New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 5, 1928, Page 10

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1928, YANKEES AND CARDINALS PICKED TO WIN PENNANTS Giants Divide With Brooklyn Over Holiday—Cards and Cubs Split—Reds Take Two From Pirates—Sena- tors Hold Yanks to Even Break — Athletics Win Brace From Red Sox—Detroit and Cleveland Each Win One—Young Ed Walsh Starts for White Sox. By the Associated Prese. Chlcago 002 203— 8§ An ancient superstition persists, ‘ 2 }:v“l"‘n" ,(’V‘“"‘ 0, 511“” as almost evedy one knows, that the | vmer: et ey teams in the lead on the Fourth of | Owen and Geisel July also will be on top in late Sep- | tember or early October at the close | (Second Game) of the major league pennant cam- e e e Ppaign Manion; Thomas and If this were 100 per cent true, the Yankees and the Cardinals could | save much trouble for all concerned (o o (First Game) i by starting the world series imme- |5 150, 310 000 10x diately. But it seems that the Fourth | sne and Grabowski of July theory arouses only skepti- | Jones cism in some quarters—chiefly in '\.'L"';("l‘“‘ the National League. R H PO AE John J. McGraw, for one, recalls P iie ity that the Giants were running away IR L LR with a fourth straight pennant on e July 4, 1914, with the humble 1 a0 Braves in the cellar as usual. 1t so 1T I happencd that the young men of i the clan McGraw enjoyed the en- H R suing world series from ringside 18 o ey seats as the not-so-humble Braves 0 DO sailed info the mighty Athletics for i four straight victories WASHINGTC The manager of the Giants always AB'R H PO A E did hold that turn about was fair [Rice A play. He announced publicly no |pqry 0 i iy longer ago than last evening that [Gosin, | 11 s T he was perfectly in accord with any | Judge. 10 MR LB move designed to limit the Cardinals | pretes 58 G to a purely literary interest in the | Ruel. ¢ 01 s o o, next world series, as he himself was | Brow o limited fourteen autumns ago. Taa WS R St. Louis partisans ave taking the | wes. - e e rush of the clan McGraw with some | Marberry, p G5 e Gy equanimity—which is saying a lot i Totals 364 for 8t. Louis partisan really worthy [ TRl 95 4 of the name. Although the Giants | zr—ilit for Burke in &th. now have lost one game fewer than | Two hase ihts: Combs 2. Lazzel ings of bhall players are in the|josing pitcher: Brown. Umplres: Guth- “lead” by that marign—the fact re- |rie. Hildebrand and Ormsby. Tim 06 mains that, playing eastern trailers, the New York team has been unable | meticane) & to overhaul its western rival, which | pitiol L T e met admittedly tougher foes in the Ruffing and Hofmann, Heving; Elmke, sunset section. Rommell, Grove and Cochrane. The Giants closed out their intra sectional campaign at the Polo (Serond G Grounds yestrday by dividing a L S T double header with Brooklyn—the | riagstead, ot ...'¢ 2l most noteworthy achievement of the | Myer, 3b e a0 New York team in its recent eastern K‘"“‘-‘”‘l‘l‘m : Tl campaign. Dazzy Vance snapped & |pigan, 2 3 3 Giant streak at eight straight by |Taitt, if 3 s ol rolling the home entry § to 3, in 2 ] the opener, but Larry Benton came | [ok01 * 2 R back in the second clash to hang |Morris, » . e up his fourt2enth victory and his [P. Simmons, p TR ST T seventeeth complete game in seven- : = = T Totals 1 teen stars. The score was 5 to 2 Benton's game was halted by wind B and dust and darkness as a &torm | Bishop. v H swept down on the Polo Grounds |o%: I 5 while the Giants were at bat in the | 5. Simmons, 1f . 0o fifth, but it is hard to sce how the | itauser, 10 (0 Robins would have had any more | Miller, «f T chance in nine innings than in five. | poyes, o o 1 The even break cost the Giants no i o (R ground as the Cardinals and the s v 01 1 # Cubs divided two wild games which el developed merely into a background | moials 1l 0 for the home run struggle hetween | x—Two out when game was called Boston w000 Hack Wilson and Sunny Jim Dot- 030 tomley. ch slugger gathered tw leaving Wilson in the lead of the league, 1S to 17. The (‘ards won by 11 te 6 and the Cubs by 16 to 9. Hope flamed anew in Cincinnati as the Reds plunged the Pirates delphia [ o buse ssing pitcher ounolly and mpires: Bart 1:30. First Game) further into the depths by taking | Cleveland R morning and afternoon decisions at | Dotroit e Blorksa WHel, 6 Ho'D ani V11 40" Rl oont oo e gty ands Lo tsewell, Stals The Braves dropped another fo (he phurlous Phils, 10 to 6, but rain | providentially tepped in, and pre- ey vented further carnage. Jamieson, 1€ 0% In the American League campatgn | 1 4 30 to see whether the Yankees'can win | Moigan, of o0 117 games (and so heat the record |Gerken. of A of the 1506 Cubs), the Senators held | 1y Sl ** 0 0 the champions to an even break, | summa, tf 05D, which is one of those moral victor. | Fonseca e ies, any way vou look at it. The i Senators, furthermore, held the Gnl A Hugmen even in the series of four, which has not heen done by every R team the Yankees have met Agiies The Athletics caught the Red Sox 9 - in the midst of a very bad ind turned back the Boston entry, 5 fo i 4 and 11 to 3. It almost escaped T notice that the Mackmen so shaved IARAAES a full game from the lead of fh 4 o et champion bl o A Detroit and Cleveland divided | aaoner s e e thelr holiday biil did the Bro Wingo, 1f SRl e SR and the White Sox. The Chicago | Billings. p P celebration was noficeable chiofly | 00T P TR for the debut of Walsh, Jr., late | sttane P T of Notre Dame, Young Ed's first | 1 ety stride in the shoss of his famous | 7% s father unsuceesstul one, bt | he showed he has the pitching | »—Ratied goods. The Bro tunched hits on Lan 4 him for five runs in the fourth | bALs SR he was retirad to walt a better | cand o8 g0 kns P B ase iiita:: Wk Hetlmann, Ray Schalk celebrated young | Morsan. hies b e Walsh's debut by catching him in | [200er il iraflan and person. Schalk Previously had | Nann, Time: 1:5% 1ded pation s wan- | A o ween ) National League I GAME)Y LS (SECOND GAME) o R E SHICAC o ! AR AB R M PO Ak ! ] . o0 ] ] . a0 \ : 1 0 e e e hiennon 1t 5 {00 ] L ' i Total n FT e 1 CHICAGO 0 o o ABR W PO A B T yunnefield, 21 T : 10 9 A 1 1 § h ‘0 0 0 1 000 al L veo 500 soo—11 | (Continued on ‘ o So——— T A RANGERS WINNERY Local Team Slugs Way to Filth Gonsecutive Victory Colhnsville baseball team proved to be the fifth consecutive victim of the Rangers A. C. team yesterday afternoon in Collinsville when the local club slugged its way to a 9 to score an earned run tour times as the result of infielq | |errors. Ehlers fanned seven and | I 'walked only one man The Rangers scored their runs in lvh«" second, sixth, seventh and eighth innings. In the second. Hayes, Krause McKnerney and Wendroski singled in ession to score two | runs. 1 sixth, M. Argosy | singles and homer. Tn the seventh, McKnerney, | i\\‘rvndro‘\l Ehlers and Cosgrove | | singled in succession. Bloom tripled | and Jack Argosy singled to score | five runs. In the eighth, Wendroski | singled, stole second and rode home | on Cosgrove's single. They counted the Hayes followed with a HENSINGTON AND TAFTVILE SPLIT End All-Even in Holiday League Double-Header Kensington and double header Taftville vesterday, split a the morn- Kensington covered a new Billy Darrow. T whale of a making several which put him aftville fans. ber were the management un- in the person of. oy played a at third base, sensational stops in solid with the Scriminger and Hu- leading stickers in the morning game, while Huband and pp sharcd the honors in the rnoon. Gripp also turned in a | nice game at second in the after- noon game. Mornin Taftville scor on two crrors and ington went into |(\\o runs in the second singles and a rific a big inning in the third, scoring five rons on three singles, a walk and a triple. Kensington got 1 in tht fifth on two singles and a fielder's choice, and scored their last run in the eighth on a single and a triple by Gripp. Game 1 1 in the touble, the lead first Kews scoring and three . Taftville had - IN GOLLINSVILLE| 4 vietors, The Rangers bunched a staniey Works 7 001 |fotal of 15 its to score its nine runs PR D 1 14ty tion found itself and wcored three while a_triple by Bloom and a paper Goods | 3 500 | Counters o e (he count. 30 fhe Neiloring ity HevsRhei e 1| nse Geoas § 20| cighth and sent the game on Dia- | Piling up the big lead gained by the |N. R, Machine 4 4pg|mond Noi 2 into the 10Lh inning, In (i e [k Macning 4 335 imat frame the Newmatics crashed | “Vie" Ehlers, pitching his first | i 4 A [out four hits, drew three passes from {game for the Rangers, allowed the | stantey Rule . 5. sboniines Mebormick andiseared four runs | Collinsville All-Stars six scattered plo easily trot away with a victory by hits. The Collinsville crew failed to | Continuing its meteoric rush fo- ! core of 7 to 4. T hard and timely hitting of his mates | LAE1ed 404 Wichtmyer followed sult. | H and some poor fielding by the losers | 10N W &, singls hy flelding b | Haines brought two mere runs in. 1l gave the Stanley Works an easy win |y o, GloET (00 B i Haye o over the Fafnir Dragons and incl- |, 17 FESAStOn fea ""“‘f*""“‘ a rally Eraue. it 0 dentally brough the Workers win- | SUC (25 87 the fnal frame but Nenial : ning streak to 6 games. Scott al- | T (O VS TO 0 B " eoning, Ehlers, p x |lowed the Dragons but seven hits| 1 81 a8 featured by a triple : i and these were so hadly scattered |PMY cxecuted by the Newmatics. Totals that they were ineffective, Several 1'::1 :"‘[:'n’] C"’g"s :‘:d r"‘"‘" on first B of these were very scratchy, espe- |’ sconc. = On e hit and run Cutza, b PO A Blcially one by Kania which was an |Pla¥: Jim McCormick biasted a drive | Kt e 17 3 casy voller down the fhird bse tine | ! \.\1]..‘(“, v at second. Maher speared B Ol o 3 3 u|but which Abramowicz could notihe Pull. tossed to Patrus at sccond | Morroney, 1b o field because he had to dodge part | Who shot the ball to first. Patrus, | Nixon, H of Kania’s bat which broke as he | however, failed to touch second and Tarline, ot i hit the ball. One end of the bat |!NTOUzh quick work, H. Anderson re- i Honn, 1 St (‘m.m‘rlo a stop at third base. ‘h\::n':';lm'hvl l':all‘mJ hltnl n::or getting Al Fafnirs' managed to keep the an at first, just in time to cut Totals 11 9| Workers from scoring in the first [Off the runner who was returning to ing game going to Tattville and Kensington taking the afternoon | game. Both games were well played | ind were enjoyed by u large crowd. STANLEY WORKS CONTINUE TREK TOWARDS PENNANT {Scott’s Masterful Pitching Once Again Brings Victory to League Leaders—Fafnir Dragons Prove to Be Easy Victims for Strong Buttmakers’ Team—New- matics Held Scoreless for Seven Innings, Defeat Paper Goods in 10-Inning Battle—Games Tonight. League Standing i w. 1 | Paper Goods team leading 3 to 0, PC.ithe New Britain Machine aggrega- | wards the pennant in the Industrial | 1t was .vf(.vompl_ste surprise to see baseball league, the Stanley Works 'he wmatics win out after the team Tuesday again kept its winning | "4per Goods had almost completely streak intact by downing the Fafnir |sowed the game up in the very first Rearing crew in the game played on |inning. The Newmatics seemed un- Diamond No. 1. The New BRritain able to solve the slants of McCor- Machine team sprung a surprise by |tlick although they had men on in measuring the Paper Goods of Ken- [4lmost every inning in the early part sington in a 10-inning encounter. of the game, However, just when Games Tonight {the pinch would come, McCormick P. & I°. Corbins meet the Russ. “10 had passages of wildness and wins tonight in the feature game of | PUssges of effectiveness during the today’s play at Walnut Hill park "‘\‘”"”v would tighten up and retire s el oecd on Dl ":'l'hst“d(g:ime went along until th Mend e, S8 The sunlep BuI I | on taAs aretman up fo: micets Landers {n the second game [ (G Then Maber, Aret ma op el on Diamond No. 1 [1theg2 3 ed. H. or- on followed him and crashed a Stavley Works 12, Fafnir 5. b : | home run Mainef Scott’s masterful pitching, \~|ng!~vv] it a0, S Maiadlle the touch the bag. Three double plays exceuted during the game also tell the story of the tight playing by bot'y inning by some fine ficlding. Matteo stole a hit from Snyder when he made a fine running catch of Paul's drive. Walicki robbed (‘harlow and |tcams. Richtmyer featured in cen- Crean of fine bids for hits in thgs‘\rnrnnld with two great running | inning by two splendid stops. Wal- icki's fielding was the finest shown in the league this summer nearly | cveryone of the nine chances he ac- cepted verging in the sensational. He deprived the Workers of at least six hits by his great stops. After two were out in the last half | of the first inning the Dragons scor- {ed twice. Krause reached first when he was hit by He | ored on K tremendous triple to centar. The latter scored on | Kani funny single which was | deseribed ahove, | The Workers got right on the job | veral hits which went into right d for the Newmatics should have | been casy putouts. They were most- |1y of the Texas Leaguer variety ex- | copt that they were high enoush. Witham who had replaced Johnson for Kensington in the right garden, | seemed unable to judge the balls and these did plenty of damage in the late innings. Anderson's home run also bounced off Witham's glove in the same tetritory. at bat for the summary Sullick featured | losing team. The BURRITTS DEFEAT AMERICAN LEGION Score Victory in First Start in Junior City League Age and experience triumphed over youth and enthusiasm in a Junior City League game played at Walnut Hill park yesterday after- noon when a highly powerful Bur- ritt Reserve team ran roughshod over the American Legion nine and slammed out a 15 to 4 win. A falr sized crowd was on hand to watch the winners in their initial start of the season. Grusha, who started on the hill tor the Burritt was in rare form and held the Leglon batters well in hand In every session but the fourth. A hit and a trlo of misplayc sent four tallies across the plate in this Inning. In seven stanzas he let the opposing batters down with two singles. The winners played a great game in the field with the exception of the fourth. The infield handled all but one chance. They also showed strength at bat pounding out no less than 14 hits, including three doubles and a pair of triples. Alex Zaleski led the winners' attack with three safe smashes out of five attempts. Partyka was close on his heels with a brace of doubles. Haber was the only Legion player who was able to connect safely more than once. He crashed out a pair of singles. O'Brien played a nice field- ing game handling five chances out of six cleanly. The losers showed great promise after the fifth inning. tightening considerably and playing heady baseball. Deferenzo, the Tegion's starting pitcher, was touched for 11 safeties and was removed after one out in the fifth when the Burritt team bat- ted around. Schmarr was sent into the breach and stopped the rally but the winners had put the game on ice with eight tallies. Capodice relieved Schmarr at the beginning of the sixth and pitched a great game, holding the Burritt sluggers to three hits and a lone tally. The summary: BURRITT RESLRVES AB R H PO APE Rogdanski, 3 B B a gl g Dalkowskl. B T T T T Walicki, 2 9% 1 4 8 a0 Partyka, If ... 4 3 2 0 0 0 Alex Zaleskl, of .5 1 3 & 0 0o Kulas, 1h 2 4gs Dl rro, o 2 IR Klepacki, rf TR TR TR Kezakie, rf AL DL e 0, oL B Grusha, p 3 2.1 0 1 W@ L f T T AR TR Totals 37 15 1 ¢ 3 AMERICAN LEGION AB I H PO A E Mehlomeur, ¢ I O R T Flood, © A HL R A Deferenzo, p ....2 1 0 08 3 0 Schmarr, p, 1h TR R TR A. Zaleski, 1b, 2b3 1 0 T 0 0 Savick!, 2b B A pdiai 0l Cusosky, s AT Kelpowski, 2h S @ 3 8 0 Zembroskl, ss R T T s RO T T T R o p TRV T e ot a0 0 00 ) L LI R | o B DI TRT T T Schubert. rf SRR T ST T I T S T Totnls e | Burritts 1180 100—15 000 400 000 — 4 | base hite: Partyka 2. Garro. | Three base hits: Bogdanski, Dalkowski. Umpire: Morelli. CITY L MEETING President Kenneth S8aunders of |the City Leagtic wishes to announce that there will be an important meeting of the managers of the league on I'riday evening at 8 o'clock at the city hall and all man- agers are requested to be present without fail. There are a number of questions that will come up for discussion. | N. B MACHINE in the second inning and scored five BR PO AE times on six hits several of which | Richtmer. ot Pt S e iy S |were bunts which were not fielded. | hattisen. it ET R Schrocder opened with a double 10 | gric Andersan, I i ght. He scored on Parson's single [Maher, 2b ... 5 1 1 3 & 1 "to the same plac ‘Vvl Anderson, 1 I | | IR n ey i | Patrus, es B bt h Merline laid a bunt down the | Gart™ & AL DER { first base line and none of the Faf- | Matneil, 1t 2 ot nir inficlders reached it, giving the [Emy Anderson. p1 6 0 o0 5 o itter a single. | I aid | e = s = Ihitter a singl Gulda then laid| o, i 7 down another in the same place and PAPER GOODS {again the Fatnir team did not field H PO A & it. The Dragon infield just stood :'w"":';_ ; ; : : around on cach of these plays ex- [y0q o G e o pecting the other fellow to take the {Jim Mec'm'k, 1 4 *°0 ball. After these two bunts the |Sullick, o 2.2% 0@ | hases were loaded : ; 0 ; Abramowicz grounded out to Wal- | ) R e T jicki and all base vunners advanced | o0 o0 ' hase, Parsons scoring. oit shot |3 3 2 0.2 single to loft and hoth Merline and | qpoare TEETIRT) |Gaida counted. Scott stole sccond | N. B. Machine 000 060 030 4 and scored the final run of the In-|Paper Goods =~ 300 080 000 03 s Ty wo Vase hits: Maguder, Sullick. Home L y uns:’ H. Anderson. Umplre: Lynch. Time | The Dragons failed to score in | o game: 210 + | their half of this inning but the | winners pushed one run around in the third frame. Schroeder walked, went to second on Gaida's single to right and scored on Abramowicz's double to left. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS 'OR YOUR WANTS FALCONS TAKE MEASURE OF WATERVILLE TEAM—RANGERS WIN IN COLLINSVILLE—STANLEY WORKS TEAM CONTINUES MARCH TOWARDS DUSTY LEAGUE PENNANT—LEGION TEAM LOSES TO BURRITT RESERVES IN JUNIOR CITY LEAGUE—ITEMS FALCONS BLANK STRONG WATERVILLE AGGREGATION Locals Suddenly Start to Hit in Seventh Inning—Pitch- ers Furnish Pretty Battle for Six Frames—Atwood in Great Form—Riley and Klatka Lead Hardware City Team in Hitting — Visitors Unable to Dent Home Plate—Four Successive Win for Home Team, After being held to one hit for the ninth Johnson hit a Texas six innings the Falcons nuddenly\l?&l’fl:‘lr h;:t R:Ivy threw ):m out :z 2 second when he attempted to make n '0"": d"‘:" ;’“,‘""‘ ’?"h' “[d it a double. The next two men pounded the offerings of Johnson t0 popped out. The summary: ~ all corners of the lot to score a ' ' WATERVILLE 5 to 0 whitewash over the u(rong“' % AB Heo 4 8 Waterville baseball team yesterday Yail. & SRS afternoon at St. Mary's field in a fymena sn 4 6 4 3 3 1 holiday attraction. Both Atwood urban, If Tagocio St ton e and Johnson had the batters at their Phaler. o .lld 0 0 3 19 mercy but Johnson crocked under'fRotertzmn 1b ... 4 010 0 4 the strain in the seventh and eighth ;i 0t " S and the locals scored their fourth Johnsen. p Jalio i Eaace e ive e timel - - = Eocamnys i by heavy and i T “Lefty" Atwood was on the mound | PO A B for the Falcons and pitched a beau- ' Patrus, 2h i 3or tiful game of ball. He was in great Kredar, cf A 25008 form and had the Waterville bat- S b ey ters grounding out weakly, all the iiatka, « S 120 1 time. He allowed but three hits, McKierney, 1t "0 ¢ 1 v o0 o two of them being infield scratch Ritey. 3b- ... 30 Al blows. He fanned seven batters YWR: A 4 A and had excellent control, not a man b == reaching first on a walk. Atwood | Totals 12 hasa yet to lose a game while playing “}:If_:‘vnw’clla 9B0500) 51\72 under the Falcon colors. | Umpires: Sautter and Mangan. Time: Johnson, pitching for the visitors, | 1:10. hurled well during the first six in-| nings but tired near the end and (hv‘ To FIGHT To“lGHT locals hit his offerings hard. Two fast double plays engineered by his e teammates in the first few innings' kept him out of trouble. He was wild at times and allowed six bascs Tod Morgan and Challenger, Eddie Martin, to Cuash at Ebbets Field on balls. i The game was filled with Km’fli in Brooklyn. baseball, a number of beautiful | | New York, July 5 (P)—Tod Mor- gan and his challenger, Eddie (Can- nonball) Martin, clash over the 15 round route at Iibbets field tonight for the junior lightweight chame pionship of the world—Johnny Dun- dee’s “own™ crown. The Seattle boxer will be making the eighth de- fense of the title he won from Mike Ballerino in 1925, Neither Morgan nor Martin did anything more than limber up ves- terday as both were within safe dis- tance of the eclass weight—130 stops being made by the infielders. Riley and Lewis, at third and short respectively for the Walcons, gave a wonderful exhibition of fielding. Roth men raced to all parts of the diamond to knock down sure hits. Riley made a nice play in the ninth when he sped into left field and threw Johnson out at second when he attempted to extend a single into two bases. Lewis made two| stips of balls in back of second that were beautics. Ashmore and Vail played a steady game for the visitors and gave Johnson great aup- | Pounds—soon after the training bort ¥ P beriod began. 1t will be their sece Klatka and Riley led the local ond meeting within six weeks, Mor- hitters with two bingles apicce, 8an having outpointed the Brooklyn Riley secured the only hit off John- Aspirant in 15 rounds at Madison son in the first six innings. Kredar, |Sauare Garden in June. McKernan and Soule each connected e FIGHTS LAST NIGHT The visitors went out in order in the first. The Falcons got a man —_ on base when Patrus Walked Utip (0 ssciatod Pros Soule hit into a fast double play.| 'y S ; 5 Macon, Ga. — Young Swibling, e e ek e | Macon, knocked out “Bucky” Hare nings found the pitchers at _their | "% Wiehta, Kuns, (9 0 best and the sides were retired In o1, Los Angeles, won over Charles Both teams put a man on base in (Fi0to, New Xork (1), the sixth inning but were unable to| Oakland, Cay VDS, & push them. areund. The visitors Francisco. knocked out Dode Beriot, were retired in order in the seventh | Scattle (2). Eddie Moore, Chicago, and in the Faleons half of the in. techancally knocked out Frankie ning the freworke. bogan. Lewis Prave CBKING (8.0 o =0 rolled out to the pitcher. Kiatka| Akrom 0. = K. 0. Christner, crashed & long single into right AKron, defeated Jaok Humbeck, fleld. McKernan drove a wicked Belgium (10). Big Bill Hartwell, ball over third base and IKlatka Kansas City, knocked out Ace Clark raced home for the first run of the NeW York (7). Horuce Vreeley game. Riley was hit by a pitched Denver. defeated |<. nkie ‘B)o\\n ball. Noonan walked, filling the (6). Arvin Spence, Cleveland, bases. Atwood lifted a sacrifice fly | knocked out Willie Stepp, Louisville into left field and’ McKernan raced | (2)- p home. Patrus fanned to end the _ 1¢s Moines, Ta. — Al Knipp, inning. Waterloo, Ia., defeated Tony Folen, The Falcons continued their hit- Omaha (8). ting in the last half of the eighth = after Atwood had retired the visi-| Chicago, (UP)—Ed Walsh, Jr, tors in order. Kredar shot a bingle son of “Big” Ed Walsh, star spit- into left field. Soule hit to right.|baller of the American league Lewis walked and the bags were | cral years ago, made his major loaded. Klatka pasted one on the league debut yesterday with the nose scoring Kredar and Soule. ' Chicago White Sox. He was re. McKernan popped out te the third placed by a pinch-hitter in the baseman. Riley connccted for his fourth inning, after 5 runs had been second hit and Lewis scored. In scored by the St. Louis Browns. = AND THE BRows DERBY VOTE IS GoiNG O MAWE The STRAW VoTe LooK RIDICULOUS - HA RA THoS & HIGHBrOW TILES CAN'T HIGH- HAT ME ANY MORE, FoR @oop SouiD COMFORT GIVE ME ME&.. 'M No GooD AT FUNERALS AND WEDDINGS - BUT- o 1 om this point on the Dragons 1 0l were helpless at the plate and the ¥ a ISR | \!\'nr],ul s');'l" I‘Iflvh;vz “y“ ay ':‘nu] Ind]- WELL YOU'D 8E o 3 2 o |ding to heir tota B a ick e replaced Fergi -f:||lm lh{r”lm\ I:;:h.. SURPRISED AT The TAFTN L b A g| TR but he was no more eftective | JeaLousY ExX1STING Normandin s 1 o 2 o o|that his mate, = oy, i o 0| In the last inning with the ba AMONG US HAT3I LR . Tl :»mylllx 5 o |‘|"-lm I\ o riest 1o YessiR Taxe A leston, ¢ ... 4 0 1 o q |01 pla alesk ew to first to o AT H teh Gaida napping and the 'hrow! Loow AT THOSE i <4 1 1 2 0 olarrived in time to catch the latter | SILLY SUMMER STRAWS B S 2oL 30 Tlin a run down Totals 1 /B igileT o§ | Klatka started fowards second to Kenengton 0 1m0 [touch Gaida and Parson's started for e Dasadentt Duugas, Gripp. tome | COUTSe and started towards the plate pites: Murphy and Caplett. Time: 1:45. |and finally throw to Zaleski but the Afternoon Game { throw was too late and Parson’s was Taftville scored two in the first i”‘ on thres successive singles. Kensing. Walicki's ficlding took most of ton took the lead in the third, scor- he honers of the game, the remain- ing three runs on a walk and three |ing being faken by the batting of | singles, Kensington scored anovlm»}r hroeder and Snyder | in the fifth on a walk, sacrifice and The summary ~ a single. Taftville scared two in the PANLEY WoRKS sixth on an error and three singles. | AB H PO A E| | Kensington finished the scoring in | Sniae L 2 0 0] {the seventh, getting one on al| : IR R double and a wild pitch & ' 3.2 * ) CERTAINLY -AM TAFTVILLE s T , TR e PR T Beine ToSSED IN Uy ; R ] R e Tue AR Tuese Nice I o 11 e SUMMBEBR DAYS,.. MY : olnBlor A i TPy | OL0 RAL BLAC Dabrowat, b T ey F. DERBY 15 GIVING 0 3 0 0 E { Yerrington. 3 oSS e iR, ME DIRTY LOOKS Too., [iamary. e pR e ] e SRy ILL CROWN HIM 1* oy S e o0 2 0 HE CETS Too FRESH A dC Hopo A BN b 1 [ ¥4 I3 i 4 1 g SN LR et e W T 2 0 o Kemure e N T Y 5 0 ulzaiesi - TN TR el 1 4 offeruen, p.rf .2 0 1 6 0 O <t o4 T tals Sl e aa e : i loy 051 200 103—12 . B B 2 o lafnir 0 100 000— @ . et | Two base it 1w, Schroeder, = i i The hits: Kiatka. Tare i anz n00—q | my Laneh Kensington 010 dix Newmatics Win Murphy. Time: 1:45, seven innings with the American By BRIGGS * ANOTHER THING THAT TURNS THE oLD STRAW BONNET YELLow Wi ENVY 1S, BECAUSE A, LOT OF LOVELY LOOKING GIRLS ARE WEARING ME Tl YEAR It Go BIG N Tue FALL 'ROUND ELECTION TimE - OH Boy- ik | GET I THE WAITe HOUSE You'LL SEE A LOT OF SiLw< LIDS, FEDORAS, SOMBREROS AND OPERA TOPPERS TURN UP THEIR RIMS - FoR GooD EVERY DAY WEAR AND TeAR 'M THE BABY. EAST 5“;’: & | e sew To BEAT WET S! ANY OLD SIDE W »

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