■*? 



Paf-e Ten 



THE I. A. A. RECORD 



INABILITY of I o>;.in Couiuy I .irm 

 Burc.ui li.mt-'is to solve tlu' sl.uiib 

 and benders of R.ilpli Mc.ido, McDon- 

 Gugli County larni Ikirc.iu piiclii.'r, cost 

 I,oj;.ui county the first j;.inie ot tlie 

 tlumpionship scries pi.iycd .it Lincoln 

 on October 4. McI)onoui;h county 

 won tlie g.inie 2 to 0. The second j;.inie 

 was scheduled for Saturdax' afternoon, 

 t")ctober II, at Macomb. 



Pitchers' Battle 



The s;anie was a ,i;reat pitcliers' battle 

 between Meade, and W'eldon Quisen- 

 berry, who hurled for Loi;an county. 

 Meade allowed only .^ hits and struek 

 out 1 5 men, while Quisenberrv allowed 

 only four hits and whilTcd nine bats- 

 men. .\Ieade won by a shade when 

 Quisenberry's -.upport crumbled in the 

 fourth permitlint; two runs to score. 

 For four inninj;s Meade set down the 

 Lo^gan batters in succession. Quisen- 

 berry did his best work in the third in- 

 ning when he struck out three succes- 

 sive hitters. 



How It Happened 



In the fourth inning R. Ll.union, 

 center fielder for .MeDonough, sm.;shed 

 a hot grounder to Israel at short. The 

 ball got away from the shortstop and 

 Harmon reached first. (J. Harmon ad- 

 vanced his brotlier and was s.ife himself 

 on a fielder's choice. Carnahan, Logan's 

 second baseman, was charged with an 

 error. Both runners advanced on a wild 

 pitch and wlien Boots Runkle doubled 

 to center field the two runners scored. 



Prior to the fourth inning not a sin- 

 gle McDonough count\' man h.id 

 reached first base. It was a hard-fought 

 game and revealed that the two teams 

 are evenly matched. The fact that 

 Meade did not allow a single pass while 

 striking out 13 men game him the edge 

 on the pitcher's duel. 



Perfect Record 



Runkle, McDonough shortstop, ac- 

 cepted seven chances without an error. 



Totals 



II \'i"i'i.i': i''(»i{ sTA'ri-: ii \si':ii ai.i, 411 \Mi>iu\siiii> 



l.ou::in <'oiiiil>'„ l-'m-m lliimtii li:i^el»:ill triiiii «\oti tli«> ri^ht tn t'lid^r llie I'linili- 

 l>i<>iiNlii|> Kcrii'N iiB:iiii»t >lcl)i>ii»iiu:l> foiiiity i\ hen it iK-frnla-il Siiiikiiiiiiiii in tlit-ir 

 >,fiiii-lili:il Ni'riCM. 'riiiw i„ llic mcimiiiiI fiiiie llir l.iiufin t«>;iiii |il;i><'il f€»r the K4:it4> title. 



The Kcnlleiii:iii l>illK ihiMli in front, :ilM>\e, In IIiikIi ilnntt-r. the »il> ■n:ina- 

 Ker ol tli«' tt'liiii. 



SD'onii roM. Irft t<i ria^tt, iirp: t':irn:ili.in. Isr:i<-I, Short, (i. Sliirloj, \V. Qiiisen- 

 lii-rr>, A. Sfliiilil. l,rininK<-r: li:ick row: ,1. II. 4'lir<-klfy. fsirin iiiUlKt'r: S. ItiiiKt-n- 

 lii-rry, II. Mryt-rN, Chrrry, I.. Sliirle}. It. <(uiKeiil>rrry, II. .McytT.s, T. Ilannhiin nud 

 'riionisiN I'lifckivy , iiijiKcot. 



the City of New York. Particular 



warning was given against purveyors of 



I the so-called "shotgun pills," alleged to 



contain "an herb for each symptom." 



Totals 3 3 4 27 14 3 



Score b\' innings: 

 McDonough . 000 200 000 — 2 



Logan \ . 000 000 000 — 



There will be from 2 5,000 to 40,000 

 licenses to handlers of fruits and vege- 

 tables in effect by the time the Federal 

 Perishable Agricultural Commodities 

 Act of 1930 takes full effect Decem- 

 ber 10, 1930. If persons continue to 

 operate without licenses after that time 

 they will be subject to a fine. 



The creation of a tobacco exchanes 



Summary: Two base hits— S. Quisen- \^^^ b^cn proposed bv Governor Gard- 

 berry, Runkle. Struck out— By Meade, ^er of North Carolina. This action 

 13; by S. Quisenberry, 9. Bases on ^^quIJ involve standardization of the 



balls — OlF Quisenberry, 2. Double 

 plays — Russell to L. Graham to L. 

 Mings, Israel to Carnahan to Schahl, 

 Quisenberry to Schahl. Wild pitch — 

 Quisenberry. Umpires — Mattoon and 

 Kane. Scorer — Quisenberry. 



tobacco leaf in accordance with the 

 United States grades for tobacco before 

 it leaves the farmer's ownership. 



Do You Know That — 



The excess supply of sciiool teaehers 

 now constitutes a serious educational 

 problem which the National Teacher 

 Training Survey Committee is attempt- 

 ing to solve. 



The year 1930 has been an excep- 

 tionally healthy one for the people in 

 the United States according to the 

 Public Health Service. 



The expectation of life at birth has 

 increased from about 48 to 5 8 years 

 during the last 20 years. 



Federal income tax receipts to Sep- 

 tember 17 are considerably less than 

 for the same period a year ago. Re- 

 ceipts this year were $279,410,511.20 

 compared with income tax payments 

 amounting to $361,396,067.80 to Sep- 

 tember 17 last vcar. 



The per capita consumption of milk 

 in the United States in 19 17 was 836 

 pounds and in 1927 it was 1,032 pounds. 



30 2 3 27 8 2 



Many medical fakers are "crying 

 their spurious wares" through the 

 smaller radio broadcasting stations, ac- 

 cording to Commissioner of Health of 



Farmers who employ help and who 

 have elected to come under the Work- 

 men's Compensation Act of Illinois 

 must file notice with the Industrial 

 Commission, Springfield, Illinois, by 

 November 1 if they wish to withdraw 

 and terminate their liability under the 

 Act, January 1, according to V. Vani- 

 man, director of insurance service. 



n< 

 th 



