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Oshawa Daily Times, 8 Oct 1930, p. 7

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-------- NY. a A A ---- iio ---- AP + PAGE SEVEN World THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1930 e Pe es Page Philadelphia Athletics Win World's Series by ~ Trouncing Cards 7-1 Athletics Wallop Four Cardinal Pitchers and Take Advant- age of Every One of Their Hits to Score Runs--Earn- shaw Holds St. Louis Cardinals in a vise to Capture Sixth and Final Game (By Alan Gould A.P. Sports Editor ) Shibe Park, Philadelphia, Penn., Oct. 8.~~Back where = the battle began exactly a week ago, the Atkletics and Cardinals today car- ried the world's series fight into the sixth game, pursued by the heavy clouds that followed the warring forces out of St, Louis. The Athletics, leading three games to two and needing but one more victory to clinch the cham- pionship, expected George Living- ston Earnshaw to start his sec- ond successive game, with Robert Moses Grove on hand for quick relief work, if needed to settle the issue promptly. The Cardinals, ready for a des- perate fight to win today and ex- tend the series to the seven game limit, decided to make another switch in their batting order for the purpose of trying to concen- trate a bigger punch around the top of the list. The shakeup resulted in drop- ping Sunny Jim Bottomley, first baseman, who has hit .050 in five games, from hte cleanup position to sixth place, With Frank Frisch moved down from third to fourth and the right fielder George Wat- kins or Ray Blades, from sixth to third place. Watkins will bat third, if Earn- shaw pitches, Blades if and when Grove or, another left hander takes the mound for the Ath- letics . Manager Gabby Street, in an- nouncing the shift, declared he expected the shakeup, with Bill Hallahan's southpaw stuff, to help the Red Birds again deadlock the series. It was heavily overcast for the most part, and apother hazy day caleulated to be of benefit to speed batt pitching. -» Play by play story of sixth World' Series is by Brian Bell, oo Writer, Cardinals~Douthit up, struck out, swinging. Adams up, rolled to Foxx and was out unassisted. Watkins up, struck out swinging hard at the last one. No runs, no hits, no errors and none left. Athletics. --Bishop up, lifted a fly to Frisch near second base. Dykes up and was given a big hand. He fouled on his second strike but drew a rane up, hit to right field 'and Dykes .scored. Cochrane going to third. It was a two-base hit. Watkins was charged with an error, when he let the ball roll through him, Simmons up, struck out swinging hard at the last one, Foxx up, drew a walk. Cochrane scored on Miller's double to centre, Foxx going to third: Watkins made a reat hay to hold the hit to a dou- e. oore lifted a fly to Douthit on the first pitched ball. Two runs, two hits, one error and two left. : 2nd Inning Cardinals.~Frisch up, flied to Sim- mons who made a running catch in deep centre. Hafey up, lifted a high fly to Simmons in centre. Bottomley struck out, swinging' at the third strikeout, It was his ninth strikeout "of the series. No runs, no hits, no errors and none A Athletics oléy up; rolled to Gel- bert and thrown out to Bottom- ley. Earnshaw up, struck out on a fast one. Bishop up, hit by pitched ball and took first base. Dykes up, Hallahan tried to catch Bishop but Missed, Bishop went to second as Wilson Tet the ball get away. Dykes walked for the second time. Coch- rane fouled to Adams who ran nearly to the stands to make the catch. runs, no hits, no errors and two Jeft. grounded to OXX. line drive, which sailed over Hafey's head among the spectators, Coch- rane was out, Frisch to Bottomley on a great play by the Cards'. captain, Simmons grounded to Adams' and was out to Bottomley. Two runs, one hit, no errors and none left. Sth Inning Cardinals.--Bottomley 'up, ground- ed to Bishop and was thrown out to Foxx, Wilson up, struck out on a fast one, Gelbert up, fouled int stands and a fan caugnt the ball with one hand. He flied out to Haas in short centre. No runs, no hits, no errors and none left, Athletics--Foxx up, doubled to centre on a hard drive which carom- ed off Frisch's glove, Miller bunted to Bottomley and was offt to Frisch, who covered first. Haas flied out to Pouthit for a scarifice hit, Foxx scér- ing. Boley flied out to Watkins. One run, one hit, no errors and none left. 6th. Inning 5 Cardinals, -- Blades batting -for Johnson, struck out on a fast one. Douthit up, fouled to Cochrane in front of the A's dugout, High ba ting for Adams grounded to Earn- shaw was thrown out to Foxx for a nice play. No runs, no hits, no er- rors and none left. : Athletics ~High playing at. third base for the Cards. and Lindsey went into whe box. Earnshaw up, flied out to Hafey in left. Bishop up, drew a walk. Dykes was given an ovation. He doubled into centre field, Bishop going to third, Cochrane up, out on a sacrifice fly to Douthit. Bishop scoring. Simmons lifted a fly to Wat- in right field, One run, one hit, no errors and ope left, 7th Inning Cardinals--Watkins up, bounded to Bishop and was thrown out to Foxx Frisch up, bounded to Earnshaw and was thrown out © Foxx Haley bled into centre field. Bottomley an led. ink YI Wilson fouled to Cochgane in front of the stands, back of the plate. No runs, one hit, no errors and two left. Athletics. --Foxx flied to deep cen- tre, Douthit making the catch, Mill- er up, fouled to Wilson near the stands. © Haas up,-rolled to Lindscy and was thrown out to Bottomley. No runs, no hits, no errors and none left. 8th Inning Cardinals.--~Gelbert up, bunted to Foxx and was out unassisted. Lind- sey up, Orsattie batted for Lindsey and was out on a fast play by Foxx who gathered in his hard smash near first and beat him to the bag. Dou- thit bounded to Boley who made a nice pickup and threw to first for the putout. No runs, no hits, no er- rors and none left. : Athletics, --Bell went into pitch for §t Louis. Boley up, bounded to Gelbert and was thrown out to Bot- tomley. Earnshaw up, flied to Dou- thit who 'made a pretty running catch. Bishop up, rolled to Bell and was thrown ofit to Bottomley. No runs, no hits, no errors and none leit, ; Sth Inning X Cardinals.--High up, singled into right field. Watkind up, drew a walk: Frisch up, lined to Foxx and Wat- kins was doubled at first unassisted, High remaining at second. Hafey up and rapped out another double, scoring High. Bottomley 'up, drew a walk, Wilson up, flied out to Mil- ler. One run, two hits, no errors, and two left. St. Louis ... Philadelphia Cupid is the architect of a good 0 ri alr castles.--Chicago Dally RESPONSIBILITY LAW WORKS WELL Ontario Highways Minister \ Well Satisfied With © Act Toronto, Oct. 8--During tbe fou} weeks that the financial responsibil- #|ity law bas been in effect, there the ball. "Miller up, got his s two-base hit of the game M up and went. out § ging. flied to Watkins in short right. One run; two hits, no errors, and one left. ' 4 é $ x 4th Inning : Cardinals. ~Simmons moved over to left field for the Athletics and Haas went w centre, Adams u Serudle out, swinging at a tt bal Watkins 'u a high fly near third. _ Frigch bit t, uw drove a home run into the st Picea left. field stands f th heaved behind. Bishop: Tt was 4 of of with t t of Highways by reason of Oo jos Step. inst. on, George am iatoter of Highways and acting prime minister, announced yester in making . public the of the new law. © "The 4 tment has experienced no dificultty with regard "o the en- forcement of the act and it has been very well received by the gen- eral public," said Mr, Henry. the 221 cases, 84 were for driving without a licente. When a motor- fst commits this type of offence, he immediately comes within the provisions of the act and his lc- ense plates are confiscated dnd re- Jossaision ot the depart- ment until proof of financial respon- sibility is filed. That, of course, is in addition to the fine the mag- istrate may impose." re- Ontario' TEAMS "WORLD SERIES' SCORE BY INNINGS 12 3 485 6 1789 St. Louis Philadelphia 000000001 20121100 RH 135 77 BATTERIES: Hallahan, Johnson, Lindsey, Bell' and Wilson Esrmsbiw and Cochrane FORD AIMS AT DRY BRITISH FACTORY This Policy Necessary, He Tells English Reporter : London, Oct. 8.--The Daily Her- ald says that Henry Ford will use every effort to make his new auto- mobile factory at Dagenham dry. Mr. Ford told an Interviewer that such a policy was necessary, the Herald says, "Does that mean that the man who drinks will be discharged?" the interviewer asked. "We shall see about that in our own way." the American manufac- turer was sald to have replied. The next question was: "Will you follow workmen Into their homes or when they are off duty and penalize them for erer- cising their private rights?" Mr. Ford declined to answer, The Dally Herald added that no liquor would be permitted to be sold in any of the Ford factory's can- teens. GOVERNMENT AIDS RADIUM RESEARCH Mineral Obtained With Ease in Haliburton Area Toronto, Oct, 8--Pointing to the hopeful results so far obtained and stating that further exploration and research work will be carried out, Hon, Charles McCrea; Minister of Mines for (@ptario, Monday issued his first statement on the recently acclaimed radium find in Haliburton county, To date, the minister stated, about one-third of a millegramme of ra- dium has been produced: from the rocks assayed and tested by the re- search laboratories at Ottawa. Be- cause of the high concentrates yield- ed, and the ease with which this metal was obtained, the Provincial Government is lending every facility to the company, FURTHER CURBING OF RUM RUNNERS "MADE EFFECTIVE Change in "Customs Rules Puts Another Check on Liquor Running (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) Toronto, Oct. 8.--The Globe to- day publishes the following des- patch from Ottawa: "Collectors of national revenue throughout Canada have been ad- vised by Robert W. Breadner, com missioner of customs of the pass- ing of an order-in-council amend- ing the customs regulations with respect to coastwise vessels carry- ing as cargo wines, spirituous and fermented malt liquors. The ef- fect of the changes, it is intimated is to prevent a repetition of the Vedas case. "The minister of national rev. enue, Hon, Edmond B. Ryckman, submitted to the cabinet the order, which has been approved by the governor-in-council, to place copast~ wise shipping on the same fobting as vessels clearing for a foreign port when carrying intoxicating liquor, The new order will curb the business of rum-runners on the Great Lakes, who had already bean retty effectively stopped by the Donor Expo Act submitted. to parliament at the last regular ses« sion by Mi; MacKenzie King. a -------------- JUMPS 114 FEET THEN SWIMS ASHORE Stockholm.--~A young Swede, E. G. M, Soederberg, jumped from the Skuru bridge near Stockholm, n height of 114 feet, and swa ashore without being injured wit the exception of a few bruises on his legs, He did it on a dare, driv- In with the taxi driver and a few friends as witnesses. he perform- ed the perilous dive. Some ten years ago a Swedish film company offered 6,000 krone ($18,000) for a jump from this bridge, but there were no candi- EGYPTIAN CURSE in a taxi to the bridge where, | dates, ~ PHILADELPHIA Bishop, 2b. Dykes, 8b. Cochrane, c. Simmons, cf. Foxx, Ib. Miller, rf. Moore, If. Boley, ss, Earnshaw, p. Umpires--Charles Rigler third. The Batting Order ST. LOUIS ' Douthit, cf. Adams, 3b. Watkins, rf. Frisch, 2b. Hafey, If. Bottomley, |b. Wilson, c. Gelbert, ss. Hallahan, p. Harry Geisel (American) at first; Jack Reardon, (Na- tional) at second; George Moriarity (National League) at plate; (American) at RANGE CAREFULLY KEEPS RECORDS OF LEGION OF HONOR Staff of Sixty Looks After . «Records of 140,000 Members Paris. --France watches with care over its roll of 140000 Frenchmen who have deserved so well of their country as to have been named mem- bers of the Legion of Honor. A staff of 60 look after the records of the members, both living and dead. yDuring the Commune in 1871 many of the early records were destroyed by fire, but the archives of the Le- gion still proudly boast twenty thousand records of the earlier years, many dating from 1802, the year the Legion of Honor was founded by Napoleon | There are five ranks in the Legion of Honor: Grand Cross, Grand Of- ficer, Commander, Officer and Knight. Of the Grand Cross there are only 60, with #15 grand officers, 2863 commanders, 18814 officers, and 116,- 183 knights. The proportion of mili- tary to civilian members of the Le- gion of Honor is 40 per cent. The President of the republic is Grand Master of the order, and a grand chancellor, named by him, and ten members meet every fifteen or twen- ty days to consider candidates for decoration. Nominations are made by 'the gov ernment ministers, , who before they pass on the application for consider- ation have taken every precaution to see that the postulant is worthy of wearing the five-pointed star of the Legion of Honor. ANIMALS LIVED THREE MILLION CENTURIES AGO 4 Washington.--The earliest rec- ord of animal life upon earth goes back more than 300 million years, a short time compared with the 2,000 million years that astronom- ers estimate the earth has existe. These earliest ' animal records come from the Cambrian rocks. Older rocks are known to geolo- gists, and in the other rocks are abundant evidence of aquatic plant life. "But," says Dr. C. E. Resser of the United States National Mus- cum, "thus far no undoybted ani- mal fossils have been discovered in pre-Cambrian rocks. anywhere in the world and geologists' are speculating as to the meaning of this." Dr. Resser is quoted in a Car negie Institution report dealing with the grand canyon of the Col orado, where ancient rocks are ex- posed down into the Algonkian period which preceded the Cam- rian. . : "1 feel sad--I've just had my handwriting read." "What did the expert say:" "That from the way I made the 'h' at the beginning of the word 'elegant' he knew I had never been to school.' BLAMED FOR DEATH Havana, England. --Dasia dro in a pond here where 'Bad thrown the hand of an tian mummy and the "Egyptian curse" mongers are busy again. _-- re mother. died Shontly af I the death of the father. od Ko mummy's hand "3 curse on the family and 1t was at' her suggestion that (t was thrown, into the pond. : The father, a British naval off: r MANY PICTURES OF NAVAL BATTLES Sailors Broke Rules During War Forbidding Taking Photos Toronto~=The London Onlooker of the weekly, Saturday Night, in em- phasizing the historical value of na- val pictures says: "Rather late in the day, some may think, the Admiralty has discovered the historical value of photographs, and a recent Fleet or- der invites officers and men of the Royal Navy to contribute prints of suitable naval subjects for inclusion in the Admiralty Photagraphic Lib- rary. Contributions would be wel- come from retired Naval men or re- latives of former members of the Senior Service, There is no shortage of current photographs, because In recent years the Admiralty has re- cognized the status of official photo- graphers aboard ship and provided facilities and encouragement for the keeping of pictorial records of inter- esting events, During the War, however, it was an offence to have a camera aboard a warbhip. This was a rule more honored in the breach than in the ob- servance, and,. thanks, to the dis- obedience of individuals, posterity has a few wonderful battle pictures, like the sinking of the Blucher, to help visualize the war at sea. The Ger- mans went to the other extreme Submarine commanders were expect: ed to bring back photographs, and even cinema films, of torpedoed mer- chant ships, partlv for use as propa- ganda and partly as a check on over- optimistic claims of successes. That is why a great majority of genuine photographs and films of the Naval side of the War are German. The Admiralty Photographie Library will not be confined to War pictures, but 'it 'is in that period when the use of cameras was officially discouraged that gaps may be filled by private contributions. SINGERS MUST NOT BECOME TOO FAT ------ Stockholm.-- Professor John Forssell, thief 'of the Swedish Royal Opera and one time cele brated singer, has warned hie singers--ladies and 'gentlemen-- not to grow fat, and that those who already have grown too heavy must do their best to reduce. "Our sudiences d) not alone pay to hear the singing, but expect an esthetic picture of those who execute the music," he says. The Swedish press unanimously shares. Forssell's view and hopes that soon there will be no heavy- weight artists with the Royal Opera. RADIO COOKSTOVE BAKES, BOILS, FRIES Schenec » day -when the hou 'e can tune radio cookstove to bake the next | meal is foreshadowed by a littis glass dish in the General Electric Laboratories "here. This dish hangs at the end of a wire, Be- lieve it or. not, without flame or means of heat of any visible sort in thé same room, this cooked the following: One sausage. One fried egg. One baked apple. A batch of cookies, And water was boiled in the dish. #h It was all done with the mew, ort wave vacuum tube, which 'sends out a radio wave about 20 feet long and having a frequency of 50 million cycles a second, The dish is suspended ao that its con- cer, brought the gruesome relic from Egypt. tents pick up this intense radia- tion, : in her dish has NEW LIGHT SHED "ON ARCTIC OCEAN AND AIR CURRENTS Sea Flows Eastward, Away From Civilization and Rescue Hopes New York.--New light has been thrown on the trap of winds and sea chrrents that caught Salo- mon August Andree in his attempt to reach the North Pole by balloon in 1897. In a message dropped 28 years ago by United States polar explorers this new light was re- vealed. The Russian ice breaker Cedov reports by wireless the find- ing on August 11 of this message in the Arctic ice. Discovery of this message also suggests reasons for the probable fates of 12 other still missing | aeronauts. Six vanished in the airship Italia, and six in Amund- sen's airplane expedition. Like these missing men, the message started its journey by air rising in a balloon from northern Franz Josef Land, now called Fridtjol Nansen land, which is east of where Andree died, Nobile was wrecked and Amundsen disappear- ed. In all that area the sea currents are eastward. while civilization and hopes of rescue lie westward and southwestward, In 28 years the message made barely 400 miles, due south--a witness to variable winds of the region which bprevented it from getting far be- fore settling to earth, It was found off the island of Nova Zem- bla, The message was sent by Com- mander E. B. Baldwin, of the Baldwin-Ziegler expedition that attempted to reach the North Mole. Its contents were identified by Anthony Fiala of New York, a member of the expedition, 'who helped in making the coples. Nearly 200 identical messages were sent, attached in strings of 15 or 20 to balloons about the size of garages. The messages were in buoys, made to release automatically upon 'contact with water, ice or land. A few of the messages were found in the near by Arctic in the next several years In a metal container in the buoy the note was found, still clearly decipherable, Tt requested coal so that the expedition might remain' longer than originally planned, but the first message was not found for two years and the expedition came home op "sched- ule. COW'S STONAGH WINDOW HELPS STUDY OF DIET Scientishs Study: Action of Food Through Ingenious Opening State College, Pa.--~The mantle of Pennstate Jessie, the famous cow vania State College with a "window" in her stomach, has fallen on an- other. Again selecting a Holstein, scien- tists christened her Pennstate Jessie II with a painless operation in the anaesthetic was used and beyond shaking her head several times the heifer gave no signs of being aware that anything out of the ordinary was taking place. ~ The opening to her largest stom- ach is kept closed with a special rubber plug which can be removed when scientists wish to study the bacterial action in Jessie's dinner. The studies interrupted by the death of the original Pennstate Jes- sie now may be resumed. They open speculative features which may ini- tiate an entirely new sphere of in- vestigation in dietetics, It has been found that the bac. terial count content in a cow's sto mach changes as new elemants are introduced to her food, new bacteria appearing and developing as the new vations were continued, and disap pearing when the elements are withdrawn, : + How. these bucteria originate, where they come from and how the findings may apply to humans and Influence the general prachice of die tetics, comprise a fleld of large po- {BLUENOSE LARGER which lived four years at Pennsyl- college veterinary hospital, A local. THAN U3. RIVAL Meets Thebaud for Lipton Cup---History of Races Lunenburg, N.S.--Interest: is mounting as the international fish- ing schooner race off Gloucester is less than a week away. The dimensions of the champion Lunenburg racer Bluenose, and her smaller Gloucester rival, the Gert- rude L. Thebaud, are as follows: Bluenose , Thebaud 101 ft. 133 ft. 25 ft. 15% ft. 7,700 in Waterline Overall ...10,000 be used Tonnage, gross No machinery will handling sail and gear, The schooner races were inaug- urated off Halifax in 1920, when eight Nova Scotia Grand Bankers competed, Egperanto, of Gloucester then came to Halifax and won the international trophy from Dele- wana, winner of the Nova Scotia race. In 1921 the new Bluennse, winner of the elimination race of that year, defeated Elsie, of Glou- cester, in the international series off Halifax. In 1922 Bluenose, winning the Nova Scotia title, went to Gloucester and defeated the Henry Ford. In 1923 the Columbia came from Glougester to Halifax and eompeted with Bluenosee In an unfinished series. There was a gap until 1926 when Blueénose and. Haligonian al- so of Lunenburg staged a series off Halifax in which the veteran schooner defeated the new vessel with ease. Another gap elapsed until 1929 when the fest Lunen- burg race was held in connection with the exhibition. This year the races have been revived on a big scale, for following the Lunenburg race, in which Bluenose will not" compete, the famous schooner is to go to Gloucester to race the new vessel Gertrude L. Thebaud, for the Lipton Cup. The International Fishermen's Trophy is not at stake in this race, but it will be tha first contest of an inernational nature singe 1923. The fastest time on record In the international races, which have been over a forty mile course, was that of the Bluenose in a race of the 1921 series, when she covered the distance in 4 hours 30 minutes and 33 seconds, or at the rate of 8.8 miles an hour, which contrasts favorably for a thirty thousand dollar fishing schooner, with the average speed of 9.4 miles an hour, made by the million dollar yacht Enterprise in the final race of the 1930 series for the American's Cup, What, it is asked, are the seven best words in the English lan- guage? Well how about 'Here is the money 1 owe you?"---Border Cities Star. roaster in his bachelor pent house. roaster in his bachelor ent house. He does not care for peanuts, but loves the fragrant roasting smeil. As who doesn't?----0. 0, Mcintyre. "Among inseets," says a natural- ist, "bees take the good conduct prize." Certainly bees ought to know how to beehive. The Bore: "One thing I have al- ways dreaded is that I may be buried prematurely,' The Bored: "How could you?" FISHING IS POOR IN HUDSON BAY Government Expedition Probes Commercial Fish Prospects Halifax, N.S.----'Possibilities of commercial fishing in the Bay are very poor," reported H. B. Hachey, of Bathurst, N.B., a member of the Biological Board of Canada and in general charge of the Government expedition returning on the trawler Loubyrne after' investigating the fisheries of Hudson Bay. The Loubryne, commanded by Captain Sigurd Sorenson, travelled 8,300 miles during the eight weeks expedition to the Bay. Captain Sorenson, who was presented with a hat and cane for bringing the first boat of the season into Port Churchill, said that while no re- port of 'the expedition could Le made as yet, the party was entirely satisfied with the trip. The, expedition left Halifax on uly 26 with two main purposes in mind: (1) Actual "fishing operations with trawl, long lines, hand lines and nets: (2) Survey of the bio- logfeal, physical and chemical con- ditions of the waters, Captain Sorenson was in charge of fishing operations. The investigation followed early reports of abundant fish in the Bay and later inquiries by the Hudson Bay Company showing poor results. The Biological Board made plans for a survey of the Bay and charters | ed the Loubyrne, taking along = | number of scientists and members | of the Board. W With the development of a rall- way to Port Churchill the subject became increasingly important, as the line would supply western Can- ada if commercial fishing in Hud~ son Bay were possible, A shore party from the Loubyrne under the direction of 8. J. Walker, Supervisor of Fish Culture, investi- gated fisheries in the vicinity of the Churchill river and good results were reported from this search. A great deal of the Bay was covered. In addition to beam trawling, the Loubryne carried a few dories to try out other methods. The monotony of the trip was only broken once when the ship came near to djsaster, mews cf which became known for the first time when the trawler arrived here. A wrong bearing put the Loubvrne ashore on a rocky ledge fifteen miles from Port Churchill. 8.0.8. calls were sent out as the steel bottom dragged against the rocks, but two minutes later, under mil steam, the trawler scraped over the ledge and made harbor safely. Touch with shore was maintained at all times by radio. Consderable field ice and icebergs were encount- ered on the outward trip, and some shoré ice in Hudson Straits. Sev- eral icebergs were sighted during the homeward journey. "Some fish were taken and we have them aboard," said Mr. Hach- ey. He declined to state the spe- cles or discuss the matter further, A preliminary report would be fn the hands of the Departmentt of Fisheries within two weeks and would then be available for distri- bution, Several months would be required to prepare a complete re- port of the investigation. re. But tires is the lets talk turkey, Roy 11 Celind: Street And from the lowest to the highest price classes, Sap far and away 'the biggest value. ik" when you can year quality and our service right here at the same or lower prices. Drive over and what a range of them! ™ of tira | tentiality.

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