New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 21, 1928, Page 14

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LOWLY PHILLIES AGAIN DEFEAT BROOKLYN TEAM| N TITLE TOURNEY Quakers Jump on Jumbo Elliot and McWeeney to Win Second Game of Series—Cards Increase Lead Over Reds by Beating Cubs—Cincinnati Bows to Pirates —Yankees and Athletics Split Double Header— Senators Trim Boston Red Sox. By the Aswciated Pre | Fonseca, 1b 6 0 The ferocious Phils, hungry for !. Sewell ss 0 0 games, remain at large upon the i Tmeeell o 10 land. They have developed an un. | levan. p T accountable tendency to slam their ‘,;:;f;‘: By pe betters on the chin as is shown by |furne 22 o the fact that they have so far for- ilarder. p 6 0 gotten themselves as to win seven Uhle. 21z oot out of nine games. | Totals o Not satisfied with Walter Lerian's | z—Batted for Levsen in ¢th triple which outraged Dazzy Vance| z:—Patted for Bayne in 7th on Tuesday, the Phils jumped on | ro—Batted for Harder in O Jumbo Elllott and Doug McWeeney | (jovelana 000 200 003—4 for enough hits to win the second; Two base hite: Fonseca, Mory &§ame of the Brookiyn serien yester. | [funnefield, Lind, Home run: Mecurds. day, 6-2. Hub Pructt, whose chief |LoM1E plicier: Leveen, Umpires, Owens. claim to fame is that he fanned Babe Ruth ten times one season, turned in & neat game for the Baker (SECOND GAME) 000 Chicago 010 1013 GOLFERS TEEOFF | National Open Championship Started at Olympic Fields Chicago. June 21 (M—Although the gentle arts of cracking chins and pummeling ears are principally in the limelight here teday, it should also be noted that this seems to be the year for busting up some of the most beautiful friendships and profitable partnerships in sports. First there was the sudden part- ing between John McGraw and the aggressive young man he had groomed to succeed him, Rogers Hornsby, “for the best interests of the Giants." Now the well known local firm of Red Grange and C. C. Pyle has split after & sensational assaciation that began to the roar of the grid- iron crowds and ended on the finan- clal rocks of the celebrated Bunion Derby. The highly lucrativa Demps: Tunney-Rickard Combination, last in business here, also ia at an end, after two hoom years. Moreover, the talk is that Tunney, win or lose against Tom Heeney, will cut the few remaining ties that bind him with Billy \Gibson and retire from the bexing business altogether. Tunney virtually broke up his busi- Boys, and Don Hurst helped With |ciaceiana 100 100 01x—4 his eighth home run. The Cardinals made it ten out of BOSTON eleven and increased their lead over ABR HPO A B the Reds to four full games by tak- 1, SA0 e 0 ing the series opener from the Cubs | ~ : Ao bart. : 5 in Chicago yesterday, 6 to 2. Joss of 3. 0l 0 d A e ihie Haines outpitched both Percy Lee Williame, ¢t .1 0 0 o 0 O Jones and Guy Bush, and a majes. |Todt, b oo 3000 10 000 tie home run by Grimm, the Chica. | ioline%, ¢ S A g0 first baseman, was purely decora- | Tairt, rf 3. 9. ai 8 i@ D tive, (Jerber, » S D N S L] The Reds slipped further back Tkl SULELIR R toward the Glants as the Pirates |, T oY e made up a bit of ground by shading | liarriss, p T SR T S Eppa Rixey, 2 to 1. More heartening | Simmans, p <% el 8o e to Pirate fans than the victory it- RO 0 SO0 self was the form Remy Kremer 30 & 26 12 1 flashed in achieving it. After lum- WASHINGTON bering through an unsteady spring. AR RS Rip0 A n Kremer won from the Reds by an o b g Irish mile with a margin of only 5 1 * 2 1 0 one run and his team outhit by 11 L35 S D N T to 8. Traynor dashed home from P first on a single to score the winning | jyage, 1b T3 6 01 6 1 0 marker. Heeven, w8 4 1 1 1 2 2 The Giants, scheduled in Boston, | luege. 3b T SO R ; : probably did not expect to play, [Rueh o e d L1 b 38 They did not play, at any event— % il B SRR for the fifth time in six scheduled | Totals 4 812 27 7 days in the Hub. The clan McGraw | x—Batted for Harriss 0"“0 .;:h now faces eight games in four days 004 030 at Braves fleld in September, even Rice, Taltt. if the rain lets up today. ||ume" run: Wem. v’;\;(:{nmh o After the first two skirmishes of [ Bruston, Lomng rionr, o what has been facetiously referred 10 as a “crucial” series, the Yankees and the Athletics are just where they were before it started—which the Yankees can very well afford to be, but which the Athletics can not. Connie Mack astounded the burgh- Time: 1:35. National League ors by permitting old Jack Quinn ¥ HEPO AR 1o remain in the box through a five | Jovh TR | run fusillade by the champions in |y A the third round of the opener at the | B a2 0 0 Yankee stadium yesterday, and old | {nfey Pl Jack rewarded his master by com- [ 1'% “ 53 ing through to a 10 to 5 victory. The | Maranville, 0 2 5 0 veteran spitballer himself drove in |Haines, p Ik U ihe ultimate winning run with a S single {n the sixth. hire i R The Athletics reached Herb Pen- HFOAE® nock for 13 hits in five and on s MR LS third innings, butwere just ahead el ZhE Ll S 6 to 5, until Wiley Moore erumbled | RBR; O cine AL Al S R in the ninth. Old man Quinn, who son, 1t o 0 -2 s o once was jerked from a two-hit [Grimm. L:i2 92 ) zame by the impatient Connie, was | Moo L strong in the pinches after the one | jones, p & L 9 %5 & Yankee flurry. Bush, p 0 00 9 B George Pipgras and Omsle Orwoll| . .. PRI e e made as it to go through with & |g. Louls a0 pitchers’ battle in the second game, |Clicago 039 but the stadium was saved from | Two base hits: Beck L. Wilson. this indignity when the battens|Wikon, Ssfey, Threo base hit: TRACH came to life. Grabowski slapped a i Hart, Jorda and Rigler. home run for the Yanks after Laz- zert and Robertson had singled, and Al 8immons repeated the process in CINCINNATI behalf of the Athletics following a ‘:.B 53 5} PO : 'o pass to Cobb in the eighth. i paain b g b In the battle of the lower depths, T A A Washington consolidated its hold on :‘ 1 ; :, g fifth place and menaced fourth by A 7 o 0 0 0 trimming the Red Sox, § to 0. Gar- | imart 1t Al S B B8 land Braxton allowed Boston just|picinich. ¢ AL g e o four hits and never was in any [Pittenger, »s ... ¢ 0 1 1 5 0 d Rizey, p T anger. By SRt R The tafl-end White Box divided a 2 S e . pair with the slipping Indlans in| Totals 3 1. 88N 0 Cleveland, winning the first, 6 to 4, URGH i R HPO AE and lapsing back into normalcy In 4 &£ 90 ¥ the second, 4 to 3. e R o L 9 9 . 4y 2 4 1 0 American League i o o 0 3 0 M [] (FIRST GAME) 30 0o 0 PHILADELPHIA R - H PO A B Totals 33 2 12 9 13 2 0| x—Batted for Rixzey in 9th 33 0 1{Cinctonatt 009 100 000—1 1 0| pittsbur onn 200 00x—2 2 & 0 . Purdy. A 0 Time: 04w Bk o e o0 1 0 HPo A ® = R T e S TS 2 1 i 1 10 0 0 HPO A B o o & 2 RN S v o1 0 0 g 3 0 39 o o 1 1 o 0 1 6 0 0 116 0 0 1 e T 22 0 0 g4 7% 1 6 1 r % 1 2 3 R = 1 n L A0 ? 2 1 5 % 0 3 alrrie 1 Ton ) S|Fretesu =x R 0 0 3 0] qoe T 3 AEUEY FPHILADELPHIA it s AB R H PO e T ) o 5 2 0 o EEE o 1 A 0 1 ‘ i b ness partnership with Gibson two vears ago. Gene didn't like the way his manager handled the first bout with Demp: financially, and he has directed his own affairs since then. The champion, eoynting his earn- ings for the K as “in the bag” will have more money than any other fighter within a given space of time. For three fights in slightly leas than two years, Tynney's earnings will have reached $2,000,000. Dempsey cleaned up in 1926-27 with $1,750.- 000 as his end for three fights, but it took the Manassa mauler nine years and nine championship scraps to amass his total ring earn- ings of $3,000,000, The experts often talk of the get- rich-quick partnership of Dempunesy and Kearns, another famous friend- ship that hit the rocks, but Dempsey earned as much after it was broken as he did before. No immediate conclusion sheuld be drawn that the widely ballyhooed new tennis strike will help Big Bill Tilden and his Davis Cup teammates rout the French champions. Nor is any alarm likely to be reflected about it in Paris, where the first line of defense is still tottering along with Lacoste, Cochet, Boro- tra, and Brugnon. Tilden, théy say. has used the new stroke, imparting greater speed, un- conscigusly. The inference is that it would be distinctly undesirable to tackle Big Bill when he was fully conscious of his super-stroking power, magle touch or what is it? Tilden's success or failure in the forthcoming few wecks at Wimble. | don and Paris depend on how well he conserves his encrgy and keeps his stroking control in a succession of hard matches. The odds are against him. They are at least two, it not three to one and their names are Lacoste, Cochet and RBorotra. On any given day Tilden has the #tuff to beat anyone of the Franch- men but it takes more than a new and secret stroke, if any, to beat two of them in a row. Tt looks like a free-for-all scram ble among the Olympic sprinting candidates, owing t0 an unprece- dented séries of upsets and accl- dents. Not many weeks ago it was simple enough to head the list with Borah, Paddoek, Locke, 8cholz, and a few othera. But the van- guard now is led by Rracey, Wykoff and Hussey. Paddock, Schelz and Lecke. not yet up to old time form. are likely | to make the team, byt Berah, gen- erally regarded as the best all around sprinter in America, seems to be shelved for the year. Bow- man hae broken down and Paddock was beaten twice by Wykoff at Los Angeles. Hank Russell's con- dition is in doubt, but he will be one of the best if back in "‘SGi form. Instead of Borah and r’nddoch{ however, the two main Olympic| hopes from out of the great north- weet and west look like Claude Bracey of Rice Institute, Texas, and Frank Wykoff, Clendae,, Calif., prep star. They have baen the sensa- tione of the spring and will bhe closely watched in their final tests at Harvard, July Another schoolboy whe may step in where veterans are having their | troubles f& Don Rennett of Toledo, Wwho has burncd up interscholastic | ranks around this area. Bennett, whose best distance is 200 meters, is in fraining for the Olvmpic trials with another newcomer and possible champion. Lea Bartlett, who has come out of Albion. Mich., collage to toks the javelin further than it has ever been tossed before in this country. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT * Amociated Press. Thom; Home ruf Hurst. Losing p Parman and Qui T (UPY— lcading tes of the Metropotitan il compete in the Metro- politan associa.ion trac and field championships at Weenuahic park Saturday. This.wvomon's’ meet is ex- pected to 4l possibilities for women entran's in the final Olym- pic trvouts July 4 e -l Morg 5 Lasgrera. - veland—Mike Dundee, Rock Island, 11l outpointed Joe Glick. Willlamshurg. Pa., (10). Manxie Strub, Erie, Pa., dcfeated Jack Duffy Toledo (10). Indianapolis Frank Tarabee, serics the opinion {to give you Omaha, won from Al Conway, Phila- 4clphia (10). Vincent Ambright, Cineinnat!, defeated Tate Langford. Loulsville (10). Dayton. Ky.—Joe Chaney. Balti- more, Asteated Midget Guerry, Cin- cinnati (10). Stanley Williams, Martins Ferry, O., defeated Al De Rose. Indianapolls (6). Herman Clark. Indianapells. wop frem Al Merrill. Cincinnati (8). Howard Mitehell €lneinnati, knocked out Harry Chapman, Terre Haute (3). BY HENRY L. FARRELL (NEA Service Sports Writer) In the opening article of this| was expressed that the United States should win the Olympic track and field games in Amsterdam this summer because it has s0 much claes it can't help but win. Throughout the serles the point, was made that mismanagement of the team was ita only danger and it seems quits certain that there will be no mismanagement this vear. Lawson Robertson, who has been given the responsibility for the fleld management of the team, is the most competent man. in the world for such a responsible position. He can do it perfectly if he will insist upon the exercise of complete au- thority and it is a good bet that he will insiat upon it. There should be a squad of better performers on the ecxpedition than there were in 1920 and 1924 and re- gardless of all the talk about the German menace a team of satiafied und contented young Americans is in no danger. fpeaking generally, the team this vear will be just as strong in the departments where it excelled in 192¢ and in eother departments it has greater potential strength. ‘The middle-distance runners, for { inatance, look more promising and in Joie Ray the United States at least seems to have a real challen- ger for the distance events, The real potential strength of the | team can be estimated only by a technical analysis of the candidates class by class and this is & subject for a technical expert. This article concludes our eral discussion of the Olympics and we will turn the subject over to Johnny Magee, coach of Bowdoin and an aseistant coach of the Ameri- can 1920, 1924 and 1928 Olympic teams. Magee 18 one of the most com- petent coaches in the United States. He knows track and fleld athletics and“he is an experienced Olympic man. Magee will discuss the ath- letes in each class, compare them to foreign rivals and he is qualified an expert forecast of what will happen in Amsterdam. Junior Mechanics Beat Eagles at Walnut Hill The Junlor Mechanics, meeting the Eagles In a postponed game in the Fraternal Soft Ball league, left the birds in a bad way at Walnut Hill park last night. The Mechanics walloped the ball to all corners of the lot to take a victory by the «core of 17 to 6. Beginning in the first inning, the winners whaled away for a total of eight runs and they followed this with two and again three getting four in the final frame. The Eaglea staged several Incipient rallies but each was clip- ped when the team got dangerous. The acore Eagle Mechanics 0014 06000 4—1 S Ao 0 823 4 OLYMPIC OFFICIAL New York, June 21 (UP)—Col. Charles J. Dieges, of the adjutant general's department and secretary of the military athletic league, is the first of the American athletic offi- cials appointed to officiate at the Olympic games at Amsterdam, Hol- land, from July 28 to August 12. He will sail toda; TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIP New York, June 21 (UP)—The United Btates will be the scene of the international inter-collegiate team championship tournament in 1829, when a combined team repre- #enting Oxford and Cambridge uni- versitiea of England will play a similar combination of Harvard and TYale players. the " S L. T. A. an- neunced. | gen- | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1828, MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS (Including games of June 20) By the Associated Press. National Batting—Hornsby, Braves, .413. Runs—Bottomley, Cards, 57. | Runs batted in—Bissonette, Robins, 57, Hits—Douthit, Cards, 104. Doubles—Douthit, Cards, Triples—Walker, Reds, 8. Homers—Bottomley, Cards, 18. Stolen bases—Frisch, Cards, 16. | Pitching—Benton, Glants, won 11, lost 19, American ; Batting—Goslin, Senators, .434 Runs—Ruth, Yanks, 65. L Runs batted in—Ruth, Yanks, 61. o0 3 Hits—Manush, Browns, -§2. 3 et Douhles—Manush, Browns, 20. 8 1 o Triples—Rice, Senators, 19. | Dutex, oz o Homers—Ruth, Yanks, 25. | Plaski, ?\ o of Stolen bases—Sweeney, Tigers, 10. AR Pitching—Hoyt, Yanks, won 9, lost 1 e | 27 14 4 Godfrey-Risko Battle | B R H PO A B o 4 | Booth. #s . 3 2 3 o 8 2 Postponed to Saturday | rews in P01l New York, June 21.—(UP)—The | pomtrs 20 e heavyweight bout between George |Svndiinake vt .. 3 1 0 3 0 Godfrey and Johnny Risko, | Kozlowaki, 3b 5 1 1 2 8 3 scheduled for Wedneaday night at|foye © -8 4 8 L 0 Ebbets field, Brooklyn, will be held | Ciliizza, rf S e s | | Saturday night. Humbert J, | Carlaon, 1t T T Y TR O | Fugazy postponed the show because |MgKendrick, ¢ . ¢ 0 0 0 o 0/ of threatening weather. When the| Tiaie “ 13 25 s fighters weighed In yesterday, God- | Meriden 200 100 8! frey had an almost forty pound |Nev Dritain aulba ge 3| weight advantage. Godfrey weighed | T%® joer v Rewng S 235 1-2, Risko 197 3-4. bryz. Umpire: Sabr Tim 1M PLAYING PRIDGE TS AFTERNOON Eve WG Yoy SHE'S GOo'NG To HAVE Four TABLES - | THinw Sue's PearecTLY LOVELY ers in Connecticut baseball circles. Coleman, wing that shoots a a bullet, is still in" harness and his mate “Cannonball” &mith may draw the assignment on the slab. remain the same “Micky’ bat with |City team came through with a bang. | T HAS RAINED Dow T You T | NEVER DID FEel_JusT Rieut oF Tis LANDERS AND STANLEY WORKS TO BATTLE IN DUSTY LEAGUE TONIGHT—FALCONS TO MEET COLORED GIANTS SUNDAY— KENSINGTON PLAYING IN SOUTH MANCHESTER TOMORROW—NEWS AND NOTES OF THE MAJOR LEAGUE GAMES—SPORTS THINKS U. S. WILL WIN FALGONS TO MEET COLORED GIANTS New Haven Team Appears at St. Mary's Field Sunday —_— One of the blue-banner baseball attractions of the season will be staged at St. Mary's Field Sunday afternoon when the Elm City Color- ed Giants, hailing from New Haven, take the field to battlegthe Falcons. The visiting team nceds no introdug tion to the sporting public of this city because it has visited New Brit- ain on an average of at least once a season. The team this year, has been greatly revamped and besides re- taining all its comic aspects, the crew has formed a really tough| baseball combination that will ex-| tend the Falcons to the'limit, | The lineup reveals some of the 014 veterans who have kept the team alive and in the running for the lau-| rels among colored teams in New“ England and some new names of| men who are rated as real classy| ball players. ‘Twynan on third base ie a familiar figure with the team. Tedway the shortstop is a ncw ad- dition. Brown on #econd and Fin- man on first are also veterans of many campaigns. Brady in left and Yordan in right have appeared here| Refore while Linn in center fleld is rated as one of the fastest ball chas- | ‘The battery remains unchanged. stocky backstop with a| all to second like (sle on the cards for Sunday after- | the team is leading the pack for the ) INDUSTRIAL TEAMS READ FOR HARD GAME TONIGHT Stanley Works and Landers Teams to Furnish Feature Game of Schedule — Universals Anxious to Pin First Defeat on Buttmakers — Stanley Rule Crew Confident of Breaking Into Win Column at Ex- pense of Fafnir Combination—Games at 5:30. klm‘lulnul Baseball league this seas |son will be fought out, weather |night when the Stanley Works team E—— ]nnd Landers clash, The Stanley Bl'islol Efldefls 0 Bame soulhi\vorks crew has not yet been de- ‘fcalml in the league and the Unl« Endem s‘mday |versals are cager to be the first to Ipin a defeat on the team. ! The Buttmakers are out to keep All-Kensington will trek over to their winning streak intact. For South Manchester tomorrow evening several scasons in a row, the team to mect the Manchester bascball hag been an almost pennant winner team in & regularly scheduled COn- |hut this seq on the crew seems necticut State League contest. The |pcaded toward the flag game will be staged on the West| poth games will be started not Side Recreation grounds in South |1hi.r than ) o'clock. Manchester and all members of the | Huber 1s Barred team must Jeave this city not later | The question of allowing “Lefty” “‘“1" Eroiiodl 'j""',"-“;fl"’;'] K4 Huber, Tufts freshman baseball must get Ilnrh‘rv\, in South Mau- qar (o join the Landers, Frary de chester not later than 6:15 0'clock. | ol team, was aken up. at & | meeting of the managers of teams in the league last night. After dis- cussing the subject thoroughly, tha managers voted to adhere to the rules of the lecague and because of Ithat action, Huber will not he al- |lowed to become a.member of the Landers team. The action, as explained by soma Kensington has another hard tus- noon when the Bristol Endees in- vade the Paper Goods town for an- other lcague game, Manchester stands undefeated in the league up to the present time and although no records are avail- able for a standing in the circuit, Brown and Tingee may be called on to work on the mound. 9 The combination as a whole forma ‘“'r::‘ threat to the winning stréak | sington erew will use the strongest |9 ] Falcons. | The Mneup of the local team will| as last Sunday. | Noonan will be behind the Lefty” Atwood in the hox. | The game Sunday will start at 3| o'clock. LOCAL TEAM WINS - | ! New Rritain State Trade Baschall Combination From 1ts Slump. The ew Britain School | erges | | Trade | school baseball team emerged from | its alump yesterday to wallop the| Meriden Trade school team by a 13| to 6 score in Meriden. The locals; made no doubt about returning to form and they greeted the Silver| City pitcher with a salve of 25 hits. Meriden scored first getting two runs in the opening inning but, al- though New Britain didn’t get start- | ed until the third, the Hardware | The summary: MERIDEN Second Honeymoons rY DAY SINC® CAME - DID REAL'ZE THAT. SToP GROWULING e WELL - BY BY DFAR- Dow'T BE LONESOME IT MAY CLEAR UP BY VD MEVER HAVE Come TOMORROW = M NOT > BLAME FOR ThE WEATHGR; FOR_HEAVEN SAwE’ PEELING (T WiLL® |of those who attended the meet. ing, was taken, not as a personal movement against Huber, but was a |gesture towards supporting the {rules of the league, One exception {would lead to many more, they |stated, and it was thought wiser to bar Tuber from'ths league and thereby cause no precedent. Huber | was a member of the Landers team |two years ago but he was not em- (ployed at the factory last season. Girls Dusty League Managers of teams intoer the reorganization of a Gir | dustrial league will meet in the Y. [ M. C. A tomorrow night to discuss the project. All those interested in the formation of the leaguc have been invited to attend Several fa |tories have already mado inquiries regarding a girls' Jeague and the [ project seems to be assured. FOOTBALL SCHEDULE New Britain High School Grid Eley- first round. Kensington s eager to pin the first defeat on the league leaders and tomorrow night's game iould be a real battle, Manager Eddie Moore of the Ken- possible lineup in the contest with Manchester. Again on Sunday, the strongest team will be sent in against the Bristol Tndes in an ef- fort to score two victories in a row. The local club started off with a bang in the first of the season bu three sudden reverses sent the team tumbling headlong towards the cel- lar. o Sunday’s game in Kensington will be started about 3 o'clock. Federal Agents Make Raids in New Haven New Haven, June 21 (P)—Sixty federal prohibition agents, last night spread out from the city to suburbs and surrounding towns and raided 13 places, seized small quantities of alleged liquor and arrested seven persons, among them a woman, in one of the most concerted drives| o i against road houses in soulhurn‘ en To Face Tough Opposition Next, Connecticut. Year. The raids were under the per- | 2 sonal supervision of Henry E. Good- nough of Boston, assistant adminis- trator in charge of prohibition en- New Britain High will face stern opposition in foothall next year, ac- |cording to the football schedule an- forcement and Frank T. Putney of 'nounced this morning by Coarh Gullford, deputy administrator for|George M. Cassidy. This year's Connecticut. Agents from Rhode schedule calls for eight games and Island, Massachusctts und Connectl- | {wo new teams app on the list of cut burcaus were in the raiding opponents for the local high school, party. | The new gridiron opponents of the igh school arc Buckley High of |Hartford and the Coast Guard Jun. [tor varsity of London. Rela- T S |tions will also be reestablished with the Stamford High school, ents, dtoves| .o s sl {meet its traditional rivals, Hartford \Public High and New Haven Hill- |house. The Hartford game will he played in the Capital city on Novem- |ber 24, | The schedule is as follows: Sept. 29, open; Oct. 6. Pittstield High, there; Oct. 13, Buckley, here; Oct. I20, Stamford, there; Oct. 27, North Adams, here; Nov. 3, Coast Guard Jr. varsity, herc; Nov. 10, New Ha- |ven, here: Now. 17, Vermont Acad- Jnm). here; Nov. 24, Hartford, there. Camp goods, Cots, etc. ECONONM SPORT SHOPR 15 MAIN STREET. “Everything for the Sportsman.” NOT ONE DECENT| DAY FOR A GOLF GAME - RAIN ~ RAIN - RAIN 7 \ a7 / / 7 / Do€S my SLIP Swow BELOW My DRESS ? T SOEEN'T LOOK AS THOUGH _IT \xcm.p EVER STOP RAINING 1 WOULDN'T MIND AN OCCASIONAL SHowER BUT TS CONSTANT] RAIN. RAIN, RAIN 1S 1VE A YA i G,

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