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Page 30 text:
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THE STONEHAM HIGH SCHOOL AUTHENTIC three hits, while Haley and McCann led the visitors with three hits apiece. The score : Winthrop ab h po a INIcCann 2b 4 8 2 1 KShafer cf 2 0 2 0 Haley ss 5 3 2 2 Vance lb 5 18 1 Lon rose rf 4 10 0 Dalrymple c 4 0 10 0 Verdi 3b 4 0 2 4 Andorsia If 3 0 10 Orcott If 0 0 0 0 MacPherson p 4 2 0 9 EXCHANGES Totals 35 10 27 17 Stoneham ab h po a Adzigian 3b 5 2 13 Eice ss 4 10 0 Marston cf 3 2 2 1 Lundregan rf 4 2 2 1 Griffin lb 4 3 14 2 Finnegan If 2 2 0 0 Houston If 10 0 0 Corcoran cf 2 10 0 Dougherty 2b 10 0 0 Widen 2b 1111 Gray c 4 14 0 Theroux p 4 0 3 7 Totals 35 15 27 15 Euiis made by McCan 2, Shafer, Ha- lej , Verdi, Andorsia, MacPherson, Ad- zigian, Eice, Marston, Gray; errors, Shafer, Vance, Dalrymple, Verdi, Mac Pherson, Adzigian, Eice, Marston; two base hits, Haley, Vance, Marston; double plays, Widell to Gray and Lun- dregan to Griffin; stolen bases, Haley, Marston; base on balls, by MacPherson 2, by Theroux 3; struck out by Mas- Pherson 4 and by Theroux 3; wdld pitches, Theroux, MacPherson ; umpire, Ward. STONEHAM SECONDS Stoneham has also been represented this j’-ear by an undefeated second team in baseball. They have met and van- quished twice the Beading seconds by the scores of 6 to 5 and 14 to 1. They have also defeated the Wakefield sec- onds by a score of 9 to 6. This record should promise good ball teams to come in Stoneham. The second team is com- posed of the following men who cer- j tainly deserve a good deal of credit: Houston, Corcoran, Patch, Tilton, Black- burn, Finnegan, Eyder, Hibbard, May and Currier. Our magazine, The Authentic, will al- j ways remain. Year after year it is printed — like an endless chain. So fellow exchanges let us start again in September, Always will the Authentic remember: The Polj Press, Baltimore, Maryland. The Sagamore, Brookline, Mass. Idle Spirit of Towle, Newport, N. H. Wakefield High School Booster, Wake- field, Mass. Druiy Academe, North Adams, Mass. E. O. T. C. Shield, University of Cin- cinnati. Station E. L. H. S., Auburn, Maine. The Whittier Town Sentinel, Amesbury, Mass. The Northeaster, Northeasterii Junior High School, Somerville, Mass. The Abhis, North Abington, Mass. The Caribbean, Cristobal High School, Canal Zone. The Eeporter, Bradford Academ 3 % Brad- ford, Vermont. The Pilgrim, Plj ' inouth, Mass. The G q)S 3 ’, Portland, Conn. Netop, Turner Falls, Mass. The Apokeei sian, Poughkeepsie, N. H. The Holt School Magazine, Liverpool, England. The Flashlight, Wellston, Mo. The Pinnacle, Meredith High School, Meredith, N. H. The Simondonian, Simonds Free High School, Warner, N. H. The Earl.v Trainer, Lawrence, Mass. The Pinion, Honolulu, Hawaii. The Blue and White, Taunton, Mass. Tlie Owl, Middleton, N. Y. The Pioneer, Beading, Mass. School Life, Melrose, Mass. Clark News, Worcester, Mass. The Courier, Bristol, N. H. The Altruists, Union Cit ' , N. J. The Axis, Normal School, North -Adams, Mass. The Eeflector, Woburn, Mass. The High School Herald, Westfield, Mass. The Hamiltonian, Hamilton, Mass. The Spectator, Chicopee, Mass. True of Some Flappers If brains w ' ere powder some people wouldn’t have enough to keep their nose from being shinj ' . Some people whistle while they work because they are happj . But how about a traffic cop? [ 24 ]
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Page 29 text:
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GRADUATION NUMBER a return game. Tlie sc.ore was 6 to 4 in favor of Bel- mont. The local boys fought hard to pin a defeat on the champs but were unsuccessful. It will be remembered that the same teams met earlier in the season and Belmont won by fourteen runs. In the second clash Stoneham lost by tw ' o runs. One can readily see what a vast improvement our High School team has made. Shorty Dearborn started the game for j Stoneham. His pitching was very good and he held Belmont scoreless until the breaks went against him. Some of his team mates erred and a couple of hits enabled Belmont to get three runs. Shorty was then relieved by Lefty The- roux, the star sophomore hurler. Stone- ham got to Scott, who started for Bel- mont and he had to be relieved by Bar- rel, the ace of the Belmont pitching staff. Stoneham managed to score in the ninth, but Farrell had complete con- trol of the game during his stay in the box. Flanders, White, and Farrell shone for Belmont while Griffin, Stoneham’s first baseman, was the big noise for I Stoneham. Incidentally Freddie Cor- | coran, playing his first full game for | the blue and white, played well in the i center field. Stoneham High 8 — Reading High 7 Stoneham High’s baseball team de- feated Reading at the local ball field by the score of 8 to 7. The win enabled | Stoneham to take second place in the j Middlesex League standing. | Reading started the game by scoring four runs in the first inning. Theroux I was a bit wild in the first inning and was relieved by Dearborn, who held Reading for the remainder of the game. Several Stoneham rallies were checked by the masterful pitching of Dougherty. The Reading players bunched their hits early in the game and these hits figured in all their scoring. Stoneham gradually made the game more interesting by creeping up on Reading. Reading was leading 8 to 6 in the ninth inning when Stoneham came to bat. Griffin led off with a single to center field, Marston and Lun- dregan were passed. Spud Rice then came to bat and smacked out a double and the game was Stoneham’s. The score: Stoneham ab h po a Dushane If Adzigian 3b Marston cf Griffin lb Lundregan rf Rice ss Dougherty 2b Theroux p Dearborn p Gray c 5 12 0 5 2 5 3 4 0 2 1 4 19 2 5 0 11 2 115 4 10 1 2 0 0 0 10 0 4 3 0 7 1 Totals 34 Reading ab Merritt 2b 1 Gascorgne 3b 3 Morton lb 3 Dougherty p 3 White ss 4 Crowe If 5 Marchetti rf 3 T. Doucette c 3 Hickey cf 4 B. Doucette 3b 4 6 27 13 h po a 0 0 0 0 10 0 8 0 2 0 0 2 0 4 3 10 0 0 0 1 13 0 10 0 112 Totals 33 10 24 14 Two base hit. Rice ; stolen bases, Ad- zigian, Griffin 2, Dougherty, White, Crowe; base on balls, off Dougherty 6, off Theroux 2, off Dearborn 5; hit by pitched balls. Rice, T. Doucette; struck out by Dougherty 13, by Dearborn 4; passed balls, Speakman. Innings Stoneham Reading Doucette ; umpire, 123456789 00001301 3—8 40030000 0—7 VV ' inthrop 7 — Stoneham 4 The strong Winthrop High School baseball nine defeated the local high school nine by the score of 7 to 4. The team played before one of the largest crowds of the season. The Stoneham boys hit MacPherson, the Winthrop pitcher, hard, but he re- ceived brilliant support. Several times the local team had the bases loaded but were unable to score. The longest hits of the game were made by Haley of Winthrop and Mar- ston of Stoneham. The fielding gem of the game was contributed by Joe Lundregan by mak- ing a shoe string catch from the bat of Shafer and executing a double play to Griffin at first base. Haley, McCann and MacPherson starred for Winthrop, while Marston, Griffin, Finnegan and Lundregan fea- tured for Stoneham. Griffin led the local boys at bat with [ 23 ]
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Page 31 text:
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GRADUATION NUMBER Don Glynn ’2S and Walter Fredrick- | made a name for himself. Eog Lamson, son ’27 have returned from Montpelier i an honor pupil at Syracuse, has made Seminary after a successful year both ! the Syracuse baseball squad. He is in sjDorts and studies. Don played j home for the summer and has a job in quarterback and Freddy played tackle : Melrose for the summer, on the football team. i ‘ Wennie Packard ’27 is considering George MacxSeil, president of 12- 27, spending the summer as a hotel clerk, has finished his first j’ear at the Suffolk , Wennie hails from Tufts. Law School. i Weston Brannen is through at Chaun- cey Hall. Hugh Bailey ’27 has a position with a Boston firm engaged in decorating Avin- dows. I Everyone has heard of Ralph Dup- i lin’s sensational sport career at George- town. He is the second leading college batter in the country. It seems as though he is headed for a big league career in baseball. Ralph is a member of the Class of ’24. Bill Richards, a football star in S. H. S. and at Cornell, is home and Avorking for the B. M. Railroad. Long John Tan Derzee ’27, a frequent visitor at S. H. S., is using his 6 ft. 3 in. with Severance, the moA er. Johnnie hails from Northeastern. Eddie Adzigian ’27 is proudly exhibi- ting a large red H, the results of a suc- cessful basketball season at Huntington School, Boston. Don Whiston ’27 has completed his freshman year at BoAvdoin. This sum- I mer he is to attend Tech summer school aiid enter M. I. T. as a sophomore in the fall. Henry Richardson ’28 recent- ly spent a Aveek at BoAvdoin as Don’s guest. While there, Henry was pledged to Don’s frat. Theta Delta Chi. He now appears around school Avith his T. D. pledge pin. And of course AA e musn’t forget the Kennie Gilson ’27 is employed at E ' proud of — Don Hunt. L. Patch Co. for the summer. He too ' scholarship which comes from Northeastern. ’ entitles him to spend his Junior year at Sorbonne in France. He is now a • sophomore at Brown. This honor goes to only six men in the country, each Another one of our graduates has ! year. Stoneham is proud of Don. [ 25 ]
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