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e o A TR m::_— STANLEY WORKS BASEBALL TEAM GOES INTO FIRST PLACE IN INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE THROUGH VICTORY PAPER GOODS—BOBBIE GRANT WINS ONE-DAY TOURNEY-—HARTFORD COUNTY “Y” TENNIS TOURNEY STANLEY WORKS BATTERS ATHLETICS LOSE WHILE | YANKS TRIM ST.LOUIS Hugmen Shear Two Full Games From Lead of Mack- men—Babe Ruth Provides New York Punch With Home Run and a Triple—Pirates Drop Robins by 3 to 1 Score — Cardinals Finally Win a Game at | Philadelphia—Washington Shades Detroit, 2 to 1. —e | By the Associated Press. Just when it seemed that Connie Mack was headed for open country where even rear- i would be safe from an: ank thrust th Athleti began absorbing taps on the chin from the humble Whit 0X. 2 2 The champion Yankees preversely | Torais = 3 | chose the exact moment of Mr. Mack's greatest distress to launch | & series of raids upon the Browns. The Hugmen won th out of four in St. Louis as the Macks drop- ped three out of four in Chicago, and by this gesture sheared two full games from the Athletic lead in one | ¢ brief series. he Macks were out in front this morning with a margin Of’ seven and one-half games. The Philadelphia host still has little to | ptroie worry abo but soon ma have | plenty unless the brakes can be ap- pliec The Yan! i i | Tat had to call on th of their first st pitchers to shad the Browns by § to 7 in the get- away game at St. Louis vesterday, o but Herb Pennock had enough stuff |/, 5 ; : ai to register a troublesome third out X S in the ninth and the champions w S e 8 e | saved. The Hugmen are winning a |/ b R UR IR U Tot of their games by the hair-line | i g decision of one run. but the im- portant fact i t they ar them. These one-run victo can mean the difference between first place and the second division in the | course of a seas(n. | Babe Ruth provided the Yankee | margin yesterday with his 1Sth] home rup and a The homer | Revnolas. rt 3 0 » 0 W registered at expense of | K 2 Wally Stewart in h £ none out and nobody on T \uyp‘,, Yanks followed up the Babe's blo with three more runs to lead by 5 | s to 0. Heinie Manush's homer in the . s fifth helped the home team to tie. | i oty but the Yankees won the game all | Philade 02 ann—y over again in the seventh, which thrake oGl AR o - Ruth started with his triple | Rapad Eals Motzle Then in the ninth with Hoyt in the | box as a successor to the Messrs Wells and Zachary, the Browns = | again became trcublesome. They had Nafiona] Leagu’;‘ winning | Fren Gl " s often & 5 < | 1 ' [ Ciss a ..\ fvith { “ i I ‘\ | Shires. Struck out one run in, the bases filled and two out when Pennock took the reins. Schang got an infield single, but Fer- CINGINNATT rell grounded into a force-out at B R third, ending the game. ! The Athletic reverse at Chicago | Was brought about by a double failure | —The Mackmen at bat and Jack | Al Quinn in the box. Urban Faber held the Philadelphians to cight hits te | win by 6 to 4. Washington shaded Detroit by 2 |lLuque, p | to 1, but the Boston-Cleveland game ‘was rained out. ~ The Pirates gained a bit of breath- ing apace for themselves by dropping the Robins, 3.to 1, at Ebbets field as | the Braves draped the Cubs on the | ropes, 6 to 2, for the second time in | three games. These two results in- | : creased the lead of the Pirates to one | .3 1 gy and one-half games. but the Giants |} 4 ; 0 gave the one-two teams further | cause to worry by cleaning up their | fourth straight against the Reds, § to 5. Clive Dudley had an Remy Kremer for rounds in | Brooklyn, but weakened in the last two. Pittsburgh got two runs on five hits in the cighth, and adde orative marker on Lloyd Waner's homer in the ninth. Brooklyn scored In the sixth on a circuit blow by | Two hase Leach. Lindstror Delphage Bissonette. Ben Cantwell | 0! suvas. Three base hit: I stopped the Cubs with five hits, and R eRtucl aup Joe McCarthy's second pitching e string, represented by Bubber Jon. e nard and Mike Cvengros, was over- matched. t Long George Kelly celebrated at ! Douthit 60 o the Polo Grounds with two home s tee runs which accounted for all th Cincinnati scoring. I7red Lindstrom and Andy Cohen collaborated in driving in seven of the eight Giant |Gt = oo ; e Tuns on three hits between them. |yad o el B Cohen got only one of these, hut 1t a home run with one on base. | Jack Hendricks and six lesser Reds were removed from the premises for thinking out loud on the Bench Two circuit drives by Jim Bottom- | ley enabled the Cardinals to defeat Philadelphia. The scor: to 4 in 10 innings, Bottomley contribut- ing his second homer in final round with two on base after & ; O'Doul had tied the score for the| mishe Liiiio 5 | Phils with a drive n ” 2 field wall in the Al 2 e s i q edge over | seven Totals x—Batted for Luque in Batted for Ash in x—Batted for Scott | cimcinnati I New York NEW yor . ) AB I 1 Po o : = —| | | Badgro, r Manush 1July 2 [ton will | of competition | Monday | Was 06 4 | |this city and {compet { Southington ;v‘ am of Manchester slace & |P | ponem |10 D | Soap. | tion of { prospects inone the 1 | the present season the || Park at t Nathan | Smith at NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 192¢. LOUGHRAN DEFENDS HIS CROWN ON JULY 18 JAMES J. ' BRADDOCK. & be ) -*CAALLENK—?ER» . PLAN FOR COUNTY (L TENNIS TOURNEY Hartiord District Y to Gonduct - Sectional Playolls JIMMY CAR HiIT— TOMHY CAN BOY — Myl Ha OMM i 'SOME RECLINING, The entry nval tennis pices of the lists for the second an- tournament under the Hartford County Y. M. C. A. have been declared open and the tourney will be started on cording to an announce- today by the county of- Backman of Southing- be in charge of the details and is handling en- must be filed by next ment made f Geo tries, which instead of having a single tournament for teams from all over the county, there will be : isectional play-offs in order to make o T e [it more convenient for the plavers hese must be over by August 10. e TOMMY_BAS BEEN after which the survivors will meet DOWR BEFORE AND in the final tourney. GOT UP 10 WIN KIS (EICHT This year, Each organization in the County Y" may enter two men in singles and one team in the doubles. nt held by the play The first tournam organization took piace last year in attracted 18 entries. nk Lanza of Kensington won the Y's” first singles champion- while Kramer and Brupo Miginoli of Tast in he ¢d the field in doubles. This yea ition is expected to draw a much larger field Baschall Results The County “Y" baschall league pleted the four weeks and the Orford tied for fi 15 follows W. . Pct Southington S 00 Orford S 7 0 1.000 Highland Kensington Bezlin Bar weather | nt of sev will be several delayed interspersed with the he schedule fr season THE BALONEY- | - RING THAT GONG/! I'rank has ¢ first of its The standin LQUGHR\Q\M RE CHANVP.ee East ed the post- mes, so that On the night of July 18, Tommy | Loughran, cavyweight cham- '“xlol\ of the world v once again | drag his shopworn crown into the | ring when he meets James J. Brad- |dock, the rock fisted New Jers sharpshoote fter Lewis had knocked Sonnen- berg out of the ring. The cnummo: promoters, Joe Coffe) “Doc” Krone announced that Son Henyegt Nt Campion D Lo ey it e fends His Title in Boston :;‘gz;:” to be sclected by the Ili Boston. July 10 (A—Gus Sonnen- | HO [H LUB g 100k in another notch today in | ME R I G there m now is as the schedule until the close of the follows July ington July —Highland Park at Kens- Southington at Orford Soap. Loughran. the boxer against Brad- 20—Kensington at Southing- | doc hamite puncher—that ton; E rlin at Highland Park. | one should hold enough possibilitic July 27—Highland Park at South- | to assemble quite a mob or the irgton: Orford Soap at . Berlin. |blood-thirsty and with the moderate August 3—Highland Park at Or-[prices in effect for this one, th ford Soap: Southington at E. Berlin. | Yankee Stadium should be well fill- August 10—Kensington at E. Ber- |ed when the fighters step through lin: Southington at Highland Park. |the ropes. The possibility of sceing August 17—Kensington at Orford [a title lifted with the old K. O. Soap. generally brings them out en masse August 24—E. Braddock, the challenger has ora t during the past 12| Ppionship, aftr turning back the August 31—Orford Soap at South-|months, Only a year ago, he was|Cchallenge of ud “Strangler” Lewis ton. in the camp of Tom Heeney, then|from whom he wrested the cham- Anthony Egidio is manager of the | prepping for fight with Gen. |Pionship 6 months ago. Tweniy-fis: Southington team and Carl Allen s | Tunnoy pored as an ordinary | thousand customers crowded Ien the pilot of the Orford Soap outfit. | sparring partner and little had heen | ¥y Park and paid §90,000 to sew [ B Rev, Vernon L. Phillips. has been|pearg of him outside of the N the encounter It was the largest \“:;\‘ L managing Kensington, but during | york and New Jersey district. | amount ever paid at a professional | o SO% MW IR | his absence the team is bein%| gince then nis heavy right hand |SPOrting event in New ILngland ‘,,‘,‘,':;,‘m{“ n‘-:“‘;h{' 9. handled by Edward Malone. Kenneth | ya5 secounted for knockout victories | The former Dartmouth football| 'Doul. Phillie Rich is the East Berlin manager and { gyer Tugty Griffiths, Pete Latzo and | player su d the first fall of hic| Jackson, Giants, GeorgeRBagrthe "f"’" of the Hizh-{yinmy Siattery. These wins brought | eighteen months' mat career la S 0Ly omee | land Park aggregation him acclaim in all regions whers|night Lut came back with the fi-| pottomley. Cardinals, 2. g the noble business of ear scrambling | mous flying : i : tackle he horrowei| jielly, Reds, 2 helds forth. from X He is young and ambitious and the gridiron to flatten Lewis| (ohen, Giants, 1. | | twice in minutes. It was a fast Bissonette, Dodgers, 1 he can shoot a nasty right hand. He|match throughout. with each man| [ Waner. Pirate A I y lack boxing skilland experience | out to win as quickly as possible. | ('Doul, Phill 1 ut if he nails Tommy on the| Lewis successfully avoided Son- Manush, Browns, 1. i mandible, the King will go down.|nenberg’s butting charges at the | Totals 10 seconds’ nap. | start. With minutes gone he confident he can [Jumped aside from one of the cham- | American League, back. He banks on|pion's charges so neatly that Son Total, 760 | and experience to|nenberg nose-dived to the mat. The el T | whip the kid. Whatever may Se| “Strangler” jumped on him and ob- | HTS LAST NIGHT | your opinion of Tommy, you'll have | tained a breast lock for the fir ociated Press | to hand him these two qualitivs. He | fall | New York—Tony Canzoneri, New | After a week devoted to the ercc.|may be dangling on the pugilistic| Sonnenberg came back fighting | York. outpointed Phil McGraw, De- organiza- | parachute but he still has mad but almost lost the match sev. |troit (10), the play-|Of setting the eral times when Lewis clamped Chicago—Johnny Burn grounds rday with or-|the 18th of July | headinck on him. Finally, however |Nia. outpointed Ted Ross nized activities. FFuture Babe | champion | he hutted su-~cessfuly to take the ‘(l“). Rtuths wax enthusiastic over th= = cond fall in 19 minutes. The de Des Moires—Joe Rivers, Ceda i of their ball teams and TRACK TE. \\r \I\hl\l S ciding fall cama three minutes later | Rapids, outpointed Jimmy Sacco. s interested in baseball | Cambridge, Mass. July 10 (UP)—— | sports ie commission. diamond belt, enblematic of the Rerlin rat Orford world's heavyweight wrestling cham- o\ oo Leaders ott, Gia Gehrig. Yankees, Bottomley, Cardinals, Klein 21 | And maybe for th Loughran turn James J. lis ring scizns National League, 444 After Week oi Pfepai*alions, Or-| ganized Activities Begin apparatus and the tion of clubs and group: Califor- | Chicago | ;| down only with a single but Schneider was nip- | rode home on Schroeder’'s single | towards first and was safe when Joe | der's homer |came in on Wi | when Johnson walked and Maguder | double | Paper [two putouts. | five, OVER AMERICAN ENTRY LIST OPENS WAY INTO LEAGUE LEAD Champions Come Through With 6 to 3 Victory Over American Paper Goods—Poor Judgment of Drive by Schneider, Allowing Home Run, Turns Tide in Game—Jack Schroeder Pounds Pill for Four Safe- ties Qut of Five Trips — Winners Now in First Plazce. | while Sullick and Joe McCormick Pet. | were the heavy hitters for the Pa- .533 | per Goods. The summary: THRAGTE b s00 | STANLEY WORKS Ao AB R M Fafnirs ........ : 800 g hneider, cf L5 3 Corbins . 3 3 2500 f Charlow, 1t veees B 3 Paper Goods ... .333 |Greene, 2b ... 0 Stanley Rule 1333 ehrocder .o N. B. Machine ... -187 | Wendroski, B alak, A line drive to right field that |ina o' was badly misjudged by cmecol Williams | s = and was conseguently turned into a| Totals u 616 home run gave the Stanley Works a | "“PE“\SU;,’DSH victory over the American Paper | iane G0 Goods in the Industrial Baseball | Wil T League at Walnut Hill park Iasfi‘j:'”;::';‘ud“‘ 5 § night and put the winning team in|yjm Ac'mr, ss .3 0 sole possession of first place. The |Warren, of 1 home run was chalked up in favor |Sulick o { of Paul Schneider, Stanley Works |Jo" \iCommick, b center fielder and although it was|¥erraro, 2b o a terrific drive that rolled clear to Jno Magudel o the road, Williams came. in on the run and the sphere sailed over his head. Salak trotted in ahead neider making two counters on PR, | Sle i ooas | S sczp wies rocell mlcocse Totals x—Batted for Johnson in 9th. Stanley Works 140 010 Paper Goods 010 020 Two base hits: Salak, Charlon, | Schroeder 2, sullak. Home runs Schnei second and run ned off scored only one Stanley [Worth, McCormick thew wildly to hitters. Joe McCormick had an!Cramer. » Umpires: Maher and Noonan. The Stanley Works slapped the pill | ing all this year, however, and it | the annual women’s invitation golf between Maureen Orcutt, of Ha- Cramer was on third and Wendr : e on second when Salak burst*a dou- | Virg&inia Wilson of Chicago, in the G R |Miss Hicks. who overwhelmed Bea- edge on Scott but the Stanley Works | Time: 1:40. team had a big edge on the Paper | for a total of 16 bingles to 10 rov\ the Paper Goods. However, Joe M was good enough to win .any ba | game. He was forced to hear tournament for the Griswold cup had reached the second round today MO el S N. J., metropolitan champion, Works' big session. Cramer opened |and medalist of the present tourna- ble into the tree in right. Schnei- [UPPer half. to right made it a to-| M Orcutt, who eliminated Stanley Works scored again in the | (¥ice Gottlieb of Providence, 6 and fifth when Schroeder doubled and |4 vesterday. was pitted against Mrs. the hit The game was a battle of pitche “m‘ Maguder. Bases on balls: Off Scott ! - Struck out: By McCormick §, Scott and at the same time, a battle o e ek B gt Goods. In the field, the Stunley| Works team played heads-up base- ball and several slips on the part of the XKensington crew cost it runs. | !N 'SFEBNH RUUNB Cormick fanned eight batters \0 seven for Scott and he failed u.uo d F All Scott's work was of the high or-| R der that mas eharacterized nis pien | RUNDING At Sheneuossett Groton, Conn., July 10 —Play in in {he last four innings when he blanked the Paper Goods, The Stanley Works opened with a hit by Schneider. Charlow followea |With all the outstanding favorites still in the running. the winners | If play follows form today semi- when Charlow |final round battles are in prospect with single, Wendroski bunted |ment, ana Helen Hicks, of Hewlett, N. Y. in the lower half and between fivst, | Mrs. Dorothy Campbell Hurd, Mer- ki [fon. the defending champion, and Mo e s |Gladys P. Doctor of Hack ck, N. The Paper Goods got one back in |J. in the first round, 4 and 3, was the second when Warren singled Matched agaonst Elizabeth Morris ot ad Sullick brought him home witli | Huntington Valley in her second test. hdroski's single pasi |1+ C- Dubois of Ridgewood. in the hird. The Paper Goods staged a |S¢¢ond round. rally in the last half of this fram Victorious by 6 and 5 over Mrs. E C. Koepel, Glen Ridge, N. J., Mrs. Hurd was jitted against a formid- {able opponent in the person of Mrs. put the ball over the center field | ence r S ed :h':‘ R r];"”]';”'“l’flmlj”i ended [ puth M. Raymond, of Baton Rouge, JEOLDE oo | La. Miss Wilson, who beat Mrs. Rita The Stanley Works! turned in the (82 20as WESeH, B R0 Dedils: ita flelding feature with a heautiful |1 Fodney RMamaronech ‘% X 8 play. Cramer, with a m”‘"!‘hmmw Hucknall of Stamford, on first and second. picked Kane's [(omS JCHEITE | S grounder, threw to Balak at second | " oepor matches included: Bernice and received A quick (hrow in 1o |\ Gsniosn, Wis. vs. Mrs. N. K. filri o) malke fiet ‘dotublat putautilTassi ST SRR S SRRt Ferraro starred at second for . Mrs. HUAA. Martell, Goods with five assists | Hartford; Edith Quier, Philadelphia, Charlow fielded nicely | g Mz K. S. Fenn, New Haven; land Mrs. Jay Lee, Hackensack. N. J., \s. Doris Bry: C in left field. Jack Schroeder with Cramer, Schneider low with three out of five, the heavy sticks for four out of and Char- | wielded | READ HE! the winners FOR BEST RESULTS | Boston (10). | rls who, it was particul (he Oxford-Cambridge track team, | end practice with the | Which will meet the Harvard-Yaie big leaguers. Du teamn Saturday at Har d stadium, Rotary leagi wrrive here this afternoon played at Walnut Hill | Ingland’s athletes planned to pro- park ar the Playground leagus | ceed immediately to the stadium for games at the respective playgrounds. [a practice session in preparation jor Playground League Schedule e annual competition between the July 11—Willow Brook at Vanc English and American combinations. Nathan Hale at Paradise Park, Bur- ritt at Washington July 16—&mith Washington, Bt Hale July 1S—\Washinzton Hale, Paradise Puark at Willow Brook July Nathan Hale at Was . Vance at Willow Brook. B Paradise Park. Paradise at Nathan Washington at Burritt, Vance at| Smith July Washin, than Hal are the g noticed regularity of Movie of a Fan and a Foul in the Stand vas to mes will be “"CoME ON YouU BiG Bam' el et " ARl S e 2B GRS A, ON You Bl Arthur Devlin, s for the York Giants, says that he has more good college ball play than he has in years. Nekola, Holy Cross pitch- Murphy, Fordham pitcher, Paradise | New irritt at | his at Nathan And that Burritt, 1, and Brook at Smith I—Willow a Park, Na- Paradise at Burritt Track Meet A track meet was held Washington grounds unc Mes Shea children irection of Hinchey. Over OH Yov BIG BoY' ComE LITTLE ACTION A LTTLE HooP- LA BY BRIGGS [ ] FAT- A I‘GOTJT FOUL OUL- BiG Bov! in the vard dash—Virst, Mazor Glownia; third, Prusse h—Tirst, Coy third, illo. —First, Gray: Welsh as First Keeney; vard aleski second Chaduki «o oo Don’t ask the them! He knows.3 First, Woiculew hand made cigars iolas; Iirst, Pi DiPac First. Bal Miwlo: jump erzanowski ek: third i thir VANITIE IS DEFEATED ibay Harbor, Me., J 10 B, Lambert's \ ts first defeat of the season ¥ when it was nosed o1 Walter | Clark nds. l Yean TV TorT S0- | Tor™ So