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SUNDAY,- JULY -6, 1924. ; Che Casper Sunday Cribune PAGE NINE . Ea Se Se SS Sates A Lh calle bac Cs NINE First in News Of All Events NS UNFURLED IN OLYMPIC OPENING OST ta SL SIE VE ———— By Leased Wire 16,000 ATTEND NEW YORK, July 5.—The Detroit}:500. To be consistent in their con- Start in today’s game with the Phil-|_ Summary—Two base hits, Young, r | i; linda tie the core at | Groh "anvtor®” xgms''rene” ord |“Soapy” - Waters - Ex-|Atiss so Cincionats Xacanaa| rien, chez autho cut ore “ow |Eks and Standard, Tied for Leadership in Oil City all in the seventh but Meusel| Sacrifice hits, Mewsel, Groh. Left} PY crate the, tage Tarhiig tormnade [there are no evidences that the i wi the ovenih, "but Meuse! [Sacro hits Mee, Groh, "iat ed to Be Sensa- | citi, are, marking combleton| wit” Se peging teteen sane ty League, to Cross Bats Again; Texacos saith omens a f gate I Sakae ond - Seutitiee by|8. Struck out by Hubbel, 8; MeQuil- I C ‘ P Debok anon bri deea er ar eras at oF, na gies at Sup ure To Meet Le ic Cl b os fe Glanite’ of the sarne|jan, a. cha bell . the toll of time rather than by any Spectacular. Para OF reame. McQuillan, 6 tion of the Olympics. itw 1924 games by Sunday and Cin-| tuck of baseball knowledge The task gion Club. Score: R. H. E.}betl,.1.. Umpires, Klein and Wilson. cinnatl by the following Tuesday,|that confronts Manager Hendricks Athletes Marks Great Philadelphia 030 000 200— 5 8 1 e given any kind of weather, fs less that of cultivating what GIANTS TROUNCE PHILLIES AS . DODGERS TRIMBOSTON BRAVES Philadelphia, 5; New York, 6. | Henline; McQuillan, Ryan and Sny- NEW YORK, June 5.—A’ flying| der. ia oe “eam samn eee ais an ee! LEAGUE SLUGGERS CLASH TODAY 4, Casper Tribune) them with a percentage of less than Big league baseball is due this afternoon at the high / ae | AW SON ABS O09 22x 9738 <t Cope ARTES CAME. | The ond of the. frat half of the/plants he has than of getting some acbepl are wneusche Elks tangle with the Standard for * A eineder, Lewis and Brooklyn, 8: opyright. , Casper une,)} season finds bot se clubs in vast;|new ones to set out in 1925. The e leadershi lity Ly ks , a s vent. ‘ BOSTON, Mi NEW YORK, July §—ts Soapy''||y ditverent circumstances than they| team he has now probably will never | slowly but cee OF Gity jeagie, The Etks have crept é Dodgers took the final game of the| Waters, the star 800-meter man of|were at last season's half-way post.|do any better than it is doing. all be-thelsonatt ne Dottom rung of the ladder un~ By HENRY UL. FARRELL Y > series from the Braves, 8 to 4. Year-|the American Olympic team, going! For Cincinnati, tt 1s a sad change| Should the Detrott Tigers win an'|til by their yictory on the Fourth over Glenrock they are (United, Press Staff ‘ Correspondent) esterday s gin, started for the. Braves, and was| Harvard who now is in Paris with and for Detroit, a pleasant one, |of their games up to the halfway|tied for first place with the Refiners, i 'Y game they stars, some of ting grey at the game but to paste the apple when hits mean runs. COLOMBES. STADIUM, Knocked out in the fourth inning, | to prove to be another Shick? That's)Cincinnat! reached the middie| point, their percentage would be |have been adding confindence and, array ce PARIS, June 5.—Colors of Si Decatur pitched fine ball for - the; the, question that {a interesting|of the searon last yerr, the Reda|.572. Last year, when they put up|today they ought to be right. ‘The|them get 44 nations displayed in sa- cores — visitory Crimaon adherents just now and the) were standing cocky with a percen-|at Halfway Inn, thelr percentage|Elks have everything that goes to|atill arte tand Score; ‘ R. H. ¥,| most of them answer tyes.” If he|tage of 615. They were second in|was only .487. They have a chance|make a great ball team, confidence, Brooklyn -200 410 010— 8 14 2] in to come up to Shick, Harvard's|thp race and a jot of people were|to be nearly 100 points, better than lute, pledged standard bear- Ae 1 & couple.of heavy hitters, two sweet| As an eyo opener the Texacos will ers. to- clean sport and fair a American League, Boston 000 001 012— 4 8 O|historic sprinter, he will have to} pulling confidextly for them toover-|they were last season at the half-| pitchers and a fair fielding team. line un against the L - The th. ighth Olympic New York, 2-2; Washington, 0-7. Decatur and Tayl Yeargin,| step some, for no other man in| take the Giants. But they had shot|way mark and even if they lost all On the other hand the Standard] Legion is all pepped up th had play as. the eig' : ct] Boston, 6-7; Philadelphia, 3-2. North, Benton-and O'Neil, ambridge history ranks high on|their bolt and after mid-season faded|their games between now and Sun-|players are mean as a bunch of| vi tory over the Refir Taira gages of modern times were-off!-} g+. Louis, 0; Detroit, 3 Summary—Two-base hit, Stengel,| the cinder path. fast. day, they could not stand as poorly.|hound dogs since their shutout by {it in mind to climb haug tenet? cleliy epee today por}. Cleveland, 7; Chicago, 8. Stock, High, Wheat, Cunningham. | Shick, class of 1905, first appeared Se | the Legion Friday, The act ornery| Not 20 long ago oe top. Thoiisands of" p eee tae b — Three ‘base ‘hits, Fournier, Gibson.|in the intercollegiates May 30, 1902, |" enough to bite thelr own grand-/leading the league but they kicker Ra EE cage ts tarsent Fi ae National League. Double plays, Decatur to Fournier|at Berkeley oval, where, on a tech. RIO | S A mothers and they are going into|away several games ow ar bririg# former enemy states si er! Philadelphia, 5; New York, 6. to Taylor; Padgett to R. Smith to|nicality, although he finished second the game today for blood. Roy| holding a .500 percentag Pe were=#eleaged’ at 4 o'clock as Pros-}” Brooklyn, 8; Boston, 4. McInnis. Left on bases, Brooklyn.|in the 100 and the 220, he was dis Hartzell, for long years a star for{ The game today ident® Doumergue of France con Cincinnati, 4; Pittsburgh, 11. 10; Boston, 6. Bases on balls, off| qualified. Next year at’ Berkeley ‘ the New York Yanks, will climb the Chicago, 6; St. Louis, 2. Qecatur, 2; Yeargin, 1. Struck out.}owal, Shick finished second in the | | H HE ANKEES hilltop to try to stem the rising tide : Dy Decatur, 4; Yeargin, 1: Losing|100 and third in the 220. But the | Y of Elkdom. Behind him will be the a double. header, the first setto cludé® his wddress and declared the ting under a, way at 2 o'clock and all for the games open. « a2 m a Price of one admission Fifteen thousan: heathy hs Cole American Association. pitcher, Yeargin. Umplren Moran! following year, at Philadelphia, he lostsht the Breat mween of t R.H.E.Jand Rigley. Time, 1:41. finished first in both events, | He ombes stadium built to ees Ee Kansas City ’-..000 000 004—4 8 repeated in the intercollegiate of By FRANK GETTY mittedly a hot-headed southerner, but 60,000:-" Those .-15,000 taxed. the! Miiwaukee -004-010.00x—5 9 4 Chicago, 6; St. Louis, 2 1905 at Philadelphia. Meantime, in| (United Press Staff Correspondent) |no one who knows him well will be- atrengtir of ushers and Lay get 7 Saladna, Wilkinson and Skiff:| BT, LOUIS, Mo. June 3—Thelthe dual meets with Yale, Shick| NEW YORK, July 5.—(Unitea|leve for a minute that he would give however, the combination of equatiy | Schaack. and Young. Chicago Cubs walloped the Car-|won both the 100 and the 220 in| Press)—The New York sport writ-| orders that might result in the seri Hes fein” pee Se ft ae . dinals today, 6 to 2. Although the] 1902, 1903, 1904 and 1905.. More-|ers have been'shedding bitter tears|OU# Injury of a fellow ball player. i OX TA unfamiliar: languages making Mr R. H.E,| St. Louis team got 12 hits off Blake, | over,’ in 1904, when the joint Yale-| because President Johnson of the| That New York sport writers allow 5 # sore Te OU spectators © Alf) stinmeapolis ---011-000.000—2 11 1]the same number the Cubs got from farvard ran Oxford and Cambridge, | American League plastered a $100| themselves to be influenced by such Wok teltea cr alton iGae Care ae 000 006 10x—7 12 0 |four Card herlera, the Cubs held) shick won the 100 in the remark-| fine and 10 days’ suspension on Out-|Unproven reports is astonishing tol Ney York, 2. fear G7. hese Washington, 0. Mangum and Grabowski; McQuald/ thelr lead ajl through. O'Farrell) oie time of 9 4.5 seconds. fielder Bob Meusel, while he gave| fair-minded critics o Morlarity and Dineen. : Pon Berne WASHINGTO: Palas Time of cheers erected president Dow, {"84 Dixon. got, @ horhe run. Cole, the Detroit pitcher, a shall] Come to thiifk of it, the only cases| watiorals ‘broke’ ova, wane tee] Second samo— ; 5 ee haem 4 Reema by Beore: R. MH. B-) inland. is courting disaster jn|fine for their part in pulling off the|f serious injury to batsmen by Puckees ine, aauileeendan orcs | t= 000020 . the British pringes-Wales and Henry. R. BE. Chicago 000 033 00 612 Il panning “to. enter Nurmi, thdr| Detrott riot. thrown balls from the box in recent] gay and retained ate weed Ae | Philadelphia -—-000 000 200-2 6 3 2 j| Endianepolts 00 o10 on: 2—4 9 1/8. Lovie 7-000 080 000— 3.14 2) Firon cnan™ Inthe sOdmeter, the) They felt very deeply grieved that| Years in the majors have been where | SAY, "4, Tetalned the lead. New| Fullerton’ and” Pleinich: Ateeker Raualiy. stormy. cheers --ereeted | ouisville ~--010000.0010—2 5°°1| Blake and O'Farrell; Pfotfer.|; for, 7 ork pitchers were doing the Hasty & 3,000-metey team race, | “Big Ban" hadn't suspended the en-| New ld Bruggy, Gibson 4 x bested Walter Johnso: A pitche: Seaton, Poysiae Fairbanks and Mary Plek-}'" petty and Krueger; Holley and|Sherdell and Nieborgall, Wick: coim, | the 10,000-meter and the croas.| tire Detroit team or expelled Detroit hurling: ‘Carl Mays killed Ray Chan-| partie ut LA WRpre ig gue sen Summary: Two base hit—Harrig, ie 4 Meyer. Summary—Two-base *}country. Five events {s ent! from the league. ‘Their bitterest|man, Cleveland shortstop, on a New , e hon Ten conda, Wambss ‘Therparade: of the natiogs started Cooney, Grantham, Toporcer, Bot- ¥. mia ts entirely too ver, were over Jonn.| York diamond. Maya, now with the| TOS in the second, piled a two-| ganss. Left on bases—Philadelphi: much for one man. But the very| laments, howev 3 run lead on Ho: a wa ov @ ; adelphia, fact that his countrymen have such|s0n's failure to inflict some punish-|Cincinnati Reds, was then a Yank. fe ate ee Wan never | 6. Boston: 6, Doukle: playa—~Lee to headed Babe Ruth starred in the | Ws eta confidence ‘n him shows what a|ment on Ty Cobb, Tiger leader, In their wildest moments of anger, first with a perfect game. Wambesganss to Harris; Hasty to shortly after three. One after the other-each of the 44 groups filed iv the -president'sbox, each con- R.H.E.| tomley, Stats. Three-bawe - ‘hit, Golumbus -.-.-023 100 020—8 12 3] Blake. Home run, O'Farréll. Sacrl- -000 001 500—6 10 1] fice hit, Hollocher. Stolen base 1 the Clev re Hauser to Rico: i ge utente exeart sprsll dippiag: ite pol: uth Bkngite’ and tieean: Nay-|Grantham, Hollocher. Double play, | Wonderful all around man he Js, eae work’ thneten See east nes | blame ont ene eee Precrie Shir a a ids Ge R.H.B.| “off Meeker 8, Fullerton eae u io . of mt % ;| New York — 2 ak ae iE espe eis jodi sania ae lor, Johnson, Baldwin, McCullough] Rottomley unassisted. Bases on feeble claim that Cobb had given his|then with Brooklyn, hit “Chick” WeeNivatia ‘1 000. 10 2] out—By Meeker 1. Hits—Omr Meeke 000 000 000-0 6 Oler 10 in 7 innings; I y 2 in Losing pitcher—Meeker. Umpires— Dineen and Moriarity. Time—148, pitchers orders to “dust off” oppos-|Frewster with a thrown ball several ing batters and that Cole hit Meusel| Ye@rs ago in a practice game and in an effort to drive him from the|Put Frewster out of the Yank line plate. The general attitude was that| UP for a year and probably prevented | » the Yanks aregGod’s annointed and| him for all time becoming the star he| + therefore are sacred. The charge| Should have been. Did anyone even fused to. dip, thelr colors, but raised | #24 Gaston. balls, off Pfeffer, Sherdell, passe —- Blake, 5. Struck out, by Pfeffer, them, higher aa they passed the box International League. by Blake, 4; Sherdell, 1. Pitching Games Today America’s eta was the largest,| At Newark— . HB. record, oft tateec, hits, a: rahe tn its y e wi ay | Jersey City -. innings, o! e' ii Up mavertibio army. ven thele | Newark Aiaplnes,. ett 6p: henesse Chucage National Loague. Pennock and Schang; Johnson and Ruel. Summary: Two base hits—Ruth Sacrifice Hits—Meusel, Harris, Pennock, Peck. Stolen base—Bluege. St. Louls, 0; Detroit, 3. 7; St. Louls, 14. Umpires, Me- Taake charesé acnihat nd Double play—Ruth to Pipp, Scott] DETROIT, Mich, June 5.—Eart bordel, 59 ve Malige dea tha abd RED CSE ert Cormick, Pfitman’ and Hart. Time.| pyncinnatl at Chicago. UnggpEoried word o¢ take, vormee |inson Of Brooklyn? They ia ror, | © Waris ares Shi helie--Oc- Jobo: | Sh chile aimee siccher: yenetecay Drawn upp midfield. cach: team | TORONtO: son ee>ee-sonvdaw~ BT} 0| 2:07 pane ; Tiger pitcher, now with Boston. And! General opinion In baseball circles, | Tonnson 1. UmplrescOrmate ana{ Well scattered and with wet, nem behind,its standard bearer, the ath-| Buffalo ~-.-.------——ae--~-~ 7 1 American at, that, Ekmke never allowed him-| outside of the fanatical Yank fans| jane rime tes % SPC bort’ tcome kim tiated blanked the letesthen repeated the oath, each a Cincinnati, Boro sir * py] Chicago at ‘Detroit. self to be duoted to that effect, but] 4nd writers, is that Meusel didn't | Mune. 4 Tyme TSS: R. Hb, | St. Louis Browns, 3 to 0, here todas, in his own language, led by Georges |. Second game—° RHE] PITTSBURGH, June 5— The Pll st. Loule at Cleveland. it has been generally circulated in| set half that was coming to him.| yaw york 00 000 000—2 ¢ 2| Hellman's triple scored Fother- Andre, French. ster. chosen to re.|Torento - =a : : paging iaateecn Ha heel the] New York at Philadelphia. Americar League circles that Ehmke ee [papkogic art aera) is pee whl Washington 2-400 200 01x—7 9 0| sill in the first inning and in the : : ; s atta : ; cond ea rods Peek hae aha ag a Sree wunee Reds here today, 11 to 4, ce Woentea bainetoas 7% ret Liatala torbave Pee Fhe meoet fa Bia ne am voruaseeUlt by Donne Hoyt, Markle and Schang; Maberry second inning Jones and Woodall passing overhead -at w dangerously | At Rochester— Fe SP ase maet = 00006 sttod res b= Fe ig Ge RRS But that is just how thin the|crowd. He was supported by Ruth, | 7S. ewe base hits -Schang, | ingle. : 1 Sc RO low. altitude of a cinema operator's| Syracuse $8 0 it idiareatie = nn 400 10x11 14 9|__THbUNe Wantads bring results. | charge against Cobb is. Cobb is ad- bbl Boveri ted'.to get inte the NehR nate. / Balen. bases Gouin, Eien | Tho ‘essrert rien, airplane, but was impressive withal.| Rochester - Leela igs Spry ale gee aE HN etapa es a pe i fiehtine| Sacrifice hite—Ruth, Tate. Double| St. Louls ---..090 000 000—9 11 6 Se ee camer gua __then... dev At Baltimore— R.H.E,| Sandberg; Stone and Gooch. weight, would be easy meat for either | Pl4y8—Peck to Harris to Judge 2.| Detroit ------..120 000 000—3 6 0 clared the games officially opened. as 713 9| Summary—Two-base hits, Tray Mataat. ox TRGth Base on balis—Off Hoyt 4, Maberry} Lyons, Wingard and Collins, Actual competition will begin Sun-| Reading 5 9 ojnor. Maranville, ‘Wright, "Lee, , MAtibal: 6; aA Wanv ot acto sintall Markle Hits—Om Hoyt 8 in| Severeld; Whitehill and W« 1 day with Graeco-Roman wrestling | Baltimore Grimm. Three base hits, Wright, 6 innings, Markle 1 in 2. Hit by| Summary: vo base hit—Cobb, gence, and if the riot day was one of his thinking - ds he must have contésts, for which 22 nations have| (14-innings,) Critz. Home run, Carey. Sacrifice pitcherBy Hoyt berry 2,] Three base hit—Hellmann. Sacrifice enfered.teams, They are Austria, Wright, Roush. Stolen base, ri Markle 1. Passed ball—Tate, Los-| hit~Blue. Double pls —Gerber vo t The £ 4 sh. § 5 known that he was starting some- e : 2 at ae uler: McGows s 3; Mee Goths a ee: is Penis a acces Fe wie Double! stay. Wem If you have some question to ask about baseball— thing he couldn't finish. eb vet i SF Si ( Lae yp Feats oa rennin ler. ae cs land, ce, ‘Greece, } : = 5 881 “4 « , ste 1 game was forfeited to the ot he oF ~The te eS ites - Taped Latonks aee, ty: Pigg satin bb yrs year a ‘ rane coe Tf you want a rule interpreted— panks because it would have been! |. poston, @7, Philadelphlay £2 peanuts Merainoace Be Way,9Polamd,- Sweden, Czecho-Slova-| Allen and Hale; Haide, Dayenport|}. stays, 2. (Stone, Maranville) left If you want to know anything about a play or a player— be ae aa: Sean it pei neerolt PHILADELPHIA, July 6.—The| Whitehill Hits—Of Lyons 4, kia, Purkey and Jugo-Slavia. ~ | and Minetree, Brooks. Cincinnati, 3; Pittsburg, 4. attack with anything short of a riot| Boston Red Sox took both games of | Umpires—Connolly, Hi and | age At Omaha R HE|Umpires, O'Day and Sweeney. Write to John B. Foster, the man who helped make the |] 4 doubleheader here today setting | Rowland. Time gun battery, In this case the Yanks Time, 1:32. had a comfortable lead and the for —— -_—_—_—— | an, ; : at reaps RHE TILDEN MEETS and Roche. (Copyright, 1924, Casper Tribune.) forfdited to the team that is losing. * . . - - Ps At Wichita— RHE Question—One 1s out and there| hesitates and then starts forward| The rule should be amended, giving} _ S¥mmery Want to Kee Him IN| Tulsa — - 200 000 100— 3 6 2 ¥ are runners on second and third|/and hurdles the ball. In doing so|the umpires power in a case of a| 2pbia 5, ¥ iy p Wichita — _-_ 202 130 10°— 9 14 1 bases. The ball is batted to center-| ho obstructs the shortstop’s’ view.| deliberately incited riot, to punish|— Harris. Tum for Battle Bolen and Crosby, McNamara and field, Fielder caught the ball and| The latter stops the ball but. is|the team as well as individual offend. With Firpo. the Athi Flagste down 6 to 3 and 7 to 2 = — feited game did not affect the result, Birbraner athe we ea keh Chileago, 6. Cle put it called attention to the-weale | times at bat in the first game and! opioago, yess of the forfelted game rule. It ia] the second got a/sixth hit. evidently possible for a pugnacious| First same— Se ball player, with his team behind, on| Boston ~---.---012 000 102-6 12 0 a foreign field, to start a riot as Meu-| Philadelphia ---100 010 001—3 7 2 sel did at Detroit and have the game| Piercy and O'Neill; Burns, Heimach rules under which the game is played today. If you want a per sonal reply enclose a stamped, self-addressed. envelope. Other: wise your question will be answered in this column. Address—Joln B. Foster, Special Baseball Correspondent of the Casper Tribune, 811 World Building, New York. ° id, 7. June 5.—"Bib” Patk's hitting eye was right t and the White Sox beat the Indians, 8 to 7. The score— R. i. Cleveland .000 300 —F 7 Chicago 200 320 00x—8 13 Metovier, Cheeves, Clark, Roy and Myatt; Faber, Connelly and Crouse. Summary: Stolen e8—Hooper, Collins 2, Kamm. Two base hits— McNulty, Summa, Hooper, Sheely, Falk 3. Sacrifice hits— Burns, Mostil, Collins Left on bases—Phila- d, Sacrifice hits— Wales. threw home. The throw went be- rattled and throws poorly to first. | ers tween third and home. Pitcher got Should the runner be called out for} ‘The G Burns, Harris, Veach, Double plays INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., July 5.— eater New York teams have Southern League. “Big Bill” Tilden and youthful John;| the ball and in relaying it to the| interference or should the shortstop | been allowed to get away with a lot, sven Suara, ee0! 1D a gis Faber 2. Bases on Balls—Off Fat . At Little Rock— R.H.B.|ny Hennessy, hooster state cham:| catcher hit the runner going home| be charged with an error? because the money taken tn'the New | oie ie i owen Basen on bails | 2 Contelly 2, Metevier 3, Cheeves 4, By FAIR PLAY. Memphis 712 1/plon, will mest here tomorrow af-|from third. Hall’ rolled into the) Answer—The question of inter] York gate keeps many a team’ off| Burns to Galloway. Bases on balls | Ciaike 1, Roy 1 ck out—By (Copyright, 1924, Casper Tribune.)| Little Roc! 1 1 4) ternoon for the western tennis cham-ferowd. A boy picked It up and) ference is one of the umpire’s judg-| its uppers, but some limit should be| Of Burns pia ec dr ber 3, Clarke 1, F Umpires NEW: YORK, July 5.—Efforts are pionship, handed it to the catcher who threw| ment. Most interference plays are | set. Hit by gitdhes—By Plercy (Bishop) Holmes and Owens, Time— no’ making fo provide Harry| At Birmingham— -H.E.| Tilden battered his way easily | to the piteber and the latter touched | questions of judgment on the part Baseball writers all over the cir-| Hit +09 es ee he Burne (O'Neil, Wills -with another battle ‘before| Mobile - 6 0|through the semi-finals today, beat-jout the runner coming home from|of the umpire. If there is no inter-| cult are of the opirtion that “Ducky’"| @nd (Ga eieieeecire. Wincaiewes ee eee nr = ths time comes for him to step in Birmingham — 4 O]ing A. C. Chapin, Chicago, 6-3; 6.0;] second. Was he out? ference decited upon then the fielder | Holmes inflicted unnecessarily heavy | Losing pitche bel a 6.0. Answer—No. The ball” was| must be charged with an error, punishment on the St. Louls Browns|———————— Hennessy sprang the sensation of | blocked and must be returned to the ..— for the little flareup on th Louis] who knows Sisler petteves that even the tournament when he won from] pitcher In his position before it can Question—Two are out and a rw grounds recently. Johnson's, sus-|in the heat of the game, he would Gerald Patterson, Australian star,|be put in play. The run should|ner fs oh third base. The batter up| pension of Sisler, Collins and Austin ; forget himself to make any in the of half of the semi-final} have been counted. hits the ball_and in trying to make| was, of course, based on Holmes’ re-| thing but a gentlemanly protest. A round. The score: 4-8, 6-2, 6-1, 6-3, _ it a two bagger he gets put out.|port. Sisier, as manager. certainly bea who have watched the Amer. Question—Runner is on second| Meanwhile the player .on third|had a right to protest in a gentle-|{can League umpires this year, be« Washington base. Batter hits to shortstop who | scores, Does the run count? manly way if he thought his team! lieve quite a few of them are at-| New York is playing behind the line. “Runner| -Answer—The run counts. was getting a raw deal and no one flicted with sun-spots. Detrolt YOU KNOW ME AL---Adventures of Jack Keefe _ By RING chiar LARDNER | <ieces: JOY, INOTICE WHEN! SoHNSON'S 2) ie | WAS @S OLO AS SS the ring against Luis Firpo, Paddy Mullins, who - manages the big negro,{) At Nashville— ys) that “Harry got off a lot of| Chattanooga rust imhis*battle with Madden, but] Neshville --. there’ fs ‘more to come off and he thinks i¢ is up to Rickard to pro- vide his man with a battle, espe- cially inasmuch as Wills signed with Tex to fight two battles for him this summer. Fred Fulton is anxious to take on Wills, just why no one knows. But Fred, -while he is skid to have im- Proved,’ ig not impressing anyone, emt 2) o 8 = = 3 g a re ont AMERIC/ At Atlanta— New Orleans -. nat 208 ehh Call the Tribune for highway in- © catch train.) | formation. | HE DON"T O@ST Philade!lp’ least of all Mullins, with his ability . mr HAROLY HIM, | WOOLON'Y TAKE << GUY ! eins to give the colored gentleman a good PITCHIN', HE OO J i) 1s WITH ‘THR | NATIONAL LEAGU workout, ® EVER SHARE HIS HEAD. 2 NO SIGNS FROMA Kids CATCHIN® THEYD ; “ Pot, Georg CGgdtrey ta ready and will WHATEVER RUEL See errcnes VO PLTCH WHAT | FELT FINE Him FOR New York ------ ‘ ing fto,-aecommodate Harry, bu Pp : SS ahecs Gawge Goes not appear to be just FOR, THATS WHI LIne ili DISOBE YIN’ & B ‘ooklyn “ 3 the sort of game that will fill the Pittsburgh “ 33 bill for the firm of Mullins, Wills Cincinnati - a9 and company. Boston os 41 Mullins would really lke"to get Philadelphia - _----- 40 © shot at.Spalla, since. the Italian eR St. Louts __ 2 5 made a good showing against Tunney and moreover nt 14 s i , i ( rounds against Firpo before he was i Wed away. If Wills could put Spalla} aWay in less than 14 rounds, it wontd™make the féat look good clong#idé of Firpo’s showing. Yet, t the same time, Wills would have to tutm the trick Inside of seven unds to make thé victory look as 00d ‘a& Tiunney's victory over the Ol! City League Won Lost Independent League Italian. | frohanite Vago Al, aféund, if {sa hard problem t ; i , ; : yD Z Merchant to work owt and only one fact is a i NY i ly Hi L fs / Pordsons - ee clar, this being some time before Yi ro sehen i fo ‘ sh : Lee Douds ————- ‘ he is called upon to meet Firpo, Si aati Co AAG i le i iE ee thd sel iti fo urlington Cte : Telephone - Collseeum Harry Wills will step into an out- door ring against some man of some sort of a reputation, f i > ;