New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 7, 1916, Page 8

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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 1016. Pennsy Secures nghler Grip on % asketball Championship-- Rousch Stealing Some of Benny Kauff’s | hunder--Staniey Works Bowlers Oust Berlinites From Second Place--O’Conner for Park City Manager | USCH REFUSES | Frank Moran Now Buckles | ™= | e DORT PENNTAKES LEADIN may play baseball at T0JON GV Down so Hard Work for ) Co@ANPCNL - ot bt Bout With Jess Willard ' . oo H el Outiielder Now in Class | | iitions, *~*The- foncern imisie that -y ™ Philadelphia Lads Broak Tie by +With Benny Kauff | v i T BUNNE (o ceecnent it consien okt s W Grantland Rice Deleating the Cornell Five made plans to stage bascball games =‘wr‘\wflek| independent nines at the old + |Iederal leagie bailiwick. | The case has some peculiar angles to jt, as arry Herrmann and € known vesterday that Eddic < # GO . { Trreyfuss are interesteq financially in |Pail that are often overlooked. X S RS : g g % ? i 3 the lighting company Charley A day or two ago we were talking ¢ other outfield acquist 1 3 ST Iibbets has entered a protest with the | ity By vt te lamentod badoril Xy X il e | National Commission against allowing > iy, | the use of Washington park for hase. | (N¢ Dembsey Hotel, at Macon, Geor- | vous system close to the surface. | zuarding by the Pennsylvanians and Vall at any time, day or night, and it ;8'a, When Gerinany Schacfer passed T 1';1{:- - . 10 foul goal shooting by Capt i PG i il nlul Be D £0)Ga vy folla chiastons Fofi by it o e e S o ; "I‘:(“’ ko Lo }“'“ "‘;':‘)"‘]' Brown of Cornell caused Cornell’s y on 1dia arn it he umpires i e e % - looks as well as he ever looked | 4 ¢ fly on his Indiana farm await- : . LEe pires in the case, ways, but no one could have figured | i 'ni: tite. He looke as young as he | a°feat he Sl 5t a Hatter offer trom : s 3 . : S e sy 3 b I8 as 1 £ | At the end of the first half the el o e o » " o e it anything more than a casual mect- |looked ten years ago. He still has Olsch was recently purchased by e S J - ¥ 3 T 3 One of the smallest squads taken tead from THarry Sinclair fc . i ? 3 ; s & : Epstea rom Harry Sinclair for . § s v South by auny club in the modern jorted to he $12.000 Brook- g £ i i i There ¢ rtain secti rama a along e ssary bulk to | i are certain sections of drama ) them along—the necessary hulk | harakic by Match ‘ornel) or segments of human life in base- | bear the heavy strain, - % 2 But through these fourteen vears as defcated herc last l]lq!)l at t Evers has weighed 135 pounds or | ketball by Pennsylvania with a score . : less and at all times has been a ner- | of 10 to 9. The victory puts Penn Johnny Kvers in the lobby of [vcus, high strung type, with his ner- | 1, the lead for the title. Close gw York, March 7—Benny Kauft ot the only Giant holdout. 1t 1 had not vet signed a con offered him by Harry Hemjp 5 ! i, score stood 6 to 2 in Penn's favor, fug of two well known stars. After | he same keen enthusiasm. “l_‘"‘“ Near the close of the game. when Germany had passed along Fvers sat | *L‘{‘:;l?“‘u H\‘v r:::-v «’r‘\m ‘vl:n rv]y:f:::nd there were only two minutes to play. fon i ina i akIng| 0 et RS I om N S ata Satterby fouled and MecNichol drop- it i e e e L : .‘ S Faseball era will work under Charley | - l_v:m:;';"“ Clp Georgia plantation ten days Dbefore | neq the foul goal which gave (he £ hot on the trail of the younsg T 3 e Herzog at Shreveport. None of the i | training time was ordered. visitors a victory. Pennsylvania glder, but New York got the call . . - T Teds nced fear being released on ac- Fourteen Years Ago. | Strong for Braves. | passing was short and quick Cor- veason of heing Sinclairs ha ey it Sl o i count of the player limit rule, for “What's on your mind, Johnny?" And. barring an unusual lot of bad | nell had ¢ more chances for omer. I'red Anderson, Bill Rar- | . : e S e § Tierzog can hold on to every man on | We asked. “I was thinking,” he an- iyycl, Evers is certain of being in his | making baske than Pennsylvania, i Kauff had been bought pre S P ; ; G [the squad until the twenty-one-man |“Wered, “of a certain morning four- | ixth world series. | but the Ithaca lads were especially iy e . . i 1ule goes into effect on May 15. This |1¢6n Years ago. 1.was then & TaW | T don't believe any one.” he says, | weak in field goals. Austin played n all around performer Rousch | & ey S} : i condition is said to be unprecedented. |¥id Of twenty. T weighed 128 pounds, - inows what a strong club we have | 2 0od game for Cornell, while pores Tavorably with Kauff. With e S : 3 . L Herzog this year decided: not to |and had only been off the lots tWO ynig vear. I am absolutely confident | Nichol and Martin starred for Penn- Newark I'eds last season Rousch : o # £ |[take a lot of rookies South and then, | N:0Dths. That morning I came out t0 ' (hat we are 25 per cent stronger than | sylvania ||‘-m‘l‘ re ”j”' Hm!\ .'- ;wl 'l"cmn‘v“l“; > i > S after feeding them for a while, let |the ball park, and the first man 1 we were in 1914, when we had a | Cornell Pennsylvania ielder and a reliable hitter. Ol¢ B : [ them loose. There is praotically only | S8W Was a heavy set fellow. in front torrinle start and still won out.’ | Tilams Phillips, who was deposed as i : .- ono fob open—in the outfield. Ts. |Of the clubhouse. His first words (0 | The pitching staff alone should | Punden B e Wllismaen ager of the Peps last season, S : ; mond and Morgan will not report at {M¢ Were these: ‘Well, young felloW. (ome near carrving us throush. In grown AT S Martin ¢ i a big boast last winter. The % £ E { Shreveport for some time, as both |1 understand you've come to take ;5gition to Rudolph, Tyler. Hughes e ids had just taken Kauff aw: " are ill. my Jjob.' T was scared to death. T ;4 Ragan, who did most of the work ‘} s e - Jeftord the transferred Indianapol felt like turning there and going 5 he werll Sutterb o effor : ¢ v g g 3 BN last year, Stallings has a star in b. but Phillips emitted no wail. ; 3 ] back. I tried to explain that I wasn't xenf—p grand pitcher, if T ever saw | speiton " Tonas fll took a strong Whiff at 1 § Two members of the Superbas are |after his job, not even knowing Who ne: another star in Barnes, and then | FER T fi-colhy and remarked, “Kauff i 4 : 4 : siated for berths with Montreal. |it was. But he only smiled, wished y. has Frank Allen and Knetzer, both | Austin MeNichol 6, but T have Rousch, and I thin : They are Nixon, the outfielder, and {me luck and went on inside. HiS ccparienced pitchers, & iy {aci a better ball player in many 1 s | Mack Wheat, the catcher and brother |name was Schaefer, the same Herman | 2 : & ? e : is Keep your eye on that I ¥ ; {f Zack the hitter. Dan Howley, |Schaefer that just passed. He was | e snols Dol e (BN isldRsoale = Butierky iz MEBLLOR, I e one of, the real stars of ti {manager of the Royals, has entered |then playing for the Cubs, and 1| “Tn the outfield we are stronger | Austin, ~Williamson, Martin. Foul e within a season or two. LU . a bid for the two players and he is |had his job in less than a week, al- | than we have ever been, with Magee, goals— §r0\vn, McNichol, 6. Suh;u— ith Kuuff holding out and Rol.- ; i . Pretty sure to get them, as the Su. |though after that he was a star, | Connolly, Compton, Snodgrass and [tutes—Connelly for Willlamson, Ref- y on the hospital list, McGra % : £ Berbaslatoimot it nesalorlci A i e Siilll anead? | others. Even if every recruit we |eree—Tom Thorpe, Columbia. Um- 2 o 2 either. with his best vears still ahcad. | B ver casily make use | have fails to make zood the club will [ pire—Ed Thorpe, La Salle. Time of fh. EA4 was scheduled to leave | ’ : DS g | Le a strong one. If one of two of |game—20 minutes halves. Touis with Art TFletcher's I,nn\v} There is one manager who is sore This is merely one of bhcv many ' the youngsters came through I can't Saturday, but he did not show that he waived claim on Joe Wood, |episodes of a great game. To the fgyre how we can lose. I know this and he is Lee Fohl of Cleveland. It |ovtsider this meeting was only a|gcounds like the old dope, but 1 am | Q’CONNOR MENTIONED | & . | i : # | |wasn't Fohl's fault that he gave the |chance passing. There was no Part' ..ying this to you exactly as it looks | | | ted Sox a walver. When Joe Lannin |of drama to it. But fourteen Years|¢. me knowing all the conditions AS PARK CITY MGR sent out the call for waivers the |back of this meeting there was plenty | giallings is out to make up for last | > ¥ Cleveland outfit was still in the hands |[of drama for hoth—vita] incidents in season, and he will find the ball club e of the bankers' committes, and Fohl |tie careers of two men who have ' jn’ fim. d WAS THREE TIMES IAND OUT FOR BERLIN | { ‘ s ey hands onjeshels 200 i cor) otitstandineliteatures BRCIIRERe | Other Clubs, Famous Pirate Backstop Now in Line s | : o clain i am o : d o A . | B e i et . - i('lr\\‘nlzand «rm.:mf\—w “:‘;:hpwrn;» T:fi 5 e ratwents (o =aconaihase when | L fl’f”"‘" Nepy@¥ oLk famd Brook] i, ‘ for Job as Leader of ping Victory Gives Buttmakers | f T G > 45 ;. R Mother Hubbard's ecuphoard and | Schaefer passed and no statistics are | ;‘(“l"f'"”"fi H“‘QNL \ln give us the hm:y y s | Fohl could not have bought three Ty |necessary to show what he has done. | #50 :‘_‘_ 5 M‘"["‘”;"‘ e "‘)""T 21?:.%1 | Bridgeport Team. sl being in proper shape today to tackle | Cebbs if they had. been offered at a |Svhacfer afterward landed with De- (190 o WS DERRE: ML that Roles Ub | o0 e 2 pown 1n s New Record Tor High Single | New York, March 7.—Frank Moran | Willard in a ten round bout. While | thousand apiece. Now things re | troit and ‘)m-:amo a Iln_r: factor in a | e o o G "mdmm as I | Bridgeport they say Paddy O'Connor ; will finish his training for his battle | at Saratoga Springs the Pittsburgh ! different with the Cleveland club, and | :v\nmflh_“mmn_‘s machine. . L cver saw on a ball club, Robbie has | of this city stands second in the runs e anxiously waited for contest | (i}, Champion Jess Willard at Mad- | aspirant gave himself over to getting the new owners ha\'t-,'mstrur‘tod Fohl n<f‘ :ltf mmm‘n‘g 1f'r:1rlve_n‘ d‘lldl‘? e e e e R e B s s T ot T Ween the Stanley Works and the | json Square Garden, March 25, an abundant supply of oxygen in his |to go out and get Wood. TFohl has |2go, Sc g v lals o] '):ll |5 Saaition Tt mon ke Promos B Asencrt clubiot the lektern lankim fin Construction bowling teams | Dal Hawkins' roadhouse. The husky | lungs. Long walks, plenty of ice |made several offers f"r."”ei\\.h"tl x1h‘"“ f.i‘!’;: f’uio\"crin“ \‘(:.ri ,u]nS J:J“x'im ‘r;,\ nd others, I look for Cheney and |This is interesting to fans and te | Pittsburgher spent a week at Saratoga | skatins and fishing make up his daily |that somebody wants him Wood B‘d\? 3 gi“m" L Ch;‘“éc ¥ Bu’"‘ ‘since that | Marquard to win him many a game. | Paddy especially, for he did not know 3 Dreneringlfor ot higt millf| rormioe rainine | Now hel yillistart) sedinihecomns S iyainablel et ARSI S 28 G thors ther have . Dbeen | Cheney is still a great pifcher. If | he stood in the Bridgeport running e ss s cauitithe Slopad x Nidently the ouidoor exercise has | to put the finishing touches to his |Carrigan declines to talk business and j a9y Detween them they have ~Been {prookiyn plays the ball that club |at all, not to metion second place entatives are teday boasting of a|had good influence over Moran. The | work. Long jogs on the roads of {has ordered W 00d to report at Hot |stars in eig Hefwinninggeampaisnailia st S| i dl an)shl secondl| NeaiiRallihas (HEtDol6 | DUt RD i riil: : rhi j gifferent leagues. i B sweep over their rivals for sec- | ¢ inds of Saratoga have tanmed | Westchester and two round bouts with |Springs. While on the subject of e It erare Lands and pass | 10 Boston. But I don’t believe either |1y not very much more. Owner John Jeposition: in the championship race. [ his skin so that he resembles a New | Willie Lewis and Dan Daly, as spar :‘!mv;hx'j\(l W e o ers | on and it means—nothing, _Nothing | EXooklyn or New York can beat us |H. Freeman of the Bridgeport club games were thrillers-taroughout, | gng e i i fas ring pa ors Il make his aily terest to know g A S < i oo | cut.” has been talking of hiring Ball for .| Englana fisherman. His step is fast | ring partners. wi : - : o e el S | 5 3 & Photo shows Moran | nimber no Jess than thirteen. toans RRCHSC A Cten, 5 the past few weeks but has hesitated Evers looks for one of the great |fo much that fans down that way boys from the suburban town | anq springy. His eyes are clear and | routine of f\‘wr» Z { ¥ho still remember. bright, in fact, hc impresses one as | on home bike t ; , ¢ Evers & ¥ | Authorily to transfer the Toledo Evers and 1916, races of baseball in his league. He | think Ball is losing out and not ting every inch of the way, but winners were not to be denied of i Mv \nc:nwr(;)rprn:';r?::;;r;‘a'1 ”1\» ?Crm{ Evers v is starting his fifteenth | figures the Phillies and the Cubs un- | gaining by the delayved plays. Hugh o Rog voted - seagon in or League ball. This | certainties—the Phillies because it is | Bradley was considered well up in the opportunity of improving their haing. 'ER CITY | 080 1Y BUBSES. :: e ese tation At ong 1 e £y the oc leago last | gy scem to be no ordinary achieve- |still a question as to whether Alexan- | race until O’Connor was suggested, forse of the locals gave one of the = = s = i 2 tticst exhibitions of bowling wit- | Another Lemon 1 Biched for Walts's | Tentative Plans Arranged for Graml nhisht. Brosialas ls sald virtally to |ment. It may not until you consider |ger's arm is right, or whether Killifer | but since then Bradley's stock has sed inithe league so far this se Cha ey A T Rapids Grand Cirenit Meet. O e Toledo eitiyone to byt u |ene detail. Wagner, Lajoie, Anson |will be able to work. But he believes | slumped. It fs said that Ireeman Starting out with a score of 10 DamponS PR S plaation ™S S oo g company of Toledo citizens to put up | ;ng a few others who have lasted | Herzog will have a fast, hustling club | prefers either Ball or O'Connor, with ame, he went back in the Meriden, March 7-—Another f Grand Rapids, = Mich, March 7_-'~'h° pHONEYS | vear upon year were all big powerful | at Cincinnati—one that will be no |a strong leading for the latter. and hit the pins for a | marl i picked out for “Sem | Horses going to the post at the grand ! men with a world of stamina. to carry | casy target for any of them, | The signing of Paddy as manager i | Which s & new record. | wiits Gunning's “cheese cham- | circuit meeting in this city, “e“‘ Among the hurling recruits to be | ! by the Bridgeport club woilld' béthy | | i | ond Place in League—Morse i place last evening at the Aetna the night was 327-—som« | cummer will step for purses totaling |given the careful o. o. by Hughey wise move. Paddy is a good back- Lantone ‘v next in lin | Jennings at Waxahatchie, which is in ;| BRIDGEPORT'S FIJ ROUNDS. TIGER TRACK DATES. | stop and has picked up considerahle total of 23 F: ¢ ter answering to tne i experience with the Pittsburg and St " = 2 | Louis Nationals, not to mention the Grandstand Burns, Ficld Ts Rocky, ' Princeton Will Engage Yale and VIr- | pittsburg Federal league club. He Yet Game Continues, i ginia in Dual Meets. is a wise boy on all baseball points i . = A and temperamentally seems built for “I've played on somc awful ball Princeton, N. J., March 7—The ' managing a ball club. He is peppery, said Manager ~Princeton track team will open its js a worker and loves hustle on the pion” last evening in Meriden, wihes $55,600, according lo the tentative |J¢ 5 ha ; ey el loreErambart: needsby Homer TR KIine) [Texas, s KToms Basan S fyouthiving —_— S in t Esexesiibutaldnotil Vesubiofl Farniture City | pitched for Oklahoma City last sea- | 1 0 ‘defeat’ 23 t | now secr ary of the a L g L down to idefeat’ in the fifth | iing elub have to fix details ot |son. Bagan Darticipated in eighteen stz e e B ol e formulat- | confests and is credited with thirteen | evening lieforo the Lenox A - ot | cd by Mr. Kline materialize, the $10.- |Victories and no defoats. He allowed After looking at the exhibition Merl- | 0 Bo ot o . whicl, 'featured |32 passes and no wild pitches. As a | 3 den fans held their fingers to their | s st 0 AT i o, | CEETRGE) [ o (i i the meeting last year will 5 i he | no: imd had a disgusted look onthe mee Lis average being one of Rip Hager- | Joe Tinker, of the Cubs, “but those outdoor season on April 15, when diamond Besides, he is a plawer | their face, for the work of Keyes was | ¢ A {1z rti 064 & : - 5 .1 | that could spur others on and get a ol o ‘il early tlosing s to- |man proportions—.064. - 3 t beat anything. the annual Caledonian games wiil = Purses for early closing events | we struck at Bridgepor ything 1o 160 ot ok Shsine them 18 crowds | “rotten” while that of the ‘“near| Purses for carly closing ove ) = a s be held here, according to the sched econd | champion” was not much better. S e e o T M Britz Maisel and Eddle Colline haye | Lo Sycs SeenICiseiie oa el sung ier 25 ing to the sched- pag always been very popular with ome time,| A crowd of over a thousand per- ‘I[‘I” ‘f”‘"]“]‘ """‘ f:‘. B hetent S naeRi Dl Balir, day, vears ago, when I was on ule announced yesterday by Manazer |cvery team he ever played with and il % . r their 4. | Kline’s plans call for i stock in Jack s i ¥, 3 ' ¢ ot < et h rks within | sons were well paid fi‘)\ :Iw'\ ir_atten L o T or 5908 trot, $5,000 purse, |more International league club. Both Chance’s team, and wo staged an ex- Donelson M. Lake. v fans h.«‘h,. alw : Fn“:“; a(:m1|re‘d on Werks jance by Hho b ulton. Ahe miil | renewal of Furniture Manufacturers' |Maisel and Collins have been placed nibition game with the Bridgeport| Two dual meets will be held, Yale | {0F theavrioue mic L that Becdsieete | Condon and Young Ifulton. ees: for $3,000 «: |on the Board of Governors. ! ; ¢ ; : iRl | into 4 > team won two games | went the limit. and produced some ‘)”"‘ iB e Ry ’('(,r $2 on:) T\::m' BE e a8 iclub. The battle was staged on an at .New Ha.\en on May 6 drjd Vit- | " When Paddy is mixed up in a ball 2:10 or 2:12 pa D We didn’t have our full team | ginia at Princeton on May 13. The ' game, there is little else on his mind, ers, No. 1 team > |of the finest milling that has ever A t slower than 2:05 for $2.- . € . 2 ¢ 000 ]\\‘l‘lir' two-year-old trot chscp» Jack Dunn has signed the veteran there, Heine Steinfeldt being excused annual Princeton interscholastic He is out to win and to win solely by | been witnessed in the Silver City. | Pace. Berlin Construction, No. 1, Condon had a t shade accord- Johnny Bates for the Baltimore club. 1 Jaying baseball Bridgeport 1is € ces s st p 3 S > Ba i . meet will be held on the latter date, | Plaving i EtalcesfieyenvyANEIoxagS nusUibe inamed Dla%acol of tholUniversityillot isouth Tior oS [casonson other, WL hae 9 thinking him over seriously and fn Bickey ..... g g 29) |ing to the newspaper men at the jStakes o e 1 d Queency ... b e 9 3 de. Young Mack shaded Joe |for this event by Carolina, another outfielder, has also , /&y third and: Zimmerman went ""?ohnfi t‘::)\?e‘::;la “l.‘finnlca)?e::pfi:u 9 view' of the fact that Owner Free< Hick E rth in the preliminary bout. | S T e been signed. | shortstop. The first ball knocked to | o ha n:an has a strong likingl for Paddy it 1 would bhe no surprise if the Bridge- % = . C Jouls . 2 { 20. The team will participate as e vot iy 1 ave Fitzgerald handled the Touts fhalinnalal want stralehtiat Zim I Fre (12 - OREH SR SB R T LRI Bt usual capable manner. ANNOUNCE TENNIS DATES, A rort people managed to work some s o Brovidencall haslsizncd cher | hent low and just as he reached for | games and the intercollegiate cham- {E0 FEOPT0 BH0N B8 pla g "oy thets g Eastern Doubles Will Be Started at |Peters and Outfielder Kane, who it the marble bounced over his head, | pionships. | manager. il e J onvood on | duly 24 piayed with Brockton in the Colonfal just missing his nose. There were —— 2 7 ol : ” : e . . S S 2 league last season. Both were farmed g¢iones and sticks everywhere, and a plekman 02 80 8 ) [Releats BB oggenburg Close Match | new York, March 7.—The dates |out by the Brookfeds. Peters is a wam took an awful chance, AMERICAN BOWLING CONGRESS, fror 2210 in Billiard Tourney. for the sectional championship tennis |former member of the Minneapolis very other time the ball went at | Toledo, O., March 7.-—Bowlers con- ar New York, March 7.—In the closest | qoubles, the sectional portion of the |American Association and Chicago zim he covered his face with one | tinued their good work in the minor antone e 8 D s - American league clubs. Kane ma\m P reached for tF i1l with tini 0 game thus far of the amateur cham- iona cha ionships, were an- 3 iy hand and reache or the pill with perti o s rational champ 8 AN- | under the name of Kiley las {he other. We didn’t have many ship billiard tournament at New | pounced vesterday by George T. st tnatt day Ibut the scorekeeper | 5T€SS tournament here yesterday. Francis §. Appleby last night | Adee, ;»ronNHTrvf the United States | was generous with the errors.” Sec- | The best attack on W. Heenan's 630 . ,'f,'.,\) red : n“schnlmr:,_ "‘l'; o ‘-mr'{\‘;’n"fll' 1«“‘]_’;] (;’r:‘\‘;’l';;p;»;:j“”- t;“;n-de_ Adolpho Luque, Who has been ' retary Charley Williams of the Cubs, | score came from P. W. Hawkins of b e e a sl s Losrcod top Bontot acdediichthelosterforlthefTioutayiniesivas flisten ingimhen Wos was Statkingliifa ceson Svlch Sl hofraniintoRthird ! 1 the forty-third | : . ston, | b, Luque was secured from the I remember that game,” he said. | place in the singles with 614. Bre- i i | cvents of the American howling con- '!:;xpp“: n::”L:‘\‘;»xflxsxzp ! h}ic‘xr:;:'lf‘ ‘1\:‘.1‘\’:’;.:“Lm\‘?;l‘x‘l‘:fld};m ‘11‘1’111\» )vli:{nnin’l:;\({ | Brooklyn Federals, to which he ‘The grandstand caught fire just be- | derick and Mollonkopf still top the | ohe stors. f Apslely, O T, | ey matehes (o) meinaPary | jumped from the Torgnto club of the fore the game started. — The island | doubles with 1152, the 1120 of Glebel o B A ! 10-48 high 1 challengers 'of W, M. Johnston and international leaguec. Besides being Was sO H“a_‘l that many of the fans . and Roggenburg, two Cleveland men, : s s . 8 a pitcher of more than ordinary Wwaded out in the water to avoid the | proving the best on the single shift of | ,\‘”\“Im(“'\.“H”I,h‘x\l:“(}h(‘h\,i’:””",;lw"w::e | SBility Ludue Is & gosd utilty mam, But we neceded the money, so | two teams yesterday. e & Witnimorontoiasticeason f the! €uban Setased JthoEam e fe UYWAY AITL o Sans = August 5. The preliminary “\,i,,‘ t‘,;c won fifteen games and lost nine. He |lined up in front of the charred re- ’ s ow Is the Time to Start bbb R SR credited with 133 strikeouts, and :mains of the stands and thought it WESTON DEFEATS MATURO. e g e 04 70 S'pring League 5 & 2 D ad d with 100 bases on balls. |[Was great sport. Chicago, March 6—Charles Weston npson 7 90 84 | oSl v AETNA BOWLING Weare ... . 1103 8 ALLEYS e Andersor s ’?1 Alleys Reserved for Mixed 7 46 Parties. urgen fiddleton ‘ohnson Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, o 5 i sugust 16, 17 and 18, Luque batted .219, — of Chicago defeated James Maturo of The Pacific Coast a m].ri;«:mu will l WITTPENN RUTGER'S CAPTAIN. | Denver in the ional pocket bil name its own date, probably about | advancer s Sbury far i : The advance squad of Pittsburg | o - p o o 7 gopn | Hard meet yesterday, 100 to 91, after | July 1. The other sectional dates will | pirates 1 it - | y : s left here last night for the o be named next weck. String training camp at Dawson |N (“Mike”) Wittpenn has been | °7° of Lhe harden: forkh Springs, Ky. The party was com- | elected captain of the Rutgers basket- games of the tournament. Up to the twenty- BESTIN rosed of twelve players and News- | nail team for next vear. He is the | (Nrd inning Maturo led, but he then made three successive scratches, the AMERICA | [ | (! | | | SAGUE GAD Z’Tr’()Nl(-llT. 1 et 4 5 2z can SMOKE |If You Want Good Bottled |paper mon and was in charge of |l (P oiceted, in his second vear The New Britain team of the Inter- . : 3 Catcher George Gibson. A second | * | last one giving Weston a set-u 3 | las P < a p, on Beer, Wine or Liquors, detachment of Pirates will leave here | His work was the outstanding RO || i R e e City league will meet the Southington Tl five this evening at the Aetna alleys. Rogers, Brennecke, Lanton, Prior and Anderson will roll with the home re resentatives. l A MILD, PLEASANT 5c¢ CIG/ \l‘ Order Same from next Saturday in charge of Honus |of the team’s play this year. Twenty | scored, the high run of the gae. i PHILIP BARDECK, Wagner. After a short stay at Daw- |of the Rutgers squad of twenty-five ' a 7 in the sixteenth inning i SoLp By 185 Arch St. ’Phone 482-2 |cnirtca to Hot Springs, Ark. The Ashley & Babcock Co. son Springs thetraining camp will be |rien will be lost by graduation this | toolk Weston twenty-five innings [year run out.

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