Eastern Progress Eastern Progress 1953-1954
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GSN Edition 06-24-20
The MIDWEEK Tuesday, June 24, 2014 Goodland1205 Main Avenue, Goodland, Star-News KS 67735 • Phone (785) 899-2338 $1 Volume 82, Number 50 12 Pages Goodland, Kansas 67735 inside Run with the Law today More lo- cal news and views from your Goodland Star-News Outlaws win tourney The Goodland American Legion Baseball team won the Levi Hayden Memorial Tournament on Saturday. See Page 11 Goodland Police Chief Cliff Couch holds the torch for the opening lap of the Run with as well as from Golden West. For more pictures, See Page 5. the Law held Saturday at the Goodland High School track. Couch was surrounded Photo by Pat Schiefen/The Goodland Star-News by fellow law enforcement officers. Runners and walkers were from the community weather Intentional burn 69° Police seek help 10 a.m. Monday Today finding vandals • Sunset, 8:18 p.m. Wednesday The Goodland Police Depart- be in the thousands of dollars. • Sunrise, 5:22 a.m. ment is asking for help locating the The department is asking that • Sunset, 8:18 p.m. perpetrators of a string of thefts and anyone with information about the Midday Conditions vandalism that has been occurring case contact the police at (785) 890- • Soil temperature 68 degrees since last Tuesday. 4570 or the Crimestoppers hotline • Humidity 68 percent Based on the department’s inves- at (785) 899-5665. Those providing • Sky mostly sunny tigation, suspects have stolen solar tips may remain anonymous. Any- • Winds north 7 mph powered yard lights from several one providing information leading • Barometer 30,30 inches homes and are using them as projec- to an arrest in this case is eligible for and falling tiles to smash nearby car windows. -
Walcott in 1 Punch KO 10 ^ Tragedy
A RHH: ms\ ': '•' I" WWI W MB Ike, Sugar, Ez Dethroned; Who's Next? THE OHIO J - •••—g * **^*»— \%:*n High st. 10 Poop**** Walcott In 1 Punch KO ^ PITTSBURGH.—Four tune* previously a challenger but taever a winner, ancient Jersey Joe Walcott rewrote THLZ OHIO M VOL. J. Wa. 7 SATURDAY, JULY 28, 1951 COLUMBUS. OHIO boxing'* Cinder*?! I * Story by ocotriog a one-punch seventh •round kayo over Champion Eaaanrl Charles of Cincinnati before a shocked throng of 30,000 fane here at Forbes INEL field Wednesday night. Thus, the up.iet Mtrinir, be . gun with Ike Williams' de* coming in with a hard right m«*e in the lightweight di- hand. VOL. 3, No. 6 Saturday, July 21, 1951 CoJumbae, Ohio vi-tioii. Sugar Ray Robin- Ex fell forward, rolled aon'a fumbling of the mid over and making a dee- dleweight crown m London perate effort to rise, as Tragedy a week aft*o, w tarried over the count reached nine, Sports Gleanings into the heavyweight divi slumped on his face and sion, mo-rt lucrative of the the year's biggest sports lot, and where thi* crazy story was born. Thc kayo •pin of up.net event** will end was recorded at 55 sec no one dares predict. onds of the seventh round. Turpin Gives Boxing Needed Walcott had been refer That's the fight simply. red to by many as "Often a There were no sensational beat man but never a bride," early round exchanges and and along with the Drornot- the finish came as sudden as ers of Wednesday's fight was the surprise with which Shot In Arm In Beating Ray was being ridiculed, by fans it was received. -
Hftjvtm)Iv Ej Littst
BASEBALL SPORTS OF ALL SORTS BOXING Some enthusiasts are getting all It's all over. The last man is out het up over the prospect of Willie in the Baseball Contest and up go Ritchie getting another ten-rou- the scores. Following is a list of fight with Freddie Welsh and taking those who correctly named the the title from the champion. But it is easier to convince a copper that a No. 1 L. F. Orlowsky, 837 N. Law-l- er murder is a murder than to make us av. subscribe to any such opinion. No. 2 Miss May Caldwell, 129 S. The memory is too fresh of the Morgan st. way in which Charlie White made No. 3 A. Hansen, 2440 W. , Freddie look like an amateur, only to North av. have the champion come back in a No. 4 H. Carroll, 1955 W. Harri- return fight and make the Chicago son St. man star in the role of a sucker. No. 5 William Tennes, 6438 Lake-wo- od Welsh is wise to all the tricks of av. his trade and is not averse to increas- No. 6 Joseph Caputo, 1027 S. ing the box office tolls. The best State st. way to do that is to let an American No. 7 Walter Hamberger, 2315 N. lick him in. ten rounds, then reverse Hamlin av. the tables on said American in a fu- No. 8 Roland Libonati, 1013 S. ture go and clean him up. Halsted sf- - Over the route the results No. 9 Edward T. Murrin, 3406 might he entirely different Ritchie, Lyndale st. -
State Tournament Program
© 2019 Dairy Farmers of Wisconsin The WIAA Welcomes You To The 45th 2021 State Softball Tournament Fans are reminded of the risk and danger incidental to the game of softball whether occurring prior to, during or subsequent to the actual playing of the game, including specifically (but not exclusively) the danger of being injured by thrown bats and thrown or batted balls. DIVISION 1 #2 Sun Prairie (21-3) Mon., June 28 – 8 a.m. @ Bay Port H.S. #7 Beaver Dam (19-3) Mon., June 28 – 2 p.m. #3 Hamilton (23-3) @ UW-Green Bay Mon., June 28 – 10 a.m. @ Bay Port H.S. #6 Chippewa Falls (24-5) Wed., June 30 – 3 p.m. #1 Kaukauna (24-2) @ UW-Green Bay 2021 STATE CHAMPION Mon., June 28 – Noon @ Bay Port H.S. #8 Wilmot Union (13-10) Mon., June 28 – 7 p.m. #4 Burlington (21-4) @ UW-Green Bay Mon., June 28 – 2 p.m. @ Bay Port H.S. #5 Cedarburg (26-3) DIVISION 2 #1 Jefferson (26-0) Wed., June 30 – 10 a.m. @ UW-Green Bay #4 Catholic Memorial (19-9) Wed., June 30 – 6 p.m. @ UW-Green Bay #2 Baldwin-Woodville (21-0) 2021 STATE CHAMPION Wed., June 30 – Noon @ UW-Green Bay #3 Marinette (20-5) DIVISION 3 Stephanie Hauser WIAA Assistant Director #1 Dodgeville (26-3) Tournament Manager Tues., June 29 – Noon @ UW-Green Bay #4 Lomira (17-3) Tues., June 29 – 7 p.m. @ UW-Green Bay #2 Prescott (23-3) 2021 STATE CHAMPION 2022 WIAA Tues., June 29 – 2 p.m. -
1ATIMA Strange Are the Intricacies of the Colonel George H
THE tfORXIXG OREGOtflAX. WEDXES1AT. SEPTEFBETt 27. 1022 15 ford Honey, Dr. Tubbs and Ben to yell at the pitcher and call him not, i& penalty? Moore H. names? If what the Al- ANGLERS, A. He is not allowed to do bo and the 0UCIBESTJH1 The big running race of the umpire should send him .to the bench. bany card will be the Linn' county HODS Q. Man on third base and three balls derby, over a course of-on- mile and and two strikes on the batter. The next 70 yards. Exceptionally keen com- pitched ball is the fpurth ball and the petition is expected. BY- catcher throws to third and geta the SACKER FOR SERIES BENEFIT - RAIN , runner. How can he-b- e called out when it is a dead ball? Pacific Squad Works Oat. A. The fourth ball is not a dead balL It is only recently that some have come PACIFIC UNIVERSITY,. Forest to believe that it is, and much confu- Grove, Or., Sept. 26. (Special.) sion has been created. Coach Frank is giving his men hard Q. Batter hits between first and sec- Foster and Groh Outranked workouts every night .On McCredie' Dry Weather Interferes With ond. First baseman gets the ball when - he shoUld have let it alone and then field to put them in trim for- the finds that he cannot beat the batter to This Seasoii. football game with the University Tracking Deer. the base. What should the batter re- of Oregon Saturday. The scrubs ceive? continue to break through the var- A. -
The Retro Sheet Retro News 9 Official Publication of Retrosheet, Inc
June 2, 1999 Inside: Volume 6, Number 2 Game Acquisitions 2 Nominations Sought 3 Strange Plays 5 The Retro Sheet Retro News 9 Official Publication of Retrosheet, Inc. There are two topics for this column: game logs and data release policy. The game log story is really just an up- date from last time. Since then Tom Ruane has done a lot of work getting the logs organized. He has had help from Mark Armour who is filling in some of the gaps, especially umpires. In addition David Vincent has written a program that will make access to these logs easy and logical. All that is left is to get the logs posted on the web site, which we hope will be accomplished very soon, perhaps even before you read this notice. The Retrosheet Board of Directors explicitly gave permission to the President of the organiza- tion to decide when a given data file was ready to release. Up to this point, I have been very conservative and we have only released files that had undergone exhaustive proofing. For ex- ample, totals generated from our play by play files agree to the greatest extent possible with the official totals in all batting and pitching categories. For those cases (very few) where our numbers differ from the official totals, we have detailed descriptions of the source of these dif- ferences. The logic behind this slow approach is that I thought it would be damaging to our credibility to release one ver- sion of a file without detailed proofing and then to replace it later after we had made corrections. -
".7 Case It Didn't Work out Accord Sr
r 1 s r- - TEtfeTFATlMER : MARCtl 25, 191?' V "'page cr sports! STAMFORD MP WATERBURY LIKELY TO GET FRANCHISES TONIGHT edited dy hag: DOWN EiHi..nznw:!:fnnni..!fid; BRIDGEPORT TURNS w , Quality I m e Not . Came! ' JERRY GONNELL FOR MANAGER Cigarettes m 1 1 ' !.. m - IFnirst - Premiums choke TurfcisK tile 1 Will THE Domestic tobac- 4 Stamford and Franchise cos are expertly blended as Waterbury 9 9 to produce in Camels & W ' - k Be Awarded at Eastern Meet- 0 May smoke more pleasing - ' than either kind smoked f ,M ' of this House to pre- ing Tonight 'straight; we can't afford w t It isthe pleasure f- 1 to out or V . Hart-ze- ll pass premiums sent' the new styles of the (ByWagntr.) ' Keating fanned Handiboe and spring the - ' officials said to- and held 14pe to a puny roller." ' coupons with Camels, 1 The Bridsport club , Con-ne- famous; there was no chance of ll cost of the tobaccos pro- 4 day Jerry Pennsylvania is supposed to be gen- ' to manaare local W being engaged the erous to its old rival, Cornell. The hibits this - - team, although he has applied for the Quakers have agreed ' to send,' their " in, 1 . admitted track, team to Ithaca spite of the are ( position. Secretary Reddy fact on Cornell's Camels delightful! he had received a in that they appeared g letterrom Jerry home field last , year. But Cornell had There's no tongue-stin- which, the former New Haven man- no home meet and their time honored r asked to be' considered for the or- nor unpleasant, cigaretty i 3 ager rivals came across handsomely. -
Newsletter Vol 6 Nbr 3.Pub
6HSWHPEHU ,QVLGH 9ROXPH 1XPEHU 0HHWLQJ 5HSRUW &RXUWHV\ 5XQQHU 6WUDQJH 3OD\V The Retro Sheet 1HZ 'HEXW 'DWH 2IILFLDO 3XEOLFDWLRQ RI 5HWURVKHHW ,QF There are three big items of news since the last *DPH $FFRXQW $FTXLVLWLRQV issue of TRS: 1) we have completed the acquisi- tion and computer entry of all games from 1974- By David W. Smith forward; 2) thanks to the gen- erosity of Steve Gietschier The news continues to be good in this area. For quite some time we have needed and The Sporting News, we 13 games from 1975 and 1976, all played in Atlanta. In late July I received an e- have microfilm copies of the mail message from Brian Westgate, who lives in Texas. Brian has hundreds of daily totals for NL players for game accounts on paper and a sizable number on audio tape. He had seen the almost all of the 20th century; lists of games we needed in our "Most Wanted" feature on the web page and very 3) we received permission generously donated copies of four of his scoresheets plus audio tapes of five oth- David W. Smith ers. We were able to obtain the last few we needed from another source so that from Total Sports to post President we now have complete coverage of all games from 1974-forward, a tremendously 1984-1990 event files on our pleasing set of games. The "most wanted" page has paid off for us at least four web site and the first two separate times; we are keeping it updated. seasons went up in July. -
The Century Book
THE CENTURY BOOK 1863 ESCANABA 1963 as years pass by..... Escanaba, its first 100 years! When Escanaba was young our pioneers lived with visions of a brighter future. Now we take for granted miracles of which they did not dream. How did our people work and live? What were their achievements? These and other questions are answered in The Century Book, which is not a "history" in the usual meaning but rather a commentary to the fact and an interpretation of the statistic. You'll read about the adventuresome era of the big trees, the plight of a little girl lost, Eli P. Royce wrote of city aldermen in his diary, and how the "fever girl" fooled the doctors. You may for the first time learn that there would have been no Escanaba at Sand Point if there had not been a dispute over land at Old Masonville; and you'll read about an airplane flight that took four days to hop from the ground to the top of a pine tree. Most of all you'll be impressed anew by the many good deeds of the people from many lands who, in the exercise of freedom, created in Escanaba their contribution to the American heritage. Foreword Escanaba was born in a period that throbbed with the excitement of the fast developing North Country. Nearby there could still be heard the occasional beat of an Indian drum. From the South came the disturbing echo of the Civil War. One hundred years ago, in January of 1863, President Lincoln issued a proclamation freeing the slaves. -
Price 1 $45,000.00 2 $15,500.00 3 $32,000.00 4
Lot # Description Price 1 Complete Set of (33) 1954 Red Heart Baseball all PSA Graded $45,000.00 2 1911 T3 Turkey Red Ty Cobb Cabinet-Checklist Back PSA 5 EX $15,500.00 3 1933 Delong #7 Lou Gehrig SGC 88 NM/MT 8 $32,000.00 4 1932 U.S. Caramel #26 Lou Gehrig SGC 88 NM/MT 8 $21,000.00 5 1932 U.S. Caramel #32 Babe Ruth SGC 86 NM+ 7.5 $25,000.00 6 1956 World Champion New York Yankees Team Signed Baseball with 24 Signatures PSA/DNA LOA $4,500.00 7 1954 New York Giants Signed Baseball with 29 Signatures including HOF'ers Willie Mays, Leo Durocher, & Monte Irvin PSA/DNA$4,500.00 LOA 8 1911 T205 Gold Border Cy Young PSA 8 NM-MT $19,995.00 9 1907-09 Novelty Cutlery/Postcard Ty Cobb/H. Wagner PSA 6 EX-MT $17,500.00 10 Babe Ruth Dual Signed Check PSA/DNA AUTHENTIC $5,500.00 11 Babe Ruth Single Signed Check PSA/DNA 8 NM-MT $4,950.00 12 1921-1931 Babe Ruth H&B Game Used Professional Model Bat Mears LOA $20,000.00 13 1933 Goudey #53 Babe Ruth SGC 86 NM+ 7.5 $26,000.00 14 1930 Roger's Peet #48 Babe Ruth PSA 5 EX $4,495.00 15 1909-11 T206 Piedmont Ty Cobb Portrait, Green Background SGC 86 NM+ 7.5 $30,000.00 16 1909-11 T206 Piedmont Ty Cobb Portrait, Green Background 350 Subjects Factory #25 SGC 60 EX 5 $4,500.00 17 1910 T213 Coupon Cigarette Ty Cobb SGC 50 VG/EX 4 $4,000.00 18 1912 T202 Hassan Triple Folder T.Cobb/C.O'Leary Fast Work at Third PSA 8 NM-MT $10,995.00 19 1911 T205 Gold Border Ty Cobb PSA 7 NM $15,000.00 20 1909-11 T206 Sweet Caporal Ty Cobb Portrait, Red Background 350 Subjects Factory #30 SGC 84 NM 7 $4,895.00 21 1909-11 T206 Sweet Caporal -
1932-12-05 [P C-3]
Herman Adds Dynamite to Cub Line-Up : Pay Limit War Among AA Minors Looms the Cauliflowers WASHINGTON AND LEE COURT TIME ASSIGNED ONE FOR THE Culling « Basket Ball Games I MIGHT EXPLODE, FEATHER ME GO BY FRANCIS E. STAN QUINT HAS 13 GAMES SET MY ME Many Listed for Floor at Roosevelt High. φ BOOK © Ε devastating left hand of Joe In the country and has no Idea of re- Knight, which has enabled the placing him on the strength of Er- Basket ball teams have been as- win's protest. Eight of Contests to Be Staged on signed time on the Roosevelt High BY CHARLIE WHITE. handîome Southerner to ascend Γ OPPOSED ON School courts as follows: BRIGHT CARD since ol' Doc the COAST Ï0PS to good Wilson, the top of the light-heavy- Home Floor—Opens Play Tonight, Griffith-Consumers. 8 o'clock; DUFFY, one oT the fa- hero, the fans' "spirit of fair weight ladder, may prove something of NOTboy tomorrow. Calvary Baptist, 7 o'clock; HUGHmous outfielders of Boston, in play," etc., departed for other ter- on a January 6. Bureau of Investigation, 8 o'clock; the season of 1894 (National handicap tomorrow sight at Portner's Babe With but Barba in ritories, has Washington had a real Pacific Won't Attend Olmsted Grill, 9 o'clock; Wednesday,, Great Willow, made the Chocolate-La Bout Loop League) highest batting j Arena, when he opposes Cowboy Owen honest-to-goodness collar-and-mat hero. Wpllace Memorial. 7 o'clock; Tremonts, percentage, .438. in a Clark major leagues. -
The Woods Hole Clippers: Filling the Postwar Years with Baseball, Basketball, and Camaraderie by Deborah Griffin Scanlon
The Woods Hole Clippers: Filling the Postwar Years With Baseball, Basketball, and Camaraderie by Deborah Griffin Scanlon From 1946 to 195 1, the 2 1 members of the Woods The Woods Hole Athletic Association sought and Hole Athletic Associatio n met in an upstairs room gained membership in the Fa lmouth Twili ght League of the Community Hall to plan thei r upcoming baseball association, and since there was no basketball sporting events. The Woods Hole Clippers baseball league, organized its own basketball schedule. The team played a full sched ule through the summer members named their team the Clippers, long before months, and then it was time for the C li ppers' bas the Falmouth schools adopted the nickname. "We ketball season. just discussed it and decided that this was appro priate fo r a ream representi ng a Cape Cod seaport vill age," How d id a vill age the size of Woods Hole - the M r. G riffin said. popul ation in 1950 was about 600 - come to have an athletic association and such an acti ve SPOrtS program? "After the Second World War, the soldiers came home, and people wanred to get together," explained Ro bert W. Griffin , who fo unded the athletic as sociation with Norman "Nog gie" Eldridge, and was its fi rst pres ident. " It was the era before TV, and baseball and basketball games afforded the opportunity to not only play the spans, but fo r the townspeople to spend evenings together and social ize." The Falmouth Enterprise repoered, " It has been unau Some of the Woods Hole Cli ppers got their start in baseball playing for lhe Woods Hole t ho ri tative ly sa id that fis hing Yankees.