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i i NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JUNE 26, 192 COLLIERS BEAT LAURELS IN OPENING GAME OF JUNIOR CITY LEAGUE—CORBINS AND LANDERS SCHEDULED TO CLASH IN INDUSTRIAL CIRCUIT TONIGHT—FALCONS TO MEET WALLINGFORD LENOX AT ST. MARY'S FIELD SUNDAY — SPORTS ITEMS CINCINNATI REDS HEADED FOR SECOND PLACE BERTH Sflflfigflfl}#g&% Cards Send Team Further Down Ladder in 11-Inning Struggle—Giants Score Double Win Over Phils— . Dodgers Down Braves — Athletics Drop Two to Beflllll] Has Easy Time Senators — White Sox Batter Detroit Tigers— Cleveland Indians Come Through for Win Over Inter:Chivrch, Sanding Scores Surprise Win—$wedish L. Browns. St. Matthew ) [ Stan. Memorlal 3 1 By the Assoclatad Press CHICAGO ?‘ g_‘sg Meti. ‘ I A record division berth looms for AB R H PO A EB| O SRR 5 : | © o 1 1 oFirst Lutheran. 2 2 the Cincinnati Reds unless Jack | o 0 & o o|South Cong, ... 2 s Hendricks can pull his faltering o ¢ 5 0 OlTriniy M. E. 1 3 crew together within the next few | i 0 0 Al | EivetCBEaphist. o: I daye. 2 2 4 o o] The biggest upset of the 4 1 0 1 0lChurch league bascball season _The Reds went east leading the & 23 3 0 Ulcurred last evening when the South National league parade a few we : 2 2 2 2 ‘lcongregational team turned sudden- ago, managed to hold up during | g4, 4 8 & 2i 5 1|ly on the champlon First Lutherans l'n?sl of the castern invasion despite DZT".rq'lp and practically put them out of the injuries that laid low several regu- AB ‘l H |:\o IA |(a7 nbing for ihe Doatihalrity sotine s, ‘apd then xaniinto. uglump io 1 ¢ 4 o olthem down 43 in a tight battle at the mostly uniikely place in the cir- s e e cuit—Philadelphia. Since that tiue 1oz 10 tlggedes second defeat of the sea- they have lost 10 gumes in 12 starts o 1y ' 3 olson and their third in two years. and today were only three points to T 'F:‘:bf::" of the fifth place Brooklyn, 21 3 1 Ulened and revised lincup and, by b < SitaT o tightening up in many dangerous The Reds lost groind “""y(f,""ld 2 0 5 & olsituations, woh out although they il afford yesterday when the ‘al"d‘l- A 06 L e ettt g itheigea The o nal steam roller crushed its way {o 00 0 0 ol Grepped to Aith place. &5 (0 3 triumph n 11 Innings. The D Sopm nolier was a bit late: getting 14 4|field gave the Bwedes a start in the into operation, mainly because Eppa R bt il g Byl deebigin Biba slonksted 1=t bands ¢0=%lafter that, but the latter threat did | b e e not profit it any. In the last half | e b Gider 1n #th. | Donald Hattings scratched a hit and [ erms S es un- Imann, a- 5 3 tit the 11th, when the storm broke. : var‘. Losing |Scored on Billy Darrow’s double to, Jim Bottomley, mainspring of the Urapliias(0dm right. Bell shot a single to center ; [Uamuben and Owens, Tinie: an4 the South church led. Ahlgren's Cardinal attack, ed the rally % single to center with two on and two out put the Swedes ahead again n the fifth, but back came the South church to tie the score on Schaefer's hit and steal and Parker's single to with his 23rd double of the season. N ‘l Soon the hases were filled and Chick atlon e Hafey did a Frank Merriwell with a sack-cleaning triple, scoring himself (FIRST GAME) when Val Picinich mcnm (hr:)\\-ln NEW Jug sngimen andiRed throu is legs. Cincinnati got ro A plrenia > ;:l: of vhv:I-‘- :’our :ms back in |hf\|r 5 2 3 0| Bell made trouble for himself in half, but did did nothing more than 4 8 : 3 the seventh when he dropped a pop prove that Cincinnati's head may be 5 R | with two out and Holst fr)llo_\\ul bloody but still unbowed. Incident- 5 > 5 o o|with a two-bageer, but !_(zmmn ally it was the Cardinal's 21st vic- G SRR Y 2 6 2 o|came in fast to nip Hultberg’s Texas tory in their last 27 games. L U o :‘ leaguer and end the rally. Billy While the Chicago Cubs and Pitts- | jiogan, T8 1 1 s o o|Darrow started the second half of burgh Pirates were idle, the New |Benton. p 4 1 0 o o ofthe frame with another two-base York Giants moved into undisputed [ o= BiGL Bl wenb oul bot when Schae- possession of second place with a ""L‘Du_?“u L fer bunted Nyborg threw wildly to double win over the Phils, 12 to 4 R H PO A E[third and Darrow scored. and 8 to 2. Larry Benton chalked up 1 1 1 9 ol W.Darrow, Schaefer, Parker, Ahl- his 12th victory in 15 starts, all com- 0 3 2°% Olgren, Holst and Fresen led the hit- plete games, in the first contest. Bill o o 3 o ofterswith two bingles aplece. A cou- Walker, southpaw, was an easy vic- 1 t 1 1 1]ple of catches by Hattings were the tor in the second. Freddie Lind- 11 2 3 Olfclding features. The lineups and strom got nine hits in 11 trips to the | [ 3 score by innings 1 The Dodgers hit Ben Cantwell | Davis, © . o o 0 1 0 olmorgrc, Johnson H IZrnchnn ‘ob, hard and chalked up their fourth |Walsh. 7 ....- g S hgsn : Foberg rf, Ahlgren cf, Holst n' straight victory at the expense of the [\t P 7 7 | 0 3 o|Hultberg ss, Fresen p. Boston Braves, 9 to 8. Doug Mc- [aitter, » .. o o o 6 o 0| South Congregational—Morey rf. Weeny pitehed u strong game for | Maclonald, 1t o 1 0 0 6| parker 1h, Barta 2b, H. Darrow s the Robins granting seven hits. De | Bonge X © 0 0 0 0 ¢l Bomba cf. D. Hattings If. W. Bissonette went into a tie With| 4, 3 % 9126 18 3|Darrow c, Bell p, Schacfer 3h. Bottomley for home run leadership x—Batted for Willoughby in §th First Lutheran 010 020 0—3 10 2 with his 15th of the year. Howard | \s-Ran for schultc iy bth = . |gouth Cong. .. 020 010 1—# s 4 Freigu changed from a Robin to a | e 10 200, 100 L0804 omquist. Brave before the game via the | 'mys hage hits: Thompsen, Cohen. Wil- pounds Out Win, waiver route. {liams, Welah, Losing pitchier: Walsh.[ Dave Swanson held the tail-end The Washington Senators, now [ mptres: o sy Reardon and Magec. | pyror Baptists to four hits while his playing the king of baseball that T/me: 23 mates pounded Al Bassett for 16 been expected of them, knocked (SECOND GAME) safeties and the Swedish Blfllhay,\ off the Philadelphia Athletics twice | xow vork 00 030 1208 | team moved into third place by vir- at the capitol, & to 2 and 7 to 2.|Philadelphia 010 010 000—2| (ye of 4 14-1victory in a lop-sided Washington's 15 victories in its last H PO A B|cncounter. The winners hit with 21 games have brought the Senators pthit. ot 5 4 0 o]terrific force. Anderson, their short- from near the cellar to fourth place | o, b 2 3 0 0lgtop, smacked a home run and a in the standing. Braxton and Brown, | Frisch, 2 1+ 2 Olgngle, Lagerlof drove out {wo both left handers, held the Athletics | Bottomlow, 10 . ISt | triptes and a double, Strom got a helpless In both games. Braxton | 1% i 1 1 s o of|double and single, and Dahlman and gave up seven hits and Brown but |witeon, e 3 1 1 % 2 Olywestergren had two elnges apiec three. The A’s double reverse en- | Maranviil ©ou 0 = 5 0lA) Anderson made half of the losers abled the idle Yankees to stretch S b5 8 0 o bingles : their American league lead to nine S o o a @ 0| The Bethany team broke loose in and a half games. leri = the third inning. when it scored four The Tigers again moved into the times, and in e next frame it bat- ”‘IUHr \Ihll“ .'hlh‘nlw 36»’ moving out H PO A E|ted around and piled up eight u;u;-., when the Sox battered out an § to 6 2 3 2 Olcounters. The Batpists made their | victory at Detroit. Moe B rg led the | 11§ Ulonly score in the fifth, when Stec ge | Sox attack with two singles and a 1% 4 0| was sent around. The line-ups and double. 0 4 1 1lscore by innings: Morgan's liome run, one of five BEEt 0| Swedish Bethany—Dablman. c; hit during the ganme, gave the Cle S e ; La 2b; Edma et T ve- 13 & 0|Anderson, #s; Lagerlof, b; Edman, s 4 7 1o 4 win over the | Y 0 2 of2b; Westergren, 3b; D. Swanson. p: Browns at St. Louis, Heinte Manush — — — =|D. Jonnson, 1b; C. Olson, If; Strom, hit twice for the circuit. Lou Blue 3 2 8 3 W 1]ce Eimer Johnson, ©f. and Luke Sewell got one apiece. for Maranille in 11th. Anderson, First Baptist— W0 000 001 04— g 0an 080 010 01—2 | Bassett, p; M. Luke, 1b: Richter, 2 Amefica Lefl it Umpires: PAr-| R, May, 3b; C. Pinkerton, ss; n gue s auietev. imss 2utte | S e e Bwed. Beth, ... 104 800 1—14 16 2 BIL oom_rv 4 (FIRET GAME) R H PO A B Flrgl Bapt. . 000 010 071 £3 PHILADELPHIA Flowers AB B TR 3 0| Umpires—Hamlin and Frederick- AB K H PO A E|ilendrik gave a0 A & laon; T T o | Herman, 51 2 AT 0, Cone SN ‘ o 0| Rreasler, I IS 1 o 0 = : A ) HOME RUN CLUB . 5 4.oa 0 RS G et ' 0.8k @y 10 ——et ¢ 0] 2 0 15 Ylpy the Unites Presa. o s Tr e AMERICAN LEAGUE g R Ruth, Yankees 28 3 2 | ‘R H PO A ¥|Genrig, Yankees G il ; 2 2 1l Hauser, Athletics .. 10 TH G ® o 5 1 0Brannon, Browns 9 5 [ o & 1 4 1|Bluc, Browns 9 ] &l ot 1 2 1limeqay Red fox ..........0. 5 p ro e e NATIONAL LEAGUE | 1 5 2 0| Bottomley, Cardinals ... S5 ‘ o o o0 o 0Bissonette. Robina s 15 i 1N 0 0 1 0 9lHornsby, Braves 3 - 14 L 4 & o o ofL Wison, Cubs AR TRAT o o o o olHurst, Phillles ... ........... 9 X ToeE Yesterday's Homers. it 2 Manush, Browns . Blue, Browns .. Thres bas: g ; Toxx, Athletics . ?m-i: 1\1'4"‘ wan, Connally and Barr At FenAritE L. Sewell, Indians Morgan, Indians Bissonette, Robins O’Farrell, Giants .. Ieague Total: ng pitcher Bisor Hart and Umpires: Time: 1:65, National l.eague 1\Stulz and Gordon Take al Loague B Off From Paris Field | #mere«n beasoe - e i 1 pams, June 26 —UP—Wilmer | g u0n's total und Louls Gordon of the \tantic monoplane Friendship A off from Le Bourget today air visit fo Paris. The run (BECO! ' e Rain In‘terrupts Tennis But Tilden Is Winner | shade 1:50 if conditicns are good | during the tryonts Hahn has promised fo run the| mile at the New England cham- | pionships at Lawrence next Satur- | day, and that will be his last com- | petition until the Olympic trials, { when he will take part only in the | 800 meters event. His reason for | entering the Lawrence meet was to prepare himself for the Olympic | E 3 1 men wer en in two army planes Wimbledon, England, June 26.— L. Bewell, c S S L 0| d by ench officers, (P —Rain today interrupted play for bl b e ns spent 20 hours i0 | (he English tennis championships Totale 2.7 15 30 1] 2 which they went onpefore the first matches had gotten sT. LOUIS I \secing trips and were [ weil under way ey AR AR Ry cd by American Ambassador| When the downpour came Wil- | Melilln,” 5. 9 V| HMerrick, M. Painleve, French min-|jiam T. Tilden had won the first set Manush, 1f g1 o lister of war. and officers of the aero | of his mateh with H. C. Fis | Schulte, cf B 1 etun voung Anglo-Burmese star of Ox- Blue, 15 ALt 3 — ford university, by a score of 6-1, Bettencourt, 3b .3 0 1 1 4 0 S| 1D PLAYERS REMAIN an4 George Lott, younger member Schang. ¢ PiaiDeipae, sl Haierford, Pa., June 28 (UP)—|of the American Davis Cup team, Coftiian,; 38 0 0 0 0y geoded plavers remained in the | had taken the first eet from H. K. | 5 % 8 3o 1z 3|national tutercolleglate tennis tour- | Lester, last vear's Cambridge uni- 100 000 201 3—7|nament todzy. Headed by John Van | varsity eaptain, by the same score. st Loute 109 101 010 ¢—4|Ryn of Princeton, the players, eight The shower was only a passing Two base hits. Lind f‘ i "‘;."‘: in number, had comparatively little f one and Tilden. taking the court 3 Seawell, N i hineen, | difficulty in winning first round |again againat Fisher, won in.ghort i Cratien t0d Nailn Time. 2.03. . |matches order by scores of 6.1, 6-3, 6-1, 6-1. I Jack | cometime if 1 hope to do anythin lin the 1500 meters at Amsterdam,” | he explatned e FALCONS 0 PLAY WALLINGFORD TEAW Lenox Combination to Appear at | St Mary's Sunday Following his determination to | secure the best available attractions for games in this city, Manager Jehn Cabay of the Valcon baseball | team has secured the Wallingford Lenox to oppose the locals | Sunday afternoon at St. Mary | field. The Lenox team is no stranger to New Britain baseball fans be- |cause the team has been one of t cut for a number of ; Led by “Dutch” Leldke, pitcher and one-time nemesis of the Falcons with the Kensington team, star |to take the measure of the 1 {club, if possible. The team carries a stronger lineup than last year, according to Manager Tom Brennan land there is going to be plenty of opportunity for the club to make a bid for the state semi-pro cham- pionship. The team will line up as follows: Miller ¢, Leidke or J. Werner p. Houlihan 1b, Condon 2h, Gestey ss, { Fauham 8b, Blakeslee 1f, DoLucia | lef and Werner or Centner ©f Leidke is having one of the b scasops in his long carcer this year. He has pitched in four games ko far this vear and has 49 strikeouts |to his credit. He has allowed a | minimum number of hits and has | excelient control. He will probably SHEPHERD "GARLAND | face the cons during the game. Decause he is jumping consistent- inches. He also won this event at| The Falcons will have their same {1y better thap six fe Garland the Kansas relays in 1926 with & lincup in the game Sunday with leap of 6 feet 4 inches | Loty ) 4 Shepherd of Texas University secks ' g Lefty” Atwood the probable pitch- /i A Shepherd 18 a teammate of W. R. jng selection e s ivan a berth on the squad that will rep- | i, who holds the world's |\it) prabably TR f el resent the United States in - the intercollegiate record with & mark ,gain and the lineup of the team Olympic games this summer. of 6 fect T 1-4 Inches. These twWo | (i1 b the same formerly. The A mark of 6 feet 513 inches i have beaten each other alternately |y i bo out o praction durine his best and was made at the na- | during their careers in college. e ? E cunE ) 4 o heun oo Ithe weck under the supervision of tional intercollegiates in 1927, He | The Texan is 22 vears old and was : {Coach Ray Begley and he oxpects holds the Southw record with a leap of 6 HAHN REPEATING THREAT T quIT ern Conference feet 313 developed by Coach Clyde field He JOIN ASSOCIATION Future Collegiate Tennis Little | t5 whip the squad into good shape by game time. MAY SELL GIANTS lives at Austin. Affairs next | |1eading baseball outfits in Connccti- | Phoenix Team Swamps Bagles' |the Wallingford crew is coming here | N 0eeeeeee CORBINS AND UNIVERSALS CLASH IN DUSTY LEAGUE Champions of Past Year to Battle It Out at Walnut Hill Park Tonight—P. & F. ar the Top of the Standing—Landers Anxious to Team Determined to Stay Get Back Into Winning Ways—Stanley Rule and Paper Goods to Meet in Second Contest. TABS BARELY WIN FROM MECHANICS in Fraternal Ball League Coming through in one of the |greatest hattles on record in the Fraternal Soft Ball league, the Tabs team nosed out the Junior Me- { | by the chanies at Walnut night by the Hill park last ore of 13 to 12. The winners harely stuved off defeat in of the game the tin mning: eause of the desperate rally staged Alcchanics, | The MecManics started fast and ended just one run short of tying !Il\: score. In the first inning the Me- chanies belted the Lall out for five runs. They aided two in the second The Tabs got two back in their half of the first and came through with another to make the score 7 to 3 as the third frame opened. The Me- chanies were held score up to the eighth inning while the Tabs managed to send across four count- ers in the third The big inning for the winners, however, was the fifth when in a spirited rally, six runs crossed the plate. This eventually proved to be | just enough to win because the Me- | New York Daily Mirror Says Madi- |\ Chanics got one in the eighth and four in the ninth while the Tabs were unable to score in the sixth, | nth or eighth The game to finish ling plays on both sid ting featured the innir the runs were scorcd Mechanics was exciting from sta and was marked by spark- Heavy hit- s in which The score: 0 000 014—1 1 080 00x—1 Will Not be Under Jurlsdiction of| 0" Sauare Garden (nrpflmnon; Phoenty Team Wins & SR | The Phoenix L 0. O, I. team not | Intercollegiate Body. Will Buy New York Team. | only clipped the wings of the Eagles | i A 3 but they crippled them for life in ’ New York, June 26 (UP)—The P¥ Tl‘a(‘,l( sm‘ H&S De(}ldefl {0 Seme Philadelphia, June 26 45L—Future‘ ew York Daily Mirsor today salg| ¢ other game played last night. | % intercolleglate tennis affairs will be|that announcement of the sale of |11 E4aes acted like onc of the| Down [0 Bl]sl[]ess | under the jurisdiction of the United |the New York National League | /'@nsatlantic planes which were un- States Lawn Tennis assiciation, the | baseball club to the Madison Square |42 t0 et started because the team students playing in the national in- | Garden Corporation would be IHade| ooy Eolagolng Hin iy Anal dnuiig Boston, June 26 (A—Lloyd Hann, PhaE e | within a few days. | and suffered a 23 to 5 Deating. | one of Amerieas brightest track | tereolleglate championships wwu[ Tex Rickard, promoter who js at| The winners scored in cvery in-| last night to scrap the intercolle- |the head of the corporation, was |WHE cxcept the seventh. The losers stars, day cated B ca 3 ] 4 t corel v p: stars, today repeated his threat that | g Sonnig association, the old gov- | said in the article (o have closed the | Went scoreless in every luning ex- he would quit running after the | erning body, and 1o create a com- | deal last week, lcept the ninth when they collected Olympic games, Hahn has made faint farcwell gestures 1o the track hefore but his | mittee of four graduates, all former The Mirror said the sale would college players, to be appointed by | mean the retircment of Charles Al the president of the U. 8. L. T. A., | Stoneham and other officials of the latest sounded positive to the last and three undergraduates to be | Giants with the exception of John degreg, elected annually by contestants in | McGraw who would be retained as “I will not one of those stage [the intercollegiate tournament | manager and president. ‘ farewells,”. he said, “for T have| The undergraduates chosen last| Rickard and Stoncham have been made up my mind this time to set- | night to work with the U. 8. L. 'T.[at disagreement for some years. It tle down to business. You know a|A. were B. H. Whitbeck, Jr., Har-| was said in the story that Rickard | fellow has to give a great deal to John Wheatley, Leland Stan- | was negotiating to have the Giants | track in time and in energy. 1f you|ford, and Kenneth Appel, Prince- |play their home games at the| Yankee Stadium instead of the his- toric Polo Grounds, No confirmation was available of | | the story want 10 he a chumpion you have to | ton. The new committee will rule on werifice much, You cannot think of | eligibility and other tournament af- nything else and what is more you | fairs. cannot do anything else. It is like any other game, if you want to suc- | ceed at it, you cannot do it on part | LOAFERS WIN Houston, T time, | (Strangler) Lewis retained his The Loafers A, C. baseball team “1 like the thrills and the con- | heavyweight wrestling crown here won a d fought game from the tacts that come with sport, but 1| tonight, winning twe falls to one Pioneers yesterday by a sco must settle down xoon. 1 have had [over Joe Malcewicz of Utica, N. Y. |to 5. The Pioneers ave my share of success, T want to win| Lewis took the first fall in 43 min- | tween 16 and 17 years of age n Olympic title, in fact T have my|utes with a eerles of headlocks. | the Loafers averagé between 13 and eart et on two titles, the 800 and | Malcewicz took the second fall in 15 |14 years. The winners would like 1,500 meter races at Amsterdam, dminutes with a leg scissors and arm but win or lose over there 1 am | lock. Lewis took the deciding fall in | of their age. through." & minutes throwing his opponent so —_— Though Haln has not definitely | heavily that Malcewicz was knock- | The island of Juva helongs to the deeided on what he will do when he | ed out, | Netherlands. quits the track, he will probably de- vote his time to the large farm which his parents own, but do not work. outside of Falls City, Neb. The Nebraska flyer, who has heen training here under the direction of Ryder, member of the Olym- ! pic coaching staff, s in exccllent shape and is confident that he will break the world’s half-mile record during the final Olympic tryonts at| the Harvard stadinin on July 6 and | Ryder belicves that his star will | Ain’t It a Grand and Glorious Feeling WHEN YOUR COMMUNITY HAS BEEN SUFFERING FROM A SERIES OF BURGLARIES AND You CAN'T ENJOY THE MOVIE S FROM WORRYING - 1500 meters race “I must g-t a mile under my belt HEENEY IS TOUGHER Spectacular. N. Y., June 26 (UP) Gene Tunney thinks Tom Heeney will be a more formidable opponent than was Jack Demps He does not think Heeney has the punch AND Yoy PICTURE HM GOING VN ©OUT OF TWE HOUSE WiT A BaG FULL Dempsey had, but pointed out that in a 15 round bout, where the crown OF SILVERWARE mizht change on a, decision, the Australian is more dangcrous than the former champion — 2 2 ANG C. \\\U\S Most (ofilplelc Line in the City. ECONON ST 15 MAIN ST. | | i charged with 31 fand in = AND THE RIDE HOME SEEMS uuuswu.v LONG AS You CONTINVE © WOoRRY all of their five runs Mechanics | didn’t choose to let the score appear too biad and a little let down allow- ed the Lagles to accept all gifts with profuse thanks i 1o seorc: enix 164 222 06x: Football Star Faces 31 Counts of Robbery Los Angeles, June (P)—John- ny Hawkins, former football star and once captain of the University lof Southern California team, as counts of burglar district attorney’s ! yesterday by the office. The complaint sets the amount ot loot at approximately $100,000. Many picees of valuable jowelry al- legedly stolel by Hawkins have been discovered buried near the or hidden in the the neeles the hranches of trees, caves of ge in homes T.os A figured in robberies. CLmewG N YouR BEDRoo M i the league. League Standing w. L. P.C. Stanley Works. . o 1.000 Corbins 1 750 R. & E. 2 600 Fafnirs b 5 500 Paper Goods .. 2 300 Landers ....... 2 3 400 N. B. Machine.. 1 200 Stanley Rule. 0 00 Ancther feature game is on the program in the Industrial baseball leugue tonight when the P. & F. Corbin team, champion outfit of the circuit last year and Landers, Frary, & Clark champlons two years ago, clash on Diamond No. 1. The sece ond contest of the evening will be played between the American Paper Goods and the Stanley Rule & Level The Corbin-Landers game should be a duplicate of the Landers-Stan- lley Works game of last week. Both teams are eager 1o win and thera isn’t any doubt about their intentions of so doing. 3 The Universals stand.in fifth place’ With a lineup such as the team has, there is no earthe 1y reason for the team being anye where but in a pesition where the players can be hammering at the front door of the league. The crew is a combination that has an ex- cellent defense and a strong offense and its poor showing is a muystery. With Frank Nester in- shape to- night. Landers stands a good chance to defeat Corbins. On the other hand, if the bad ankle suffered by Harry Mills recently, is repaired suf- ficiently to allow him to go into the box, Landers will find plenty of trouble_in solving his shoots, The Stanley Rule feam fs deter- {! mined to win its first game tonight at the expense of the Paper Goods crew. The Kensington outfit will present a strong front to the cellar champs tonight and there is plenty of rivalry hetween the two. Both games will be started not later than 5:30 o'clock. SURPRISE OF TOURNEY Defeat of Francis T. Hunter, Ameri- can Star By New Zealander Eme tirely Uucxpected. 26 (P—Tennis ex- in the morning London, June {perts commenting papers today viewed the dufeat of s T. Hunter of the United States in the English singles tennis championship as the dramatic sen- sation of the Wimbledon tourna- | ment © experts were no less surprised than pleased at the New Zealander 124 Andrew’s victory over Hunter, which was the only bright ray in what was admitted to be a bad day for Gr Although Andrews won fame on the me\\\ courts in New Zealand and.at Cambridge University, it was first appearance at Wimbledon and those acquainted with his form said that he never played 8o well. While some critics thought Hunte er was somewhat below his best, others said he did nothing un- worthy of his great reputation but met a greater player who outdrove him with flerce strokes aimed in deadly fashion and showed himself possessed of the strategy of a chame to hear from any team in the city |roofs of palm frecs in the suburbs jion the same time received a full me of praise for the as- fonishing manner fn which he kept his head and rallied nis torces. By BRIGGS Hunter at RlFlmG THE DRESSER DRAWERS WHERE You KEEP Youm JEWELRY AND WHEN You ARRIVE HOMmeE You FIND BVERYTHING O.K. OH BoY.. AT T A GR-R-R-RAND AND GLOR- R- R-Rtous FEELIN T