Jasper County Democrat, Volume 13, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 May 1910 — COLLEGEVILLE. [ARTICLE]
COLLEGEVILLE.
Father A. Schuette left on Tuesday morning for a t'hree months trip in Europe. Naples, Rome, Paris, Berlin and London will be numbered among th«, places visited.
Father Seifert Is absent from the college this .week, a short, but well-deserved trip through the south. The. baseball game, scheduled for Saturday with St. Stanislaus college, Chicago, was cancelled yesterday by the “Windy City” team. The Varsity will journey to Brook on Decoration day, and will try to give the down river aggregation a return beating. The C. L, S. held their final meeting Sunday morning and closed their business accounts for the year. The last official act was .the voting of $25 for the Milroy monument. L. J. Lambert, the banker of Beaverville, 111., was over to See his son Leon on Wednesday. Leon was the victim of the most freakish baseball accident that ever happened on the college diamond. While, in the act of pitching a ball, he broke his throwing arm midway between the shoulder and the elbow. The injury is not further serious, only Leon will miss baseball while carrying his arm in the splints. A goodly number of visitors were at the college over Sunday: Mjrs. Margaret Kaiser, , Cedar -Grove, Ind.; Miss May and J. M. Voors, Ft. Wayne; J. M. Grathwohl, Niles, Mich.; Leo Thomann, Wheaton, <111.; Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Murphy and sonsNorbert and Richard, Mathew S. Quin and son Daniel, Chicago; Mrs. Joseph Reif, Delphos, Ohio. On Sunday afternoon the Hammond Foresters invaded the Varsity’s territory, but never even had a look at the fourth corner of the lot. Humpher and Hasser were the two rings in the Circus, for half of the batters went quickly down Strikeout lane. Hasser captured 17, and his opponent 10. The very far scattered hits numbered eight all told, the locals snatching six to the visitors’ two. Camp’s errors on third made the college scores possible. He bungled two dasy grounders that in each case •would have been the third outs. Carmody followed his first fall with a hit that sent Minster, who had pilfered second to the rubber. In the seventh round Grathwbhl; and Berghoff neatly repeated the same stunt. Batteries: Hasser and Grathwohl, Humpher and Beltz. Umpire, McLaLin. ■*
