New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 15, 1927, Page 8

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, AUGUST 15, 1927 BURRITTS AND PIRATES SLUG VICTORIES IN CITY LEAGUE—FALCONS DOWN COLLEGIANS — PIRATES TIGHTEN HOLD ON FIRST PLACE BY DEFEATING WATERTOWN—RED SOX SWAMP PEXTOS OF SOUTHINGTON—LEGION TEAM TRIMS COLLIERS WWWMWWW CHICAGO CUBS SET OUT 4 ONINVASION OF CAMPS Crucial Campaign Is On for Pennant—Beat Cincinnati —Giants Defeat Phillies — Pirates Down Cards— Braves Whitewash Robins — Yankees Again Set Down Senators—Detroit Scores Another Win Over Browns—White Sox Knock Off Cleveland Indians. After a home stand that netted 18 | Meiillo, 2b victories in 17 games played the | S hans. © Chicago Cubs were en route east| Gorner, ss today on an invasion of enemy aton, p . campe, the success of which proba- | O'Rourke, bly will determine to a large extent the fate of the National leaguc leaders. lomn lonwa~s Totals e =5 Joe McCarthy's hustling outft {s | Warner ib scheduled to meet Brooklyn, Boston, | Gerninger, Philadelphis, New York, Pittsburgh, | Wingo, rf and Cincinnati in order before re- | Manush, ct . turning to Chicago, September ¢. Ir | Tulie M the Cubs return home With first | jausler, o place still theirs they should hold on | Stoner, p ... the rest of the way. The Cubs made a clean sweep of | the three game series with Cincinnati | s, by winning yesterday's game, 7-2. Percy Jones, Chicago left hander, was invincible after the first inning, | ; when both Red runs were scoresd. The Bruins pounded Red Lucas out ; in the seventh with a rally that| clinched the victory. i By deteating Philadelphia, 3-1, the | Giants pulled up to within one game | nrosgen of the thrd place St. Louis Cardinals. | Allen The game was played in a drizzle. "‘f'*kflfl Larry Bentom allowed eny four hits, \, paiken, two of which were bunched. Fergu- | Fera, sa son of the Phils was not scored on | Critz, 2b after the second inning. Hmgiae Ray Kremer's airtight pitching | fransmue 5 was too much for the Cardinals and | Dicinich, x Pittsburgh strengthened its hold on ond place with a 6.1 victory remer held the world's champions | to six hits and Kept them scattered. | The Bues collected only six safeties oft Sherdel, H. Bell and McGraw, | jiacimo e but they delivered at opportune mo- | Wiison, ments. The Pirates are now two | Stephenson games ahead of St. Louis. [iGiumeian Brooklyn failed to end its 10sing | fore 2 .. . straak and returned home to take a 4-0 beating at the hands of Kent| Greenfield and the Boston Braves. The Kentuckian held the Dodgera to four hits and never was in difficul Three home runs spelled the down- fall of Jess Petty, the Robin south- paw, Hogan, Welsh and Fournier 0 0 & . ol oo clotit alonoronee 4 1 0 3 0 Totals 29 “Batted for Schang in fth Louls «..... 041 000 Detroit & 102 210 00x Two base hi ner. Umplres—>Me- Gowan, Gelsel Hildebrand. Time— 34 NATIONAL LEAGUE 2 9 AD el e ot e £ R losseasw Totals x—Patted for 53 Danohua CHICAGO e 3 Adams, 3b e GES 1t L Cineinnati | Chicaga Two ba zales, Ad. | ente, W pires—Reardon O'Day and Moran, —1:45. hits—Bressler, Kelly 3, Gon- . Stephenson, Beck. Henth- Losing pitcher—Lucas, Um- Time FALGONS DEFEAT COLLEGIAN TEAM “Farmer” Bucholtz Invincible: With Men on the Bases The Falcons ed the Colleglan club of Providence Sunday afternoon at St. {in a thrilling baseball to 3 score. The game waged from beginning to end with both teams hitting the ball hard and often. “Farmer” Buckholtz was on the mound for the I%alcons and though touched up for nine bingles | was invincible with men on bases. In | the sixth the Colle on second and third with no outs. | Buckholtz then treated the large gathering to a neat bit of pitching when he retired the side without a score The Collegians presented a hard fighting aggregation but erratic work at critical times cost the visitors { whatever chance they had of win- ning. The Falcons were in fine hit- ting form and sent out 11 hard {smashes inclnding two triples. John- |ny Klatka, hard hitting Industrial !league player, had a field day at the bat. The curves of Bradley were meat for Klatka who lined out four ame by a 7 was hotly !terrific hits in four times at bat. A | triple and three singles were John- {ny's donation to the Falcons’ cause. | Bradley started on the mound for | the Providence team but found the locals too tough and retired in favor | of Noonan in the sixth inning. Noon- an was also hit hard in the few in- nings he toiled. Lalos played a wonderful game in the fleld and at bat for the Falcons, | The Massachusetts boy displayed great ability in snaring balls hit center field. His speed in covering ground cost the visitors three appar {ently safe hits, He also hit well with | two safeties in two times at bat. Si Budnick and Jimmy Green kept up their steady work and performed in fine style. Kredar made a great run- ning catch in deep center that was a star piece of work. It was easily the fielding gem of the game. F |in the lot for the Collegians. Brad- | |ley, Doyle and Noonan hit the ball | for two hits apiece. I baseball team defeat- | Mary's field | lard and his aides ins put a man RECORD GATE 1§ EXPECTED AT BOUT New All-Time Mark for Crowds and Purses Is Anticipated Chicago, Aug. 15 (P —A new all- time record for prize fight crowds nd purses loomed before Tex Rick- today as they ettled down to the big business of etting everything ready for the T'unney-Demp: fight at Soldier field Sept. Rickard no sooner had announced vesterday that his final plans for the ght now indicated a total gate of nearly $3,000,000, with a gross at- ‘ndance at some 160,000 than Jack Dempsey boarded a train from Hol- Iywood and headed for Chicago with Lis wife and a party of his training camp helper The challenger is due here Wed- nesday ready to go into training at the Lincoln fields race course. Tunney is not expected much be- fore September 1. Rickard went over his ideas of seating arrangements yesterday with engineers of the South park board which confrols the stadium, draftsmen began work on the blue prints which are to be submitted to e Tllinois state athletic commission tomorrow. Tentative plans of the price scale |show that the $40 ringside seals, !clustered around the ring, on the ground between the two colonnades | of the dium kings, constitute but a small percentage of the seats. Nearly all around the huge concrete horseshoe are scaled at $20, $25 and $£30, about divided between the 50 rows evenly |of chairs. |Just land Cummings put up a great game | The glass enclosed press boxes in front of the colonnade pil- lars, on top of the stadium wings, re said to be the ol able bidding among those planning | (0 entertain big parties of friends for the fight. VEECH SAYS CUBS WILL NOT CRACK and | of the permanent rows| ect of consid- | COLLIERS BEATEN BY LEGION CREW Close Game in Junior City League Decided in Eighth League Standing W L Pet 5 .833 .800 .600 .600 000 Burritt Juniors .. | Phantoms Colliers American Legion Y M. C A Laurels 2000 Tho American Legion baseball team defeated the Colliers at Walnut |Hill park Saturday afterfioon in a fast and close game in the Junior City league by the score of 9 to 5. It was only through a batting rally |in the cighth inning that gave the winners five runs that the Legion team was able to come from behind and score the victory. | 7The game started off fast with the {Collicrs scoring two runs in the i opening frame on three nicely placed hits. The Legion came back to| |scorc one. In the fourth, the Legion tgam ticd the score through a long | {lome run by Zujko but this was followed in the sixth with another ort-lived rally of two hits and a {sacrifice that put it in the lead. The Colliers, however, were not { yet beaten and aided by an excel lont “dbreak” in the seventh, they {went again into the lead. With run- iners on second and third and two men down, I'to right field. Lindgren easily got |under the ball but just as he was |going to catch it, his spikes caught i the ground and threw him. The two runners scored and Florkowski came in a moment later on a passed bail. The Legion, striving desperately for a win, got another in its half on Zaleski's single. In the eighth, fgame was settled. and a hit batsman gave Ithe opportunity they {for and five runs came across the plate, | “Lefty” Cohen pitched very good | the result of the| Iive hits, a pass | the winners | were waiting thundering !ball, keeping the opposing hits well | riking out 11. “Pee- the heavy sticker th three screaming liners. He and Chodukiewicz starred in |scattered and wee" Zaleski ® Florkowski hit a high fly | PIRATES NOSE OUT WATERTOWN TEAM Locals Tighten Their Hold on First Place in League The Piratee tightened their hold on first place in the Western Con- necticut Baseball League when they nosed out the strong Watertown nine Sunday afternoon Brook park by a close score, 6 to 5. “Huggic” Carlson too mound for the Corsairs and held fhe visitors seventh when Watertown ‘scored | four runs. “Hal"” Beagle won the | game for the Pirates in the last of homer into center field with a man on base. It was a terrific clout and ¢ell in the deep grass. “Hal” a great day at the bat with two doubles and a homer in four times at bat. Both teams played a strong game in the field and fought hard to get the verdict. O'Connell put up a great game behind the bat and | handled the shoots of Carlson in neat style. McCleary put up a good |game at first for the. visitors, | The Pirates“found the offerings of Deland fo their likening and crashed out eleven hits. Tn fourth Begley and Charlow singled. They were followed by doubles on the part of Beagle and Williams. This display of hits netted the Pi- rates four runs. The visitors tied the [score in the seventh inning. hits and two errors were good for four runs. Beagle then won the | game with his home run. The Pirates are in the mldst of a winning streak and at their present| pace should cop honors in the| |league. Tt was their twelfth veitory | of the year in fourteen starts. The| '\\':\(l‘r(o\\n team filed the bases in the second finning and tried a | squeeze play. The locals outgues the visitors, however, and easily got | their man at home. NEW BRITAIN PI B. R. | Becter, s 1 | 3 y 0 | O'Cannell 0 Carlson, p at willow | helpless in all the innings except the the seventh when he smashed a long | had | the | Two | BURRITTS AND PIRATES BATTER WAY TO VICTORY Champions Maintain Lead By Burying Tabs — Tree Robs Rose of Fourth Homer — Pirates Smother Speedboys and Drive Richtmyer From Box—West Ends Defeat Rangers In Uninteresting Game—Bat- ting Averages of Winning Teams Rise. League Standing w Burritts veee o ] Pirates . R il West Rangers | Speedboys Tabs | The Puml b ewsici, ) 1ekson, Cherpa 5671 1. F Seg |Milte +286 | Ditge 143 ott 143 Pirates and West | 2nds continued their winning stride | in the City baseball league at Walnut | 1 Hill park Saturday, hitting hard to| L score victories ove the three teams |y in the second division. The net re- | el sult was that the standing remained | unch nged. The Pirates showed a pet.| | 1.000 | .S57 1t on, 20 ot rt ehan, myer, ne, 1b, P 1t 1 0 11 0 24 011 Wilewskl, Claire, or and Camps i Totals 5 Kas. Umpires— Time—~1:51. Rurritts 15, Tabs 3 The Burritts continued their win- much improved spirit and played-ine | ning habit and snowed the Tabs un- ball in all departments, smothering jder a 15 to 3 defeat. There was no the Speedboys by 1 The Burritts | doubt about the outcome of fthe kept up their slugging and piled up | game after 14 of the winners batters a 15-3 count on the Tabs. The West | went to bat in the second inning and nds did not far quite so well but [added 9 runs to the three which were still able fo turn hack thethey had scored in the opening Rangers by 8-2 and take revenge for | frame. | their previous defeat at the hands of | Rose was on the mound for tha that team. {winners and just breezed along Pirates 16, Speedboys 0 rping the six hits gathered by the The revenge taken by the Pira abs well scattered. McNamara on Morse Richtmyer, who had held | pitched well considering the hitting [them to two lucky hits when e },4,,“'\ of the winners and the weak | pitched against them before, was alsupport furnished by his mates |terrible thing. They fell upon h The Burritts broke into the lead offerings for 16 hits in seven inning: |in the first inning scoring three runs driving him from the mound for the |on three hits, two infield outs, an |first time this season, and continued { arpor, and a wild pitch, In the sec- lnst h ssors to make their | oqg fivg golid hits, coupled with sev- al. total USRS Aeamhila e (e o Nl oy i cor T d e cerett Willinms, aided by good sup- | - b e ment on the part of the losers, gave port when this was LT PR s back the Speedboys almost in orde iHalliabS atored (wice (nithe asc: land shut them out with four hits | atle I four hifs. | o1g o fwo hits, and a hit batsman They scored once | The fifth inning was the only session | | lana two erro [in which he was in danger at all, | “° FUE Gl S L SO O e a |and in that innings the two hits S0 =l which were ma came after two were out and the third man was re- | ke |fi | fielder’s choice, and a wild pitch Tn the seventh the Burritts added | three to their total on three hits 0 tired without trouble o ! Johnnie Sheehan The Pirates, | with much of | safely !score i going into the game | last year's pep, hit inning, but did not Irickson mu rounder in the | terror. lincluding Rose’s blow looked home ru n triple by Rose, until it strick a and like tree an in | deep left. The ball bounded back to ards the diamond upon hitting the tree, getting preventing Rose from home run of the season. BURRITTS R. hitting for the circuit. Fournier's drive came with a runner on base. In the last threc games Petty has worked the Robins have failed to | scere a single run. The New York Yankees chalked up another one on the Washington Senators, 6-2. Waite Hoyt allowed the Harrismen only five hits while Tom Zachary was ineffective. Ruth and Gehrig failed to do anything about their home run dispute, but + each got a hit. Detroit made it five in a row over | St. Louis, the Browns being nnsed1 out by a 5-4 margin. Melillo'’s three errors paved the way for the St. Louis beating. AMERICAN LEAGUE NEW YORK AB. | second and three consecntive singles 2l fallowed, three runs being the result. | | Beagle's double drove in Matulis in 0{tle third, and Sheekan's hit, ¢ land saerifices by Calire and Connell 0 made it 5-0 in the fifth. Begley and y | Havlick put ive pitches on! 0|the tennis courts in the sixth. Tn 0 lthe seventh Claire found the same o mark and was scored by Connell. The big blow-off came in the | eighth, when Havlick, Beagle and | Yankaskas all pounded doubles into the courts and, with two out, forced | Richtmy retirement. “Bus” Mil- ler took his place. Miller pitched to cight men and couldn't get one of |them out, three hits, four passes and [an error”allowing all to reach first |base. Then Osborne came in to I pitch. He started by walking Yan- kaskas, but he struck out Cianci and | ended the rally. A nice double play | Begley to J. Sheehan to Beagle stop- ped the Speedboys in their half 4 | Sheehan had fumbled Osborne Two games are scheduled to beljep 4 [played in the Boys' Rotary haseball! qhe o |league at 3 o'clock at Walnut Hill| steady and terrific, 0| park. Willow Brook will meet the | Degley and Beagle leading atack. | 1| X M. C. A on Diamond No. 1, and |yfilewski made a pretty running | Washington will clash with the Bur- | catch of Beagle's foul in the fifth in- ! 4|ritt team on Diamond No. Ining. Williams pitched and | 900 300—5| This Wil usher in a busy week | stoady game all the w box Home yan (for the juniors. With the two con- e Umpire— |tests on today, another pair s |scheduled for Wednesday, a regt |afternoon of play in the league. |sides these four games, two mor will be played on Friday afternoon |when the games, postponed a weck |ago today because of rain, will be |staged. The locals took the lead in the first when Lalos singled and stole second. A long single by "tar Budnick sent him across the pan. } hit by Kennedy and a wild throw by Kopec into center field allowed the visitors to tie the score in the second ! innings. They took the lead in the third. Doyle walked and a second | later stole second. Noonan came through with a hit to score him. The Falcons came back in the game stanza to register three runs Green and Lalos took first on walks. | Haber was safe on an error which filled th es. “Star” Budnick hit an easy grounder to short and Green scored as Budnick was being retired | at first, Haber started for home and Noonan threw to third to cateh him. Fay took the throw and threw to home in an attempt to get Haber. He | hit the running in the back and both men were safe at the plate when the ball bounded into the crowd. Two hits and an error in the fourth gave the Collegians a run. In the fifth a walk to Lalos and succes- sive triples by Klatka and Kredar I netted two more tallies. The game was called at the last of the eighth on account of the heavy downfall of rain. The summa PROVID! |the ficld. Skonieczny and Florkow- ski got three out of five for the los- ers while Wajok hit two safeties out | of three trics. Pierkowski fielded Inicely for the losers i Game Tonight The Phantoms will meet tha Associated Press. M. C. A. team tonight at New York, Aug. 16 Walnut Hill park in mark of Bill Veeck, president of the league game. The summary: Chicago Nationals, on the occasion | AMERICA the Cubs’ last eastern invasion | ss y turn out to be prophetic. 'he Cubs,” said Bill, “will crack. That's one thing you ) o | Zateskl. 1b ... COURLOn | Chaduklewicr, Since then the Cubs not only have | declined to ¢ but have built | themsclves a substantial lead over | their three major pennant conte ders, the Pirates, Cardinals and Giants. Big Bill Tilden “cracked” seemed, in his two main with French rivals abr the year but the lanky American tennis ace appears as durable as now that he is back on home | soil. The cffects of a campaign that has taken him over half of the United States and a good share of urope this scason apparcntly are | just the stimulus he needs PITTSBURGH Totais 5 his fourth AB. WATERTOWN AB. R. k] Qo Chicago Nationals Have a Sub- stantial Lead Over Rivals L. Waner, cf P. Waner, 1f . Parnhart, 1t Tragynor, 3b ... Wright, ss .... Harrls, 1b Grantham, Spencer, Gooch, © | Kremer, H.PO.AF Farrell, ss | Leatie, ‘3b Donston, 2b ...... Magner, ©f, 1b . MeCleary, 1b, rt .. a pass, the Y.| o'clock another By soomomnasag linabnamnn lomnimasas » 1 ol evmnnosas 2 mans Totals Bogdansk, Silse e 00 weki, s . Budnick rf 1b . Watertown Pirates Two base Osbo Umpir ..000 004 000 hits—Beagle 2, Willian Delano. Home Tun—TNea Conway. Time of game—1:40. ROTARY BOYS LEAGUE | Two Srhwlulrrl Games to he Played At Walnut Hill Park This lorhrnomnnonss not | can | Touthit, Hafey, Toporcer, Frisch, | Bottomtey, Southworth, Uolm, 1 of . IEE 3b Totals 1 o BT A 23-mubo hd =3 Paschal, cf . Koenlg, 85 - Ruth, rf . Gelrl a hit, it matches After- Schulte, 1z noon. 1 albumsas Totals 30 1 2—Batted for Sherdel in 3rd. zz—Batted for H. Bell in 7th Pittsburgh 302 000 st. Louls . ..000 001 Two base hits . Frisch fices—Rhyne, Douthit, Bottomle ing pltcher—Sherdel. Umpire Hart and Rigler. Time—1:35, ..390 420 Two hase hit—St. Budnick Home run—L. Budnick. her. t Ends 8, Rangers 2 he West Ends defeated the Ran- gers in a rather slow and uninter- ting game, 8 to 2. Blanchard was on the mound for the winners and with the exception of the fifth and xth innings, when he ecased up and | the Rangers scored two runs, was in | complete control. Anderson pitched | well for the losers but his erratic support proved to be his downfall. Neither team scored in the first inning but the winners went into n Pirates was 0 with Havlick, | Colllns, ¢ hitting of the Hoyt, p Totals Potka | Vterkowskl, | Gotas, p, e ... =.I T | o ol moonmmmmg - lhwrosun WASHINGTO! AB. R, 1 0 1 0 z ° I smmrys oot o Bl ey 10 a0y 100 k. Truhan, me—2:05, a conl The Rice, rf . . Harris, 2b . Bpeaker, 1b Goslin, 1t AfcNeely, Kuel, ¢ Bluege. 3b . Teeves, o8 . ‘achary, p raxton, p Burke, p Tate, s 4 “ 3 BOSTON R. i 9 o olossscssss Tnless some new fighting figure | springs to the front the winter edition of the “heav slimination follies” will find partici- " | pating the same cast that provided | ;| the nment leading up to| | this ¥ s return Dempse: | title match. Jack Sharkey, the Toston sailor, ady for action by Octobe manager u.\.&r‘l‘\’\ | the Poston Trish- “eliminated” by already has | ' The Days of Real Sport' e . 2 Richbourg, Gautreau, Welal High, Fournler, Brown, If .. Farrell, a8 Mogan, ¢ . Greenfleld, crifices PIRAT Time of 3 of A E 0 sescrmuan Toyle, 2h . Noonan, POLO TEAM WINS b York—The new merican Internantional Polo team won a de cisive victory yesterday over a team composed of three United States ar- l(]\ players and one recruit from the British ranks, The score was 16 ouls to Matulls, |l T, Sheeh ank m , scosmnnuavuc nef, nell, Williame, rt aloss mloscosccesonal alonsommms sllctbmwonronay Totals ) 3—Batted for Braxton In Sth. ew York ... 00 300 . Washington 100 100 000—2 Two base hits—Lazzeri, Rice,: Gehrig, Paschal, Bpeaker 2, Meusel. Losing pitch- er—Zachary. Time of game—1 Totals 000—6 READ HERALD CLASSIFTED ADS P ADS FOR YOUR WANTS (Continued on following page.) 5] -> Carey, rt Statz, cf .. Hendrick, 1b Fellx, 1t Parrett, 35 Corgan, 2b Butler, es . Deberry p Petty, p Maloriey Totals who was last M, his comeba Jack Delaney and Paolina Uzcu- n complete the leading quartet, { thus keeping intact the organi tion that “played” last winter's | 3 ht circuit. Paolino's loss on a foul to Delaney | was net convincing enough to put him out of a future role. The | Spa rd indtcates that he has “just begun to take it." BASEBALL TITLE Road Team 2h | Jimmy man Gre. Haber, rf .. Lalos, 1f . St. Bubnick, s 1. Budn! Klatka, 1h Kredar, cf Koper, Buckholtz, CHICAGO A 3 Metsler, cf ........ Kamm, 3b ... Nels, 1t . Sheely, 1b . Falk, If . Ward, b Peck, &8 ........... Berg, o Blankenship, b Totals £l o locnnssomnsy 0 200 011—1 High, Rich- Lalosssassasy H. ) 0 a 1 1 0 0 0 ‘ Totals Boston . Two base hits—Welsb, bouer, Fournier. Home runs—Fournier, Welsh, Hogan. TUmpires—CcCormick, Me Laughlin and Klem. Time—1:30, Total Provide A ] Falions " | Two hasa | ra—sciatica, Time of -000 ~ hit—Bradley. JKredar. Umpire—sauter. 1:45 . CHURCH LEAGIT: GAMES | With | lecwssasmny luvsneensa Yoo - Hoo-cv -+ C'MoN OVER'N RUN LIKE | ™' DICKUNS . PHILADELPHIA AB. R. H. Za g I looomsnounmmany Spalding, 1t ... Cooney, & Willlams, rt Wrightstone, 1 Mokan, ef . Wilson, ¢ Thompson Friber Seotr, x Sand, 3 reuson, Totals Jamieson, 1f . Fonsecs, b . | First l.mhvrm- Confronted Annther Tough Obstacle in Pen. Burritt to Moet City | League Outfit for Diamond Hon- nant Race Tonight. | The First Lutherans are confront- ~ ors of Club. | ed with another tough obstacle to night in their march toward the In- ter-Church baseball league cham- pionship. They are to meet the Co fonal church team ecoming rapidly to having won five and climbed from games front of half. on but in S e e B S Myate, N Noaven. a EW TORK AB. R. ss020ro=omoouM wlooksosoanl he baseball o ni at the ith championship of the will be decided Tue Walnut Hill parl Burritt road team crosses the City v team ot me will | 6 o | Reese, 7b Lindstrom, i 2z—Batied Chicago Cloveiand Two base fices—Berg. South which 1 ' | the fore st for Ei i s been of late Losing pitcher at n' and Dincen right ht o to third have won n hemselves an pack by a game The Swedes have has aro s | 1 | Benton, p H fact that following. the other remembered for g will have The City the ere each team Each team | 1 trouncir 10 in Sth Totals Pattud for Fr Philadelphia New York Two _base Ticese, TI nipires o1 29 g of the lar to give will be s ont and s an edge tiona Dattin 1d with cet infield and ontficld con and both have Bl he Bill Fresen, Lutheran 3 out of 14 s has won all he has patehed |00 0 g h. 1_,'4“‘), has de- i B ill he played on Dia Klatka ¢, Salak 2h, Walicki ouiEh BEh Jnick 1, rf ST. LOUIS AB. R. H.P.O. b 5 A t Bennett the Sister. the Williar E. Mille Cor sts it of ost per s 3 Dalkowski vf battl . Pa bramo- ohb ef, Partyka lows game, Gr mond N, best of the year On Diamond 1 the First Bap- tists have been golng down grade of late and will have to recover consid- lerably it they are to stop the E. B | €. rush. which has brouznt it into third placa. The Bible class has a number of sluggers in Its line-up, vhil2 the Baptists depend more on <peed. The St. Matthew's German |bustibla gas. 75.2 pounds of acetie Lutherans. scheduled to play Ken- |acid, 24 pounds of wood alcohol, 140 s ons el to thelr | pounds of wood star and 622 pounds total without working for it |ot charcoal. T the will hold halls iciate Indicator William bases, on | Lasky | on ne ton of corncobs, recently dis- rsity of Minnesota, 24 a small quantity of vietory

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