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ALT MOIS Sports| Neer. PIV'TSBURG GROOMS FOR WORLD SERIES Tickets on Sale in Smoky City Are Eagerly Snapped Up New York series p Sept. 16. P) World's parations Pittsburg ly forward of the slicing of the tage to six and the MeKechnie with a blast of hits Robins to. day to balance their alarn slump of last week only to be ed a vic tory b n. ‘The Pirates had piled up a 6 to 0 vietory Meanwhile the Giants clipped half a game from the maryin of the Na tional league leaders, allowing five hits, Giants Win Ken Greens gave the Reds but a single run while the Giants were gathering five tallies off Eppa Rixey A big demand for world serie tickets developed when t put on sale in Pittsburg yeste | Hotels are flooded with reserva tions The outlook of the leading: Wash Senators favorable. balance over the x by nosing ou Sam Gray held Ch while Holt and Dykes pounding out «4 to 2 victory for the Mack- men, Zachary topped — off hi good twirling by pounding cut a home run. Goose Goslin did like wise. | Browns Dig In | The defeats of Detroit and Chica-| go enabled the St, Louis Browns to tighten their hold on third place in| the American league by shading the, Red x with a two-run 9 inning | tough one rally. ‘The game was a held the | for Ehmke to lose. Browns hitless until the 7 not scored on until the fin Gaston . ked t til the closing 0, when scored the only Boston counter St. Louis Nationals, however, ground to the bins i place fight of the tossing off a gam 4 to. Jim Bottom Phillie: raised th most strenuous obj of the western club, turning in his 2Ist homer along with a trio of singles Association Rests Six teams of the Association en joved a holiday, being without en gagements. The Colonels, — champions-elect, turned the tables on the Senators who have been giving them rough treatment in the present series Leading the assault: were Shannon and Cotter. The former went to bat five times and smacked four singles, while the latter offered a little va riety with a home run, « triple and a single, in five attempt CASUALTIES MARK EARLY GRID SEASON Practise at Minnesota Gets Under Way Guided by Dr. Spears Chicago, fortune alr hi a ulking in the wake of king football on the | gridirons of the western conference. | Northwestern's aspirant first sufferers, Bob Johns most reliable in the 4 potenti: i weeks with a sprained ankle as a re- sult of the initial tackling practi Duke Cohen, regular guard, whose locked knee last May necessitated and operation, still limps, and can- not play until mid-season. | Crutches and a sprained ankle bar Ray Dauber, veteran Hawkeye half- back, for a fortnight. | Purdue has the most serious cas- uulties. W. B, House, a likely for- ward wall candidate, slipped and fell | yesterday while running signals and | broke his shoulder. | Rain Hampers Work Rain is dampening fields but not | spirit elsewhere. Coach Yost is | tutoring the Wolverines on rules | with scrimmage in prospect for the | week-end for his sixty students. | Fundamentals are Wisconsin's dish, | 21 veterans showing the way for 64 other hopefuls. “Red” Grange leads the practice for the I 3 4, where aspirant in- elude his “kid brother” Garland, an | unknown quality. Crop of Ivory Light scrimmage and forward pass-' ing is Coach Stage’s program for his | 64. Ohio state boasts the largest erop of ivory—an even century with backfield material predominant, and ends aplenty. That this is Coach Will's 13th year mentor 13 re- garded as an auspi ‘omen rather than the usual otherwise. Dr. Clarence Spears used blockirg and tackling practice as his intro- diction to Minnesota’s possibilities. | ‘Two practices a day are in order un-} til September 28, when schcol opens. | Class room work holds Indiana to| one daily practice, but Coach Bill| Ingram expects to determine shortly the most likely regulars in his col- lection of three score availables, nineteen from last years squad are! back. Rockne Has 500 | Coach Knute Rochne of Notre} Dame with a turnout of 500 candi- dates hag ost 11 jobs open, he says. -fourth of the student body are virtually included in the crop of prospects, but these are faring ; prompt a: aying dnd elimination as ‘work gets started in earnest. BEEE TRC COOKERY ae EANS "COOKING IN COMFORT BEAD TRIBUNE ‘WANT apps BEGIN HERE TODAY War brought great sorrow to untold numbers, none more bitter than that alloted to Va NAN MARRAE who parted from her sweetheart, retaining only } his promise to make her his bride on F his first leave home, She had lenrned of tis serious injury, She f jihad lived somehow through — the > weeks of waiting with news frag: i Viner snd intrequent ¥ { PRTER LYSTER had finally re ‘ tu 1to London, but when he faced Letrothe show ens of hell which Jaid him low had also robbed j lum of his memory | JOAN ENDICOTT, whose husband 1 aise serving, living with Nan ina small London apartment, There sTT, pat of ty persuade sister's home with the hope that t tavorable egain bh inpossib leave while Nan as in NOW | Nan tr | planned jhis leave; his last letter to her be- | fore he was wounded had been full he got of all that he meant to do whep he cue home one sentence he had ritten seemed to leap out of the H and stare at her | *We'll spend cur honeymoon in London, 1 think, Nan. ‘There are j such lots of places | haven't seen, doing the round of ith you and buying you } suppose you know tf vot a proper en- in t. madam? ‘That's vot thine We'll do the: morning tof get home -go and choose a whe was home, and he had He was quite content Presenting — Joe e pound hitting weer Peer nd of the shops with club, ‘Three-F Leag They « Arnott instead him'the “Babe Ruth of the minor nt to the door with Arnott despite his small stature. Over him yoodby. stretch of 40 games he crashed you again 67 hits, 17 of them being hom He looks promising. me see you — ! he dazed o——_—. trnott where nd Peter were i} ne that mornin dared go National League Jin the same direction herself, in the w. Pet, | hope of meeting them. If she could Pittsburg Low BA Gal just see just watch him from : ‘ m7 60 soa) a distance, it would be something. Wb wo 39 She shook hands with Arnott: me- a ‘A televraph boy ran up the steps eee od there. He handed Nan Chicago 61 so Philadelphia ou 78 oop American American League St ouis 2, Boston 1. Yashingto , Chicago 2, aaaunet + Detroit 3. St. Cleveland at New York, postponed, De rain ‘ ae: Cleveland American Association New York Louisville 7, Columbus 5. Boston Indianapolis at Toledo, postponed, rain ssociati ce er ) American Association GAMES TODAY f —__—-9 Louisville lou [aie AMe St. Paul RB ‘ Indianapolis se National League Minneapolis x2 Philadelphia at St. Louis, Kansas City 74 Boston at Chicago. Toledo 6s 81 New York at pnati. Milwaukee. 66 os Brooklyn at Pittsburg (two games) Columbus £5 95 364 ‘A freee I ooo —+ merican League i Results Yesterday | : at Boston (two games.) — — yashington. ; ago i adelphia (2 games) National League Cleveland at New York (2 games) New York 4, Cincinnati 1. Gem ace Philadelphia’ 4, St. Louis 2. American Association Brooklyn at Pittsburg, postponed,! Indianapolis at Toledo (2 games) rain, Louisville at Columbus. SENSATION OF NATIONAL AMATEUR GOLF TOURNEY Youthful protege of Bobby Jones, king of amateur golfere, who was the sensation of the recent classic at Oakmont. Playing in his first national tournament, Gunn, who. like his teacher, Jones, comes from Atlanta, Ga. stayed in the vanes 2 the finals, losing to his master, ye and ‘4e( Ine wlotorgot | | By RUBY M. AYRES un ina .| hurt, N Ach of Endicott?” he said la- conicaliy. “For Joan,” said Nan. A little pang of envy went through her! heart. Once the sight of a telegram set all her pulses racing, but now she cared less than nothing. She bade Arnott a hasty “goodby” and went in to find her friend. Joan was only just dressing. She looked very frail and childish startd- ing there’ with her hair tumbling pout her shoulders. Nan spoke to! her gently. “A telegram, dear,” she said. Jean turned sharply, her fice chalk-white. She dropped her brush with a clatter. “For me? Oh, Nan, you open it—| I'm so afraid! Nan laughed—she tore open the envelope carelessly, and drew out the message, “Home on Friday, five days’ leave. —Tim.” She 1ead the message aloud. Joan gave a little hysterical scream. : “1 don't believe it—you're teasing me . I just don’t believe it.” She snatched the paper from read it and burst into tears. “Oh, it’s just too wonderful—I’m so happy Oh, Nan, you must hurry up and finish that pink blouse for me.” Nan walked out of the room with- out answering; she did not mean to be unkind or unsympathetic, but her heart felt like a stone. She passed Joan's room, and went into the little sitting room where the small bundle of letters returned to her by Arnott still lay on the table, She picked them up and held them mechanically, It was quite time now that she woke up, she was telling herself. “J have had dreams like this before—not quite so bad, per- haps, but still very bad. . . .” Then steps sounded along the little pussage outside, and Joan catne into the room. “IT hope you won't think me very horrid,” Joan said, in @ sort of whis- per. “But, of course, when Tim comes home he'll want me all to him. self—-he has said so so many times, and I was wondering—you won't be ? I was wondering if you'd ing away for just those few mind g days? Nan did not answer. You could go home just for a few 3, couldn't’ you?” Joan went on. r to some friends—I'm sure you won't mind me asking you, but...” She looked up anxiously, “Are you angry, Nan?” “No,” said Nan; she gave a queer little laugh. “As you say, I can go home . . . or -or to some friends.” And the thought of John Arnott’s embarrassed invitation crossed her weary 12nd. Joan gave a little sigh of relief. was sure you would if I asked you,” she said. “It was the first thought that came into my head after I read Tim’s telegram. I've been without him so long und we used to be so happy here just by ourselves.” Nan said yes, but she felt curious- ly hurt that Joan should be so an- xious to get rid of her. “I should have offered to go, any- way,” she said, with a touch of dig- nity. “I quite understand how you feel.” But the tears smarted in her eyes as she went to her own room with, her tittle parcel of letters. ' Home had never been home to Nan since her mother died and her father married again. That was years ago now: Nan had been a small child of nine then, but she could remember, as if it were yesterday, the night when her father brought his second wife up to the nursery and told Nan that she myst love her. For ten years she had been forced to stand it; ten years during which three small stepbrothers appeared to add to her burdens, and push her more and more out of favor, till at last she had begged her father to alléw her to leave home. So Nan went to London with noth- ing but £10 and her own pluck to help her, and for a whole week she sat in the bed sitting room which she had taken in an unattractive suburb and answered advertisements and tramped to and fro from agents’ offices. And then one day she answered an advertisement for the post of com- panion to aedelicate lady and got it. The delicate lady proved to be one of the few women who did not regard & companion as someone to be treat- ed not quite so well as a servant, and Nan stayed with her for two years. | Happy years they were, of un- eventful, not at all exciting, mo- notony, but it was better than being at home. Nobody ever spoke un- kindly to her or made her feel that she was not wanted, and it was a real grief to Nan when one morning she went to Miss Lyster’s room as usual to wake her, and found that the lit- tle lady had died in her sleep. Mr. Rook, Miss Lyster’s solicitor, came and went and was kind to Nan in his dry sort of way. “You had better stay on for the present, my dear young lady,” he said. “It is impossible to make final arrangements till I hear from Miss Lyster’s nephew. Yes, there nephew, as, of course, you know—' “You will find that you have not been forgotten,” Mr. Rook told her gently, and later, when Miss Lyster’s will was read, Nan found that she had been left a sufficiently large capital to bring her in sixty pounds a year. Everything e]se went to Peter Lyster, but it was many weeks after Mi Lyster's death, and after the war had broken out that the little maid who had stayed on with her came to the door to say that a sol- dier was asking to see Miss Lyster. And that was how Nan met Peter. Nan had also met Joan Endicott while she was with Miss Lyster, and when Tim joined the army the two girls went to live together, and had lived together ever since. (To Be Continued) RAS comes * SPORT BRIEFS | EFS | o Paris—Rene La Coete, French tennis ace, will serve his in the French army in the avii tion, the war ministry decided. Vernon, Cal.—Stewart McLe; St. Paul lightweight boxer, won on a foul from Johnny Lamar, Los Angeles Mexican, in the fourth round. laine sen ere Fitzsimmons, a jana, promo: ter, eft after fruitless week of effort to obtain the signature of Harry Wil negro challenger, for a heavy weight title fight with Jack y- New Yor! my Slattery of Buffalo, undaunted by: the knock out given him by Paul Ber- jlenbach, expects to fulfill his contract with Harry Greb of Pitteburg, for ® middleweight title bout at the polo grounds Oct. fifth. : daily thru the Tribune Columns ‘\ This being made possible by leased wires of the Associ- ated Press, the greatest, most reliable and accurate news gathering agency in the world. With this increased service The Tribune is giving its readers all of the latest and most interesting news. 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