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NEW BRITAIN LEAGUE — FRATERNAL LOOP TO BEGIN ACTION MONDAY | PIRATES FINALLY CHECK (0UALTEAWST0 THEIR STREAK OF LOSSES| " fEfT (N’ summ Corsairs Nose Out Cardinals — Braves Turn Tables on \ Phillies Again — Yankees With Makeshift Lineup Falcons - and KeflSlflgwfl Buth Blank Senators — Cleveland Takes Third Bedtmg' Ready for Terrilic Battle From Detroit Tigers—Browns and White Sox Split | SF y Double Header—George Sisler Hits First National |, siseh e My Homer. [ sort will be staged Sunday after- 1 avenue diamond Kensinglon when the Falcons of oon at the Pereiv i i , | this city cross bats with All-Ken- | L pennant considera Pitts 4 T Sinatodn thossehond LieElinE oD | burgh Pir L league | 4 | i uson. Murder will be it i champions 1 Lol {he IPaloant chew 3 their losing St tempe o SN s e o e = { varlier this year by Kensingtc it Mt inelr 1 % i ¥ . « Soutl Enders are set for the best | aftair, 1 g Corsairs, har- : 2 sl il :L;\.,‘ i‘-m“ As ap in the K \ ! | Sevday 5 x is imminent alter the two disasts i ] Cardint 5 27 a2 deteats of Memorial Day. The team ed the Pira 2§ | Played raged basclall against Ma iy ndiaiegd & 0 (15 0 { ehi'ster wnd Manager Eddic Moore is fourth pluce in o 9% . bound to {ry out a dilferent comibin i Affar 8 & M inordcr to U results. Nol i settled down Mer T | mention of the shifts is buing uade. | ball for the wi L The Falcons wre standing pat | H mates k T th their linenp intact, The teim i{ Hauines 1 n showing zood stuff and on i first to be 1 POl A rial Day, split two games with i feat was s e | Meriden Endees Smith’s homer in the sixth gave the || e P s service to be run as often as § Corsairs the tying run. Paul Wan- it et . B j are enough fans wishing 1t, | 1 s triple and Glenn Wright's singl B $ w2 11 wiwill be installed by the Conneeti [ accounted for the win runin IS o on sundtiy. The buses witl piy T | the ninth io 2 i 2 5 ol between Upson’s Corner and the | Geor first Nation:l |} SR o | basenall neld. league b run as the Boston ; % e ) ol o N o | Braves 1 i in a row from ik 3 10w e it Rori aa Seaioite DAt the ido den Phillies, 3 to 4§ gl 351 syor 19 1[tle the Manchester feam at St All told contributed three of ST. LOUIS Mary's field tomorrow afternoon Ahe. Bre Jiik-afl thzeo Bl AB R H A Russ Fisher, one time a mainstay of flens. 3 B R Rl | e . : 3 the Falcon team. will oppose his Tar-dwells e = 5 v = o o|former mates on the mound and the Dl e gt e £ 1 1 Falcons are in for plenty of trouble,| Ripping throngh the water at Wigw Cour. ut o pe U1 0| The Manchester erew is leading the | Kahanamoku at bl shut: oy aash 4 1 olleague at present he team Tas | Olympic team possibilities, He has ':”;: o W - it e ! 'j?nm yet heon defeated and the Fal- | since 1911, B it wimnat o 0e L Ak far he | 1 U|cons hope to sct them back for the| | oo e il me in the fifth when he tripled to | s 0 o rsk mE | cight years old but still trying for deep center en was caught at | 1 o] e contest tomorrow arternoon | WECE BACR P G N Duke the plate wi tricd to streteh it. | will start pmmpm at 3 o'clock. | Kahanamoku, one of the grea Herb Pennock ted four hits and | never was in troubls | swimmers that eyver split the wite | Cleveland took its thir strajght |, 0 | berth. heliing fopmn the opcoming Delralt | "' ¥ The passing years have b ught Tige: 9 to 4. Shaute and Buckeye | 4 ” | were pounded for sixteen hits while | 'x g forth new satellites to mak his task more difficult, but the veteran Gibson pitched ~1I\I-r1nr|\' {ur‘ the | Hawailan Tas kept pretty well Tigers. Johmny Hodapp, Indians' N l L e oy Tunier w0 ot o Ve R tasiin ahona al League —_— experts cor him a good chance the seventh inning and will be out | ‘? dusky ' The St. Louis Browns and Chica- | A ¢ | . N mous the world over for his sprint #0 White'ox ended all sauare arter | w00 n 0 0 Digpleases Fight Fans i i e nvsicn a double header at St. Louis. l.wnn\h o ) . condition. The Duke blazed - into leld the Browns to seven s | B 1 [ = ! the agquatic world in 1971 by setting Lits in the first sci-to, the |n i o York, Junc 1 ®—Manuel | new world’s marks in the 50 and loping ay with an essy 7 fo 2 | Rostig Y01 51 e lQuintero, fast-stepping Spanish light- | 100 yard tree syl His time victor Blaehol 14 Wiltse were | o W w15 opweight, out-slugged Louis (Kid) | va 4 1-5 and 55 conds, re- batted hard. ay und AdKins | i 01"t OiKaplan of Meriden, Conn., formor |spectively. :} ‘.wl’:“'w:x r”y\:“"‘\‘ :‘n';»’)l.]l‘x:g\ ,J‘;:KI’ .::” iy © 7 T5xe 1 o featherweight champion, last night | nantoku's 100 yard open St Syt ””"“";\ PITTSBURGH in the main ten-round bout of a s ht e EaNoD ""'\""\“ in even break on the day, I to 1 ! v i o o) L E Riokend ognd S He ‘w"..m' T, ‘\ Home runs by Manion Clancy 1 BOULPwIOIce AN - 0nDbasHE Ter {10 ‘,J,]" flu\n: i . i w‘»‘.. gave each team @ run in the third, | P, Won 1 e Alst e eIt o Bl s I G 00 s SRS wd then Gray a ns held tight | paniihe e o D ““."",‘:"I gk day :\'N”“ | The Hawailan still Tolds the 50 rein until the centerfielder | Tray S 0o [ s Aaddkion, wlinl Saniied fdo i but sinee 1911 he has et Tt e S S i W W o o please the fans, was close but wont | ¥ d]’”“{i il g SV ey o Ol Y » | punching. Kaplan. a bull-like Little | DUriE tie Gl s in & leaders scored s v n the |5t Lo i 5 | Spanfard every minute of the goi 1419201 Conteats al o cighth and three nore in the mmht g Sehan il | but could not Jund sharply on his|, M ”" = WHM’» : ‘Wl\‘,”"‘l\“": 10 gain # 10 to § verdict over Buf- | Luipires: Stark, Quig- | flect opponent. 10 meters event falo of the Tnternat league, |ley and T Piwe: 1 | Quinteros sounpaw styte puzaea M it i A L | former King of the 126 pounders, | 10 v mark 1o beat the mencafl eague de 0 e - Spaniard drilled clean shots to ey e ke o Kaplan's head and body but conld s of 104 Ulent put the sturdy plunger on the N eI ' & 1ffoor. Neither wus ever in danger | | 11 of @ knockout and most of the but- | S of a maultng, hanling 1y PHLLADELPILA SO W ro a1 [ Filipino, Slammed K ] o0 olangeles, into defest o a ten round Langfor A | g s T o]xking Tut, otherwise Harry Tuttle, I Sew o o o 0f13s, v » cxowowow s e Baby Joe Gans, negro lightweight . Angeles, edged ont a de- | na '3 it of 1os | Hartiord, June 1 — Frank ] » 0 i jmis, Florida, will again ofticiate as v ickie Brady, of Syracusc. | ygngger of bleyele racing at the ¥ ' 0 ing ten rounder. a slOW, | Huriford Velodrome this scason. | ir. Gans scaled The track surface, which was i L E o i somewhat damaged by the flood last A \ s 3 S tull, has been put in perfect repatr 1 s I | BALLOON RACE OVER il Jocal ur bike viders have ) o009 alrcady s training for the . 5 o % | ) hos been | Cleveland k ? BARne BLiGe T = hursday nigif. June 108 bee T Witz | e S ACTCE MUK ETRG I”"":wlrwwl s the date for the opening | g M Others H and Craft. Wrecked, it | meeting of the 1923 season. A ban- e | quet progrim of vaces is heing hook- H LAST M GELT | Was Most Momentous in History. | cd and the | tnotor-paced re event will be a not less than tie Muell , Buifalo | pittsbu June 1 (P—Oiricial | gy star riders i ey % « > (10). Jack irmation that all 14 balloons | The series of & from which | it " « 11 enfered in e national climination | will - enic t American open 4 Sokiter, Domt-| contests foc the L e trophy and { yotor-paced champion of 1925, ) 1 % g N irht 1o represent the United States | 4pcady under The world' (1 the international balloon races at | st rid o i 1 Lon ! Detroit, June 36, w accounted for | ypre divided into 1 ivisions, desig- % Bas terminated what pilots tertied [ pated as 0l el divis- Hadls Q most momenious free balloon |jon will contest in yaces with N |l on record.” 1 division conts rode out the 44 races, ! 1 clectrical storm that mpion. | ! ¥ g 1 biags shortly after o ‘]vhnl“‘ 1 i oy Ficld, Decoration Jericans ) Tam Day, A situlation showed two |1y seo Zuchetth and Dan Pischi I < Hoonists o seriously in- one, Halia Wynsday, Bel > ¢ ¥ ‘ Fisposito, | jured and pr ry one of | Larry 1w Irish-American, pon 3 Bn ! others in race bruised. [ vamco Giorgetti and 1 1 | three balloor that rode out Vi Ttadians Victor I P-4 the stormn, the W. W. J.: American | Hophins Frank Keenan, | i | o! Business Club of Akron and Army | American; soozman, Holland- ! Pennock, » ) No, 1, each landed yesterday in Vie- | ers Sammy € ' s1na All e owill be entered ih‘: nager Cadwell nounces that Lo N tonrney, race officinls | the best riders in the world will be T J " . Distance must be | seen at the Thursday night mectings g ow Y cfore the actual winner | at the Hartford \Velodrome. el 3 h out Lefty Coop - NS | COLUMBIAS WIN s ek | i ! LASALLE A, €. WIS | The columbia A. C. basehad team ¥ | Phantom Cubs had their fea- , opened the season yestorday it ey 1 SPEEDROYS TARE TWO { tures Badly clawed by the LaSalle | feating the Eagles 3 o 2 Linchan CHICAGO ’ The « tonk Panl Tutko's | A, €. Meamorial at Walnut Hill "and Burke formed the battery for o iy | park. Smolens wtarred behind | the winners while Ferony and Per- ; 1 p | te b) N to 17 and 3 the hat whil micko pitehed a | retta worked tor the e, rony : 1o 7. A 1 from the gime for the winners, He hurled nicely althonzh | on 1 o ' 15 <ore were 1o ! struck out 15 men and walked five. the wrong end of the score. Weir : A winners, T The team challengs ny other team Stelma and Burke ccor the runs g - & 4 | St 4im 4 farfelt from {in the clfy atveraging 15 to 17 vears for the winners. A challenge is is- - 1 gives the | Addrcss Tadward Sapita a1 94 Cabot sued to any team in the it averag s {team a ins and on= | street or telephone Louis Knight ut ing 16 tcars of age. Telephone 10 13 1]loss for ¢ 3son thus far 1 1055.w Dick Burke at 1414-M DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NIGHT — OUT FOR OLYMPIC TEAM *Iron Duke” Kahanamoku Fhirt y-e e; out agam z“ar the 0! ym pzcs- the 1 championship is good enough to comyi been shining in the sprint_events lNTER GHURCH LEAGUE First Luther Everyman’s Important Game, {games and 12 days ah Witaks s 1927 pace, when he hit 60 for a new | mes of the class will oppose U Diamond No, Aready shown the : looked upon i wnt-winning performance A new entry tonight when the man Lutherans stacks up on Diamond No order to confine have asked ! - team to till the their efforts to hard ball, put his light heavyweight crown on hets field touight « . Scranton coal min try to knock It off in 15 rounds. The originally was scheduled nesday but vain knocked plans into a cocked hat, FALCONS AND ALL-KENSINGTON TO MEET SUNDAY AFTERNOON—STANLEY WORKS DOWNS STANLEY RULE IN INDUSTRIAL O'BRIEN BATTLES AL MELLO IN HARTFORD MONDAY 'MERIDEN TEAMY APPEAR AT Y. M. Sllver Gity Handballers to Battle, Local Pill Swatters Meriden handball teams will in- | New Dritain tonight in a re- turn mect with the local pill sw: ters, Chief among the invaders ure the state doubles champs, Frank | nd Georgs Warner who haven't |p, Been defeated in the past five or six | Mepiden’s second best team known as the i 1t presen e the Warne £0 will be seen in Mag brother Meriden will send up six handball teams and New Britain will try to match them in skill and enduran and a'tempt to turn tables on the invaders for the defeats they re- ceived at their hands in Meriden two wieks ago To wmateh Meriden's best in tHe competition tonight New Britain will probably line up the following teams: Mangan-Dunn. Mag brothers Dressel - Greenstein, Loomis - He strom, Cohen-Strong A possibly Parker-Anderson. Clamoring for recognition to compete fonight is on Lou Vogel and @ dark horse which | he will select as his partner but re- nses 1o devulge his identity as this to pr The matches are open to the pub- CRASHES 19 HOMERS Babe Ruth Closes Booksi for the Month of May Far Ahead of Former Records, New York, Jur 1 Tah Ruth has closed his books on the month of May wifh 19 home runs to | his eredit, more than he ever had at this stage of the season. Homer No. 19—A high fly that dropped just inside the right ficld barrier—was propell bino ut the stadium yeste day with Hadley of Washington as the victim, The drive put Ruth ten has ke record. U® did not s homer last ye ash his 191 rountil June 11 in his nd game. Yesterd s his 42nd contest of the 1 The “Sultan of Swat ers during month he ¥ tember of last year he wound up the campaign with 17 HIGH TRACK MEET S W on. the second hest AL r With Croshy of Waterbury Tomorrow Afternoon, A track mect which was post- poned twice will be runoff at Willow 00k park tomorrow afternoon at 0 o'clock when Croshy Hi school of Waterbury will op New Britain Hizh school team. the second-lust meet on the h school trac tean’s elate. South m at | a SUff | i, ction against the | st | memie | walk and bwith the Workers helpless in the | the outcom 1 by the Bam- | hand ad of Mis | hit 15 hom- | < ever enjoyed. Tn €ep- | STANLEY WORKERS TURN BACK STANLEY RULE CREW Family Battle Ends in Victory for Buttmakers—Corbin Club Entrenches Itself in First Place by Swamping Newmatics — Timely Hitting Gives Champions a Decided Edge Early in the Game—Rulers’ Rally is Stopped Short in Ninth by Throw From Outfield. League Standing STANLEY WORKS LA AB R 1 PO A B & F. Corbins o 1 3 2 08 v g 4 a2 o Stanley Works. . 2 " wf &u . afnirs I e 2 v Sd ey B S0 enka {0 Paper 1..00.1‘ 7 C SRR R Rule ... 0 . Machine. . o : e e L s Salak, b 3 L Ty Stanley Works and Corbins were ic Lo T {the winners of the games played in| Towls TR s the Industrial baschall league at | STANLEY RULL Walnut Hill park last night and the AB I ro A m Stanley Rule and New Britain Ma- S KEen chine were on the losing ends. The 5 noo oo Stanley family affair was an inter- 3 a5 esting battle while last year’s cham- e pions, the Corbin outfit had little| p, Sae S0 0t : trouble in disposing of the Newma- M S tics, | G o e L. Fafnirs and R. & . will meot to- SR night at 5:30 o'clock at Walnut Hill | 3% 6 10 14 park. The game will take the place | -8 of the tie contest staged last Tuese Hiless doias d day night in which no decision was Bohtopdar reached by either team Works Win et between the two| Newmatics Swamped Stanley family, the!| The champion I & I Corbin Stanley Works took the measure of |team entrenched itself in first place the Stanley Rule team after a hard | last evening when it ran roughshod fight by the score of § to 6. Billy |over the New Britain Machine team Wolte opposed Joe Salak on the | by a score of 12 to on Unipire: sautter In an {mound but the support accorded | the mound for the winners and him by the Rulers was terrible in|pitched a fine gume although this lspots and those spots were just | was not necessary due 10 the splens cnough coupled with some hefty hit- [ did support he received and the hard |ting by the Stanley Workers, to top{and timely hitting of his mutes, < their season as they the total in runs scored. | The game gave the win It vas a pretty battle to watch | second victory of the With first one team and then the swamped the Rule Shop last week other g ng an edge Getting 1o by an overwhehning score, Salak in the first inning, the Rulers| From the first inni when the pasted ont two hits which, with a!winners scored two runs on a base pretty sacrifice fly, gave | on balls. two hits and two ficlders thent two runs. The game rode along | choices, there was no doubt about | The winners hit rd of Wolfe until the fourth in-|throughout and always arose (o the ing. Here with a spurt that was|occasions when hits meant runs. surprising as it was sudden, a| The losers on the other hand hit single, triple and a double, tied the | in str. aks and could not carry a sus- scorc. tained rally. When they did gt men A double, a sacrifice and an error | on hases Gray wonld tighten und re- |gave the Workers another in the | tire the side before any damage had | fifth while still another was added in| been done w). sixth on two crrors a walk and | Ernic Anderson d Richuneyer Bit. Twice, in thestifth and sixth, | shared the hurling burden for the e Stanley Works team loaded the | losers and this was o considerable s only to be held to one run|task. Each was touched for hits at ough the effective hurling of | times when they were useful to the Wolfe | winnerg. Their support was alse a Then with things starting to 100k | handicap as their mates were cone hious, the Rulers swung into | stantly placing them in bad positions stride and in the sixth, starting \\"h‘by their errors of easy hit halls & walk, two successtul singles were | The features of the game were the sent out bringing in two men 5‘"“‘)\"”\\‘ of Bates, Eric Anderson and zain tying the count | W. Preisser, each of whom collccted stanley Works veturned to the | three hits, and the ficlding of Patrus f {battle in the seventh when Parsons |at sccond base for the winners Postponed Twice Scheduled for | led off with a pretty double to right The semmary: Merline sacrificed and Wendros! 2 CORMIN | 1 1 Wendroski P& | singled to right, Parsons scoring. 3 AB I 11 PO A 7’4 dros! second a asper, &s el s Wendroski took sccond on a pn'neld Juspen, B8 e | ball and scored on Sulak's crash to |y, r 'y TR center, Another pair of runs in the | yackwon, o e b W eighth sort of cinched things for the | Wil 0o he | Workers. Green singled and Schroe- | Prtis e his | ger double An crror on thivd | a H O 21 | hrought Green in and a sacrifice fly | Rates, 10 12 0 e to center scored Schroeder. | wright, ¢ 1 § 08 Manchester is to he mict next weck. he Dtulers attempted to right | % ”_ i New Britain is in a faiv way to cup- | s in the ninth but a rally was| ture both of these mects, | stopped ufter two runs were scored. | PO A E The only game left on the baseball | An error, a double and two singl D chedule is against St Thomas' |nccounted for the tallies but a pretty | B AR Seminavy team a week from towor- | (hrow from deep left by Zaiko to | r;\ 3 4 e g e row in Hartford, There is a possi- | home to catch Jack Argosy scoring “ b J 3 1 Lility that some game may be sehed- on w hit, stopped the Stanley Rule | RS uled during the week, but on Satur- |and gave Ntanley Works a vietory. | p; , a8 ‘o duy the season will ofticlally come to | Both sides playved fairly good | Ference, of 01 a close. baseball. “Darby” Carrozza and |Matis, ef . hise —e 4 nyder were the heavy hitters | - Anderson, ni : CITY LINKS PROFITABLE for their respective teams Torais 3 Spokane—With a modest the | double plays, one each by the mem- | Corbin 2 12 city made a net profit of $3,000 | hers of h team, furnished the |Now Dritain Machine lfl‘::‘":"" e | Trom it municipal golf course last | year, Cadwell of West Hartford and Noko- | C/ M TIKEEP AWAKE - WEATRER WARM — ik LAST NIGHT | S TR NG - < There’s At Least One In Every Office / ( MR. FuLTon WLt You CRECK UP ON INVOICE, s L1 ©Omig N Y Triovne e C oH MR W!LUS' Just A mom ficlding featurcs. The summar | grove, Eric Anderson. Tiree base hity | Bates. Umpire: Bily Fitzpatriek, By BRIGGS APPLIES HIMSELF MosT ASSIDUOUSLY WHILE | CONSClou S OF CHIEES WiTH A Vpresence ¥ START 'LAPSES INTO ANOTHER fcomatosetsTaTe