Evening Star Newspaper, April 28, 1926, Page 28

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28 SRORTS. THE EVENING ."':\lé, WASHINGTON, D. €, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28 1926. SPORTS. i Griffmen Priming to Check Yankees : Ogden May Starton §ab in Red Sox Final NATS WILL SEEK REVENGE || BIG LEAGUE STATISTICS |[YOUNG RESERVE HURLER | "A0% LEAGUE LEAOERS. [TY MARKS SEASON'S By the Associated Press. D[]RING VISIT IN NEW YORK AMERICAN LEAGUE. NATIONAL LEAGUE. IN TRIM__ P—‘OR M?RE WORK lhltin::’lt::x:b,)f%:r‘:h 442, Runs—Wilson, Cubs, 15 Hits—Hornsby, Cards., % By the Associated Press A New York, : A ba all disturbance of marked Sl . T : 5 ! i e e S . ) . Doubles—Frisch, Giant L e ek Continued Consistent Clouting to Supplement Fine :".‘ - ?:.5?.%?« i Bush to Open Fire Should Pilot Harris Follow His Triples—Wilson, Cubs. e s i i . 2 ’ s . . o 3 . ers—\Willia » Phillie: For 21 % s th blings have Pitching by Johnson in 9-1 Win Over Red STAN ; 2. __sTANDI L Regular Pitching Schedule—Goéslin Bolsters Stolen bases—Frisch, Gian been heard at this season of the yea sl i & 5 = Batti .\hlnfll?rl. ('ur;lx.i.'t e ululx;nn:n in the past about two weels —uCa . Pitching—Petty, Robins; Lucas, |earlie atting Mark suals Improving. and Rhem, Cards, Trevia Bayuiond Cobls of Georpta P S S R g A has entered the Detroit line-up. Yeste Ty day he turned the tide which had ; g ; . e ; been forcing his men steadily back BY DENMAN THOMPSON, BY JOHN B. KELLER. x—Dykes by, a2 | D00 By dniivecing evers Kindof Sports Editor. The Star g o aLdEs i = ! URLY QGDEN was likely to get a chaiice today to start a cham-| Jouns—Gehric, ¥ ¢ safe hit but a home run in his firs P OWER with the stick displayed by the Nationals again yesterday in ! 4 ’ regular apy s of season ox Encourages Backers of Champions. Percentage New York Cincinnati |2 Brookiyn | Phitadetphia Percentage [l 1 % L pionship game for the first time this season. Although Manager Doubles—Flagstead, Red Sox, |11 el Toy : 2 o - > s 2 Chicago.. | T . [ K nley Harris la v g S Foveldakd and Goslin, Nationals, 7. Y eanane o ¢ hanging a 9 to 1 shiner on the Red Sox will stand them in good | [Hesre-: 1= : : 55 B : ; i 6508 ‘,’]” Harris last week announced that Stan Coveleskie, Dutch o i vhr‘z,"\u BB “‘.,.m(,n of € stead if maintained during the last three days of the current week. | Boston 1 21 A5 .T. Il 20+ fiilsags. : ~. el 6.500 | Ruether, Walter Johnson and Joe Bush, his quartet of vetcrans, would take st L i o= o vhen they scheduled to clash with the walloping Yankees in their | Phil'phia_|. 3k A Pittsb'gh 1.1 1. 1 ‘\ ’:} 3: regular turns at beginning contests—a schedule that if followed would hav Yanks, 3. ke | <’-.,m. batted in fot spacious stadium in the Bronx BETLSES (oo e A 286 Boston. . = had Bush on the slab at the outset of the final tilt of the Red Sox series— Stolen bases—Rice, Nati - |twice himself. ; st 137816 w1414 - | the pilot of the Nationals figured it might be well to break the order while | Pitching—Ruethe tionals, « |‘serted « gloved b The Hugnien have been averaging around a dozen blows to the game | P t Fite TR way, with' & goodly’ percentage of et r}’m‘xilg the dizzy Fohlmen and discover just what the young right-hander | Wom 3, lost 0. up, an gnemy rally. ) ) bingles going for extra distance, and it will require sturdy swatting coupled ston at Washington, New York ulnl’mhldflnhlu. can ‘]‘l‘-‘ s did g X 1 i} % . ——— ‘rmru'\L\v»x:':jx e”: )\’\:;‘x’ljl‘ . hu teran curve with tight hurling for the champions to climb in the race before returning felphia at Ne 3 Brsokivn sk Bagion. - i Idlrml did fnot state, definitely this morning that Curly would be on SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION. fined the Chic home for a single engagement with the Mackmen next Sunday. As the| Chicago at Det G St. Louis at Cinclnnati. n_e} s, znll_ his a ternoon, *but did say that it would be a fine time to test W 3. . |and the Pirates wor Harrismen see it, there is more to be feared from the Yanks than the | = 3 this particular pitcher, and that Bush probably would be held in reserve. Mobile - 1% 18 0 |errorless battle. Athletics in their attempt to achieve a third straight title, and they will _ Although it would be Ogden’s initial | can League, with 24 hits in 56 times at [Atlanta ... o 7 35 8] oMU entrain for Gotham after the final of the set with the Crimson Hose today I ECH FAII S I :l-"lrll_mf‘fl-\’fim‘";nmnl xlr hlfiai\\'olv chosen | bat for an average of . UL b e R i L B i ankees it nin el &b mine the two-to-one game advantage obtained by the oday, it would not be his first work | quite a number of the safeties the =2 ermined to wipe out one ¢ advantage obtained by the under fire this season. Curly has|Goose has made so far havé not been | New Orleans 51 3 [deTDIE SeUIE s o New Yorkers during their recent sojourn in the Capital. Al RN participated in three games and was |of the length fans expect of a swinger | Birmingham 15 %|Ruth cleaged the bases in the Unless all signs are misleading. there l‘: in one long enough to be charged|of his type, he has hit enough two-| Roy. Cvengros. Hilton. Scott, Warmouth (inning when his terrific smash gla is nothing fluky about the recent pill with its loss. That was in the Na.|baggers to fank around the top of the |and Lisle: Nieiius. Judd. Rush and Yursan {off Max Bishops shoulder and Lour 5 tionals’ first clash with the Yank group of pitcher-maulers driving dou- e d to the far right field fence. Comb EDLINE b0 wess e den ey e | ¥ i when he relieved Alex Ferguson after |bles. Within the past week, Goslin has | T . 3 11} |and Lazzeri made home runs, the f sy s D D N bigh school base ball race tightened up yesterday, when' Tech |the second inning and took a lacing |been “getting hold” of the ball bette s e G BT, 3 1 porters. By clouting two of | Flugstead. c ; ; it st - liter five rounds; Before - i\ evet N0 5OFE SRoGIA e Senal SR {triple and three singles in he trio of Boston boxmen who did i failed to show anything at all against Eastern and allowed the Lin- |{of, five rounds. “Before that, Ogden |than ever and soon should be sending | Mas B e duty yesterday for 13 safeties to at . 2 coln Parkers'to step out in front of the field with two consecutived Athletics here and later he faced the | = Memph § 1 3|, Wi Jobuon was 1ain their second straight victory, the | K 5 k ! T A’s in an inning in Philadelphia. | _Seven of the fourteen games so far ; Memphis 2 & 1| Washington, and set titleholders extended to six the num. | Rikuer. st : S : sUimice Saturday in the| | Diiring e irainine season in.she|Pigueds by (e Nationalst Navesbsen | ; tiome, Bollbears sud Keaus: Bounsllyi g ur hits, winning 8 rer of consecutive double figures in the 3 ol Provided MMH(‘»I dut_‘~l'\u\ -\I)I“";,' any su_tlxl»rlx_u\bon ,,,nurl ay in the | den was nsed freqmently ang | completed within 1 hour and 50 min- s nd g 10-inning ve have registered double figures in the . game with Western, the fight in the future will lic between the George- R o utes or less. That's a pace that would over the St. Lot 1 = ! r 1 generally gave a good account ¢ 3 ; rer hit column. All of the Nation: we | & | towners, Eastern and Central. I e o, &S00 account of MM |make no one angry if followed INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. | ifjers men had tie Iudge parti ated in the celebratic o1 o » . & 3 " throughout the season. The shortest R. H ninth with two run | The latter nine dropped a game to; [ | |his work in the Spring of 1925 and g n o1 vesterday. (icslin once more show = S # | G Al et Cheti ' | game officially for the Nationals was - B3 Lindstrom and Jackson e Westerners st Saturday. but| | RECORDS OF GRIFFMEN | |coused” his' transter to Chattanoosa | Surne, oMelaliy, for the Nationajs v SIS 55 b clinta wers vietim of maimer anc of e S hern A tia sev. . Bluege celebrated his entrance to the | o WAS] : L PO, A stage a comeback when ek Lo en o aiaey |plaved in 1 hour and 33 minutes. Hov nd Tvon: B that_caused them to leave 1 Hbme s ass 3 x 4 met next Tuesday, while Eastern, § AR SBRBLAG peared, and while his efforts in a re ‘\v',,‘,_'”,“l. Ao can ,A[, e opener in i wsainst. the Phillies. The Gia P . 1 3 sxpthmairg B 0 | | 000 e . & Yot be =2 re | which they participated in Philadel- 9 to 8. R e - ; 3 [ heavy stusging exhibi| | Gty 01 0d - e s Vo Tt heen, oft such igh | onia s y was played in 1 hour VIRGINIA LEAGUE. | Fournier went itess for Just as encouraging as the batting g E - o is conceded an even . . ¢ « ship seasc Silfilites. hut the ofieial Aie 5 i time this season against the £ E Y i || Blue starte dhetle. of Stiur 66 3 officis i€ | Norfolk. 4: Porthmouth, 3 was the mound exhibition given by . % 0!chance with Western on May 11 | | 3 'iireiy ‘;_fl'“‘:‘»hi““‘ Sheik of Swe I»”l““‘l“l“”“ given as 1 hour and 35 minutes.| Kingaton. 14; but his Brooklyn teammates de g clatms wing is in splendid | ppe “umpire-in-chief, who announced| Ricimond. 13: hits when needed, and de Johnson. Walter's true form has bee Tech was never in the ri ng after | naition a moot subject ever since that suc. the first inning of yesterday's clash | e s he time, evidently assumed play had Boston 6 to 5. 5 i e B e e e PIEDIONT LEAGUE. | = s T Sl : according to the officia isbury. 9: Winston-Salem, 8. (10 in- | = was apt to be opposed by Charlie | Sooer ninge) AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. R. ¥ @R =R Johuson. vessful nning effort on opening | Totals [RE ith Eastern, which ended with the | lay, but his feat in letting the Crim- _ *Batted for Lundgren in eighth . |score at 11 to 3. Two hits, a_ stolen son’ Hose down with but four scat- | Boston 0100000001 base and an error gave the Manual 3 tered bingles should just about settle | W DY S0 Rl ‘Trainers a run in the Rufling, a pitcher of worth who has Greensboro, 9: Danville, ; 5 the debate. e e rupuel, Gostin, . | but from then on the game was SR dark Tony Welzer, the Milwaukee Dutch- | rifices—Rigner. S Teft on basese | Eastern’s with the exception of the man grabbed by the Sox from Mobile, | Baston, G: Washi Buscs on balls— | cjghth frame, in which Tech manu- | sssayed to do the flinging for the Sox. | BT e pdohnson. 4, Stk ont— | tactured its two additional counters. His bad third inning that netted five i : Western tallied four times in the | i runs failes convince Lee i se e the fifth and com- | 1s failed t i L o AL second, once i | done_especially well with a club of | Karl MeNeely's left elbow that w K Cir 01 0. 1000005 the caliber of the Red Sox. Ruffing | st Sunday’s game and Stuffy ps Colvmbus.” 10 0 00000 6—1 5 hurled part of the tenth inning Sun-| Stewart’s slightly sprained ankle due FLORIDA STATE LEAGUE. e e sies Mxquiliion n ay, when the Fohlmen won and had |to a fall suffered during a recent| -0 =08 0ot T SN 2A1l_other_games nostponed been expected to toe the slab vester-| morning practice session e For Mycrs 13: Sarasots; 4 I day. nicely and both of the B s wi Orlandd T; (10 ‘innings) . d D. Wh l 1ohl that Welzer was not the man for B Crenires s LOMNE | leted ‘the scoring with half a dozen - be among the crowd bo: St sburg, 6; Br 1 w Ire an 1SC eels B Quinn, who blanked Bus Morrelf. | the job, but this became apparent |Gowan and D Time of game—1:38. | run: he sixth. Several Nationals h: their | train for New Yor ht. MecNeely | I3 N N7 batting averages helped to some ex-| was in uniform yesterday and Stewart SOUTHEASTERN LEAGUE. w S K th & C last | | Thomas 1 : | .. Aenworty 0. even to the Hub helmsman during 10: Col ) Colambus, vound 6 when four more markers o 5 | ness for eight straight innings K tent by the revised scoring rule that|was expected to be in spangles this or ‘ materialized. "W n:.(x Ryt IT Is EASY FOR COBB | Tuy ay, went the route on the mound | keeps a time bat aws om the | afternoon. a 1 T 1617-19 14th St. N.W. North 441 flinging then was done acceptably by | again vesterday, allowing seven hits, | batsman when a runner Siteon iied ke il h m | e er o e e AV any tht | Flagstead made a sparkling catch at Delmore Lundgren, a youngster from fanning seven batters and issuing one | Z Y 4 Birmingham. and Rudy Sommers TO SHATTER RECORDS pass. Dulin_went five innings for | z players like any rule that may boost | the expense of Bucky Harrls in the Service and Parts P L. T ) es2092022200 womo ) ed veteran lefthander who has just been Tech before being relieved by Forr their hitting percentages, but not first inning yesterday. The Red ¢ Asheville y us | Tires, Tubes and Repairing escued from a long stretch of service George Hogge, Bastern's captain, | 2 ? every one conneoted with the game | center flelder came far in to get the f in independent ranks. By Ahe Aenaclabad i | opened the slaughter in nw” th with 5(.,",...,, thinks well of this revised part of the :mll “le mi . :.»x;)x;e;";\lnd keep a hit| S : i gt {2 homer to left center field | | dohnson ode. 2 veteran bas rom the National pilot. 2 Herrera Produces Tally. CHICAGO, April 28.—Ty Cobb, who | homer to left cente Covelenkie |code. Bill Hanna, veteran base bLall . | Nash Rink | ;. e i Western | | Marberrs™. writer of the New York Herald slin got a couple of hits without | ! as mker Notor CLo. Herrera supplied the punch that en- | topples over at least three base ball| Bu Central and tern | | yercusgn Tribune, thinks it poor in a way and | i eening the. ball rout of the infleld | Wy abled the Red Sox to get off in front |records every time he safely swin: b backs this thought with a good argu- | pic"frst two times up. In the first | Providence. it 1 E SALES and SERVICE action today, the Stenogs | Kelley.. Oxden with their lone tally in the second the Monument | | O i, Hleie it e . 4 Albany. § nning. Ramon’s contribution was a me he beat out a bunt toward third 6 years at same on the horsehide, stanas a chance | g Central playing the Hilltoj i e | & B CEl R = Hadley “In the first ve, the ght tc i 5 of setting new marks about a thou- |} o iGeongat | the first place, there ought to|;nq in the third round he was credited | e - itsel = ¢ idodbla: Gb: g0 i | freshme and the Georgetowner Morrell - . nd in the third roun FECiitee address speaks for itself \;Mhl;mx 7 "“.h o ~;m1 5 '1! I;N: sand times this season it he continues | JECHE" “fop Humpreys, Busi. | | Thomus be no such thing as a sacritice fly. but | wjth a single when his pop fly dropped | 2 : ¥ ine that scored Rosenthal, who had |, play and holds the pace of his| cci 1ok a beating vesterday at the | if there is, by all means it should fely near the pitcher’s box as Todt e, 1419 Irving St. NW. Col. 4457 reached the midway on a pass and a beating 3 ply to second and third, as well as|and Haney. trying for a catch, col 4 | 5 < A | first start in the twenty-second year ds of S an's nine 3 : E T ; : Rigney i « n: suecumb: | oo Fi carveer i the mmajors. ll.\.mll q-\ 1‘:,:? ‘.'\'1.‘ «xn'l'hf_xulx;rl}.m:‘l:‘t AMERICAN LEAGUE home. The only real sacrifice is when | jjqed. ed on s Ruel frustrated | ppe veteran pilot of the Detroit DL ¥ "”‘\h:um R Chiih | Sonie RO a batter deliberate lays down a| — TODAY Herrera’s attempt to pilfer (hird reys tam sh some st funt to advance o runner. thus sac.| Bluege’s homer in the tHird was BASE BALL 5" Tera’s atte t r | Americans, who holds more base ball | Te¥S feam shotid o it | oWelzer pitched himself out of a jam ds than anybody else in the | JPhOSition to Western, &5 e i OWNERS IN SESSIQN |ritcins to a large dexiee his chance | liner down the left field boundary that | oman 3 10t entirely of his own making in the tarted his first 1926 game with | 505 08 A DR GG B o soldlers to make a base hit. bounced off the grandstand barrier | Dex Aioi American League Park initlal frame. Rice got a life when o . a . ; St aliae | : = T : i i e J vgers vesterday, his previous |fin. ! S il But why he should get a sacrifice| and passed Rosenthal to roll on to . 3 Todt grabbed his bounder and threw |, pienrances heing as a pinch hitter, | W3Ye & crack pitcher in ferst SIS for bringing a man in and not for put- | left-center. But for the hard rebound. pea Washington vs. Boston poorly to Welzer, covering first . 3 e By the Associated Press. ting him on third or second was beyond | the hit probably would have been good TEXAS LEAGUE. = and he clinched his team’s victory | e | After Flagstead pulled a fancy eatch | o ks 0Ty | ygainst Gallaudet, allowing no hits | t ORI G L Ll e S R s e i L ! over Chicago by his willow work and | AeGU GO MV (BN PRe . YORK, April 28.—Ameri. | the bounds of common sense and falr. | for only two buses. Fort worth 5: Wi TICKETS AT u AT PARK | o Tevenort, 6: AT 9:00 AM. of Stan Harris' low liner, Goslin beat | {6 [V GHE0 W B T8 hole g 4 5 ot ‘& bunk that refused 15 Fhll Toul |4y o orary chalkediun & ol : e Barracks, Gallaudet, gue oflicials were here today | €SS hende the S ameatle to| A pair of fine stops by Bluege cheat for Haney and Joe Harris was hit by | hlo and triple in four times at iastern Elchcana SVt rep daie ) ept a constitution revised dur | nend that batters deliberately hit | ed Flagstead of safeties in the first a_ pltched ball, filling the bases. | ought in four runs and Cobb scored he Hteains e I niar flies to bring a man in from third, | and third innings. Ossie's second Welzer then hooked a third strike over | t\cico himself. Humphr pastimers. A tot, f 55| .Some of the magnates said that|They are trying to make base hits. | flelding stunt was a particularly fine on Judge and Bluege hit into a force | "\\hen v singled he bettered three | YUNS has been reuistered agains the little mesh bag which has been or instatice, & tedm. goas. to; Bat|Diece of work. play. | batting marks previously held him-| f0r their opponen adjudged by Commissioner Landis a|jn the ninth inning, 10 runs behind. o o e _ . s i —_— . . | part of the pitche araphernalia G Colato) 'd. The } Bucky Harris made the finest play Welzer Luckless in Third. | self —those of the most hits in any Episcopal h diamonders took a ll" o lm:ma!“r' :mjctd”):::::v"llml A man gets on third. The next Imuor‘m. the game when he went far back edflej rom St s league, the most singles ever made ! g ame with Devilt Prep, Il | brings him in with an outfield fly. For =5 ] SWelzer's duck desertod. himsdn ithe | ISPSNE A0, DO REIRE UL TLCS slxinning tgame (with SDev P | might come up for discussion. So|that he gets credit for a sacrifice, Did | OF first base to get Carlyle’s skinsner third round, however, when a quintet | 4o . Gt . far as known the American circuit|he ac el : ice. DId | ((ith one hand and followed with a ol e total bases for one major player, the ar 3 3 Amer he actually try to hit that sacrifice | ¥ Tual 5 of Griffithian ts splashed over the | 125 Tacora previously. standing. at | c & Fastern run-| and several of the minor leagues|yupder those circumstances” Forget it. | SNap throw that got the batter in the , . o et s B e Then he doubled, passing h ainst Tec! stern Stadium | Which took a stand against the new{ “The new rule is an improvement | ¢ghth inning wedge himself, when he muffed Todt's recor 8 extra long bing v rn salla rule at the time it was passed have P P X . il e 1t's | old record of 1,036 extra long bingles, |and Western Gallaudet at ¥ ve |on the old and to that extent prog. Aentéall conflnged” N brilliant toss of Rice’s roller, the latter moving | ey reaking his totals for hits and the | Kendall Green appear on today’s sport | not rescinded orders barring resin|ress. One of the hardest things for “P',':]'in‘g D ihe tHInD: gt ot tha up on Stan Harris’ sacrifice. Goslin i 5 A S i 4 from the pa ‘KiHic. stanapeatter: 4 : 1 D 2 5 most_bases and adding to another | card. Rifle competition also is listed, o the chronic standpatter and fault-| ceries. The veteran roved all around was credited with a bingle when Todt | ;15" (obl, record for the most extra }vmum] meeting Eastern on the indoor Recently several players com-|finder to recognize is progre the center garden to keep hits away | ocoumo02=~2 Lost. and Haney collided heavily in trying | pio, <! L, = plained that Washington pitchers had |- — i aiti five oGt et ey, (I e onle ceniet IS S e Deen using resin from a bag in the | After an exceptionally poor start,|from the opposition. He made five and Joe Harris' slashing single | ;95" the four just reset by his dou.| Western racketers played to a 3all | duszout and President Johnson of the|Goose Goslin has reached batting fig- Lkt through Haney registered Rice to knot and his old total for triples. When | ti h the Georgetown Prep team | American League took action to stop | ures more than merely respectable for A the count he crossed the plate two times he The Preps took both dou- | the practice if the assertions were|a slugger of his repute. He is among| American polo players pay as much Judge succeeded only in forcing Joe | Jutiered still another, pushing up found to be true. the five leading hitters of the Ameri- |as $10,000 for a pony. Harris, but Bluege came through with | his” total for most runs ever scored : line :lri\‘e"d:;:_\nhvhp left m]m line | by one league plaver 2.040. Bai that caromed off the concrete barrier | “mhe trick in it is th Cobb, is so | ; in front of the field hoxes past Rosen- | far gut in front that he automatically | g S FIGHTS LAST NIGHT' thal to deep left. Blu easily com- | hoosts a series of top marks every| .. o Manase Woodbersy | By the Associated Press . pleted the circuit before the ball could | time he hits. 1In addition. there ex- | FOrTest s Wanacas: 15.| CULVER CITY, Calif.—Benny Fur- be retrieved. Goslin and Judge scoring | jsts the po: lity of his bea s " Hig! ria: 18, Business | rell, San Pedro flyweight, won a de- ahead of him. Myer then poled a|jifctime bat nd his jileh at Wilson Stadium: June 1.|cision over Alkie Akool, Filipino Sngia o center sl followed with | numerons; # “season” Bnd “comsecil: Aimel. “Alexandria High at Warrenton, | boder (8 CipntnciiRiice, st when itanisla | L o E (UEIE e eRE. — € o TOULERENE fumbled the bounding ball Myer con- el i panta, oorel o fumbied the bounding ball Myer con | THREE FIGHTS BLANNED COLLEGE BASE BALL. |technical’ knockout" over ~Tommy session w ended when Johnson | G s Wl lined to Carlyle. | FOR KEN[LWORTH SHOWI At (‘ol'lfl:e l’r.lll“l(-—)hrylind. 8; - Another Big Inning. | A tanistar;icar dofiatives 10:ronnd | e—Virginia, 8; Duke, Welzer got along swimmingly there- |houts instead of the proposed Fore- 5 after until the sixth, when he was|man-Ahearn match will open the new \-",‘,f,,(‘("":‘,’:},,,f,"'g'_"""'g"‘ Tech, 11; PO ~ driven from the mound by a Kenilworth. boxing arena on May 20, (< i . { e " , of five bingles " |socording to. the present plans of | At Raleigh—North Carolina State, | |§ g . ers. Johnson's dez wed a Matchmaker Heinie Miller. 10; Lenoir-Thyne, 2. by Ruel, the latter taking third when | The fwo. fentherweizhts were ex.| At Elon—Elon,'3; Lynchburg, 2. || QUALITY SERVICE Rice beat out a bunt to Herrera.|pected to sign for their bout yester.| At Winston-Salem—Guilford, 11; With the squeeze sign on display, |day, but could not come to terms L & g " SR X stan Harris caught the vight side of | agreeable to the management and the ; Bl ADAMS MOTOR CO. : The attentions men pay me are most flatter- the Sox infield napping, his jolted |match was definitely called off. bunt g for a hit and scoring Ruel. | ¥ t s . . ittt S ehe. et | s " oo o s Nw. b e A fleld line scored Rice, and Joe Harris| WHITE HAVENS PRACTICE. a Potomac 1742 do, I'd be tempted to doubt their sincerity. cashed the pair of his mates With & | yeonns’ Wil be distributed to | AL Gotmibia—Ames, 9; Missouri, 4 rousi b 0 ) jer | = Str] ‘olumbia—Ames, A sourt, 4. . rousing double to the barrier in lefL | \white Haven players when the team Tonight, for example, at the country club center. Welzer was recalled here, and | Lundgren succeeded in halting the | Meets today at 580 for practice on T : e dance, you could have started an argument parade. ! Glen Echo field. irank Tompkins and | Augustus Roberts have been added to ! on most any topic you might mention — —_— | the team’s roster. Pongo Joe Cantillon, one-time | books, plays, motor cars, golf, stocks and, Lot manuger of the Nationals, later pilot | FEA of the Minneapolis American Asso- | PALAIS ROYAL WINS. 4 of course, thlblf-lom cfation_club and now directing the| Clark of Palais Royal fanned 19 il Tittle Rock outfit o u | batters vesterday when his team : . e o S But when my friend took out his cigar case UILD up your health and strength and offered it to the crowd, they were all of acquaintances and a busine: .. . . with President Quinn of the e, with this wonderful, appetizing one mind. fre chich club Joe h to pro- 5 &, 1% im gth ; cuve_an infelder. .;;KW, n T\\]’;:‘Uu ; : :’::: i g:lg ?ldh"'me strength and flavor guaran- «Muriels!” was the common exclamation. in this part of the country also 3 < in hotels, restaurants, grocery stores, s , visiied Balimore ee s ol 4 ghoogng.ur £ f drug stores, etc. Order a bottle at your next “Sure I'll have one. It’s a great smoke!” friend Der " mer, man: avorite Size 3 G meal. Or have a case sent home. If not satisfied be . R ARG L W g Puritano 10c P after trying six bottles return the case with th And they all knew the reason, too—choice i Perfecto Extra 2 for 25¢ S i unused and used bottles, and get all your money Havana blended with the best of the lighter ‘Ambassador 15¢ feases back. Having sold millions of bottles of bever- tobaccos. | 3 i - % ages, we know you will like Utica Club Pilsener. | \ 4 1 - cht End Brg. Co., Utica, N. Y. w ASH%;; . : ., WHISTLE BOTTLING WORKS L > : 1 S. Farber, Prop. DAY AND NIGHT ! ! . | ; 703 North Capitol St. Washington, D. C. : The Cigar That's Just Right AUTO LAUNDERY : - o M ll ) Phone: Main 5045 | . %7 > N : %e sw e et an d e ow And for finest Ginger Ale or Wurtsburger order " Utica Clab® 7% Neither too heavy . . . nor too —_— 7 (! ? & P mild. . . theperfect 53 ; ey i & Y % . medium J Wallace Motor Co : 2 e S This is why El Verso is sweet and R . ///// / > pIEaR mellow: Its choice quality tobaccos-to- 2 2 - 7777 gether with that rich brown El Verso : /] 7%, %, N A PE wrapper—are fully matured and expertly 7% / blended. The result —a sweet and Z _ ShlesiandSersi mellow cigar—with a character all its an rvice own. Don’t miss smoking one today. Geo. W. Cochran 3 R 3 1709 L Street N.W. GARTERS e R o e ’M/ Just East of Conn. Ave. NO METAL CAN TOUCH YoU San Felice @i Laste 2 for15c iR DANIEL LOUGHRAN Co., INC,, day for friendly with old | sociation, was at the opened its season with a 13-to-10 win > ¢ 4 NI Main 7612 ns =l 3 Washington < -~ Distributors Dist. of Columbiz

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