Aug. 4, 1916. 
~ erson, 
to third. 
= 
Foster and Hart in order, 
Dowdall got to first in the sixth in- 
ning, when Herron juggled the ball. 
He advanced to second on Glenn’s 
sacrifice bunt, which dropped two feet 
fron the plate. Grover tried to field 
Shean’s smash with one hand and let 
the runner get to first, Dowdall going 
Both runners scored on 
Holcomb’s single to Gourley. 
In the first of the seventh Herron 
stopped Peterson’s hit at the begin- 
ning of a long drive by going into the 
air and pulling down the ball with 
a beautiful one-hand catch. Hart 
was robbed of a hit in the same in- 
ning, when Herron scooped up his 
drive over second base. Manchester 
made its nearest approach to scoring 
in this inning. Cody got to first on 
halls and scored from the initial sack 
on Devlin’s two-bagger. Under the 
ground rules he was called back to 
third as the hit was a few feet to the 
right of the flag in right field. With 
two men on the bases Herron and 
Conley struck out and Collins popped 
into Peterson’s hands. 
Dowdall singled to Conley in the 
eighth and was advanced on Glenn’s 
single to center. Both scored on 
Shean’s drive to right. Shean was 
out, Devlin to Herron, on Holcomb’s 
grounder. Twitchell’s single to Col- 
lins advanced Holcomb and _ bad 
throws by Perkins let in’ Holcomb. 
Thus ended the scoring. With per- 
fect fielding the score might have been 
2 to 0, but with the poor stick work 
of Manchester that is the best which 
might have befallen them. 
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Earned runs—U. 8. M. Co., 2. Two-base 
hits—Devlin, Shean. Base on balls—off 
Hart 3; off Grover 2. Struck out—by 
Hart 10; by Grover 7. Left on bases— 
Manchester 6; U. S. M. 3. Sacrifice hits 
—Glenn, Mulligan 2. Stolen bases— 
Glenn, Holcomb. Umpire—Walen. 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 69 
SHOP AND OFFICE: 112 PINE ST. 
40 SCHOOL STREET 
Ss 
PLUMBING Tel. 12 
John F. Scott 
The turning on and shutting off water for the season a specialty 
Personal attention to all work 
33 years experience 
HEATING 
References if desired 
MANCHESTER-BY-THE-SEA 
Edward §S. Knight 
FLORIST 
Everything for the Garden. 
ESTABLISHED 1884 
Tel. 10 
Flowers for ali Occasions 
MANCHESTER 
POy ss Out - FIELD DAY 
A public exhibition of a scale not 
attempted in this locality before will 
be given in demonstration of the train- 
ing of the Boy Scouts of the North 
Shore and vicinity at Tuck’s Point, 
West Manchester, tomorrow. ‘The 
demonstration, to which the public is 
invited, will take the form of a field 
day. If the plans go through about 
100 scouts will take part, including 
troops from Wenham, Leverly, Sa- 
lem, Gloucester and other nearby 
places. 
The program as arranged by Scout- 
master A. G. Warner of Manchester, 
although subject to change, is sub- 
stantially as follows: 
10.45 a. m.—Assemble at railroad 
station, Manchester, escorted by Man- 
chester troop, march to Tuck’s Point. 
11.15 a. m.—Water sports. 
12 m—Basket lunch ( Manchester 
scouts furnish lemonade). 
12.45 p. m.—Policing the grounds. 
1.15 p. m.—Troops assemble under 
respective leaders. 
1.45 p. m.—First call (Manchester 
bugler ). 
2 p. m.—Assembly call. 
2.15 p. m—Event No. 1, march in 
review. Event No. 2, opening exer- 
cises (attention, right dress, scout 
colors, pledge to the flag, etc.) Event 
No. 3, stunts (a. fire building, light- 
v 
Lehigh Valley Coal Sales Company 
GOAL 
ing and waiter boiling contest; b. fire 
i, tt'ng without matches; c, day in 
camp, pitch tent, make bed, strike tent 
and march away; d. special stunts, 
each troop furnishing its own special- 
ty). Event No. 4, scout games. 
Event No. 5, tent pitching contest, 
first aid demonstration, roller ban- 
dage and stretcher making, fireman’s 
lift. Event No. 6, signalling in inter- 
naticnal Morse code; pyramid build- 
ing for signalling. Event No. 7, knot- 
tving contest. Event No. 8, 440-yard 
relay race. Event No. 9, special 
events chosen at grounds by respec- 
tive troops. 
The closing exercises will include a 
parade of the grounds, short address- 
es, the singing of “America,” “re- 
treat” and the lowering of the colors. 
Following “taps” the first call will be 
sounded, followed by “assembly.” 
The troops will then march from the 
parade grounds. 
A few men’s and women’s second- 
hand bicycles for sale—-C. S. Peters, 
bicycles, opposite Manchester Electriz 
Co., Summer st. adv’. 
Taxt—Phone Manchester 290. adv. 
Elite Shoes for Summer at W. R. 
Rell’s, Central sq. adv, 
Buy your paints, oils, varnishes 
and shellac from H. $. Tappan, 17 
ridge st., Manchester. adv. 
Taxi—Phone Manchester 290. adv. 
TELEPHONE 202 
SAMUEL KNIGHT SONS COMPANY 
32 CENTRAL STREET 
MANCHESTER, MASS. 
