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Basebe@anding AMERICA Speaking of Sports LEAGUE Games Yesterday ‘Washington 11, Philadelphia 6. Boston §, New York 7. Detroit 7, Cleveland 1. Chicago 2, St. Louis 1. There will be no American Paper Gaods baseball team in the Indys- trial league this season, according to the announcement of Harry McKeon, ranager last season. Since the clos | of play last year, the team has lost | | scveral of its players, This has creat- | “5[*‘0“‘1“‘1‘“ ¢d a shortage that cannot be filied | &, OV and the company has decided not to [ 8 - enter the league this year. Fhllsd bl Boston Detroit . New York Standing W. 2500 it | 400 As a consequence, the league will | again be made up of seven baseball | feams. This was the number ¢ngag: cd in play last year. 50 Games Today New York at Washington. Philadelphia at Boston. Chicago at Detroit. Cleveland at A meeting will be held tonight the Y. M. C. A. on the organization | of a soft ball league. Last season, | there were 12 teams entered in the | league. Not so many aggregations | PO | Games Tomorrow - . e are expected in this year but a 500d | g i FEESE league is being planmed. | New York at Washington. s Chicago at Detroi Cleveland at St. Plans will be made later in the| week for the annual banquet of the Jndustrial bowling leagues, both men and women. It is planned 1o | hold the affair somewhere out of town this year. Louis. NATIONAL LEAGLE Games Yesterday New York 10, Brooklyn 4. Pittsburgh 9, Chicago 5. St. Louis 10, Cincinnati 5. Boston 13, Philadelphia 4. The Waterbury Brasscos bascball team has organized for the season and games are being sought with the leading teams in Connecticut. | The team wants home and home | games. The team is composed of the | cream of the public parks league of | Waterbury including former higl "'“-““‘"5" school, college and independent pe -‘)?f“?'jov formers. Teams wanting games are | LGSR0 advised to get in touch with Charles | St Louis Beckman, 28 Hill street, Waterbury. ‘ Philadelphia . | Cincinnati ! Brooklyn .. Standing Pet. 1.000 859 New York 417 Tn his column in the New York Herald-Tribunc today, gives vent to a spread on the size of | the members of college rowing teams | this season. He states that the style | leans towards tall, lanky, heavy and ‘ | Harry Cross | Games Today Pittsburgh at Chicago. Brooklyn at New York Boston at Philadelphia. St. Louis at Cincinnati. Games Tomorrow Pittsburgh at Chicago. St. Louis at Cincinnati. Boston at Philadelphia. Brooklyn at New York. young oarsmen. Bliss Clark of this city, a member | of the Cornell crew, receives some | favorable comment in the column, | Cross calls him the “whale of the | lot.” He saysi— | e | — INTERNATIONAL LEAGUL Games Yl‘.\t('rr'lfly’ Toronto 6-7, Jersey City 0-3 (2nd game, § Newark 2, Rochester Montreal 6, Reading Baltimore 10, Buffalo 2. “The whale of the lot is Bliss Clark | of Cornell. He stands 6 feet, 6 inches and weighs 204 pounds. And besides, he is one of the fastest men in the shell. He's the Jumbo of the sweep- swingers this spring.” innings). i Evidently Bliss is getting to be a | real big oy since the time when he | was one of the weight men on the| New Dritain high school track team. | Standing W. Pet. Baltimore | Buffalo .. Newark loronto . Rochester teading Montreal Jersey City The unexpected victory of little Bates in the two-mile relay at the Penn Relay carnival on Saturday afternoon is of interest in this city inasmuch as Ray Thompson, the | track coach of the Maine college, is known here. He married Miss Dag- | mar Carlson, local junior high school | teacher, last December. The Bate anchor man, though of spindly build in comparison with his competitors, came out of third or fourth place on the back stretch and pushed into the lead on the final straightaw to defeat the strong entries from | New York university, Harvard, Ci lumbia, and other institutions. The final basektball game for th=| church championship of the state| will be played in Middletown at the Y. M. C. A. next Saturday night at 5:30 o'clock instead of Wednesda night as at first planned. A pre- liminary game will be played be- tween the Lutheran juniors of this city and the winner of the junio league in Middletown. SPORTS SUMMARY Ascociated Pr Baseball Cleveland Dislocated shoulder | forces Lew Tonseca, American Teague bafting champion, out of Cleveland lineup indefinitely | New Brunswick, N. J. Jack Liddy. Rutgers, freshman, pitches no-hit,- no-run game to beat Lehigh freshman, 4-0. Track | Des Moines, Ja. — Seven records smashed in Drake relays; Leland beats Bracey in § 3-5 in 100; Warne barely fails in attempt to set new pole vault record at 14 feet two inch- es. Philadelphia — Simpson runs 100 i 9 at Penn relays: Harvard takes mile relay in sensational race; Hamm sets new meet broad jump record of 25 fect 4 1-4 inches. Atlant — Team honors at South- | castern A. A. U. championships 2o | to Alabama Poly: Bob Young, Geor- gie, sets meet record in mile and half mile even Foulder, Colo. — Dan Beattie, | Colorado Aggies, {osses eight pound | Biiot 6§ fect o better world's record. | ¢* ¢ M i Ay Palo Alto. Calif. anford easily ) s Washington. 96-35 T White Sulphur Springs. W, Van Ryn and Allison win Mason and Dixon doubles title. beating Lottand | Doeg, 3-6, 12-10, 7-5, 6-3. | London Games Today Toronto at Jersey City Rochester at Buffalo at Baltimore. Montreal at Reading LASTERN LEAGULE Games Yesterday New Haven 4-1, Hartford 0 Allentown 6. Albany Providenc Springficld * Tittsfield 4, Bridgeport 3 (11 innings). Bridgeport 4, Pittsficld 0. (6 innings). Standing w. 6 Hartford | Bridgeport | New Haven . Providence . Springtield Albany Allentown Pittsfield By the ames Today Hartford at New Haven. Albany at Allentown Bridgeport at Pittsfield. Providence at Springfield. Games Tomorrow Albany at Hartford. Pittsfield at Allentown. New Haven at Springfield. Providence at Bridgeport. 70 SAIL FOR EUROPE Dailey Louis B. President of Lawn Tennis Assoclation, Accompani Players on Trip. New York, April (UP)- Dailey, president of the ates Lawn Tennis association, will ail for Europe with three members of the Wightman cup team on the Louis B. United n in its matches be rinst the Lnglis bledon June 13 and Dailey plans to for the Suropean n posed open tennis was defeated tional Federation meeting. Dailey also will bledon tournament 23 to July . the Davis cup inter-zone finals and the challenge round in Paris. 14. inquire into the bitter opposition of ions to the pro- mendment which t the recent Interna reason the Winning last two | singles matches, Great Britain elim- inates Germany from Davis Cup competition ) 3 to 2, General New Haven, Conn. — First Rughy game between Yale and Harvard in nearly 60 years goes to Yale, 11-0. June The Herald Classified Ad dept. | believes in telephone service, New York —DAILY— EXPRESS 32 50 ONE 53.75 ROUND IMPORTANT BOUTS New York, April 28 (UP)— Important bouts scheduled tonight follow: Tommy Loughran vs. Ernie Schaff. | heavyweights, at Philadelphia, 10 round: Gorilla Jones vs. Bucky Lawles middleweights, at Holyoke, Mass., 10 rounds. Larry Gains vs. Roberto Roberti, | heavyweights, at Milan, Ital 10| rounds. Kid Chocolate vs. Johnny Erick- | son, featherweights, at Toronto, 10 rounds. WAY TRIP Return ticket good 30 days Drand New Latest Tspe Parlor Car Coaches Comfortably Heated—Bonded—Insured \We Guarantee Your Comfort Leave Cruwell's D 1al 2:15 . M., 5:30 P. M. nning March 16 Daily and Sunday Phone 1951 Make Reservations Early YANKEE STAGES, Inc. FIGHT TO DRAW Mexico City, April 2§ (UP)— Tommy White, s welterweight, | and Ignacio Apa of Spain fought a 10-round draw here Sunday night. The erowd thought Apa won and Dissed the decision. Try one to he convinced—Herald Classified Ad dept. 10 to direct the | wonien at Wim- | attend the Wim- | NEW HORSE PROVES A | TRACK SENSATION Buckeye Poet Causes Specula- tion in Racing Circles Lexington, Ky. April 2§ (UP)— | Buckeye Poet, Colonel Edward R. Bradley's sterling colt, was the chief topic of conversation in racing | circles here today following his vie- | tory over a crack field of western | colas in a mile race Saturday. | Buckeye Poet has been condition- | ed over Col. Bradley's private track |and is being cspecially pointed for) | the, fifty-sixth running of the Ken- tucky Derby May 17. Following a season of varicd suc- cess on castern tracks last year, Buckeye Poet, a son of T Tony and May Bird, was sent to the post {for the first time in the 1930 cam- paign on Saturday and made a show of the field on a track that was cuppy and dead. Nearly 25 lengths out of it and trailing the field for three-quarters, | Buckeye Poct, urged on by Eddie | Legere, went to the front on the | turn and won by three open lengths. There were many visitors at the Tdle Hour farm today to look over Buckeye Poet. Trainer H. J. (Dick) | Thompson said that the big colt | might go under colors once more at | Lexington, but that he would have |a good race at Louisville and then | positively start in the Derby. Buckeye Poet’s casy victory may mean the withdrawal of Dedicatc, | one of the winter book favorites. | was soundly beaten by the colt and it is understood | reliable sources that Dedicate |is a very doubtful starter as he | shows a dislike for the distance. | . F. Pritchard’s Tannery has | | from been stamped a dangerous contend- Shipping interests who opposc the Trainer A. Baker has been ng the colt around slowly and most certain to start. and Uncle Matt fell by the Saturday, leaving only buckeye Poet and Tannery as Ken- tucky representatives for the Derby. | Gallant Fox's victory in the Wood Memorial at Jamaica Saturday has |raised his stock and in the opinion of many is the horse to beat. ‘COLLEGE TEAMS FACING | HOST IPRTANT WEEK >rinceton and Dartmouth Lead List of DBascball Games of Im- portance On Schedule. York, April 28 (P—Teams |in the ern Intercollegiate Base- ball leagne today open their busiest and most important week of the son with Princeton arrayed | against Dartmouth at Princeton. { With Gunnar Hollstrom available for pitching duty, Dartmouth is | favored, but Princeton will have the incentive of a clear claim to the lead to urge itself on. Jeff Tesreau's | team fought its way back into the | thick of the pennant fight and at | the same time dimmed Columbia’s | hopes considerably by defeating the | light blue and white, 10 to 3, in New York Saturday. The rest of the week's schedule in the league will give Pennsylvania and Cornell a chance to advance their standing. Penn will entertain Columbia at Franklin field on Wed- | nesday and Yale on Saturday. Cor- nell will play Columbia in New York on Friday and Princeton in Princcton on Saturday. | As a recult of its 8 to 3 victory |over Pennsylvania in New Haven {last Saturday, Yale is leading the | league with a record of two games {won and one lost. Pennsylvania, | Dartmoutlh and Cornell each has | won and lost one game. Columbia {has won one and lost two. Prince- ton begins its scason today against Dartmouth. | | INGREASE IN PURSES ‘ Arlington Park Will Offer $613,000, a This Scason. Chicago, April | Park will offer an increase of $.000 over last |vear. and a rccord for a 30-day rac- {ing meet The international handicap tops the list with its $100,000 in added | money. The Arlington classic, $70.- 1000 added, will be the richest three- i}cunol\l test of the season. | Other events listed include the Arlington handicap. for threc year | olds and up, at a mile and a auarter, | | $55,000: stars and stripes stakes, for three vear olds and up, one mile and an cighth, $20,000, and the Arling- [ton Oaks. for three-year-old fillie one mile and an cighth, £15,000; 15 steeplechase events also will be run, cach worth $2,000. The increase in | prize moncy was made possible by | Arlington’s non-profit policy. all | money over expenses being put into purses and improvements. Arlington ,000 in purses, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, APRIL 28, 1930. GIANTS STARTING | WIN SWEEPSTAKES |GANDHI LEADERS AT SEQUIN CLUB Prat Takes Honors on Saturday and Brinley, Sunday Plenty of interest was displayed |by the members of Sequin Country club in the sweepstakes tournaments conducted Saturday and Sunday. The course was in excellent shape and the members took advantage of the |tion of a new phase of civil disobedi- fair day despite the chill breeze. ence ve resistance T, Pratt took first prize in Sat- | ists first paraded th play scoring a net 71. He |strects of the city, three camel cart 1 handicap of 18 and he trav-|filled with the cloth accompanyiy cicd the 18 holes for a gross of 90.[them. A mass meccting he J. M. W. Brinley took the honors in|and resolutions adopted condemnir the play on Sunday with a net of 73. |the government for firing on “peace He was ticd with M. Myers, DBrin-{ful citizens” in Peshawar. ley's card was 87-14-75 while that of | The ceremony ended with lig Myers was §5-12-73 |the bonfire. Appearance of the war The scores for Saturday were as|plane above caused a slight p follow lamong the women. but nothi E, B. Pr asous developed. The women cr 110-3 H. E. Myers $6-12- \hymns of sedition while t Alton Greene 87-1 F. C.|blazed Findale 91-1 A. E. Thornton | §9-15-76, C. J. Christensen 99 | Two Killed Sunday H. Frank 101-25-76, W, E. Chingan| Bombay, India, April 28 (P—Two §6-9-77, B. H. Phelps 1 \Indians were killed and three A. L. Thalheimer 98-2 W. C.|wounded in Madras Sunday, when H. C. Blakeslee | Brtish police opened fire upon an Geer 98-15-50, C.|unruly mob. The rioters stoncd the §1, L. A. Horton | police, injuring both commissioner 101-20-81, P. Fellows 119-28-81, |and his deputy, and cthe Orders J. M. W. Drinley 95-14-81, Dr. W.|to disperse were answered —with H. Stockwell 96-14-S2, W E. Chapin |more stones and finally the police [105-15-85, 1. Wessels 103-14-59 and |opened fire. H. O. Converse 112-20-92 | Elsewhere in India therc The for Sunday were as|weck-end of comparative quict, follow {which was considered by some ob- servers as the lull before the storm A 8-77,|with vdevotees to capture what b ¥ arc the government salt pans at Dharasana continued to preach his doctrine of non-violence, and to . deplore the recant rioting at Chitta- Clingan 93-13-50, T. L.|gong, Peshawar, and Madras. 103-22-81, W. A. Farrcll| At Simla, summer capital, Viceroy W. L. Chapin 102-18-§4, |Lord Irwin issued an important -86 and C. |statement in connection with re-in- |voking thc press censorship laws of 11910 for suppression of alarmist n [tive papers, which he conside |spread rumors and keep the people [in a state of ferment. ays Resistance Stronger The letter said in part: “Civil di {obedience, whatever may have besa the professed aim of those who launched it. is rapidly developing as jall reasonable men foresaw; into violent resistance to constituted au- [ thority Turther he said: “The spirit Homers—Jackson, Giants. 4. |revolution, fostered by civil disobedi- Stolen bases—P, Waner, Pirates, 3. | €hce, now is beginning to emerge in American Ticaguc dangerous form.” Bxplaining then Batting—Simmons, Athlet X |his move for supervision of matter Runs—Rice, Senators; Bishop, |Printed in the native press, ths Athletics, 10. tatement concluded with an appes Runs batted |to the morc sober classes to “resist leties, 11. {the forces of anaichy.” Hits— Myer, i | Of his impending move Gandhi Doubles—Manush, eaid: “Wo have been playing & |child’s game so far, but we are go- to be serious when 1 make the ttack on Dharasana. 1 shall in- vite men to accompany me, for t T0 UPSET DOPE (Continued from Page 10) Planes Hover Nearby During Geremony—Two More Killed Karachi, India, April 28 (P While a British war plane hovered overhead 8,000 Indian nationalist today burned a pile of forelgn mad: cloth fifteen feet high in inaugur: O'Doul, 1t Kieln, 'rt Whitney, Hurst, 1b Friberg, 2b Thevenow, ss Davls, ¢ ' .. Willoughby, p Collins, p Benge, 1 Williams, x Milligan, p Gamm. xx 3b. . HomouoUALARaG cooncoamummIm alccsscccscuuon olocsscoarruunm Totals was Maguire, Cronni, Grimes, p Totals 3 x—Batted for Benge in Batted for Milligan in 9th. Philadelphia 010 100 Boston 050 015 Two base hits: Maranville, Grimes, Klein. Three base hit: Welsh Home run: Hurst. Double play: Maran ville, Maguire and Neun. Bases on balle: Oft 'Willoughby 2, Collins Grimes. Struck out: By Collins 1, Milligan 1, Grimes 3. pitcher: Willough tt 90-18-71, Do 0— 4 Neun, T T % C. PITTSBURGH 52 Sn e o g H. Sherwood . Waner, Comorosk Bartell, sy Engle, 3b Hargreaves, ¢ French, p swetonic, p in was scorces H auman 105-2 Trinley 8-14- g o Tofuls . J. Crouden Engli Blair, 5b Bell, 5b Cuyler, rf Wilson, ct D. Taylor. Grimm, 1b Hartnett, ¢ Beck, 2 . Bush, p Nelsan, p Shealy. p Horneby, x Z. Taylor, xx . Tolson. xsx Osborne, p Heathcote, J. W 110 Wk Arnold 1t x33x (Tncluding games of April 27) By the Associated Pres National Leazuc Batting—P. Waner, Pirates, Runs—Hafey, Cards, 12 Runs batted in—Tisher Hits—Fisher, Cards, Doubles—Fisher, Cards Triples—Suhr, Pirate blisesccsccomeonecask Totals x—Batted for Blal xx—Batted for sxx—Batted for Sheal sxxx—Batted for Osb Pittsburgh Chicago Two baso hits: Grantham, Comorosis base hit: Subr. Home runs: Flagstead, | Heathcote. Doublo play: French to llar greaves to Sulr. Bases on balla Off Bush 2, Nelson 2. French 6. Struck out By Bush 1son 4, Irench 3, Shealy | 1.” Swetonic 3. Winning pit French, | Losing pitcher: Bush. i YESTERDAY'S STARS R | 529 Cards, 16. Flagstead. i Bartell. Tie:s Hargreaves, 6. of n—Simmons, Ath Senator: . N 3rov By the Ascoclated Press. 3 Brog! Andy Reese, Glants — Hit home run with bases filled as Giants : | Louis; Goslin, Senators trounced Dodgers, 10-4. Homers — Simmons, 6 iples—O'Rourke, Schulte, Athl HOLD HUGE FIRE al hatma Gandhi himself, marching | | but not in the manner of Chittagong or Peshawar. Those disorders de-| layed independence.” f Today was Gandhi's day of silence | during which he speaks no word | whatsoever, he was believed to be | meditating another letter to Vice- Iroy Lord Irwin, which would mak clear further aims of his civil dis- obedience movement. Holds Special Meeting At Ambheti yesterday he held | special meeting in commemoratior: |of the death of Vithal Das, one of | his volunteers who was lilled by a| |falling palm tree he was cutting | down under his master's orders with the idea of thus fighting liquor | manufacture in India. | The correspondent to the London Daily Mail last night transmitted a ch to his paper from Alla bad which said that women ther under pleadings by Mrs. Jawaharlal chru not to use foreign made cloth toolk off their foreign made raiment | and flung it into the strects. PLANET ‘X’ COMET, ASTRONOMER $AYS Chicago Scientist Says Body!| Will Disappear Shortly April 23 (P—The astral out of the skies by the Lowell ervatory at Flagstaff, | Ariz., is not a planct. in the opinion of Dr. William D. MacMillan, pro- fessor of t astronomy at the University of Chicago, but a comet that countless cons azo may | have been a part of another solar| system. Will Disappear Shortly The heralded ninth MacMillan belicve within a few yea visible again untl D. stronomers in gencral have had the fecling that the ‘Planet X.' though highly interesting. is not a planct and has no connection with | Lowell’s prediction.” the astronomer said, referring to th cfore t of a planet made by the late Perci- {val Lowell, of Harvard university | “Its orbit would scem to justify that feeling.” he continued. “Esti- I mates of its size have been on the assumption that is solid and would have such reflecting power solids have. But actually there |no way of measuring its density. 1f it is a comet, as it seems to be, then it may be a swarm of fragments |and its volume much larger than that of the earth.” | Accuratc Estimate Difficult The threc positions of the astral body on its orbit so far recorded. Dr. MacMillan said. arc insufficient to insurc accuracy, but he described the orbit as an extremely eclongate:d clipse, which would indicate it is a comet, of an unusual type. Should the orbit prove hyperbolic |instead of eliptical, Dr. MacMillan said ' will never return to th solar system and will be the such ever seen. USl’ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS | Chicago, body ferreted o a will year ot b and the is |about three &chool | Ramsey, Keaveney Transferred To Bridgeport Store James J. Keaveny of Lincoln street has been transferred to ons of the Bridgepert stores of the Schulte Cigar ¢ ain, taking up his new duties to J e has been em- ployed at the New Britain store for rs with the excep- tion of a short term in Bridgeport about a year ago. Officials of the company made the change at the request of Mr. Kea- veny, who wishes to be with his parents who live in Bridgeport. H is a brother of Dr. John F. Keaven) and is well known in this city. His place will be taken by Wil liam Mechan of 51 Buell street \VO]'CES?C:_P;SMI' Dies Af@er Illness of Year April 28 FP— Boland, 60, pastor of church of the Sacred Heart, die i church rectory more than ttended the first of graduated 390 an’ entered the Grand Seminary in Mon- treal to compl his theological ining. He ordained to the hood on Christmas Day, 189. Father Boland served as curate it John's church in Utica, N. Y. at St Paul's and St. Mi- Springfield, H hes in Bostor ficld, Holyok« came to Wor- nd chure! cb 3lackston hedral, E 1 chur West Fitchburg, G and Southboro. Hz¢ as pastor in 1 church The schedule conference conducted Nurse ciation will be as follows: Tuesday, 47 Lllis s volunteer assi Schupack; nurses Mrs. Anna Ramsc Alderman, for well the Visit- the week the by for . Northen1 Mrs. Lid n attend. Mrs. Mii- a ward ance, dred reet; vol- 'lorence: Bent nurses in attendance, Mrs. Anna msey, Miss Anna Misk Thursday, Washington school: vol unteer Harold Tayn- tor, Mrs. attendan Marie Szet Friday, ks teer t street school: volun- Mrs. E. M. Hayden: tendance, Mrs. Anne Miss Anna O'Connell. A special meetinz of the board of dircctors of the Visiting Nurse as- sociation, will be held at the homu of Mrs. Rufus N. Hemenway, 111 Lexingion street, on Wednesday at o'clock. ROSENBLOOM FAVORED New York, April 25 (UP)—Maxie senbloom, New York light heavy cight, was a 7 to 5 favorite today to defeat Larry Johnson, Chicago negro, in their 10-round return bout at Madison Square Garden Wedne: day night. In their previous mee* in Rosenbloom won when he claimed & foul. 5 a, nurses in (7 HOUSES BURNED | INMANY TOWNS and SNIR! MY HAND, THROWING UP i | hen houses. | ner home of Lowell destroye by de- nd Drac the ¢ adjoining ot ros timber- of the | club | of f cou Count ueed hed I started | into a| year old | Airplane Killing Adam Comorosky, Pirates — | | calinly. We should be ready to d 9-5. | nine hits scattered, pounded out Goose Goslin, Senators — Hit Babe Ruth hits second homer of | | Boston, April 25 (UP) — Seven- IN[;REASED IN[;[]ME.”:.] others werc damaged, and ! | Kennebunk, Me,, and Plymouth, | occurred were Billerica, Hinghan, 4 | mouth, N. H., Tyngsboro and Sau- Boston, April 28.—(UP)—The | Billerica. where nine summer cot- net income of $1,178,552, compar- | four squarc miles of timber and Saturda | town fire fighters in checking the | press tro fic agzregatifg $725.918 in | 41q 500 ne ort it rosent b improy aintenance of way and In Tyngsboro, the sum ton and Maine earned a net income | Local firemen, auvgmented included a deduction in operating | harn and destruction £185.122 and a decline in passenger djoining the . including a saving of §12 when an A theft-procf display rack has | QO 00 HOO - {0V LT e SOV NEARLY BROKE ARM WITH TTHAT ML BoTTLE 4 00 001 \T JIsT ComeS NATRUL T' THRow UP MY GUARD WHEN YOUR FELLERS MAWE AGANST “OU. 7 MOTHERS GET SWING AT ME - BuT, TO You~ GOSH T SHOULDA NEVER PERTECTID MYSELF GRA. By WILLIAMS WELL -UH- EXCUSE g ME FER PERTECIN MYSELF,MA ~ BUT HINDA A JRrwiLliame, €©1330 BY NEA SERVICE, ING. 428 Vic Sorrell, Tigers — Gave up only | Homers P : SRt Beaf Tl | Genrig, Yan i » |authorities will laugh at us if I tak SloTen Hands i Sovaral oS {women with me, but will sufier Pounded out two singles and two doubles to aid Pirates whip Cubs, | Burleigh Grimes, Braves — Mak- | OUT OUR WAY Ing first start of year, kept Phils' | | double that scored two runs, | won 13 | homer, double and single as Wash- w d[ d Burned Over i B Y ington beat A's. 11 | 00 fl]] um Vel ]l] a, i o State and Maine Territory | mer cottages, werc destroyed, sev- | thousands of acres of woodland were swept by fires between West : | Mass., yosterday. Boston and Maine Statement| otner communities in whien res S[]OWS Abnormal Expense | Lowell, Tewksbury, Lexington, Bed- | ford, Woburn, Saxonville, Ports- | gus. 7 D€ 1™ The most disastrous blaze was in Boston and Maine railroad in the first three months of 1930 carned a | tages along the Shawshcen river | were levelled. The fire blackened ed with $1,331,081 in the first quar- |, "jand, Firemen of 11 neigh- ter of last year, it was announced | jyoring communities cooperated with | This resalt, which included a re- | g cession in freight, passenger and ex- rwo dwellings, thres operatir “evenue, included also con- | Which swept 20 acres of swamp fand | tinued ormal cxpenditures for | iy Saugus. &tructu of Dr. J. Arthur Gaer For the month of March, the Bos- | valued at $5.000. was of $436,476, compared with $534.559 | tachments from Lowell in the same month last year. This | fought to prevent los revenues of $40 77 with falling | woodland. off in freight traffic zating Several hundred & revenues ing 81 9. Oper- smonth, N, IT N expenses were burne in the transportation account. | pine tre —— — children. been patented for lead pencils and other small articles in stores. helps out Ierald The telephone Classified advertising. SALESMAN SAM MY LANDLADY WON'T STaND FOR ANY NOISE — SHE'S THAT Fussy! Setting a Trap for Farbar WHATS “THE. 1DEA OF CRAWLIN' Up TH' STAIRS WITH YOUR. SHOES OFE 2, GUESS 't Too LaTe! | ; WELL,WHEN | TOOK MY ROOM OMIN' NOW ' @& SAID YOU'D ALLOW NO CATS, D0G'S, PIANOS SAXOPHONES, OR KIDs, AN’ SINCE THEN (Ve BOUGHT THESE NEW AND THEN SQUEAK Qs> ~ 2 24/C1930 Y NEA SERVICE. INC. mga, . 5. PAT.OFF. JUST & uTrLe!