NINE THE ITHACA JOURNAL, MONDAY EVENING, JULY 3, 1939 County Teams MARKET QUOTATIONS BC Grid Team To Watch Coming Events Of Rural Interest Medal Winner Beaten On 19th Hole Corporates Edge Up In Bond Mart Stock Market Advances At 4th Hour strong to 10c over Friday's average; good and choice 170-220 sparingly, 240-245 lb. butchers, trucked-in 150-230 few, packing sows, $4.8505.35. CATTLE Receipts. lightweight native offerings strong to 25c higher; good steers, $9,250 9.75; some held around plain to medium southern grassers, $7.25 8.00; few loads mixed yearlings, Canadians, grassers, $8.50 down; beef, cows, plain and medium, can-ner and cutter, weighty sausage bulls, lightweight, $5.50 0 6.35. CALVES Receipts, 600; veal-ers active; good and choice, largely plain and medium, $6.75 fe9.00.
SHEEP Receipts, 70; good to choice native springers, sorted, medium, $9.25 downward to $7.25 for inferior July 4 Enfield Old Home Day picnic, Schaber's Grove, 1 p. m. Bring table service, sandwiches and dish to pass. July 5 Brooktondale Congregational Ladies Aid picnic meeting with Whitely, 2 p.m. July 5 Lake Ridges Home Bureau meeting in afternoon.
July 5 Searsburg; Home Bureau meeting with Mrs. James Allen. Program planning. July 6 West Groton Home Bureau meeting at Goodman cottage, Lake Riugee. Bring dishes, silver, rolls and dish to pass 1 p.
m. dinner. July 6 Bethel Grove Two-cent supper at Community House, Slaterville 5:30 p. m. on.
Public invited. July 6 Etna Grange Hall Grange meeting at 8 p. m. for conferring of 3rd and 4th degrees. Unsolicited bring salad or jello for 6 p.
m. supper. July 7 Jacksonville Ulysses Women's Republican Club meeting with Mrs. Charles Leuder, 2:15 p. m.
All interested invited. Averages STOCKS 30 15 15 60 Ind. Rails Jtil. St'ks Today, 1 p. m.
64.7 16.8 36.5 45.5 Previous Day 64.8 16.7 36.4 45.5 Month Ago 67.1 18.4 37.2 47.3 Year Ago 70.5 19.0 34.7 48.4 BONDS 20 10 10 10 Rails Indus. Util For. Today, 1 p. m. 55.0 100.0 95.8 60.3 Previous Day 55.1 100.0 95.8 60.3 Month Ago 57.0 99.9 96.3 62.3 Year Ago 56.1 97.7 92.8 62.6 Board of Trade Deadlocked In Ball Loop Freeville-Dryden, Groton Coronas Cortland Moose are still in a for first in the Newspaper League after winning Sunday tjjueg.
Freeville defeated Homer, Groton defeated Weedsport, J5.5,' and Cortland defeated Lodi-W'iliard, 5-3. Groton will go a half game ahead Tuesday if it takes Homer in a game at Groton High School Field. Freeville and Cortland will be idle. Freeville batted its way to an early advantage over Homer and never was threatened as Gilberton and Bell scattered 10 Homer bingles. Groton scored six runs in the first and six in the second and had good sailing the rest of the way.
The box scores: Freevllle-Dryden (15) ABRHPOAE Brzostowski, 2b 6 3 3 4 4 0 Christopher, ss 5 2 0 1 1 1 Walikis, lb 4 12 8 10 Reed, 3b 5 0 2 1 4 0 TJtwin. If 5 2 1 0 0 0 Fritsch, rf 4 3 1 3 0 0 Lockwood, cf 2 2 1 0 Schumacher, 5 1 3 8 0 0 Gilberton, 4 0 0 0 0 0 Wheeler, rf 1 0 0 0 0 0 Bell, 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals Homer (3) Fitzgerald, 3b Baldwin, If F. Reagan, cf Turkington, lb H. Reagan, ss Allis, B. Reagan, rf Fellows, 2b Springer, Clark, Hitchcock, Briggs, rf Dennison, 2b 45 15 14 27 11 1 ABRHPOAE 5 112 3 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 2 0 110 0 11 0 3 13 0 0 0 3 2 0 1 2 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 1 10 0 3 0 1 2 0 0 Totals 35 3 10 27 14 7 Score by innings: Freeville-Dryden 243 140 10015 Homer 120 000 000 3 Two-base hits H.
Reagan 2, Brzostowski, Fritsch, Reed. Three-base hit Baldwin. Home runs Fitzgerald, Lockwood. Stolen base Wheeler. Sacrifice Gilberton.
Double play Fitzgerald, Fellows to Turkinton. Left on bases Homer 8, Freeville 10. Bases on balls Springer 1, Clark 4, Gilberton 3. Strikeouts Clark 3 Gilberton fi "2 Lockwood 2. Hits off Gilberton, 9 in 8 innings; Lockwood, 1 in Springer, 4 in Clark, 10 in 7.
Winning pitcher Gilberton Losing pitcher Springer. Umpires Stearns and McNeil. Time 2.14. Groton (15) World Price Index The General Motors-C 1 1 World Price Index of 40 basic commodities for the week ended June 24 was 61.3, compared with the previous week's revised figure of 61.1. The United States index in gold increased 0.2 point to 62.4.
The index numbers, when 1910-1914 equals 100, follow: World United States in in in gold gold curr. 1938 Jan. (high) 70.4 67.5 114.3 Dec. (low) 60.7 63.0 106.6 Week ended: June 25 64.5 63.3 107.2 1939 May 61.5r 63.3r 107.2r Weeks ended: May 27 61.6 63.1 106.9 June 10 61.5 63.2 107.0 June 17 61.1r 62.2 105.3 June 24 61.3p 62.4 105.7 The index numbers for the United Kingdom, France and The Netherlands increased while the Canadian, Belgian, Australian, New Zealand and Finnish figures declined. The Swedish number remained the same.
(p-prelminary; r-revised.) The French government owns 37 per cent of that nation's railroad mileage. NEW YORK PRODUCE HABRET By the Associated Press POTATOES No I sacks (100 lbs.) Maine (old) Green Mountain upstate New York, round white. $1.35 1.40; southern. cobbler. 100 $1.50 1.65.
RYE Easy. No. 2 American f.o.b. New York, 62 No. 2 western c.i.f.
New York, 61 c. BARLEY Firm. No. 2 c.i.f. New York, 55 c.
BEANS Steady. Marrow, pea, red kidney, white kidney, $5.75. HAY Steady. No. 1, No.
2, No. 3, $14.00 15.00; feeding, $13.00014.00. NEW YORK DAIRY AND POULTRY MARKET BUTTER Receipts, 868,551 lbs. Firm. Creamery higher than ex tras, 2324c; extra (92 score), 23c; firsts (88-91 score), 2123c; seconds (84-87 score), 2021c.
CHEESE Steady Receipt 219,477 lbs. State, whole milk, flats. fresh, fancy 18c; held 1937 fancy to specials, 20 23c; held 1938, 19c. EGGS Receipts, 40,244 cases; Easy. Mixed, col.
Bpec. packs or select, from fresh receipts, 18 22 standards and commercial standards, 18c; firsts, 16c; seconds, 15c; mediums, 15c; dirties No. 1, 15c; white eggs, resale premium marks, 2730c; nearby and mldwestern including premt urns, 24 027c; nearby and mid west hennery exchange spec. 24c; mediums, 21c; brown eggs, extra fancy, 23 28c; exchange specials, 22c; nearby exchange mediums, 19c; duck eggs, nearby 15017c. DRESSED POULTRY Fresh: Boxes, fowls, 17 18c; fryers, 20 0 24c; broilers, 15 24c; ducks, 11013c; old roosters, 12 14c; northwestern turkeys.
24 0 29c; frozen, roasters, 18 23c; fowls, 17 18c; old roosters, 14 turkeys, 28029c; toms, 26c; ducks, 14c. LIVE POULTRf By freight; chickens, Rocks, 17c; Leghorn 12015c; old roosters, 13c; turkeys, hen, 20c; young toms, 15c. By ex press; chickens. Rocks, zuc; broil ers, Rocks, 19021c; crosses, 180 20c; fowls, colored, 17c; Leghorns, 15016c; old roosters 13c; turkey hens, 22c; toms, 16c; ducks, 10c. BUFFALO LIVESTOCK MARKET HOGS Receipts, active.
Let's Think Men with which declared be free and THEY Previous Close Open Close WHEAT July 69 69 68 Sept. 71 71 69 Dec. 72 72 71 Vi CORN July 46 46 46 Sept. 48 49 48 Dec. 50 50 49 OATS July 31 30 30 Sept.
30Vi 30 29 Dec. 31 31 31 OVID By EDDIE BRIETZ New York "UP Tag Boston College (with Fordham, Cornell and Brown) as the football teama to watch in the East next season. Canada doesn't know it, but "it's soon to get a load of Tony Ga-lento as a referee. The Elmer Laydens have decided to label their latest arrival Pat, which gives them a Pat and Mike combination. All reserved pews for "Lou Gehrig Day" at the stadium Tuesday were sold out a week ago.
Jack Dempsey was put in Max Schmel-ing's old room at Polyclinic Hospital because it overlooks Madison Square Garden where both are pretty well known. Willard Mullin sums it up nicely in the World-Telegram. He says the guy who. beats Louis must have the punch of a young Baer, the speed of a Pastor, the youth of a Nova, the confidence of a Ga-lento, the coolness of a Schmeling, the durability of a Farr and the heart of a Braddock. Note to seven American League clubs: The Yanks are 'aiming to win their fourth straight pennant by 25 games.
Maxie Rosen-bloom heads a group of Hollywood fans which proposes to pay the $200 fine the Coast League slapped on Bill Cissell. Bill, you know, had an idea free speech was standard equipment in this country. If it's a dark horse you're looking for, get aboard Bobby Dunkel-berger, the North Carolina golfer, in the national amateur. That's Gabby Hartnett barking denials that Larry French, the Cubs' southpaw bowler, is in the doghouse. One minute interview: Moe Berg: "I've equalled Lou Gehrig's record backwards.
I've missed the most consecutive games." Herman Hickman, line coach at N. C. State, is about to weaken and go back to Tennessee and his old boss, Maj. Bob Neyland George Preston Marshall says the only thing wrong with baseball is too many air conditioned rooms. (Being a football magnate, he should know).
Jack Horner now is in the sports corner of the Greenboro (N. Record, and Howard Purser, who used to write a whale of a column for the Milwaukee News, is appearing daily in the Los Angeles Examiner as "Rex Regent." all-star teams just won't look right minus the Messrs' Hubbell, Gehrig and Gehringer. Dempsey Past Crisis, Demands Food New York IIP) There's no need to worry any more about Jack Dempsey. He'll lick Kid Appendicitis just as surely as Tony Ga-lento kayoed "dat bum Ammonia." The former heavyweight champion practically had his rival, who gave him a worse scare tnan jl.uis Angel Firpo did 16 years ago, down for the count today. He passed the "crisis" without incident in nis recovery after an emergency appen dicitis oDeration Thursday night His temperature was reported as normal Sunday and the main problem th doctors and nurses at Polyclinic Hospital were having was to keep the old man mauler in bed.
The hospital stopped issuing bul infirm on Demusev's condition af ter reporting Sunday morning he was "very comfortable." The reporters who had been hanging around the hospital aoor ior mree ria ire and ni went home, and Jack raised his voice in a demand for steak instead of the liquids ana gelatine that have been his only diet. csimHav afternoon he had recov ered sufficiently to ask if he rail uo some friends and talk about his operation, but he admitted that after tne operation he had thought he "was a goner." "It had me going for a while in the early rounds, he torn iNea Rmwn. his respective. Then he dictated and signed a note of ap preciation to the thousanas wno had sent messages oi cneei. Brown estimated 10,000 telephone calls had been received at the hos 1 pital and at DemDsev two restau mnts Newspaper switchboards were swamped with cans or inquiry.
His restaurants reported a business as people dropped in to ask "how's Jack?" and Jack fcnrdiv he restrained trom calling up to ask, "who's business." Dempsey expects to remain in the hospital about 10 days and then go to the home of John D. Wilson at rnzonnvia Lake. Wilson was riovinir cards with Dempsey when 1- 1 A he was stricken, jacn saiu ue rnntinue the game, In wnicn Brown and Billy Taub also were playing, and that ne wouia oiu least 450 in spades." see the results -of the shot before the ball is hit. rnnpntrt( on looking at me ball or keeping the head down. Pvo cnlfpr should learn his limitations.
There is nothing that will upset the golfer's mind more than trying to emulate the shots of his opponent. If your opponent hits a long ball and you ordinarily are a short river, trying to arive aiong vm." him will e-et you in trouDie. You'll be pressing and the result is topping, slicing and pulling. Use your own judgment in iue selection of clubs. Don't bother about the other xei- low.
At birth the approximate weight of a baby elephant is between lbO and 200 pounds. "Rnland crows more daffodils than any other country in the world. Ovid Newly elected officers at the alumni dinner Wednesday evening at the Ovid Central School include: President, John Covert; vice-president, Mrs. Clinton Covert; secretary, Miss Nellie Riley; treasurer, Frederick Potter. Mr.
and Mrs. John McGrane and daughter Mary of Auburn have been visiting at the home of Mrs. Matie parkin on Water St. Mrs. Ruth Pomeroy of the Cayuga Lake Boulevard is at the Tompkins" County Memorial Hospital at Ithaca, recovering from an operation.
Mr. and Mrs. William Limner of Attica have returned home after spending a vacation with Mr. and Mrs. Newton Myers and family at Cayuga Lake.
Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Cratsley of Groton were guests during last week of Mr. and Mrs. George Cratsley of Main St.
and attended the commencement ceremonies of the Ovid Central school, their son Robert being one of the graduates. Dr. Edvin Dickinson and Mrs. Dickinson of the Sheldrake Road celebrated their silver wedding anniversary on Sunday, June 25. Mrs.
Estella Wyckoff is now at her home near Cayuga Lake for the summer season. Misses Beatrice and Martha Ann Daugherty of Easton, are spending several day's vacation New York UP) United States government Issues shaded downward in scattered dealings today as the corporate bond market edged up a bit in light pre-holiday business. Near noon some Treasuries were off as much as 1832nds of a point, but traders said the softening was due principally to lack of buyers in the marketplace. Continued tension with the fresh weekend warning of British Prime Minister Chamberlain to the German Reich against aggression caused tapering in the foreign dollar list and Italian 7s of '51, Belgium 6s of '55 and Japanese 5s all lost part of a point. German 5s of '65 were a shade higher, while the 7s of '49 tended lower.
Leaning forward in the corporate division were Delaware Hudson refunding 4s, Missouri Pacific 5s of '77 Pennsylvania Railroad general 4s of '65, Anxious 4s of 55, United States Steel 3s, American Foreign Power 5s and Columbia Gas Electric Ss '61. A bit down were Missouri-Kan sas-Texas 5s of '62 and Montana Power 3s. Boulder dam cost approximately 70 million dollars. STOCKS AND BONDS J. S.
BARR CO. Savings Bank Bldg. PHONE 2286 Correspondents WHITEHOUSE CO. Members New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK a document colonies to fought 4th in 1776 york New York UP) A little buying in a few investment favorites and miscellaneous ind i a 1 shares lifted prices Irregularly in a listless pre-holiday stock market Some stocks were ahead as much as a point near the fourth hour but the market generally bogged down in the smallest trade of the current dull spell. Dealings were at the rate of less than 300,000 shares for 'a full session.
Suspense over the outcome of the Danzig situation in Europe, as well as the confused legislative picture in Washington, continued to keep speculators on the side lines. Many remained away from the financial district for a long recess over Fourt of July. Fractional gains and losses were the rule most of the time in such issues as U- S. Steel, General Motors, Montgomery Ward, Goodyear, International Harvester, Santa Fe and Consolidated Edison. Many shares did not trade at all.
American Telephone rose a point at the start and Industrial Rayon advanced more than a point on a transaction of 4,000 shares, later yielding part of the gain. Celanese, Loft and most copper mining shares were other firm spots, the mining group stimulated by reports of broad foreign demand for the red metal. In the curb, Cities Service, Lockheed and Consolidated Copper climbed a bit in a mixed market. JGPleEflknemfwy vbg kxzfi vbgkv Vacation periods were expected to bring early July curtailment in many industrial plants. Some steel mills were reported planning to remain closed all this week while taking inventory.
The financial district looked for a further decline in motor production as automobile manufacturers shift operations to new models, which are due to come out earlier this year than usual. Wall Street underwriters studied plans for additional corporate financing. Approximately 700 million dollars in new corporate issues were said to be in prospect or under discussion for offering, with at least half that total likely to come on the market in the next three months if the European situation does not upset plans. Some analysts forecast second quarter earnings reports, scheduled to start appearing soon, generally would show up favorably compared with last year, considering the higher level of activity in most industries. Charges Follow Royal Visit Victoria.
B. UP) The visit of the British king and queen is over in a blaze of glory, and now the season for post mortems has opened. Mayor Andrew McGavin has promised an investigation into charges that reports of a food and room shortage in- Victoria were spread in neighboring cities, that grandstand seats sold too high, that certain school children didn't get to see the parade and that steamship companies failed to offer excursion rates to Victoria for the event. with their aunt, Miss Julia McDonald on Ann St. The Ovid Center King's Daughters will be entertained on Thursday afternoon, July 6 at the home of Mrs.
Howard Bassette on the Lodi-Interlaken Road. Treman Co, 201 First National Ithaca, N. Y. Open 1:30 Packard Motors 3 3 Paramount Pictures 8 8 Pennsylvania Ry 16 16 Phelps Dodge 32 32 Phillips Petroleum 33 33 Pub Serv of 36 36 Pullman 25 25 Pure Oil 6 6 Purity Bakers 16 16 Radio Corp 5 5 Reo Motors 1 1 Rep Iron Steel 14 14 Reynolds Tob 3 38 Schenley Dist 11 11 Shell Union Oil 10 10 Socony-Vacuum 11 11 Southern Pacific 11 11 Southern Ry 13 13 Spicer Mfg 21 21 Standard Brands 6 6 Stand Gas Elec 2 2 Stand Oil of 41 41 Stand Oil of Indiana 24 24 Studebaker 6 6 Texas Corp 36 36 Texas Gulf Sulph 27 27 Timken Roll Bear 38 38 Timken Det Axle 11 11 Union Car Carbon 73 73 United Aircraft 34 34 United Gas Imp 12 12 United Corp 2 2 Rubber 39 39 Rubber Pfd 103 103 Steel Com 44 44 Steel Pfd 107 106 Warner Bros Pic 4 4 Westinghouse Elec 94 95 Woolworth 46 46 Yellow Truck 13 13 Youngstown 33 33 Arthur B. Treman Co.
MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE INVESTMENT BANKERS ASSOC. INVESTMENT DEPT. PORTFOLIO ANALYSES DIRECT PRIVATE WIRE TO NEW YORK FIRST NATIONAL BANK BLDG. TELEPHONE 3404 After pacing the largest entry list the' Country Club of Ithaca's annual Fourth of July tournament ever had, Al Meyn bowed to Carl Treman after 19 holes in a first round match Sunday. Two down and three to go, Meyn caught up on the 17th but failed to match Carl's birdie on the extra hole.
Meyn's medal in the qualifying round was 73. It took 77 or better to make the first flight and five players, Treman, Bob Hutchinson, John Carver, Ralph Head and Carl Snavely played off Saturday afternoon for four places. Carver lost, creating one of the club's first Carver-less first flights in years. Hutchinson and Head both triumphed in their first round tests while Snavely and E. E.
Bredben-ner meet today. Hutchinson took B. M. Clarey, 3 and 2, while Head triumphed 5 and 3, over George Cross. In the second flight Bob Causer moved to the finals with victories over M.
E. Campbell, 5 and 3, and over Harold Brown, 1 up. John Carver won 4 and 3 over Dr. Leo Speno and must play Kenny Reed, who defeated Jack Miller, 1 up, for the right to meet Causer. Brown advanced on Harold (Chick) La Bonte's default.
One of the third flight finalists is Dr. David Robb, 3 and 2 victor over Louis Barnard and a 7 and 6 winner over Dr. W. E. Dillenbeck.
The latter moved into the semifinals on Bob Farnsworth's default. Robb will face Elmer Henshaw for flight honors Tuesday, Henshaw having beaten William Perkins, 1 up, and Lou Pickering. 3 and 2. Pickering reached the semifinals on a default. Barney Pelotte heads the fourth flighters.
He won a pair of 7 and 6 decisions at the expense of Jim Van Natta and Robert Devricks. The latter defeated Dr. Leonard B. Job, 5 and 4. Norm Bakko captured a 19-hole event from William Starner and now awaits the winner of the P.
M. Lincoln-Leigh M. Champaign match to fight for a chance at the finals. Fifth flight matches resulted a3 follows: Harry Clark beat Bert Patten, 3 and Joe Farley beat Virgil Ruegsegger, 1 up; Prof. Louis Knudson beat Harold Howard, 1 up (19 holes) and John Moynihan beat Fred L.
Brown 1 up. In the sixth and last flight. Cliff Morgan beat C. R. Dixon, 4 and El mer Starner beat La Vere Brown 6 and Doug Gillette beat Charles Salisbury, 5 and 3, and William Waters beat M.
E. Van Orden, 1 up (19 holes). The only beaten fours match of the day saw Van Orden taking Salisbury, 3 and 2. Diam id Strrs By The Associated Press Buddy Lewis and Johnny Welaj Senators former made unassisted double play with bases loaded and Athletics leading in ninth, then hit homer with one on to win first game of doubleheader; latter got four hits to drive in six runs to lead way to victory in nightcap. Tommy Bridges, Tigers four- hit pitching strapped White Sox for his 11th win of season.
Paul Derringer, Reds, and Jim Gleeson, Cubs former held Chi cago to six hits in winning opener while Gleeson singled with bases loaded in ninth inning of second game to give Cubs a split. Howard Mills, Browns, and Mel Harder, Indians each hurled five- hit game to divide doubleheader. Al Lopez and Ed Miller. Bees Lopez hit home run with bases loaded for margin of victory in first game and Miller hit for cir cuit with two on to break up tie in second. Bob Grove and Ted Williams, Red Sox, and Bill Dickey, Yankees urove muniea Yankees on six hits and Williams hit homer with two on in seventh inning of first game; Dickey's home run with two on was big blast of New York's second game bombardment.
Luke Hamlin, Dodgers, and Harry Danning, Giants former stopped Giants on six-hit pitching in nrst game, wnne latter hit homer in eighth inning to break tie and win second game. Arky Vaughan and Elbie Fletch er, Pirates former hit triple and two singles to bat in three runs in leading triumphant opening game attack while Fletcher hit homer with bases loaded in sixth inning to break up second game. Sues Movie Men 'That isn't my was the opinion of Gen. Andrew Jackson Houston, above, of Houston, Tex, after seeing movie, 'Man of Only surviving son of Sam Houston, Texas hero, he is suing producers of picture for one million dollars, claiming his parents were libeled. i AB PO A Petrella, ss 4 2 2 0 3 0 Pankovich, ss 0 1 0 0 0 1 Gallagher, lb 4 2 2 7 1 0 Sidle, lb 110 5 10 T.
Heffron, 3 2 1 5 0 0 Erickson, rf 4 110 0 0 Pfeiffer, 2b 4 1 2 5 2 0 E. Heffron, 3b 5 2 2 0 4 0 Tarbell, If 5 12 10 0 Drake, cf 4 2 1 2 0 0 Kalb, 4 0 0 2 2 1 Totals 38 15 13 27 14 2 Weedsport (5) AB HPOA Wright, ss 4 1 2 2 3-2 Holihan, 2b 4 12 12 1 Backman, 3b 4 0 0 3 2 1 Earl, if 4 1110.0 3 0 0 2 1 0 Brayek, rf 4 2 2 0 0 0 Bibbins, cf 4 0 0 1 0 0 Lamphere, lb 3 0 0 7 0 0 Schramm, lb 3 0 0 7 0 0 Helmer, 0 0 0 0 0 0 Hamlin, 3 0 0 0 0 0 vision, men with courage signed thirteen North American independent. They dared, they TRIUMPHED! Back to STOCK QUOTATIONS What a day that must have been a day ofclimax for an independence-minded group of colonies and in Philadelphia, the solemn and fateful Congress in what is now Independence Hall. What a joyous scene must have taken place when the "Liberty Bell" tolled its glad message! i At that time and during the Revolution that followed, Banks played their important part in finance, industry and commerce a part that in the succeeding years has been increasingly important and of far greater scope. Today, as a modern descendant of those original financial pioneers, the Ithaca Savings Bank salutes the past with a great feeling of gratitude for those who so securely founded our democratic institutions Totals 36 5 7 24 8 4 Score by innings: weedsport 001 000 211 5 Groton 660 100 02015 Two-base hits Tarbell.
E. Hef fron, T. Heffron. Three-base hits E. Heffron.
Home runs Galla gher, Bravek 2. Sidle. Stolen bases Kalb 2, Earl. Sacrifices-Drake, Tarbell. Double playwright, Backman to Schramm.
Left on bases Groton 9. Weeds- Port 2. Bases on balls Helmer 4, uiun iu, Kalb 1. Strikeouts Hamlin 2, Kalb 5. Hits off Hel-m, 7 in 1 innings; Hamlin, 8 Lcsing pitcher Helmer.
Lmpires Davison and Brady. Time 2.10. Prepping for Par EKEPTiomLiy. LONG BALL DO NOT fJs WITH Wf fiy art Quotations furnished by Arthur B. Bank Building, Open 1:30 Allied Stores 8 8 Allis Chalmers 32 32 Amer.
Can 94 94 Amer. For. Pwr. 2 2 Amer. Pwr.
Light 3 3 Amer. Smelt Ref. 39 38 Amer. Tel. Tel.
159 160 Amer. Tobacco 'B' 83 83 Amer. Water Works 8 8 Anaconda Copper 22 22 Atch Santa Fe 25 25 Aviation Corp. 4 4 Baltimore Ohio 4 4 Bendix Aviation 21 21 Bethlehem Steel 52 51 Borg Warner 21 21 Brook Man Transit 11 11 Celanese Ohio 21 22 Chesapeake Ohio 31 31 Chrysler Motors 67 67 Col. Gas Elec.
5 5 Com. Solvents 9 9 Con. Edison 29 30 Cons. Oil 7 7 Cons Aircraft 18 18 Cont. Can 36 36 Curtiss Wright 5 5 Curtiss Wright 24 24 Eastman T'odak 159 159 Elec.
Auto Lite 29 2978 Electric Boat 10 10 Elec. Pwr. Light 6 6 Gen. Electric 33 33 Gen. Foods 42 42 Gen.
Motors Goodrich Com. Goodyear Rub Gt Northern Pfd Hudson Motors Illinois Central Inspiration Copper Inter Harvester Int Pap Pow Int Tel Tel Kennecott Cop Kresge Kroger Grocery 41 42 16 16 25 25 29 20 4 4 11 10 10 10 54 54 7 7 6 6 ri 31 24 24 26 26 105 105 12 22 31 31 48 48 5 5 26 26 16 16 15 15 7 7 13 13 20 20 Lig Myers Lorillard Martin (GF) Co Montgomery Ward Nash-Kelvin ator Nat Biscuit Nat Cash Reg Nat Dairy Prod Nat Power Light New York Cent North American North Amer Aviation 14 14 Northern Pacific 7 7 Otis Steel 8 8 In observance of the 163rd anniversary of freedom this bank will be closed tomorrow! Ithaca, new. P'ayer has ever been able to has S00d game of golf until he able to control himself keep cool. hhuVe stlH to hear the golfer no has shot a perfect round, fiem- rs have eone around in even can ask them and thev a11 not e.one or tw shots that were Wdhelr likinS- The golfer is 6o have one or two shots 60aad in a round. 'about Inust overcome worrying Th.
I that have been Played, on most important is the The be played-taL reatest hazards are men- They cause the golfer to try to.