Evening Star Newspaper, March 26, 1925, Page 30

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30 SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1925. SPORTS. Harris Plans Test for Pitching Vets : Boston National Leaguers a Weak Oulfit RUETHER, MOGRIDGE FACE BISONS AT TAMPA TODAY Johnson, Gregg and Coveleskie to Oppose Giants Saturday—Nationals Find Batting Eyes in Walloping Brooklyn Dodgers, 16 to 2. BY JOHN B. KELLER. r——— 0d- the last two ganies on the exhibition schedule at the Ila Ty are slab for AMPA Nationals in the to grace the hase of the world champions have y tilt of the vet > " Susenud nto f o—soocco0c0sas!’ e e | cooormnonuonmsy | coo0omro~csoasd side- 3| mocorunonnonaan 4l cooomman Totals “ *Batted for Zachary in fifth inning. BROOKLYN. AB. ritohell. s ® his left | morney,’ b Martin de- | whoat i ul Grifith, 1f ] n ) g 8l cocorrunaiuse~! ha Ving that been | had not months, l Tampa trainis . The battle today with the Buffaio Internationals was to bring to the while for the struggle with the Giants on Saturday Manager Stan’'cy Har- vis plans to employ as huriers Walter Johnson, Vean Gregg and Stanislaus The “voungsters” lot—Ructher, Mogridge and Coveleskic heen under fire this Spring. but for Johnson and Gregg the Satur Both of thess rans @ppear to he getting alonz well as could ~ CLEARING THEIR OPTICS perhaps, trifle avier than he| hould he, but nuation of the | WwASHINGTON. this ought to round him |Harris,” 2b rm and give to his hurli | Rice, ¥t stic of it in | Feia: St champlonship campaig So far, this | Judgs. 1b has been missing, but A » b e pitche uege. by ¢ teh Peckinpaugh, erved in his twirline as soon Zaohary, slight weight reductiol completed effect of his body pivot o his “‘“"""“- 3t arm delivery ready for a good trial when Saturd arrives. The 40-vear-old southpaw shoulder, but T clares it to be put on muscles much in use for the soreness that Gres ready worked out pitching hill Walter Ruether and George Mogridge. veteran southpaws, Coveleskie. The ages of this quintet total 177 years. will be the first showing of the season in competition. expected in their training. Johnson is, | unusually strenuous work he has been | McNeely, cf nap generally character E i | Eeles.p believed | Aicock, 15 those in charge of conditioning that the snap will be ob- [Riar and Walter able to put th [HII""N“""“"“”" Harris figures Gr = hould heen bothered by soreness in quence of the ext saging has done away field O GG A <o | cocecoororasosn 5| coomcouscomauer »l c00000mrorosmal 4 coconcororosen &gl 6 2 Mitchell. E. P 3 01 4 01 00 0 2— ontributed to at was severe uch of Wilon, P pitchers to get down to conditioning | +Batted for Roberts i month. But the big portsider has been | Two.base hits—MoNesly. Ruel, st etk seema to have made grea | Goslin, — Double plays Judge to Peckizpsugh ugh to Harns to Judge: Griffith to Stock If in good physical trim and avows off Keiley. 2. Left on bases—Washington. 8: e mars, 1. Hit by pitched bali—By Hollings. of the showing the latter makes|Zachary, 3 in 4 innings: of Wilson. 7 in 3 weeks will remain hefore the opening | Bags. - Umpitee—Massry. Exule sad Row- fully in his conditioning routine that [ .o .abe the pitehe Masiager. Hatz (s MOt has one IRk by ginper [ wiio with the Nationals Jez Zachary, who gave his most im- | e S ire attdsviut O iweon The Nallohaly anil the |sinmie; Riea's (rivle|and Blusges W ek of At ortile mouTMEnS only | for thzee Nutionsl tatiies In the it rer was passed. second a3 Harris was retired, count- Fot Dis Homodlots successor oft the|pitching when the Nationals e up ol in thres vounds, and aithough |doubled and was singfed home by fecting his work. Ha ;| base. Judge got a scratchy single and box that the Dodgers bunched a pair | fence for four bases. | two-bagger and went to third as Car- was their and sustained at- | right-field barrier. some days, the world champions fell [ slammed. He gave up a run in his three swats of the circuit variety. | MeNeely’s —one-base blow. In the Judge and each blow came as run- |the ball outside the right-fleld fence. of the day. Te registered two singles | Peck's single, tossed the ball away. runs. Rice and Peck got three|Brown's retirement advanced his team- embar of the regular National linc- | chased the pair of Dodger runners home. AMPA, Fla, March 26—Now the Nationals have but 13 pitchers, not al- training Ready for Three Innings. Roberts, p Gregg was the last of the Nationals' | Totals work, as he did not report to the | washington 3106 1 camp here until after the first of the | Brookyn 5000 ° tofling carefully, vet faithfully, since | Thres-base hitv—Rice, Hargrave. Nis arrival in Tampa and within the | —McNeely. Judge. Bluege. Stolen to Jud, Mitchell to Stock to Loftus; Tierney progress in the matter of getting |to Stock to Toftus: Harris to Judge: Peckin- into pitching form. He considers him- | pa g‘u:l base on bells—Of Hollingsworth, 3; off that his 5 R houph | Zachary, 1: off Roberts. 1: off McNamara, 2; to do at least three innings of work | Brookiyn, 8, Struck out—By Hollingsworth ;‘l‘l‘:’ ’Zl-:l\lr,", 1; by Roberts. 1: by McN Manager Harris will continue to| > o w (MoNeely): by McNamara (Loftus). Worle Slowly; with Gress. ""‘"""'“’Hfaim ‘;(oulll:n'nflh 5 in 3 innings; off against the Giants on Saturday. After|innings: off McNamars, 2 in 3 innings: off that engagement more than two | Roberts, 7 in 2 innings; off Kelley, 2in 2 in me—1 hour and 45 minutes. 5t the American League ‘campaign,| e Timerof sx d the old-timer will be nursed care — Bl himiprdcoically the top of | yho healthy swat total. form for the championship matches. |y p S8 s soeorth, overhand readxitaldoe)the '\‘v“h 2nd hocd for a time when Donie Bush managed to the best of the opposition. He is |y, ojyh season before last, was the first v pressive performance of the training | W0t YO €0 i T MeNeely's season in the first four innings of the | the WoTl P | gle, after Goslin and Judge had Dodgers at Clearwater yesterday. |8 . e s atepunted Just 15 men faced Zach during his strolled to fill o inning. 1In the second inning, Holly four of them got on the runway. |INDINS '8 A, after taking Three reached him for hits and the |hit McNeely, and s s ce singled. Zachary was credited with the 16-|ed as o singled. to-2 victory scored over the Dodgers,| Gomer Wilson, southpaw, N: &l h turn at bat. Wilson lab, Jim McN. . also did well, |for their fourt 3 2 D, O e Si3 iwo|sot, rid of Zachury, but McNeels s, orratic Dodger fielding helped he is complat g of ore hurling | Farris. Errati e l\‘rml. it .M I;:n‘(‘":bun m«? it wis ,r‘.’ Harris to the plate and Goslin to first g Goslin dashed home ahead of twirled in the last two innings, and [he and Goslin ; -lv”\um "n‘ his \:mq,vl sston in the | Bluege, who walloped to the left-field " on ain was damaged in the of swats with a pass for their tallies. Wilson agal | 1 opened the frame with a Griffs Get Out of Slump. fifth. Ruel on The most pleasing thing about the |jyle, batting for Zachary, was erased. game from the Nationals' viewpoint, | McNeely then poled the ball over the ack. Emerging from the batting| Cameo Jim Roberts, righthander, was mp that had enthralled them for |the third Dodger moundsman to be upon thfee Brooklyn pitchers for 19 |starting inning, the seventh, due to hits, totaling bases and including | Peck's single, Ruel's retirement and These £ hits rebounded from the |eighth round, Rice and Goslin gsingled s of Ossie Bluege, Barl McNeely and | and taliled ahead of Judge, who parked ners were on the paths. Bluege walked and made the Nationals' MeNeely was the demon slugger |last score when Loftus, after fielding and a double in addition to his homer The Dodgers got their HM‘rkLr:( in the n five times at bat and made 4 [ninth, that Loftus began with a single, bingles each, one by. the former be- | mate a base and Cox walked.- Stock ing good for three by Every | flied to McNeely, but Hargraves' triple i ise Dudley Is Sent Pitcher Clise Dudley Is Sen Back to the G ille Club Clise Dudley having departed from their midst this morning. The to Greenville of the South 3 Atlantic League, the team irom which he was recalled by the Nationals Dudley was looked over at the Tampa was shipped to Lincoln of the Western League in March. He was later released to Greenville of the Sally circuit. big youthful right-hander has gone for a second trial with them. training camp last year, but fancy to the National pitching. The former got three hits and the latter two. The Dodgers' safety total was but seven EXHIBITION BASE BALL R. H. B, 6 16 3 e et ¥ Greenville to him so concerned, having Dudley goes back to with no strings attached far as the Nationals are the minor organization hought him outright Nick Altrock, although signed as coach only, got into the game at Clearwater yesterday. He played first base in the ninth inning, and made good in handling the one chance that came his way, a sizzling | grounder off Brown's war club. At St Pefersburg, New York (N.).....-- 5250 Boston (N.).. : Wisner, Maun and Barnes and Gibson. Hartley; Marquard, At San F R H. E. Pittsburgh a0 San Franeisco (P. C)iii.iiooceeen 11 16 5 Brown, Richardson, Sanger and Smith; Pfeffer, Moudy and Agnew. Bill Emsl National League, Altrock's comedy nouncement of the batteries that het neglected to don a mask before tak- ng position behind the Dodger cateher. The veteran arbiter ducked quickly when McNeely swung at Hollingswortl’'s first piteh, and lost no time in speeding to the Brooklyn = bench for his head protector. 3 7 S emeritus of the ered by umpire was so flus during the an- At New Orleans— Boston (A)..... A New Orleans (8. ¢ 2 7 Kallo, Wingtield and Seving; Werne, Bolt and Nowie, Carmouche. his 5 0 u. E 2 8 a0 R Wells, Moore and Woodull; Stange, Gibson, Smith and Manion. udge does not call it a day when he visits the ball park at Clearwater until he knocked a home run He has played in the Brooklyn arena in three successive vears, and each time has senl a circuit drive over the right-fleld wall H At Mobile, Al E. Louisville (A. A.).. Mobile (8. A). : A 411 Dunlap, Koob, Culiop and Brottem. Walsh; Murray, Shaney and Devormer, Ducot. R B Oxnie Bluege drove in enough runs beat the Dodgers. His single' the first inning chased home a tally. and there were two Nationals on the | paths when he got his homer in the fourth E. 1 2 5 o Krueger; At Plant City, ndlanapolis Cincinnati (N.).... 3 Schemanske, Fitzsimmons Luque, Shechan snd Wingo. Fla.— H Ayooen ) and At Fort Myers, Fl R Philadelphia ( s Milwaukee (A. A} 4 Rommel, Groves. and Cochrame; Gearin, Cracken and Skill. 3 Se. Matthews was sent to the plate to bat for McNamara in the eighth inning, and beat out roller to Shortstop Mitchell 2 = At Richmond, Va.— w York (N.. second team). mond (Va. L.). . Medillin, naers and Menter: Shields, Jones, Casey and Chatkley. S R. H L 101 N Ric Lance. Dods MeNeely made the best fielding play of the ganme when he .bagged Brown's loft in the second inning Farl had to run in far and fast to get to the looper that was just toe far out for Peck to reach. Mitchell nnd - Hargraves took- At Fla— Toledo (4. A.)... Battimore (1.) T8 Gy of Canavan, Boyne and Vigerust, Poppen; Mc- o Barnsbaw and Jacksos, Cobh, ustis, L4 Both the 20. Orleans, 15 years hix nenlor, are striv thix neason. Kelley ix taking his first neas: HICAGO, March 26.—Urban C nant race, has demonstrated before surgeons operated on it last ager Eddie Collins. The fate of the Cubs at Los An- geles was not as cheering. Kewple Morgan, elongated Texas flinger, was unsteady and let in five Los Angeles runs. Wilbur Cooper went into the breach and brought the Chicagoans ack into the game, but the Angels me back at Vie Keen's expense in the ninth, and the melee went to 11 innings for an S-to-7 Angel victory The Cubs start a two-game series with Vernon at Long Beach tomor- row. while the Collins crew today engage Louisiana Polytechnic at Ruston. Tyger Pitekers Do Weil DETROIT, M March troit and the Toronto Club of the Internationzl League opened their barnstorming trip with a 2-to-0 vic tory for the Tygers at Charlott N. C., yesterday Wells and Moore, pitching for the Tygers, aliowed the Canadians but three hits. The two runs from eight fts by the Cobbmen were the results of home runs by Heilmann and O'Rourke in the second inning Two errors were made on each side, those on the Bengal side being made by Tavener, recruit shortstop. Duram is the stopping place today. —De- Ruth Falls to Aid Maeks. PHILADELPHIA, March 26.—Babe Ruth, home-run slugger of the New York Yankees, played left fleld for Connie Mack’s Athletics in an exhibi- tion game against Milwaukee yester- dsy at Fort Myers, Fla, but the Bambino's hitting did not figure in the Athletics' 5-to-4 victory. The Babe whaled the bail three times, but the best he could get was three infield grounders which were easy outs. On his other trip to the plate he was passed and scored on Hauser’s triple. About 5,000 fans, one of the largest crowds that ever turned out for a sports event in Fort Myers, witnessed the game. Plerce, Mil- waukee left ficlder. had four hits in five trips to the plate. The Philadelphia Nationals nosed out the Columbus American Associa- tion team at Bradentown, Fla, yes- terday, 4 to 3. All the Ohlo Senator: runs were made in the ninth inning off Mitchell and Oeschger. St. Louis Clubx Seore. ST. LOUIS, Mo., March 26.—The St. Louis Americans and the National League team both won exhibition games vesterday. The Browns defeated the Buffalo In- ternationals. 4 to 2, at Palmetto, Fla., in a game devoid of heavy hitting. The Cardinal tory over Kansas s by one run. Three drives, to be the most terrific seen th vear at Stockton, Calif., helped give the Cards the big end of the 4-3 score. Hornsby, Bottomlet and Douthit each slammed out a three-bagger. Big Day for Beantown. BOSTON, March 2| upon both the Boston S major league (I Delivered ' Main 1423-25-27 L St. 75085 R ctory smiled | Photos By CARL TTHOMER. ear-old reeruit from Memphix and the veteran fro; ing for mound jobx with the Nationalx fiing in the majors, while Martina had # big teague trial xeveral years before he was picked up by the Griftmen last RED FABER OF WHITE SOX PROVES ARM IS ALL RIGHT (Red) Faber, Chicago White Sox twirler, upon whom cousiderable depends in the forthcoming pen- his arm is working as well as it did Summer. He cut loose yesterday in the game at Shreveport with the hometown Gassers, and, although he lacked control, his exhibition was regarded as quite satisfactory by Man- The Sox won, 11 to 7. teams at their Southern camps yester- day. The Braves defeated the New York Giants, 7 to 6, at St. Petersburg, Fla., while the Red Sox, in New Orleans, were putting away the Pelicans to the tune of 6 to 1. The winning run of the National League contest came in the last of the ninth, when Maury Burrus sent out & sacrifice fly with the bases full and one out, Johnny Cooney scoring, Prothro was back at third for the game. Bill Rogell, at second for Bud Connolly, who was still out of condi- tion, made a star play in the fourth inning by going back of his base to nip Tucker's hard bounder. dians Farm Wyatt. CLEVELAND, Ohio, March 26— With the farming out of Outfielder Joseph Wyatt to Terre Haute, nine outfielders remain on the roster of the Cleveland Indians today. Of these only Speaker and Jamieson have their berths assured. It is likely that Man- ager Tris Speaker will keep RIggs Stephenson, whom he converted from | an infielder, because of his hard hitting. Carr Smith and Fred Eichrodt are slated to go to minor league clubs, but there is no indication which of the others—Lee, Hendrick, Summa and McNulty—will be retained. Speaker planned on using Sherry Smith and Joe Shaute against Cin- cinnati at Lakeland today. Frisco Defeats Pirates. PITTSBURGH, Pa., March 26.—Man- ager McKechnie used three pitchers yesterday in an effort to save his Pirates from another defeat by the Frisco Seals at San Francisco, but his trio of twirlers were unable to stop the Coast Leaguers' batting spree and the Buccanneers lost, 11 to 7. The Friscoans had 16 hits. The victory Is the second the Seals have taken from the Bucs In their scheduled series of 10 games, the Cor- sairs having won five of 7 already played. Sawmill Joe Brown and Jimmie Richardson were on the Pirate mound during the early innings and ylelded most of the hits. Don Songer suc- ceeded them. Jeff Pfeffer, former Pirate, did mound duty for the Seals. Ex-Glants Get Revenge. NEW YORK, March 26—Former Giants led the Boston Braves to a 7-to-6 victory over the present day squad of McGraw at St. Petersburg yesterday. Rube Marquard and Jess Barnes pitched for the Braves, the latter per- mitting but two hits in five innings. The victory came despite a triple play on the part of Ernie Maun, Travis Jackson and Frank Frisch, staged in the presence of Commissioner Landis. Meanwhile in another part of town the Yankees broke camp, ready to start on the long trail that leads to the Bronx Stadium. Monroe Schwartz, a pitcher who has had little oppor- tunity to show his worth because of a sore arm, has been sent to his Ohio ANOTHER NASH DEALER The Most Popular “Nash” —car, judging from the sales standpoint, is the new Special Six Five-passenger Sedan. unites Nash mechanical perfec- tion with rare beauty of body construction. leader in auto values. R. McReynolds & Son ty Years’ Satisfactory Service in Wasl I O M It Easily the season’s ington 14th & Park Rd. 5% 2619 O S O | ter. first time in two weeks In the Red Sox | AGE VS. YOUTH IN BATTLE FOR PITCHING BERTH WITH THE WORLD CHAMPIONS HOW TO PLAY BASE BALL By Stanley (Bucky) Harris— THIRD BASEMAN: ball. have a big advantage is on a bunted T 1I—FIELDING DUTIES. HE hardest fielding play which falls to the lot ¢ the third baseman If vou can call the play in advance you will You can thus get a stride jump on the hit- If he is a fast man you will need it if you are to have a chance to | throw him out. Young third basemien need to learn how to figure in advance if the batter is going to lay the ball down. observation you will have no real d: cally no batter can successfully mask Big leaguers will tip off more less when they are going to lay one down. The less experienced the player is the more pronounced is the | manner in which he will let you know what he plans on doing. The man making ready to bunt has to loosen up on the bat. Otherwise he would hit_the ball too solidly. Watch his stand at the bat, if the stage is set for a bunt. Also observe how he holds his bat. If he is loos- ening up it is a sure thing he is get- | ting ready to bunt. Then get your quick break to be on top of the ball When you figure a left-handed batter is getting set to bunt, crowd him all you can. This will take from his confidence, for he will worry and won't feel so safe in dumping the ball down. The left-handed hitter has no ea task placing the ball on a bunt down the base line. The tall, rangy third baseman will | have the advantage In getting on top of bunted balls quicker than the average smaller plaver. 1If he is a ball hawk, in the sense that he can be depended upon generally to come up with the ball, he will stand the better chance of retiring his man. Always try to field the ball with two hands. This way vou are mak- ing more certain of getting hold of it. But if you are pulled out of posi- sition to throw by using both hands in fielding, use only one. The big thing, after getting the ball, is being in position to make & play on the bases. Some youngsters can naturally | field with one Rand when there is a throw in sight. They will sometimes hit their arms with their knees in getting two hands on the ball. If you feel yourself out of position in using both hands, perfect yourself in the art of fielding bunts with the un- gloved hand. With a man on first and 2 ball or| home and will be tried later in the season. The Senators indulged in slugging and left the Dodgers of Brooklyn far behind, 16 to 2. Earl McNeely, Joe Judge and Oscar Bluege made triples, while Charlie Hargraves and Johnny Mitchell accounted for five of seven | Brooklyn hits | double play and both runner: If you have even fair powers of ifficulty detecting the play. Practi- an attempt to bunt. bunted directly at you or to your right, make the play at second base, if you think vou can get the runner. But remember If you miss him you will also miss the other end of the \will be You have to use judgment in such a situation, figuring in the speed of the runners and the manner n which the ball is rolling toward ou. You should know what you are Boing to do before you get your hands on the ball. The only sort of a bunt on which you have a real chance to start a double play, under the situation outlined, is a fast one. The percentage will be all against you on a slow roller, un- less the man on first is exceptionally slow. The catcher or pitcher should help coach you on a bunt to your right, where you are at a disad- vantage in getting your eyes on the runners, A bunt toward the third baseman, with @ man on second, is a hard play to handle. First of all you will have to judge whether you should take the ball or whether it is better for the pltcher to handle the chance. Be sure to yell to him what you are going to do. If the pitcher is the one to fleld the bunt, hustle back to the bag. There is a chance to get the man coming from second cnd perhaps start a | doubie play, provided the man in the box is an exceptionally good fielding pitcher. If you are off the bag and the pitcher, thinking the station is covered, throws there, both hands are safe, The same thing holds true when you break back for the bag, believing the pitcher will field the bunt, and he is unable to d6 so. Again both runners are safe. No one can get to the ball in time to make the play at first if you and your pitcher fail to co-oper- ate. Tomorrow: Other Hints for the Third Baseman. (Copyright, 1925, by Current News Features, Ine.) = Only about 1 in 50 ivory tusks is sufficiently closegrained and of suit- able size to be made into billiard ;I‘HE GUARDS ARROW COLLAR Presents an ideal in llar dtyling - o ey S 1T Cluett, Peabody & Co.Inc o Maker BRAVES HAVE LITTLE HOPE ) OF BECOMING CONTENDERS Manager Bancroft’s Greatest Ne=d Is a Stanch In- field, But Club Also Lacks That Dash o Essential to a Winner. of Fire BY JOHN B. FOSTER. T. PETERSBURG, March 261t is futile to National League team cxcept in humble plugging in the world cannot help this club, which needs help badly that it shricks for it Only by the slow process of steady cultivation of base ball <oil and experiments from the minor leagues can Boston again gather its forme base bail glory, unless the owner or some other club, in a moment o petulance, as has happened, is willing to clean out his team from top t« bottom and sell to Boston The Boston Nationals. to be brutally truthful of the following dependable players ave Bancroft, manager and shor O'Neill and Gibson chers Bl MeNamara and Marquard nd Cooney, both piteh it think terms. is are made up, for most ;riME LIMIT FOR SEATS AT OPENER IS APRIL 2 ns for ob- pitchers and fielder To these & young n the may Jeus be added Welsh was obtained Northwest nto i the 1 t from Only one week rer taining ~eats for the openinz & of the American League season tween the Nationals and Yankees at Clark Grifith Stadium, on April today was made hat holders ust call for them at the offices, Seventh street and | Florida avenue northwest. by hursdny, April 2, ax they will not he held thereafter. It alxo hax been announced that | box weats for the two exhibition contexts with the New York Giants to be played here April 9 and 10, will be placed on sale Thursdny April 2, at Spalding’s, 138 G street northwe: and ball player who is by | perhap: n real » no means athers w at times and interestin develops throug 0 may pla the season of rexervations Laek a Stanch Infield. What ails the lack that eroft appear Marriott is the Braves most] 1d of stanchnes the wit of an can_keey That 1 vielding and at third base from the third busemen have held high the in base ball. Lue is @ converted pitche gritty voung fellow with a another has red hair, and x ball play and that Inch of him, so far as his spirit goes. |, But he is not the kind of ball|gj player who can be counted on to elevate the team with eff Then there is Burrus at first b who has been in the greater leagues before and who had to retire hecause he found the pace too te hin He will find the pace just as heated now as it was then 1 the team had of fire In it, as there s in an for instance, there might F hope that it would get away frc second division, but there iy gleam visible. It is simply of pluggers, who will roll rel over the highway, it waiting for od Sama come from behind with a truc give them a lift There is « pitcher on the Brav a name that sonnds like Obegas who may make fame for himseif son day. Then there is a young outfield- er named Sperber. reputation in Texas to Boston. He was sent be recalled and some make good = Judge Fuchs, who has in charge the | executive affairs of the Boston club, | realizes the team's shorteom although he s philosophical them he is far from satisfied “1 am at last reduced to a condition of passiveness fu which I can look upon a losing game and not rebel said Judge Fuchs to the writer.." that I like to lose, but i am learning my lesson, the lesson they say many Ban o tean non it of old fame Boston | base ined of | 5 second . a deter shod “H that come that some pro an four in with Helde thres boots a thing imptious so1 e P before only a dash 1 the | through Dave Helped no such Titled Teams 't the So this is t craft 1 haly peny Northwest alm the Philadelpt son he made by the after protest, t the Phill in ther from opportunity to get b 4 an infield that was lo r and helped win more for New York. The of Flet ampior Phi Taken who had « splendid | 9¢1phia before he went [ UP an out only to | he stead Y o | Fletch appoint 2 is doomed to be 8% 4N | v for this about | " Boston Nation | nas everything to | ing even this ear |it “may have to | kind Providenc re all three graces in liberal proporti and, most of all, charity (Copyright, 1825.) the ¢ day _\ = 2 nd is pra fight th lese as It need ittle NEW YORK GIANTS’ ROSTER FOR Pitchers. Baldwin, Howard Barnes, Virgil E. Bentley, Johr M. Dean, Wayliand O Dodson, Frank. .. ireenfleld, Kent Huntzinger, Walter H MecCullough, Frank M MeGrew, Walter. .. McQuillan, Hugh A . Magewney, Hugh Manners, John.. Mann, Ernest C Nehf, Arthur N.. Royan, Wilfred D. ... Scott, Johnm.. ... ... Tunney, James. . ..... Wisner, John H...... Catchers. Devine, Michael J Gowdy, Harry M..... Hartley, Grover C.... Giants Giants .. 2 Glants 2 Richmond, Va.. fanty Gilants Semi-Pro Memphis, S, A Giants s Notre Dame Portxmouth, V. L Ginnts Giants Giants Toledo, A. Hely Cross Rochester, 1. L 30 15 27 14 8 No recerd. 2 2 114 < 20 20 No record. 48 18 13 < Newark, Giants iants Columbus, Giants Snyder, Infielders Frisch, Frank F.. Groh, Henry K.. Jackson, Travis C Kelly, George L. . Lindstrom, ¥Fred C. Terry, William A Outfielders. Crump, Arthur E Fraser, Ralph L. Meusel Emil............ Southworth, Willlam H.. Walker, Frank. ... Rocky ) Wilson, Lewis R.. % R Glants 107 Young, Ross..... : R Giants . . 133 335 855 Charles A. Stoneham, president: James Tierney, secretary; Francis Y. McQuade, treasurer; John J. McGraw, manager and vice president; Hugh Jennings, coach. Sarasota, Fla., training camp. Finished first for fourth straight time, {ying the record held jointly by the Browns of the Ameriean Associntion, 1585-85, and the Boston National Association Club of 1572-75. The Giants won 93 and lowt4 60 games for a percentage of .60S. WANTED the following USED CARS Oaklands, 1922, ’23 and ’24 models. Dodges, 1922, °23 and ’24 models. Buicks, 1922, °23 and ’24 models. Fords, 1923 and ’24 models. Essex, 1923 models. Hupmobile, 1922, ’23 and ’24 models. We have a good market for the abcve cars and will accept them as part-payment on "THE NEW Glants Giantx Giants Giants ianis Rut’d-Que., Gianty . Giants 87 139 91 Q.0.V. OAKLAND - Wallace Motor Co. 1709 L STREET N.W. Main 7612 Open Evenings \

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