New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 1, 1930, Page 16

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

BOYS’ CLUB BASKETBALL TEAM DEFEATS McKINLEY ATHLETICS OF EAST HARTFORD IN FINAL GAME OF SEASON—DOUBLE HEADERS ARE STAGED IN' SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL INTER.CLASS COURT LEAGUE—GAGNON KAYOES TUFFY GRIFFITHS—ITEMS _!——_——_-———_———_——'_——-J ‘ - . K’S BIG MACHINE WELL-OILED FOR ANOTHER RACE BOYS’ CLUB ENDS SEASON : ELEV%ST%EFCE&MCB%J?{DTS LOOP ik | . WITH UNEXPECTED VICTORY i ictories i y - ’ & Metes Out 29-23 Defeat to Strong McKinley Athletics s M Stralggt VAC:‘() r}es - D?lu:‘,l? I'!eader ll‘jla)r . e ; ; : B of East Hartford — Joe Boukus, Substitute, Stars g?:\:: x‘z(:fi{ i:yBittee; 'é‘i‘ifi;;;‘es ‘°EL'I§;S ({l:e - i a - for Winners With Ten Points—First Half Is I}ag- Won by Slight Margins — Final Battles Will Be A A : 2 4 , ; ; fitfi"@ffifi%fifii Ag(;}:b Reserves Defea Staged at Gymnasium Tonight—Interest Increases £ : : Wy, 4 o i ¢ : ; . The Boys' club put at least a sat- | Kerelejza, rf-If ... : / isfactory finlsh upon a disappoint- [Boukus, rf ..... . b h 7 & L - /| iIng basketball season last night by | Rametta, 1f . Standing but they managed to increase this as . = % i ¢ . s % Lo 3 defeating the strong McKinley Ath-|Goffa, ¢ ..... W. " P.C.|the game progressed. The summary: 3 : . v letics of East Hartford, 29-23, in a | Winters, rg-ig .. ven-one ... : g Eleven-one ; i . Notly if at times rather loosely played | Compagnone, rg Twelve-two L ] . B . B é y . contest on the club floor. The visi- [ Paluch, lg Ten-one ... Daluch. enf o e i 3 ; L e tors, who tied for first place in the Twelve-one ... A0V Zntko, A hseieae s 1 g % z i o initial half of the Farmington Val- o4 ORI Ten-two ... £ 4 . Ritier okt | 4 - A 5 v : ley league, were favored to defeat McKinley Athletics Eleven-two o Cos s N 3 . . e : F. | |the Hardware City team, but the lo- Bl Double headers were staged ves- | I 5 ¢ g " 1} : o of i 4 p B EA cals shot their way into an carly lead | May, rf . terday afternoon and evening in the . i) o 3 e and relinquianed’’ their advantagelCronim lf sy New Britain Senior High school and 4 S N i Pl i : H only twice—and then for only a few | M- Malloy, ¢ ... for the first time since the tourna- Twelve-two : : > ’ : o e | Poscher, rg . ment, first place is occupied by a Fld. ¥l Pts. o The first half was a decidedly | W- Mallo lone team. The Eleven-one quintet e = 0 S : 2 B § . sloppy period, with both teams mak- Tarrell, came through to win two games in |G. ck 5 g o > Y ing glaring mistakes and showing the two-game playoft and therehy C : g Lo S £l : a tendency to rough it up, but in went into the driver's scat in the er, 18 . : . : oo i N1 L the closing quarters they settled league. Ramizi, g . 1 : L 2 L ‘ 4 down and provided ‘a fitting wind- In both the afternoon and evening "y i e up to the season by flashing some the first and sccond games were cx- : 9 v s it ; fast and effective basketball. It . iy i elotony citing but the third contests were| Score at half time, i " : & subsiihite Hlayer: Jon Botius “rw-12‘33?;3,;“,‘,‘..‘,‘“.STIZT?.’.‘M“Q.?’”;‘C‘lifii’,.;J Sow 0 et e e L R s i ¢ | played the biggest part in the scc-|jg)f (o humble the South church en-two Beats Twelve-one McEvoy. Scorer, Morey. 3 . ond half attack of the winners, his | Reservos by a 27-17 count. It was In a close battle that started off Another Walkaway {tall but slightly built youth slipping | {he second win of the season over the afternoon play, the Ten-two| In the final game of the night. the through the McKinley defense for|{ne church outfit. The losers start- team nosed out the Twelve-one |Eleven-two und Ten-two teams bat-| 10 points in the last 20 minutes and | oq off well, leading by at the combination by a 14 to 12 scorc.|tled on cven terms in the first half | leading both teams in the matter of | quarter and then piling up a 12-7 The outcome was in doubt right up [but upon resumption of play, the scoring. Boukus had spent most of |jeaq during the second period on to the last minute with both teams|Eleven-two folded up and the op-| i the season on the sidelines, but e |shots by Hattings,” Dan Wosilus, fighting hard for victory. Wojack, |position coasted home to an easy 27 % : ¢ G |was called upon last night and|Wheeler and Merza. But in the through his excellent marksmanship, {to 10 victory. The summary: 3 : _ made good beyond a doubt. {third period Parparian flipped a starred for the victors. The sum- Eleven-two G s i The first quarter was slow. M. |spectacular goal which seemed to mary: FL Tts = 3 o e : ; o, Malloy's foul shot opened the scor- |act as 4 signal for his team, and im= 12-1 R T e E 0 B i ) X 3 ing, and a pair of pretty but wide- | mediately the club {eam began to Fld. TFL TtlDagatta, 1€ «o.eeuen.. 0 : E : g N ly separated corner shots by Goffa|drop the ball in from all angles, Neidier, rf RIS e B R S : o s : » -~ g and Rametta made the tally 4-1|pushing into a 19-15 lead by the end O'Brien, 1t | e e N % : b i when the period ended. Two fouls|of that quarter and then running Parda, ¢ .. : L 2| %uin c o Haer 0 by Poscher brought the visitors close |out the final count. The work of Miynarski, rg . 0}l ST rotieee e ) = s e = i in the second stanza, only to have |“Sheik” Adams, who scored five Steinle, rg . | Marsha, 1g ...ool1s | GEORGE EARNSHAW MICKEY COCHRANE, Rametta fiip a shot from mid-floor, | pretty baskets during this rush, fea- Falk, Ig o {and Poscher's basket was offset by |tured. | E 2 ] Dicking half a dozen stars out of the galaxy of luminaries in th e Philadelphia Athletics' camp is no easy task- DBut anyway, here are [a pretty hook by Paluch. This was Twelve fouls were called on the half a dozen of the boys who are out to help Connie Mack cop anoth er world title. all 'thehn'o;"il(}g in the half, for the ;jl\fl']inners and only {wo on the losers. s | tearhs battled around futilely most |The summary: Wojack, rf ... : 8| Crowley, rf ... Ty " JAY VESSELS of the time. Boys' Club Reserves Crowley, 1f .... 0| Wofack, 16 ... ; 3| Sports+Editor | Boukus and W. Malloy. going in d. ¥ Margentino, rg .. | Lyons. g ... 7 Philadelphia, April 1. ¢P—When | half, both forgot to report, and each | Parparian, rf . 0 O'Brien, Ig ... Margentino, o |the hatless Connie Mack comes X 5 ! : 3 made the free shot awarded for the | Rowinski, 1f ...... 0 5 R P e 3 | dashing around under the stangs HY JA[;K [jA[iN"N‘ F"R SPEEI] TRY Some of the Country’s Leading Golf- | other's oversight. Then came a few .nnm; c ; [ & e after the A’s great final-inning vic- = e seconds of whirlwind scoring. Cro- | Capodice, Score at half time 11-9, 10-2; ref- in the 1929 I ers Start Out Today to Try and Referee, Tobin; timer, Grusha; scorer, Parker. Reserves Duplicate Win The Boys' club Reserves 10 tery world's serics, nin cut fast, took a pass. and scored. [ Adams, rg-lg . eree, G. M. Cassidy: timer, E. Mc-| Score at half time, 9-5, Ten-two. |Seemed to be eager to escape the Overtake Bobby. He immediately put in another, this | Kobela, rg-lg . Lvoy; scorer, E. Zetterman. hewling throngs. e R | : one with one hand, and the Ath-|Nedbala, lg ... Wins By One Toint e mow appears that nis naste was | BOSL0N Second Rater Scores Ong|Forced fo Quit Yesterday Be:| aueuste, co. aprit 1 cr)—|ietics led. But Boukus taok the nent : Even by a closer margin, the Fl[iHTINfi TWINS ingpired by a desire to hustle back Some of the count leading golf- |tap and fired it into the basket be- 1 Twelve-two team eked out a win and begin work on {he 1950 cam- of BlggeSt Rlfig U]JSC[S cause of Garburetor Tl’Olll)le ers started out today on the final|forc the crowd could catch its South Church r‘scr‘Ff over the Eleven-two combination in paign. 36 holes of the southcastern open |breath. Shortly afterward May's bas- a Dbitterly contested tilt, The final None of the American league | championships in an effort to ov |ket made it 12-11, East Hartford. score was 12 to 11. Thrills galore | B[ITH I]EI:EATE[] clubs is openly conceding the 1933 | Philadelphia, April 1 (UP)-—| Daytona Beach, Fla., April 1|come the lead of Bobby Jones. . lbut Compagnone eame up the floor | R e e e b e s e o (OBl e o L R o e e CRD S SR I gain the :x\ci!ciarc;acv:!ggal‘:;‘l;mi';? perhaps, are clearing the track for NEAYWeight, was the vietim of one | with which he still hopes to breais His vestiraay: Whoninst caualléa P shodt]anfl'umrlo\i{\f\fnn‘ni summary: Hel‘lllafl flll[l Helll‘y PCI‘IOGI( LOSG the Mackian machine and arc hop- |0t the biggest fistic upsets of the| the speed record set by his countr¥-|pap on hoth rounds with a 144 over!New Britain went in earnest after | Eleven-two | ing that they won't be smacked too |Season when he was stopped bY|man, Sir Henry Segrave, was ready’the Augusta Country club course|Cronin had pulled his team to with- | i)'np.n . . FL Dis DeC[S[O]]S on Same Ca]‘fl ki Gagnon, Boston sccond-rater.|ogay for another attempt. and thereby held a three-stroke]in a point. far down the list when it comes [Jack crashing through. in the sixth round of a scheduled | pon tried it out yesterday and|lead over the field. Kerelejza made two baskets and a Potts, If. ... Training camp chatter doesn't |10 round bout at the Arena her|pagpelled the bullet-like tonneau| Close behind him were three New |foul within a minute, Boukus count- o s Ludwinowicz, c. 3| Boston, April 1 (UP)—The Kala-|win baseball championships but |last night. Each weighed 189. over the smooth beach at 186 miles | York professionals, among them|ed from the floor, and se did Pa.;Ed Walsh Appears to Be Dagata, rg. . 4 > [ mazoo fighting twins, Herman an.|when Connic Mack in a talkic ap-| Iicferee Tommy Reilly, Who was|an hour on his third trial only Horton Smith whose unfamiliarity | luch, making the scoring 24-14 On Road to Recovery Marshall, Ig. ... 0 | Henry Perlock, lost 10 round deci- |pearance, with his team surround- |the third man in the ring for the|pe forced to quit because of car-|with the course sometimes left him|May’s shot at the end of the period| yreriden, Co April.1 (UB)— . sions on the same card here last|ing him, reminds his stars that the | first Dempsey-Tunney fight, stob-| pyretor trouble. Mechanics went|at some distance from the pins. He|started a McKinley rally. | Big Ed \\,'::Lleh“[‘;.éavp’:l) :il )h— — night at Mechanics building, the | public “expects you to be not only |Ped the contest with Griffiths hang- | 1o work immediately and later re-|was able to make a 145 by careful| This was continued in the last| /& “F ESH 1054V _é‘ga:‘“ 1900 4 former béing trounced by Bruce|a good team but a great team,” th: |ing helplesely on the ropes. GAE-| ported the motor to be -in gool|chipping and putting. Johnny Car-|session bythe same player and by|SIFiE OF the 1OnE TOAC o recons Twelve-two Flowers, New Rochelle, and the|idea is imparted that this is the|non had rocked Griffiths around|ghape, rell and the veteran Tom Kerrigan|M. Malloy, and New Britain took}milo‘;_m‘;w Syt a‘:‘l‘_‘f Fld. FL latter by a shade to Hy Diamond, | year the A’s will convince cvea the |the ring with & serics of straight| The British driver seemed weil [had 147's. M outiwiiniits lead cbito four (2R 0N A8 A HE B VS FDEn G = G. Bayleck, rf. . budding Boston lightweight. skeptics that they are a great team. | TISbts to the jaw. pleased with the condition of the| A majority of the other profes-, Points. Goffa and Boukus put the | Peri S e (_‘h" en DEAYer, I, o v uvnes Flowers administered a terrific| The tall Philadelphian has buiit viously, Griffiths had been | peach and predicted it would stand |slonals were so far behind today it [£ame on ice when play was resum- \wfln« P i 1‘"; _“”“L” ‘;‘“‘f" Dworin, c. . beating in his bout with Herman,|up his machine so that it now ap- three times in the third| much greater speed than that ats|was doubtful whether they could|ed. Poscher and Boukus made free| t " ;‘*]":‘ pdcf‘r 5"““d :* C‘)""“ one Ikowitz, rg. . and only a stout heart kept the|pears crack-proof. round, but had displayed remark-|tained yesterday. He said he would |sériously effect Jones' lead. shots good, and Poscher closed the| ftl Sh‘l?nmdpvea;e_ o e‘ gain- Ramizi, 1g. .. Kalamazoo twin off the floor. Her-| To a pitching staff that took fiv:|able gamences to last out the round | probaply maie today's attempt| Today's play was oOver the For-|&ame with a useless basket. 1:,;‘;1;6"3. Ty ,'M" elhinas man won the first and third rounds|of the first 13 places in the leagus |and stay on his fect in the fourth|ghortly after noon. rest Hills Ricker course. Boukus' ten points made him the [Te§arded as serious, however. 2 12 | but after that he wasn't in it with|standing last vear, he has added|and fifth rounds. . Meanwhile unpleasant reactio —_— star of the game, but much credit UL NATEORE Score at half time, 5-5; referee, |the New Rochelle Negro, who wad- | Roy Mahatfey, the hurling.“find” of | A Tight to the chin floored Grif- | attendant upon the numerous de BASEBALL MEETING i D st i L el e e e G. M. Cassidy; timer, E. McEvoy; [ed in and flajled away with both |the training season. fiths the first time in the third for!jays in the speed trials were report- e | who played an exceptionally hard| LOS Aaseles, April 1. hi- er, E. Z 1 5 e o : : The Cardinal baseball toam will |game all through the first half and | €a80's Cubs today hcaded into the scorer, . Zetterman. hands as he dame into range. In| The forces that brought the team | count of nine. A series of lefts|eq pere. Following action of one|hold a mecting Thursday cvening at | oo AEORE e O S e e Win in Walkaway the seventh and ninth rounds aftsr |the highest ficlding honors in the | &0 rights to the head dropped him | London correspondent here in in-|s grclock at the home of Gesrpe | ihcially wore himself “out. —The | 0 o o ieh | inolades o sent In & recl walkaway, the Tleven-|he had connected with solll|league still are instact and are re- | fOF @ count of six, and when he 80t forming his publication that Don | (yordy) Osborne w‘n SR fl fs‘e team took hold in the second 1,;‘1(1“‘(!‘ ety ‘“ ich vmj u .sha sex;u; one team scored a 22 to 9 victory | smashes, Flowers tried desperately |inforced by such sterling rookles s |UP 2nother right sent him down | was being goaded into trying 0it | plans ror the coming seacon nin be | ong Piaved £00d ball after the poor | o e o eT oot over the Ten.one combination in|for a knockout, but though he pun- | McNair, Keesey and Williams. for a count of seven. the automoblle despite the alleged |1a1g at this sessicn. Al of the | coomi "“""_"?’l oAChor ““3'““”_“ e CURRNOTRLIC R CCast the third game of play in the after- | ished Herman severely, he could| With Simmons, Foxx, Cochranc,| Throughout the bout, Griftiths| gangerous condition of the beach, |memtars ot loat ears tomm ore |Giolin were best for the visitors.league. Nl noon. The winners took an early | not bring the twin down. Bing Miller, Dykes and Hass back | W8S a “sucker” for a right. Tufty|London officials protested. Sk e Dl s e ot LTI 0T lead and were never headed. Play| The semi-final between Hy Dia-|swinging the willow, the Mack's|SImply couldn't evade it, and he| "4 cable from the Harahan infor- | neotive candidates arc: Invited te at- T e e e e oo SR 08 was close only In the first half when |mond and Henry was a sizzling |have all the punch they had in|¥as unable to take it on the chin. |mation bureau of London quoted{femq. . dR sl D e e S s the Eleven-one crew had a lead of | bout between a boxer and a fighter.| 1929 when they were second in| It Was the second time Griffiths|a gispatch from Lawrence Cads, | embrowski, rf ... | Angels today. 810 4. The summary: Diamond had piled up an carly lead | lcague batting. has been knocked out. James J.|gpecial correspondent of the Lon- Ten-one with his clever boxing and cleansr| So. since none of the other seven | Braddock —stopped him in . two Referee, Rametta, Tobin. don Star, telling of the feeling her Y 998 hey £ i ’ i . Tld. Tl Pts. | nitting but Henry about evencd |clubs has shown more than ordi-|'Ounds in 1928 when they wese|and added that such &n attituds OUR BOARDING HOUSE By AHERN g Judab pdcantnariel matters with a desperate rally that|nary improvement. those destruc. | lEhf-heavyweights | wz Stanley, 1t. 0 Victories over Johnny Rich || nas danserous to good fecling bu- Grammitt, carried him out ahead in. the[tive A's cannot be d the pole| Yictories over Jolnmy Tisho anl|tween the United States and Lns- Sl seventh, cighth and ninth round.. | potition | Faolino Uzcudun last vear had ele-|japq, The Boston boxer got the jump in vated Griffiths to a position among| yal Haresnape, dircctor of th : Y e i rouadt an iRt b | READY FORSWIMMEET he vwelghts, He Was|speed trials, immediately answerel EGAD ~1 cal'r UNDERSTAND clear margin and was awarded th t Jack Sharkey at|the London query assuring them ey o : 9| decision | ey, < | Miami Tast winter, but Sharkey re- | that Don ran yesterday against th- | & {5 ! «~x A PHONE CALL LoTe-one . The weights: Flowers, 137: Her- = | fused to meet him and Phil Scott | will of the trial officials and was CAME FOR ME EARLY TTHIS Fld. man 136: Diamond, 138; Henry | N31ators, Among Them Holders of |was given the match Perlock, 13. The preliminaries: Dick Lopez. | 15 3 ity ” A pped las tto Vor : g SR UST DAWMED oN 1517, Watertown, defeated Billy| plete Pinal Training Today. stopped last year by Otto Yon Porat| Meanwhile the speed trial camp RD FOR ME & MEET e AT TS Eaelaet G e b |and Ernie Schaft. Gagnon has been | took on a new appearance with the LEFT WOoRD : = ME —THAT -THIS (S APRIL | Dube. 129%, Haverhill, defeated| Chicago, April 1 (UP)—Stars of | d out six times arrival of a tiny racing -automobile, Hip HERE ON THE CORNER FooLS DAY! wmne | Napoleon Bonaparte, 129, France, |{he swimmins world, numbering | —— entirely made in St. Paul, Minn. ~ A \ERY [MPORTANT DEAL, T g (4): Young Nadeau, 11915, Cam.|among them holders of 14 American QW | 1 ha St Pa ; i SOMEBODY S et e e G e e R CTOSESISWINESEAS DN et oot ey He SAD waole AT L (o SovER Zimatravich, Coyle, Ig. ... S WoULDRT WAT ANY LONGER, )‘ X MATSOR , F T WAS “ou we N . BETTER G0 doME AW’ ADD ) only permitted to run after he an. S\ SoME MORE BREAKFAST EGG Q) Gagnon has never been more| his manager had agrced to assume 3 MORUING FROM DUGAN,BEFORE o, YOUR VEST COLLECTION ? N than a trial-horse and was twice|the day's costs. I WAS AWAKE AMD HE . Q el o ® Zujke, rf. . Paluch, If . Vetrano, | Ritter, c. Keeley, Rylz, l1g. . 11 American Championships, Com- 2Lt L | Chicago intends to get the car of- BEEN RIBBING Scors at half time, §-4 E .on alrin e 5 4 : . Selercc 6. % Cami .f“}“‘f(f?" fei| 119, Revere, (4): Jimmy Roger. |training today for th ional A | ficially timed and probably rus WolLD MEAN MaNEY <& £ - ssidy; . E. Me- nbridge. knocked out Patent |- U. indoor meet, which begins|__ . |over s course diate- = i Evoy; scorer, E. Zetterman. 01 DildEe: thnoge DU el gL | D ool e [Xale Tean, dinds. Adars, Campalgn | 0 2 HiA nille goutke mmidiet o ME! DBy Gaodl e New Bedford, (3): | here tomo : ntinues [1y benind Don. The car weighs : Th e B e Jerteed Roston, defeatd |through Saturday. in a Blaz¢ of Glory by Defeating | 900 pounds and has a two cylinder the Twelve-One combination open. | ! 30s Practically all the entrants, i | air-cooled motor of 77 inches piston S0 Ehe Greiiy oy i DEH A ot i cluding Wally L Georze Ko-| University of Michigan, displacement. It has made $3 il' \;{‘.(c;]—i over the One quin- |9 . "l .05 A E i aliEoin I\))Im[‘\' T e miles per, hour., Hohenhauer aid. et. Both teams displayed fine team- | - Kepe LS Al Bn e tcRniclosdatiistsean work with the winners getting the | e v y an ly Colbath, have | Yale swimming team closed its sea- | CHAMPIONSHIP GAME edge near the finish. The summary: | ¢ cticing several days to be. SO0 in a blaze ot glory last night. | qye enampionship basketball game Twelve-One | COUHT TOURNEY STARTS e At et e ool feating the University of Michigan | petween the Nine.Two B anc the s : nopes (o better the pres-|—champions of the Middle West—| NinoTwo G teams was played Jast O'Brien, rf .. $ 3 ec style record ‘“,'0 4 e |night at the Central Junior High Neiderer, 1t tiehl t1 rli| The sixth consecutive scason vic-|gipool gym. The C's were the vie- y 52 Annual Quest f National Higl Tt 2 y he rcollegiate le Datan s : el Quest for the National High jtnin the past two weecks, and Ko- [fory of the intercollegiate 1eaguc | iorq by the score of 15 to 7. Smith Miynarski, 15 .... school Basketball Champlonship (%€ designs on the -yard |champlons was marred only by 1085 | a5 the best bet on scoring and Falk, I3 . s 5 3 ' backstroke mark jof the 440-yard swim and 150-yard | pajng played a good defense game. Will Begin Today. e backstroke. Garnet Ault, $Wolverine | yrooiti ccored all but two points for | Brothers to Engage ‘U‘:‘D:‘“Gfi ;‘E’“kli“;“f]:”‘r‘;}" 0 :::lr the losers. The summary: A es. 6 4-5 s he most | Nine-Two B In Billiard Tourney oriniant individual performance of | Fld. FI, Dts jielty pocket billiard tourna- | the evening. Boldt of Michigan took | paris, rf . LR nt will be st 1t Rogers Rec- |the backstroke in 1 minute, 46 4-5 | enacks, 1f . 0 0 zht when [second | Klapp, z 0 0 meet in The Els captured five first places, | Meotti, rg. ... i U5 This will be the including the relay, in which Michi- | Guzzy, 1 gan holds the world's record. 'I'hr; Yale four was clocked in the slow | 7 ) n-|up the t s ) {time of 1 minute, 36 seconds | Nine-Two G i \ i ; @ Referee, Cassidy; r E T title-hol va v oa 1 <= | Captain Johnny Howland of Yale, | Fid. Tl 3 7 &8 \ -1 e scorer, Morey. ieney G Frr s : Seapoll - lati. | ) ;. ¢ | making his farewell appearance in| Demnicki. rf 3 Takes Early Lead o Although the ne {eam Sin Antienal intereat se e 5 s LIS i ; i e 5 & ¢ : &’LVDE AND with Stanley, v [ could b Mautner, ¢ . s starting pla Grammitt, rg 1 ;| Chicago’s Co¥le, 0= vis e vs ament. | Smith, ¢ . took an carly lead . ~ — | Dains, rg ... 5 1 —— AN MACK ARE the game with the Twelve-t T P e e e it el Do | v s D e S g ; i RE $ 8 S & 5 IN BACK cF AR st 0 : ! crease the t | cobellis. (. k a 20- | Lancaster. Pa., April 1 (P'—Jim- SR 7 > 8. PAT.OF. ing and well played throughout to &6 i : : 0 both crews. The winners led at half y Sheckard, the old time Chicago 1h outfielder, is base coach at | “\ ranklin and Marshall,

Other pages from this issue: