48 NORTH SHORE BREEZE and Reminder 
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Assoc. Sem. Am. Soc. C. E. 
LEE’S BLOCK, MANCHESTER 
Brveriy FarmMs WINS OPENING 
GAME IN BASEBALL SERIES 
Manchester lost the opening game 
of the series of baseball games be- 
tween Manchester and Beverly Farms 
last Saturday afternoon on the Brook 
st. diamond, Manchester. It was a 
hard game to lose, for Manchester had 
it clinched up to the eighth inning, 
when the Farms boys connected with 
Grover and slammed out a series of 
nine hits that sent home seven runs. 
Manchester pulled in a run in the 
first inning and kept it up for the 
next two innings, while the Farms 
boys were utterly at a loss to connect 
with Grover. They did gather in one 
tally in the first inning, when they on- 
nected safely for two hits. 
Grover was as tight as a drum 
from that inning on, until the smash 
came in the eighth when everybody 
went wild. 
A better game of ball has never 
been seen on the local grounds than 
that put up by Manchester for the 
first seven innings. Grover was cer- 
tainly the star performer. Time and 
time again he saved the day for Man- 
chester by mowing down the Farms 
batters in the one, two, three order. 
In the third inning with one out and 
two men on bases he tightened up and 
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— 
struck out the next three men up, 
pitching only ten balls to do the trick. 
lhe next round he repeated the trick: 
*not a man seeing first base or even 
touching the ball. He repeated the 
performance in the fifth and sixth 
and again in the seventh, but in the 
eighth,—well, the less said the bet- 
ter. There was nothing to it. Tue 
balls went right and left and walt. J 
the tune of six clean hits and four 
runs. Next inning the performance 
in and out among the infielders, + 
was repeated. Manchester meanwhile 
was unable to pull off anything that 
looked like runs and the game was 
over with no more runs to their ere- 
dit. 
Grover was the whole thing for 
Manchester, it would appear. And 
he was the whole thing against Man- 
chester in the last two innings, thongh 
all the blame cannot be put on his 
shoulders. He worked like a dog 
while it lasted. To strike out 21 men 
in a single game of nine innings is 
no slouch of a job. Two and a third 
men an inning! That is some pitch- 
ing. It would seem that the rest of 
the team could put out the other two- 
thirds of a man, but that is one of 
the fortunes or misfortunes of the 
game. Nine of the thirteen hits by 
the Farms boys came bunched in the 
— 
last two innings. 
The game tomorrow will be at 
Beverly Farms and if the weather is 
good the whole town will be there. 
Manchester is out for another good 
game and Grover is expected to pull 
the trick clean over this time. Prac- 
tically the same lineup as last week 
will play for both teams. 
The Farms boys played a_ good 
steady game. McNair is a stalwart 
battler and his pitching is way above 
par. Cy Perkins behind the bat is 
another good standby. A great game 
is expected Saturday, so everybody 
pull together and give Manchester the 
support that she needs. 
123456789—R 
10000004 3—8 
II 1000000—3 
MANCHESTER 
Beverly Farms 
Manchester 
Because of the inclement weather 
last night the band concert was post- 
poned, and was to have been held to- 
night if the weather is suitable. 
The fall term of the public schools 
will open Tuesday, September 8. 
Practically the same corps of teachers 
as last year will return to their posi- 
tions. At the Price Primary school 
two vacancies have been caused by 
the resignation of Miss Audrey Cal- 
den, who is to be married, and Miss 
Alice Sides, who was married the — 
first of the summer. Miss Fannie 
Knight has been advanced to Miss 
Caulden’s position as principal of the 
school, and Miss Sarah Dodd of Bey- 
erly and Miss Marion Jewett of Lex- 
ington are the two new teachers ap- 
pointed. 
Mrs. John Cool and four children 
have gone to Mrs. Cool’s former home 
in Catalina, Nfld., where Mr. Cool 
has bought a house and will go to 
live this fall. 
Misses Dorothy Blaisdell, Helen 
Wing and Gwendolen Glendenning 
have been visiting Miss Blaisdell’s 
aunt, Miss Alice Blaisdell, Haverhill. 
Arthur Lodge has been spending 
the week in town with his parents, 
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Lodge, Pine st. 
He is employed in the office of Swift 
& Co., at Lewiston, Me. 
Mrs. C. A. Hatch left Wednesday 
for a visit to her former home in 
Bangor, Me., where she will be joined 
in a fortnight by Rev. Mr. Hatch, 
who is with the Boy Scouts, at pre- 
sent, at their camp in New Hamp- 
shire. 
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