New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 10, 1929, Page 10

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1929. CUBS NEED ONLY EIGHT MORE GAMES IN LEAGUE LUGK HAS BEEN KIND 70 TILDEN | | | | AMERICAN PAPER GOODS BASEBALL TEAM HURLS CHALLENGE AT KENSINGTON A. C. FOR SINGLE GAME OR SERIES FOR CHAMPIONSHIP OF TOWN—CHICAGO CUBS NEED ONLY EIGHT MORE GAMES TO CINCH NATIONAL LEAGUE PENNANT—ITEMS DEAF MUTE FIGHTS WAY TOWARDS TITLE - THEY MAY PAPER GOODS TEAM WANTS SERIES WITH KENSINGTON ! Chicago Team Hopes to Clinch Pennant Within the [o and Hunter Prepared to Take! Industrial League Baseball Club Challenges Semi-Pro . Next Two Weeks—McCarthymen Nose Out Boston {0 Courts AT R Bg\)g%g{ggg Club for Championship of Town — Factory Team Braves—Pirates Outslug Brooklyn — Giants Take | 0 Courts Alter a Rest NOT SODOMB/ Composed Solely of Local Boys — Charges That Two From Reds—Phils Down Cardinals—Red Sox . . e~ v, sept 10— | Community Is Not Getting “Fair Break” Because Beat St. Louis Browns—White Sox Trim Senators. | r.uck nas heen kind to Big Bill of Importation of Players—Answer Is Expected. Tilden and his “Man Friday,” Toe Mol o Cubs set = Tauit ok the national menit singlen | fiance and threat, has been hurled e e . Tl T uit of the national men's ingles at the Kensington A. C. baseball victories, all they need to clinch the ST 4| tennis championship. VIV"]LY ARRAYEI] team by the American Paper Goods 1929 National le penna Swan i| The “old masters” were prepared nine with the championship of Thirteen games ahead of the sec- |! 0| to take the court today for their Kensington at stake. Needless to ond place Pittsbu Pirates and | b 0 | third round matches after three solid =T say, the challenge and its. possibl: : with only 19 more contests to play, | o | days of rest, while such members of | . acceptance, has stirred the south pennant within the next two weeks A 0| Lott and IFritz Mercur underwent | , red during the entire present 1 e 0| hard tests of their championship IS Ag t T gh T baseball season. As the situation stood today t o | mettie. Yestrday Big Bill was among | | eason fllI]S o eams Charges of a nature intended to Cubs, by winn it of their 0| the spectators and Hunter also en- | | o s rile up Eddie Moore and his mates maining games would wind up with 0| joyed temporarily a non-combatants | | West Point, N. Y., Sept. 10 P— | (15 have been handling the town i a record of 98 victories and P 2 | role. Eleven football teams, distributed |t.am “have been made by the fac- ] feats. Pittsburgh, by winning all of for Critz Having drawn a bye in the first from the Atlantic to the Pacific|(5py spokesmen and there is hardly - its 21 remaining games would finish | N S 10| round and won his second-round through the east and middle West|,ny goubt that the challenge will : with 98 victories and 56 defeats, the | Sreo | match in straight sets on Saturd will do well to provide themselves |y snapped up and, probably, a sc- & difference beir Chicage [ Two hase hits me | Tilden had harder opposition today | with the proper serum to ward off | jjog arranged. ; 1 games with St. Louis been ' 10k ns | in the lanky person of Young k| jaundice or yellow tever, or hoth. | In making the challenge, the of- ' washed permanently sched- x Los | Shields of New York. Hunter, who The Army football team is busily |ficjald of the American Paper S Byery Bitts h defeat from e has fared similarly to date, was cngaged in concocting a yellow peril{Goods crew state that thetr team now on, of course, will make the BROOKLYN bracketed with one seroy M. Weir m} to sweep down upon its unsuspect-|.omposed solely of players who! Cubs' already task that much | g ABoEe 4 Ela match that promised to be little | ing opponents. |lives are bound up in the daily do- easier. ; 3 3 2 ol more than a workout for the sturdy | Clad in vivid jerseys almost 100 |inge of Kensington. In other words The two lea each chalked up |1t A i1 a0 internationalist | golden to be true, the Cadets areitne paper Goods crew is local in wvictories yest the Cubs nosing | . St g Tilden and Hunter were not the preparing for a season that wiil send | ovopy respect with members of its out Boston, 4 to 3, and Pittsburgh | ¢ » 1§ 1 1 onlyones who were favored with an iheir shock troops against Boston |fean living within the confines of outslugging Brooklyn, to ) Ra 58 L RIS S extra day of rest. Among those who University, Gettsyburg, !\rl\ldsolv. |the town whos name signifies a Percy Lee Jones appeared to have . i T ) | strted a round ahead of the field Harvard, Yale, South Dakota, Ili- | {5 in the king's meadow the Cubs stopped, 2-0, until the ! L0 4 & 5 §|were numbered also John Van Ryn, nois, Dickinson, Ohio Wesleyan, | " on the other hand, those same seventh when Hack Wilson hit his e 0 0 o 1 ol John Doeg, Wilbur Coen, Arnold Notre Dame and Stanford in order. | helligeront officials charge that th 37th homer with one on o tie the M : 0 0 0 0 #{Jones, Richard N. Williams and the | The Army has discardcd the som- | toqpy which has been representing d score. Then, after the Braves had | hrs 1 0 o | Englishman, John Oliff. All these | bre black jerseys, with a band of |jse)r 45 the official Kensington clue scored one in the ninth, Stephen- | ! L _"| were to see action today for the fi - {=old and gray, in favor of the MOSt i made up of imported players and son’s homer, Tolson's single and| Totals " o | time since Saturday = | conspicuous garb an Army eleven|poiayse of their poor showing ir Taylor's double gave the Cubs two B R Fritz Mercur, on the other hand, | = ;i jevr has worn, bright gold Shirts | .ompotition with all other teams _runs and the game. Jones gave only 2N 0 A Elnas been forced to work overtime. A& with a band of black and gray. e ; 2 Seshily @ight hits to 11 for the Braves off ¢ @ % lHe caught a bespectacled young .. WAS A STAR. PITCHER. FORTHE GIANTS- 4555 To fill these impressive gkrnmn(i“::;) 1"‘f}nig'fifrgfl;.',‘ e Charlie Root. Wilson's homer put 1 0 & Tartar yesterday when he ran up W5 RODE THE DMPS WITH HIS FINGERS » === Head Coach Biff Jomes and his|oe'tno sporting public. e him in a tie with Chuck F of ; 2 0 0 against Harris Coggeshall of Des brother officers are rapidly PUtting | " g, paper Goods crew is willing Philadelphia for the league lead. 10 0| Moines, 1a, playing several potches . together a machine-like team. There | (4 onon up negotiations for a single A four run rally in the seventh |Shcely, 1b 4 0 o above his ranging as 14th among the [ will be some newcomers in the cen-| oo o "o corios of games for th “gave the Pirates their hard fought |tlarke, s 3 1 olnation’s players, Coggeshall gave J{/ o ter of the line, at the snapper-back | gyt B0 & o H 0 S town, | Th for triumph over Brooklyn. Rosolf, |}losolft = 0 0 0l¥ritz some worriea moments in a (et i and guard positions, but experienced | - FIREE R A o team, de. & recruit from Wichita, drove in the | 0 1 o five-set struggle that lasted more men will form a great foundation | iive their low R'm“ding‘ in t‘hc'N( \ “tying run in the seventh and later - - — | than two and one-half hours before | BY WERNER LAUFER e - — |on ‘which to build, | Britain Industrial league, are of th: gcored a run that added to the Pi-| g9 Ulthe Bethlehem, Pa star finally | % : l The familiar faces include the | i % : . d a run that RiciL | ; e i t ) i N1A| Service Sports Writer: | 2 J ude the | opinion that their club is one rur »rates’ advantage. Ervin Brame went | ed ! S won it at 7.5, 7 HEI EN HlCKS TO SHOW crafty Kenere Cagle, a back Who |y tter than the semi-pro nine anc the route for Pittsburgh although Reditar adie i As for Lott he had his troubles in | One of the rarest specimens in the L has few equals in contemporary | (nov are willing to stake all they he was reached for 14 hits | Broakivn 3 010 0017 | the few moments the elements al- | sport world is the deaf and dumb | WHY SHE IS SENSATION footwail at either passing or min-ly o s e sribe oo the ond o The New York Giants took two |Pittsbursh = = =~ 203 000 407 lowed him to face J. Gilbert Hall. of |athlete. Out on the Pacific Coast al A ning. Dick O'Keefe, Hertz Murrell | pame il resut e «from Cincinnati, 6 to 4 and 10 to 4| .4, Hanarlele Cor teme. | South Orange, N. J. Lott was | full-blooded Mexican kid, Ired | BY KID KAP‘ AN - and Herbert Gibner, looming as the \,f,,. the ;\-p,w“}gm., { o X “4n five innings. The Giants concen- Waner, Picinich. Struck out: By | handled roughly. Hall, giving no | “Dummy" Mahan, deaf mute from = . . probable starting backfield and | rpere i\)\:' any d‘ov\ bt but tha * trated their attack on Adolph Luque n 1, Brame s pitcher: A.|quarter and expecting none, held his | infancy, is battling his way among | R — Former Chleago Miss Goes Around | 00 (0 "nocr ot from last Sea- | aanaser Hddia Moore and his co “in the second inning of the first | service inviolate, as did Lott, until [the welter fighters. : Hlosmoor. Gountrel Glub son R ~game for four runs and then added | the 22nd game when the young inter- | Despite the fact that he was re- Fm;mer Fmtherwg-gm Gham ] | Messinger and Carl Carlmark | oo S0 & VEES 30 oL SOt *“two more off Ken Ash in the ninth. PHILADELDHIA | |nationalist from Chicago broke fcently stopped by “Gorilla" Jones, 1 s p' Two Under Par. | eatcest to play the ends and ficials “I" “"0 ”"]" = 1”"’“‘ oyerpthls Hubbell held the Reds in check most s L AP R M PO A Tl ough to take the set, 12-10. They | the Akron belter, he is regarded Fasy Ti With 0 { AR fee R L O S e of the way. McGraw's hopefuls Y 1 1 1 o o|were deadlocked at one-all in the |a comer by the California ring bugs Has rflsy ime Wit ]][]OI‘.GH ol (P=arormen |t fali SRl s GE R R i lol il An el e b Chatene “blugged Kolp and Rixey for 12 hits | 0'Doul 1t 313 3 0 0l second set when rain intervened. | Jones could probably knock out the vea EoIA T e e e e e s “in the abbreviated nightcap and | {{fi T § 1 0 7§ ] Lottis heavily favored to win the | welter champion Jackie Ficlds in anf = by N e cks, now from Inwood, L. L, t0-| 4 e cnion who have their spurs | (e financial side of the aftal d‘m Fitzsimmons had little trouble coast- | jjurst, 1t 50001 § o o|match today. | overweight match and that doesn't Baliimoce, Sept. 10——Touis (Kid) | day was out tc the old home | © o 50 Troul Miller, Ed Saurez, | h calisico 16 atal st Ki 10 o vetory. Thevenow, a0 o | ™ Principal matches on today's pro- | detract one bit from Jackie either.|Kaplan of Merlden, Conn., battered Rofier dentonatralionotthol SRR ERelat] Sl EaSEC et ] initisunerserlcltiic foporiing tanule The Phils bunched hits to down S 0 0lgram were: | Jones really is a light middleweight | his way to a technical knockout vic- that made her the sensation | ‘S8 PPEREIET: LA [ St. Louis, 9 to 3. Sweetland had . ! Ll R unny Austin, England, va. |and avould havetto cut oftia les tol torysover Henry, Dewanca, Biladelsjiof lasiwinters soniern * SoBlEsl Snry crenl, Swho had s great | SOCGER SCHEDULE only one bad inning, the second,| Totals o | Harold MacGuffin, Philadelphia get down to 14 | phia lightweight in the seventin ments, in the second round of the | EITVEC lon (0o Sl ooting | when the Cards scored all their runs. | ST. LOUIS | 2 p. m.—John Doeg, Santa Monic: Runs Up Kayo String |round of the scheduled ten-ro ind | aerby, a 72 hole medal Bl AoIE i G e L e e s ek | Danny MacFayden outpitched A,“ R li PO A E Cal Vs William R Wood, Jr., o Ma feafure bout at Karlon park here amer sponsored | the Western G AT e e the | List of Games in American League Jack Ogden and the Boston Red Sox i By ButiERiHnegback Wo last night. Women's Golf association A R S S ik ~beat the St. Louis Browns, 6-2. The A R 3 0|08 p m—willlam T Tiden, 24, | it e fiazikncoked ot £ his| %oy Mormer featherweight cham-| Miss Hiclis yesterday went over | Mispiaced st TUEEL S BMCR Tl gor This Week is Announced By : : b wst 26 opponents. He is a two-fisted | | the IFlossmoor Country club course | versatile performer that there fs no game was scheduled as the first part ¢ 0 0 0 0 0 philadelphia, vs. Frank Shiclds, New | p s 8 o | pion of the world outclassed his o sel i ke el ’ Ei : s Sl iea itter and a pretty bood boxer. H : B O both |in 78 strokes, two under par. On the | fear at the Point that he will fail. ’ “of a double header but rain forced | York Al ponent in every round, closin h : L omicials. ol R 7 50 g jorE g | put the old Queensberry nap on good | ! R ot journey over the heavilv|He is a qualified machine gunner, postponement of the second game. § 1 0| 4:30 p. m—Wilmer Allison, Fort [pen like Cuddy De Marco, Paul De | CYes: cutting Dewanca's nost ¢ ) et 5 ristol sharpshooter, rifle marksman, | 5 0 (U an MacFayden gave up only seven hits | Jonnard, « D Gy e e e S Sem e s ot Bertrs ok hietander ol (revpsdilevontishe ufned in @ v Ul Sgrostiporer wle marieman) - Boston, Sepl 0 (ULJe et o v 3 PhRChhalel A oLl & of Lof all | Hate, Speedy Sparks and Johnny 3 three better than and came | sings in the church choir, teaches | Soccer Leag es carded for this &and was never in nger after the | Gel 0 3 0l match 3 s 5 stop the slaughter ¥ 8 ! ! | Soccer Ague games Car or e o 1 o|mateh. Preston. He was trained to almost |SIOD the SGushier: '~ ¢ |home in 40, a stroke over even fig- |a Sunday school class and leads a | weck follow: In the only other American league Somh w0 S RTINS skin and bones for his match with Dewanoa was Woohlvifrom tha thind | LEessea usHshERICe rtaihty in her | troop of Boy Scouts. | Wednesday—TFall River vs. Provi- “game of the day, yo Ed Walsh 2Nt LAND]S TO GONFER ON [atushy: Callanan, yet manageaito LRI e it beating: | Hood sRats yas niore than offsct by | “We like em tough.” is the Army | dince at Tiverton, R. I N. Y. N gave Washington only six hits and | Totals e [dogtHGe B RIC: ! Punching viciously with cutting left ebizonk pyithulhejiror [ answer to hints that the 1929 sched- | tionals va. Bridgeport at New York, Chicago beat the Senators, f-4. A » 'l“_i'”" 1L | Fred Winsor, who does the 1,1]k.—‘h{m]\< A ik entinana slame. to Hicks' performance gave her | vle is formidable. The current line- | Saturday—Boston vs. New Bed- e e go. 003 ) GOM]NG WORLD SER[ES |ins and listening. for the Dummy, | ooks and ol BEOE ERL HATE stroke Iead over Mrs. Austin | up seems o fit the bill right down | ford at Boston. Pawtucket vs. Fall #eventh sent Sad Sam Jones to the o base hits: TDouth Whitney. | ‘Hnnks the Kid \}\ll r:\f»lrnmv he de- e e i e of Hibbing, Minn. Mrs. Lee |to the mascot mule, an animal de- | River at Pawtucket. Bridgeport vs. h0 Wars: Home run: | | feat by the Akron Gorilla R R Mida and Mrs. Melvin Jones, a pair |voting his week-days o pulling a|yall River at Philadelphia. . il Hallihan % | Representatives of American and | he ADUMMmySISHiC ke A ford ) 8 L |of Chicago veterans, tied for third | post garbage wagon with nothing to| Sunday—New Bedford vs. Fall Amerlcan Leag“e Hethen ’ [nary fignter who hecomes worn out | the outcome. \ o | plageish o do on Saturdays but attend a foot- | River at New Bedford. Providence National Teams to Gather | hearing a lot of buszing and who| Dewanci —a combination boxer Miss MatireentOnentiof Wihiterh e | =) AT ST |hearivuialotiot buasbsana o el e e i e O e Lo |13 Boston at Providence. Brooklyn PR At Chicago | berry that the fans sometimes throw | Meriden Mauler without SUCCesS. |ginia Van Wie, Chicago, an 87 Slss ¥y | vs. Bridgeport at Brooklyn. Hakoah AB R H PO A E § 2t a good fighter doesn’t bother the [ Kaplan started slowly in the first e OICOTIE! STOPRED SRUTH S i vs- N o Natlonalstat iBrooklyn: g Chicago, Sept. 10 (A —Representa- 2 74 oo | o e i Eddie Cicotee, who was barred | — —_— h t Rl ahearit | two rounds, going into the ring with AT TS T e - c | = e Uier ot dmelady cnat n Not So Dumb as He Looks out a warm-un because of the fact St i from organized ball after the base- LEFT HANDER GOES UP ) ] league clubs still having a chance, | o K8 2® (CORE R T T O ol avas put on ahead | GrTover Cleveland Alexander. re- | ball scandal of 1919, used to have | Pitcher Chuck Galeria, southpaw., : however remote, of getting into the || WINSOrs VoeRRUIA S ages [of schedule. Regianing with the |contly sent home by the ds'[the Indian sign on Babe Ruth. H- hired an airplane when the Wichita . world series, were here today to | WPENRER BT s advice he | third, however. he found the range | IManagement for infractions of thelis the only pitcher working in 10 | Ialls club of the Texas League sent ¢ confer with Kenesaw Mountain |10 B® 10 RIS T P oxing | and. crashed Dawanca with cvery |UTining rules. fanned 241 men dur- |or more games against the big slug- |him to {he Springficld Midgets. Landls, Basehalll sommisstoner, on | oo LEOBAE 00N e iy | pitrich Inihis KIt: | Saverall times thai{ins the season of 1915 He woni3lger that Ruthinever hit for a four- | After making the trip he pitched a S S plans for the classic. R o couldn't hear or falk, Win- | Enilly boy! threatened fo. Iit the8ames that year for Phils. | paser. six-hit victory for Springfield. 2% | The most interested delegates| . {,ok Mahan before thern and|floor for the long count but h e == > ) o were those representing the Phila- | Lo oq the kid was more intelligent [ gamely stood by his guns and stop- delphia Athletics, leading the | {1 50 per cent of the fighters Who | ped everything that came his way OUR BOARDING HOUSE B AHERN American lcague by 14 games, and |p;co their five senses. When a man | Both boys weighed 113 -4 younds. | y ine Chicago Cubs, 13 games out in {3 1001 6F one or two of is| Due fo the threat of rain. & erowd | [front in the senior circuit. How- | Lrcec” the remaining ones often be- | of only w the | | ever, Pittsburgh and New York. in |aome more highly developed. This! carq Ui dofrw okl " |the National league, and New York |igtrue of the Dummy. He has ex- A e e = A e B [ ¢ | and Clmf'::md olt f‘hfi .\n\]vv‘wn‘ Fflli |tremely keen eyesight. His sense of ~uw 'SEE 5, NOUR UNCLE RUFUS EGAD WEMNDELL, THAT i ; Were mathematical possiviities ana | (o S0 T Curs throusn | MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS | : i . e e ! WHo LEFT HIS ESTATE © Vou, IS A GROSS EXAGGERATION!| If the Cubs are successful in the |jg tre & | R — ¥ Two Uas pected that the first two games :' I he was a baby and the shock made National FATHER ! v (N THAT WAY, You SUM «~ HARDLY MORE run: 1 the championship series will be |him deaf. He was unable to hear| Batting—O'Doul, Phillies, .399. . , T P e e el L e s [maiing Zoibu e AUD ME ARE RELATED ~NaTCLOSE, T AL A PURSE oF coi! T :nd 9, with the next three in the | Al of the Dummy's brothers and| Runs batted in—Wilson. Cubs, 7, i e | home park of the American league |gisters are normal. The family | 140 BUT TUST THE SAME., WERE i champions, October 11, 12 and 14. |comes from Tombstone, Arizo Hits—0'Doul, Phillies, 220 car -HE FINE oD HIGHLY RESPECTED HM-M- T Beail : Details of the handling of ticket |pymmy started in the ring game Doubles—Irederick, Robins, 48. . i sales. Hime. of games and. Uckel |eoriy. Ranfing around! the Dootles | iriples—L. Waner Pirates, 10 TFAMILY OF HOOPLE ! «r AS THE “o SEE e REASON prices also are to be worked out. |amateur clubs of Los Ange Here | Homers—Wilson, Cubsi Klein, DUTEHMAL SAYS , V'KNoW , «o NoW For -THIS - Hottr —— Winsor discovered him. Winsor at|phillies, 8 4 err | one time managed Jack Dempsey.| Stolen bases—Cuyler, Cubs. 34 UNED WE STAND, DIVIDED SHARPER'S # One of Most Toyal Rooters For | i |since he lost Jack lost 4. Philadelphia Athletics Not to | Missouri Athletic Body to See If ?wm:"i‘l'!mi\ll‘f:;‘sfr\?{z: ';1:: :tinflr Smute | R.\(ln\:”}"r:‘\llm/\‘v“r‘vll'd\r's. 371 % MY AUNT MAG, WHo " . i | aciles Om dhe F1y o | PeRer, Dummy Taylor, who work: | Runs—Gehringer, Tigers, 118 KEEPS (N ToUcH WITH RELATIVES = See World Series Sonnenberg Tackles On 1y OF |4 several years in the National Runs batted in—Ruth, Yanke 10 (P—A long | Just Butts. ague, his hest vears being with the | simmons, Athletics, 135 N DOVER, GoT A LETTER et Cmtone - New York (;v:m\; Taylor was cccen | aits 1.\|nn‘|:nns_ ’A-)'n-m-a i SAVING Nod CcAME INTO 1 2 t = Kansas City. Sept. 10 (P—Mem- |tric. He had a keen sense ! | Doubles—Manush, Browns, 42 = i : MLl . ‘rr" bers of the Missouri athletic com-|and many tales are told of his es-! riples—Miller, Athletics; Fonse- $50, coo LE ‘ < "~ | mission will be at the ringside to-|capades. ca, Indians, 14. s, will mot see the Mack-| iq "hen “Dynamite” Gus Son-| Diit ny Taylor. although he| Homers—Ruth, Yanks. 42 Nod BY YaUR i LA D Ay provided | 0 world's heavyweight wrest- | couldn’t hear or talk, was an Um-| Stolen bases—Gehringer, Tigers, 9, UNCLE RUFUS ! - TAK and win | oo ampion, meets Stanley Stas- |pire baiter. He rode the daylights|oag WELL 3 molim o ik : ! ol fan ia Miss Mary |12K: the big Pole, in a titular match, |out of the arbitrators \‘\'nh \[\15 ng’mii Pitching— anks, won | e E(: > ; ’ 1roold fan is Miss Mary | ;" getermine if the champion's fly- | ning sign_language. got so badl (o, lost 0. . i o eldest daughter of | {1 "ackle is what its name implies | that Bill Klem, the veteran umpire, Sl ot THAT'S FINE | ! : boss of the Athletics. |75 geliberate butt. |jearned the mitt lingo in self-de- PUNTING PRACTICE I I a convent, it Was| " po state wrestling code, recently | fense. Then when the Dummy start- | New York, Sept. 10 (A Depress- | | fay, with the inten-|.4onteq by the commission, prohi-|ed in on him, Klem would come fing heat caused Major IFrank Cav-| I' £ a nun bits butting. The commission has|right back and it usually ended UD [anaugh, coach of the IFordham foot- Miss MeGillienddy | snnounced that if the flying tackle |with Taylor leaving the park ball team to change his plans for a hers always |15 a deliberate butt, the champion Onee in a game with Philadelphia, | fi serimmage. Instead backfield o ck of the | il be disqualified. Taylor was coaching for the Giants. | men were given & punting practice (1 Athletics were at - It had been raining steadily for | Johnny O'Shea, Frank Bartos, John | ; ve all the players GIVEN HARD WORKOUT three or four innings. and although | Fisher and Walter Tracey led the | - nows the fine | Karmingdale, L. I 10 (I'P) | the athletes were all for calling it a | punters in yardage and direction. ¢ ) Chick Meehan drove his New|day the umpire in charge bade the | = B — York university Violets through a|game go on. CHAUTAUQUA BOAT GIVES UP 16 HEPo AT hard S0-minute live tackling and| Iinally when the Giants took their | Celoron. N. Y., (P—The ancient ponli, X I 2 line play session on a rain soaked |turn at bat, Taylor emerged from |steamer City of Buffalo, known to st N i 2 ted from |field yestorday. The entire squad of |the dugout on his way to the third |those who have visited the chautau- | ’ Y Cohen, : A my last |37 had its first taste of muddy |base coaching box. He was wearing |qua assembly during a quarter of a | (S‘,f]_) 7 Terry. 1 n 1001 days she [ weather @ind slipp ball handling.!an immense pair of hip boots. The centu has been burned Motor C{x \j\ 'I‘;,'v aiL too thietics and | Vic Connor and Al Gaudet, backfieid } Dummy’ erproof footgear caus- | cars have defeated the fleet of 10| U BY NEA SERVICE, INC.>¢) ) REG. V. 8. PAT. OFF, Hogan. ¢ ¢ ¢ \sketbal] team | candidates, flashed some accurate ed a riot among the fans. It also |vessels which once did a proftiable —== Farrell, 3 0 0 0 0 oflast yea ; ‘passms. o e ! caused the umpires to call the game. |business. 1 «

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