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STANLEY "WORKS AND FAFNIRS TO MEET FOR INDUSTRIA i. LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP AT WALNUT HILL PARK TONIGHT — POLICE TEAM INVADES MERIDEN TOMORROW FOR FIRST GAME OF ANNUAL SERIES—ST. MATTS WIN TITLE—SPORTS ITEMS PHILLIES TRIM PIRATES ‘ | ST, MATTS REPEAT | WINNING OF TITLE Capture Church League Flag Second Successive Year TWO GAMES IN TWIN BILL Pittsburgh Drops to a Position Nine Games Behind the | Idle Cubs—Athletics Get Back Into Winning Stride | and Defeat the Browns — Yankees Shade Chicago | White Sox By 3 to 2 Score—Boston Red Sox and | Detroit Tigers Split Even in Double Header. Final Standing | P.C.} .867 500 Matthew's | First Lutheran 1, PSouth Cong. fated Press. in the box office nd New Yor degree of real rain at Boston 5o ¢ tailed the National | Bl most a holiday I By the A Moistur Brooklyn \gue progr yesterday that Monday was ‘s German Luth- “rom a Pittsburgh team captured its second suc- viewpoint, the only of J a e % cessive chan the Inter- baseball p in the afternoon w furious Phillic s gue last night 1 in the first in- d out, the I Dragoons in bill by Herr Barney's flag de- bo! I8t Willow [aia the triumph brin ®itheir third pennant gave th > St. Matts four, d le cidedly tlat The double Pirates to a po hind Yor in veu g st of- resent sea- nes concluded the managers of the Memorial and Swedish Beth- g that it was un-| them to play off the | postponed” game. innin arted the St. final lap of their oll u ich wa tion rt of the p > Cubs, who Wi chaner schedule difference Bruins and Flim the Buccane ) games ir 1 all-important Dor Rush now ne crucial series to he field cessary for losing column e's one A big Matts on the The for six runs in ture bl ds six straight in tha played at Forbe th ‘the con- om fea- being a Klopp with peating champions in the third and < and had an §-0 lead cthany batters got quest m thi W the |nome run by Krnest one The | made sing fourth innir . | before the n the det Pitts it dream ¢ ' Philadelphia pitct hoisted high his afternoon of his big I hero L day if the vicinity of North Broad and the railroad trackes they tell you that Harry Smythe of ville and the Sally lea b to the big to stay This southpaw recruit land which Nap F mejar lcague tossed back th ging Pirates hitless in five the two g He took the opener i the sixth teams tied a* 6 to G, und blazed av faultlessly as the Phillies gave hi a margin of one won. In the second game he pitched | only tie last round after official | credit for the victory had been hand- | ed out to Lob McGraw for the is burgh young of ramg who on for no wi Ashe- | 15 come uppened in the Westergren, tison crossed the plate, J |er counted th ners i(;\lh and Ken Westergren [losers in the second half of | session. Jack Scott blasted a final in fifth, when and Pat- lius Preis- the the that home g but the blow Steege of the The lincups Scott time for in for from the icker to the | slug- 25 of ot the | inn charge with s, triple. ings German Lutherans: 2b, R. Fink 2b, L. Neu- . Preisser c Klopp Ih M. S 3, O . Sirko 1f, W. Fink ¢, O. T hleicher rf 501 that McGraw was on hand when | B2 S5 : Eadtrom ) I the winning rally was unleashed. | ot i WECEL. Doy 15k A The Phillies won the nightcap in |derson ss. D.Johnson 1b, \,\\'r\\“”r»‘ the seventh when Remy Kremer and | ren 3b, Olson If, Stott rf, Pattison Larry French were rudely as: for three runs. Burleigh Grimes w called to the box to hait the foolish | antics of the Phils and he did, but 5 0 the Baker boys larruped Grimes : RN T y L himself for two more runs in the n€kt round. It was th spit-ball er's first ape ance since his i at the Polo Grounds on Ju The Macks got back winning stride in the league campaign, dowr Browns by § to behind Bill Shores and evening the series. The Yankees also won, and the lead of the A's remained unchanged at 13 games. The Yankee victory was & more or less personal triumph for young Roy Sherid, who shaded Hal McKain and the Sox by 3 to 2, The triumph was Sherid's first after a run of hard luck reverses in | I which he pitched about as well as he did yesterday. His margin over Me- Kain was slight, the winning run | ore the third man was retired, The being due to Watwood's three base | Bar 2 picked up one in the seconl muft of Combs's long fly in the sixth. | ner, cf 5 1 oilbub e r Swede rally, this time| The run of complete games by Red | ! : gave the Lutherans o | Sox pitchers was halted at n margin in the fourth After Milton Gaston had hurleq t son’s home run with on Bostonese (0 @ 3 to 2 triumph over climaxed this assult. | the Tigers in the first game at De- half of the inning the ::':lyt yester Jack Russell gave > {wo runs when Graham v unde Iressure { ong 2 3 rey vy u mgh,mm urnrm,‘;?].qffi‘ g and Morey hit home runs on | ; successive pitches. Billy reins Yobens in 1 L ) to Dobens in the sixth ned the fifth with an 0000 Win 1 ad enabled the .utherans to score their thi ry of the year over the South Con- egational 7 big ba m by 9-7. g with both nd Wilton M o into their | Johnson America vantage of their opportunities while South Church players miscued bad times in the f il in a ed so rallies. lled their recentl record of crashing out but he a c h homea | oney npty and they | With two out in the first Dave Ahlgren started a Swede rally, | ind the thrice be- National League eve (First Game) ning, | inners scored our runs. bats | the as the ther circuit home team won by o A | tabl s G ng the India Swedes counted once but the loser: in the Lutherans mac seventh only to ha irch come back, b had made a home run re men had reached sec- hird, lofted v third out bat with a all ter: Oshorne got and Johnson tack with two Washington turned ‘the n Cleveland, defr 6 to 3 American League moved run in t South fter Barta nd two m the Joseph ordy" Stromq ped the winners' | blows apiece, while Morey South church got a like Abie Joseph made the me one Sherid, Totals fea when, out with and Metzler, I Clasell, ss Reynolds, s cious liner {for a dou Osborne turr the outfield and ual sterl JOR LEAGUE LEADERS Nelson g game ore by Lutheran: N playe at third. cups and August Fitst National r Robins Carls Stromqui Carlso th Co i i Morey Barta American IFoxx. Athlet Athletics Methodists Rise | Superb | three bingles Methodis tory of the it. The Stanmors got 3-1 lead, but the winners the fourtl rgin ochrane, Simmons, Foxx, 1h Summa, Hale, Boley, ss Shores, | Jatting e Shepard Stan 1l team to nd Trin their third by T4 away to a tied thin fifth toolk b Simmons, ity scored 1sh, Bros a Totals Heilmann, and in the Melillo which was e Met 12 safe blows by inni ne inkerton, L ’inkerton, b Patterso JOHN K. TENER 1T 5 ' Memorial ench alder en nnsylva ola, ospital. The nat ¢ his illr c: Sinko, has not d T M. 3 .10 20 2 2 4 today as fair. | Stan. Mem 4 101 120 000 000 Philadelp St. Louls Two base been deter hut his | from to competc | the Darrow | In'} s “[won a n - |amateur ature catches in | ' D \%0,58 HAS COPPED THE AMATEUR" THE LAST FOOUR OUT OF + FIVE TIMES e . WHO CAN KEEP, ey THROVGH? N 9 WSEPEMBER™ , / ({ IS BOBBYS % FOREIGN INveSTORS” A GODE LAUFER ts Writer TITLE IN DUSTY LEAGUE Tt isn't so much a question of who will win the national amateur golf Pel Sept. championship, beginning Beach, Del Monte, Calif., will keep Bob) ated Atlanta i | of the greatest fields ever it the wi In one Park—Teams Are Tied For First Place — Last Game of Year For Both — Contest Scheduled For Diamond No. 2—Paper Goods and Landers to Clash in Second Contest—Play to Begin at 5:30 o’Clock. in this annual contc Bobby Jones ime winr and national open ¢ pion of 1029, pone at a Chris nic. Jones, today, domins ack Dempsey used to d ht game. Or li nd still does, in | at the very pinnacle than has ever been attained human in the history of “the t Scotch sp Harry Vardon was a master golfer 1 stylist supreme. Jon on the strength of his marvelous record, crowds Vardon out the picture. | He is the test golfer of all tim without an argument But t re is no man line that he n iny one competi in th iteurs who are lifornia tournament. itish amatenr champion olley He ot stace Storey, event st fan Endeavor Standing (ured out of the picture entirely. The Pet. [team, however, through persistent |efforts, has mowed down opposition as it came along and today finds it tied with the Buttmakers for the highest honors in the ledgue. The .400 | Dragons are being made the favor- .364 [ites to take the pennant this season. .091| In the second game of the night, | Landers and the American Paper | Goods teams will clash in their final games of the year. This game is scheduled on Diamond No. 1 while the Stanley Works-Fafnirs clash will take place on Diamond No. 2 is pla v Landers ... 600 er Gooc ¢ Rule Machine . N. B o 30 o'clock at Walnut ¢hampionship of the Industrial Baseball le: will be settled when the Stan Works, champions of last year, and Fafnirs clash in the most important game of the entire season. The two teams are in a tie for first place in the circuit nd this deadlock will be broken to- v 1 the winner will be the hip combination of 1929. ame tonight is the final game - for both clubs. Stanley Tonight at Hill park, the h thi there is hope horde of for the The is solute sure He ion B RGN FOXX IN EVERY GAME Louis, Mo.. Aug. 20 (A—Jimmy | Foxx, leading American leagué bat- [ter, is the only member of the pace- |setting Philadelphia Athleties who has played in all the A’s games this 3 season. “Bing” Miller, who shared Wroks has been out in front fo tinction with Foxx until yes- about half the schedule, but v, was out of the lineup with es within the past two weeks [a wrenched knee. ] USRS has brought the teams:back several he Lhii failod |© | honors in A. Bour Major Guy | Lord Charles Hope b maki { Colin Campbell, | off Are an un- crown (ef v s Canadian amateur rev The chinchilla is rat of the Andes. a squirrel-like st . some time ago, was fig- | TO BE SETTLED TONIGHT Stanley Works and Fafnirs to Battle at Walnut Hill POLICE TEAM TO INVADE SILVER CITY TOMORROW New Britain Bluecoats to Meet Meriden Rivals in First Game of Home and Home Series—Billy Kline and Tommy Blanchard to Be Probable Pitching Selec- tions—Lineups of Teams Announced—Game to Be Staged at Hanover Park—Banquet Planned. ENGLISH STARS Visiting Players Come Through Matches With Flying Colors Forest Mills, N. Y., Aug. 20 (P— hteen casterners, seven Califor- nians. two Middle-Westerners and |five formidable English. women to- day remained to enter the second round of play for the national wém- en's tennis championship on the West Side Stadium turf. The English forces came through the opening round yesterday with colors flying, but Canada, Brazil, Sweden and Bermuda were counted out and the battle narrowed to an Anglo-American affair. Great Britain's sole casualty was Mrs. D. A. Alston, who was speedily eliminated by her country-woman, Mrs. B. C. Covell. As a result of the success of the British stars ,a series of interesting international battles was in prospect for the second round today. Most promising of these seems to be the match between Sarah Palfrey, the 16-year-old Brookline, | Mass., girl who outplayed older and moro experienced opponents to win the eastern turf title just two days ago, and Mrs. Dorothy Shepherd-Barron of the English team. Miss Palfrey, who won a smashing 6-3. 6-1 victory over Ruth Bailey of St. Louis here yesterday, is conceded close to an even chance to defeat the English player. Largely because of her youth, Miss Palfrey was not included among the eight Americans seeded in the draw but her play the last few days indi- cated that she undoubtedly has “ar- rived.” Among other important matches billed for today is one between Helen Wills, the defending champion, and Mrs. Charlotte Hosmer Chapin of Springfield, Mass. Mrs. Chapin, ninth in the national ranking, is a strong opponent for Miss Wills to meet in the sécond round and it is safe to |say that the queen of the world's |courts will not race through the |match in 18 minutes as she against Katherine Lamarche of Seabright, N. J., yesterday. Last year Mrs. Chapin met Miss Wills in the quarter finals and gave her the hardest fight she experienc- ed in the tournament, winning six flames. Helen Jacobs faces &trong second round opposition, from Elea- nor Goss og New York, veteran of vears of international play. Betty upon as the leading threat to Miss Wills' continued reign, was expected to have an easier time with Gertrude Dwyer of New York. , Playing under wraps vesterday in defeating Cecilia Riegel of Philadel- phna, 6-2, 6-2, “Bounding Betty” set something of a record by making three Wouble faults in one game— and winning the game. The doubles championship, open- ing today with 32 pairs entered, do Inot include Miss Wills. Although she | won this title last year paired with Mrs. Hazel Wightman, Helen decided to confine her activities this year to singles. |READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS tonrna- Canada and the United nateur champion Von Elm, i tournament win- mat in there fryir | of the at Bobby. | Chick Evans was |a mateur cl WHEN YoU SIT AT A SMALL TABLE IN A RESTAURANT AND WHILE PACKING AWAY YouR FooD A STRANGER TAKES A SEAT oPPOSITE g for an up! S = national open repe amateur. H was el i ilford in the f has not | > champi prom Don Carrick won championst Voight In t competing import- 615 he has established | record. He 5 enviahle 0 - AND HE HAS NOTHING 1N THLS WORLD To.Do NOR ANY- WHERE To STARE BUT WATCH YOUR EATING OPERATIONS - (BUSINESS oF DROPPING FooD FROm FORK WHILE ALMOST AT, Petty Annoyances That Drive You Crazy MOUTH) WIN AT TENNS | Nuthall, English ace, who is looked | Toforrow afternoon at Hanover Park in Meriden, the New Britain police baseball team will make 1ts first invasion of the year against the Meriden bluecoats in the first gamo of the annual home and home series | played between the two departments, The second game will be played in this city, at Wilow Brook park, a week from today, August 28. Billy Kline, mound ace for the Meriden cops, Will oppose Tommy Blanchard, local motoreycle wizard, |it is expected. These two'are no |strangers to each other. They have {met several seasons in mound duels in the annual game: The probable lineups for both teams will be as follows: Meriden. | Boldt ss, Cossette ¢, McGrath 3b, | Kline p, ailcox 2b, Kurcon If, Hig- gins cf, Baer rf and Kelly 1b. New Britain, Fesney 1f, Huber 3b, Blan- chard p, Smithwick ¢, Veley 1b, Noonen 2b, Cabelus ss, Politis cf and O'Mara rf. Meriden's reserves will be Woolschlager, ‘Scharmer and endrickson. New Britain's subs will be Carroll and McMurray. The Silver City department has made arrangements to give the local team a royal welcome at a banquot to be served in the Hanover Park pavilion tomorrow evening following the game. About 250 guests are ex pected to attend. Policeman Fran- cis J. Higgins, chairman of the com- mittee has announced that Mayor Wales L. DeBussy will be toastmas- ter. A full course chicken dinner will be served at 6 o'clock by J. D. J1- lions, manager of the park, and his staff of assistants. { The guests at the dinner will in- |clude the mayors of the two citi |members of the safety board and |the police commissions, police and {court officials of the two citi |Among the distingulshed guests ex- [pected are: | Superintendent Charles A. Wheel- er, former Superintendent John H. Redgate, Captain Lyddy and Lieu- tenant O'Leary of Bridgeport; Su- perintendent MacLean and Captain Dodd of Waterbury; Chief Charles Anderson, Captain Dunn and Ser- geant McCarthy of Middletown; Warden Bridgett and Chief George Abbott of Wallington; Captain Theo- |dore Brazel of Hartford: Chief Sam- uel Gordon of Manchester; the Rev. Walter J. Lyddy of New Britain, |chaplain of the Connecticut Polics association; Fire Chief John I |Donovan; Fire Chief William J. No- ble of New Britain; Fire Chief Er- |nest E. Belden of Bristol, and C. J. Danaher, corporation counsel. HOME RUN CLUB | By the United Press. Leaders Klein, Phillies, 33. Ruth, Yankees, Ott, Giants, 31. Wilson, Cubs, 31 Ifoxx, Athletics, Gehrig. Yankees, Simmons, Athletie: Hornsby, Cubs ,27. Bottomley, Cardinals, Hurst, Phillies, 25. Yesterda Homers Iriberg, Phillies, 1. Haas, Atheltics, 1. Bishop, Athletics, 1. Alexander, Tigers, 1. Totals ‘ National league—614. Arfierican leagle—472. League totals—1086. BY BRIGGS AND You TRY_To ASSUME’ UNCORNCERN N K 2, O = - AMD YOUR FACE FEELS RIDICULOUSLY COMTORTED e WHILE You CHEW AND CHEW CoNSCIlOUSLY- rounds with Mo terey won the California amateur cham- | pionship for the fifth time | MALONEY FIGHT TONIGHT | Bostno, Aug. 20 (A—Postponed rom yesterday becau: of rain, th Jim Maloney-Rice 1 round Braves field will ht bill heavywe he 1 The mer i ely with « foul tonight 12201t win- | Th liminary | fray is headed by North Ender. ny “Kid eight, The the of Garden management. Moore who Carter, | 10 un- | Boston | I in a semi-final show the der wuspices - AND You STEAL A GLANCE AT THE PEST AS YoU DRINK YourR COFFEE ITS THE LITTLE THimGS LIKE Tigt& ThAT RUINS YOoUR MEAL FANR COMPLICATES WIFE B (Q