Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 224, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 4, 1928 Page: 5 of 8
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CAL IS 56 TODAY
mtm
Beaumont I. Houston 1.
Wseo 7. Son Antonio 6,
Fort Worth 3. Shreveport
Wichiu Path 7, Dallas I.
dated Prow Sport*. Writer ■
i John McOraw talked over
tuation before the major
Season opened, he said his
of winning his 11th National
pennant depended upon his
COLEMAN, Texas, July 4.—<8p.)-
Ooleman Bobcats slugged their way
to a 13-6 triumph over Abilene, aided
by Smokey Boyer's hurling: Cnhqp-
ton and Taylor hit for the circuit.
Taylors clear left field barrier, j
Crumpton’s was a liner to right that j
found a hole under the wall Walk-!
er. pinch hating for Cromer in the
final stanza, rapped out a three bag-
ger. • Boyer pitched five innings of
no-hit no-run baU.
j Abilene— ABRHPOAE
Sullivan, c f 5 0 9 10 0
0 0 13 0
0 1 0 0 0
0 1 14 1 0
0 0 2 0 0
3 1 9 0 0
Dallas . .;.i.r-6
San Antonio , 4
Beaumont .. 4
Port Worth .. 5
Shreveport ../%
Waco
BY POP BOONE,
.. 6 ports Editor Pert Worth Frees..
PORT WORTH. July 4 —<8p.«—
Well, unless seme hitch occurs that
is not now in light, we wilj ^e. Kid
Dula and Duke Tram el in the %ame
squared circle on the evening of
July 13—Friday, the 13th-^ Cat
Orchard. , /
Apparently, either Mr. D4qk Orif-
fin. nor Meeyi. Dula and Tram*
are superstitious in the matter of
dates. Anyhow, according to a
statement given out this morning
by the said Mr. Orlffln. the article*
are signed and the boxers^sre al-
y but he has
k quite accept-
itances. And
pitchers have
that a day s
filled the Rajah's shoe
ably under the circum.
now most of John s
gotten over, the ;ldea
mm
Shreveport at Dallas.
Beaumont at Houston ; : s,
Waco at 8an Antonio
Wichita Tails at Fprt Worth.
work consists of pitching three or
four Inning* '• followed by a cold
shower while a teammate finishes
up on the mound. Larry Benton, of
course, has been aware all along
that a game lasts nine innings Some
of the others havp just learned it
and results are beginning to show.
A 7* to • victory—their eighth in
a row—over the Brooklyn Robins on
Tuesday coupled with St. Louis’ 13
to 5 setback by the Chicago Cube,
shoved the Olanta closer to the top
than they have been for weeks. The
Cards Mad by two and a half games
but have surrendered td the Oiants
the strategic advantage* of losing
the fewest contests. St. Louis has
dropped 27. one more than the
nMNIMPi. |.
The cant CU)8
m l —- *
You cAKiYsnaws
mgesTuMfc yfcHft
•nvYJw Mu.ee.
ready training for what: to the av-
erage fan will be the battle of the
year.
Just why the battle has been so
earnestly demanded by the’fans is
net hard to figure. Neither Trams!
nor Dula are over-popular if you
listen to and believe the ravings you
hear around the ring. Said rtnng
lead one to believe the raiibtrd
want to esc both these hers guys get
their heads knocked off. . !.•*■< -j
What Bags Would lA# I
Kalliiis, lb .
Best, 1 f ...
Ouerra, c .
Oarms, s s
Bush, 3b .
HIlian, p .
Cromer, p .
Walker ....
(twelye
sJSHSSSS Sr* vt-*" ‘ “
I ioc** m ipan»Tb*satehetf New York ..Tro"* M®
n tci almost Impossible fo* Philadelphia .72 41 31
wo fans to agree on any barer st. Louis.....73 37 36
we winner and aa a result Cleveland ____73 34 J9
ft° ** favorite spotted Washington . 72 32 40
Ihese favorites all looked to Boston ...... 7S 30 38
a chuioe at fine money until Chicago ......72 31 41
free that finished;!**. second Detroit ......72' 28 44
bird began to pull* out in front Where They PWy Today
I the last few hundred feet of Cleveland at Detroit,
toes. «. ~ . - 8t. Louis at Chicago*
A dogs Oaa > 4 • Boston at Philadelphia
l who won. was a question that York Washington
id one and all tor several min-
liter two of the three hornet NATIONAL LEAGUE
lone under the finishing whs _,_
ramalnod in position for srv- Yesterday's KasWfe
Weutaa waiting for the judges' ’ Chicago 13. St. Louis 6.
PpP* . to the A»fias Cincinnati 9. Pittsburgh 7.
ttk to at the twe j Philadelphia 6-15 Boston 5-0
» had won. Finally the judges New York t. ‘[Brooklyn 7 (e
id a verdict and Jeff Reed, a innings.)
| Flashes of Life
..38 5 3 24.10 2
..5 1 2 0 4 1;
.. 4 2 1 3 2 1
.. 5 1 1 13 0 0
..4 2 1 10 0
..3 a m o o
.. a i 0410
. I>fil 0 0 0
.4 3 3 3 3 6
. 4 0 0 0 3 0
Total
Cole titan—
MEW YORK—There le a lot.of Lagers. 2b ....
' money in circulation on mr i Kott, ss .....
glorious day. Yesterday the New Holloway, lb
York .Clearing House handled the Bryan, rf ...
unprecedented total of 63.413jOOO.QQC Taylor, cf ...
in checks, representing some 6700.- Anattl. c.....
000.000 US1 Interest and dividends be- Moore, if
sides commercial iransacuonui and Crumpton. 3b
withdrawal of spending money.. Boyer, p ...
McOraw’s clan pulled out th*»r
triumph over Brooklyn in the 11th
inning when Jess Petty forgot the
bases were filled and walked Cohen.
The defeat not only cost the Dodgers
fourth place but the services for the
rest of the season of A1 Tyson, the
fly-chaser. A1 suffered a broken leg
when, Rube Breesler crashed into
him Just as he was set to take Jack-
son s long drive in the first inning.
The ball got away for a home run: •
. . home runs marked the
If Dula and Duke naa^d from
their corners at the first * ben on
Friday the 13th and Dula eeonectf
With Q
at the
JULY 4th has been a memorable date in the lives of presidents. Pres-
J. dent Coolidge is 56 years old to day. having been born on July 4th,
1672: Three presidents have died on July 4th—John Adams <upper
right). Thomas Jefferson (center) and James Monroe dower). Adams
and Jefferson died on the same day —July 4th. 1620—and within a few
hours of each other, ifonrpe died on July 4th, 1831.
instant Duka connecter
with a left hook to the button; if
both boys went over and were count-
ed out by Referee Eddie UMrls with
I one count—I verily believe iaof
Coolidge Observes ZlSJff&AStfR
Birthday Today
_ • / * pasture. * r*.
SUPERIOR. Wle., July 4.—Another thing: We’re j*6M
Answering to the chief executive s be forced to bring up the Old
own wishes, today was set aside af ter ofthe grudge scrap.
the summer White House for the w»o knows either boy, knows
quiet observance of Mr Coolidge * crave each other’s ■ *
fifty-sixth birthday with only his Mention Dula to Duke, and I
family about him. < UP curi*: mention Duke to Dull
£r^r-srssMjj SrssS&SSS
after winning ten straight, bv a 4-5 celebration of the anniversary. Pres- h^w^ hue aS
sco-. to Midland this af emoon. ident Coolidge had indicated his de- t_.
Midland- ABRHPOAE sire to spend the day to absolute
2 1116 0 privacy. No invitations had there- *7“
l! i J * J ,or rtctB,lon “UTn.5*
5 0 2 1 0 0 during the day. emphatically thdi t
5 2 2 1 1 0 Many birthday Cato came to the KTSch > ppo
3 0 1 9 0 0, executive residence yesterday. The ll(?hu^^Uiey UtiS
4 >0 1 8 3 0 outstanding cake was made by Mrs. ^
3 0 0 2 1 0 T. L. Cowen of Duluth. It weighed J*1*£5ES
. Cromer ran for Welker in first. BunLllt^
■^Walker hit for Cromer in ninth. 1:28- Umpires. White a
Abilene .......U... OlO 000 004— 5 ! , I ! ..
hit-Kr l*HoSoway, Midland Breal
fSS^^iker0^ XL Snapper Win $
—'Tbylor. Crumpton. Stolen bases— j . * |
Bu«h. Garms. Bryant 3. Taylor. Kott.
Sacrifices—Hillin. Taylor. Moore. «jan Angelo Texas, J
Bit* and runa-Off Bqyer 6 hits 5 —oien rom kept San
runs 9 toning* HUlin 6 hits 8 runs
4 1-3 innings. Cromer 4 hits 5 runs
3 2-3 innings. Struck out—By Hil-
lin 8. Boyer 1. Cromer 2. Bases on
balls—Off Hillin 2. Boyer 3. Cromer
3. Batsmen hit—By. Boyer <Bushi. ,
Left on bases—Abilene 6. Coleman La*gunas s s
3. Double play—Boyer to Area ti to Cheeves c I
Holloway. Time of game—1 hour i j f
and 40 minutes. Umpires— 8hep- ‘ seuler 2 b
pard and Black. V i Rrvan lb
-Mr*- Wemgarten, divorcee, com-
plained the boy could nog- sleep
nights. The father said his so:
got a thrill and was always asking
for a ride. Judge Sabath decider
the boy should wait a few years, re-
marking that then firing would
probably be as common as automo-
biltng. - • + ... 't— *
CHICAGO—It took a. book and
ladder company more than half ar
j hour 'to free two-year-okl Marvin
Smith from a water pipe, when
one foot had becomed wedged. Fire-
men removed a section of sidewalk
and dug up around for foqr fee*
around thr pipe. Police kept back
nearly 1,000 persona. ' ,
GOTHENBURG. Sweden—Farm-
! ers face hardship this summer. The
factories which supplies most of the
wooden shoes has been burned. Tbr
fanners like them because they keep
the. feet dry and cost Utile.
Locklear, was announced as the st. Louis .
winner of the race, with Crlmpear New York
%■ sorrell owned by C. Lock- Chicago •.
Imr, and ridden by Bridges, being Brooklyn
awarded, tooood place. After the Cincinnati
judges declelon had been announc- Pittsburgh
ed. oaa of the men who had to de- Boston ...
rids who, was who,
Where They Play Today
Chicago at 8t. Louis.
Brooklyn at New York.
Philadelphia at Boston. ‘
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh
Bis: Spring Beats j
H ubbers Tuesday
BIO SPRING. July 4 - 8p *—In j
a fast game of ba^bill. Big ftprin*
oew home of the Hamlin team, beat i
Lubbock’ 3 to 1 in a pitcher’s duel
before a good crowd
Lubbock— : ABRHPOAE
Williams cf 3 6 13 0 0
BrownJow ss r.... 4 10 13 0
8tort l 3b ./...... 4 0 0 4 2 0
•caltog 2b ........ 4 0 2 8 0 0
BQHLJo. ........ 4 6 0 8 0 0
Ooddard rf 4 0 1 3 0 0
Robinson If ...... 3 0 0 3 0 0:
Burch e ......; 3 0 110 0
Bunt p ........... 3 0 0 0 2 0
HOLYOKE. Mass—At last the
hatching post has given way to Uw
automobile A 400-pound granite
was from a fine group of while Houston was losing to
horsoa, any of whom ooukl win a Beaumont.
net. Troubles, a brown horse, own-! The Bpuddars wo^7 to 8. but not
ed by the Moore Stock Farms and without an effort. They piled up a ___„ ,_____
1 ridden by Beck ran a whale of a Mg lead in the third inning when nuke, the Chicago ’
, nee to lead the Yield under the they scored five runs. bu'. Dallas it three in a row
wire, min* Moore, a sorrel gekUn. tied the count in the sevghth with e place 8t. Louis Broi
'(| owned by O. cToallln. with Bridget four run rally. In the ninth, how -, Jot Sewell's triple
up and > Running Oold. another ever, 3umm^in u^dtwe
I 2ySu£ SS ^ orCjS’1‘SUVo*
to win. but the beautiful brown led thHo^l.f2SSi Sff bJ JTto ! d only or
i iLrjrori:?^ ,o*-rooi
[ «££■*whuT^ou«wr«»S*r4°bul ,rn,^ "S
of the dayigig fourth, a three ^ ' wear's conscript.' u
y> quarter-mile race, open to Mi Waco defeated San Antonio. 7 to \Sf, a 51-ppuiid Nc
I Only five homo were entered bu1 g, tn a great ninth-inwng finish 1*11.
I ,a|| wart winntoi. This race was ^ MV Btactberry clout the bsU •_
i won by Ban Saba. over the left field fence with two ; . -===^ -
4 ad by Cooper and Ftocher and rid- men ^ ^ ^ ^rs had a 5 to f\wtn nr\ a w
t 1 *!_•». *S2- •..’SS? i Pun BO At
overt the Boston Red Box Al
Simmons' single in the eightn scored
enough to stave off that Uekmg
' Anyhow. July 13 is the date and
the bail park the place.
Totals ........36 2 4 27 10 2i
Home run. Bonds. Double piays.
Brown low to Bean. Struck out, by
tfovl Vo* ALL so/..,!
ves soil,
■Sts' AS MiyfAK
VIltL PRESS Wo’
surfs AM’ ^irf A |
CREASE **) PC
PAM-CS PArf VllU-
5-CAW CRCASEP.
i>K AS IF VoO
No’ VIAS VIALWTIAJ’
W on STiuts .
HAR-P-P-'ROMP.’ —-
LAPS, I - WAU-T Voti
-To M«Bf rJXSokl, MV
VALET*- AHEM,-.
eft- UM-M-- KAFF ri-'
Vf PCX ANYTimF You ‘
, V/OUR SUI~Cs *To
W5 SPoMfSBP AWP:
?RESSHP, ^ASOAA
ry WILL DO rf FOR A f;
i I'Imommau oUReef
Fo-r ouce,
-TXEV ARE
S1UMMEP
BEVOWD
Words* ,
CO-ED, 21, TO PREACH IN INDIA
ATLANTA. July 4 - WUUam
L. (Young) Btribling. the boy from
Oeorgls who long has been known
among the nation’s pubihstk fans
as a "fighter without a punch" is
no* holder of the world’Tall time
record for knockout*, surprising a*
the fact may prove.
TOM MOORE
CICARS
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White, James C. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 224, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 4, 1928, newspaper, July 4, 1928; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1128036/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.