Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
=gy 1., SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, IONDAY, JUNE 15, 1925. SPORTS. D. C, Hiiting Rampage A ATTAIN .354 MARK TO WIN SIX OF LAST EIGHT TILTS McNeely, Harris, Rice, Goslin and Bluege Lead in Cannonading—Griffs Climb to Within Half A Game of Lead by Beating Brownies. BY JOHN B. KELLER. ISIBILITY in Clark Griffith Stadium is almost of the highest order, in so far as the Nationals are concerned. The world champions certainly sock the ball in better style in that plant than in any other around the American League, and they have socked it so earnestly during their present home stand that they now are but half a game be- hind the first-place Athletics. The club improved its position in the flag race yesterday by beating the Browns, 9 to 8, in a lurid match, while the Philadelphia outfit was sustaining a 3-to-0 defeat at the hands of the Indians in Cleveland In garnering their victory the Nationals continued the hard hitting that has marked their play the past 10 d. An even dozen safeties were ered to hoost to .354 the club’s clouting average for the eight games th the visiting Western teams. ) ] _Five members of the champs have been conspicuous in the bom- hardment of opposing pitchers recently, with Earl McNeely, returned to the outfield aiter a long lay-off, setting the pace for the lot. Earl in his last six engagements has slammed for a .500 rating, His hits have proved important in| Double plays—Davis_to MeManus to_Sisler, Judge (unnssisted), Peckinpaugh to S. Har: Judge. Left on bases—St. Louls, 8, Bases on_ballv—Of Davis, singles and a sacrifice fly, while Har ris collected two doubles and a single in four legal times at bat and Gos- lin got a two-bagger and a brace of all of the battles, too, but not more | TY CTI so than the hits of Stanley Harris. | PLEN OF ACTION Sam Rice, Goose Goslin and Ossie Bluege. The batting eves of these| g pouis, AB. R. W. 0. A. E. men_have cleared remarkably since [ Robertwon, 3h......... 5 0 2 2 % 0 the Nations ame home for the stand | I Rice, rf SRl AR iinst the Westerners. The Goose | Wint 1P - s s sa has “busted” the ball at a .435 clip | MeManus, 2b.. ... 512340 in the last eight fr: while in nw\-lv’m-h-.m, .. 3002 o0 same tilts Manager Bucky has hit | Dixen, e .. R ind Bluege fo 2 3 1 2 0 at’s socking the ball in great | Duvis, 00010 and to these five men must go | Wingard, p. ENS e e Y much of the credit for the N: :’mna".-'1 Totals. 118150 16 2 spurt nefr hits have told heavily e in the drive that has brought vic- |y NASHI Ay Tas MeXNeely, 3 1106 tory in six of the eight scraps with | S. Hareis, 3 3 % 3% W % | E. Rice, rf. 4 4 4 '8 the eThmr "‘":“': i 1idise jo B | dudge,’ 15 3 19 0 rio Busy Yesterd .:llu;‘:le ‘ : : 'I' _l‘ :‘l Three of these were important | Pecking E 3 : X Ruel, 3106001 factors in the of the club|@nel g - 3 4l e enna vest .. Har Rice and Goslin | Marberry, p:.. 100000 contributing 10 to the total of 12 s | - _—— ties amassed at the expense of the| Totals. : 3> 19 1 right-handed Dixle Davis, once regard- | ‘l'"'l'"" whea ""“"'""": ;“n . a 8 ] ol » | St. Louls - ed as almost Infallible when pitching | §f; Leuls asie o e s = against a Washington team, and the | "l ML Ll o 0 T Rl T left-handed FErnie Wingard. Rice| garris (2). McManus, Goslin, Sisler, La stepped to the plate five times and| Motte, Williams. Three-base hits—E. Ricet came through with a triple, three L Motte. Bacrifices—F. Rice, E. Harris. | ris to Wasl singles In his four triy It was not much of a ball game, lzln‘:lr?. :(||n artistically, but it was a whale of : . e ball game’ for entertainment. Both e Al nings: e d s n Coveleskie, soundly the fray w innin RAD vlux sllfiwr—\\lnllrlrd. mdsd, fithe || ROWiknd: Owens, i N& B e oue | ours and 18 minutes. ter he had | = = starti Umpires—Messrs. Time of game—3 former leavi in the seventh ids World Champions : Tunney Not to Rest on MACKS ARE BLANKED IN CLEVELAND GAME NEW YORK, June 15 (#).—The Ath- letics, who have been leading the American League since early in May now have their backs to the wall. Only half a game separated them from the champion Washingtons. A crippled pitching staff and a bat- ting slump caused a comfortable mar- gin to dwindle in the last two weeks. Yesterday Cleveland shut out the peacemakers. Karr of the Indians gave the Mackmen their first coat of white- wash this season, 3 to 0. He allowed only five hits, of which three were by Lamar. A brush for sixth place in the Amer- ican League between Detroit and New York found Cobb’s men victims of good pitching by Sam Jones. Five hits, bunched in the sixth, gave the Tygers all their runs, as the Yankees were sailing into Dovle for 12 hits and 8 tallies. Babe Ruth made his second homer of the season The Robjns, with Vance pitching, the Reds in the National, 12 to 3. The St. their fas straight from the Phillles, 11 to sathering 17 hits off three pitchers. The Cubs took their third straight game from the Braves, 7 to 3, while the Giants and the second-place Pi- rates had a holiday. BIG LEAGUE STATISTICS AMERICAN LEAGUE, Philadelphia ... 34" Washington . Chicago Left to right, front row: C. Barber, Cherry, Frost, Back row: Gatley, Miller, Buscher, W. 0. Cornelius, manager, Smith, Bleir and Purdy. JOHNSON TO BE HONORED AT BALL PARK THURSDAY broke the week-old winning streak of | Louis Cardinals kept up | pace by taking their third | | battle, W ball park. winning w A of 15 to 8 Blackie Elwood, diminutive pitcher of the I street nine, displayed a brand of twirling that proved a puzzle to the Mohawk batters, while his mates gave him the best of support in the field In haw! spite of their defeat the Mo- gave their conquerors a great Grier, their moundsman, be- ing the victim of bunched hits. * The presentation of the diploma, a parchment bea grossed, will take place at the President's box near the Nationals' dugout.” Although busy with preparations for departure to his Sum~ mer home at Swampscott, President Coolidge considerately found a place on his well filled schedule for participation in the tribute to the greatest moundsman base ball has know: ALOYSIUS AND SHAMROCK NINES KEEP ON WINNING i. Barber, McIntyre, Giovannetti and Burdette. ALTER JOHNSON will be signally honored Thursday at Clark Griffith Stadium. The veteran of many seasons of campaigning with the Nationals will receive from President Coolidge the diploma proclaiming the pitcher to be the player most valuable to a club in the American League tribute to Walter, Thursday will be designated “Johnson day” at the 1924. As a further ifully en- LOYSIUS CLUB and Shamrock base ball teams continued in their ys yesterday, the Aloys handing a 6-to-2 trouncing to the Mohawk nine at Phillips Park and the Champions slugging out a victory over the Knickerbockers at Georgetown Hollow by the count Athletic Association nine by a 24-to-9 score. Hospital tossers won the annual game between the two teams of the Public Health Service, being nosed out, 16 to 15, Bub Geutler, Te | | Quarantine | giving activities for | h High pitcher, LEAGUE TIE RESULTS AS HERZL NINE WINS Herzl tossers won their second game In the Jewish Community Center Base Ball League and created a tie for first place in the loop by nosing out the Rialto Theater team, 4 to 3. Good pitching by Lew Needle of Baltimore, coupled with long-distance hitting by the Herzl batsmen, gave the tail-enders the victory Jake Milwit, outfielder of the win- ning nine, led both teams at bat with three hits in four trips to the plate. The league standing: Won. Lost. Kanahwa . 2 Rialto " Herzl KILLED BY PITCHED BALL. NEW YORK, June 15 (#).—Eugene McGrath, 34 years old, who has been 5 in®semi-professional base ball s for the last 18 years, was killed ¢ by a pitched ball. McGrath was struck over the heart by g ball | pitched by Victor Taconia. MINORS ARE STAGING HOT PENNANT RACES BY JOHN B. FOSTER. NEW YORK, June 15.—The Ameri- can Association seethed with fans the Joy- past week. Louisville got on a rampage, as the hurled the Hess Juniors to a 15-to-0 | Colonels had been threatening to do victory over the Falls Church Juni for some time, and slipped into first i Fight Laurels GENE BELIEVES ACTIVITY IS BEST WAY TO ADVANCE Climbed Ladder by Batitling Often and Intends to Keep It Up—Is High Type of Fellow and \ Great Credit to Ring Sport. BL SPARROW McGANN. EW YORK, June 15.—Word comes to the writer from Billy Gibson N that Gene Tunney by no means intends to rest upon his laurels. His dope is that he has got to his present position of eminence by fighting regularly and he intends to keep on fighting. In this way he expects to have a decided edge over top-liners who do battle once every six months, if then. Gene will next appear in the ring in the Middle West on July 10. The fight will be held probably in Indiana and Tunney has given the promoter, Mullins, a most generous latitude as to opponents. He will meet any one who is picked, outside of Wills and Gibbons. That is going some and shows how Gene is feeling these days. Coming right down to it, it seems any place—an attitude which no strange that Tunney is the only man)other boxer, big or little, seems to of all those who returned to civil life | share. from the war with the love and knowledge of boxing instilled who has Lfiummed success and fame with his sts. Five million men under arms and out of that host one champion. Hold- ing the American light-heavywelght title, Gene can be world light-heavy king any time the present holder, Berlenbach, can get up his courage to Now on Vacation. Just now Tunney is spending a va cation out in Davton, playing golf with former Gov. Cox of Ohio and having a fine time generally. No finer type of man ever drew on | boxing gloves. Any novelist or plax right seeking an ideal hero for a story or play of the ring would find meet him. in Gene a model made to order. Well And it is not unlikely that some day | educated, handsome as a Gibson Tunney will hold the world heavy-|drawing, clean-mixed, considerate, he is as great a credit to boxing as E | he would have been to any sport in Fought Before War. | which he might have happened With regard to Tunney’s career as | shine. a soldier it might be interesting to| Weight and strength are the assets dip into some problem of this sort:|he needs to carry him to his highest If it took 5,000,000 men at arms to | pugilistic ambitions. M vt § e n’mvmej PRINTERS MAA-KEWBID | FOR LEAGUE HONORS weight title. champions for all the weight divi- sions? As a matter of fact, Tunney did not gain his first boxing experience in the Army. He fixes the date of his first bout as having occurred in 1919, in | the data he submitted for the official | but the truth is he | make r in boxing records, had a half dozen bouts before he donned his uniform Union Printers were to nal bid for champion series of the th p honors Departmental 2 | Two of the pnes that he reralln‘ League race this afternoon were with K. O. Jaffe and Young|in a game with Treasury at the south Guarini, the last of which he fought | Ellipse diamond in May, 1918. He knocked Guarinl| The Treasury nine is scheduled to out and celebrated his feat by joining ‘ play again tomorrow a postponed the marines the very next day. game with Bureau, closing the list of Tunney’s outfit was sent to Paris| contests in the first series Island and here he fell into the hands| Yesterday the Printers broke the of Al Wambsganss and Al Thompson. | winning streak of the Fort Hum- boxing instructors at the camp. But Gene did not stay long enough at the South Carolina island, being shipped to Quantico for further training. Two months after he enlisted he was in France. Tunney's outfit the 3rd French Div | phrey’s nine with a 12-to-8 victory LEAGUE STANDING Treasurs P, absorbed by ion and, what . > : | A belated rally in the eighth failed sk place. The Kansas City club got into | : el Aged tofithe exlent ofmino | Blen Ee s (goled 4 stwn e saenifo |to carry the Knickerbocker team to| Georgetown Juniors defeated the |the first division for the first time|\Vith training and the like, Tunney | x runs. while the Nationals’| left, center to score his teammates. 3 Scior Hoas iianar was' diiven | Naticasiss 10 %o 7 this season, only to ooze out again. |had no time for boxing, nor even for | pithaller was chased after| That $to5 advantage looked large from the mound in thefifth, when | 5 - Milwaukee slid into the second di. thoushts of boxing. Prin one Brow retired in the eighth, | to the Nationals, but mot to the| CAMESYODAN. GAMES TOMORROW. | oy 1 (0" \ent on a batting| Southern Midgets won from the Tr vision June 10, while Toledo stipped When the armistice was signed | Bureay .- eaving behind him a record of 12| Browns. They fell upon Coveleskie | flreland at Phila. &t L. at Washine spree and chalked up runs to|angle Midgets. 9 to 2, while the Moose |into the first division at the very end) (ene was stationed at Romonentin | SETELNE, alien swats that had netted 7 tallies. | in the eighth for a couple of hits Cleverand st Pul bring their total to 13, Frank Hud. |Shut out the Thistles, 3 to 0. Lot tho weii and here he resumed his boxing i . The world champions had hopped on | that, mixed with a poor chuck by BetratiiateN.-X-~ 1| o o O D & Aitiai o — The race is so tight that about the | CAreer, meeting and taking a decision | TR TEDE Davis at the start for a seemingly | Harris, netted two runs. With one YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. DAL PN ce) MTE T oEE bulSHE sl Aggie tossers outclassed the Tigers, | " thing so far determined with any. | from Tommy Gavigan. e, T commanding lead, but the Browns|gone, Severeid, batting for Dixon,| Washington, 9: st. oo o oheok e BoR the € ool 24 to 3. = Catalifte 1o S 5 | Treasury 305 were kept in the fight by Coveleskie's | singled, and La Motte doubled. Bob's veland, 3; Fhl or oo e CORTIORSE AIREERIN e !::"}‘ kS costaimy s e pronanN Nine Bovstios mite | Potomac Park 35 uncertain pitching and his equally un- | hit was fielded by Rice, who threw to enlytemporantly LINWO e T T A TR O winniig the light heevyweight | Arnouitue ok 213 Sortain sUpport. and thie ssllef pitcl-| Harrls, but Bucky's toss fo heml off More than 2,000 fans saw the Mary- RTH AND TEXAN | In the Southern Association, New |championship of the A. E. F. Tunney —_— s Woise bt e e Ml Be Y mEl e R land Park Athletic Club go down to| Orleans, Atlanta and Nashville held | fought nine battles, winning them all. | pADJATOR, FENDERS e el N junnesiaud Hhe unded so far ' New york defeat before the onslaughts of the TEAMS ARE VICTUR the fort. Birmingham was the only | *iX of them by knockouts. He beat| Ty, pipg saDE ’AND REPAIRED berry's none oo spod rescue elort|from Ruel that La Motte, who had Fiffwusth sl el S il | first division club that found the pace | Bob Martin, subsequent winner of the O R AR ToRs YR AtToE vas n s a pinch. and | started for third with the heave, was | Brookiym " S e e gl [too hot to hold. It begins to look|A. E. F. and interallied armies| WITTSTATT'S R. & F. WKS. the Browns knotted the count in the | able to follow Hank across the count- | g™ j'auis TRt endsa di ko8 *| Linworth and Texan teams were ,s if the great fight would be to hoid | heavyweight champlonship, on points 1423 P. REAS ninth. ¥ however, obliginglv | ing block. oEians 3 2 t | returned the victors in two of ves-|New Orleans acwn. The Creseent|in a fourrtound bout. His knockout E LI E e e it of slow work | Marberry then relleved Coveleskle |Fhlideivhia ... 21 33 430 441 ‘13| pant Mattingly allowed the Ana.|!Srday's clashes in the senior division | City team is pretty well ahead. victims in the course of the A. E. F. | e t tyrn at bat land continued to get through the 22 ke costia_ Eagles but three hits when|Gf the Washington Base Ball and| The Western League race continues|tourney were Sid Turner, K. O. Sul At the Sign of the Moon thi! jent the local rooters home well | inning without real damage, although | GAMESTODAY. caMes Tomommow. | (0t 1 Eol, Tl dd™up 12.t0.2 | Athletic Assoclation series. The Lin-|one of the most thrilling of the lot. | livan, K. O. Marchard, Al Wurhl and | satisfled with the day’s proceedings. he had a rough time. But he got into :g;l,ln- = l: I"I,:III; at 8¢ Louls. | Lin ot Fairlawn feld. The Northern | orths gained a 7-to-1 verdict over| Oklahoma City.was on top at the week | Johnny Newton. | ‘Wonder Champs Strong at Start. trouble in the ninth when Williams, | Boston at Chicago. Bosion at Chicars. | pitcher also accounted for three hits, | the Tremonts, while the Texan bat-|end, but nearly every club in the cir-| Tunney got home from France in | What Merts o first up, doubled to right and moved | New York at Pitts. New York at Pitts. | drove in three runs and tallied on | '€[S outclassed the Boys' club, 5 to 3.|cuit has had the honor at one time|August, 1919, rested four months and wal s The world champlons opened hos-|to third as McManus' bunt became a i e s e | Crescents and Liberty clubmen. the [or another. then, on New Years day,1920, met Dan 5 tilities as though they would copper |single when the pitcher fell While| chicago, 7: Boston, 3. other senior teams to see action, bat- | Baitimore succeeded in ousting To.|O'Dowd in an eight-round, no-de- Tedayt e gams once. McNeely nicked | trying to grab the sphere. Brooklxn, i2; Cincinnati, 3. Eddle Carroll, manager and left tled to a 3-to-3 tie. Dulin and Kremb ronto from first place in the Inter-|cision contest in Bayonne. Da for a two-bagger, Harris singled Ruel's Errof Ties Score. St. Louis, 11: Philadelphia, 7. fielder of the Alexandria Dread-|furnished 8 of the 12 hits regis-|national. The one big fact in this| He won his light-heavyweight title Earl home, Rice tripled to put Bueky naughts, is expected to be out of the tered by the Liberty sluggers, each|race is that Jack Dunn of Baltimore, s, Close Dafly at by beating Battling Levinsky in across the plate and Goslin sent Sam | Jacobson flied to Rice, and all may game for several weeks with a sprain. | connecting four times in as many|the moment he saw his team waver.|rounds in the Madison Square Gar- S over with a one-baser. In the third have-been well had Ruel frozen to RECORD FOR PAST WEEK | &3 i Soiiiuy Senterdas when the | chances at bat. |ing, began to hustle to get players of | den, his twenty-frst battle after his Harris doubled. moved to the far cor-|Sam's fine return that had Williams | | n THE MAJOR LEAGUES | Grotto nine was defeated. 6 to 3. Lud | In section A ‘of the junior division |his own and didn‘t run around in|return from France. How SISk el ner when Davis uncorked a wild pitch [ beaten to the plate by yards, but low, Lee and Giles staged a triple|the Peerless team turned back the | circles yelling “Conspiracy Then Harry Greb came along and 1808 and tallied ter Williams caught | Muddy dropped the ball, and the The past week's major league record | steal in the seventh frame. | Congressionals, 11 to 6. in an 11-| The New York-Pennsylvania race is|Gene blew his championship, the Rice’s loft to short left. Then the score was tied. Severeid threatened |of games won and lost, runs, hits,| . inning thriller. }another of the close combination kind. | first and only defeat that has ever | Browns hecamegbusy. £ |to send the Browns ahead with «|erfors and opponents runs, includ- Cherrydale tossers came across the| Southends swamped the Renrocs, | Ninety-eight points separated York,been recorded against him. Later he | Williams opened the visitors’ | slash toward left center, but a great |ing games of Saturd follow | Potomac and nosed out the Mount|2g to 0, and the Crescents trounced |the leader, from Wilkes-Barre, the|won his title back from Harry and | H fourth frame with a single, the second |stop by Peck inaugurated a spec-| xATIONALL. W. L. H. Ralnier nine, 7 to 6, while Petworth | the Trinity Juniors, 12 to 4, in section | tail-ender, at the end of the week.|his ability as a fighter is in no way tyles at atls y of four swats he helped himself to |tacular double play. Cincinnati 8 @ b was defeating the Brightwood Ath-|B games. That's the best record of any league | better demonstrated than in his will- during the melee. McManus follow-| The Nationals were not long in get- ETL +h 4K letic Club, 16 to 8. ¢ Three clashes were staged in sec- |this season ingness to tackle Greb any time and o ed with a two-bagzer to tally Ken |ting their winning run. McNeely | figanureh i3 % 10 Pete Schrider, University of Mary.|tion C of the junior division. Yorke Ifldl'vidudl Taste and Marty crossed the block by way | began the ninth with a stroll to first, [ New York B 68 8 ote § ler, University of Mary-| prang took the Swanee Preps to camp of Jacobson’s Mfield retirement and |and Harris promptly sacrificed. Rice | Brookisn 2 : % 5 £ ke mound dce. mcorsd for S¥veriny the one-sided score of 14 to 5; La Motte's single. rolled to Sisler, too far from first | Bastemiphia 2% 821 Spring in a meeting with the Cardl| po.or” Juniors easily defeated the o —Mertz quality tailori: t L In the fifth the Natlonals regained | for Geor; e he bag. Win- v. nals. The Marylanders got a 3-to-2 o St oriug s ow R i or George to get to the bag. n AMERICANL. W. L. H. E decisi Schrid Towi: but £ Bloomingdale Juniors, 11 to 4, snd ", their threerun lead with a rally that | gard, trying to cover, failed to|St. Louis 3 70 O e e n’ v | the Clovers handed a 7-to-2 trouncing e (R} pricescommen du ke fattention far chased Davis to the showers. It |gain the station ahead of Rice, then.| Chicso . B e o e S e Yhe Asrewe. every man. The largest and best came after two were out. Rice |muffed the throw from the Brown |puiladaionia ... 3 3 % 8 g parformunp Bty St Bpring. Yankee Juniors won their third howing of fabrics in Washis singled and Goslin doubled. Goose's [ manager. McNeely, who had round- | New Vork 3 3 51 4 Herald Harbor displayed a flashy | straight game in section D by defeat- 2 5 B se nLabgton hit to left was just long enough to |ed third, took advantage of the error | Gleveland 3 3 = brand of base ball yesterday and regis. | Ing the. Cardinals, 7 to 4. Everywhere. .. from the Lips of the Wise, he from which to select. ;(;n{(lp;a'r;‘\'l;' third ‘h.:t;‘xp,f{\ul[ w tl‘mm!; | to race home Boston : 4 56 12 tered a 9-to-3 win over the Dominican | In the midget ranks the Cardinals . o all and the fleef ional S e Lyceum nine. Ed Roche was on the |trounced the Dreamlands, 3 to 1; the “Wi » s i esmpered home | IHs (Gooseiway J h T Sl b T mound for the winners, while Nelson | Randles made _their wins ° three learns the "WHYS quurads Leadership P o ate by Judge, who ] s. straight with an easy ¥ ovi ’ e g iz | Johnson Toes Slab Tomorrow |5 i o i o™ | it i h sl teon e o ‘ to the slab and stopped the scoring | Lafayette clubmen came from behind | salle tossers won from Merid temporarily Sixth a Fat Frame. i The sixth was a fat frame for both clubs. Williams opened the Browns’ portion of the round with his third single of the day and after McManus League schedule makers, but N "When Nats Face Browns Again ATIONALS and Browns are given a rest today by the American hostilities will be resumed tomorrow in the seventh to get a over the Shamrock & B. Schambe D: mall for the winners, ber led both teams in batting. nic Relieving s pitched great Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone while A. Scham | 0-7 verdict |7 to 3 and Terminals handed a “to- setback to the National | MINOR LEAGUE RESULTS | Made for you. and Jacobson had failed to advance at Clark Griffith’s ball yard. Walter Johnson is to toe the slab|Co. tossers took the short end of a e '“'“‘f“‘":"-“« ""':‘U"E- 3 00 i - ix i c & . s a v Sean altimore. Syracuse, 2. him took third as Dixon singled. La | for the world champions in the second game here with Sisler and Com-| 713 count In a game with Seabrook. | Rayife! exer. Harry Hershfield, car- i At Bt Derossed et Dioe Uaners | pany, while Joe Bush or Dave Danforth may do the chucking for the| Rgberts twirled Seat Pleasant to a| JuffaloglZ: Provigence 8., | toonist and creator of { visitors Herrls fumbled Wingard's grounder:i V'R IChy o wootores first appearance Two were out in the Nationals' half rifice to show for his five trips to victory over the Wesley Athletic Club by the score of 6 to 1. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Columbus, 12-8: Milwaukee, 11 «Abie, the Agent” says: Our $30 Values . el g Gealy |Of the season against the Browns.|the plate. Ken Williams . S "Paul. 3: Indianapolis. 0. g of the inning with Ruel and McNeely | Je. 4% Bt e e | the peate. o Fon, Willlams got threé| Ariington base ballers clearly out-| Toieda 11, Bansss Gy o “When I sit di k on the pidths as the result of passes|‘'valter was mnot used in St. uis| singles and a two-bagger for the| . ...q 0y don i Minneapolis, 11: Louisviile. 10 sitdowntowork, ! when the Nationals visited there last |Browns in five legal times up. classed Clarendon in a Sunday game, = ; month. The big fellow has pitched in few games in the Mound City during the past three vears. ARE BATTING AB. JI. SB. RBIL. Pct. HOW GRIFFS Golf Balls, 50° Our Service is 100% Efficient Judge made a double play unassist- ed in the fifth when he speared Sis- ler’s liner and stepped on first base Arlington getting the decision, 20 to 8. The White Sox, a combination of high school stars, had little difficulty - cost of in trouncing the Earle nine, 25 to 5. | SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION. New Orleans. 8-3: Merdphis. 3: Atianta. 1 Mobile._£.1: Chattancoga,” 50 in Radiums, Crépes and silk labelw—> | waSHABLE | T Ask Your Haberdasher I must have three things —an idea, a pencil and a box of Murads. Some- savor and fragrance beyond com- pare . . . And only the choicest of 2542 Mohair or Suit EETLe WHEN YOU SEE ONE PA RI s | et SR R e g THINK OF THE OTHER [weeRUBY | e s 12c, 14c, 15c & 18c F. | i | vou. Special SHOLTALE £ ReA GARTERS || [VASHABLE - | Washington Rubber Co. NO METAL CAN TOUCH YOU Mmmhfl_.N:'York MURAD P. H. NIGHOLS, Manager P C. T. ELECTRIC TRUCKS | Time for a fresh pairf 4,y || Siieimrrn A e @ risc P Lt o, l Tate That double play in the ninth yes-|Pefore Harry Rice could return to T . D s i Hirtraie terday certainly was of the sensa.|that sack. Maryland Athletic Club nosed out {*|| times I'm shy the idea, Our $35 Values e tional variety, Peck had to make a| ‘Wingard granied three passes to| e National Clrcle team, 8 to 7. || For Warm Weather || || but with the help of a ohion - s > -| Nationals and all were turned . inta, rfield ¢t | W i Gosll | arfield tossers won their first 4 v'fn;:'.'z" \:xrm:ert(;rerell?éem‘\“{c\l;;n'\::":z J::clor:g o i oy ”‘*“fh”h' seored after | game of the season from the Eastern | Comfort — Wear M:rid: I"ncver fail to s e exe ; L valking in the sixth and Earl was S ook ipas and Judge Just managed (o tag oUt|franied to first before getting that big | . spatsione e JeNe ank on the line after a briliant | run'in the ninth. Ty T e Reliable I recovery of Bucky's wild relay. | el i % Harris received a painful blow above Y Qur $40 Values Lelhold 3 Harris' erratic fielding accounted | the right eye from a bounding ball 9. SIL I S Siarberry o for at least two of the Browns' tallies, [thrown by Rice, who had fielded Wil- Gresx o o but the Nationals' manager poled a|lilams’ double in the ninth. Bucky ; ’ ‘fli'r':".'v TS couple of doubles and a single, there- |had to take time out, but came back | | 00 ‘ e S 2 |by driving in three markers in addi-|gamely. < $ 5__ I “un\fl“" 'l, 'l: tion to scoring two himself. . Ni 1 th — MeNally Nine of the 27 safeties in the fray breh Gemeiaklo S _Sam Rice had a perfect day at bat|were two-baggers, St. Louis batters [ ":,... s . | ‘ Oxden ° 0 |with a triple, three singles and a sac- getting 5 of them. ‘ (Truehue) Our $45 Values £ puone J Broadcloths | £ S o in white and all | ! | : i l i iphite and all ll:fature « « « and Nature alone . . . Reep Cool £ b : ‘£ ; as given to Turkish tobacco a o 5= by ].OW | 1dentified by g 1h a Smart FAIRWAY | ehis woren i