New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 26, 1929, Page 22

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. : NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1929. i 2 ———ene e i FAFNIR TEAM NOSES OUT CORBINS BY 2 TO 1 IN INDUSTRIAL BASEBALL LEAGUE—BATTALINO BOUT IS POSTPONED UNTIL - TONIGHT—TWO GAMES ‘SCHEDULED TOMORROW IN CITY LEAGUE—TWO CONTESTS IN CITY SERIES NEXT SUNDAY—ITEMS CUBS BEAT GIANTS FOR 'BATTLES BATTALINO TONIGHT /GHAMPS AREFEW |FAFNIR CREW NOSES OUT THIRD CONSECUTIVE TlMETEM}SNTgfllTEfflSTEE{EES — — | Am FSTCWORLD CORBINS IN TIGHT GAME i Incr Its Lead Over Pir: Full | ; o mes [ “Lefty” Huber Holds Lockmakers to Three Bingles as Chlcéi(r)n:aa:dess Tai(e A‘:wth;: lI."r()lrlrnagfxptl:sgll"i\illiues Red SOX Meet SGH.CCflS and Bur- R . F ou of E]ght .Mam Divisions l\zatesuP;:nd Out Seven—Jagloski Also in Excel- —Cincinnati Reds Bury Boston Braves—Athletics| Iil{s Clash With Sokols ¥ . ; | Have No Title Holders lent Form—Bearing Makers Win Ct:ln;est in Third Drive Out 25 Hits to Crush Cleveland Indians— ;s : A Inning — New Britain Machine and Paper Goods White Sox Eke Out Victory Over Senators. |, The second games inthe cils, . ., | New Vork, July 36 (P With &l Gtams Swatfest With Kensington Winning, 19 to 9. |series for the baseball champiou-! ; few fighung exceptions, the cham- | |ahip of New Britain will be played . e 7 % | pions in protessional boxing have be- By the Associated Press Marberry 6. Winning pitcher: McKain, [Sunday when two contests will be . bl 4 5 come us scarce as pennant prospects Standing jonly error of the game was a bad Much to the embarrassment of | ° staged bringing in four teams which | . i | for the Boston Red Sox or hockey W. . C.|throw to first by Kenure, Fafnir John McGraw, the New York Giants | Natlonal Leagufi have not vet seen action. The Holy | ! 7 L players in Florida. Four of the|ganley Works. catcher. current western tour to date has Cross team will be idle and remains | g cight main divisions are now cham- |y anders Ferguson was the big sticker of been a constant source of satisfac- |the only team in the series which 4 F pionlesz. Fafnira |the game, getting three singles out 5 tion to. the growling Cubs of Chica- NEWE ORI g | Wil not have played after Sunday's| 4 neunid summersacllon SRl RSt o8 ok i 4 500 |of as many trips to the plate. His 3 1 go, traditional foes of McGraw « 3 ) ) | games, ¥ s i veight and light Stanley Rulé |second hit won the game for his team. The summary The Burritts and Sokals, two rep- < L A |t A e e e e & ORBIN 0 3 XBIN teams. indsirom, 3 Sane of Caivie : For the third staright day, thy |geach [0 eoee d 0 resentatives of the Polish population . ’ save something, fromi(he wreck butin ®p ‘arsching 0| ul 1 s ey i i not much. AB R H e :iym:né'fn’éo:'i: h;uolficlgm?u:n Sufi‘:' e Anyone worried about the current | Tafnirs, by nosing out the P. & F. |Jasper b .. s et ing to the Giants, § to 5, thereby | O/Fur s 0| Mary's feld. The R 5 condition of pugilism may find a few | Corbin combine $ to 1 in the In.|BLessen o3 00 Fisea Titianoren Puatea la one full i : Ulplaying in Thompsonville, leaving of the reasons here dustrial baseball league last night, |. Huber, 1t 0 o place Pittsburgh Pirates to one full |Js ; 8 v plazinerin Shotmopillc s Losving . Flyweight division—no champion. |has cemented.its hold on second | Bates. 1b 5o S T o i 0 1 0lgame g Bantamweight—no champion, al-|place and has also furthered jts|J281°skl. D 0 0 In justice to the Giants, it might U D ol game. 6 %ald fhatithey outiupla tigHt to| 505 | Both teams are in shape for a real o though Al Brown is recognized in|chances of catching the leaders in|wrigh save something out of the wrec . 3 5 | cliCAGo choice between them as a likeiy P ; | : ; New York state. the race for the pe t. In the|H ann, battle and there is hardly : i - ) e pennant. In the | Heinzmann, s LR any 4 Veatherweight — (he cltampion, | other game staged last night, the | of their series with the Cubs. ! ; [ Andre Routis, just knocked out by | American P : | A : e 2 / ; | Anar American Paper Goods shoved the gave red-thatched Larry Benton g ; s 5 VORGSO S il R y & Al Singer in a non-title bout. New: Britain’ Machina furthes. Int . | their usual strong lineup intact for | ; : Sy Machine further into two run lead in the second innin, [Heathcote, 1t . 1 | i Rin: Lightwelght—Sammy Mandell 1 | the cellar by swamping them 19 to 5 | v [5orsaby 1 {the contest and Bruno Kania wiil s =t 4 0 ping them 19 to 9 | venturo, then, atter the Cubs had tled it up | Gl = sece g probably draw down the pitching T e o Fafairs 2—Corbins 1 O'Brien in the sixth, scored three more runa | gammensen 16100 & 5 1 i TR 3 . : Canzonerl at Chicugo next month. With “Lefty” Huber pitching un- | fersuson. in the seventh and held a 5-4 ad- 0 o3 SEnm s sy ’ | “Welterwelght—itic just shifted | yittablo ball and his teammates play. | 12205 D antage as the Cubs camelto hutin 1 posine elineieang thevaitibe ot from Joe Rundec (o Jackie Fields on Kania, s 0 o win. |« foul. the last half of the cighth : : : o foul. Mike Lynch will umpire behind 1 : Middlev-eight—Mickey Walker the ing anall but errorless game behind | Bucheri, e him, the Tafnir team nosed out P. | Walicki, Then the storm broke. Singles by X < 2 » the bat and Jim Havlick will act o % i r ctivity. Grimm and Pinch-hitter Hazen Cuy- | Uvengros, p ... 0 1 Ll champion but no signs of activity. & F. Corbins 2 to 1 in the game|jraus 10 : o layed on Diamond No. 2. The con- | = ° the bases. The contest will get an- \ : 8 5 T P! - 2. con. ler brought another pinch-batsman, o der way at 3 o'clock & 3 Tn]”,,ll‘:un ll‘l‘n:i ’“\,l'flsi‘t.h.m, ‘?0‘:“.',1:,{ teat was one of the best and short-| Tatals g Gabby Hartnett to the plate. Me- i 0 Bon SovoSineons 4 L e m"‘_(‘mq:”fih The title | ©St battles fought in the Industrial (P: & F. Corbin IR0 ¢ yank and s £ 0 = c A g 1 g 2 i 2 afn 002 000 00x—2 Graw then yanked Benton and sént 0 At Willow Brook park at 3:15 . and join the full-fedged heavics. league this year and was in the Karl Hubbell to the mound. Gab- Nl 5 o'clock. the Corbin Red Sox will é i | keavyweight—no champion e Two base hits: Ja Kania. Sacrifice doubtful column right up until the | hits: Preisser, ieri, 1. Haber. Ven- by's sacrifice fly brought home the Batted n it meet the Senecas in what should Le Rt last man was out in the ninth inning. | ture. Bases on balls: Haber S. Struck ving run. A walk, an error by Batted for Tavlor in Sth A ieallnatie D g . It took an hour and 17 minutes for | OUt: By Haber 5 dJagloski . Double B | Senecas last § 1 0 : % ] | plays: Venturo to Kenure, Kania to Wa- 5 field s o] 7—Ran for cuyie sth : : : U's difficult to work up much en- |the eight plays: Ventur enure, Andy Cohen, an infield single by Sl Sunday showed surprising strength ; 3 A (o T RoiE ght and a half innings to be | Jiyi" (o Krause, Umpires: Lynch and Rogers Hornshy and Hack Wilson's | » D20 000 3 against the Ialcons and lost a close ’ Ssms e ol To 1 S ; Husinim o © approaching 00l | played and sparkiing catches, 5tops | Noonan. Time: 1. e ; b : . all campaign in the midst of a July | and throws were the order of the| Paper Go Machine Shop 9 wereeching double brought in three | base it Ge0 002 20— | game by a 10 to 9 score. They will : heat wave but the gridiron ballyhoo | gay. T,‘,” P, “{sé‘)—dl T i more tuns and decided the game ase b tmen, - Witson 12, figabtSr T ch s py sk ignd” Sunday 3 o Paper Goods and Machiu a | 3 e onglish, Crawford, Home runs: Wilson anl G : | can already be heard The' hits' f6r" both 'fés vere | Sh s got together and ham beyond a doubt. Wilson incidental- | 5/ Sliuex our X ush 1. | the followers of the team are pro- i e eereale 3 & ho ecams were | Shop teams got together and ha 3 Stru By Blake 4, Rush 1, t the team are pr At West Point, where they KNow |garce and far between. Huber, using | mered the ball to all corners of the 1y hit twe doubles and This 26th | Benton 2. pitcher: Benton, dict S cas v &t B 2 R oo s R ) dicting that the Senecas will ~com u.nl);m)r about summer vacation. Red | o siow hall and a fast one to perfec. | lot for cight innings and then Um- s R PHILADELPHIA 8. i = | Cagle is getting into condition for |6, ailowed only three hits, no two | pire Billy Fitzpatrick called a halt drove out homer No. 27 in the sez- i o | Manager John Tobin has his| | his last fling by workouts on 1he o which came In any one inning, |to the affair because of darkne ond inning. Blake started on tha |y o AR B R 2 Vlstrong lineup intact for the game| | artillery range. John Taw, Notrs : R t | The Kens e 2iac il f Bloks celar e e 5% pieons flneun inlact tor s | 2 arilo ; e e riene e | while Jagloski hurled a game that | The Kensington crew had the facult cubemounld pu ‘: e T Arae 5 8 Ene e \‘n‘f\“ v states that his | VF':,‘(“,-! ‘k-li;““n- ‘:j”“n“_‘“d 1”“ S I | would ordinarily have been turned |of hitting when it had men on bases “vengros wh C credi SR E e n . will score a win. 4 (New York for exercise and raining. |into 3 win. He allowed only seven | while the Machinists wasted most of the win although he pitched only | RiFih <f coeeee - McKeon will umpire behind the| | Torlda, which was heard from |pingies put three of theso were | their blows and Kensington won, 19 the eighth inning. Guy Bush finish- | yurse, 11 .. S e e bat in this encounter while Larry g considerably last season, i8 mapping |1 hed in the third frame to score | to 9 5 % i ed up. Taeenas e : : Mangan will be on the bases. AL BROWN | plans for its most ambitious gridiron | (4, two runs with which Fafnirs won | So consistent was the winners' at The St. Louis Cardinals, now oper- | Leran: © . B Other Games | scason,: including successive contes(s |y oaime. (e R e Dl 1 JtaeD ating under the personal guidance |smuine. p ool o ) The Sacred Heart team will meet = = next fall with Georgla Tech &t At~} "p "g 1 “gtarted to score in the first |one run in each inning. The losers of Bill McKechnie, advanced to|Southern, x . the Cubs of South Manchester [ex-champion who is reported ready | lant, el A Jacksonville and | frame when- Jasper connected for a [ made a good showing in the matter within three and a halt games of | . {the Washington school grounds to retire from the ring. Haryor0 el oo e [ bagger (o left field. Preisser sac- | of scoring consistently as it put over e third vlace Glants by trouncing e Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Promoter Fitzsimmons opened ne- | 10 & 18 0}53;2;:»?llquan\i M-l rificed him to third and he scored |a run at least in five of the eight the Phillies for the third straight AB A B| ‘T!” Kensington team will play in ;:ohatim\s today to match Jimmy with a pretty slide as Patrus went | frames. time, 10 to 3. Jess Haines held the :'l“:‘»!l“'- 'y’ -5 | New Haven, meeting the Westville ‘VELTER EHAMPI"N [McLarnin, the baby faced ex-light- SRR out at first. “Goose” Maguder featured the Quakers to four hits, one of which | ;i "5 Indies in a return game. wieght, for a welterweight cham-| Speaking of Jones, the great Geor- | The Fafnir team went into the | game in the matter of hitting as he was Chuck Klein's 30th homer of [ Bottomley, 16 ... ; I | pionship match with Fields early in [&lun is already being conceded & few |1ead in the third. Kenure started the [hammered out five consceutive the season. HalEh gy : ol September. The bout last night drew P‘“l“f!“ 0 adyane of “1”1“" of | racket when, as the first man up, | bingles in six trips to the plate and Behind clever pitching by Red |{{R08en 10 woee d pea! \W' Tl F. 1 D d {approximattly 27,000 spectator: cbble Beach. Says &n advancepe poked a single to left. Venturo | reached first on the last occasion on Yucas, the Cincinnati Reds buriéd |Geibert, ss ooo.. ol | 10§ 116 T0I Jo¢ bundee On‘w\uh net receipts around $125,000, [sheet: “So far, par (72) has evaded | sacrificed him down the line and|an error. He connected with one | | any official attempts against it (in the Boston Braves under a 14 te 3 |Haines, p 0 | : X a record breaker for wWelterwel o O'Brien came through with a single | home run and would have had an- BBInl andl cvencdlthh sertest with - — = UNTIL T[]N"]HT FUU] 1n Seu@fld RDufld |competition, giving Iit s tournament competition) .... but|ts gend him to third. IFerguson’s one- | other had he not failed to touch first wo victories apiece. Lucas held the | 1o seted for faEdis hope that a Itields-McLarnin match | Seneral opinion concedes Jones at|pase glice to left center brought |base. On his second long clout. he Braves to nine acattered hits and |Philadeiphia 200001, would draw $150,000. least one or two rournds under 70." | hoth men in. passed the bag and had to go back f St. Louis u20 310 Detroit, July 26 (A—Jackie I"ields —_— S That ended the scoring. Iafnirs|to touch it and was then thrown out SOl Ponoatdtica BRI (T Bads ; John MéGraw will tie his own rec- SOLInE 2 T ginse hitss laley, Qelbert s i y 1 welterweight . failed to get ast d for|when he tried to make a triple out ot 21 hits in all, five of them goini | omier, e Bat Batfal d today is the undisputed w ! rc-| fajled to get a man past second for . There were only two games in the | out: By Benge 1, Smythe 1, Haines 3. | Fields won the title last night, de- r and the prospeets mow seem |pergicon reached second fo be| The Machine Shop was short onc Adfiericarr Teague But fn-one of them | LO9INS plicher: Benge Clash at B“lkeley smdm]]] feating Joe Dundee, the fitle hold-| = === ery much against the. Glants in|oayent stealing third, Bucheri hit a | Player when it was ‘time to start the the Athletics drove out )lnh to er, on a foul, in the second round of -‘n'e'('m”“‘u';‘:k‘n ‘};mds Chicakd, finishing on_top. I,‘ has been five | g0 0 i the fourth but was out for | game and Jim Maher, who Was as- Ath a : BOSTON | what was to have been a 15 round | : » CRICAED. | yeqrs since McGraw won a pennant. | oot 5 0o me (oL el abikenal e crush Cleveland 21 to and ex- AB R | won world welterweight champion- | 4y only one other period of his : e i : A Bl A heavy shower of rain last night |battle y | At only v Corbins threatoned all through | Diessed into service and was given tended their league lead to 10% ¢ o | : stz | ship from Joe Dundee, Baltimore. | career. 1906, {hrough 1910 inclusive, | 4 © _into serv ‘ Elriion - Nine runs In’ the fivst in. | Maranvitis 0 about 8 o'clock prevented the stag-| Dundee, knocked dpwn twice inl areer, 1306, 9 | the rest of the game. Tn the fourth, | the catcher's assignment. - Incident- : 2 £ (2 y ¢ s, Cleve- Giant leader's record show i ; ; Sister, ] S tiDAl I : 5 " fon foul, (2); Billy Clemmons, ¢ does the Giant leader's recor Blvins ala R HAC ob: ning decided the game and allowed | jorper. 1¢ i ing of the Al Brown-Bat Battalino |the second round, cut loose With @|j5nq " Knocked out Sully Montgom-|g five-vear period devoid of cham . |E2trus and Mickey Huber got on, | & 1€ ¢ J e Letty Grove to win his 17th game | Bell, b |bout in Hartford and Promoter Ed |sweeping right hand punch that| o oot ey S0 TSI 1eE Sl ehT S Hene the former by a single and the lat- e winners got off to a seven run T e e an o o 1|Hurley announced that the ShoW |lunged deep in foul territory, a min- e ie il s tr Bonshin horor ter by a walk, with only one out, |lead in the first ~two innings and Bon Sk lne e e e, o|would go on as planned tonight in- |y and 55 second after the mnmx‘D‘"“h‘r."_‘"""!, L euipom PN but both wers stranded as their|from then en the élements of a Y dimmy ,‘-On e]\rw lzl’f:\; : ',T; 2 35 uistead. A crowd of more than 2500 |gpened. Fields collapsed or the dan: |[SpisEEirDo el R String of Jumpers to mates failed to come through. Tn th»,“’g"ds} were “"t'“‘fl ;"”‘f"fll“ ‘]"" : BE e iy )| fans was keenly disappointed when |yas and was unable to regain his — | Qo | fifth, Lipka got to third with one out | “roWd's interest was kept alive by b '(;:ms;a:g;';::ef::r;\]:;fn‘ dld“es Dugan. x ... 0 |the word went out that no fight |juct Montreal—Leo Kid Roy, Montreal, | i ComDEtg _f’rtgflllatofii’:m\.e he was caught at the plate by a | the hitling of cach team y aas, as as dou- |would be held and there was plenty [\ Jields was drag- | outpointed Billy Hindley, Englang, | New York, July 26 (P—Lor the|nies throw from Venturo as he tried bles by Grove, Dykes, Haas, Sim-| Totals of grumbling when Commissioner | V¢ I1NINg in pain P | first time in several years, Thomus |yo o0 00 FR MOS8 Y feld mons and Burns. homias B DonaHls lorabred] ol fed ESm Lo mcomsr Bu s LT, (LD | Hiteheoek will race his string ot |“* Qi SR EILCY G PR N0 Inot win the game. The felding was Fred Marberry weakened in the|g .. turn money until today. e so intensely that he was una Mn:“ X jumpers at Suratoga next month. | g sfole second and went |10 More than adequate. late innings and the Chicago Whita | pressen, 0| Tor a time last night it appeared |8t o0 his chaiv and fell into theipasop (ot to Make Dangle, the star of the stable, |40 tyira on an infield but me| The summary S % PP } s made an ex- | VeI oun! ; AR on an infleld out, PAPER GOODS sox eked out a § to 1 victory over|Walker, Ulehat the Bout woulti not go on fos 108 After phyfieln s MACe E8 L0 With two victories in as many starts | .4 gtranded there when Mickey e Washington in 10 innings. The Sena- | 1ell }[night. Battalino had plenty of trou- |2mination. the low hlow WAS I Last Turf Appearance|a: neimont park. 1s in line for ths | 1ranes e o pre oy o oottt |xane, an ; tors got only six hits off Walsh, Mc- | pisranger o|ble in making 125 pounds av\dif‘°\“‘:‘“fl',‘, ‘:“f%'iwum.;,,‘i S ams| Chicago. July 26 (P—Reigh Count, | national championship. He will he | “'Tyc Corbin team played errorless |Joe Maguder : Kain and Weiland. Marberry was | Ford, 2h 0 | weighed three-quarters of a pound |2WoT Ul |vuler of the American turf last year, | campaigned in preparation for the |pagenall. Jasper had five hard |Sullick reached for nine. ;‘:nl o 0lover that figure yesterday afternoon 7 5 pionship. will make his last appearance under |grand nationai to be run at Belmont McCormick, p Am r L 2 2 at the time scheduled and he had to | erican League Totals 1 P & a r hances at third base and made them dee was guilty of fouling after A e ] Peterson, $s | h n,“‘:,' moived $50.000 in advance |Silks tomorrow at Arlington Park.|Park in September. all good. He featured the Infield [ Warren, cf 1|do some stiff road work and finally |he hac re g x—Batted for Jones in |stage a wrestling match with his| i 5 g o chal- |The 1928 Kentucky Derby winner. ST = lay of the losing team. Venturo and | Johnson, 1f | forgriosing ‘1\'::“]1:“’]"1”"‘;,'m',\ffl:‘:;,l'\ which recently returned from a| Hal Carlson. Cub pitcher. had a R Pt P MO TS S E S A L esuder Clacinnatl o {ix_1i | trainer before he could get on the lenger. He WES DL CUR Tl oo | campaign in England, will not be|hard time getting started this year| the outfield for the winners, while : Two hase lits: Kelly 2, Dressen, Al-|Scales and tip at the required weight [time the matcd WES TEEE B0 D fentered in a race, however, but will |but when he did, he turned in a|Kania, Bucheri and Walicki, the in-| Totais tiasiien len Pittenger. Dugan. Three base hits: |of 125 pounds |the remaining $4 ) “’” Some of |£ive an exhibition run, as the fea-|five-hit and a four-hit game in[feld combination, had 10 chances iy Sl e o et foie h | en m Tenehy Sisument ”w'm.m~|h:‘ »mf\\‘w'lu;A.YYF(),}-'owmrm:-no of “Reigh Count” day. quick succession. {hetween them without a hloh. The | (Continued on the Iollowing Page.) Aver Sl ) 0| Struck outs By Lever 08in5 DD | drossing rooms Iast might. Manager the skeptics advanced the opiniol | | Dave Lumiansky of Al Brown finally | that Dundee fouled Iields Hanse I N \ Falk 0 00 was apparent he had no chance of o { agreed to waive another weigh-in ROk £ P B del ) AMERIEANS MEET | fioeer s piwss ror oo souc ware s 450 OSERL, v avan Wonder What the New and Old Bills Think About. BY BRIGGS 9] $ T immediately made. Lumiansky at|been knocked out before 1he Hn! b e el L ol first demanded that the hoys weigh [of the second round or at least the | Zinn, p F [in this atterncon but Hy Mailey, |next one. - 4 - The chin that absorbed Mickey | i i’ g e e s i va e i vanes) sadindinaticring | WELL OLD IMFEELING. | 0l VERY a " You DoN'T OH S TuAT Miljus. p Hartl L ¥ T | precedent established in this state, g 2 o o I THiNK = i [ |refused to agree to it | of Pete Tatzo was an open target for | TIMER How PRETTY CRISP- TuE \LL RE- LooK VERY So!'? weLL PHILADELPHIA : ; According to Promoter Hurley, the | Field's sharp right crosses and left | ARE You RAGGED 2 = e W L S AR T You WALT Battle for Davis Cup Will Open| FUTUR TRE <IT'S Neither pitcher hore down as cach vealized that tight twirling would E e Wl e oermunn ! wlon Totals e entire card will go on tonight as |hooks. Bishop, 2 Luiia : - 22l dee started fo sag under FEELING YouNG LOOKS PRETTY T OF "ALL W’ TiLt\You ve 4 2 t eesey & planned for last night. The rescrve | Dun ! _ | Fe W : 5 5 ABOUT Tim R in Pans wl[h Smgles Seat section is practically sold out |Field's wallops in the first round and | To DAY FELLAH Bl i ANY\U/\Y—E You NEED BEEN 1N Goehrane, © and an even larger crowd is expected | broke completely in the second. A | E How You A GooD AND OUT Of Ed it tonight than would have been on |few seconds after the second round FEELING M IN FOR I'VE HAD BATH AND ARSIy Perkins, c Simmons, 1f - “jelds sent a crashing right o 4 hand last night [opened, Fields sent a cr TimE MY DAY’ Suens, 21 The first bout will be fought at|to the chin that dropped Dundee to | A GooD TiIME D A LoNG REST PoCKETS 4 o'clock. e floor for a count of nine. There | 2 AS | HAVE was little strength left in his wobbly AV =i o - Paris, July 26 (P — The United States' second campaign to recover the Davis cup, emblem of world ten- 3 Suprena ""I"' F;”"ce's {""’;‘ |legs when he regained his feet. He | Roland Garros stadum today wita | [slemental cornas ’“‘\‘]:;:h"fl"'”‘”L:‘M“""lw ! ST\ Totals Big Bill Tilden and George Lott s e D Cieyeland | meeting Henri Cochet and Jean Bor- 1 5 By the Associated Press. down again, this time for a count of | Philadeiphia 0 ctra in the first two singles matches ] g | i s 4 | " (Including games of July seven. When he got up he fell into Two base hi AL VA LAatoh peries | L g & ven. When he got up n . Ha 5 National he ropes and then cut loose with | L rasRy 3 L oTte Llie) Tosa, Lihroush illness) t the rop \d then cut 1 (S Batting—0'Doul, Phillics, .3 the terrific right hand punch that| oxx 2, Haas Grove. of Reae Lacoste. most consistent of | Battng d gh v e e Runs—Ott, Giants, 90 landed low in the groin rov siteh p the enc r h holders | 2 '1 b e ,"H."rhl :‘(’,‘i\,“‘( ‘:‘C( 'n‘:,';(i ‘.,K,d‘ te] Runs batted in—Ott, Giants, 5 Dundee claims the blow was te- {eam on which Tilden past his peak,| Hits—Terry, Giants, 145 livered unintentionally, it was s the only experienced campaigne Doubles—lI'rederick, Robins 30, [doubted hy ringsiders whether he Matziar 2 & BlHis singles partner. Lott, is playing| Triple Waner, Pirates, 14 would have survived the round. After | Cissell, S 5 in the challenge round for the first| Homers—Klein, Phillies, 30 hitting the floor twice, Dundee ap- : Bhires, 1b . 5ol 3k time as will be John Van Ryn and| Stolen bases—Cuyler, Cubs peared completely bewildered and "YouRE Too g 4 A0 Wilmer Allison, Wimbledon cham-| Pitching—Bush, Cubs, won 13.|the sting was out of his punches. He BIG AND HERE You COUNTAY (S T HeHman; s s o 1 & ofwions, when they take the courts|lost 1 staggered around the ring like a EGrr TTLE SHRIMP- KD You'l oLD TIMER LTl Hunnefleld, 2h | for the doubles match tomorrow. | American drunken man after fouled his | Gtesior 1o u o) To BE WELL B& Down OBLITERATE Berg, ¢ e i | An even split was the most the| Batting—Foxx, Athletics, .30 youthful challenger, | LOOK ANY | LookeD R\D OF You, N A DIRTY S FELLER T | Americans were hoping for today mln\ Runs—Gehringer, Tigers, 87 lm}n(d?» h‘mnrfly ]x;v;‘dv“o':Tl“;l')f:"; DIFFERENT~ JusT ASA > You PooR OLD OLD BLACK YoUR SELF CIRCULATE McKain, p To Vo whether Lott or Tilden would| Runs batted in—Simmons, Ath- |Weight limi T URELI TAKE SAN AN = e ' o o o|achieve victory remained to be seen. | jetics, 9 they jumped on the scales at 3| ILL TAKE E_;:';H e GRAYBACK - PoCKET StoN YouR SELF Watwood, x 1 .ott was to take the courts against| Hits—Manush, Browns, 145 o'clock yesterday afternoon. He was | BETTER s 43 )| Youve HAD AND THEN Adkins, xx 5 0 | Borotra and Tilden's encounter With| oubles—Johnson, Tigers, 34 drawn to the last ounce, barely tip- CARE OF You OnE DAY % S Tatals 5 9 Cochet was to follow. | Wriples—ailier, Athietios 1 ping the heam at the class limit. He | MYSELFR" f = N The Ameiican forces were €on-| gomers Gehrig, Yanks, 23 scaled about an ounce under the fig- . JOUR TUNE St E H PO A E|ronted with thc necessity of Win-| goion hases—Fonseca, Indians, |1'& While Fields weighed in at 145. R D ] ning at least one of the first two | . To all appearances Dundee was | e S e 1atches or else abandoning virtual- , s, won |forced to exert every effort 1o make Myer, i i 1y all hope of recovering the trophy | - b cig West 0 the I'rench captured in 1927, Two e ) | 'rench victories today would prac-| S S Lonis | COBtrol. which governs boxing in the | Have Ao TR e tically clinch the series for Cochet is e Lk OUIS | state, may find itself in the position | Marbert + virtual certainty to beat Lott when | Browns built a screen above their | or poing unable to fine Dundee for Go yey meet in singles on Sunday,|Short right field fence four drives | eoviine"as Floyd Fitzsimmons, pro- | Thus even if Tilden beat Borotra on | hounced back into the playing field. | yioter of the contest, was forced fo | o Y ) Sunday ind Allison and Van con- | None went over | pay the champion his full guarantee | Ran for Berg in quered the Irench doubles team = = of $50,000 hefore he pulled on the Batted for Marberr { | Frobably Borotra ana Cochet, thc| New York baschall reporters pre- | gloves, The hoxing hoard may sus- | Sl e Al UL Americans would have only two vic- | dict that Bob Meusel will he used |pend Dundée, but may have ils | i Twi: bass hits? cRUAN - Myer. Th] | tories in a series decided three out|only as a pinch hitter after this|troubles in assessing a fine. The sus- E- 1989 Ny TFTEIE Tue « Biti Bhies. Struck out RN - ) season. |pension would mean nothing to the R Aol vk Er b e asiee b Miller, rf Dykes, 3b, Boley, 38 Grove, Rommel, p welocosscocosccad 4 "ALL RIGHT

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