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Al 8 2% VL R e W ).} Usual Beating--Pioneers Beat Ethiopians From New Haven--Many Games on Local Diamonds T Q«fi]ANTS .Chick Evans Favored 10 Win 10 PIONEERS ‘Revenge for Defeat ed Several Weeks Ago feers evened up its score City Giants (Colored) iven yesterday afternoon § street diamond, when they beating the “Smakes” by gore. The game attracted vd but from a playing ‘it was nothing to brag were frequent on Both h team benefited: by 1r ‘went scoreless until the bg when with two on bases Dudjack smashed a ingle to left which pro- it tallies. Again in the boys added four more playing on the part of # outfield. The visitors to put the game on ice ‘ of the game when the fed a case of "blind stag- sularly on the part of Con- séd several opportunities second. ides pitching a masterful ‘ball hard getting a two- d & single: - -Blinn - _also three-base wallop. ho was'in the mound the i@ visitors appeared here, lop yvesterday, and gave thibition of .fielding. He itors’ first run when in ng he, hit 'to left field ound the bases while no effort to get the t had been stopped owd. The umpire re- the claim and the ily would have been for a home run. mpire system was used, es’ consultation with t might prove beneficial New Haven, who was He started in to | strikes, but was dele- base job after he had | to deliberately walk s batter and intercept a tching McKeon at the it and run play. unced that the Pioneers Wwould play at the Pio- nd next Sunday. The Pioneers. *+° ab r h po a | Snocohamn alihnoos miesm @ ] e - o Bloowmomnts wlhrnossosson o - o8 laud ity o iants. = - | omodonvwerey - -3 oMHoODWR®BOO,y [T Y [ ococooRrrHmol cooroswOOD0 I C RN | | I sloccesbnmune [ © 12 24 10 3 .. 00024000x—6 .. 000001021—/ ‘Ahern,. Dudjack, " three-base hit, un, Culver; stolen bas- onlin 2, Blinn, Jones, th; ;bases on balls, off ith 1; struck out, by mith 12; hit by pitcher, ‘left on bases, Plo- time, 1:55; umpires, nmon or trap-door pariety of Union Suit'is ‘bifurcated botch. You ince, only to vow. gain!” Union Suits like your trous- f open on the out- , with two but- ht and instant i History almost repeated itself when Chick Evans of Chicago defeated Ned Sawyer of Chicago, two and one, in the semi-final match in the Western Amateur championship at Cleveland. i It was the same score by which Evans won from Sawyer in the semi-finals l:ut year. The same men who met in the finals at Grand Rapids last year Western Golf Championship CHIC. EVANS clashed. Jimmy Standish, Jr., of De- troit was Evans’ opponent. He won over H. P. Bingham, the Mayfield club dark horse, 7 to 6. Followers of the game figured on another repeti- tion of last year, too, but Standish ad- mittedly was better than he was last season against Evans, when the Chi- cagoan won, 11 to 9. Odds were in Evans’ favor to repeat. \ Baseball News in a Nutshell FEDERAL LEAGUE Yesterday's Results. Pittsburgh 4, St. Louis 1. Kansas City 3, Buffalo 2. Kansas City 5, Buffalo 4, (10 nings). Baltimore-Chicago (postponed). in- \ Chicago Kansas City .. St. Louis Pittsburgh Newark Brooklyn a Buffalo .. £ Baltimore & Standing of the Clubs. w. P.C. .580 .575 545 541 506 451 .536 372 # Games Today. Brooklyn at St. Louis. Newark at Pittsburgh. NATIOMNAL LEAGUE. Yesterday’s Results, Philadelphia 4, Cincinnati 2 Standing of the Clubs, ' W. L. 38 39 42, 41 1B 4 147 48 P.C, 571 547 .5086 .494 Philadelphia ....." Brooklyn . Chicago .. New York Pittsburgh - . Boston .......... 8t. Louis ... Cincinnati 48 47 43 40 42 .488 478 422 Games | Today. Pittsburgh at New York, (2). St. Louis at Brooklyn. Chicago at Boston. Philadelphia at.Cincinnati. AMERICAN LEAGUE. St. Louis' 9, Boston 8. -Boston 1, St. Louis 1. ‘Washington 3, Detroit 2. Cleveland 3, Philadelphia 1, Cleveland 8, Philadelphia 4. New York-Chicago (postponed). Standing of the Clubs. w. L. 31 33 34 44 44 53 A 54 58 P.C. 56 56 New York .... St. Leuis Cleveland Philadelphia L6904 | COLONIAL LEAGUE, Standing of the Clubs. w. L. 32 22 30 31 29 25 26 Springfield .. Hartford New Haven New Bedford Pawtucket Brockton Today’s Games. Pawtucket at Hartford. Springfield at New Bedford. Brockton at New Haven. . SATURDAY'S RESULTS. Colonial League. Hartford 8-1, Springfield 0-4. Brockton 2-0, New Haven 0-1. New Bedford 7-2, Pawtucket 3-1. National Leaguc. : Brooklyn “6-9, St. Louis 5-5. Bostan 1,” Chicago 0. New York 8-4, Pittsburgh 4-2 Philadelphia 4-13, Cincinnati 0 American League. Cleveland 4-12, Philadelphia 3-4. Detroit 2-5, Washington 0-8. Boston 7-2, St. Louis 3-3. : New York-Chicago, postponed. Federal' League. Newark 5-4, Pittsburgh 1-4. St. Liouis 4-3, Brooklyn 2-1. Buffalo 3, Kansas City 2. Baltimore-Chicago, postponed. New England League. Lewiston 3-1, Worcester 1-6. Lawrence 7-2, Lynn 5-0. Fitchburg 1-0, Portland 0-3. Manchester 5-7, Lowell 2-9. New York State League. At Elmira—Wilkes-Barre 8, mira 2. At Albany—Albany-Utica, (rain), At Scranton—Binghampton Scranton 3. At Syracuse—-Syracuse 12, Troy 1. =13 El- 7, EDDY WINS AT GOLF. E. B. Eddy was the winner of the par handicap held on the links of the New Britain Golf club Saturday after- noon, finishing one up.' Frank G. Vibberts was second, even up, and R. 8. Coe was third with one down. Fourth place was disputed by three players. Godfrey Brinley of Newing- ton, M. H. Pease and E. P. Glasgs, finished with three down. In the tess for places Brinley won fourth and Peace won fifth position in theé list Refreshments were served on the club lawn by mittee of the women. | The hi wgq Miss . Marjorie ‘| Humason and Mrs. H. W. Hatch. earned. Hence the Saler selection. The Game and the Piper. (Re-entereqd as a warning to those who see only the gleam and glamour of it all.) This is your game, old pal—the Game you loved so well; That crowned you King of the Field through the sweep of a golden spell; That put the world at your feet in the border of dreams-come-true. But here at the end of the trail—well, what has it done for you? It gave you flame in a flash, Aid rank at a tender age; The thrill of the headlong clash, A Name on the Printed Page, Then jeers for the cheers of old It gave with a snarl of glee; 1t took your job in the fold— And you were but thirty-three. At the age when most men start On the wide trail’'s upward sweep, It broke your grip—and your heart— In the rut where Hasbeens creep. | Acclaimed in the Big Corral, Loud cheered in the Ruling Push— | Say, how does it feei, old pal, To be bawled out in the Bush? { In the Bush with a wornout wing— Loud cursed on a ang-town lot— The Game—yes, it made you king— Has it made you pay—or not This is your Game, old pal-—the Game that you loved so well; That crowned you King of the Field through the sweep of a golden spell; You've saved from the grip of Time, from the laurel that crowned your | brow, A dream and a wornout glove—well, what is the answer now The World’s Greatest Ball Club. No. 3—First Base. Vic Saier—Chicago Nationals. In announcing this selection we stand = braced for the Iloud roar emanating from various rownships— Brooklyn, with. Daubert; New York, with Merkle; Philadelphia, with Me- Innis; Boston, with Schmidt. Daubert is undoubtedly a grand ball player—a fine batsman and a corking first baseman. Jake can hit and field—two of the main require- ments of greatness. Fred Merkle, batling well over .300, is also playing brilliantly and deserves extended praise for his swift come-back after two seasons of poor batting. Merkie and Daubert are both stars—and so is Stuffy Mec- Innis, the Mackian athlete. But Sgier has been something more this geason. He has not only been play- Jng great ball around first base, while both Daubert and Merkle have leé him a few points at bat the Cub performer leads his league in runs scored, runs driven across, extra base wallops, total bases and 1s up at the front in stolen bases. / ‘A D player who excells in so —and who leads his entire many shifts of offensive play—who is o0 a hard, loyal worker —mhust be giveN the credit Last Chance, White Sox ahd Tigers have one ! forlorn chance left of smashing the Red Sox grip upon first place—and this can only come .in a victorious march through the East. Carrigan’'s club fousght its way to the top upon the Western highway, end returning home so well fixed in the percentage way is now the easy | flag choice. With Wood, Leonard, Shore, Ruth, Foster and Collins in‘ shape, there doesn’t seem to be a| Tiger or a White Sox chance. Asj baseball dope travels, which is often in a zigzag direction, the Red Sox| have only to make a normal showing hcme to close out the race. Home Runs and Matty, “Why is it,” queries an earnest non- combatant,” that so many home runs have been made off Mathewson this season ?” We know of but one reason—the veteran no longer carries his old time speed—his pristine smoke, as you might or might not say. Opposing batsmen, knowing this, are thus able to take a toe-hold for a full wallop. Matty’s only' chance is to outguess them. If he doesn't out- guess his opponent the latter is fixed for a full smash and a husky chance to whale the bally bail out of the lot. The Philly Oulook. Those who figure the Phillies a bad ball club, with no chance to maintain their clip; might absorb these few de- tails of dope: 1. In Killifer they have the second best catcher in the league. 2. In Alexander they have the game's greatest pitcher; in Mayer a young star—and in Al Demaree, a former star, who is romping back to his own, with more stuff than he has shown since 1913, when he won 16 out of 19 starts. 4. They have a fair infield—not a great one, but a steady one, bolstered up by the addition of Bancroft at short, who is outranking the work of and as much outfield strength as any rival. : 6. And in Pat Moran they have a leader who inspires friendship and re- spect, and who will he able to keep club gpirit at full fire on through to the finish. 1f the Phillies have a fair Western trip these next two weeks— well, Philadelphia may have one sec- tion of a world's series arter all. i o ANNEX BEAT EMERALDS. Hartford City-Leaguers No Match for Fast East Enders. The Annex played unbeatable ball at the Belden street grounds and as a result the Emeralds of Hartford were forced to take the short end of a 4 to 1 score. The Emeralds are making a bold bid for premier honors in the City league in Hartford, and if they represent the class of the league it would be soft work for the Annex to win the rag in that league. Lemmy Blanchard twirled in old- time form and the visitors were awed by his assortment of benders. No less than fifteen men fanned the ozome in a futile attempt to connect, which is pretty consistent pitching. The Annex started scoring in the second stanza when Cabellus, first up, smashed a clean double to center and 2 passed ball put him on third. The next two men fanned, but L. Blanch- ard poked out a single, scoring Cabel- lus. In the third inning the locals scored three more. Begley was hit by a pitched ball A. Blanchard reached first on a bad error by the first baseman, Begley going to htird. Schneider beat out an infield hit and Begley scored. : Cabellus then came across with his second hit, a neat single, scoring both Blanchard and Schneider. The Emeralds were tame until the seventh inning, when Blanchard eased up and got in a bad hole. Nestor got a free ticket to first, a single sent him to .second, and Linde, up next, it to L. Blanchard, who threw too late to third to catch Nestor and the bases were filled. Lutz then hit a slow one to third and Nestor beat the | throw home for the only run, Blanch- | ard tightened up and fanned the next | two men and the third grounded out. | The Annex will tackle the Pioneers next Sunday and the East End rooters are looking to L. Blanchard for a vie- tory. The score: Selander, rf. Begley, 2b. A. Blanchard, 3b. .. Schneider, cf. Holleran, c. Cabellus, 1b. . Grey, 1f. ... Hogan, ss. ‘ L. Blanchard, p. .. w|dveonvonwol alcoormomrnsan @ Emeralds. " ~| coococcoomae k-3 cowmommns Brody, rf. ... F. Smith, ss. . Nestor, 3b. ... L. Smith, p. ..... Linde, 1f. ..... Lutz, 2b. ... Watt, cf. .. Murphy, ef. Degon, c. .... Serophin, 1b. . co~oncomD CoOCOMMMELLT | = ab 4 4 3 4 4 4 0 3 3 3 32 ol cworrmorncsaP -l 32 24 Annex ........0 1300000 *— Emeralds .....0 00000100 Summary—Stolen bases, Annex two-base hit, Cabellus; bases on balls, off Blanchard 1, off Brody 2; hit by | pitched ball, by Brody 1; struck out, by Blanchard 15, by Brody 11; passed .balls, Brody 1; umpire, Graw; time of time, 1:30. @ - BELLIGERENTS FINED $100. Boston, July 26.—Captain John Evers of the Boston Braves and Um- pire Quigley were each fined $100 Sat- urday for their part in the dispute during the Chicago-Boston baseball game last Thursday when Quigley struck Evers, claiming that the Braves' captain had stepped on his foot. According to President John K. Tener of the National league, who announced the fines, Evers was penalized for not taking his base when the umpire called four balls, and Quigley for failure to handle the resulting situation in a proper man- ner. Heinie Zimmerman of the Chi- cago team was also fined $100 for “improper conduct” on the field dur- ing the same game. Zimmerman's ' Prel), | Rebillard, 2b. ... | H. Poullardpct. ... penalty resulted from some remarks which he addressed to Umpire Emslie. ' FRATERNAL LEAGUE RBPSULAY. Jr. O, U, A. M. Have Soft Time Beat~ ing St. Jean Baptiste Team Sunday. The Jr. O. U. A, M. team had an cagy time with the St. Jean de Bap- tiste.team in the Fraternal leaj : game yesterday. The Mechanios hiy at will and ran wild on the bases. Tho. score of 21 to 3 indicates the compar- ative ability of the teams. St. Jean de Baptiste sssumes the standing of * the Eagles, in the league race. The | score: 0. U, A, 9 b Scharff, c. Trennon, Nerlith, 2b. Lelson, &s. .. .. W. Wright, cf. Sebroal, 17 . Wensel, Chalmers, ccep comoommwe p. 21 22 st. Jean de Baptiste, ab. r. h. eloccsns il eSbeibonst © S Fanion, ss. Dowhan, .c. O'Dell, 1b, Burter, 3b. Poullard, If. rf. coo=omanLe . *Scharff out, hit by batted | Wright out, crossing plate. Me- | Jr. 0, U. A, M. . 003312193—2 St. Jean .. 000300000— & Two-base hits, Dowhan, Poullard} Prell, Scharff, Neruth, Wright, Se broal; three-base bits, Neruth; howm run, Neruth, Fanion; stolen bases, Neruth 3, Prell, Trennon 2, Chalmef¥ 1; bases on balls, Chalmers 3, Mack b; struck out, by Chalmers 22, by Mack, 10; passed balls, Dowhan; wild pitches, Mack ; left on bases, Jr. fl U. A. M, 10, 8t. Jean 6; first base o errors; O. U A M, 9; time, 2:30, umpire; Lynch PIRATES AGAIN BEATEN. The Blms of Meriden m ; perior to the Pirates at ‘s fiel yesterday and by hard hitting 1 speedy base running, humbled i champions, 15 to 9. The. wvistto made ten errors, but offset their ragi ed fielding by making sixteen hil The home team got but two hits. FRE Durham, N. C. Mickey Doolan. 6. 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