PAGE SIX IH 1 m . ■ ' .« £7. : ’ H? mfe J'^'4 r* Ra *» / I *» ■Fa W . ••’* ■%>:' * \*jjß| $& I * ■R- * % ■fcV £ « .', ■>£;;«; - . 'ls‘*l jB I I JrVQ get a big kick i out of this pro j j session of help -9 / ing sometimes I as many as fifty j people a day se ll i / led their moun j tain home sites. ■RS ■£} 'Jm (I Flew* mal the second. Johnson, first up, went out, Ellerbee to Jarrett, but Lentz trickled a slow grounder down the third base line and received credit for a hit when Watts retrieyed it too slowly to make a put-out at first. Lents went to third when Basinger errored Hawkins grounder, and scor ed when Ellerbee messed up Motsing er's hit to short. Hawkins scored on Lee’s infield out. Ellerbee to Jarrett. McLean ended the inning by flying out to Richards, who made a pretty catch in right field. Gtbaon Makes Three In Fourth. Gibson came within one run of ty ing the score in the fourth, after El lerbee ami Smith had hit singles in the second to no avail. Ellerbee, first man up, hit a stinging single through short. He was safe at second and Dulin at first when the latter’s grounder was fumbled momentarily by Johnson, who had a dguble play in sight. Ellerbee was forced out at third by Smith, who was safe at first on the fielder's choice. Watts was called out on strikes, but Simmons rose to the occasion by catching on« of Hawkins' fast ones on the nose and sending it over the ’eft field fence. Richards ended the scoring by going out. Motsinger to Lentz. Flowe Hits Homer. Flowe, first man to face Simmons in Kannapolis' half of the sixth, in creased their lead to two runs by smacking the ball over the right field fence. Lentz got a single after John son had gone out, but Hawkins and Motsinger were easy prey for the Gib son infield. The homer by Flowe end ed the scoring by Kannapolis. They rould not touch Simmons for anything that even resembled a hit in the last three innings of the game, though in the seventh they filled the bases, with one out. on two errors and a walk, •lowe and Johnson hit pop flies to the infield to end the frame without damage. Take Lead in Seventh. By scoring three more runs in the seventh. Gibson took a lead she never lost. Richards was safe on an error by Lentz end went trf-second when Hatley singled to center. Basinger hit a fast liner to Motsinger who doubled Richards off second with a quick thrown to Johnson. Two were out when Jarrett set the stage for Ellerbee by singling to left. Ellerbee made bis third hit of the day, a vic ious liner over the fence in left, and Gibson was in the lead for the first time. Dnlin made the third out, Mot singer to Jarrett. Last in Ninth. Gib tort made her seventh and last run in the ninth inning when Basin ger singled and Jarrett doubled to send him home, after Richards and Hatley had been easy outs. Hawkins was relieved by Fergnson at this point and the new pitcher presented Ellerbee with a base on balls. Lee retired the side, making a beautiful catch of Du lln's long fly to center. Home run honors to date go to Gibson. They have parked nine in comparison to five made by. Kannap olis. Sixteen of the 80 /Tins that r j OMOUNE SWEET FEED TO FEED YOUR HORSES AND MULES And you can feed one-third less and keep your stock np better on a Balanced Feed than you can on oats or .corn. § Cash Feed Store ; | PHONE I*B SOUTH CHURCH ST. [IL CRAVEN* sons! | PHONE>4 ‘ | J COAL j I oooooooooooooooooooceoooi !•%. ' . ,VV.„;eV■ hVi,*,. •!; * Monday, June 21, 1926 Gibson hnx' made have been directly due to four base knocks, and 11 of the 1 18 made by Kannapolis. Briefs. 4 ' Twenty-nine errors have been made by the two teams in the first three games of the series. ! The final two games' of the present series will be played at Gibson park Friday and Saturday of this week. “i)ago” Smith's shoe-string catch of a liner from Lentz's bat in the eighth was the fielding feature of the day. Smith accepted four hard chances dur ing the afternoon. “Huck” Dusenberry's decisions on balls and strikes were the cause of just as much kicking from the players as those of McLean and Andrews were in the other two games. Russe'il Lee. with four put outs in center, had almost as busy a day as did Smith. Both played their posi tions faultlessly. Simmons, doing to perfection the iron man stunt, pitched an even bet ter game than he did on Friday. His home run put his team in the winning when they seemed hojtelessly behind. Hawkins seemed about to blow up in the third when he was unable to ’ locate the plate for eight pitches. He was helped out by i’mpire Dusenbery who called a dubious third strike on Jarrett for the last out of the inning. Ellerbee and Jarrett. with three hits each, share with Simmons the honors of the day. Box score: Kannapolis AB R H PO A E Motsinger. 2b. S 0 .0 1 4 0 Lee. cf. fi 0 14 0 0 McLean, c. 4 11 12 -0 0 Kirk. rs. —4 110 0 0 Saunders. 3b. 5 0 12 11 Flowe, if. 4 110 0 0 Johnson, 88. 4 0 0 11 1 Lentz, lb. 4 1 2 0 0 1 Hawkins, p. 4 10 110 Ferguson, p. 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 30 5 7 27 7 3 Gibson AB R H PO A E Richards, rs. f> 0 0 2 0 0 Hatley, cf. 4 112 0 0 Basinger. 2b. 4 112 4 1 Jarrett. lb. 5 1 210 0 1 Ellerbee. ss. 4 1 3 3 4 2 Dulin, 3b .5 1 0 2 2 3 Smith. If. 4 114 0 1 Watts, c. 4 0 0 2 0 0 Simmons, p. _. _4 11 0 2‘ 0 Totals 30 7 10 27 12 8 Score by innings: R H E Kannapolis 220 001 Oil O—s 7 3 Gibson 000 300 301—7 10 8 Summary : Two-base hits—Saund ers, Jarrett; home-runs—Kirk. Sim mons, Flowe, Ellerbee: sacrifice hits —McLean : stolen bases—Kirk; base on balls, by Hawkins 3. by Simmons 1; struck out, by Hawkins 11, by Simmons 1; double plays. Motsinger to Johnson; hits off Hawkins, 10 in 8 and 2-3 innings, off Ferguson, none in one-third inning; losing pitcher, Hawkins; Umpire, Dusenbery. Sunday World Fiction Feature. “The Magic of Fear” by Edgar Wallace, a story of what happened when Under Secretary Tabcn, fol lowing the rather mysterious death of his wealthy wife, took a trip to Africa and encountered a native girl, mistress of a strange magic which enabled her to bring before the eyes of any man a vision of that thing which he most dreaded. A most un usual story, through which runs an undercurrent of the supernatural. This story complete in next Sunday’s world Magazine. Order The Sunday World from yonr newsdealer in ad vance. Edition limited. Girls Love New Wonderful Powder You will not have a shiny nose now. A very fine, pure, new French Pro cess Powder is all the rage. Keeps shine ayny—perspiration' hardly af fects it. Lines or pores won’t show. Looks like natural Skin and gives a beautiful complextion. 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