Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 12 Jul 1929, p. 7

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July 12, 1929 WI L M ETTE record here in an Phillips will hurl and Robinson will take his customary stand behind the batter. Sunday's box score : of (.:. Ab R LIFE 7 ling cans, tubs or other containers, are removed or kept emptied. "(5) In rural di~tricts, shallow welts, cisterns, rain barrels and cess pools should be kept tightly covered or screened with fine-meshed screen. "(6) If there is a swampy place or low lying land on or near your premises in which water stands for several days after a rain, phone Glencoe 314 and we will investigate the situation and endeavor to have it remedied. "(7) Inspect your premises after every heavy rain or at least once every we ek. K ennedy f ""eatures on M ound as Local Nine Takes Sl!venth By AI Schaefer \Vilmette's Chamber of Commerce baseball team hung up the season's seve nth victory Sunday afternoon at the Village Green, when the B. B. R. Cubs were defeated, 8 t o 3. Kennedy twirled for the local s, and after a ~ tor my start. wa s practically invincible. He allowed only eight hit s, ,~~.·a lke<l only two, and fanned five of the enemy. He wa s al so the her o o n offensive pla y when he d o ubled with two ~~=-___.:..::,._~=-;...:.! out and the sacks Joacl e cl in the secKennedy ond fram e . BorreJ with a h omer ancl singl e, and Janrtz, " ·ith a t\\' o- bagger and hYo s in g les . aided "Left{' co n siderably . Ka sse l s tarr ed o n the clefcn siYe with . eyentecn putouts at first ba se. The Bn\'S' Bro therh oo d H c puhli c reprcscntati\:e . " ·c nt t o work early to bag a Y:c t on·. Tn the opening period Scigal . c ler t ecl. n n e of K e nn e dy 's fa st ones fo r a triple to lef t -ce nt e r . Fcigcnherg im mt·<liatl'h· iollll\rcd " ·ith a o ne -ha ::;c :--ma~h. scP ring ~c i ga l. Lipman sacrificed and aitr. ~ Capp~· " ·ent out to Ka s:'cl. una ss isted. Hl o n ste in . inglcd to centn. clriYing in h is tcam1\1ak. \\'i ltnettL' went out quic~ly in the hnmc half. i>ut ~ti ter di spo . 111 g of the l'hical!nan . . in the :'Ccon d. three runs " '(·re chalked up f11r the cause. Rn<ltdph began thL· :--t;tnza \Yith a s in ~d e t 11 rig h t . ~ 111 it h at t c 111 p t t' cl t o sac r i fi c e hut_ l\t1<} () lp h wa..; out ~t second. S.ei~!.al. tryllli-!' t(l r a dnul>lc p l a~·. tiHC\\. wJ!cl to ftr:-t and ~mith reached se c ond. Bo rr e t a p p c rl t (l 1' k i 11 a n d ~ m i t 1t '" a s t rap p c d cd'f ~cCcltH1. Baker ~ trnlkd . H n hin so n hit tn !-llllrt l~t tt \l n~n failed to get B <llT l' o n the rcla_,. frm Lipma.n . [~en nnh· foll< l\\ cd \\·ith ~ resnunclin!.~: clo ut tfl (ictp ct·ntn for t\\'n ba :-. l':-, c.lcaring the prcmi~cs of loca l runner s. Thc Cu b s \n·re again r limi11 atcd i;1 the third. but not sn th e h nmc aggreR'ati o n. T.iep e. ,,·ho \\·as pla.\·in g d c~p ite a sore foot, s in g led to left. Rudolph '"·alkcd. hut '"a s o ut at :-<:cnn d when Smith's att empted sacrif'tcc \\Tnt a\\'ry. Liepe took third 0 11 the play. Borre, then connected for a round trip. Liepc and Smith preceding him o \·er the pan. ~o further excitement (lCcurrcd until the fifth, when the lose r s lillcd the paths with one do wn on a hit, \\·alk and an error. A fa . t double -play at thi s stage, Uepe to Baker Ka sse l, ended the splurge. In the sixth, Lipman d o ubl ed to start the frame and came home '"hen Baker, who may have b ee n worryingabout whether his 3-dav old so n wa s going to be a left - han~l e d pitcher or normal, booted Blonstein's grounder. The eighth spasm wa s anoth e r good one for the home talent. Baker began it with a single and was promptly fqrced at second by Robinson. Ken nedy sent "Bal" to third with a single and followed homeward when Ka:--sd unbelted a sock good for one base. The win was reassuring to local fans and players alike, as the losers vanquished the Evanston Xe\Ys-Inclcx outfit earlv in the season. \Vilmettc took a 10-2 ·sock on the chin from the F.vanstonians on Thursday, ] uly 4, at the Evanston High school field .. Another stiff program is annou~H·ed for next Sunday at the Village Green. The Brick layers bring their winning ~~~e~~! 1~o~~tt~~a~; IASK RESIDENTS TO AID IN FIGHTING MOSQUITO (Co ntinu ed from page 2A) H ·) Jan e tz, If.' .. Kass l, lb. . Lie'pe, ss. . . .. Rudolph , rf. . . Smith, If. .. Borre, 311. Bake r, 2b. Robin o n, c. K e nn edy, p. T otal s .5 .3 .. ~ !i . .. 4 ..:{ 0 0 1 0 1 2 1 2 .2 .4 1 2 1 0 2 1 0 . E 0 e n ough. E\·en· hom e-eve ry vacant 0 2 lo t-an y place \vhich will . hold wa~er (I 0 for over a week, is a potenttal mosqt11to 0 1 0 breeding place. W hat Can Be Done " Due t~ the limited fund s available from taxation, it i imposs ible to send inspecto rs to every pi ece of property in th e di strict. \\. ill vou please as sist by seeillg that an)·- standing wat er is rellWY ed from your premise s? One m osq ui to lays about three hundred eggs at o ne time. One little fi sh poo l n ot stocked with fi sh , could supl y a neighborhood with hordes of m os quitoes. "(1) \Vater s ho uld be changed eac h 'ree k in artificial poo ls. fountain bas in s and bird bath s. "(2) ~fake sure no wat e r stands in basement window an::a\\'aYs. "(3) H epair sagging ·roof gutters and clean out leaves and dirt which may have bero me lo dged in rain lead er pipes. "( 4 ) Sec that tin can :-. , bucket ;; , br o k en b ottl es, old auto tire s, sprink- 2 0 34 B. H. Jt. <.:ull!-i .Ab 8 R 1 1 1 (I 12 H 1 Can Be E liminated "\\Then all stagnant water is disposed of, there wilt be no mosquitoes. Mosquito abatement has been accom_. plished elsewhere-it can he done here. H owever, it will take several years to eliminate all mosquito breeding place~. Temporary oiling measures must be rc . orted to where immediate draining is not possible. "If ·each householder wilt do his part as o utlin ed above, the mosquito nuisance will be kept at a minimum." Seigal , !.lb. F e igentk-rg, c f. Lipm a n, 1-'f::' · .. .. Cappy, c. . .. Blonl"tein, lb. . . Klein, p . ... Lids ky, If. . .. .. . . . . Coh en , rf. ?~l ose r, 3b. E 1 (I 5 :~ 4 1 1 0 ;{ 0 (I .4 4 4 .. . 4 0 0 () 0 (I 1 (I 0 0 (I (I (I .2 1 lJ ;} ... 35 8 T otals Two-base hit s-K e nn edy, Jan c tz. Lipm a n. Three-bal"e hit-Se iga l. Hom run - Borre. 'Valk s-by K enn edy, 2; hy Kle in, 6. Stru ck out-by K e nn edy. 5; by Klein, 4. Double play:-;-Lit· JH.·-Ral< erK assel; Lipman-Seigal-Blnnst e in . Pa~s c d ball_:_f'appy. , tolen lJascs-.JanNz, Kassel, Smith. Sacrifice hit r-:-Ka!-'~el, Lipman. S to r e r-Hoffm a n . U mpire-l\fatt. I Park Mr. and Mrs. Cecil H. Hurtt of 708 avenue, and their family, spent the past week-end visiting Mr. · and 1\frs. E. \V. Dresser in Milwaukee. ·xxxxxxxxxxrxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx· ~ I YOU BE ·THE .JUDGE WE ARE CONFIDENT IN SAYING THAT OUR QUALITY OF WORK AND SERVICE CANNOT BE EXCELLED AT ANY PRICE ANYWHERE. Our modern method of cleJning your summer apparel restores its new ness. Let us d~y -clean J fl · 1 I 1 them . for we I I I are especially equipped to thoroughly cleanse those light weight. light colored suits. the filmy chiffons. that colorful sports costume. sorfs. swcJters. men's white flannels, golf suits. knickers. etc Men's Suits Thoroughly Dry ..Cleaned and Hand Pressed ... Ladies' Plain Silk · Dresses T horoughly Dry ..Cleaned and Hand Finished ....... .. $}.00 $}.50 ALL WORK CALLED FOR AND . DELIVERED . ERMINE CLEANERS, INC. Otto F. Fisher, Pres. 11 50 Central A ven ue Phone W ilmette 704 706 Vernon Avenue . Phone Glencoe 86 5 ~xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

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