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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1920. _ —_——— STANLEY 7W0RKS TEAM : BEATS NEW BRITAIN MACHINE IN IN DUSTR!AL_—LEA(;UE BY SCORE. OF 32 TO 0—THREE GAMES ARE SCHEDULED IN CITY CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES SUNDAY—PIRATES TO CLASH WITH BURRITTS IN CITY CIRCUIT TOMORROW WANTS PLAYERS TO BE GENTLEMEN fi i YANKEES OFF FOR LAST '; INVASION OF THE WEST | Hugmen Take Two Out of Three Irom Athletics Mackmen —Detroit Tigers Nose Out Indians, 9 to 6—Browns | Drop Brace of Games to Chicago White Sox—Sen- 1 ators Again Beat Red Sox — Pirates Down Card- | inals. : | By the Asso The Yankees are west for their final sessed of whatever satisf may be gleaned from havir two out of three from the Athletics while themselves languish- Ing almost a dozen games the rear. The to 4 victory th champions in Philadelphia yesterda rried with it the in the me series and reduce of the Mackmen to half zames on their way | invasior | tio pos- ling h : ' | to | 5 of ith still the about there race is not yet over. Yankee fans as cli the Macks may repe blow-up the Hi the final third of the 142 may well take stock of the N The Yankees of last season, over- |/ sidiy Tne two ve P, o front period of t AL cline of proportions the offing and Herbert Penno eight are somc one half ks to go and that Such dic who insist hard i 3 v Walberg 2 by Quinn 2 hope that | \Jining Pennock. Logsing piteh the artistic | ¢ ¢ | en put on throug s | Penn S camp: WASHINGTON situation TNED s sl 1 1 i1 in serion preparing to pitch what no one realized would be last until long after the 1429 r been started With Pennock out guns spiked, the Yanl the rest of their lead, which time had been 13 and one-hal games, but they also recovered in time to crush the Athlet times in that memorable series on the banks of last September. It game Yankees began hitti the final series at Detroit, Jessly continued the practice ¥ankee stadium and at St. a_certain set of four the Cardinals Can Connie 1929 do any will to win time victor voung Mack falls which 1) es did blow | ir the Harlem ems th * thesc again in ind reck- cereen 0 0 ol at the L iy 4 Louis in 1 011 o me against st | Mack’s young worse? Iired which a two or an lub of e | with a . R " | thre. i | the Struck LeveD Winning possess. none the pit- beset the Hugmen last | year. Cochrane, Simmons and Foxx | owe no percentage to the law of |t 0 000 00--1 averages, face no probability of a A 4 “““ 100 o1 ‘ stump to make up for having played Louis” over too long a stretch at an exce: T e sive clip. And although Grove 'H\lil . o 1 Walberg and Earnshaw may be a [yrotise 50 oo [ bit fatigued from a lonz rTun of | Siui. double headers and Hard work there is vet no indication that any one of them will cease firing nock was forced to c The one faint gl hope lies in the fact Mack's first line pitchers slgns of fatigue; but what gins's tosser? Hoyt, out game with blood poisoning nock. still uncertain: Pip; to pitch two strong games cession. With the first thus buckling. the veteran To hary 2 0 ow and Eddie Wells have worked nobly 3 0.0 o to keep the team in the fight. For the season to date they have won 16 games between them while lozing only three. Pitted a the get-a vesterday face of ot 010 Kres | s Pen- ase last m year Yankes Connic that do of Hug- the Pen unable in string show of as, ainst George Walberg way game at Philadelp Herb Pennock with what at one time wa lead that Wilcy Moors frem the bull pen with none out in the fifth. Mule Haas had just hit a homer and Cochrane singled. Wiley pitching five official inn \lowed just one hit, and in the National league would have reccived credit % 1 for the victory. The American | s [ i ! league rules. however starting pitcher nings to win The battle champions the married men 1 church pienic herg Pennock in the with Jack Quinn and “oodw in cua roles the boys finished might have behind Matty & Sam Byrd's homer with the second did the Y Some 2 mele A ninth enabled to dians at Cleveland by vent Peckinpaugh's from stepping ir Browns obligin the White of 5 to 4 into a ti ever the in Manush 2, Kamm 1ia Kimsey 1 toyed 5 1o called require a to go only of the looked men ver leaders some us the sin Wal box, 1 they nd Plank one on in nkees no harm i 5,000 fans turned out for the t inning rally for four runs “ o In 1 pre- lovs Th to imbitious ird place ly lost twa Chic s Sox » by | md 6§ cat Washir tional le have now shared Christy Matt Gelbert in ti for four Pirat Old bett American League urE base run Rartell Alexander 1. L: PHILALELP} AR T Brame 2 1 0 | Aloxander. ing pitcher Still 10 and One-half Games in the Lead | | chine | beaten team in the circuit this sea- | son. t | seriptive Ithe first nine men up scored before | | delivery of Scott v things 1 )| in | pretty STANLEY WORKERS CRUSH NEWNATICS Industrial League Leaders Win| Game by 32 o 0 Seore | e standing W Stan! 5 Fafnirs . 7 Landers Corbins Paper G nley B. Rule. Machine 1 Although the New Britain Co. baseball team is in place in the Industrial league, it has something to boast about today and | that is that it is the most badly| night at Walnut anley Works nine, lead- league, handed the ew- matics, a pasting, a walloping, a smothering and all the other d nouns to denote the same meaning. the final score being 32 to 0. Not only did the Stanlev | Hil | ark, the er in the did Works win but it broke a couple of records in the league, according to the dopesters, G Cobb™ have d cored thre This W in twice after and then just once innings, Gai a is thought to | record when e times in one inning the fifth. He scored his own times at bat| ran for Scott and scored more for luck. In two the second and the fifth, even one man was out The Stanley Wor everything while the chine crew could do was to garner five hits in the game, three off the and two off Salak who pitched in the seventh inning With a merciful gesture. Umpir Billy Fitzpatrick called a halt at th> end of the first half of the seventh inning and the Buttmakers all wers home, most of them with padded batting averages. The first inning was both teams but in ning—Wow!—eleven runs for Stanley Works. No runs were ed in the third but the winner six in the fourth. Then in the f a couple of more Wows were counted as other over batte best hit for the Ma- scoreles the second for in- the scor- fth 1d 13 runs the runners chased | the plate. In the! sixth, two more were scored with- | out a single hit being registered. | Ixpert computers are responsible for the correctness of the total of runs collected by the Stanley Works but a wizard at figures would have been unable to recount the many alien to baseball, that the| chine , Shop team pulled in this edy: of errors it hat the Stanlev Vorks won in six and a half innings by the score of 32 to 0. The Machine Shop crew ed to score in only one "hat was the seventh to piteh and Cilliz Then Matis singled on field foul line and Gaida got the ball into Parsons at first. Cillizza | had made third on the hit and Ma- | tis overran sccond and started for third. Then he made tracks back | to second. Parsons whipped the | ball to Scott who was playing short. | Scott tagzed out Matis and then tossed home to Schroeder who | ht Gillizza at the plate. It wa double play. The sum- cach to say threaten- inning lak went | singled. | the right | mary N. B MACHIN AB It 0 Haines, Karped Cillizza 1 Matis, 1€ 3 0 2 I Ferrence 1 0 STANLEY WORKS | TR v Wendro L Totais 12 i 0 g Works sy hits hit: Parsms Ry scott Doub Moy hits: Schneid K Unipir Time: 1 HOME RUN CLUP Klcin Wilson Ott, Giants tuth, Yankees, 2§ Giehrig, 26 Athletics 26 Cardinal Phillies 17oxx, Rottomley Simmons. Athletics, Hurst, Phillies, Hornshy Yesterday's Bartell, Pirates, 1 issell. White Sos Reynolds, White Ryrd, Yankees. | Haas. Athletics, 1 Averill, Indi 1 Falk, India Alexander, Tigers, 1, Cubs, 23 Hom ted Sox, 1 Totals m National Le Americ lLeazue i League, 4 QUINTERO WINS 1POUT Pa. Aug. § (B Manucl ro. sensational Tampa. 1l mior welte outpointed Johnny Hayes of Philadelphia 10 round hout here last night tero won every round. Georgie Saun- Wilkesbarre, defeated Eddic Clark of Binghamton in six rounds Seranton Quinte weight in | baseball's freshest | park | zave the | vener; | playe NRY L. FA (NEA Service Sport Philadelphia, Aug. out from the visitors' be dragging his bat Tha White Sox were get play the Athletics. and rung giving the Sox the ting practice. hires strolled tands a was given a crowd. H ched int rear pockets and extra ek of scrap jammed the whole « of his face and went b ting cage. The Philadelphia pla the shade of the rays of the summe Only Mickey Cochr Jddie Romni were at to z00d « he re Dykes and ble. They cas rookic, first hig hand in' tohuc their dugout RRELL 5 1iditor) Art Shire trolled neh at Shibe behind him ting ready to the bhell had ficld for bat- base and snee over and by the his fresh o one of ted k in on hind the bat- vers were in ducking hottest sun ne, Jimmy 1l were visi- e on the top ed the many stories that they werc to ord 5 flying high And the “1 don't yelloy And prove that of mouti into the old 1 want to win ball that way.” he is said to hav them iet out there and gentlement. 1 don't ex to he but you d be tough to fake carc lay sissies, n't of your 1 Last had ockey in 3 the v piteher s no longor chub. And the vea with ocs that ed one of tricks of jock “Joe jockeying, no; didn't like,” our was v but he v on the hench infort p of the dugout where a flock of | s were spread out order. Passing the The three of them we berry to Shi It mu yod-natured berry all langhing. Coch in most of the veloped that he was didn’t have enough face. Shires went Athletic dugou bat. Peals of laughter the Philadelphia bencel stood up. what Shires pulled crap from his other jammed it in the face And the t. 1t was a demonstrati MeGraw ternizing the new breed of hall ening up. He harks bi days when visiting ball vide to the park bricks and antique eg to tal in and sq over, was to oceut anothe of an his Classes and 1o umid Mack's do you think the ball ficld,” ble Connie Mack A's I like is room fession “Wh ing on the i for and 1 don't that have [ will not permit my 1 1ge in they call it “There he gentlemen sion been won by lwe good-naturcd durin ys i joshing n game practical vour joker, I'm office you will f aood-natured joking. It v osuccesstul establishn grouch Perso told never can he maliciou: W charge that we s will carried a Bars “But 1 have or shouts the (e insist as I the ¢l gentlemen, T ind forth profanity hoys he hack obscene sonal insults from 1 This was interesting told me carlier in the greatest letic improvement cam this year w of A more 't here talking baek Firm, But (¢ ource very started understand t this ry serious jockeying. out season He deplores ¢ umpire in the lea in litary v st heen they have heeause front the natted on his d from pour v and lires he fans stood also to sec v fresh pack hind pocket side of ot nt over on that John nts as M that layer is soft ek to the old clubs had to L show of 1 vidence Attitude frate wsked e iz answero baseball is my many rowdy t 1 pl iy rough jockey il nd a lot vouldn't b ent if every hoy thing possibi timid, | ong as | ub that 1 but I will not toler language ot ny bench to me ina ue it the Ath the pirit thi close to the A's to do some They resent Neat Chapter “\With Bench PIRATE JUNIORS WIN A the Ldson of 4 to 2 and 3 to 1 on¢ Spacek and Gau mad at sccond which hurled fanned thr s played at St e men Joseph's Lucian he for inner Having turne Norelins is marathon in tining Angust, told and print the they and bases. stopped them, have v teran inded IPrank putouts rallies. and gaamc round, Olympic | WATCHING by 3 S By nited piteh game told il you hoy nock against lowed the Ar to hit 1's ¢ Yanke t from { the the his rtake th 101 Byrd \etor in the Deir Uberg skidd cpped cazo White o 4 and nz featured v pa 6 bher's Harry Heil tilled vinning punc land Indians, five hits inc Lloyd Tro enabled the t the Bo in drivi vith a chih, who ‘ confident Sox, pitching md 9 to 6 trinmph over Washi “‘IE:H! Wiley New relieved Herh the Athletics nerican L ¢ v of the in five innin hamps to win hereby rivals and 1l they o Mackmen, who heir took games ont in front s hitting was the Yankee offensive St L games the Bill opener the inz v of to the the nd second g mann's double ninth hin Detroit's | the ¢ Dale Alexander luding a homer in the ston Red the scoring Sox in winnir in THE SCOREBOARD and al leaders . helping | 6 to 4 the big Rube Browns Chi cores hein cll's bat Red with the was tie vally pitching nators to to % | He run the - 'THREE GAMES SCHEDULED IN CITY TITLE SERIES Interest Centers Around Battle Between Corbin Red Sox and Holy Cross Teams at Washington Grounds —Kensington to Clash With Old Time Rivals, the ! Falcons, at St. Mary’s—Sokols and Senecas to Cross Bats at Willow Brook Park—Umps Assigned. last minute. ‘ Kensington-Falcons The Kensington team will invade lair of the .Falcons. for their clash Sunday afternoon. The con- test will be staged at St.-Ma il field at 3 o'clock and will bring to- | gether two teams tat have been vi- vals for years. Both outfits have | been practicing up during the week and they will be ready for a stift Of the three games scheduled | Sunday afternoon in the city cham- ionship series, two of them are at- |tracting widespread interest among | |the coterie of local baseball fans. | Both of the battles in question a clashes in which bitter rivals i neet. the The one which will probably draw |out the largest crowd is the sched- |uled meeting between Johnny To- bin's Corbin Red Sox and Johnny battle. ‘abay's Holy Cross aggregation.| The game his contest will take place at 8:15 |o'clock o'clock at the Washington diamond Senecas-Sokols The Holy Cross team in its first| The Senecas and Sokols will bai- start last Sunday. defeated Ken-|tle it out at Willow Brook park sington and gave motice that it is|Sunday afternoon at 3:15 o'cloc much in the running for th:|The two tcams-are anxious to The outcome was a sur- |numhered among the four high to everybody but the teams in the standing and they wil the team. Kensington A be out to mow the opposition -down ¢ favorite before the game and |as quickly as possible. howifig of the Holy Cro: i Umpire Assignments |gregation was a revelation | Umpires for the contest B the interest in|been assigned as follows: V the team and the|ton diamond, Lynch on ball Red heat. Both |strikes and Mangan on bases Clubs will full strength | s field, Sautter on balls ind will me for all|st and McKeon on hases, and they are The outcome | Willow Brook, Art . Campbell on should be right up to the|balls and strikes and Paul on bascs. will be called at prise of backes was ause of this, clash between the is at be at be in worth in doubt fever thel the and CHOOSING REFEREE Paul Prehn Makes Sensationa Charges Over Title Bout Chic Aug. 9 @ smouldering controversy over | referecing of the Dempsey-Tunne worid heavyweight championship fight at Soldier field in September, 1927, today had burst into flame. with hthe assertion of Panl Prehn, | president of the National Boxing as- sociation, that he was offered $10.- 000 to urge a particular individual referee of the hout. Prehn, who recently was is chairman of the Illinois Athletic commission, said approached by gambler, he refused to divulg it the fight w: mentioned before the fight as pessibilities as referee | were Dave Barry, who finally was selected, Dave Miller, well known |as a refe Joe Choynski, former heavyweight fighter who now is in the theatrical husiness in Chicago; Jimmy Gardner, former bantam- | weight hoxer; Little Phil Collins. llong identified with boxing he and Tommy Thomas, another for- mer boxe 20 — The Prehn also insisted that Dave Barry who hecame famous for the long count while Tunney was on th: canvas, had no previous knowledg that he was to referee—in fact | Prehn said, Barry was “flabbergast- od and turned pale when I handed him the assignment.” " The assign. ment was made, Prehn said, after principals had entered the ring. ! Prebn related the incident terday in telling of the troubles en- countered by the Tllinois State Ath- he was 2 hoss | letie - commission which he headel holuntil his resignation, and those of (e nroffer. sving he swished | A Mann and Sam Luzzo. recently & were requested and received by himself that the third | § : AnselE ta e third Governor Tonis T. Emmerson. ring would not he pro- man was not selected, | ousted Stato a name m w to assure an in the unney, the Prehn said FIGHTS LAST NIGHT the Pross Davenport, la. —Cowbhoy Art Dula, |Oklahoma, outpointed Haakon Han- sen, Chicago (10) Prehn was to hastened to say that certain Dempsey had nothing | o do with the affair. | “Dempsey probably hear of the offer, and T am certain no member of his camp was involved, Prehn said He rvelated that the man hal placed a thousand dollar bill on his % and had told him that nine other notes of the- same -denomina tion weuld be his if he acceded to the request. Prehn also declined to name the man whom the gam bler wished to serve erce of the fight. Prehn said immediately jected the offer and ordered the man from his office, He then toll the other members of the commis: sion what had occurred. he said averred that the proffer was made by gamblers who wished fo protect their Dempsey wagers, fear- ing that some of the cligibles might Assaciated neve Benton Harbo! Benton Henry (10) ~- Sammy Mich Kala Pri pointed Mich., 0, Harbor, Perlick, Gireenwood, M - Red Herring Utica, N. Y., outpointed Alex Simms, TCanton, Ohio, (10). as he Hartnett, Chicago Cub who has been kept out of action all season by an arm injury, | worked bhehind the bat in a five- inning exhibition game here yester- day, and his arm behaved. The per- | formance was very encouraging to Manager Joe McCarthy and ~ the whole Cub team catcher Movie of a Fussy Old Timer Trying to Take a Nap BY BRIGGS r FUSSY OLD GENT TRIE FIW wINS CRABBY OLD PARTY ANNOYED BY LIND-BUGS AND BYRDS —— CROTCHE TY OLD MOSSBACK] RESUMES ™AP ZEPP BUG - THEN COMES THE DEADLY -AND OQUTRAGED oLD GENT GOES OFF IN HIGH DUDGEON ~ T