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Speaking’ of Sports e_— The baseball leagu are producing races this year. cu in unusually interesting is in the throes of a hot with the Stanley Rule team still on the heels of the Corbins and keep- ing the fgns on edge. The City league is even more of a scramble, and it looks as if any one of the first four teams might win soft ball of As for monopoly leagt> team is hat and h Matt Int has been broken up ctual for ith the churches. which Industrial ~ soft knocked off last Screw an t thereby throw into And the [Fraternai the specta been ball the loop, night by Corbin league was confusion league is see If tail-enders leading the entire procession in the second half —this strangely reversing team ing the was be- MORGAN DOES BIT FOR POOR INDIANS Fills Fonseca’s Shoes for Mis- Tortune-Struck Cleveland Cleveland, July 26 gan of the Indians share to ward blows have this year This sedson Morgan found Belf forced to substitute for Fonseca, first baseman, who (#—FEd Mor- has done the numerous en on the team him- Lew last ED MORGAN r led the Am Fonseca club rican league in hit- compelled to to nurse a broken of hit- | Day, Morgan was and with Urban leading the club in runs Morgan is another of versity boys He three year: entering the southern he ns uni- base- ST, JOHNS get some firs the 1328 Eeason Morgan hase experience as born in Cairo, Ill, He bats and throws six foot 180 EASTERN WOMAN HOLDS SINGLES TITLE IN ESSEX Marjorie Morrill Defeats Other Mar- jorle From Santa Monica Masz, Jul Ma 3 s meet today in the East-west this city | The Industrial cir- | badtle, | nd that | cond place and | South | has | e of the | his | e o ey NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, JULY 26, 1930 Basebzfl Standing AMERICA. | | | ‘ Gamgs Yesterday | | Philadelphia’l4, Cleveland 1. | | Chicago 6, Washington ew York 14, Detroit Louis 6, Boston 3 | Standinz | W 65 3 670 | 3 Philadelphia Washington New York Chicago Cleveland Detroit $t. Louis Boston Games Today Washington at Chicago, Philadelphia at Cleveland New York at Detroit. Boston at St. Loui Games Tomorrow I Washington at Chicago | Philadelphia at Cleveland | | New York at Detroit. | Boston at St. Louis. | NATIONAL LEAGUE { Games Yesterday New York 3, Pittsburgh 1. Boston 5, Louis 4 | Brooklyn 7. Cincinnati 2 | Chicago 9, Philadelphia 5 | 2 = Standinz Brooklyn Chicago | New York | St. Louis Boston | Pittsburgh ‘4:mw|nnaz\ . | | St. Louis at Boston, 2 Cincinnati at Brooklyn, Pittsburgh at New York Chicago at Philadelphia. | Games Tomorrow | St. Louis at Boston Chicago at Cincinnati Philadelphia at Brooklyn | Pittsburgh at New York. | INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Games Yesterday | Jersey City 4. Newark 1 | Reading 7-6. Baltimore 5-12 | Montreal 5. Toronto 4 1 Rochester 18, Buffalo 11, | Standinz w Roc! 64 Baltimore ....... 61 | Toronto Montreal BALer Jersey City at Baltimore Newark at Reading. Montreal at Rochester. Buffalo at Toronto. | Springs | Allento Standing ) W, Bridgeport ..... 17 Springfield 14 Allentown 12 Albany Games Today Springfield at Albany Bridgeport at Allentown. (Both night games). LOSES 10 SOUTH CHURCH Church League Leaders Win | Again—St. Matis Keep Pace | | | ¢ Inter-Church League South Cong. Matth Trinity M First Lutheran Memo. Baptist First Baptist John's Lu Mark's ed, Beth St 154 finals of the women's doubles of the | Essex Country club’s invitation ten- nis tourney with an eastern wom an holding the les title for the first time since 1924 The defending champions. Miss Edith Cross and Mrs. L. A. Har- per. San Francisco, top seeded, play Virginia Hilleary, Philadelphia, and Dorothy Andrus, Stamford, (onn. The casterners were seeded second. Marjorie Morrill, Dedham, rank- eleventh nationally, won the les title vesterday from Marjor- adman, Santa Monica, Cal. The t easterner to win before the cign of western women began was Leslie Bancroft, the present Mrs. Carl Aeschlimann, in 1924 In the finals of the mixed doubles, Miss Gladman and Clifford Sutt New Orleans, will meet Miss Cross and Maurice Bayon, New Orleans NEW YORK EXPRESS " Four Times Daily A OUND 50 ONE Kt Return Ticket Good 30 Dass Brand New Latest Type Parlor Car Coaches Deep upholstery, air cushions, inside baggage compartments, electric fans. iee water, and card tables. No finer bullt. We gunrantee your comfort. Leave Crowell's Drug Store 77 West Main St. PM Running Time 41, Hours Thone 1951 Make Reservations Early Bonded and Insured YANKEE STAGES, Inc. inning by in- ion, the South nding out runs ning in relentless fas (ongregational h pre- served its lead in the Inter-Church baseball league by dropping the St John's German Lutherans, 9 to 3, at Willow Brook last evening and thereby r ries to four. Morey losers to | four hits and got upport, the South church crrors playing no part in the scoring. Stabert was never hit hard, but winners, despite | some sloppy base running, kept after him persistent d profited by the St. John errors to the fullest extent. | Morey beat out a hit to start the game, Parker was safe when H. Ziegler dropped his fly, and Bell | planted a double in center fiéld. Kul- | | man led off for the St. John's with | |a home run and Ray Ziegler walk-| | ed, but there the losers' attack was | | stopped with a thoroughness which | [lasted until the sixth inning. Mean- | | while, failing to score only in the third, the Congregationalists grad- ually built up a lead which could | not be overcome. The final St John gun came on Kulman's second hit, Rby Ziegler's surprising triple along the left field foul line, and H. Ziegler's sacrifice fly. Bomba, Spring, and Kulman led the hitters with three safe ones each, and Spring scored three times for his team. A freak catch by |'Parker was a fielding feature, while | | Kulman played a flne game for the | Lutherans, making several nice | catches and throws. The lineups and | score by inning: | South Cong— | ef: Bell, Barta, | Stelma, Jacobi, | Merza, St. John' r, ¢; H. Z chu held Morey, 1b; rf; p: Parker, Romba, If; | Spring. 3b; ofi R Kaminsk Kulman, zler, 2h Zieg- ‘!r. 1b; | Peterson, ss; Bradlau, if; Wietske, i, Leupold, rf; S uth Cong. ert, p 0 111 2—9 10 3| | hind and | score by innings: St. Matthew's Germa® Lutheran— Neuman, 1f; G" | John's .....100 002 0—3 3| St. Matts Hang On | The St. Matthew's German Luth- | crans kept within striking distance | of first place when they made comeback against the Swedish Beth. | any team, ended their two-game | losing streak, and pounded out a| 16 to 2 victory in ‘the late innings. The Bethany outfit, after several for- feitures, made a desperate effort to beat the Germans and had a full team on hand but gradually fell be. collapsed in the last two St. 4 stanzas. Eddie and Goody Preisser count- ed for the champions in the first frame, h(,t the Bethany worked “Tough#Guy"” Anderson around in the same frame and Ken Wester- gren in the second, tying thing up. But successive wallops by L. Ne man. Goody and Billy Preisser. and W. Neuman gave the St. Matts a 6-2 lead in the third and in the sixth they drove Lindgren from the box th five counters. Seaburg’ pitched the final inning and was found for five more, but by this time the Swe- dish defense had gone to pieces and was betraying its pitchers. It was | the 11th consecutive Bethany de- feat Eddie Pre topped the St. scoring three ru er and Louis Neuman Matt attack. each | The Ine-ups and ’ E. Preisser, 2b: L. Preisser, 1b: W. Preisser, p; Neumann, 3b; R. Fink, cf; Linn M W G Steege, ss: O. Steege, rf. Swedish Bethany — B. Anderson, 3b-c: Lindgren, p-lf; Seaburg, If-p; A. Westergren, 2b; K. Westergren, cf: D. Johnson. 1b; H. Carlson, s; Squillacjote, c-3b: Ben St. Matts 204 0 Swed. Beth S110 0000— 2 First Lutherans Cop Errorless ball in the field enabled hold on the @irst division when they took the measure of the Memorial Baptists by 7-1. H. Ziel was in fine fettle for the losers but four errors by his mates and a fifth by himself wrecked his cause and made the five Lutheran hits fatal. Harry Strom- | quist worked for the Lutherans and granted a mere three bingles, pitch- | ing shutout ball until the last canto. The#winners went about their task in workmanlike fashion, scoring in four of their six turns-at bat and ending with a three-run rally in the sixth. Hultberg, Frisk, Nelson, Bengtson and Efickson made their hits. Gudat, Olson and Elmer Law- son got the Baptist safeties. The line-ups and score by innings: Memorial Baptist Steinberg, Gudat, 2b; H. Ziel Malone, Olson, cf; Leno, If; Luskus, rf Lawson, c: C. 1 son, 1b. . First Lutherans — Hultberg. ¢ Frisk. ss; Nelson, 3b; Stromquist. p A. Foberg. 1b; E. Johnson. If Bengtson, 2b; Erickson. cf; C. Fo- berg. Tf. Mem. Bapt First Luth 101 Games Monday eading South church the First Baptists ina double header on Diamond No. 2 on Monday night. Players of both teams are requested to make special | efforts to be on hand early in order | that both games may be played be- fore darkness interferes. On the first diamond the St. John's Lutherans will attempt to stop the Trinity Methodists, who, are one of the three contenders for the championship, and the Memorial Baptists will en- gage the Swedish Bethany team “in the lots.” ATHLETICS DRAW AWAY FROM FOES Page ) 000 0001—1 3 5 5 203x—17 0 (Continued from Preceding |6 to 4 Two base hits base hits: Nelson By Benge 3. Moss Benge 3, her Klein. Three ruck out @ balls: Off Nel ning Nelson Benge. E | 0 V. H PO A Adan Frisch Bottomley, Hafey, 1t Rlades, rf Mancuso, © 3 3 il 1 1 | 1 | | style | Gascos had Rt Louis « Two base hits: T - bourg. Three base hit: Gelb Homa run: Blades. Bases on balle: Off R Sherdel 3. Struck out 3. st uthit | sparkle in baseball, because he has | top of the National league. At mid- ONE-HIT GAME “MAKES” CLARK William Watson Ciark, Brooklyn hurler, recenily turnedj in the |the First Lutherans to clinch their | Pitched game of the season, by setting down the Pittsburgh one hit. Brooklyn, July 26, () — Shaded * subsequent shut-out victory the erratic brilliance of other “as galled the best pitched game f the year, and it was recalled Robins, for a time it looked as. Yeitasan 9 though William Watson Clark never ‘\m" 01‘"', Tk pe ‘"a"“;d G }frm LI could convince the public, that he | ponon>t I38Ue In the mumber of also shone for Brooklyn LG Tl e And Clark has tried o e AN Tecors Aas was greater than that of Vance His s large by hard Dozey) finished with farming in Mississippi and he knows that a successful big league career will be insurance that he will remain so Clark’s pitching bas done much this season to put and keep Wilbert Robinson’s band of eccentrics at the neasure on he ecord to the ever: is due in a fact that he work batter while in there. It has an inclination to let up, he has a memory of the Mississippi River rising up and ruin- ing his father's 1 acre cotton farm in Mississipp his one example tions of the far! spur him on to & playgr. Clark’s baseball career began with the Mississippi University, where he won 32 g pitched two ties and lost four during four years. Clark ove feet tall weighs around 180 pounds. He born at St. Joseph, La., in 19 season he had won 11 losing 7 But the crowd could hardly see a work-a-day left-hander, with Her- man, Bissonette, Wright and Lopez playing as they Clark, however, did much to change that in one short afternoon at Ebbetts field. Only 28 Pirates faced him in a regulation nine in- ning game, and but one of them got a hit. PARTYKA CLOUTS RULERS games while of the tribula- d work as a ball were es. was 4. TO VICTORY OVER GASCOS Hits Home Run in Eighth Inning to Decide Issue—Also Connects for Circuit Drive in Second — Victory Keeps Stanley Team in Fight for Industrial League Title—Fielders Give Pitchers Wonderful Support —Many Long Distance Hits—Details of Game. With the score ti one man on and two outs, “Pete” Partyka strode to the plate and clouted of Klopp's shoots clear cross the road down the right field line to give the Stanley Rule team a victory over the Gascos last evening at Walnut Hill park. It was ting climax to a beautiful battle d kept the Rulers in the fight for the Tndustrial league cha nship. Honors must be given for the splen- did Rule shop victory to Partyka whose trusty bat sent two circuit clouts screaming out to the road he game was witnessed by a rge crowd and was one of the best secn at the park this year. Klopp and Spencer pitched sensational ball and were given extraordinary sup- port by their teammates. The fans were treated to all kinds of beauti- ful defensive work as teams strove hard to capture t It is almost impossible te n any individual star as every player | into the trees for a played headsup baseb pecially | singled, scoring Noonan in the pinches. the score. Partyka then The lead changed h on num-|games with his s crous occasions during battle. | of the day, With the score 4 to 3 in the eighth | The ficlding and the tail end of the Stafiley Ruie marvelous. In th batting order up, all hopes for the | McCormick, Gasco s Rulers appeared lost as Klopp was | thrilled the crowd rowing down his opponents in gr catches, one a ba but Partgka pulled a “Frank drive over sccond Merriwell” and saved the day. The | proved tobe a whol= infi two outs this inning f. accepting eight none out “Mickey" without an error. He r Noonan raised a high fly to left.|wide to knock dow Dujack got under the ball but it proved to be a s hit the tree and this was the signal | the Gascos for a great rally that ended at play tory. Some people classed Noonan nces. Howeve hit break for the Rulers k team they must be given full credit e their untiring efforts in face of dis-| The brilliant couraging odds ame came in The first run 6f the game came in | Francis Sheehan — & d in the eighth. the second inning when Par connected for the first of his ho runs. It was a beautitul clout tween center and right up the score for the Gascos in th t of the third when he lofted the for a Kopec Gascos ulers took a count be- Two plac The R in'the hits by o1 2nd Sheehan ahead. 2 to 1 to 2 lead twice on Arg ormick was hit by a pitch and went to second on a pass bal | Klopp dropped a hit into right field McCormick scor lopp scored on Kopec's long single to center. The big rally of the Rulers in t was very unexpected. Wendrosk and Argosy. heavy hi were easy outs. Noonan him, lofted a e el with t to ne fly the and when Vi s of each worked for fieldin ugEin cient to | and | Klopp tied | ciashed a terrific drive over center field for an apparent home run Jarvis ran madly after the ball and made a perfect peg to Darrow. lie in turn hurled the ball on a straight line to Noona ching Sheehan | as he slid into home plate | a beautiful piece of work | Srnie” Klopp, although ing pitched. had a slight | Bpencer. Up to the |allowed but four hits. his share at the bat and a single. Spencer strong gamn the pi sengational support many occasions likening to the sphere fielders ‘ The zumm | it was the edge on Tatal BonDEd He also dil hitting a homer pitched a hes but his wed hin The Gascos took 1l and drove line to the mer 105- on a his fast Duj Kope« I\ Sheeha Kiathka, 1 Barnes, extell Wosack | Flelae Totals Tervis, 1t Darrow, s Wendroski, | Arsosy, 1b 2 { Associated P White S | nolds, |American Motors Used In Big German Plane | New York, July (UP) | representing the Penn A | Philadelphia the Sou Beat club Quiney, IIl., sailed | on t d for the i ational rowing federation icnships at Lieges, Belgium 16 and Penn A United 2ces w in t of Side to- will in the eigl h the Illinois crew > fou-oared eve contest- PAWNE FAST BERLIN ‘The Pawnee A. C. baseball team will fast East Berlin nine mond No. 2 at Willow Brook smorrow afternoon at 2:3 Next Sunday the T ces | are scheduled to play the Ne ain Blues, park c'clock Wi He returned to his old home baser ball town last vear, and the sceney in St. Louis. week he hit a home ryn Veteran Shortstop Will Be Given 5, frs. in o sears (possioly dg- Numerous Gifts S home run today ether “vest pocket” left pull the fans to bit (Captain Walter Maran will Rat re f v games to come eran of 13 | the f t e Ra Boston, July 26.——The : yvear-old Peter Pan of baseball bit Maranville ille) grizzled v rtstop play, today An automobile urs chest of silver wait his ap- presentatio and other gifts before the CONNECTICUT LADS STAY IN SHENEGOSSETT BATTLE On e Braves-Cardir Knot-ho Marston Trophy—Two Rounds Scheduled advance For Today 1ad prove ringtield ght tation golf tou gland league. His was on a September day orous nd Cha The Rabbit thout a slipup. Has Ups and Downs with ce in andled 12 and ago in the world mai Hank Gowdy. other player of n year aves were ober were s against th 8 world series. WE HAVE NOT CLOSED Belvidere Golf School WELLS STREET NEAR NORMAL SCHOOL Improve Your Game! Practice Wood or Iron Shots Open from 8 A. M. to 9 P. M. Plenty of Tees at Moderate Fees OUT OUR WAY i AWFUL FE TIMES BEIN' SO HARD,, THEY PUT THAT BuneH O Bosses BACK TO WoRH wWiTH TH REST | ' WORK AN' KEEP FROM* 0 US ~ BUT THEY'RE TRYIN' AFFECT THEIR SOCIAL STANDIN, 84 HANGIN' AROUND TH' OFFICE EVERY CHANCE THEY GET , SO0 WE WONT FORGET THey'RE By WILLIAMS "MHER RUININ' ALL THER, SUNDAY CLOES, TRYIN LOOKIN' LIKE WORKIN' MEN, BUT ITLL DO 'EM SOME GOOD ,\F 1T STAYS SLACK LONG ENOLGH — HEY MIGHT LEARN HARD NOT T LET 1T BOSSES - TRWiLLiAus, ©1330 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. SALESMAN SAM WHY YOU LovE-~SICK NINNY ! KITTY'S ONLY BEEN GONE HALE A DAY ON HER TWO WEEK'S f VAcaTIoN! WRITE HER A LeTTer! e THERE GOES ANOTHER TeAr | "4 SO CHOKED UP| CAN Har NoPe" TUAT Wol'T 00! ('™ GOoNNA “TELEGRAPH! By SMALL (X AN BE SURE HOSE LAST YTHREE /X \WORDS ARE UNDER LINED!! see?/ 7