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29, 1921 Single Copy Four Cent*
$1.50 a Year 4 Single Copy 4c. VOL. XVIII No. 11 BELMAR, N.J., FRIDAY-APRIL 29, 1921 Single Copy Four Cent* TROLLEY HITS CURB COOK HOWLAND NOW MAYOR CONTRACTS AWARDED Several passengers were badly LOCAL SCHOOL IN ■ v A A i i t i n f i . I shaken up when Car No. 202 left the r m v in a i » ia Mayor William B. Bamford has LOCAL RESIDENTS IN AT COUNCIL SESSION “ <■ ^ e;h»,x b-c:r rwS FtSllVAL PROGRAM V T S S £*•££ AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT Eleventh avenue and F street on I land, president of "the Boro Council E. Haberstick & Son and J Eg- Wednesday morning. The track was High Honors is Anticipated for wil1 act as Mayor. Mayor Bamford bert Newman were the Sue- blocked for more than thirty min- the School Chorus at Neptune w?11 lje back on Monday. W ere on their way to attend the Avery-H eywood cessful Bidders for t h e ------------------------------------Tomorrow Afternoon — -------------- W edding- when tire blows out-ditching ,Plumbing Work on the New WORK TO START ON SHARK TO TEACH RIFLE SHOOTING and wrecking the car. Pain Pavilions - | RIVER BRIDGE n e x t WEEK On tomorrow afternoon the best, selections from each countv group < < • 1‘"np of instruction at ful injuries were sustained pT,he awarding of contracts fea j 'The replanking of the bridge wil] be used in a final County School . * ’ , , . Sl,mnier W11,1 be fro1" tured the session of the Boro Coun- by the occupants. j across Shark River w ill start next Musical which will be held in the h- whcn nfle shoot cil held in the Boro Hall Tuesday ; weej{- Protests were made oy the x eptu ing will be ta u g h t. -
Fliti/Vay* Stole Base
■ * ..... ........ ..- — ■ ■■■■ .■-■--rrr- ■ .■ = ■■■■■ — ■■■ 11 r- .ris 1 rfrr*******^ritffrf#fffrrfffjffrffrfffYffffffrrffffrffjftffrrfffrfffffffrffffffr‘*****************************l>*****************************““*************.*<w«»***»»»»**»»»*« »»»*»»#»»w#»»*»##*wm»»**»»»»*»»»*#***»***»»»*»»*»»»*****»**»*»**»»**»»»»»» II ! The BROWNSVILLE HERALD SPORTS SECTION =3 —rr~rrfrj i trrrmitrtrrrirrrtrrftrrrrrrrtsttr »»»#»»*»«#*#»#«#«»»»#*W»w»»»*»****»*l****^>*»»>»»«»***##»*»»»»#»**»**»»****»***»******^******#*#******#****>r^/<'>',’>^#*** BOXER OR FIGHTER? TOMMY-BRADDOCK CONFER TONIGHT * In Baseball 29 TEXAS LEAGUE Qninn, 44, Years, ^ ^ LIGHT HEAVY BELL UNBEATEN Giants With Backs To ^ ! GERMANY SEEKS Plans To Retire At EndOt Season HAS SEASON OF ■ TITLE STAKED _ _._ IN CUE MATCH Wall As Series With * * * TENNIS TITLE PHILADELPHIA, July 18.—(A5)— ‘SWELL HEADS’ Twenty-nine years in baseball is enough "or one man, says Jack Leads All Youths Matched With Bout Will Little Pro- Field in Elks Pirates Is To Start SAN ANTONIO, Texas, July 18. Berlin Bring Quinn, who throws twisters for the Billiard Texas is ex- Veteran U. S. Players In \ fit to Glove Slingers; Athletics. Tournament; —(P)—The league its worst epidemic of r Little Interest Jack, who was christened John Champ Loses One (By The Associated Press) periencing Interzone Finals ‘swelled head” this season. The Quinn Pjcus, was 44 years old July With the National league race threatening to become a private affair That is the the records George Bell further entrenched between the Pirates and the Cubs, John McGraw deployed his forces malady is not to be confused with 5. way The himself at the Polo in an to stem BERLIN, July 18.—(>T»)—(^*5 NEW YORK. July 18.—</P>—'The have it. Jack looks like he might top of the Elks’ upon the grounds front today attempt the Corsair rush. inflated ego. light heavyweight championship straight billiard tournament Wed- The impending series may be called crucial for the Giants alone; to the struggle of youth and vigor against be 50. -
INSIDE THIS ISSUE the More We Learn, the Less We Know
A publication of the Society for American Baseball Research Business of Baseball Committee July 20, 2008 Summer 2008 The Commissioners and “Smart Power” The Return of Syndicate Baseball By Robert F. Lewis, II By Jeff Katz Joseph S. Nye, Jr., Dean of the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, has developed a A scourge of the National League during the 1890’s, geopolitical “smart power” model, used in this essay syndicate baseball, which allowed intertwined owner- to characterize the nine Major League Baseball (MLB) ship of franchises, was a serious detriment to true commissioners. Particular focus is on Judge Kenesaw competition. At the turn of the century, New York Gi- Mountain Landis, the first, and Allan H. “Bud” Selig, ants’ owner Andrew Freedman, along with John the current one. While intended to assess America’s Brush, owner of the Reds and shareholder in the Gi- use of power in global politics, Nye’s model is gener- ants, and two other National League owners attempted ally applicable in any leadership evaluation. Nye first to form the National League Base Ball Trust. With the describes “power” as “the ability to influence the be- support of Frank Robison of the Cardinals and Arthur havior of others to get the outcomes one wants.”1 In Soden of the Braves, the trust would foster common his model, Nye simply divides power into two con- ownership of all league clubs and assign players from trasting subcategories: hard and soft. For Nye, “hard one club to another, thereby influencing competition. power” is typically military or economic in the form Needing merely one more vote for passage, a vote to of threats (“sticks”) or inducements (“carrots”). -
I Harry's Cigar Stores
SHIPPERS RIDE FOR SECOND HEENEY READY WIN FROM INDIANS IN 17 PUCE AS SPUDS BOUND FOR INNINGS PUSHES ATHLETES’ FOR CAMPOLO MARGIN PUY-OFF WITH STEER NINE — LEAD TO HIGHEST j Ten-Round Bout Postponed Press) I By The Associated Press) (By The Associated from the Increasingly evident A moist afternoon along the major league trail, where three of the By Rain Is Re-Scheduled For the sake of variety and to get away a with Dallas, the position fline scheduled skirmishes were postponed, was hardly enough for the For fact that the Spudders are bound fog play-off Tonight Beaumont in the pennant race Yankees, but about right for the Athletics. of Uncle Claude Robertson's Exporters The leaders turned the day to account by wresting a 5 to 3 decision today merits consideration. blue moons since a club from the City from the Indians in 17 innings behind Mose Grove as the Tigers cut- NEW YORK, Aug. 15.—<&>—'Tom It has been several Magnolia even acmeved tne nrst envision an upuncned the Yanxs Dy it to w. Heeney. victim of Gene Tunney in and the Philadelphia lead increased the retired champions last fight at late In the season. Robby’s present outfit not Is much in the to thirteen and one-half games. the Yankee stadium a year ago, only very select but This margin is the greatest the once more is ready to enter the ring circle, gives every prom- Ck ise of remaining there to the bitter Sp®irft§ A s have had at any time this sea- against Vittorio Campolo at Ebbets over field. -
Twins Notes 8-22 at KC.Pdf
@Twins l www.twinspressbox.com l #MNTwins KANSAS CITY ROYALS (11-15) VS. MINNESOTA TWINS (17-10) SATURDAY, AUGUST 22, 2020 - 6:05 P.M. (CT) - TV: FOX SPORTS NORTH & FS 1 / RADIO: TIBN, WCCO, THE WOLF GAME 28 RHP Brady Singer (1-2, 4.56) vs. RHP Randy Dobnak (4-1, 1.42) ROAD GAME 13 Upcoming Probable Pitchers & Broadcast Schedule Date Opponent Probable Pitchers Time Television Radio / Spanish Radio 8/23 at Kansas City TBA vs. LHP Kris Bubic (0-3, 5.12) 1:05 p.m. (CT) Fox Sports North TIBN, WCCO, The Wolf / twinsbeisbol.com 8/24 at Cleveland RHP Kenta Maeda (3-0, 2.27) vs. RHP Aaron Civale (3-2 2.91) 6:10 p.m. (CT) Fox Sports North TIBN, WCCO, The Wolf / None 8/25 at Cleveland LHP Rich Hill (1-1, 4.70) vs. RHP Shane Bieber (5-0, 1.11) 6:10 p.m. (CT) Fox Sports North TIBN, WCCO, The Wolf / None 8/26 at Cleveland RHP José Berríos (2-3, 4.75) vs. RHP Adam Plutko (1-2, 6.88) 6:10 p.m. (CT) Fox Sports North TIBN, WCCO, The Wolf / None SEASON AT A GLANCE THE TWINS: After completing their seven-game homestand with a record of 5-2 (3-1 vs. Kansas STREAKS City and 2-1 vs. Milwaukee), the Twins began their 10-game roadtrip with a loss in Kansas City Under Baldelli (since '19) ..............118-71 last night...tonight they will continue the trip with the second of three at Kauffman...after tomorrow Current Streak 1 loss Home Record:.....................................12-3 afternoon's series finale the Twins will travel to Cleveland for three from Monday-Wednesday, then Last 5 games 3-2 Road Record:........................................5-7 Detroit for four from August 27-30...Twins are 12-3 at home and 5-7 on the road this season. -
Roumanian the Chest and His Not Inf’*Equent Ed at Buckland with Heavy Dam Incident, Which Cost a Number of Artillery Across Soochow Creek New Art
A -I.-:'' -va -;■ - ^st,^.'. i'^;- ■ .^- ■ ■: -;, -v-* ........ -. „ . ........ ■ ■ V"'W si?"!-.. » ••'■; -.t'.,'' rt r. iS.'JfXjt'Vlir .‘^t' -iyif-yj- :■ :-'^^ ‘-y^^r.■ “■ .^'V Vi ^'.■, .iVr^t ■' ,.. .,.. ■ •-><?s " f v ' V ! ; - . > . Vi ■* '. ••' V '.. - ^, ■ "■ -- - - i. ------ NET PRESS RUN ATBBAGB I t i jJ X CIRCUXtATION OF THE SVBinNO HEBALD , for the month of Blaridt, 1927 fU.T- - 'W n 4,996 ■X** VOL. X U ., NO. 155. Classified Advertising 'Bh p^ge 18 MANGpES1^l^ (X>NN.; FRIDAY, APRIL 1,1927. ({TWENTY PAQild): V . » “ DON’T BE ALARMED OVER THE GOAL STRIKE’ HENBT FORD ESCARIS AlJ?Sg^,DEAXHPLOT. Conn CHINA AS IT Washington, April 1— "The pifBllc. needn’t Be alarmed, .By the coal strike,” said Secretary of Commerce HerBert Hoover LOOKS TO A today, as he emerged from a Cabinet meeting. ^ "There is enough soft coal above ground to last a year. DANGER I M LOCAL MAN The regrettaBle thing, of course is that thousands of men have Been thrown out of work.” The Cabinet discussed the coal situation briefly, But opin .V w ft. ^ ''‘S. Manager of Ghstonbnry ion was almost unanimous that ^4 A**' 5 ^ A N U i there is no cause for serious C(Hne concern aBout the strike. at Huhmr Knitting Co. Gets First - ■ <$> Feared His Lini|^ •H AMERKiW SL()GAN Hand Information. TWO UNHURT Crashed h Cnisli. ' First hand information aBout the trouBle in China has reached Detroit, Mich;, April 1.^—^Henry «Days— Ameikuis Con- AS LINE CAR Ford was slowly recovering today A''?'! Manchester In a letter from Dr. i A -yv Fred RoBinson who Is practicing from the Injuries suffered in -an Today Toward (Unese V,| dentistry in Shanghai. -
Slants the Meeting Was Called by H
I_ The BROWNSVILLE HERALD SPORTS SECTION I iU INJURIES MAY RACE UP MISSISSIPPI FOR RECORD IN TRAINING ‘DOTIT BUNDY Cubs and Athletics i HALT CHICAGO I A STAR AT 12 Loom as Contenders Hartnett Out With Ailing Brownsville ball teams had a nice Daughter of Famous Woman For World's Series Arm And Wilson And The took a % day Sunday. Tigers Player Shows Form In Also Hurt pair from Harlingen and the Palmez Cuyler Hat Makers split a couple with the First Tournament (By The Associated Press) San Benito Aztects. The Tigers TIGER STAR MAY 13. The of miracles not be CHICAGO, Aug. (A1}—'There gave evidence of returning to their day may * * * NEW YORK. Aug. 13.—uTV-An- There continues to be a difference old form trouncing the Harlingen over, but it would take a highly other budding star of the courts has Red Ants handily. The scores of opinion as to the status cf Gabby arisen to carry on the Sutton-Bun- trusting nature to bet that Chicago BE FASTEST MAN were 9-1 and 18-0. The Tigers have Harnett's throwing arm which has dy tradition of United States ten- and Philadelphia will not meet in # * * rounded up all of their old players, nis. the Cubs been lost to Chicago and, although the season is nearly the world series this fall. the season's chase of a Dorothy Bundy. 12-year-old throughout they expect to get in several With two months to go before IN JUNIOR LOOF spent, daughter of the famous Sut- j National league pennant. -
LOT# TITLE BIDS SALE PRICE 1 1905 Baltimore Orioles Cabinet
Huggins and Scott's November 12, 2015 Auction Prices Realized SALE LOT# TITLE BIDS PRICE 1 1905 Baltimore Orioles Cabinet Photos Lot (8) [reserve not met] 1 $ - 2 1905 Hughie Jennings Baltimore Orioles Cabinet Photo [reserve not met] 2 $ - 3 1907-1908 Oriole Park Cabinet Photos Lot (7) 9 $ 956.00 4 Extremely Rare 1910 Photo Postcard of the 1871 Chicago White Sox Team - One of Two Known! [reserve met] 6 $ 1,314.50 5 1900s-1910s Pittsburgh Pirates Novelty Postcards (4) Including 3 Scarce Felt Mini-Pennant Examples 10 $ 717.00 6 Extremely Rare Hotel Braxton Publicity Photo Postcard of Cincinnati's Redland Field - Possibly Only 1 of 2 Known5 $[reserve 717.00 met] 7 Rare and Unique 1910 "The 'Bleachers,' Shibe Park, Philadelphia, Pa." Oversized Triple-Fold Postcard [reserve not4 met]$ - 8 1909 Pittsburgh Forbes Field Double-Fold Postcard 3 $ 203.15 9 1914 Terrapin Park, Baltimore Federal League Postcard 0 $ - 10 1930 Fairchild Aerial View Photographic Postcard with Polo Grounds Below - SGC 84 NM 7 0 $ - 11 Rare and Unusual Aerial View Real-Photo Postcard Featuring Yankee Stadium and Polo Grounds in One Shot 7 $ 1,015.75 12 Rare 1949 Washington Griffith Stadium Real Photo Postcards Trio 0 $ - 13 1950s-1980s Cincinnati Reds Team-Issued Postcards (99) Including (15) Signed Examples 8 $ 507.88 14 1870s-1910s Newspaper Baseball Illustrations (8) Including 19th Century Hall of Famers 10 $ 286.80 15 Rare 1910s "Comic Series - The Darktown Baseball Club" Glass Lantern Slides (12 Different) 13 $ 657.25 16 1916 Joe Tinker 11x14 Burke & Atwell Spring Training Photos Pair 0 $ - 17 1935 Rochester Red Wings Hanging Team Photo Display Including Walter Alston 5 $ 167.30 18 Rare 1936 Lon Warneke "Chicago American" Scorecard/Supplement 1 $ 298.75 19 1940 DiMaggio All-Stars vs. -
The Jurisprudence of Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, 15 Marq
Marquette Sports Law Review Volume 15 Article 2 Issue 2 Spring The urJ isprudence of Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis Shayna M. Sigman Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.law.marquette.edu/sportslaw Part of the Entertainment and Sports Law Commons Repository Citation Shayna M. Sigman, The Jurisprudence of Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, 15 Marq. Sports L. Rev. 277 (2005) Available at: http://scholarship.law.marquette.edu/sportslaw/vol15/iss2/2 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at Marquette Law Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ARTICLES THE JURISPRUDENCE OF JUDGE KENESAW MOUNTAIN LANDIS SHAYNA M. SIGMAN" This article debunks the conventional view of Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, a man who served as district court judge in the Northern District of Il- linois (1905-1922) and as the first commissioner of Organized Baseball (1921- 1944).' Relying on a realist lens of analysis, this novel work of legal history examines decisions from both halves of Landis's career to demonstrate that the "Benevolent Despot" was neither arbitrary nor unprincipled, as biographers have portrayed him to be. By exploring the rhetoric and content of the Landis opinions, letters, and pronouncements, this article reveals the common meth- odologies that Landis employed to legitimize the outcomes stemming from his focus on pragmatism, economic analysis of transactions, and Progressive era principles of moral justice. This article is relevant beyond its ability to utilize tools of jurisprudential analysis to correct an errant account of a legendary fig- ure; it also provides a useful framework for exploring the benevolent dictator model within private ordering. -
Fbt Mbtuim Jlkf
•• >t - :>.y - .>>Vv - \ ¦ gpyg V-Wn-Zf'"' vf*'-*?'**'" p————iwwii"i . I———m. ¦'¦ _ Sports News Features and Classified fbtJ MbtuimV. X WITH ITODAT XOKHDTO EDITIOB L/Jlkf. WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, MAY 23, 1930. PAGE D-1 Brown to Try to Keep Red Sox on Run: Gehrig Joins Ruth in Orgy ofHome Runs BIG LEAGUE LEADERS | THE IDEAL GOLF CLUB. —By BRIGGS | YESTERDAY’S STARS By the Press. the Associated Frees. Associated Br Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig, Y&nks— NAT LEFTHANDER AMERICAN. Collected 12 hits. Including three home EACH YANK GETS 3 apiece, Batting—Rice, Nationals, .404. h•/ why' BOYS TALK *BOUT HARD f|§||C I TffU. YtoU runs drove In 14 runs and ' Runs—Ruth. Yankees, 36. J*??*** xw.f scored 8, ss Yankees took two from Hits—Rice, Nationals, 55. J LUCK-’I M«*T THS Athletics. OM Tine -TtefUTM TEC A*Ot> Irving Hadley Doubles —Cronin, Nationals. 15. / BACL **** »«U.fV I and Bob Burke, Na- Triples—West, Nationals, I TAKES A BAD BOUMCC ASJD LAIODS MovJ | QfiTTTBN LOCK taionals—Held Red Box 6. rr * to 11 hits In AS A’S LOSE TWICE HURLS TOMORROW ' LIMW' * CLO ® runs—Ruth, two games and beat Home Yankees. 12. \ HO Trie ROUGH AT THff LBFT-_ I TAKH J—r - B».w . them twice, 3-2 Runs batted in—Foxx, Athletics, 39. !OM THIRD .A PERFECT S A TTS T***®oY* and 13-1. 7. ‘-lAx THE J Chuck Klein, , Stolen bases—Rice, Nationals, STRAIGHT For The grecisj- - i*ue nrvra Phillies Eleventh New York’s 39 Hits Include Hubmen Apt to Use Rookie I —f *~ homer with one on In twelfth beat NATIONAL. -
Page | 1 “He Wasn't a Baseball Player. He Was a Worldwide Celebrity, An
Cael McClanahan | August 6, 2020 | History Through Cards “He wasn't a baseball player. He was a worldwide celebrity, an international star, the likes of which baseball has never seen since.” - Ernie Harwell on Babe Ruth The 1933 Goudey set is one of the most popular and widely collected card issues to come out of the Great Depression. Its name alone congers up the likes of Jimmie Foxx, Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig and “Dizzy” Dean – It’s the set that turned many kids of the Great Depression into lifelong collectors and is recognized as one of the top 3 sets that defined the 20th Century. One such young collector, Elwood Scharf, would one day go on to become a pioneer in the in the 1960’s and 70’s Hobby and had vivid recollections of the set when he wrote about it in 1970 – “Pennies were a bit scarce in those days and we couldn’t afford to waste them on cards we already had. A single card and a slab of gum sold for a penny. They were packed in a semi-transparent wrapper, and by holding this wrapper tight, we could make out the name of the player on the face of the card. Of course, many stores didn’t go for this nonsense, but we would hang around peering through the glass candy counter, pennies in hand, until the storekeeper would relent and place the box of cards on the countertop. Eager hands would then go through the packs of cards selecting only those that were needed. -
Complete Issue (PDF)
APRIL 2020 AJNR VOLUME 41 PP 551–736 APRIL 2020 THE JOURNAL OF DIAGNOSTIC AND VOLUME 41 INTERVENTIONAL NEURORADIOLOGY NUMBER 4 WWW.AJNR.ORG MR thermometry in cerebrovascular disease Hippocampal sclerosis detection with NeuroQuant CTA diagnostic errors in evaluation of LVO Enhancement of vestibular perilymph in Menière disease Official Journal ASNR • ASFNR • ASHNR • ASPNR • ASSR FLOW DIVERSION. SIMPLIFIED. FRED™ Flow Re-direction Endoluminal Device The Flow Re-Direction Endoluminal Device (FRED) System is indicated for use in the internal carotid artery from the petrous segment to the terminus for the endovascular treatment of adult patients (22 years of age or older) with wide-necked (neck width ≥ 4 mm or dome-to-neck ratio < 2) saccular or fusiform intracranial aneurysms arising from a parent vessel with a diameter ≥ 2.0 mm and ≤ 5.0 mm. Use of the FRED System is contraindicated under these circumstances: Patients in whom anticoagulant, anti-platelet therapy, or thrombolytic drugs are contraindicated. Patients with known hypersensitivity to metal such as nickel-titanium and metal jewelry. Patients with anatomy that does not permit passage or deployment of the FRED System. Patients with an active bacterial infection. Patients with a pre-existing stent in place at the target aneurysm. Patients in whom the parent vessel size does not fall within the indicated range. Patients who have not received dual anti-platelet agents prior to the procedure. For complete indications, contraindications, potential complications, warnings, precautions, and instructions, see instructions for use (IFU provided in the device). HEADWAY Microcatheter Indications for Use: The HEADWAY Microcatheter is intended for general intravascular use, including the peripheral, coronary and neurovasculature for the infusion of diagnostic agents, such as contrast media, and therapeutic agents, such as occlusion coils.