . Wilson, 4 Jackson, Snyder, o McQuillan, lomoasmmmn P ol oansnnnse IR s 5 ° Moo e Critz, 2b Daubert, Roush, Walker, Bresslel Fowler, Pinelli, Rohne, ss Hargrave, ¢ 1 S e e, p . Shorten, xx . lhooonownone ol Totals z—Ran for Bressler in 9th, zz—Batted for Luque in 9th. New York .. 10 100 Cincinnati 10 00) { Two baso hits, Jackson; threa base Rressler, Groh, Young, Meusel; 1 v, McQuillan; double n o to Kelly; left on bhages, Pl 1 by Tuque 1; umpires, Hart .and McCormick; time of ga BROOKLYN 4, PITTSBURGH 3. BROOKLYN High, 2b ]x' Mitchell, Wheat, Fournier, Brown, cf a8’ I Grifiith, rf I T e Carey, cf Rarnhart. Cuyler, 1t Wright, ss Traynor, 3b Maranville, Grimm, 1b Schmidt, ¢ Cooper, p Totals Brooklyn Pittsburgh Two base hits Neis, Care run, Brown; stolen base Cuyler; sacrif! Barnhart; double plays, Traynor, Mar villa and Grimm; left on lases Brook Pittsburgh 3; bases on balls, oft Cooper 1: struck out, by Vance 2; !l‘n:u\er 1; umplres, Klem and Wilson; t 001" 000 010 002 SAGE ACTING INSPECTOR. Howard Sage, an electrical LEAGUE BALL GAMES | 1Continued from Preceding Page) ’ 190 Cennelly; MeNee! Judge to Peck to Judge; base by Colling 2 Hits oft Collina 4 Whitehil Zach- e 010 001— sacrifices Jackson New York base on balls, oft Luque Pfir- ¥, Mitchell; home off Vance 1; con- NTW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1024, I !l Baseball Review EASTERN LEAGUE Vestenday's Hesults Pitisfield 5, Hartford § (frst game) | Pinsfield 6, Hartford 1 (second game) Albany % Waterbury 3 game) Springfeld § New Haven B |game) 17 New Haven 9, Bridgeport § (second o | game) | \ ’ . Waterbury 6 (first game) ‘ Atbapy 2 (second Worcesier Bridgeport 1 q. (first Standing, | W Waterbury Springfield - | Hartford Woreester New Haven Pittsfield Albany Bridgeport =i ome ok Mo iage n | Hartford at Worcester Bridgeport at Waterbury springheld at Pittsfield Albany at New Haven NATIONATI LEAGLE, — Yestorday's Tesults, New York 6, Cincinnati 2 Brooklyn 4. Pittsburgh 3. (Other games postponed; rain) New York . Pittsburgh Chicago ... Brooklyn Cinelonati o, Bt. Louls .... Philadelphia Boston ... Today's Games, w York at Cincinnati. Brooklyn at Pittsburgh. Boston at Chicago. Philadelphia at St. Louis. AMERICAN LEAGUE, Yesterday's Results, Washington 4, Detroit game). Washington game). Boston 11, £t. Louls 5. Philadelphia 5, Cleveland 3. (Other games not scheduled). 2 (fArst ratt Detroit (second 5, one by Standing. w. 67 66 64 an 54 51 51 51 jres, T New York Washington Detroit St. Louis . Cleveland Chicago . Boston Philadelphia 22-28 Today’s Games, §t. Louis at Philadelphia. Cleveland at Boston. “lsss> INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE, Yesterday's Results. No games scheduled. | Standing. w. Baltimore 89 Toronto 76 Rochester 64 Newarl 61 Buffalo 60 Syracuse Reading . Jersey City . z23235520 slass Today's Games, Baltimore at $ Jersey City at Toronto. Newark at Buffalo. Reading at Rochester. Greeks Are Blamed For Slaying Bulgars Sofa, Bularia, Aug. 20.—The inter- national mixed commission composed of British, ¥rench, Belgian, Greek and Bulgarian represenfatives, which has been investiating the recent Kkill- ing of 17 Bulgatian peasants by Greek guards in the village of Tullis, north- ern Saloniki, finds that the Bulgarians were killed without justification or provocation. It attributes the respon- sibility to the local authorities and charges the head of these auhotritics with grave negligence. hi ays, me, = wlesosmsssost K] POST SEASON SERIES. Meet if Plans Mature. Indianapolis, Ind., Aug. 20.—Plans for staging a pos aeon baseball ser- jes among the three class A\ pennant winners are being worked out for sub- mission to officials of the league, it was announced by Thomas J. Hicke) president of the tion. It is planned to have the winner of the American association and Inter- national league post-season series compete with the winner of the Pa- ices an- by ime Three Class AA Pemnant Winners to American assocla- | tractor, has been named acting elec- trical inspector to serve during the | absence of Inspector Cyril J. Curtin, who is on a leave of absence and is | now out of the city on business. SALESMAN $AM el GWAN - THAT 8055 OF YOURS 19 AN OLD HICK cific Coast minor | three league league cham organizations ass AA Lall 15 THASS 90 - SAV HE'S WAY UP N SOOETY HE BELONGS 1O 3 CLBS AND S0 DOES Ws pionship. represent HIS WIFE A QU8 HA-HA- NOW TLL TELL OnE WOMAN ¢ to determine the These the leagues of organizéed base- STORY OF MAKING OF NIAGARA FALLS of Proposal (o Reinforce Lile of Precipice Causes Interest l wil sl When re. WasMngion, D, C., Aug. 20 i the fall of a huge picce of roek cently threatened te turn the heney- mooners' Horseshoe Valls of Niagara peril ta the Great |4, spillway, the brought engineers inte a mere Falls' beauty forth the proposal to hire North out. ! America's th to pateh up | standing matural wonder | By dropping a keystone out of its | | Horseshoe arch, Niagara was merely | performing its duty to the ag ’ For 80,000 years the Falls has been | the geologie hour glass for mueh of North Amerke Dy reading the recs ord of the rocks that go through the neck of the gorge, as grains of sand slip through the hour glass, scientists stopwateh the glacier sheets, which were the first plows to furrow the fer. file mid-west. In the sermons of the cataract's stones lle the chronology of Lake Algonquin, the predecessor of Lakes Superior, Michigan and Huron, and of Lake Iroquois, the sprawling progenitor of lake Ontarlo, Their dates ars fixed almost as accurately as history books report Willlam the Conqueror's arrival in England In 10686, alls 05,17 Per Cent Canadian The story that is told by Niagara (96,17 per cent Canadian) is related in the following bulletin by the Na- tional Geographie soclety from its headquarters in Washington, D. C, “Niagara is the North American champion in one of the greatest bat- nature ever umpired, Literally of challengers wsought her More than once Niagara fell lifeless on her waterworn But finally the seekers for her the last not many go than the days of ties scores erown, almost rocks. crown gave up; more centuries Tutankhamen, Niagara is from the Indian title which appropriately the neck.' The Niagara across the neck of land separating l.ake Erie and Lake Ontarlo. Just east of Buffalo the river collects the entire natural discharge of the four upper Great Lakes, rushes it through a narrowing river for 16 miles, pushes it over a sheer drop of 212 feet, churns it seven miles through a can- yon, and then carries it gently by seven miles of lowland to Lake On- tario. said to take it name nee-agg-arah, means ‘across river cuts ‘The Birth of Niagara “Our Nlagara was born when the glaciers melted back, exposing the ridge the water now tumbles down. Like the glaciers of the Rockies, these enormous sheets of fce moving down from Labrador poured out streams of water. These streams coilected ages ago at the foot of the huge ice Tobes in depressions extending into Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. Accumulated water sometimes rose hundreds of feet higher than the present level of the Great Lakes and poured out into the Mississippi over the present site of Chicago and through outlets in Ohio and Indiana. “Finally, as the ice melted north- ward, prehistoric - Lake Tonawanda formed on the edge of the plateau over which Niagara pours. There were then five outlets from this lake—at Holley, Medina, Gasport, Lockpert and Lewiston. The epillway at Lewis- ton, Niagara, won out. Lockport gorge now contains a flight of steps for the New York barge canal. Early Niagaras Numerous “Abont the time Niagara was be- ginning to triumph, ‘the melting | glacier moved back to Lake Simcoe, | Ontario. The fickle waters of the up- per lakes lost little time in “nding the Trent Valley, a ragged series of lakes and rivers leading Into Lake Ontarvio. Trent Valley gorges tell of | many carly Niagaras. As this time {only 15 per cent of the present flow went over Niagara, forming the nav- | row lower gorge, Nature cams te the rescue, tipping a preat block of land, ever so slightly, knt enough to shut | off the Trent cet wied maks cven | more water go over N'agara than the spectator sees tod But the Chica- g0 outlet, predecassor of the drain- age canal now before the Urited States supreme court, againt cut down the flow. The whir.pool was made at this time. “Once again Niagara was flouted [ when the outlet shifted to North ay, Ontario, sending the waters down the Ottawa ovor ‘he portage which Cham- plain was > take to discover Tl.ake Huron. ‘Tha vpper narrow gorg: was | then carvel put agaln the huge rock saucer, which has the Great Lakes 1ddles in the bottom, tipped, leaving iagara triumphant. 1 started to spill over the ank at Levaston about 30,000 years ago. In &)1 centuries it has shorated ite way ssven miles, At its present 1ate of sxvavation, more thay four feet annually, Niagara will diz tack the remaintg 16 miles to‘Laks ¥rie about the year A. D. 21024, Before this time, however, man may tal’e a hand, since the peril to the famous has brought forth the su chine mechanie, bile and for services of his assistants, session of the statement |whe hired him and the couneil has |no alternative but to pay. members of the counecil indicates that will be paid LD chus, Nhoades, Myrtle Zoba and Data Ga-| data, The papers were served by Con- stable B, V. vk danl for $350 brought by the Commercial Trust company. Censtable B, V Dougherty served the papers. Dens ald Gaffaey s counsel for the plain- . ) of inforcing the lip of the Falls ouncil D:; i’ly Bill Of $110 to Johnson Alderman J, Gustay Johnson's bitl $110 for services as voling A use of his automo- Dr, Walker Is Vietim Of Paralysis Stroke Chicage, Aug. 20 Dr. Bamuel |Johnson Walker, whe during the world war was credited with stem ming the typhus epidemic in Mace Idenia, died yesterday at his home al |Lake Forest, a suburh, after a stroke of paralysis. He was 47 years old, & native of Covington, Ky, and was at tached to the staffs of several Chis |cago hospitals at tonight's eommen eouncil In ite of his refusal to itemize. the ‘The alderman glaims his Il was approved by the selectmen Il probably be paid A poll of e hill, new held up for two months BANK BIUINGS SUITS | ‘The Commercial Trust ecompany, rough Donald Gaffney has hroulml tion for $1,200 agi it M. Z Bac- M. 1. Christopher, Edgar | | Dougherty 1‘ Mike Maskowski and Dziow Kowal- | ACIAL FLOW CEA Reading, Calif,, Aug. 20.=The glas clal Mlow from Mouni Shasia in the | vicinity of McCloud, has greatly absts | €4, according to reporta received here, The flood of mud is reported as being ol the wane and It 1 thought that & {is over, at least femporary. | pedition of scienfists is pl ng e pext week to view the glacial k wcar Peaks Summit | MANILA INSURANCE BILL | Manila, Aug. 20.~The senate has passed & bill requiring all foreign insurance companies to invest 50 per cent of their prafita made in the Philippine islands in Philippine o8- curities or real estate, The bill goes 10 the house ALACE--GRAND OPENING SUNDAY NIGHT D. W. GRIFFITH'S “AMERICA” Reserved Seats Now Selling At Star Confectionery U.S.Rovyal Cords BALLOON ~ BALLOON=-TYPE ~ HICH PRESSURE Built of Latex-treated Cords E building took a big step for- ward when the makers of United States Tiresinventedthe Latex Process. The added strength and wearing quality given by Latex-treated cords is something that the user of Royal Cords can tell you about from his own experience. Royal Cords are the standard of value in cord tire equipment—even more certainlytoday than ever before. * And this holds good whether you are considering a High-Pressure Tire, a Balloon- TypeTire to fityour present wheelsandrims, or a Balloon Tire for a 20 or 21 inch wheel. United States Tires Buy U.S. Tires from A. G. HAWKER, 58 Elm Street, New Britain, Conn. THE COOKE GARAGE, 86 East Main Street, Plainville, Conn. CENTER GARAGE, The Minute That Seems A Year. Central Street, Forestville, Conn. By GLUYAS WILLIAMS AFTER BOWING AND SMILING AND WAVING AT THE PEOPLE ACROSS THE THEAMTRE WHO SEEM . TO KNOW YOU, YOU BEGIN TO REALIZE THAT THEIR GREETINGS ARE INTENDED TOR THE PARITY IN THE NEXT AISLE GLOYRS WILLIAMS Guzz Knows ALLRIGHT = TLL PROVE T TO NOU -~ T w’ WM AGAN SAN GUZZ = AINT NOUR WIFE A CLUB -WOMAN ? € McClure Newspaper Syndicate OHE USED A FLAT - TRON