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hit the first ball Mayer pitched for a triple. | CHICAGO DOWNS ps Downed in Mitchell's Last * : ting three Cleveland pitche! winning 8 to 4. men in the seventh. ed him and passed Chapman. Speak-| MAJORS TO USE “ er singled and Danforth gave way to! Cicotte, who allowed one more to score on a sacrifice fly. feature of the contest. With Collins on second and Ja Jackson on first, Speak-| New York, N. Y., April 30.—Regular | 3 's fly and tagged Col- jehampionship games of the National B ED lins, then touching second, forcing; and American leagues will be i | er trapped-Felse Jackson, thus repeating a play worked on Detroit ten days ago. iday. A wee | Polo ground: ew York, or at Ebbets | Field, Brooklyn will be transferred to Sudden Batting Rally Changes| °° to play at Har ( JOST WHEN T 6 : BED olD BABY ) WAST WAKE U FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS . By Blosser NO MORE ID THAN DONE JIMINY CHRISMES ) ev Tt CRY ~~ DAWGUNNIT 1) t SOMETHINGS GoTTA ELEPHANT IP AN’ _- a, CRE WITT NORE T 2 1 eee [ ef WONDER IF TH’ WAV TO ELeor with Z: ACUAM OK WILL BIT WM TH MORE UE YELAS From WERE T! TH! IN GAS UST? a @) GoESS Ue Witt: } EOS TL GOTTA PR 4 ‘DEAL ) \] —$——— FEETSPRINTS AINT QUIRREL FOOD .- By Ahern DID AN’ BELONGS To THEM FEC TSPRINTS + HUN, SHIVERY MUSIC, PROFESSOR —DUM! DUM! TRAAA! CHESTNUT CHARLIE By Blosser .,. Y'KNOW GEORGE~ “THAT LIL CATS PILLOW YESTIDAY DIONT MAKE ALL THOSE GROWLIN’ AN’ THEM THEY (9 SOMETHIN’ ELSE IN THe CAVE HOLE WOT BY HIM, So~ “THERE 1 1S SOMETHIN’ WITH, SHINE EYES AN’ Tv DoNyY Look POPULAR LIKE To WST A MINUTE, Now 650R6E, WHAT RRorESSoR! \S \T THAT RUNS UP WILL AS GASILY AS EA ‘OP HAPS WE 25 > HAD BEST LET 5 “Waar 1 18,77 a Oe ALONE 67% spur! spur! FLuck! FLick! spsssess | —S Re, WSS 8 a le NIT RUNS Down? A FENCE!!! ALUITRLE MUSIC, PLEASE ! G to right, and a single by G |them three runs, tying the With one out in the f GIANTS HAND riffith gave | wor ore. jan halt of | b ighth, ‘Niehotf doubled to right; match to be de rld's heavyweight champion, was tched tonight to meet Wladek Zy- sko, the Polish champion, in a finish ided here on May 8. and Baird walked. Regan was then re-! lieved by Eller, wh assed Hornsby, | 4 ‘ filling the bases. Cruise flied to Roush | | who juggled the ball, but caught it! *. before it reached the ground. Niehoff | Mayer Hit Easily, Extra Base|ran home from third on the out, but! A NATIONAL LEAGUE o_+ t New Yor tiladelphia, 0. ‘ . was called out by Umpire O'Day for t St. Lou ncinnati, 4. Hits, Wild Throw Make for {caving third base before the cate) At Brooklyn, Boston, postponed, wet, Tallies was made, thus completing a double} At Chicago, Pittsburgh, postponed, Bus Iplay. In the last half of the ninth | ¢old. = Neale and Blackburne singled and Wingo was purposely passed, filling | Philadelphia, Pa., April 30.— NeW | the bases. Chase batted for Eller BY ST.LOUIS § ew York .... 10 1 Standing of the Clubs. W York retained its hold on the National | i Seale a F | Philadelph 8 3 1 . and foreed Neale at the plate, but|Phi s 3 leagde lead by blanking Philadelphia | Groh sent a long fly to right on which | Chicago fg Devices agin ‘while ‘Mayer was | DiexEWAe Soored the “Winning: in eT tb 300 batted freely, extra base hits and | ane eres. I$t. Louis By) 20 2 Stock’s wild throw acounting for vir- Boston Sa clanti 2 8 5) was the star, geting a double and Brooklwn . 21 9.100 three singles in five times up. Young i Games Today. ittsburgh at Chi t. Louis at Cincinnati. ew York at Philadelphia. oston at Brooklyn. shard and | Louis secured eleven hi jon balls and one hit batsman, In I held Cleveland fifth and eighth innings the loc t around, getting five e) St. After Williams he to three hits in innings, he lost | 9titec 1 four D his control and passed the three runs, respectively, Danforth re FEDERAL CLUB'S A double play by Speaker was the Sunday hereafter at the former Newark Federal League grounds at) | Harrison, : vi he | eve IN ame scheduled at the |the Harrison Park each Sunday. | | The fact that major leagues contem-| plated using the park became known| last week when the New York and} i were ordered by President Ban John-| ban a : Washington was unable to comply as| ago. Course of Score in Ninth | it already had an exhibition game! ant Inning | President Tener of -the Pi ARO Le league said it ¥ the major leagu National necessary so that/ call | que; double. and Smyth’s| ZBYSKO AND CADDOCK oft Chicago. mL, | for Ugly, Unsightly Pimples Are Signals of Bad Blood |“ Give Heed to the Warning. {fier known, and contains no minerals les. on’ the face and other] or chemicals to injure the most deli- | ly are warnings fromjcate skin. | | Go to your drugstore, and get a ‘bottle of S. S, S. today, and-get rid of those unsightly and disfiguring s|pimples, and other skin irritations. | had And it will cleanse your blood thor- | but Af you wis} vice, you can’ o| wift Laboratory, Atlanta, I medical it_.without jhe Direc- sreatest veeetable b! ca Philadelphi St. Paul, Minn., April 30. | Washington American League clubs| {to muster out of state servi on last Sunday.|lery, organized about eight xpensive for the state to maintain. {WILLS SELF RA’ | AMERICAN LEAGUE | i Game Before Going to “ os C3 hington. Poston, rain, ‘ ; | amp ! igo,s; Cleveland, 4. aca! —— At Detroit, St. Louis, 12. St. Louis, Mo, April Poor piten) New York, Philadelphia, wet ground Takes Cleveland Opener 8 to 4 jing jy Mitchell, Hall and F enn Oi Standing of the Clubs. ‘ va ‘ » fabled St. Louis to win the opening wou oP With Williams Shutting Off pone or the series trom Detroit here | Pos i 2 833 Hits today 12 to 3, It Mitchell's last | Cle 3 game with the Tigers. He leaves to © 2 =a night for Camp Pike, Little Rock, Ark., | Detre i Cleveland, 0., April 330.—Chicago | having been drafted. New York .... 7 ypened its series in Cleveland by hit-/ Off the three Detroit Washington . 6 Louis .. Games Today. nit at St. Louis. ago at Cleveland. shington at Boston. hiladelphia at New York. GnouNDs WEEKLY MINN, ARTILLERY s announced to-/ War Department Refuses to: Muster State Corps Into Federal Service An order ve and dis- second Minnesota field artil- months , was issued late today by Adjut- General W. F. Rhinow. It is ef- id the scheduled with the Boston Nationals.| fective April 30. Refusal of the war department to the regiment into federal service, could get back some| it was explained, made disbandment Cincinnati, O.. April 30—Cincinnati! of the money which they must pay| necessary, as tHe organiaztion is too won from St. Louis today by a sharp, for rental of the park under the terms! batting rally in the ninth inning. The} of the federal league peace agreement.| visitors scored one run in the second on Hornsby’s single, and added two more in the | fourth on hits by Baird, Hornsby and} Smyth. Meadows held the locals per- | fectly safe vntil the sixth, when hits | ‘by Groh and Roush, S. MaGee’s triple | Earl Caddock of the National Army,| War department to set a dex. ‘ollowing many disputes over thi stion of whether or not members he regiment were exempt from th dra# and uncertainty over the disposi- MATCHED IN CHI. MAY 10) tion of applications for discharges of men wishing to enter federal service, | of the Northern Pa April 59.—Sergeant| Governor Burnquist recently asked the} pany in Fargo. “We hope it will come nite date a call into federal servi Onr |fusal he authorized the discharge of | enlisted men seeking immediate active | service. More than sixty applications! promised in Tee | were acted upon in the week follow-| employes of the railroads and the rail-| | T RETURN TO GERMANY. Douglas, Isle of Man., April-20 — : he director gen- | | : is Frederick Brandauer, a wealthy er ee ie tHeEe increases. wit | , are directed without delay manufacturer, has committed suicide in a German detention camn rather) than return to Germany. Brandauer lived in England for thirty yea his naturalization had lapsed. In a letter to the camp commander! j,ost. ‘There is algo a report that the! death said that the-agonies of suffer if he submitted a repatriation, jane be nothing to what he would) 4; which the government proposed. coMPERS TAKES, HIGH LIGHTS IN | Montreal, April 30- muel Gomp-} ars, president of the American Fed-| J i. Helena. Mont., April 50. Wash- j eration of Labor, became suddenly ill while addressing a mass meeting of abor representatives here tonight, | spatch received here todav|Some Reasons Why Ninth Dis: a sub-committee, of which Sen A > J. Walsh of Montana is chaic-| trict May Be Proud of Its Citizenship IS FAVORABLY REPORTED, ; BILL TO SUPPRESS |. W. W. favorably reported to the | umittee a bill by to suppr the ac- strial Workers of the '5,000 FLAGS ARE EARNED ilar organizations. sh, air ity of the [ | World and ‘$s ay | Minneapolis, Minn., April 39—The} rmer of the northwest; the com- jmun: NORTH DAKOTA s of German blood; the individ- ual allotment plan and high percent-! " i age of distrivution—these are the four ‘ : WJ high tights of the successful Thira! Liberty loan campaign in the Ninth! A : \federal reserve district. | WV | loan the. farmer has out-/ ight his city brother whose batting if: age in the first and second loans} what carried the loans through. ! ilure on the part of the farmers to} buy more liberally in the former loans} jis ascribed to lack of familiarity with ‘government securitie: | German communities, in many of} which the government received little| support in the | Highest Increase in Wages Will | Come te Lowest Paid Who Need it Most st two loans, this; are elated ‘ae. the. ai ‘ t time took off their coats and went to are elated over the announcement work for Uncle Sam. In practically i Washington that their wages every instance where German blood witl Le increased and that this increasé; predominates in a commun thar} will date »: to Jan. 1, this year.«Phe |Community this time has reported al . 5 ey healthy oversubscription. i rate of increase has not been ma The individual allotment plan aad public but it is. asserted that the low: fhe high percentage of distribution | clags of employes will reap the largest | went hand in hand in this campaign. | ‘The alotment or card index plan met eee OR some opposition when first sug- i 4. 5 gested, but soon was accepted. board fas been at work on this sched oe ee oe eee ea cee | | ule for everdl months past and it has! ; Weeks: in advances commities ame | ‘just been announced at Washington | m eal Reena community and laa 4 .. carefully listed up every person “‘sus- | that this work has been completed and/| pected” of having the rite of a bond iday that e ia expected the announce. | 2ount in bonds which the committee (ee 1a mpec ee “| thought each individual should take. ME eee et aaite? The Ninth district did not start its . . i isales campaign until April 15, nine MY . Fi ban ad started. Saturday, April 20, the | be ‘affected, except that the Noe wiped district was oversubscribed and A. R. It was claimed by local railway offi- he Jong _dinianee ta els ae ue cials yesterday that they had heard!“ j\rore than 5.000 counties, cities, vil- that men now drawing $250 a month lages and townships already have put and over are not likely phe included, in claims for honor flags. ‘Many ask- . Lares "7 = 7 * per cent oversubscription, some for will receive bubstaatiel ot the ag tg] the two star flags, indicating treble ign See eta Parte: he agen) thelr allotment, and Whitefish, Mont. of roads pass SE eater made claim for a three star flag to branght, the TespoS TT show the world that Whitefish went] n fon re "| fou rtimes over. x |cerning the reported wage increasees,| The entire, district followed the Jexcept that it was coming soon. same general’scheme of sales, though * From January. cicheb that various counties injected some origin-| | gL tae Seen dupes dispatches that) 4] methods. Fergus Falls, Minnesota, | |the wage board has completed its work | pyblished the names and bond allot- land that the announcement would be made soon, but haye-no official infor- mation,” said James E. Johnson, agent Railway com- Railroad employes in North Dakota 2 | benefits. Director General, McAdoo's | | , CLEAN UP j The season of the year j | v «more Liber- |. ; pretty soon so we can buy‘ more | has arrived for a general | | \ty bonds. We expect: the announce- ;ment béfore long, however. ‘Director “G ‘il. McAdoo has “in wages to the clean-up of all vacant prem- ises, back-yards and alleys. ' Ashes and other debris are disease breeders and_ will | not be tolerated by the City Health Department. Ten- ants and property owners jway wage board has been at work on) ‘the schedule for some time, that is all I know about it,” said J. lL, Rohan, | ‘agent for the Great, North “T also} | || to clean their premises and | assist in. making the city | healthier and more beautiful | for all residents. Do it now. | By order of : ut May| | ~... DR. F. B. STRAUSS, of | - City Health Officer. 4-18 to 5-1 date back to. Jan, 1, this year. “T do not know what. ciass of em- ployes will be affected by this raise, ept from ‘round about information | that those lowest paid will benefit the | | i announcement will be tegle ‘Tribute Want 2”, 7 ea ing Results. 4 m nts of every bonds, They did. At Yankton, South Dakota, Liberty loan salesmén were established at ev- regular polling plac ers bought bonds as if voting. Buffalo Lake, Minn., probably takes the honor of being first over the top which lived up} @ of those communitie to the starting rules. per cent German blood. | s were summoned to appei | village hall at midnight, April 15. At one minute after twelve April 15 the | | citizens began signing up and calling of ftheir subscriptions, siapped down on adding machines. At 12:15. the town was through | 5; ng and the aiding machines totals: ing out showing 150 per cent 2 bay cume fh over su ription. individual in their daily papers, together with a notice summoning those named to appear on a certain day at headquarters to buy and the buy- All her citi n the | were of a first payment on a bond. In the two Dakotas where it ri icr two days, band ained | ousers of a mining man. smen slep:|comes to New York to the rescue of a “ARROW COLLARS FOR SPRING CASCO-22/9 in, CLYDE-2¥9in lease in metropolitan society in the angle play “Between Men,” to be seen at the Orpheum Theatre tonight. ‘o make the contrast more vivid Hart © /is first seen wearing the wide Stetson, * | the ki shirt and corduroy Then he a.l night in automobiles mired in the | friend who is in the toils of a Wall dee Parades, HART PLAYS PART AS A WESTERNER ON 5TH AVE. mud, but they all “went over.” loyalty meet- irgs, red fire and all that sort of thing were features in almost every tcwn throughout the di fireworks, | street operator. Hart then changes to the attire of s y when he appears at the home is friend: and meets his charming jdaughter, played by’ Enid Markey. | Hart seems as! much at ease with his dress suit and patent leathers as he | did when he was\in rougher and more jot his AT ORPHEUM TONIGHT | unconventional garb. He is still the Wiliam §. Hart, the popular actor | of wild west roles. makes a novel ap- pearance as a westerner | ning clothes and is quite at his | O'Connor. eve! cool westerner, ready for anything and everything that may happen. Before buying a piano see M. J. Advertisement. | resulting ACGmor ne — CASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY: NEW VoRMCITY. NHS ~ eta “ALGOHOL-3 PER GENT. ‘Vegetable Prepa ate tncteod ty The Stomachs and Bowels INFANTS | CHILDREN 1 thereby Promoting Digestion} ;, Cheerfulness : AhelpfulRemedy |Gonstipation and Dit | ‘everishn - eae oF bees —"" FacSimile Sig CASTORIA For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria no, ln Use For Over Thirty Years