Evening Star Newspaper, May 16, 1922, Page 26

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e VENING STAR, WAS i HERE’S COBB’S SMILE OF SUCCESS | | | SPURT OF TYGERS GIVES HOME FANS FLAG HOPES Jungnleeré Have Hopped From Last Place to Third in a Week—Griffs Take Series by Winning Final From Indians, 3 to 2. BY DENMAN: THOMPSON. RAYMOND COBB’S menagerie of snarling jungle cats is in our midst. The Tygers, pa_gcd at the foot of the American League parade a week ago yesterday, have clawed their way. to third place by winning seven of their last nine games and expect to rend the Griff- men limb from limb in a-ferocious attempt to climb even higher. The man eaters invade the capital today, licking their chops after three hearty meals in as many days at the expense of the front-running Yankees and their much-touted pitching staff. With .the Georgia Peach himseli setting the pace, the once-despised herd from Detroit has become the talkgf the base ball world, and the fans of the Fourth city, doleful a week back at the prospect of being ‘epresemad by cellar champions, now are having pennant dreams. Their hopes may prove to be nothing more tangible than visions, but if the Tygers can maintain anything like the gait they have struck recently the pre-season dope that relegated them to the second division will be knocked into a cock=d hat. ~ With Clark and Rigney, green and! somewhat erratic, but fast and ambi- | tious, plugging in fine style the holes| that existed on’the inficld last vear and a handful of young pitchers to supplement the efforts of the vet-; erans, Ehmke and Dauss, and thej; near veterans, Fole. Oldham and' Hol-: i ling, the Jungaleers are threatening to necessitate radical revision of the; winter estimates of their strength.! Two_of their rookie flingers, Stoner |4 of Oklahoma City and Piliette ot W Portland accounged for victories in | the series just ended with the Yanks,| while Sylvester Johnston, the second of the Portland pair Clark Griffith| tried to buy in the off season, and Arthur Olsen from Syracuse are mak- ing noises like real, big league hurl-| i 1 . THREE OUT OF FOUR CLEVELAND. AB. R i "‘“"‘“‘“‘,b £licccsunmcsacy oloococcccococo® %l e Totals *Batted for Wood in eighth. +ian for O'Nelll in ninth. ers. AB. R. . A B. . Have Battering Outfield. A Ty The Tygers have the hardest hit- ° v o ting outfield trio the big leagues; 1 1 0 boast of in Cobb, Heilmann apd Veach, | 0 10 . two 300 hitters for third an first in | Gl 9 10 S ke S S obby Jones and La Blue, the local | LitiiiH PR . . boy, and in Johnny Bassler a back- 5’3:23'": 9 ds ] Playing in Detroit and points west, the opening of the season meant stop who ranks with the best «of N 1 %just one defeat after another for the Tygers; who floundered around in last ")':md h-l ulhl-ro\m_d ‘worlh‘,‘ nn_dl is rm—i Totals 82 3 15 o/ place for the first three weeks, but since hiking efi:.t the Jungaleers have climbed | ahead of the majority when it comes| Cleveland 00001 0—2from the cellar to a tie for third position. is is the way their brilliant to using his noodle.” Any team such}Washington. 11106000038 ‘bunch invades the capital for a four-game | us Frank Navin's 1922 edition, when it gets the winning notion, can cut! a wide swathe. The rest of the field Three-base hit—0"Neill. _Thr Home run—Judge. Sacritice—Peckinpaugh. Double plays—Judge to Peckinpaugh to Judge: Peckinpaugh to Ha can well afford to heed the new |Tis to Judge: Goslin to Peckinpaugh to Judge; alarm: “Look out for the Tygers: . | Wumbwavss o' Mclonin = Lete on tases— It is no cinch set the Cobbmen myst | Gie*pianc. ¥, Washington, 8 ases on balls_— contend with here in_the next four by Bagby 30 Hit by Sikcher—ny days, however. The Nationals have |Bagby ge). ° Umpires—Messrs. Evans, shown unmistakable signs of com-|Hildebrand and Dineen. Time of game—I hour and 45 winutes. 1he lust sk starts Wave started a lit- | [;R":I: MAR]’ | HISCONTESTSAT3:45 tie climbing expedition of their own. Although buffeted about in humiliat- ing fashion for the gerater part of the initial month of the campaign., Milan's charges occupy last place by Griffith has decided to drop even farther behind the daylight-sav- ing procession. Close in the wake of his announcement that the 3-30 starting time on week days would only the narrowest of margins and it be adhered to despite the general is possible for them to attain the first division before the week ends. advance of sixty minutes for work in Washington. comes another an- They displayed a defense that w nouncement to the effect that, be- smart and snappy in making it two ginning tomorrow the contests at out of three from the Indians by tak- ing_the final of the series yesterday Georgia avenue will not get under way till 3 relatively an hour “Just such a brand of fielding “and a quatter later than under the mperative to victory over Jim y, despite the dozen hits he al- old-time schedule. Griffith believes this twilight g jowed. for Johnson was nome 100 ef- fective. He yielded eleven blows to the enemy. and also developed a streak of wildness late in the fray that seemed likely for a time to prove fatal Bagby was corhbed for bingles suff ciently well bunched to net the Na- tionals a tally in-each of the, first three innings. Bush beat out a roller | to Sewell over second in the opener | and scored ‘on Brower's Texas! Leaguer Lo center after Judge hadt been wounded. In the second singles to left field by Picinich and Johnson with Peck’s sacrifice sandwitched in, accoumting for another, and Judge turned the trick all by himself in the third through the medium of bunting one over the barricade in, right. Jamleson was doubied up after starting the pastime with a safety, O'Neill's bingle in the third was wasted and one-basers by McInnis and base ball idea will prove.a big h't with fans who toil in the depart- ments. as it will give them fifteen minutes to reach the park upon quitting work at 3:30. That is hardly enough time. A 4 o'clock start would allow half an hour for the-necessary street car trans- rortation and enable practically all game-bound federal workers to see the battles start and eliminate objections to uneven time. It might even be possible to have {leader looks today when his scrap) 3 sojourn, after winning seven of their last nine contests. — TY’S KID BOXMEN PROVING NI WORTH $40,000 THEY COST BY JOHN B. FOSTER. EW YORK, May 16.—In the time of the Buffalo minor league meet- ing last December, when money showered in the smoky atmosphere of the hotel like the snowflakes outside, the Detroit club was re- ported to have given up $40,000 for two pitchers of Portland by the names of Pillette and Johnson. £ “The poor fish,” said half a dozen major league scouts when.they heard the news. “We saw those pitchers, and they were lucky to win in the Pacific Coast League. Forty thousand turnstile counts gone for them? Poor fish!” and worse. _ Well, Pellctte has somehow won four games for Detroit this year, losing only one, and Johnson, wl}o has been handicapped by injury and illness, managed to win the only game in which he pitched. Pillette has a wild and weird pitching| = The dgminant throb in the American motion, but he gets there. And his| L:ague Tight now is the Detroit team. average is better than that of efther |1t matters liitle to Tyrus and his M Moys or Hovt. It is al) that Mays can | i8an mercenaries that New York and do this year 10 keep even with .500 and | Si. Louls cannot win. His team can. his temper. Pillette may not keep it up. | F¢ cleaned up Boston and almost as but he gives !ndication of being perma- | 80od as erased New York. He need: nent. e is lean, uncouth, rugged and | ONly_another victory to break even on gifted. and ambitious. All are excellent | his first eastern trip. pitching qualities. z & As the St. Louis Cards won, the The other day Markle of Cincinnat!| Giants gained nothing. However, that pitched a single ball in a game and re-{ doesn’t get the National League any- Celved credit for a victors under the| thing. 1f they are going to draw the unwritten iaw of victorles and defeats, | POPulace with enthusiasm up to and in- which’ is foliowed to the exclusion of | cluding the Fourth of July the Giants revolt agalnst that unwritten condition, 4 . and thers I reason for it. When Mar- | Senuine Yaird Tuck. Playing good. ball t Sewell in the fourth also went for the games start at 5:30, and there- in the west, they have lost the services naught. The Tribe cantrived to| by -accommodate ~ the business |Llo Wentin the game the other fellow | b b o thair third baseman, for & long count In the 8fth, however. With one | house employes who now finish | had, done nearly minets-nine one hun-| Deriod. He fell'in:o the St. Louls dug- gone, O'Neill singled and was forced by Bagby, who took third on Jamie- son’s single over Hayris' head. and scored when Wamby dropped a Texas Leaguer into right. The latter over- ran first and was nipped by Brower's their daily labors at 5 o'clock, but then it might be a trifle dark at the finish of some of those long games. " Unless a further change is made this will be the “permas nent” time schedule, beginning to- out and was badly hurt. nothing. A better way can be devised | (Copyright, 1922.) to reward hard work. PRINTERS' NINE IS PIED I FT. SMITH CLUB MAY G0 Deg to Judge. moriow, for American League The Indians made no headway Park: against Johnson in the next two Saturday and Sunday settoes—3 rounds, but nicked him for three hits| o'clock. in the eighth, and, despite the bene-| _-Vesperian pastimes —Monday, fit accruing to Walter from a dou- 'l:u_esday. Wegnesdly. Thursday. \\!9 play, registered a run W)IQ_II the | Friday, 3:45 o'clock. B . y ] o R e et AL - Treasury tossers surprised Union| ST.’LOUIS, May 16.—Negotiations by Jamieson opened with a safety. Printers yesterday in the Depart-|the St. Louis Nationals for the pur Phc :: ON THE SIDE LINES. chase of the Fort Smith (Ark.) West: Speaker and McInnis singled in suc- cession, and when Johnson falled to get _the ball over for elther Sewell or Gardner, a run was forced over the plate. The lrases were lef% cJogged when Graney, inserted -to Hit for ‘Wood, rolled to Bush. Barney Menaced’at Finish. It was feared that Johnson, visibly mental League, winning, 6 to 5. The Type-stickers got two runs off Van Fossen before that wild man retired in the first inning and made merry with the offerings of Halloran in the second. Thereafter, the Printers were subdued, while Treasury aroused It- ern Assoclation club; @re. expected to be completed today, according to a nouncement in Fort Smith by Presi- dent Bullock of the Fort Smith Club. TFirst word of the reported.transac-, tion_became known when announce- ment was made that Willlam (“Ducky”" Holmes, manager. of Fort Smith, n& retired. Segond Bazeman Louls Jones Zachary probably will be delegated to mound duty in the first of four games with the Tygers today. Old- ham or Olsen may oppose him. Picinich put up another good ex: hibition of receiving back of the bat T yesterday. Val also garnered a pair | self ig the seventh and drove Webb fagged, would fail to Wweather the m with & e tting | WAS name cting ma r, but it storm when O'Neill starfed the ninth | O DIt 50! 'hl',,:l:,‘}" L 5 ’&%uf.':,“,b“‘, it’r‘-o was learned thaf goy Th Orgye. decisive tally in the eighth. Johnson and Hurney, with three hits each, led the Treasury attack. Sor overwhelmed Rafiway Mall Service, 8 to 3, in the Terminal R. R. Y. M. C. A. League. The Southérners ciinched victory with four runs counted In the opening in- ning. iomas, coach he Cardinals, would be appointed Godlin proved h 14 back for of In P e could go to direot the farm of the local Nation- 'em when he corralled Speaker'sdrive in the opener. Jamieson, who had singled previously, overron second, negiected to touch the bag in re- tracing his steps and was doubled up when Peck relayed Goslim's throw to Judge. Judge's homer was the second for with a triple to the wall in left, Evans, put on to run for the lum- bering backstop, ‘was held at third when Judge gathered in Bagby's roller, and was erased between bases when Peck grabbed Jamieson's roller and fired to Gharrity, who ran him back to third, where Bush tagged him. Jamieson reached second on ‘the play, and a tense situation was re- 5. 5 Branch Rickey, manager and vice president of ths Car ‘would neitwer afirm nof deay the reported purches: I SBamuel Breadon, presiden§ of alub, could not be reached “or & sgiwmont. The St Loulf. Cardmsle also are rd- ern Railway Tieved when Wamby flied to, Goslin | him In a week. His drive yesterday =2 i oy ks the Sy- for the final out. 4 loared the right fleld wall at aboul] Naval Afr Statlon battered the Sea- | Fomias Intornations. Sk gue club, The - Griffs - accomplisned little| the same point as that off Vangilder [ man Guaners in & 6-to-1 Potom of the Browns last Tuesday.- Sewell’s line drive in the second struck Johnson.® amidship. Walter tossed him out and then flopped, but resumed after a breathing spell. ~ Oral Betting Held Legal. NEW ORLEANS, May 16.—The ora!: system of laying bets at the local race tracks has been given a legal “Q. K.” by the state supreme court, which held that the oral system wai not a violation of the Locke an! -gambling law. —_——— COLLEGE RESULTS. land, R; West VI 3 Richmond, A \":}x 4T Misataatiot, 0. ss. Aggies, ssias! 3 Bpringfleld, 3:*Harvord, 1. Tafts, 187 orwlcl, 3. Tnwn. isconsin, 6. League engagement. Lusby held ti Gunners to four hits, while his mat slammed Patterson for eight. against Bagby after round 3. The only time they threatened was in the fifth, when Judge singled and took third on Brower's lucky safety to right. The rally ended when Goslin whacked into a double play. HOW GRIFFS ARE HITTING 823 808 1 ‘zen BUSINESS MEETS WESTERN. Business and Western nines were to. meet in Central Stsdium at 5| o'clock this afternoon in .a game 11K 1y to decide the high school base belk champlonsaip. In other scholar- tic matches scheduled -Eastern gnd St. John's-were to be. opponents’in Treasury Potoraao Park, whild Tech was ‘to Office battled to & 3-to-3 deadlock in |face the Righ school team &t Lees- the Colored Departmental League. burg, Va. Bland for Treasury gave only three | —te——————————— hits, but was weakiy supported. CAPITOL THEATER !l Officials fox Mat Bot. Thurs. Night, May 18th, 530" CHICAGO; May 16.—Two judges and a referes have been selected by the city athlgtio commission to decide the finish stling match, two opt of ) throe falls, between John Pesek, Ne- braska Jheavyweight, and Marvin Plestina tonight. A five-run third Inning helped the Marines to & 7-to-3 win over Navy in | the Government League. Degnan and Sterzer did moat of the clouting for the victors. and Govermment Printing JIM LONDOS JAM BROCKMAN \ Good Preliminaries. & Likihik e AT CISTRPEETN - 1R 151 145 PN 3 g TODAY :30 P.M. AMERICAN. LEAGUE PARK PARIS Garters. You can be sure of 3000~ ° . - hours of trim socks and happylegs for 35 cents ' if you say PARIS when you next buy Gartess, PARIS GAR 'NO METAL. CAN TOUCH YOU ' " SEMISOFT COLLARS X But wholly in stylel SAGELAWN . . 50c KIPLAWN . . . 85¢ GENUINE TOYO [PANAMA .HATS They are $3.50 values This kind of hat $ z .45 1s particularly fa- |_Frederick’s Hat Stores vored by meén 825 7th St. and 734 9th St who do not want strietly, “taflored” Climbing Cobbmen Open Series H‘e'rev Today Two Browns Hold Triple Honors stammcs orwows | BASE THIEVES ARE TOPPED BY SISLER AND WILLIAMS ANOTHER TYOER RECRUT BEATSJONES OF YANKS LEAGUE. Win, 645 New_York 8t. Tolus Cleveiand T Cobb hurled it | Detrott 3 . liching ace ‘At the Yaniees Tn the | Shiadask i First Baseman and Left Fielder of St. Louis Club t game of the series and. Jaunching | cujeago 429 henvy assault on gam Jonest the | Weles:on ] Lead in Path Work as Well as in Batting. Averages and Clouts for the Circuit. battling Tygers made¥it three out of four Yrom. the league leaders and moved up Into a tie for third piace with Cleveland. Stomer held the Hug- men to three lonely hits\ and won easily, 6-1. t the same time, another. trouble- s0me outfit, Connie ‘s larruping Athietics, completed the downfall of St. Louis by peunding out a 13-4 tri- umph over the Browns, who lost an- other chance to go ahead of New York. Four home runs fsatured the same and brought the ‘otal number of cireult-glouts in the four-game se- ries to sixteen. Artio Nehf had the ovecter of Vic (Ghirago Aldridge in a tight pitching duel and |§, the Glants made It two straight from the Cubs, 1-0, while. St. Louls pum- | Bos moled three Phillp pitchers for twen- ty-three hits, nineteen runs and &} xe ane-sided victony. Phila “Rip" Collins blanked Chicago and | Boston GAMES TODAY. Detrol ¥ Oleveland gt N. Y. Chicago at Phila. St. Louis at Boston. RESULTS OF TESTERDAY'S GAMES. Washington, 3; Cleveland, 2. Bostos, iladelphia, T Detroit, 6 NATIONAL LEAGUE. Pet. 741 583 577 EW YORK, May 16.—George Sisler and Kenneth Williams of the ?/ St. Louis Browns, besides being the leading batsmen and leading ru? hitters of the major lcagues, are dispiaying vnusual ail- y Ly also distancing all rivals in base stealing. Sisler has 41gotten away to a flying start with fourteen pilfered sacks in twent games to his credit, nearly haif as many as he had when he led the Amerr- can League iast season with thirty-five. Williams s close behind with ten. The St. L rs, however, have some high marks to shoot at, and, even at the fast clip they have been traveling, it is not likely they will topple existing 1ecords. » | SIXTEEN-YEAR-OLD BOY 4 ’ 202 820. GAMES TOMORROW. ! Ty Cobb, in 1911, at the helght of his brilliant career, made the modern record for both major eagues with Fictivur s Louls. ninety. stolen bases. The S kaymors. Jomer in the' tenth| RESULTS OF SESTERDAY'S GAMES. MAKES HURLING RECORD . {ormanee “',‘,,.',i’;‘nd‘“1”“”'“;‘,‘“‘5‘:,‘:55 gave. Pittsburgh a 6-5, decisfon over Boston; while Brooklyn was unable to solver Rixey and lost amother, 6-2. MINOR LEAGUE RESULTS VIRGINJA LEAGUE. by Bob Bescher of Last year Frank Frisch of the Giants led the way with forty-nine thefts, | but handicapped this year, by a late {start, due to injuries, he is not ex- | pected to rival Sisi | "Back in the earlier days of the | game Harry Stovey and Billy Hamil- | ton of the Philade] | lished b ; Boston, 5 rook! nnatj, (10 innfogs) dyn, 1911. a boy, hing for the St. Ann's team of tholic Schoel Boy League . 0. ‘hiladelplia, 10. TRIO OF VARSITY NINES ARE ABROAD TOMORROW nes of Catholic University, Gal- the of this city, =-Il hung up a hurl- Ing -vecord. the opposing team to one kit in mings and struck out fifteen men. A few days ngo in a six-in- X game with another team he terday Child held Newport News, 6: Portsmouth, 3. t out hin opponents without {!vl‘nl d, Rocky Mount, 0. jlaudet and Maryland are to be busy| hit and ll-led.l'l:m of the el:l-l- ent rules T orfolk, 2. een batters who faced him. 3 ol it Thix in the first year that Child has dome amy pitching. s credited wirh : 1888, playing ‘n ) ation, and two #oston, he stole 126, b National League, 1son of 1591 LUIS FIRPO HANDICAPPED | BYASUSPCIOUS NATURE Y tomorrow on - foreign flelds. The | Brooklanders will- go to’ Annapolis i for their yearly tilt with Navy and Galiaudet -18 to encounter Western Maryland at Westminster. Maryland, which beat West Virginia, 8 o 2, yes- I Maryland batted Evani Virginia hard, eight of its twelve hits { going for extra bases. Bailey led the }attack witk a homer and a double. cre: SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION. Birmingham, 4: Atlanta, 3. 1 fashville, 0. Chbattacooga, 8; Little Rock, 5. ~ ! FLORIDA STATE LEAGUE. : IndEsonville, 4. % | TEST FOR ANéAC BOXER. Tracey, Trailing Dempsey, to Fight Brennan Tonight. NEW YORK, May 16.—Jim Trace heavyweight champion of Australa- | sia, will make his American debut in ; Madison Square Garden tonight in a fifteen-round match with “Knockout” | Hamilton otaled Plttsburgh for a contest with the Panthers. of West SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE. leston, 2 ;. Columbls, 0. terday and plays that team agaln to- Nisbet and Schrider held the Moun- day at Morgantown, will move to taineers to eight scattered safeties. COTTON STATES LEAGUE. "AIR PLAY. Greenwood, 2:0: Gretnulie, 4:6. _— . )‘lerldl:n. Vb, - Bill Brennan, who staved off a knock-| NEW YOR May 16—If TLuis Clarkedale, 9; Jackvo Bout to Pal Moore. out last year at the hands of Jack | Firpo fails in this country it ] Dempsey for twelve rounds. " 'his own fault. He has a sus: Tracey is younger, taller, heavier, | nature, apparently, and will not has a longer reach and virtually is|fer the attentions of men who could superior in cvery plysical measure- | teach him certain things about the ment to Brennan. The Australa n : fighting game that are necessa is on the quest of a bout with Demp- | knoy. scy. blanie A'l"LANTA. Ga, May 16.—Pal Moore, Memphis, was given the referee's de- Tim O'Dowd, local ban- at the end of a ten-round AMERICAN ASSOCLATION. Milwayl 12 ; Toled & o, 4. Loutsrille, 4; o Of course, in a wa him, as the fight &g lot of et-scented - You can't | me is filled gentx Peerlean Athletie Cli ‘which is to ith a New. 1k, 4 ., 7; Reading. jmeet the Dreadnaughts at Alexan- { Who would as soon give Luis the bad Baitimore, 16; Buffalo, , dria Sunday, desire mn“gfi:fi::;‘:‘: DOWNEY GETS DECIS'ON l:gga?_i nflll;:l;‘,af':e wu{uld eat a e teams possessing field: TEXAS LEAGUE. should be sent to George A. Simpson, 9: Bhreveport. 8. Toustoa. 4. - Roaumont, 3 (11 inniags). Fort Worth, X the other hand, Aggressor in 12-Round Bout With | Want no inore th who could teach Firpo 0’Dowd, Flooring Rival. COLUMBLUS, Ohio, May 16.—Bryan ! Downey, Cleveland middleweight, won | the referee’s decision over Mike | O'Dowd, St. Paul, in a twelve-round bout last night. i Downey was the aggressor through- | out the fight and lost a chance for | a knockout the fifth round. He, floored O'Dowd momentarily with a? ieft hook, but was unable to land a | finishing blow when O'Dowd arose, supporting himself on the ropes. Tate to Fight Anderson. CHICAGO, May #16.—Bill = Tate, former sparring partner for Jack Dempsey, today was matched to box Lee Anderson, another negro heavy- weighZ In_ a’ fifteen-round decision contest at Juarez, Mexico, July 4. The i match will be staged in the afternoon in the Juarez race track. San Astosio, PIEDMONT LEAGUE. ‘Wiaston-Salem, 1. Dundee, holds mond belt, emblem I aLw nve moth _crowd is expected ut | At the same time the T Sissippi Valley exposition wi {progrese at Rock Island. The fight { program, promoted by the Rock | iland American Legion, will be an aft-f ernoon event on the exposition grounds, e APPALACHIAN LEAGUE, Knoxvilje, 1; Greeevllfe, 2. Johnson” City Kingsport, 1137 5th -street northeast. Kenilwerth Athletic Club took a 10- {letic Club. but still is in the field for mes. Unlimited nines interested coln 5647-J. _Durbam. 6: Daaville- 2 oo ——_—_—— DIAMOND A. C. IS BOASTING . BOYS of the Eckingtori section have a flourishing organization bent outfit the Diamond Athletic Club, and so far their play has been as Sparkling as their name. The Diamonds have two teams—senior and already have arranged with the Circles for an Eckington-Bloomingdale championship series, and they are pointing carefully for participation in Recently the senior team beat the big Seat Pleasant nine, 5 to 4, and the Avalons, 10 to 5. In the latter contest Trotter of the Diamonds wal- six of eight games and are ready for more action, - The big Diamondf: are anxious to ABaT Cih i casting Milan, Arlington, Trizngle and Hol: team that has a diamond. The Quincy Comforter clubs. For games with n:::;n: Y b Jelornonsd “angt i4 Manager Eddie Krogman, 2003 4th street northeast. to-9 trouncing from Tenleytown Ath- ga skould telephone Arthur Baur, Lin- upon making sandlot base ball history this year. They call their junior—and each has been winping consistently. The Eckington boys the city titular touzneys. loped a homer that scored two runners ahead. The juniors have captured el e e eTo ana. Holy-about for & game tomorrow with some either of the Diamond outfits write | manager ay be 1ol Clover Midgets are prepared to meet teams In_ the thirteen-fourteen-year class. Telephone challenges to Rov land Adkins, Lincoln 4852. Mankattan Midgets, who triumphed over the Kenilworth Midgets, 8 to &, in an eleven-inning nmfxla. ar after more Teams_interested should .telephone -Lincoln 3537 teams Sentors beating Naval Hospital, 5 to , and the Jualors trouncing Post Office, 14 to 13. The Cherrydale Sen- fors wil} play Costello Post Sunday. ned thb 9 <1 g for the ery‘oyment Trisngle Athletic Club d Seat: Pleasant second. tea B. Staats did the harlin ‘winners.” E can’t make any money selling you just one El Producto. If our friends, the smokers, didn’t stay with us, the sheriff would have sold us out long ago. So, when we ask you to risk a dime én your first - El Producto, it isn’t just to make a ten cent sale. We hope to add you to . Corona Perry Athletic Club s seeking eon- testan. Mandger Richerd Hurley may be telephoned at Columbia 4827. Steele’s pitching gave Postal Tels- graph a 3-to-0 win over Naval Hos- pital. The Postal hurler held the Sailors hitless. E Athletie Club. which van- ‘quished the Garrisons, 7 to 5. wants Send challenges ‘to L. K. Elliott, 1209 6th street northeast, or telephone Lincoln’4986. Yrinity Junfors teok the megsure of the Independent Senlors in a 9 to 6 game, A double by Pitcher Buscher that drove in three ‘tallles in the ninth inning declded the issue. Yankee Athletic Club wants & game with an unlimited team Sunday. The Yanks have a permit for Monument Lot dlamond No. 3 at 1.o'clock that day. - Send . chailenges to- Manager and 1t lll. .“mfl.'.‘A either. O. Faina, 308 14th street. e l o FRrkiAthledo Clab grabbed & dou- Pfimm the ever increasing army 5 to 3, ‘wna tha Lexingtons, 12 to b, o8 locke of regular El Producto Bethosda has organised two mors B¢ really looks Dew Sgatm: smokers. fifteen-sixteen year teams, one in t! in the ten-twelve, class and anot For a dime you can buy ~ N VIENNA HAT CO. STEIN— year class. For games Wwith these ElProducto(Bo t hone H Huat, Mai; =Jon. om anidiroducto(Bouque 980, branch 131, during the day. of ope S Tieh 8 N size). You will find init Cloveland §08-W after 6 p.m. thesame choice Havana, the same shade grown ‘wrapper, the same un- " copyable blend to be found in the highest iced El Producto. El uctos differ in size only. If you like your first El Producto you and we both have won. If you don’t like it, we have lost a customer and you -have lost a dime. we havelost more thanyou. Are you on? The: Name -HESS —stands for every- thing® in S where quality, prop- ; er fitting 'and lon dife are a considera: < iy “—sliould pffer; ‘all of th #flnfim&fifi{t lu: if y‘:\.l do mot recéive them all—we. of ~ the * would " si that your next -

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