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THERESE
THE CHINA MAIL, MARCH 12, 1940.
NORONHA IN
FINE FORM FOR WAHOOS
(By “GRANDSTAND")
WAHOOS ONCE MORE proved their superiority when they trounced Pirates, 9-2, on Sunday at Prince Edward Road ground.
Chief Wahoo Therese Noronha was in great form on the rubber for the green shirted owls. She held Maudie Read's Bucs to three measly hits, struck out three and gave away two passes to the first station. Besides pitching a brilliant game Therese slammed a homer for the only circuit clout of the melee.
Maudie Read, who toed the rubber for Pirates, was going great guns, fanning seven and walking three but seven well places hits by the Wahoos, aided by four costly Pirate bobbles, served Maudle's downfall.
.
| Abbas went down swinging for the final out of the frame. Wahoos scored one more in the second, two in the fifth, one in the sixth and an- other in the seventh to clinch the game.
SOFTBALL SCORES
AT A GLANCE
MEN'S
Ball Club -Trojana
7 No. 3. M.G. 7 Filipinos
6
4
GIRLS'
9 Pirates
13 Panthers
Recreio "B" 16 Forum
3
7
Wahoos Wildcats Recreio
33 Cubs Cardinals forfeited to Canadian
Chinese,
touched Irene Tavares for seven hits, while the Panthers were only able to nick Lily Mar for four bingles. Lily fanned one and walked none. Irene Tavares whiffed four and passed two.
SCORE' KNOTTED
INTEREST
ON WANE
(By “GRANDSTAND”)
In the opener of a double- header at C.B.A. ground No. 3- M. G. succumbed to the Hong Kong Ball Club, 7-0, for the Emma Gees' twelveth defeat. this season with nary a victory.
Led by senior recruit Sammy Izatt the defence boys did very well indeed. to hold the Ball Club sluggers to a one figure count and bungled only four chances to Ball Club's one mis--- cue. The khaki lads are improving frame. In the third, Wildcats garnered five-next season perhaps!
The score was knotted 2-2 in the second slowly and they may win a game yet.
Wahoos reeled off four runs in the
Pirates' scored one run in the first inning initial frame to take an early lead. when Burson crossed the plate on a walk, and a hit by Billie Penson brought her in. Paula Chan
Maudle Read In the last canto Mrs. Burson scored again, worked for a free pass to first; Yvonne Yolle this time on a double by herself and an whiffed for the first out. Lena Luongo | error by Paula Chan at the keystone. runs on five Panther errors and a homer by was safe at first on
Charlie Manson, the Machine Gun- R. H. E. Lily Mar. Panthers could only reply with ;
74 three tallies in the sixth, the only inning inners' one and only hurler, opposed' 1 - 2 3 4 which they scored. The untamed felines southpaw Frankie Gonzales 'on the scored one in the sixth and five more in the mound and allowed the Leonardmen seventh to put the game on ice.
only three hits while his teammates- nicked Frankie for two scratch: bingles.
an
Jackie Anderson smashed score Paula Chan.
Irene
4 1 0 0 2 1 100 0.00
1- Đ
error and
Wahoos hit to Pirates a
Costilho In the second game at Prince Edward erasure. Road,
Wildcats subdued Baby Panthers 13-3. The tilt was featured by more errors than hits, Wildcats booting eight the Panthers' six.
tq
a
fanned for the second Therese Noronha followed with homer to
Luongo and score. Lena Jackie Anderson ahead of her. B.
Led by Lily Mar, who homered, Wildcats
May Chung played a brilliant game at the windy alley and batted with a 750 percent average in three times up. For the losers S. Kwong took batting honours with two hits
T'IEN HSIA
MONTHLY
Published under the Auspices of the Sun Yat-sen Institute for the Ad- vancement of Culture and Education.
WHAT EVERY CULTURED HOME SHOULD HAVE!
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FEBRUARY, 1940 Vol. X, No. 2
ARTICLES
The Revival of Realism, by James Feibleman
Cheng Ch'lao, A Ploneer in Library Methods, by K. T.
Wu
The Mystery of Maya, by Wilbur Burton Youthful Nations, by Lancelot Forster
POEMS
Three Modern Chinese Poems. Translated by Arno L.
Bader and Lucien Mão
CHRONICLE
Archaeology Chronicle, by Pel Chung-ch'ing
TRANSLATION
Good Iron la not for Nalle, by Lu Yen. Translated by
Richard L. Jen.
Five Vermin, by Han Fei Tzu. Translated by W.
Liao
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LEONARD'S HOMER
Dave Leonard skyrocketed the ball for a circuit clout which was the only long dis- tance blow of the fray.
In the nightcap the Filipinos, despite fleld- ing a bunch of rookles, gave Trojans ome anxious moments before they were nosed out 7-6, the only tilt to furnish some inter- est and excitement.
The Southern boys were the first to score with three tallies in the first stanza. Dave "Amper, Fidel Dellano and Harry. Campos
romped home on two hits and two walks. - Trojans replied with two clouts in the same inning. Filipinos forged ahead with one more run in the second.. In the fourth Tro- - Jáns evened the score 4-4 when Cruz and Barretto dented the plate on two singles and a free ticket to first aided by four Filipino- .bobbles.
Dave Amper limited the Trojans to..three hits but his team-mates let him down with.. no fewer than 10 miscues. Trojahs played steadier ball, cómmitting five errors,
Palma, the Filipino hot corner custodian, distinguished himself with two put outs and two assists without booting the pill.
R. H..E. 200 230 x-7 3 Б 310 0 0 2 0-62 10. On the Recreio ground the Junior Recs pounced on the lowly Forum for a 16-4 victory.
Trojans Filipinos
Our friend Kenny Wong could not get enough of his men to turn out so he had to borrow three players from the enemy.
· · Kitchell was on the slab for the Forumers and yielded 10 hits. Jackle Noronha was. too good for the vanquished allowing...anty. four bingles."
INTEREST FALLS OFF
as रा
The game was played, I presume, matter of form, to hasten the schedule, be- cause players from both sides showed very. little interest in a listless game.
It is a pity to see the League peter out▾ as it does, because it maintained much en- thusiasism until two weeks ago.
For the good of the sport, which is com--- paratively new in Hong Kong, team mana--- gers and players should be sporting enough Ető play off their fixtures in the proper man---
her..
In the Girls' section, of the League a keener interest is shown by the fair_sex, and a big hand should be given to the lowly Cubs who are always therejim full strength,. although they are leading in the League ladder from the wrong end. ***
in three times to the plate.
Wildcats
R. H. E.
115 00 15 13 7 8 Panthers ................. 0 0 0 0 0 3 08 4
At Recreio the Ramblerettes. showed the · lowly Cubs no mercy when the Bruins went down to the tune of 33–7.
Even : Southpaw twirler Ada‚''Pcewed". Chang, who has just come back from a trip | to - Honolulu, could not stop the Recreio femmes from staging an old fashioned merry-go-round. The support Adu- received from her fielders was a sad welcome indeed:" to the portsider
MAMA RECORD
opened
In the first inning Ramblerettes up with no fewer than 21 runs on eight hits and 18 bobbles by the Cubs fielders. This is a one-inning record which' will hold for sometime to come unless the Machine Guri- ners break it in one of their remaining fix- tures this season. This is not very, likely, however, because the M.G.'s have improved:" somewhat lately.
After the first inning, the scorer, Tats Mendonca, got weary or something because he could not keep track of the hits." _and:" errors of the marathon. All Mike could do was count the runs as they crossed the {'platê!*
***Despite the one-sided score Recrelo" "did" not look so convincing on the field. · Nana Rebairo - was missed behind the plate and although" Hilda Soares tried her best-behind the bat her efforts were not good enough' t6- atop the "Cub bake stealers.
The Cubs are only a bunch of ashoul kids and they pan take it.They will be there againƐness i time" in "full" strength and whether win de losa thay keep thotë: -ahīng up" with millüz