Newspaper Page Text
sUNDAY, SEPTEMBER: 2, 1934.
[Union Point Again Beats ‘Leftovers’, 5-4
Hich Shoals And Athens Tie For Free State Loop Lead; Hull Beats Arp
L TEAM VIGTOR
| (PPER OISION
FOMMMLLER LEABUE
thens, Carithers -Play
Contest Over Next
Week, Report °
gigh Shouls went nto & tie jozi
« place in the “B divlsion‘ 0
o Free State league yesterday in
final league games when t]"ley
pely routed Jeffersom by &
to 5 score while the Athens-Ca-,
ihers game ended” in an Argnc
ont after three full innings had
en completed. .
The Athens and ' Carithers con-|
st will be: plaved over at an eaflyl
i and should Athens win they
oid take’ the “BY - group, . but|
oud they they happen to lose the
ampionship of that division
ould goto ‘High Shoals. Hull
on the *A™ division in both halfs.
Other contests in the league Hull
at Arp 5 to'2'in a game that de-
Jed the championship of the §ec
-4 half of the “A” league; Nich
wn swamped Princeton 18 to 2;
rawford won from Commerce: onl
forfeit when the last mentioned
am failed to show up for the
ntest and ‘Sanford win * their
neduled game from Brockton by
forfeit as the Brockton team has
ithdrawn from the league.
Thi« paper printed Friday that
ferson lost to Commerce in theiy
nursday’s game., However it was
n error-on the part of the writer
¢ the Jefferson nine edged out
ommerce, by, a 4 to 2 score.
The feature. of the Huil-Arp
ntest. won by the first mention
i, was the: excellent twirling of
stee Dudley, who pitched two-hit
all after o bad start in the first
vo frames when the Arp players
ecured 5 hits. Dudley was in rare
rm and had the balls just oppo
ite from where the Arp batters
wung. The 12-hit Hull attack
s very evenly divided, -while
ewell, with -3 for 4 did the best
atting for the losers. This game
s one of the best of the entire
eason.
The fast moving High - Shoals
jam their way ‘during the “entire
ontest with Jefferson and all of
he High Shoals’ batters fattened
heir batting averages no litle.
The Athens-Carithers game was
lose until the argument occurred.
obert Mahle was on the mound
or the locals.
The boxX score:
HULL— ab. r. !
p BIVaRt, Cu. v »g Wedd B & B
. JOhNSOR, A v 2l sdai o B 0
CBryant . omn sca el s O
BOmPSonN, .. 2D ruis ke v 2ot T 8
AL P s dah b s leadn @ R B
RILON; 8B vont oe os ginaiclh Bt o
felton, Of vy s svids s el T N
romer, Ihtests. ‘s i anettl 4 8
NAEY, P wawliaiet ob Wit B Bl G 4
Totals! .J¢t 05l S v B 8 D
i
ARP— ab. r. h.
fason, 88 20205, ial g W
slams, U3B 20 L ML e
ewell, T~ s i e
ole, cf b e osl s e
BEANS, ¢ LNy Ll e N N
frlay, It 00T OU 1
V. Mason, 2b .. ov auiilne BN
Ay, db L. e s L. o
Fump, XL . s v R
er, 1b ~ oL e
WPID, Be +iiiga e i ol
Botals . o e w 8 0 8
OLITICAL ASPIRANTS
SPEAK—OF SPORTS
Continued From Page Four)
EiWeen t} two schools.
[ w playing first base that
f€ar. Redfern. was pitching for
eorgia nd . Lafette for Tech
here were two men on base, one
0 second and the other on third,
here wor, tWwo outs The Tech
PUer hit the, ball betweer first
Jas ud e pitcher, Redfern
icked up the bafy and threw it to
| Standing on the base
th ho et, Thinking the man
¥ i lled the hall to the
i ‘owever, the arbirter call
it} le and the Tech man
ed, his run turned out
t i ling margin. Quite
fussed but neither the
Georgia players, or
BIE of ‘ed me if T had my
~‘ f > 4SO a member of the
At won all bhut two
one and tying one,
" € dropped was ta
The Georgia bitchers pitch
s N for fifty odd in
10Zs the Mercer game and
pEn hed twenty eieht innings
3_' n following the de
g " Wag the best pitch
k. eor He hadqd per
t L favorite trick of
y *© 1o walk the first
_ the inning and
K. the €Xt three bhatters
bk % almost perfect con
| 1 ind Derrick, who
: 18¢ played proses-
E vith the Philadel
p - : ""K‘\“' fn"‘
e Odzson plaved on the
E ‘eanw Ch is considered by
1 aledt Ceorgia ever
g M base. Cobb played in
Skeet Club to Hold
Regular Sheot This
Afterncon at 4:30
The Athens. Gun club will
hold the regular shoot this aft
ernoon, starting at abour 4:30
o’clock according to a recent
announcement made by Joe
Myers, secretary of the club.
Any one who wisheg to watch
the memberg shoot ig, invited to
do so and usually a large crowd
of spectators are present to
wateh each shoot. :
A large crowd of members
are also expected to be pres
ent and take part in the shoot.
It is possible that wisitors from.
severa] near-by towns will be
present also. 4
Ross and McLarnin
In Good Condition
For Thursday Night
Associated Press Sports Writer.
' By FOSTER HAILEY .
NEW YORK.—(£)—The impres
sion was growing ‘in fistic circles
Saturday night that Barney Ross
ig in for the fight of his life in de
fending his welterweight title
against slugging Jimmy McLarnin,
the man from whom he won it, in
Madison Square Garden bowl
Thursday night.
The baby-faced - Celt from the
coast has never looke<d better than
he has the last few days in train
ing at his Orangeburg, N. J., camp
and the weights—evidence, super
stition and actual—all are on his
side. .
MecLarnin has .never failed to
turn the tables on nay man who
ever licked -him; "he will have
from six to nine pounds advan
tage in weight and he will fight
Ross in a ring where no champion
vet has successfully defended his
title. 1
Two or three days ago Yyou
could get 7 to 5 if you were a Mc-
Larnin backer but Saturday night
most of the big layers were offer
ing no better than 5 to 6 and take
yvour choice. It was believed the
fight would be even money at the
ringside. \
Both boxers put in vigorous day
of training, Jimmy at Orangeburg
and the champion at his Catskill
Mountain retreat near Ferndale,
N. ¥
McLarnin went five fast rounds
with three sparring partners—
Kddie Flymn; . Calvin Reed and
‘Mike Licrai—before a gallery of
500 fans which ‘included Chairman
John J. Phelan and Bill Brown,
‘two of the three members of the
New York State Athletic commis
‘ sion.
l Ross worked , four rounds at
Ferndale under the eyes of one of
his chief unofficial advisers, for
'mer champion Benny Leonard, and
he looked every inch a champion.
l Ross weighed 138% pounds after
his workout which is approxi
lmately the weight he expects to
carry into the ring. McLarnin has
Iheld his poundage steady around
the limit of 147 pounds. In their
ilast meeting he agreed to come in
at 145 or less and took off weight
|so industriously he only tipped
the scales at 142. He believes that
I weakened him.
Forty Places Already
Filled by Atlantans
For Journal Motorcade
ATLANTA —(®— Forty of the
{fifty places alloted to local motor
ists were signed up Saturday for
the Atlanta-Augusta motorcade 1o
Le held September 21.
The cars 'were entered shortly
after tlfi registration books were
opened #nd the remaining 10 places
Touchy Moment in Air Marathon
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It's a “touch ard go” situation shown here, when contact with its
supply plane is being made by the Lone Star, in which two women
fiyers are seeking a new women’s refueling endurance record, over
Chicago’s outskirts. The mark of 9 days, 23 hours which Jean
Laßene and Mary Owens Campbell hope to beat was set last winter
in Miami, Fla., by the late Frances Marsalis and Louise Thaden. _
COIFERENCE TEAMS
BEGIN LIGHT W
STITNE MoKy
Seven Teams Rated Near
Equal in Strength by
Early Pickers
BY DILLON GRAHAM
(Associated Press Sports Writer)
ATLANTA—(#)—With no single
outstanding favorite selected by
ihe. pre-season gossipers, the 13
Southeastérn Conference feotball
teams assemble Monday for the
start of their four-months grid
iron program.
Upwards of 450 athletes—a gooa
portion of them eager sophomores
—gathe, at training camps from
Lexington, Ky., to New Orleans,
La, and Gainesville, Fla., for the
early drills of some three weeks
duration that will decide largely
the personnel of the various teams
The size of the squads will vary
from around 30 at Sewanee to
more than 60 at some of the larger
schools. ~Work on fundamentals
will occupy all the athletes for the
first week and then the, tempo ot
the drills will be increased at the
camps whose teams have early
games. ;
For Mississippi State, Auburn
and Kentucky only three weeks of
practice will be available before
opening games, the Mississippians
meeting Howard College, Auburn
playing Birmingham-Southern and
Kentucky warming-up with Mary
ville College. Most of the other
teams delay their openers until a
week later.
Large squads are expected at
Alabama, whose Crimson Tide won
the Southeastern crown a year
ago, and at Louisiana State, whose
team was the only unbeaten team
in the conference in 1933 (all
games.) Alabama expects 52 con
tenders to help Coach Frank
Thomas seek another title. Geors
gia, Georgia Tech, Tennessee, Tu
lane and Vanderbilt are others
looking for large :squads.
Trouble already has visited Au
burn and expressions of sorrow
likely will eminate from wmost ol
the other camps early '« the weeh
when some of the anticipated
stars fail to return to school,
Scholastic dificulties have al
ready removed four athletes' from
the Auburn squad, where Jack
Meacher begins his first year as
coach. These include Jack Kemp.
a letterman at end: Julius Watson,
reserve guard; Duke Paterson, sub
quarterback and Rupert Scott, a
promising freshman.
One of the ‘major question mark
outfits is Kentucky, where Chet
Wynne takes charge after several
vears at Auburn. Some sports ex
perts have felt thay former coaches
failed to obtain as good results as
were possible from the good mat
erial at Kentucky and if Wynne
can do as well as his friends be
lieve the Wildcats may be formid
able contenders.
The top flight teams, according
to the early guessers, are Tulane,
Louisiana, Vanderbilt, Tennessee
Alabama, Georgia and Georgla
Tech. Difficult schedules make it
impossible to single out any. one
team as a No. 1, choice.
are expected to be filed early next
week. The motorcade sponsored by
the Atlanta Journal,” will formally
| open the first all-paved road be
l tween Atlanta and Augusta.
WINNER AT BROOKLINE?
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¥ i . ¥ TN INTERCOLLEGIATE
: i i ¥ TITLE /N '3O
: i g AND '3
Ba? L WHILE{
EO RS oo 5 PRINCETON
GEORGE T. .= o ?\‘3\ STUDENT ...
J N 71
AATIONAL AMATEUR |" " A : 1
CHAMPION AT 24., | & g :
DEFENDS DIADEM 1 > ¥ . 1 AQUIRED
AT BROOKLINE, MASS, R 4 NORTH=
SERE 10-15. : iy - j SOUTH
WENTON 10 TAKE ey L s T ¥ G AMATEUR
US. TILE AT KENWOOD, y £o 0 g N EIGHT
CINCINNATL, 2y L ; i§ OF NINE
AFTER HAVING TO § : # ATEMPT.,
PLAY OFF FOR PLACE i\ i
IN MATCH PLAY ROUNDS, * 48 e
i ¥
<N —® #’my o
Fred Perry Advances Into
Second Round Of Net Meet
GEHRINGER MOVES
INTO 3D PLACE IN
BIG SIX BATTERS
(BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Charley Gehringer fattemed- his
patting average Saturday while
the other eaders were having a bad
day and moved into third place in
the Big Six as a result. Gehringer
hit four times in six trips to the
plate, adding four pointg to his
average. His American league ri
vals, Lou Gehrig and Heinig Man
ush, each hit once in four tries,
losing one point each, while Mel
ott and Rill Terry of' the ‘iants,
each lost two points. Terry didn’t
get a hit in three tries while Ott
hit one out of five. Pau Waner,
the leader was idle.
THE NEWS IN A
NUTSHELL
(Continuea From Page One)
beef cattle and ig now; operating at
capacity.
Talmadge -club answers Pittman
charge of ‘“coercion” relating to
Sanford introduction of Governor
September 10.
Interest in the Clarke county fair
is increasing steadily. E
Diamond Match company be
stows “match” fame upon four
Georgia footbaly stars. Cy -Grant,
Jack . Griffith, Leroy Moorehead
and “Buck” Chapman will have
their pictures and football history
on the covers of Diamond paper
match folders.
The Banner-Herald will flash the
returns from the gubernatorial
contest on a screen across the
street from the building on the
night .of September 12.
Georgia’s forest = fire ~ protection
hag +heen: advanced several vears
by the work of the C. C. C. men.
Howell Cobb, formerly of Athens,
zets boosts in race for attorney
genera) of Georgia.
Huey P. Long indicates that he
will prebably call a special session
of the Louisiana state legislature
at which he wil} attempt to oust
Maor T. Semmes Wambkley.
Seven more of Dillinger's accom
nlicag were caught Saturdav. when
Dilfinger's counsel and plastic sur
eeon and severa] Others were ar
rested.
Banks, bankers. and banking
nractices during pre --depression
hoom times condemned in an ex
haustive renort on this phase by
the senate banking commmittee.
Desperate federal effort to avert
toxtile sriike proved to he futile
Saturday,
Stock market feund almost de
sarted Saturday. Trade went be
low the lowest level seen in 16
yvears.
Lahor Dav wil] ses many peo
ple out of Atlanta te hear gpeeches
by ecndidates for covernor. Gover
nor Talmadege a+ Macon, Pittman
2t Rome, and Gilllam a 4 Blairs
ville and Hiawassee, 3
THIE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
William Allison Also Goes
Into Second Round of
National Tourney
BY 808 CAVAGNARO
Associated Press Sports Writer
FOREST HILLS, N. Y—®#) —
The perfunctory procedure of the
first round of the 53rd Men's Na
tional singles tennis championship
went along Saturday without a
hitch, with Fred Perry, the British
holder of the title, barely getting =
workout in his elimination of Cart
H. Schweikhardt.
i While most of the big guns were
| muffled by the first round byes, the
I'black = haired British titlist ac
[counted for the form.r Columbia
University star in straight seris,
‘6-0, 6-1, 6-1, and led sou, seeded
domestic challengers—Ceorge M.
]Lott. jr.,” of Chicago; ' Lester R,
Stoefen of Los Angeles, Clifford
'Sutter of New York and Wilmer
iAllis;on of Austin, Texas, into the
, second round.
| They were the only members of
{a select group of 15 American and
lforeign seeded players who saw
action in the opening vund. The
| ten others will swing Into action
‘for the firsy time :in the second
‘round on Labor Day.
! Playing in a brisk atmosphere,
| more suited for foothall, Perry
'completely dominated the first two
sets, forcing Schweikhardt into er
[rors -and depriving his Ame:rican
{ rival of a single earned point.
| \With Schweikhard; serving first
iin the findl chapter, neither play
i er‘could hold onto his delivery for
| the first seven gamses, Perry en
| tertained the crowd of more than
| 2:000° with some of his coury cap
i rices. and then suddenly swung into
| his stride, winning the SBth game
;nn service and taking the ninth
flrom Schweikhardt for the set.
| Allison, the man figured to have
'the .best choice -of rvestoring the
:«hampionshlp to this cowntry, mez
' a formidable antagonist in Gilbert
. Hunt of Washington, D. C, . and
' had to lift his game to the heights
[ that earried him to victory in New
- port and Longwood @ tournaments
to turn_back the vigorous challenge |
of the youngster who was a finalist |
in the.1934 inter-collegiate cham
pionship. . ; ]
Hunt took a lead of 3-1 in games
in the first set and then Allison
won five straight to take the set.
The collegian fought stubbornly
in the next two sets but Allison
checked his attack by racing up
to the next after powerfully driven
forcing shots and won the match,
§-3. 7-5. 6-4.
C. C. C. CAMP TO BE
MOVED TO ATHENS
(Continned from page one.)
food supplies, medicines. etc
for the camp personncl. In addi
tion to this the eampers are paid
some S3O a month, $25 of which
must be sent home. The remain
ing $5 which the campers will be
allowed t 0 retain will probably be
spent here, totdlling SI.OOO month
ly for Athens business firmg and
stores. % kN
‘HODESON, DUDLEY
0 LOW SCORER .
N LOCAL TOURNEY
Two Youngsters Shoot
79's in Ist Round
Of Cols Meet
BY GUY T. TILLER, JR.
The same ¢wo golfing yvoungsters
Jimmy Dudley and Robert Hodg
son, who won their way into the
finals in the annual handicap golf
tournament at the Athens Country
club recently firmly stamped their,
pames in the Athens golfing hall
of fame when they tied for low
medalist honors in the non-handi
cap tournament qualifying rounds
yesterday.
' Both carded 79's ahd will be fav
ored along with Morton Hedgson,
sr., «defending champion, Frank
Dudley, Merritt' Pound, who was
third in the qualifying scoring, and
R, L. Keener,: one of the city's
foremost Inksmen, to ¢op the cup,
Pound was credited with an 81,
followed closely by J. C. Wilkin
son who managed to conquer the
tough layout in 82 strkes. Keener
cardsd an 80 to finish in secondl
place. Frank Dudley was behind
Wilkinson with a score of 85. The!
elder Hodgson did not have to
shoot a qualifying round as he Is
the defending title-holder,
Those who will compete in the
first flizht and their scores are as
follows: H, G. Cooper, 88; Merritt
Pound, 81; Weems Baskin, 8b;
Robert Hodgson, 79; George Pee
land, 89; Jimmy Dudley, 79; L. A.
Clarke, 88; Gordon Dudley, 88;
Frank Dudley, 85; J. C. Wilkin
son, 82; R. C. Wilson, 9; R L,
Keener, 80; Charles Martin, 86;
M. S. Hodgson, no qualifying score
needed, N. G. Slaughter, 92,
The second flight golfers and
their scores are: W, O. Taylor, 97}
James Thornton, 97; Whitey Davis,
101; Dr. Patrick, 100: Bobby Wil
son, 96; Henry Parr, 100; D. B,
Nicholson, 99; H, C. Doolittle, 102;
' J. C. Jester, 997 .J. W. Firor, 98;
1 . T Coy, 1087 H, P, Cofer, 1083
l(‘ha.rles Compton, 110; L. M. Car
ter, 104; Howard Benson, 112; Hu
‘hm't Riley, 107 and Emmett Welr,
' 105.
The pairings will 'be drawn up
Sunday and the competitive mateh
play will begin immediately
BULLDOGS TO HOLD
INITIAL DRILL ON
MONDAY AFTERNOON
(Continued From Page Four)
John Bond, Al Minot, and the All-
Southeastern Cy Grant are letter
men returning. Bond and Grant
look like first stringers. A host of
last year's freshmen stars will be
given thorough tryouts. Alf An
derson, Jim Cavan and Paul Cau
esy are the sophomores who will
give the veterans a tussle for
their jobs. Glenn Johnson, Savan
nah speedster, cannot be counted
out. t
Chapman’s Leg Worry
Biz Buck Chapman, the giant
fullback who moves with unusual
speed and deceptoin for a big
ball carrier, is a cinch for full
back honors if his leg is healed
following the operation adminis
tered this summer. Maurice Green,
the versatile Texan, who can
pass with either hand ang punt
with either foot; Jack Earle and
Johnny Jones are other fullbacks.
Karle and Green are sophomores
and Jones is a former Red Devil.
Prospects are good but the
schedule, although easier than last
year's, is plenty tough. Chances
are a veteran team will take the
field against the Stetson Hatters
in the opening game. Wagnon and
Turbeyville, ends; West and
Moorehead, tackies; Brown and
MecCullough, guards; McKnight,
center; Griffeth, quarterback;
Bond ana . Grant, halfbacks, and
Chapman, \fullback. will give the
Georgia team eleven seasoned per
formers. .
The team will entrain for the
Athens “Y” camp, near Tallulah
Falls, Ga., Tuesday morning where
they will train for two weeks. The
training at the mountain resort
innovates something qnew for the
Georgia. team and it is hoped that
they will ‘return ready to go, and
in fine shape for the thrill packed
and tough schedule that faces
them.
Pittman Again Makes
~Attack on Talmadge in
Speech at Glennville
GLENNVILLE, Ga, — (#) — A
charge that Governor Talmadge
has added “hundreds of new em
ployes” to the state payroll since
the opening of the present guber
natorial campaign, was made to
day by Judge Claude C. Pittman
in a campaign speech.
Pittman said 1,100 grass cutters
as well as many others whose sole
duty is to campaign for the gov
ernor” had been placed in the
state’'s employ.
“The people, whose eyes are be
ing opened each day to new depths
are resenting more and more these
tactics,” he said. “The office of
governor is of too much responsi
bility and too much dignity for any
man to win by threats and intimi
dation and false witness.”
Four Bulldog Stars
To Have Pictures on
Paper Folders Soon
Four Bulldog football stars
have - risen to “matchless”
fame! Cy Grant, Buck Chap
man, Leroy Moorehead and
Jack Griffith will soon have
their pictures, names, age,
weight, years on team and
home town on paper match
folders made by the Diamond
Match company.
The players were chosen from
the Georgia football squad and
it is probable that gridiron
stars on every leading team in
the United States will be se
lected for the 'match covers
also. Designs of these match
coverg were seen in Costa’s
-Saturday morning.
Dove Season Opens
Saturday Morning;
Game Limits Given
Yesterday began the annual
bombardment on. the wary doves
of Georgia. Not only doves busy
also the more wary and less num
erous woodcocks, wood ducks ana
march hens. The open seasons and
bag limits on other game are as
follows:
Quail and wild turkey, Nov
ember 20 through March 11—
quail, twenty in one day and
40 a week; turker, 2 per sea
son.
Deer—November 15 through
' January 5—2 per season.
Cat squirrels—October 1
| through January 15—15 In one
| day.
| Marsh' hens—September 1
through November 20—25 in
one day.
Racoon, mink, beaver, bear
otter and muskrat—Novem
ber 20 through February 1.
No bag limit given.
O'possum — October 1 and
through February 1. No bag
limit.
Doves—September 1 through
30 and November 20 through
January 31—25 in one day;
federal bag limit—lß in one
day,”
Wood duck and wood cock—
September 1 through Decem
ber 31—4 in one day.
Migratory ducks and wild
geese — November 1 through
January 81—15 ducks in ong
day and 4 geese in one day.
Snipe—November 1 through
I January 31—26 in one Qay.
Rain Plays Lullaby
On Roof of Home of
Dionne Quintuplets
CALLANDER, Ontario.— () —
Rain played an ineffectual lullaby
Saturday on the roof of the
Dionne quintuplets’ home.
Dr. A. R. Dafoe, country phy
sician who has attended the mites
since birth, said the downpour
appeared not to have affected the
babies in’the least and that they'
seemed unaware of changing
weather conditions.
Only a month ago the five
Misses Dionne became languid
with every downpour, but Satur
day they continued to stretch and
pluneg lustily in the beds to
which they were moved Friday. l
e :,_,.‘“': ; "
_— :
¢ & U &D ‘
A "k S e
sMy &8 Tt
| S U]
\\\\ I‘§ 4 -6. .b 4
You're Still “within
%, the law” with your
L Straw Hat after Sep-
B’ tember Ist.
But why delay, when you can choose early
from our New Fall Stocks of
» 2 s
“Schobles” “Gunn’s Trumpeter
5 3 'BS
UNN’
MEN’S STORE
PAGE FIVE
TWO TEAMS BATTLE
10 INNING 3 BEFCRE
TIE SCORE 1S BROKEN
Winners Secure Only Five
Hits Off Hurling -
Of Whitehead
UNION POINT—A long single in .
the tenth inning by Credille, Union
Point centerfielder, seored McDon=
ald from first base, to give th& '
Union Point team a 5 to 4 victory
over the “Leftovers,’ Saturday for -
the second time this week. At
The game Saturday was almost
a repetition of the contest Thurs
day, Union Point defeated the
- 4 to 3 in ten innings.
Union Point could not secure but,
five hits off the twirling of Paul
Whitehead, but they came in the
- and in every case account-""
ed for runs. Thiee of the five Hits™
were two base 'knocks. AT
Bill Cauthen, rightfielder for 'the ¢
local team, supplied the *“spark”
for the local team, when he poled '
a home run over the left field wall |
in the gixth inning, with no one
on base. 0
Union Point took the lead in the
fourth inning _when they scored
four runs on two hits. Quill, first""
up was hit by a pitched ball, and
Credille flied to leftfield. Davis
then doubled to right center to
sgore (Juill. Ramsey was gafe'”
on an error to third, and McClure
Jived on an error to first, with
Davis scoring. Smity doubled to
ilertfi(-ld to score both Ramsey and
MeClure for a four run lead. !
It was short lived, however, for
the “Leftovers” came back in the
gixth inning to tié the count. Cau- -
then led off with a home run. Giles
popped up to the shortstop, but
Hart singled, Whitehead was hit
Ib_v the pttcher, Davis tripled. An- -
derson doubled, and Tucker singled
lln succes¢ion to tie the count.
Davis was put out on a squeeze
}r,lan that failed tc materialize, to
'%ecp the local nine from going one
' ahead.
! Beusse, Cauthen, Hart and
Davig led the hitting for the “Left
‘ovm's". each with two out of five
attempts. No member of the win
lnim: team collected move than one
hit,
’ The Hneups: .
4L eftovers”— Ab R HPo AE
Pucker, s® .. .... 5 0 1 2 & %
Hil Ib. ... ... 4 D 0 Wi
Beusse, of. [..... 5 0 F .1 0480
Cauthen, rs. ...... 5§ 1 2 3 &
Giles, If. .o o v- 5 003 80
Hart Bb. . ...... 5 I'% 0 4N
Whitehead, p. .... 4 '1 090 8 4@
Davia, ¢. ... -... 50 B 8 2=
Anderson, 2b. ... &1 1% 8 Bn
Totals .. ..., 42° 4 10 39 16 o
Union Point— Ab R H Po A E
McDonald, ss. ....6 1 0 2 3%
Quiil, 3b. ../. B BN 3 B 0
Credille, 0f.'...... 5 0 T 2 § &
Davis, p. .. ...... &8 T ¥ & 5 .
Ramsey, rs-p ...; 3 1< 18 &=
Brendle, rs. .. ... Y -0 0.1 8§ 8=
MecClure, 2b. .... 41 ¥ 88 94
Anderson, c. .... 4 0.0 4 @B
- Ib. ...... 4 0.1 14 0. 8%
Johnson, If. .. .. % 0 0.1 0 8%
Barnhart, If. ...i- 20 0 1 90
Totald .... ...¥B7 5 B 80 32. &