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ROSE'S HOMER GIVES BURRITTS WIN IN NINTH INNING—RED SOX WIN TWO OVER WEEK-END—FALCONS AND KENSINGTON SLIP DOUBLE HEADERS—PIRATES DRAW FIRST BLOOD IN SERIES WITH TABS—TENNIS STARS BEAT TORRINGTON TEAM CUBS LENGTHEN LEAD IN RACE WITH PITTSBURGH| ~DEFEAT HERRUPS Pirates Are Idle as Chicago Beats Brooklyn—Cards Down Boston Braves—Reds Take Twin Bill From Phillies—Yanks Defeat White Sox in Game Played at New York—Washington Senators Swamp Cleve- land Indians By 12 to 3 Score Ly the Associated Preea. The Chicago Cubs were three and today for leadership of the Na league. While the Pirates were idlc the Cubs won another of their usual victories over the Brooglyn Dodgers yesterday. The Windy City team had to struggle 11 innings to take the! long end of the 6-5 score. Brook- Iyn has won only one game from the Cubs this season and Uncle Wilbert Robinson's team is one of the very best reasons why Chicago is out in front. It was Chicago's elghth tive victory and Charlle Root’s 20th pitching triumph of the season. Hack Wilson’s single scored Adams with | the winning run. ‘Wattle Holm's homer in the Sth with one man on base enabled the St. Louis Cardinals to beat the Bos- ton Braves, 6-4. Fournier also hit for the circuit. Two brilliant pitching perform- ances gave the Cincinnati Reds a double header from Philadelphia. Jakie May fanned 11 batters in the opener and won 6-1. Red Lucas le the Phillies down with six hits in the second game for a 2-1 victory. Sweetland, the Phils’ recruit pitcher made a battle of it. The Yankees ripped the White Sox for a 4-3 victory at New York. Babe Ruth went hitless and Gehrig got only a single in three attempts. Eric Ward, a former Yankee, pounded out & home run in the second. Meus- el misjudged the ball and it bound- ed into the left field stands. Blank- enship held New York to seven hits while the Chicagoans were tapping Shocker and Moore for 11, but a bad fourth inning in which the Yanks scored all their runs, proved his un- doing. Irving Hadley held Cleveland safe while Washington was pounding { Hudlin and Grant for a 12-3 win. Tate was the only player in the ‘Washington line-up who failed to get at least one safe hit. Other American league teams did not play. ~ AMERICAN LEAGUE CHICAGO AB. R. L] Seued » mloooscccsonld Metsler, et Kamm, 3b Barrett, 1t . Sheely, 1b K9 Sce Blankenship, p . Neis, x .. leoconsaanu losummn Hlleietnsces Totals ) commMoMoooRTw 7 ] snocnSumng HoubusHousp ;3 2 H 0 il 1 : o o i H : 0 1 1 0 T 1 1 0 Totals 30 4 7 2 x—Batted for Blankenship, 9th. 422000 120 000—3 000 400 00x—4 Two base hit—Kamm, Three base hits —Bengough, Kamm. Home run—Ward. Winning pltcher—8hocker Umpires— Van Graflan and Connolly. oHooscumsoRal cowoy cossusensoanll Hadley, p . Totals x—Batted for Hudlin in Tth. xx—Batted for Grant in §th, Cleveland 001 001 Washington 013 023 Two base hils—Rice, Burns. bases—McNeely, Goslin, Losing pitch Hudlin, Umplres—Ormsby and Owens. Time—1:47, NATIONAL LEAGUE BROOKLYN AB. R. lormooren olosesssssssl! Barrett, 3b Fellx, 1t . members, consect- | | Phila { should get in Ieathcote T Wilson, : loscsssmvuan lescsonconea Totals 42 06 1 15 x—One out when winning run scored. —Batted for Brillheart in 4th, Batted for Webb in 4th. Brooklyn 400 000 010 00—5 GO ...010 400 000 01—6 wo base hits—Carey Heathicote, phenson 2, Hartnett, ¥ Henlive. ning p oot. Losing pitcher— Weeny. U s—Jorda Hart and Rig- wloosess Wi First Game 000 100 Philadelphia Cincinnati 000 100—1 201 02x—6 Second Game. PHILADELPHIA B. R. o Ppalding, Sand, 3 Williams, Leach, cf Wrightston! nnard, c . Scott, X ...... Thompson, 2h Cooney, ss . Sweetland, p 1t T ;;;u,__; T o5 Totals wluocconocccosld 0 0 o 1 0 0 o 0 0 1 AT! 3: cINer AB, ] o lhonuusssay Dressen, 2b .. Allen, cf Bressler, 1t Walker, rf . Pipp, 1b . Ford, tz, 2h Sukeforth, Lucas v .. .3 S onses Slleei Sy Totals 26 x—Batted for Jonnard in 9th. delphin . 000 100 000—1 nnat 000 110 Cbx—2 base hit—Leach. Three base hit— Umpires—McCormick, Klem and Time—1:24, ol onssonssall McLaughlin, o ) Richboure, rf Robertson, p J. Smith, x Slocounmmuono 2] cocuravonmn |l oscssonsssall Totals PE~ o lowusssuuoy wlossoncomcuay Sou Holm, 1f . O'Farrell, L. Bell, 's Halnes, p alosvsrouwso lhtoniaesas loawmaansed alouwsssuosall Totals 34 13 27 poBatted for Robertson in Sth. oston . -000 400 000—4 St. Louts 2001 101 03x—6 I bas hit 2, Bottomley, Holm, High, Hogan Bell. Home runs.. ;v::‘mun;ri c};oln{m Umpires—Wilson, Pfir- d Quigley. Losing pitcher—Gene- wich, Time—1 SR one NET STARS DEEEAT TORRINGTON TEAM New Britain Tennis Club Takes Six of Seven Matches The New Britain Tennis club team scored a brilliant victory over the Meadowbrook club at Torrington Saturday, taking six out of the seven matches played. The use of a sec- ond string man in the varsity crew. was the cause of the only loss of the day. Art Benson defeated Cooley 6-1, 6-2; Lienhard beat Martini 3-6, 6-1, and 6-2; Murdock sent Phillips down to defeat 6-0 and 6-2; Chris- tensen battled Doyle 6-1 and 10-8; and Duncan disposed of Wadhams 6-4 and 6-1, In the doubles, A. Benson and Lienhardt defeated Cooley and Mar- tini 4-6, 6-4 and 6-2, while Duncan and Carlson suffered the only de- feat at the hands of Wadhams 3-6, | 6-4 and 6-2. The local team will be at its full strength next Saturday when it tackles the fast Beaver Hills club of New Haven, one of the strongest net combinations in the state competi- tion. Entries for the city championship tennis tournament are coming in fast. A total of 43 have entered the | singles matches already and 27 ha he committee es to impress on the > public that tour- M n to eve ed in tenn There ar tions and those ~vishing touch the one in no restrie- immediate the commi tournament ce iron built spans the river ind, was built in 1 enter | FALGONS EASILY Lose for Third Time to River- Yiews on Saturday The Falcon baseball team won and lost a baseball game over the week-end. On Saturday, the local club fell for the third time this sea- son before the fast Riverview club of Norwich, but on Sunday, the Fal- cons returned home to their home stamping ground and easily set down the Herrups of Hartford. The Falcons have met 21 opponents this |g season and only four of them have been able to beat the New Britain crew. Three of these wins were scored by the Riverview club while the other was scored by the Bristol Endees. Sunday’s Game “Dutch” Leonard took the pitch- BURRITTS WIN IN NINTH WHEN ROSE HITS HOMER| KENSINGTON TABS Relief Pitcher Gets Third Circuit Blow of Season and Burritts Stay in Lead Pirates Win One-Sided Despite Speedboy Rally— Game—West Ends Cling to Early Lead—Osborne Has Field Day at First Base —Junior League Game. League Standing w. Burritts . 5 Pirates West Ends Rangers 3 PC. 1.000 838 .600 .333 .167 . 167 The champion Burritts barely managed to maintain thelr lead in the City league race Saturday after- noon, losing an early 7-1 lead when the Speedboys rallied strongly in the late innings but pulling out a 9-8 g =D ing assignment for the Herrups at |victory when Johnny Rose went into St. Mary's field yesterday. For elght |the box, stopped innings, he puzzled the Falcon bat- ters with his shoots and curves. In that frame, the local contingent started going and didn’t stop until five runs were scored and Leonard | had been chased from the mound in favor of “Ginger” Cleary. Bucholtz pitched steady ball for the home club, holding the Herrups to five scattered hits all of them scored during the first five innings. He tightened up in the pinches and it was only in the fifth frame that he weakened enough to allow the Hartford team to score. One run was the sum total of the efforts of the Herrup crew in the fifth, but it looked big to the Fal- cons. Dixon singled to right and Gallon followed with a double. This was the only extra base hit of the afternoon for the Hartford team. The Falcons couldn’t develop the punch to score in the early frames. Leonard used a tantalizing curve and the Falcons couldn’t hit it. In the seventh, however, the home club tied the score. Stanley Budnick singled through the box. Si Budnick singled over third. Stanley holding second. Klatka shot a single through first and second. Cleary knocked the ball down but “Star- head” scored. In the eighth, the Falcons came into their own. Green started the fireworks with a single to right. Haber sacrificed him down. Velardy reached first on an error. “Star- head” Budnick then singled over second and Green scored. Simon Budnick sent a long single to right scoring the two remaining runners. Klatka lined one through short and Simon scored. Cleary went into the box. Klatka went to third on infield outs and scored on Kopec's single to center. * ! Green, the two Budnicks and Klatka were the heavy hitters for the home club, while Velardy in left field turned in a pretty catch in deep left to cut short a Hartford rally. The summar: HERRUPS R. 0 L o iy iy sl . 2 , Gerltus, Madden, Cleary, 1b p Alexander, cf Holtzheimer, rf Kelly, 3b . Dixon, Gallen, ¢ . Leonard, p, 1t ulosnsssss wlossooammol Totals ] > g, Wa 9 7 @ g o Tt e Green, 2b . EhaY, ek s 2ea i Velardy, 1f ... St. Budnlck, ss Si. Budnick, 3b Klatka, 1b Kredar, cf Kopec, ¢ Bucholz, P . et S n e i e s s e ol ot |l cosooooonl 27 .000 010 1000 000 15x—6 Sacrifices—Ha- Totals Herrups Falcons Two ber 2, T n n. Umplre—Sauter. Saturday's Game For the third time this season, the Riverview club of Norwich de- feated the Falcons by a 5 to 3 score in Norwich Saturday afternoon. Du- gan of the Norwich team and Ber- gerson of the Falcons furnished a pretty pitching duel. Except for the | second inning when he was touched up for four hits, Bergeron worked a sweet game. The second frame was the one in which the Norwich team won. The state hospital crew scored four runs and these proved to be too much for the Hardware City unit. The Fal- cons got an early lead in the first inning when Green and Merek singled and Green scored on Stan- ley Budnick’s grounder, the play going to second. The Falcons made a strong bid to overcome the Norwich lead in the third, but two runs totalled their best efforts. Dugan and Chiminow- ski for the Norwich team were the heavy hitters, while the hitting of Green and the Budnick brothers fea- tured for New Britain. Kredar star- red in the field. 1 geron hoiz, With the arrival of the first ship n fifteen years, inhabitants of an island in the Bering Strait, between Siberia and Alaska, learned for the first time that Russia is no longer a monarchy. slow | | 1 I | s opponents, and hit a home run with Zaleski on third in the final inning, The game started out like the usual slaughter which the Burritts have been inflict- ing, but the leaders had to work their hardest at the end and were then just able to get the extra run | needed for yictory. The Pirates kept within halt a | game of first place by pounding out |a 15-83 victory over the Rangers in | a carelessly played game. The win- ners hit hard and the losers hardly hit. The West Ends got the jump on the Tabs and took a 5-2 decision on the strength of a lead gained in the first two innings. Burritts 9, Speedboys 8 The Speedboys came from far be- ind in the late innings, drove | Zaleski out of the box, and went into the ninth inning with a one-run lead, only to have Johnny Rose win his own game by crashing out his third home run of the season and give the Burritts a 9-8 victory in the most exciting finish of the season. Morse Richtmyer, with his hoodoo still on his trall, was a late arrival and went into the box cold, the Burritts hammering him for five hits and as many runs in the first two innings. After that he curbed their slugging tendencies and kept them well in hand until Rose's smash. Zaleski was wild and weak- ened toward the end, but Rose took up the pitching and saved the game | in the eighth and ninth frames. Zaleskl was hit in the first inning and scored on a pair of errors. In the next frame five hits, including Partyka’s double, gave the Burritts a 5-0 lead. The Speedboys picked up their first in the fourth, making it out of two hit batsmen, a force hit, and “Bus’ Miller's single. Rose's triple scored Luty in the fifth and Osborne’s error after J. Bud- nick had walked in the sixth made | it 7-1. Then the Speedboys, rapldly be- coming the laughing stock of the | league by their weak play, pulled an amazing comeback, and the Burritt infield, which had been playing per- fectly, blew up under the shock. Mil- ler started the seventh with Yis third stralght hit. Cherpac fouled out, but Scott was safe when Kuklinski dropped the throw on his sacrifice bunt. A wild pitch brought Miller in and Richtmyer walked, two more runs scoring on Osborne's safety to right and two errors in bringing the ball back. Silewski fanned. L. Budnick made a two-base error on Erickson’s grounder, Ditsch walked, and Harold Bacon dropped a hit into right to score Ditch. Miller came up agatn but forced Bacon. How- ever, the score was tied at 7-7 and the contest had become a real base- ball game. The Speedboys took the field with renewed confidence and turned back the Burritts in order, then went into the lead. Cherpac opened with a two-bagger to left center and Za- leski who had waited too long, re- tired in favor of Rose. Johnny walked Scott before he warmed up, and, after Richtmyer had forced Cherpac, Osborne drove Scott home with a looping hit back of second, but when Rose fanned Milewski and to for their last turn at bat. Richtmyer hit Zaleski for the second time, and it proved fatal, for after Luty had been retired Rose lashed a screaing liner over third for a home run and won his own game. The hit was a terrific one, the ball at no time being more than seven feet off the ground, and it was perfectly placed to elude Cherpac in left. The Speedboys worked hard/in their halt and Bacon got around to third, but Cherpac took a third strike with his bat on his shoulder. The feature of the ‘game was Osborne’s work at first. Yordy had 18 putouts, six of them unassisted, and started a double play. Rose and Miller led the hitting of their teams. The box score: respective BURRI AB. Milewski Ditsch, i Home Time—1:50. Pirates 15, Rangers 3 The Pirates swamped the Rangers Pirates from the start, Begley draw- ing a pass and Weir pounding a home run before the game had fairly begun. After that it was merely a question of score, for the Rangers could get but three hits off H: ck and couldn't make any off Willlams, who succeeded him. Quart! and Anderson were both in- effective, and the game was a list- less affair. Johnny Sheehan’s home run in the third was a wicked swipe. The ball rolled all the way into the left field territory of Diamond No. 2 and “Snowshoes’ "trotted around without extending himself. In the fourth the Pirates manufactured seven runs out of three hits, four passes, and a cou- ple of errors. Havlick wobbled in the fifth, Anderson singling and Tur- ner and Plerson drawing passes. Quarti struck out, but Sheehan foozled Simons' grounder with a double play in sight and Blauvelt shot a hit to left. Then Havlick fanned Rocco and Plurin popped to Sheehan. Willlams took Havlick's place in the sixth and had a nice workout—Ilittle more. Beagle, Yankaskas, Weir and Havlick hit hard for the Pirates and Blauvelt for the losing team. The box score: PIRATES AB. R. [ E. Regley, ns Welr, If .. Charlow, 1f . Reagle, Tf han, 2h Wik, HYA Matulis, 3b . Yankaskas, 1b Clalre, cf . Williams, p . Connell ¢ . Havlick, p, cf osos000muc0ms Totals Blauvelt 1f Rocco, ss . Flurin, 1b . Witham, ¢ Anderson cf, p Wm. Turner rf . Plerson, 2b ........ Quartl, p, cf ... May x Simons, 2b . wlooomrnsssop lossssnsse Totals 24 3 220 Batted for QQuarti in 7th, fatulis out for running out of b —; line. Pirates Rangers 5 Two base hit—Beagle. Three base hit —Blauvelt. Home runs—Welr, Sheehan, Umplre—-Camphell Time—1: West Ends 5, Tabs 2 A five-run lead piled up in the first two frames gave the West Ends a 5-2 victory over the Tabs, who threw still further fresh strength into play this week. Mec- Namara was ineffective at the start, but then he settled down and shut out the West Ends during the last seven innings, permitting only four hits during that period. Tom- my Elanchard was doing even bet- ter for the West Ends, holding~the Tabs to a quartet of hits for the full nine innings. These were well scattered, and Blanchard fanned 13 batters. The West Ends stepped out in the first inning when Donahue dropped J. Daly's throw and Hin- chey was safe. George Campbell followed with a long double to right center and drove him in. In the second Recano drew a pass but was forced when Howard grounded to J. Daly. Smithwick singled and Blanchard foliowed suit, Howard crossing the plate. J. Daly threw over first base after flelding “Red"” Campbell's grounder and the bat- ter took second, Smithwick scoring. (Continued on following page.) H-H-1 ) by 15-3 in a one-sidede and unin- teresting game, The game was all @ 1987 Ny TRIBWE , 1 PIRATES NOSEOUT |CORBIN RED SOX SCORE TWO WINS OVER WEEK-END i Take Collinsville Into Camp in League Game and Then Locals Drew Firt Blood in Dump Mystic Nine on Sunday—Walter Berg in Rare Shape in Sabbath Game—Billy Schmidt Series Between Two The Pirates baseball nine nosed out Kensington Tabs yesterday aft- ernoon at Willow Brook park in a close and hard fought game, 5 to 4. The teams were evenly matched and staged a beautiful battle. The Pi- rates, however, had their batting clothes on and batted the offerings of Jim McCormick and Joe McCor- mick hard, crashing out 14 safe blows. Ev Williams was in wonder- ful form and allowed but five scat- tered hits. The Tabs earned but one run, the Pirates faltering twice with men on the bags. Williams was the master with men on base and held the Tabs helpless. It was & strong comeback for Williams over the team that had beaten him earlier in the season. The Tabs took an early lead and forced the Pirates to fight an uphill battle. The Corsairs went into the seventh with the score 4 to 2 against them but rallied to score a tally in| seventh, elghth and ninth. Matulis turned in the fielding gem of the day when he made a great back | hand catch in the opening inning. Weir and Claire pounded the pill hard. Each man pushed out®three safe blows. Matulis and O'Connell al- so hit the ball hard with two hits each. The work of O'Connell behind the bat was sensational. He made two wonderful stops of low throws {o get the man coming from third. Fagin of the Tabs gave a classy ex- hibition of fielding at short. He handled eight chances without a kobble. The locals scored first in the open- ing inning when Weir hit a long| double and registered on Greco's er- | ror on Beagle's grounder. The Tabs tled it up in the fourth when Frank McCormick singled and scored when O'Connell's throw to get him going to second struck him in the leg and rolled into center field. The Tabs took the lead in the fifth when Yan- kaskas, with two men on the bags, threw wild over third and both men scored. A hit by Malone and Greco's fielder's choice gave the Tabs an- other in the seventh. The Plrats rallied sharply in the iast three innnings. Weir singled and scored on a long double by Beagle. In the eight the locals tied the score when Claire, O'Connell, ,‘Williams and Weir hit safely. The winning run was chased across the pan in the final canto. Yankaskas hit to Giana who threw wildly to first put- ting Yank on second. He went to third on a passed ball and scored when Claire hit a grounder to Glana, Giana made a great stop but Yan- kaskas was safe whef the catcher dropped the trow home. The sum- mary: 9 igiimerr e S o Begley, 58 Charlow, ct Welr, 1f . Beagle, rf, 1b 1...o Yankakas, 1b, Tf .. Matulis, 3b Claire, 2b O'Connell, ‘¢ Williams, B e e S ] 14 TABS e Totals 3 KENSINGTON AB. F. McCormack 1If . Fagap, ss . of .0, Jim McCorm'k B Maguda, 1b Glana, 3b Kane ¢ Greco, 2b Malone, rf . 3 Joe McCormack p Totals x25 14 x—One out when winning run scored. Kensington g 000 120 100—4 Pirates ... 100 001 111—5 Two bas> hits—Weir, Beagle. Umplre— Conwny., Time of game—1:45. aluuscssscun wlcononscoosld BLACK CATS WIN The Black Cats defeated the North Burritts at Walnut Hill park Saturday by the score of 2 to 1. It was a tight game all through. The Days of Real Sport A1t Yy, (] Pitches Home Club to Win Over Saturday Slug- gers—Tobinmen Play Winning Ball. The Corbin Red Sox baseball team Kept up its winning ~streak Saturday and Sunday by checking In two victories. The locals defeated their old rivals, the Collinsville club in a Central League contest staged at Willow Brook park Saturday aft- ernoon while on Sunday, they hand- ed the Rossi Velvet A. A. of Mystic a 9 to 0 whitewashing. Sunday’s Bame Walter Berg was in excellent form yesterday and he held the Mystic team safely all the way while his mates pounded Smith for 12 hits to tuck the contest staged in Mystic away by the score of 9 to 0. Plenty of fireworks was set off in the second inning. Doubles by Hu- band and Fitzpatrick, singles by Berg, Huband and Soule, passes to Blanchard and Patrus and an error by the Mystic shortstop, accounted for seven runs for the Sox. Huband hit safely twice in this one frame. In the fourth, Huband, with two out, tripled and scored on Huber's infield hit. Snyder scored in the ninth when he singled to center went to third on Patrus’ lick to the same place and counted on a field- er's choice on Huband's roller. Huber's throw to the plate to catch Schiller when he attempted to score on Wilson's fly, was the feat- ure of the game. The summary: CORBIN RED SO AB, I Snyder, Petrus, Soule, Jiuber, Rile; K Blanchard, Fitzpatrick, 'R D ... Claney, x b s ol cowmnoosns Totals ROSSI VE! I AB. T Dubronsk! Zb . . Brewer, ss Schiller, cf Gregor b Wilson, 1b Rhodes, 1f Main, of .. Sampin, cf Kellers, ¢ . Smith, p Totals x—Ran for Berg In 2nd, Corbin Red Sox ...... Two haso hits—Dubronski, Fitzpatrick, Huband Three base hit—Huband. Um- pires—Wiiheni and Saturday’s Game The sluggiug Conllinsville base- ball team went down for the count at the hands of the Red Sox Satur- day afternoon at Willow Brook park in a Central Connecticut League contest by the score of 11 to 8. The game wa® full of variety including errors, hits, sensational throwing and everything else that goes to make up a ball game. Billy Schmidt, on the mound for the Red Sox, was invincible until the seventh inning. After that, he bare- ly slipped through with a win. The Sox blanked the visitors for six in- nings, but in the last three frames, the Collinsville crew almost wrecked the day for the home club. Horn started in the box for the Collinsville club but he retired in the third inning in favor of O'Connell. He finished in fine forifi. A throw by Soule to the plate in the second inning featured the game. F. Odlum doubled to open the ses- sion. O'Donnell shot a hot single to center. Soule played the gall cleanly and shot it to Huband at the plate to catch Odlum sliding in. The sum- mary: 0 0 0 0 wossoss00an Srwoouem 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 100 001—9 CORBIN RED SOX B ide Snvder, rf . 7 1 Patrus, b . Soule, cf . Huband, Wojack, Haber, If .. Riley, 3b .... Blanchard, 1b Schmidt, p . Fitzpatrick, 3b . Totals R. Curry, ss . D. Curry, 3b . Lambert, 2b , Schroeda, ¢ . F. Odlum, cf O'Donnell, rf, p Tibbal, If . Maroney 1b Horn, p Odlum, rf Totals 7 Corbin Red Sox ..135 000 20 Collinsville ... 000 000 333 Two base hits—F. Odlum, Tibbals 2, Curry, Schroeder, Snyder Blanchard, Three base hits—Lambert, Blanchard, Home run—F. Odlum, Umpire—Crowley, PEXTOS LOSE T0 INSILCOS AGAIN Meriden Practically Clinches Central League Pennant The Insilco baseball team of Mer. iden practically clinched the Cona tral' Connecticut 1dague pennant for 1927 yesterday afternoon at Hane over park when it defeated the Pex- to club of Southington, 4 to 1, in a regular league game. Billy Kline's superb twirling coupled with misplays by the South- ington aggregation, gave Meriden a victory and a three game lead in the race for honors. Kline allowed only five scattered hits and was in command all the way. Ahearn, pitching for Southington, showed plenty of stuff but misplays by his matey sent him down to défeat. Southington got its only run in the fifth on Becker's single, a pass and Owl's bingle. Becker and Beg- ley were the only Southingeon bats- men to reach third. The summary: INSILCOS e wre s 24 Paralorssmsmr-ul m il @ > ] oo e s o) S Curylo, J. Curylo, Lunderville, Kline, p Terrill, rf . Patkoske, Dahlke, 1b Winterhalder, c Thomas, ¢ 2b . 5 . {9 olssss Totals L] &) owl, cf ... Carrington, 2 Mackbarth, Sheehan, rf . McKiernan, 1€ . Gibson, s cker, 3b Bagley, 1h Ahearn, p Moran, If . 2525000 sswal! Savooann Sl e Al et e Totals Pextos .. Insilcos Two baso hits—. 8. Curylo 24 13 7 000 010 000—1 001 102 00x—4 Curylo. ~ Sacrifice— Umpire—Barry Time of game WINS ANOTHER TITLE Chicago, Aug. 8 (A—Charles “Chick” Evans, who once held more golf titles than even Bobby Jones, today has another laurel for his fairway prowess. He won the third annual amateur driving contest at | Soldier Field yesterday with a total of 524 yards for two drives. His first attempt was 257 yards and on his second he added ten more. 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