Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 19 Aug 1929, p. 9

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... mond this year. ." while the RE a Ur lt 'Local Seniors Fail 5 Hit In Pinches and Leaders Win Seasons Best Game) Turns in Wonderful ; Allowing Five Hits But Team Cannot Bring Men in Off the Bases -- Weir Hits Home Run Longest Hit of the Game Battling gamely all the way in _ an effort to clinch second place in the Central League standing, and out hitting the league leader 9 to b, Oshawa just failed to make the grade and were. beaten out by a 2 to 1 score here on Saturday afternoon, in the best baseball game seen on a Belleville dia- errorless , $ Belleville team was "chalked up with three, but the fact that fourteen Oshawa runners were left stranded on the bases, ° while Belleville had only six, " tells the story of the game, All due credit should be given the Na- Oshawa played ~ tiomalg, for when in a tight corner they settled down and played ball, but the Motor City boys simpiy could not hit in the pinches. Osz- den, the youthful right hander was on the mound ' for Oshawa and turned in a fine effort, although Utronki, who opposed him, also went well. One of the Belleville runs came from the bat of Alex Weir, who poled out a long home run in the fourth innings. Mat- thews in right field relayed the ball . to Elliott at second who made a fast fly home, and Weir hooked the plate a split second before Quinn put the ball on him, Oshawa tied up the score in the sixth when Rowden singled and , Quinn doubled, sending him to third. On a well worked squeeze play, Rowden crossed the plate, Little bunting down the first base line but going out on the play, and Quinn went to third. Ogden hit to H. Mills on first, who tos- sed. Quinn out at the plate. Gray >. ended the inning by flying out to center field. In the seventh, after M. Green had rolled out, E, Green doubled and went to third whiie Ogden was throwing out Bennett at first, Utronki then practically won his own game by singling sharply to left, scoring Green with what proved to be the winning run, Although V. Weir, the next man up, was walked, A. grounded out to the inficld. That ended the scoring and neither team threatened from then on, Box Score Oshawa Gray, ef ..... MoCallum, ib EHiott, 2b .... Matthews, rf .. Young, 3b Rowden, If Quinn, c¢ Little, ss Ogden, p | Hoo 0mm on WRHSNIDIO < | Totals -. Belleville V. Weir, . A. Weir, 3b .. P, Mills, 1b . W. Mills, y Blakeley, o . M, Green, If .. E. Green, cf .. Bennett, rf Utronki, p ot n -- Ee tl NODS WDWHIIT PH CITI LI DS TI OD CORT DOOD HOES OND Cad | | Totals ~......28 "2 65 20 14 3 Summary--Bases on balls--Og- den four, Utronki three, Home run--aA, Weir, 'Two base hit-- Quinn, E. Green, Earned runs-- Belleville 2, Oshawa 1, Struck out ~--by Utronki 4, by Ogden 1. Stolen bases--McCallum, Elliott, Matthews 2, Young 2, Sacrifice hits-- Young, Little. Left on bases ~--Oshawa 14, Belleville 6. Time of game 1 hr. 50 minutes, Um-~ pires--Lebarr and Lebarr, Peter- borough, ball,' Utronki keeping the hits well scat tered and although he walked 2, and Ogden four, none of the walks figured in the scoring, Oshawa had their base running shoes on piling up a total of six stolen bases, Matthews and Young having two each, while McCallum and Ellott were the other pilfer-} ers, Utronki struck out four bat~ ters, while Ogden whiffed one, and Young and Little each made a sacrifice hit, Oshawa and Deloro are now tied |' : for second place as Deloro won from Peterboro Saturday, after a hectic struggle. Deloro and Oshawa are sched- uled to play a double header in Oshawa next Saturday and the re sult of these games will probably tell which team will meet King= ston in the playoffs, although if Peterboro wins two from Belleville next Saturday and Oshawa and Deloro break even all three will again be tied. TENNIS NOTES The Oshawa Tenunis<Club enter- tained the Birchcliff Club, of Tor onto, on their courts, Saturday af- ternoon, where several close and hard-fought matches resulted, the Oshawa team emerginb victorious by the score of 8-3. Birchcliff car- ried off both ladies' singles, and ope men's singles. The results are as follows: Singles : J. Harris, (Osh.), defeated G. Wadden, (Birchcliff), 6-3,6-3, A. Graham, (Bircheliff), defeat- ed G. Jamieson, (Oshawa), 2-6, 6-3, 6-3. Mrs. Wadden, feated Miss Fishleigh, 6-3, 2-6, 6-2. Mis Rush, (Bircheliff), defeated Miss Furber, (Oshawa), 6-2, 5-7, 11-9. (Bircheliff), de- (Oshawa), Doubles Vesey and Hainer, (Oshawa), de- feated Thorburn and Slowly, (Bircheliff), 3-6, 6-1, 6-1, Morson and Fishleigh, (Oshawa) defeated Mallett and Barlow Birche cliff, 6-1, 8-6. Corne and M. Hainer, (Oshawa), defeated Heppenstall and Querney, (Birchelift), 6-3, 6-1, Miss Lick and Mrs. Baker, (Osh- awa), defeated Miss Freeland and Miss Goddard, (Bircheliff), Wk 2, Weir | 9-7 Miss Goheen and Miss London, (Oshawa), defeated Mrs. Patter. son and Miss 'Ray (Birchelift), 6-2, 10-8. T. Fishleigh and Miss: Fishleigh, (Oshawa), defeated E. Gibb and Miss Hammond, (Bircheliff), 6-1, 6-0. A. Grapick and Miss Goyne, (Oshawa), defeated D. Patterson and Miss H, Ray, (Birchcliff), 6-3, Red Aces Vs. King St. Tonight will see the continuation of 'the juvenile series in the City and Industrial Softhall League. The diamond at Cowan's Park has been fixed up and will be in fair shape to play on tonight, A win for either team tonight will put them within distance of the League-leading Fitting juvem- iles. The game will be called at 6.30 sharp so as to give the teams time to finish the game before dark, Once more fashion decrees that skirts shall be longer. But the dicta of fashion do not seem to have the power of other days.--Buffalo Cour- ter-Express. According . to the latest schol-boy howler Croesus was the man who made a fortune out of trouser presses. --Qttawa Journal. THE END OF THE JOURNEY vr No. 18, Home--440 yards, Pard. > "There may be some as Desutifel, : Be os of the J. go Mountains, iaks, weofs a nds } 200 [7] ot certainly none more so, than If 'Course, Jasper National layed ogi Ay the ro Amateur and Western RE berth: and Westen Canada 'Amateur Championships will be : Sugust 15. 19-24, and 4 the Silver Totem Pole Tournament, September 7-14. tains, lake, woods perfect fairway, all go to make this holes known to golf. The Ge in size, is splendidly contoured and clever one free has been made rly trapped. hotograph shows the Role from just in front of the te d TRY it t 45 a plan in detail with yardages marked to py nu al legraph-Journal, {explains his suggested plan for em- '| claim upon empire , OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MON | Saint John, N.B, Aug. 19~In a special cable from London to the Te- Lord 'Beaverbrook pire free trade as follows: "We do dot seek to harm Canadian industry, for e maxim behind this roject Re free trade should fear the expense of any other part, but that all should be- prosperous to- er. Hence, we: want to see in- th ute flourish wherever it is profit- e to the empire. Further, we think that empire producers have first markets. We, propose, therefore, that foreign im- ports should be taxed and goods pro- duced anywhere within the empire be allowed free entry into the other parts of the empire. "Of course, the project provided for the retention of tariffs that are im- ko osed for revenue purposes. Further, ey industries must be firmly estab- lished throughout the empire, for an attempt to localize them in onc part of the empire would be damaging to imperial welfare. Lastly, no effort must be spared to safeguard those industries which have been laborious NERVES CONE CAN'T SLEEP? "Fruita tives" restores good health i Ars tired? "Downeast most of of ths Ye? Worried at trifles? Can't sleep? Mr, O. Ringheim, Wydandel, B.C, writes: ly built up by the dominions inte their present state of rosperity. "Given free entry, and subject to the above conditions, Great ritain secks the opportunity to complete, not with industry of the dominions but with foreign industry, where it now enters empire markets, Avoid Overlapping "By tariffs we intend to climinate foreign competition and by use of cartels, agreements and selective ma- nufacture, we intend that British and dominion industrial interests shall not overlap. This will give the do- minions a ditional means to develop along industrial lines. No check would be possible on this expansion by the empire free trade project. In return Great Britain would concede a tax on imports of foreign wheat and meat. This would favor agriculture in the dominions and react benefici- ally on industry there, "Our aim, therefore, is to create a system in which dominion industries no less than British, shall be able to compete on cqual terms with each other, and on better terms with for- eign countries, 12 YEAR OLD SON KILLS HIS FATHER Wealthy Los As Angeles Man + Slain When he Attacks His Wite ; ; Los Angeles, Aug. 19.--Frank 8. Howard, wealthy automobile deal- ler, was shot and killed Saturday by his 12-year-old som, - Richard, following a family quarrel. Although the boy was arrested and booked on a technical charge, he was allowed to return home lat. er, pending an inquest. District Attorney Buron Fitts termed the killing as . "apparently justifiable homicide." "From information I have gath- ered," Fitts said, "the boy instine- tively ran to the aid of his mother when she was being struck by his father, and this' certainly was a natural result of his affection for his mother," The lad declared his father "cursed mother," and 'mother started screaming. . I saw father hitting and choking her. I don't remember anything else until I saw father fall." ---- pp The little bird that ferments fruit in tiny caves and then gets drunk on it doubtless is the one that tells things to Joan Lowell and Trader Horn.--Publishers Syndicate. It is interesting to 'note that China and Russia saw the wisdom of peaceably settling their own dispute as soon as Japan offered to arbitrate for them.--Southern Lumberman, DAY, AUGUST 19, 1929 - ANCIENT CROSS IS FOUND IN BRITAIN Important Discoveries in Ro- man Legionary Fortress At Caerleon London.~Important = finds = have been made during the excavations now being carried out within the Roman legionary fortress at Caer- leon, in Monmouthshire, by. ¥, E. Nash-Williams, M.A, Keeper of Archaeology in Te National Museum of Wales, Cardiff. The area under 'investigation is the Prysg Field of four acres within the western angle of the fortress. Investigation of the fortress de- fences has definitely established the existence of a single ditch which dates back' to about 75 A.D. and which was 30 fect in maximum width: and 12 feet deep. In the bed of the. ditch pieces of soldiers' sandals have been found of soft black leather, still bearing the holes through which the heavy iron hob-nails originally passed. Within the defences and backing the north-western rampart a long narrow building has been found ex- tending for over 200 yards. It probably dates from the early 3rd century, and in the collapsed roof-debris in one of the rooms was perhaps the most interesting object yet found in this bulding, a tile an- tefix (ornament) bearing a definite Greek cross with splayed arms in relief, If the cross is Christian it is the only piece of direct cvidence yet found of the presence of Christianity in this part of Britain in the Roman period, and it would alse indicate a remarkable rapid spread of the new A faith through the Britain, used as a pagan symbol or else, in a semi-Christian fashion, as a powerfu} / amulet, In the interior of the field # foundations of six barrack-build * additional to the four opened uy year, have been laid bare, They je all 35 feet wide and 250 feet . Each was intended to accommodate a company of 100 men under the ccmmand of a centurion, The men's cubicles had earthern Mloprs and bare walls, but the ¢en- turion's rooms were floored with con- crete and the walls decorated with painted wall-plaster. A WORLD APART When you leave the steamer "Belle of Temagami" you are in a quiet retreat seemingly thousands of miles from the noisy workaday world. Peace and qilet are the chief laws of this forest kingdom, twenty miles from the nearest au- tomobile and a hundred from a3 | street car. J Under the lordly trees of Tema- gami, black bass, lake trout and maskinonge lie in wait for the fish- erman in the innumerable Jakes. {The quaint Indian settlements, the magnificent scenery and the many other attractions simply can't be appreciated until you see them. Ask your Canadian National Agent for literature and informa- tion on Temagami. President Hoover points out that we have the world's costliest army. Here' s, hoping that we never get our Money 's worth out of it--New Yor- cer. The French have reluctantly rati- fied the debt agreement. This does not mean, however, that they will ever forgive us for lending them the Roman army in More probably the Wad is here 7 long» ' King E. mony.--New' Yorker. 25¢ Rexall Milk oy. nesia Tooth Paste 50c Rexall Milk of Mag- nesia Tooth Paste ...80¢c 25¢ Riker's Milk of Mag- 50c Riker's Milk of Mag- nesia' (i... i 00 Genuine Russian oil esssssees B90 25c A.B.8. & C. Tablets 10¢ $1.00 Riker's Beef, Iron cesses ALL THIS MONTH AT The Rexall Stores Jury&Lovell Simcoe 8. Phone 28 Phone 68 $ a the n TheRED INDIAN Stop for gasoline . . . stop for oil . .. stop for service! ( At all Red Indian stations you will find quick, courteous attendants ... spick and span rest rooms ... a full supply of the famous McColl-Frontenac products. These products, Cyclo Gas (No Knock) Motor Fuel . . . Red Indian Motor Oil . . . and Marathon Hi-test Gas- oline have already gained tremendous public favour and are still winning new friends daily. Try McColl-Frontenac products in your car. Drive i inat the sign of the Red Indian to-day! McCOLL-FRONTENAC OIL COMPANY LIMITED Offices and Plants ot Winnipeg, Regine, Calgary, Vancouver, Toronto, and Montreal Distrihutinn Warehouses at other convenient noints Cyclo Gas MOTOR FUEL A new motor fuel with drive --pep--and punch a-plenty! esa. RED INDIAN MOTOR OIL Provides a perfect film of protection between all worke ing parts of the engine! ET, MARATHON GASOLINE A straighterun gasoline . . . eco=| momical . . » unie' formly clean and reliable!

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