New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 28, 1928, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

29SS FALCONS AND BURRI WWWMWW TTS TO CLASH IN SERIES OF BASEBALL GAMES—WASHINGTON TEAM WINS CHAMPIONSHIP OF ROTARY LEAGUE — CHURCH LEAGUE RESULTS —KLEM AND EVANS GIVE OPINIONS ON DUSTY LEAGUE PROTESTS—OTHER ITEMS o CARDINALS AND YANKEES ARE SAFE TEMPORARILY St. Louis Team Downs Chicago Cubs — Huggins Clan l Takes Two From Tigers — Athletics Are Idle Be- | cause of Rain — Pirates Score Easy Victory Over Cincinnati Reds — Browns Dent Red Sox In Both Ends of Double Bill—Indians Triumph Over Wash- ington Senators. | By the Associated Pre The St. Louis Cardinals and New York Yankees at last can take time out for a breath without endanger- ing their hold on the leadership po- | sitions in the two major leagues. x Bolstered by the return of “Sun- | : - S ny Jim" Bottomley, who totes ot S B mighty powerful bat to the plate, the Cards have won four straight games, thelir last triumph coming at the expense of the contending Chi- Nt e 3 cago Cubs yesterday, 11 to 3. . o000 I The Cards now lead the National soich L S e q procession by four games but that settlomive, p ... 0 0 advantage may dwindle considerably | /" . L or disappear cntirely during the next 18 days, when St. Louis’ opposition comes not only from the Cubs but from the other two western tenders as well—the Pittshurgh rates and the Cincinnati Reds. While the Cards thus were con- wolidating their position at the top ' of the junior circuit, the Yankces were doing exactly the same thing in the American, A double-barrcled triumph over the Detroit Tigers sent | the world's champions four full games ahead of the Athleties who were forced to sit idle at Philadel- phia and listen to the patter of the rain drops. With Bottomley again in up, the powerful punch of or so ago shows signs of It was manifest in the last game of the Cardinal series with the Phillies on Sunday when “Sunny Jim" first got back into the game. Yesterday Sheriff Blake and Charlics Root were pounded for 13 lustysdrives in- cluding a sack-cleaning double by Bottomley himself. This blow—in the seventh inning—clinched the game for the Cardinals. Flint Rhem and Sylvester Johnson were cuffed about by the Cubs but McCarthy's | Tate men could not bunch their 11 hits to any advantage. | In the only other National battle, the Pittshurgh Pirates dov ed the Cincinnati Reds in ¢ jon, 9 to 4, gained an even break in the two day series and advanced to within one game of the Re hold fourth place in the st The Cubs, in turn, lead the Reds by | only one game and trail the sccond | place Giants by half a game. In| other words, the Pirates, who have | won 36 of their last 50 games, are in fifth place bufganly two and a hlf games behind the Giants and six and a half behind the Cardinals. | The Corsairs beat the Reds by bunching their ten hits in effcetive fashion. Fred Fussell, young south- paw, gave Cincinnati 14 hits but was practicably unhittable in the pinches. In addition he received air tight sup- port from his mates who have com- mitted only two errors in their last eight games. The double triumph of the Yankees was featured by the first appearance of the veteran left hand- er, Tom Zachary, in a Yankee uni- torm. Pitted against him in the opener was Earl Whitchill, another southpaw. With hetter control Whitehill might have bested Zachary | but four walks in the fourth inning gave the champions two runs and put them in a position to wi 4to2, | with one run splurges in the sixth and eighth ininngs. George Pipsras showed a return to form when he pitched the Yanks to a 5 to 2 victory in the nightcap. Pipgras gave up eight scattered hits while the cham- | plons bunched ten off Owen Car-| roll. At Boston, the St. Louis Browns beat the Red Sax twice, § to 6 and 4 to 0. The opener was a free-hitting batle which the Browns won scoring seven runs in the sixth a seventh inn Jack ¢ Talaate e ‘i Baltimore ace, held the Red Sox to : 0000 g four hits in the nightcap while Ma 0 Fayden was touched for nine of these, one a home run, Schulte, Brown center ficld George Uhle's effective gave the Cleveland Ind umph over Washington, 5 to an even break in the four serfes. Hudlin had to relieve in the ninth with two out and zot out of the d torcing Rice to line out Goslin to hit into a double American League Totals a " b | 1 con- Pi- out the line- a month reviving. Two base Naticnal Leagne 4 Afinyns Wit X a 1 ] Three | b CHICAGO Al R and Goos play. P WRIGLEY MARATHON Sixty Siv of World's fing Women Distance swimmers Enter Zachary, § Totalm x—Batted Detroit New York Twn base b base hite play: Ren out: By Za (SECOND GAME) Detroit New York yrites in the Hertle t won (FIRST GAME) &1, LOUIS AB R mile Miss wam 14 m Ernest P H 8¢y ny to was 1 4 4 t H o the or up. st ress, 58 Brannon, Bettencourt, Melillo, 3h Manion. ¢ prize in t is £10,000 ishers also figuri = h four fin- in the money. & U miade g |er heat | doubled, LUTHERANS TOPPLE BETHANY AND LEAD Move to Fore Again-South Church Downs Baptists Inter-Church Standing "1 Lutheran Stanley Memorial .. Matthew rinity M. South' Cong R e vedish Bethany . rst Baptist st The First Lutherans pushed tem- | porarily into sole possession of first | place when they downed the Swed- | jsh Bethany team by 9-4 in an| Inter-Church League baseball game at Willow Brook park last evening. Fresen held the losers to four hits | and ketp them from staging real Jllics except in the sixth. quist, who worked for the Bet permitted only seven safe | but two of them were home | blows, | runs and the others came at dis | trous ments, son put his team ahead in the first frame by leading off with his third home run of the sea- | | son and his second in two games. | | The losers tied the score in the sec- | ond, but the Lutherans went back again in the third and staged thel | big rally in the fourth, when Eric | | Anderson’s home run was followed a number of crrors. The losers’| their one bid in the sixth, | when they scored twice before man had been retired, but then the | Lutherans tightencd and Nelson | got three men in succession at first. | Clarence Foberg and Red Nelson \tinued their stellar work in the 1. No p on either team able fo conneet safely more The line-ups and score by a Bethany—Anderson, derickson, 2b; Lagerlof Stromquist, p; A, Westergren, Nilsen, 1If; Strom, ef; Carlson, 885 1 T | Nelson, 3b; Ny- | <on, ss; Jolst, | 1t; Hultherg, | A. Foberg, tf utherans Eric Ande wer Johnson, %, Foberg, of; resen, . wedish Tiethany 010 102 6— First. Luth Umpires—Hamlin 143 102 40% x—9 7 2 and J. Thor south Church Wins South ongregationalists end- | 1 their losing streak by falling up- {on Carroll for 11 and de {the First Baptists by 11 v granted four hits , but two of them we nd responsible Baptist tallies. With however, neither en such long might even have shutont. MeDonald X n to the were for faster would hit and scored a opened the game with hit to center for three bases and then, when the relay from the outficld was held too longz, he tried |to stretch his hit and succecded. | The South church took the lead in {the next inning on hits by rrow and Donald Hatting, and in the third the feam batted around. After Rockwell had gone out Park- out an infield hit, Morcy | doubled to right. Darrow hit safely | again, Johnson splashed a hit, Wolfe and the Baptists made |some weird throws, six runs coming in before Rockwell, batting for the ! sccond time in the inning, flicd out. | The Baptists got two more their ha on Jehnston's wild throw land Carroll’'s home run to left field. Morey and Darrow collaborated to score two more in the fourth, while Morey brought in another in the |€ixth by a daring piece of base run ning and a fine slide to the plate. | Morey pitched a fine game and struck out several of the opposing ide. work of Stelma behind the it was exceptional, “Vosh” leap- and diving in all dircetions to spear fouls and starting one double play which ended a rally. One headlong catch inches from the wround particularly _brilliant, Nice work b: Steege and Pinkerton Iteatured th defensive work of the ptisis. Darrow and Johnston were 2ting stars, splitting six hits een them. The line by innings th Congregational — 1 parker, 1h; Morey, Johnston, ss; : Wolfe, cf: saptist Ba Pinkerton, | gan, 16; Ax “onth Cong IFirst Baptist Games I'riday night nportance Iversman's the nity Matthe Slanlk Wi sett, 1 s; 0. Ahead two vill Bible Methodi Lutherans will Memorial team latter game will first place with on rreat face The w's r of the tie for ntherans, chedule of play-offs for next il e follow Tuesday ptember 4 onal vs. Everyn aley Memorial vedish Bethany vs the 18 s w's Bible First First Vs September § - 8w t. Matthew's Bible class mher 6 vedish st Memorial Trinity MW E. 1irst heran man Lutheran Beth v Baptis Vs, G | e — | WANT DOt HEADER 1o K . Trian to arrunge a Labor Day doubl with some fast bascball team New Britain, layed o like header in or about ing gam penent’s on the op atternoor Fagan cd by Tom 204 e arram N Britain, Sicily fs 10,000 square miles fr |area. | pionship at Walnut Hill | innings, * | broke and the “ to 6 1 Hammy | in | #0 South WASHINGTON TEAM TAKES ROTARY LEAGUE PENNANT {Swamps Hitherto Undefeated Paradise Park Aggrega- tion, 16 to 6—Winners In Sensational Form, Led by Sam Capodice — Second Time That Championship Has Gone to High Street Aggregation — Three Other Game Are Staged as Season Fast Nears the End—Resuits. / A Rota team captured Bruft, 3b, league cham- [ fastlla, park yves- | Xorkie. afternoon by trouncing the | Wheeler, o undefeated Paradise Park |Feron: team by a 16 to 6 score. It was a [ oo great battle until the ninth inning / and with the complete collapse of the Paradise defense, the winners crashed the ball to all corners to| double the number of runs that they The the hington Baseball » 1 |13 . 2b, T, i s mocecmocos Totals 15 WASHIN ot 30, Peters, Hubiy HLEN AND EVANS GIVE OPINIONS Answer Questions On Profests in Industrial League Regarding two protests filed in the Industrial Baseball league, Billy Evans and Billy Klem, two recogniz- ed authorities on major leagues, have filed opinions which might settle the questions as they exist today. Both men were queried on the protests by Secretary have promptly answered. Their |answers will speak for themsclves. The question on the protests as | written by MF. Long were as follows: “Case No, 1. With no one on base in the seventh inning, a hitter of team A knocks a long fly to left cen- Tadzin, Zisk, 1t apodice, jko, uenk, Marino, Gola iiggins had scored in the preceding eight U it rt 2 » The wi the Washingtons not only won the championship for them but it also avenged a defeat handed the playground in the indoor base- ball league by the Paradise Park team tht gave the championship to the latter. It was the heady playing,of Cap- tain Sammy Capodice and the scr tional work of his mates that won the title for them yesterday. The Washington hurler ~ alowed but eight scattered hits throughout the contest, Block collecting three of the Dingles. He was slightly unsteady at times but brilliant fielding behind him cut short many threatening | rallies in the early innings. e g .7 00— 0 14 By Totals Smith Washin Hon Higgins 000 Struck n run: Capodice by French 4 Nathan Hale Wins Out-sized and outplayed, not outgamed, the Y. M. C. A. team went down to a 17 to 6 defeat be- fore the over-age Nathan Hale team. The game was played under protest. The “midgets” started out in the first inning as it they were zoing to make things hot and inter- esting but their lead was shortlived The losers used three pitchers in a {as the older boys crashed through vain effort to turn the tide but they to six runs in two innings. The could do practically nothing against | team got five in the first two the hard hitting Washington team. |frames and one in the fifth but Slysz who started on the mound toil- | these didn’t help at all. ed for eight innings and in that| As the game progressed time was touched for 15 solid hits.[seen that Nathan Hale could not be He relicved in the first halt of |stopped. In the fitth frame, the the ninth in favor of Olewnick three |winners staged a spirited rally that men to face him hit safely. The lat- [gave them cight runs for a total of ter also ineffective and Block As a sccond game had to he took his place before the inning w: yed on the diamond, the contest over. s called after the first half of the Paradise Park took the lead at the | sixth, outsct and held @ 3 to 1 advaniage| The score at the close of the second inning. The | winners rallied sharply in“the third, however, and went inte a one run | lead. | They Inereased this in the next two stanzas and were out in front | by an 8 to 6 score when they went to | bat in the first half of the ninth, It | at this time that the storm | Washington batters deluged the losers with hit after hit, When the final Washington man | | was retired, the scored showed a 16 | oul wzp . 2h Coyle, 1t n, 1 Knight Lyons, Mu | was Neverts, © 1d for the winners. The losers | Y {1 0 a pitiful attempt to score in | Kasancul 1st half of the ninth but they |Ja it retired in order, the last man | Nihis | fanning. jralss | One of the best baseball prospects | Morley, in many seasons loomed up in this |Camp, of | gitme in the persons of Golas, midget | .\ {second baseman for the winners. |y M. (. The chap who stands but tifree feet | Natian with his shocs on played a Two & |tional game throughout and casily the fielding star of the game, | He had three put outs and five as- |sists to his credit and made but made the | were G In a tighter bLattle, the Nathan Hale team beat out the Burritt ag- g tion 6 to 3 in the second game one bobble. A bright future is pre- |~ i So. 0.1 : onehi A BRI falnne 12 805 ol yen b minnend DT, Db mans {dicted for this youngster if he kics | yont only four and a half innings wing the - brand of ball he |y .t the diamond had to be sur- played yesterday. Peters played a| o000 nce game for the winners hehind | "“Nyopisti in the box for the win- "J\‘Q holt “W{wv-v;fi;z};'" :1::;*\Olj;}‘§§:;,.\.»rs, was 100 much for the Burritt |were the fielding stars on the losing Block also led his team at the bat | cracking out three sate hits in five | trips to the plate. Sam Capodic helped his own cause along by push- ing out two doubles and scoring four runs. Higains hit safely in three out | of six attempts. Th AB R | N s 0 AB 3 @ (Continued on Following Page) frames and allow the first three weakened to | first two frames cdge to win. H Po 01 A 0 8 1 < o ® Mar Peter | e i) Zisk, 19 PARADISE A wlosmssamwss e YouR FAMILY AT SHORE AFTER A H WEEKS WORK Keletein HeLeo Rles eridg sl sssmnssnncs CRETS n3 Mo 120 010 20816 of every baseball realized by, Higgins, ond string in the sec- ame of the scason for the Washington outfit when he pitched a no hit. mo run game against the Smith team. The final score was 14 1o 0 The game was uninteresting !throughout, the only outstanding ihout it was the fine hurling | Washington pitcher. Only men reached first base and these were either thrown out or left str The dicam piteher was Washinzton s ond and tinal thing of the four nde jcosacsaE & though | it was| {vatters. He blanked them easily for | then| them to score : runs in the fourth inning. Five | runs scored by Nathan Hale in the ] 1 |league managers. 1 ( Hlo JmJ N | ter field, which hit a small child ren- | dering it unconsclous. Both fielders |of Team B picked up the child and | carried it to its mother. In the | meantime the hitter ran around the bases and the umpire allowed a |home run. This was the winning | score for Team A. Team B has pro- tested and bases its protest on § tion 2 of Rule 74 which reads: “An umpire shall suspend play in an ex- traordinary circumstance. here wege no ground rules covering case of this kind. What is your opin- ion of the above? “Case No. 2. Can a game be for- feited by an umpire under Rule 26, section 4, without warning, if in his opinion a team is wiltully delayin the game, or must he, as per section 5 of Rule 26, first warn the offend- ing team before calling the game?” Klem answered as follows: “No.1. | The umpire was correct and time should not have been called in such case until that play had been com- pleted. “No. 2. | is usually given in any insta |tion 5 means protection | stance” to a player that | know he is violating a rule.” Evans answers as follows: “In e No. 1 when a batted ball hit a by running loose in rendering it unconscious, it was nat- ural that the ficlders should pick up the child and take it to its mother however, it was unfortunate that both fielders, instead of one, did so. 1t would have heen much better had one player taken care of the baby, and the other chased the ball. Of course, when the rule makers mad rules they had no idea that babics would be roaming in the outiicld and, consequently, there is no special provision except the one which fors to extraordinary circumstances and it is my belief that this clausc does not cover your play. If I wus in charge of such a game, 1 would have permitted the ball to remain in play. This scems inhuman, of cou but otherwise if it was customary to call time when players collided run- ning after a ball, of you state, there would be a con- t feigning of injury only to have time called. “In the second case, it is custom ary to warn the team when an um- pire belleves it is wilfully delaying the game, As a matter of fact, um- pire Yes, he can, but warning Sec- in- not “or may trying to avoid forfeiture if the gue umpire saw fit to forfeit a game and failed to notify the team, he would be upheld in his judgment | Yet, in an amateur game, to protect | These letters will be dis an early meecting of the Indu: The only fish that never sleep are | the salmon, pike and goldfish. umpiring in the Bryce Long of the league and they | he outficld, | such situations s not caring to forfeit ball games usually warn a team 'several tignes | continue their dilatory tactics. How- ever, 1 am sure if an American lea- limselt and to prevent the defeated |up. team from having an alibi, T would i cay the umpires should always warn | the ninth inning of the Pirate- and another in the | o aljeged offending team at least | & third gave the winners a sufficient once. IFALCONS AND BURRITTS AGREE TO PLAY SERIES Managers Cabay and Lasky Come to Terms — Each Team to Pick Lineup From Roster of 18 Players— First Game to Be Played Next Sunday—Plenty of Rivalry Existing Between Clubs — Bonds.of $100 Each Posted as Guarantees of Good Faith.— Ar- range Other Contests. PLAY IS STARTED IN COUNTY “Y" TOURNEY Close i After a rapid-fire argument which lasted more than a week, Managers John Cabay of the Falcons and William Lasky of the Barritts got together yesterday and agheed to play a sertes of thres out of five games, the winning team to be con- | sidered the champion of the north- | Opeiing. Bajlies | west section of the city. The agree- {15 . : | ment was drawn up and signed by Play in the Hartford County [both managers and honds of $100 tennis tournament was started last!have been posted Ly the clubs as w\vnmgdul u\\:nnn Hill park a guarantees of good faith. two d clay caused by rin,| pno firs : ; played by representatives of four of | 3 ololovk ar St Mancs meln the he County erganizationt B, & |home of the Paloons. THE: will tie Hanney of Plainville subdued Del (o scene of all other 2 [Mona of Southington after a stub- | plqyeq Alotisr. gamenqoiha Mona of Southinglon after a tub-| played in the series. Dates for the . $-10, 6-1, 6-3. | yonaining games " [Both men played soft, cautious ten- |ty i S e be settled | |nis in anticipation of opponent’s mis- | oy oo [0 anagers after th takes, with Hanney driving some-| ' poop® S RENEE e what harder than the Southingion | jinit their aEkaen yeaterda | player. De Mond ran up a 5-3 lead | helr roster to 18-men, and | play < an up & o-0 [CaC| from these two lists will be select in the first sct only to have Hanney | og he tarting teams next Supdus. i;l?:;‘“‘i(‘lro::; ?\lt"“dg!‘gn' P und CAtsy | The Burritts submitted the follow- | ‘tra g efore D ing ist; Kopee, Zaleski Mond won. The cautious playing in | oanin 3. K. J,M' Zalen o B |this set resulted in sustained rallics | oy IR Meous alioh, which tired De Mond more than his| [T B O W b {opponent, and Hanney swept the|gon Budnick Luckn - Budnick, [sccond and thira sets as his superior [ )"0 S8 U B Gada, Salak, |gasonil gnd third sate s d | A1 Havlick, Zembko, Stanley Bud- {ERmn ARl SeRmE AR EENL | nick and Jarot. The Falcon list is | Giana of Kensington overeame|gon o 8 IR g =3 | Dick Gordon, ot! New Brylain o2 | JULINAE MIeuolas Sioonan, Kiuths, . in the other match. Gordon got | telltey, /R Begley, .1 Bog- n the other match. Gordon €9¢)ley. MeLeary, ' McKernan, Kredar, et Db 08t & mrentt chinos: nien|oniey PiBoss 7 Kofe, Atiipod |he double faulted four times in n:n:,'.o,!.t:;r' i fourth gume and lost his own serv-| " il Aitiot i g les e At there be a red-hot tine ko Siana a0 DR ‘l’y‘]'\‘zv‘mg ¢ hetween the backers of both Sl et ing Buime to tha. buasime. and |3 1he EAme and during the romain- losing many points when these long |7 %) T 5 regs fncidenged hyiiha hots landed ontside by inches. Gor- [£200 (Bt the argument which pre- don took the first two games of the "¢ Lol g of articles yester- on ok £t of (%) day has broken up life-long friend- love i the nest game for point-set Ol be caused by nothing else than atch, Gordon staged a great stand |® [FEC SEECH g t, evened and won the S OLERINS RaespEa: at this point, hed] and Twon paring to sink their savings on the game and then took the next one.|PRFRE & B e Giant. maade Tis last drive |OUtcome of the game. Because no | northwest section of ind ran out the match. [faaim fromBtho | Four singles matches are sched-|the city has ever captured a city, e allana: At 6 |Championship, the game is drawing olclock; Murlburt' of Southington ye:| oo Lot Intereat everywhere. /he Tonga: of Kensinston:. Hawett: of|: olaticlubsiais falilng of nothing New Britain vs. Slegrist of|¢lse but the coming battle and there Fast Berlin. At 7 o'clock, Fi will plenty of excitement at St. of Plainville vs, De Garmo of Sims- | Mary's Field next Sunday afternoon. tury; Kramer of East Berlin vs. Pat- BRI, tison of Simsbury. Tn the event of | F]GHTS LAST NIGHT rain these games will be postponed until tomorrow evening and the dou- — hles matches scheduled for then sct| ahead " SEYS HODERN RECORD Witheut an Error - Pittsburgh, Pa, Aue. 28 (P- parky Adams, peppy little inficld- L1 ofi the Pittshurgh Pirates, has set | - |what local baseball writers believe | .|is a modern record for accepting essive chances without a slip- | Two Singles Matches Are i Played at Walnut Hill Park in N as seaciated Pre wcisco — Mickey Walker, middleweight champion, knocked |out Armund Emmanuel, San Fran- | cisco (7). Non-title, | Chicago — Jerry |Sioux City, Ia., defeated K. 0. rgh Pirates ! white, New Orleans (10). Erni Owens, Los Angeles, outpointed Ton William as City (8). Jac McCarthy, Chicago, beat Louie Li | velle, Anderson, Ind., (6). Sandy Garrison, Los Angeles, defeated n Brown, Chicago (6). v Castle, Fa. — Young Firpo, Louisville, Ky., knocked out George rotto, rie, Pa. (3). Cincinnati — Howard _Mitchell, | Cincinnati, defeated Dickie McDonie, Huntington, W. Va., (8). Lon Love- .|lace, Terre Ha and Harry Kreindler, Cincinnati, drew, (6). San Antonio Kid Adams, San Horace Ford of the Reds ac | Antonio, outpointed Billy Kane, In- 135 chances wiihout an error|dianapolis (4). and Fresco Thompson of the PRils| Little Rock — Milton Manguna, took in 149 before he foozled one|New Orleans, won from John Kel- |this season stein, Buffalo, (10). Tuffy Griffiths, Accepts ‘cssive Chances | sue When the last man went out in ne in Cincinnati yeste | Sparky had hung up his 174th suc- cessive chanee. You ComE Down To THE ARD AND, You HA: Do BUT SIT LISTEN To wiLD WAVE AND TeLls You OF THE BIG DEAL TiAAT FELL THROUGH , OF ‘-Somebody Is Always Taking the Joy Out of Life AND THE NIGHTS ARE MICE AWD Cool , AND You HAUE A GRAWMD, REST WITH NOTHING To DISTURB You - WE NOTHING: T © AROUMD AND WHAT THE S ARE SAVING Some oz 1S A\._v.gAYS Lu- Matthew's wouid the morn- mes may The new champs got to the offer- | | ings of French in the initial frame | and pushed across enough runs to win the game. With the aid of but | two solitary hits the winners scored six runs in the last half of the sec- ond inning. They continued the on- slaught in the third and fourth and atter the losers were retired in the first half of the fifth Umpire Lynch sensing the helplessness of the sit- nation for_ the Smith aggregation called the game | Colas played another sensational fielding game for the winners tak- ing care of seven chances without a misplay. Sammy Capodice got the | only extra base hit of the game, a long iome run to the second dia- mond. I'rench pitched fairly good ball for the winners but he was handed wretehed support. The score: T AB R H PO A & 3 6 9 & 9 0 ki |caryens. »t AnD THEN CoMES A "FRiEND FROM THE CITY WHO TeLLS | You THING S AT THE OFFICE | “Loow PRETTY BAD" THE MEN THAT ARG BEING LET OUT", OF A NEW MAN WHO HAS BEEU SITTING AT YouR DESK &Tc. €TC ETC. Taxking The JOY ouT OF LIFE afteri A Roge: when pin 5 ed ba self e ‘The Work playe has | rain Nev Gibso: Knute weigh Walte lionais the bi pay § in Ha The f all cls | Nea annua turn ¢ cent o than : READ

Other pages from this issue: