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Page 116 text:
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FQ, '- 11 VK C xl 1 1 f w 'x 'wx f r.. Z Honorary C as ML ALLEN LADD IXIUIRHEAD BARNES IIANNA 373 INGERSOLL BIOYVBRAY REPP FIRKINS XVARD
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Page 115 text:
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Page 117 text:
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' iz' if J. Y Ag gf if -if. Q. lp Aj, ,ww J G' tl lg 'M rf ..,. -,.w,.n,.L:.-M N.-4. M0 ,A l ,,,f. . u t X.-f '.. ' 1.-.57-f -1.-1-Ji - ' Y-'f- vi Season of 1914 Heretofore, baseball at Leander Clark has been promulgated on a modest scale, but, during the last two years its stock has taken a rise until now devotees of the game and friends of the college are able to inflate their chests and chalk it up above par. It is interesting to note that the date of this increase in prestige coincides with that of the entrance of one Jackson K. Allen into our midst. This year, after receiving a unanimous and indisputable choice for the captaincy because of his work in the previous season, he at once began to confer with the veterans Ladd, Barnes, and Hanna, and the result was the successful campaign, with the record of which these pages are decorated. Al furnished the brains and the inspiration. He talked, ate, and dreamed baseball, and as early as the middle of February the college began to take notice of the summons kept con- tinually before all by means of bulletin and chapel oration. Ladd, our versatile Hercules, had charge of the squad and the men walked the chalk line without a waver. , The season was opened by a two-day practice series with the Des Moines Weste1'n League aggregation, said series being rather in the nature of an in- novation around these parts. The Clark men worked off their early-season stage- fright and gained much experience which they made good use of later in the season. It takes more than a battery to win games, and, though Wl1itey and 'fDeac had the best of the box score, the team kicked away both games 4-O, 8-4. April thirtieth brought the first real game of the season. Much enthusiasm was displayed as 'tPrexie heaved the first ball and Dean Walid retrieved the same from the middle of the tennis court. The big Swede then assumed mound duty and picked off the batters in one, two, three order. Neither hits nor runs were registered by the visitors: only two of them saw first: and the game ended in a complete shut-out 2-O. The feature of the game was a general bonehead in which Muirhead, mistaking a passed ball for a foul, gracefully retreated from second back to first base while the Highlanders looked on but offered no op- position. Grinnell courteously begged to be removed from our schedule. The reasons were not stated but in view of the two decisive drubbings at our hands in the previous year the move was a wise one for them. May second Al felt that the team needed another lesson to overcome the effects of that Highland Park score and, subverting all to this good cause, we let Marshalltown, of the Central Association, administer the antidote. The Des Moines trip came next where, on the first day of the joyful pil- grimage, Highland Park evened up the percentage column with a win. It was here that Allen developed a bad case of inflammatory rheumatism centering in the left arm and gloom hung thick and heavy about us. The next forenoon saw Clark participating in a slow contest on the Simpson diamond which also ended disastrously. The next week Simpson invaded Toledo where accounts were fully squared - '-'., i'f5 :QIf ,T 3 A m 'T -i' 'ng' -7 QL H
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