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NEW, BRITAIN DaILY HERALD, MONDAY, AUGUST 21, 1916. 4 in 5 innings, off Johnson Neurath b 3 0 in 1; stolen bases, Ccburn, Conway 5 2, McMurray, C ghessy, O'Deell; 4 L double play, Conway to Kliason; bases balls, Neurath 3; st on off uck out, Dodgers Win Over Cubs By Lone G e ooy v, 110, Tall yy Grantland Rice Allegations Regarding Sickness, Heat ! s By Lines to Edward S. Plank. four first class pitchers; a strong in- z By o N B _Chicago, Ans. 21.—. Coombe, | Lo one told you Walsh was |field and a fine outfieli—tho punch| and Poor Drinking Water at No- |§ § pitching the finest article of hall scen oaens and the speed. This, plus Ficlder B e e ; hereabouts for mw days, proved n Jones. EalcsipeRiec He ke L Sy Wneolvable oniems for the Cubs v That Miner Brown had drifted by? terday and the Robins won a tight | That even Matty’s day was due S Conversation—Boys Get Fussed. o - ferday and the Robins woR & LE3Y) wiith shadows spun athwart the sky? Erin Responds. S ) i 11 A Mto2P M contest by the score o 0 0. Si “The Irish no longer rule the old | (Special Correspondence By J. F. . . . teen thousand perspiring fans sat . s s Py salpita- | as no one whispered in your ear game.”—Exchange. Ca ers.) :_nuu,-_h : wvv_v' u‘".;l :.“,t, ,fi,,”],(, ;mp That you have long since passed the | As Old Pat Erin scanned this line Nogales, Arl Aug 14—We had i FOR MFN AND WOME N ion of the and con 3 prime He looked a trifle dazed; a parade inspection today of the whole | § A o here bo ; ; Ainstinop Slne n-m\,:?;:)d P | That yields to one and all the cheer, [ He pondered on the dope a bit Sy e S e 3 . g Stopped by the ancient master, Time? | With eyveballs slightly glazed; o dldid noiime e ihe expedtational or f the New Yorkers. re pos ARditheniholetral e Rt aviment and l=ot \ i 20 S 3 . hen he straightway went and got | tne inspecting off Is while in their | C tively nothing doing, however. Gas ERae ) g s L oL o O N everss (| O when Time called you from the | The dope book from the shelf, L e e e hing but Tob: And as he turned from page to page | through any complicated mancuve mass formation, everything but i = b irough any : And beckoned to vou in the game, He murmured to himself: without a hitch. R AR bombs ont was tried. There | wware : e i | youRtoojbusy ionging) fob The big hike that is to come is the ! was no bombardment to speak oOf.lmg, get the signal when it came? “Pat Moran and Carrigan S s A - g { Max Flack, in the seventh inning, fur- e v Gt ek most interesting item about the camp | g St ‘the so far & ol Metthy end Mlacks these days. From morn till eve the | 1 nished the only bombardment so g o aveiyoule Dotiove : : 1 Flow many youngsters have you seen | Donovan and Callahan boys discuss the toplc at any avail- as the Cubs were concerned. ! Rise up and shine, and fade away? Leading the attack; in | 8 ) ] lack : 2 s b 5 G at when not occupied in and then curved a low one on the out- | Jyom lofty helghts that knew their | Crown the Irish brow, field dut side. Flack met is squarely and it sway Tt %bo 4 up oo mmopine ol Tue boys at [h()v('n(np’z\(re n\n(‘vl’) i,"_‘ sped fairly inside the first-base line, ThoolSmedearind G how censed over interviews given a Water- went for a single. That was all, but | Altrock and Chesbro—Wailsh and bury paper by two discharged militia- as a result the Cubs learned by other iy “The White Sox have the best team | Men, Privates Fred Mecsata and T. J. than hearsay evidence that such a|Waddell and Wood—where are they [on paper.” Quite so. But, unfor- |Fakourey of Co. M, Second "“‘\“{“." thing as firs e existed. now? tunately, ) they) quitsnlaying fon*paper) (|outl Inantybatl ot AW onlzca Asr Wild Pitch of Value to Robins. |And yet today the laurel crown on around the 12th of April. And | Torrington. The statements glven the Still presses on your clammy brow? so many things can happen off paper | Paper by thesc men are branded as between April and October. absolutely false and are stories made Drift on, Old Top, and hold the track S up by two disgruntled militiamen. That echoes with resounding cheers; Maxims of the Ninetcenth Hole. The interviews njllrmml by (hlv '\:] = With Fate and. Time both M son. there 1 o Gouie st in | terbury paper have been'read by the back - oo t'ha‘t s m”‘ o 11; different companies here and feeling T hope you last for ninety years! Yo Driet gasies 2 30lf | runs high. Woe be it to these €wo s20 Lk men who maligned Nogales if they One is learning how to play safely | were here at present. Tar and f beyond all traps. The other is learn- | org would be letting them off mildly. ‘}“rft “q"‘t" o (’]’1“» ‘“‘f"ly out when the | = 15 one statement given to the Wa- irst art goeth astray. Opposed to Mr. Coombs was Claude Hendrix, the slippery-elm artist who admits Kansas as his home. Claude was also there with a high-grade vari- ety of twirling, but lost his game in the third with a wild pitch. It was his only break, but damage had been | done. Zack Wheat had smashed out a long fly, which Zeider misjudged, We will probably know quite a bit Whe: RdiT Birdl Dot he more about the status of the Amer- and Vet fon Ded MORtNirciDeIone B0 iicant league trace by the k time i Co1: sphere was relayed. This incldent ra- | o0 S5 is Fo B S cuate Bos. terbury paper, Private Fakoure ther upset Hendrix for a moment. He | 4o ““mpic sorfes should be what is 3 e . that *“wo had drill nearly every put too much steam on his next curve | yoofnically known as the tip-off. 'I_‘O!jms and golf (“mmmnnsln}w have | ¢.0m 7 o'clock in the morning and iott couldn’t get his hands on never known ftournaments any Inorelllyyorclosk and from 1 olclock i St. Louis, Aug. 21.—Formal com- Bridgeport, Aug. 21.—New Haven| New Haven, Aug. 21.—The Co it properly, with the result that Wheat TR open than the two to come in Au-| ;= , ;0™ 9" 9 tho time the ter o = z e A came home while Elliott was chasing | Here is another sprightly conun- |gust and September. There was a | 207 S04 T8 A8 AHIZTC C07 | plaint to President Tener of the Na- {end Bridgeport fought fifteen long |lonials were defeated by the Reming: the wild piteh drum to grapple with—If the Braves | day when you could pick one or two | \ortire Wi Hol BeOT OF CHE While it was a hard game to lose, | have a club batting average of .228 in men from the field and forget the | NS We were not guiias wq MU e = the National league, what will it be | others. Now In both games there are | 88108 S8 . o . : : ; e |95 Rl SE BT OUSSRRTORN R 7 NtE B for a drink of water, but the water | magnate, regarding the alleged mis- | Futting a halt on the activities with |afternoon, 2 to 0 if tossed in against Ruth, Shore, |four or five who may drop even the i e : Mays and Leonard? champions at a moment’s notice. made everyone . here as conduct of four Boston players yes- | the score knotted at threes. The con- It is often the Thero has been a great extension of | Man in the camp but w | terd test was one of the most sensational: 'S . A S some ti ause of the water.” Mr. Britt Eesthathiner . Brooklyn’s Test. skill, and this extension is sure to | SOMe time because o - Britton charges that these four Sy 5 B 1 The above statement is remarkable [ members of the Braves used rot pitchers' battles of the year, Harry'|mined to put up the game of its 1i¢d but was nipped trying to steal sec-| As for Brooklyn’s pennant outlook, | 8T0W S0 that some flve or six years | . =00 7 e St over || ol oan s Weaver and “Shanty” se gol i ond. Rolla Zeider also reached first | here it is in bulk for tho: who do |from now the battle for a golf or for lv(s absolute lack of truth in every jand coarse language to him yesterday d h uxg House going tho)to gain a verdict it falls down hard. base when Mowrey threw badly to |not esteem unwieldy detadl tennis champlonship will be among at | Particular. In tho first place, there | because he wouldn't open a certain | entire route for their respectivo clubs. | est. Yesterday was evidently one of McCarty, and in the seventh Flack| Eleven games in a row from Sept. |1east a dozen entries in each sport— 1th beenivery ltle s e 0F1 any | gate fo the park just to let them in. | With a break of luck Weaver should |those occasions with the Colonials 3 <ind among the troops located here. | He declares their language is de- ve emerged a winner but costly | L M the time they stepped on the i e 11 to sept 12, away from . |and a nip and tuck battle at that. D . 1 | reac hed first on a single, the only I y n home, 5 In fact, it said by regular army |serving of a reprimand and of a fine | infield errors denied him a victory | field to go through a very ragged field: , Weaver lost an ecleven inning game | '8 Practice until Pete Wilson tossed BRITTON ACCUS BRAVE A FPAST BATTLE, i COLONIALS BEATEN. Owner of Cardinals Says Four Bos- | Hustlers and Murlins in Long Battle, { Pete Wilson Applies Paint Brush td ton Players Insulted Him. Darkness Ending It With a»Tle. Elm City Nine. tional league is on its way from innings for a box score at Newfleld |ton Arms company nine of Bridgepor Schuyler Britton, the local baseball | park yesterday afternoon, darkness the fans were unsparing in their ap- | plause for the masterly performance of Coombs. Twenty-six Cubs faced him. Zimmerman was awarded a base on balls in the second inning, case that when team wants most to win and is deter: icago hit of the game. A moment [against Philadelphia, New York and Iy @ =l fou wlchs 8 1 ater he was retired while attempt- | Eoston. This fortnight tells the | We understand that Fred Welsh 15| officors who are acquainted with other ) o pension g;:l 'no,‘ts‘:'e‘c‘ 22;‘;2‘; xfifi"hfirfi?f; L‘t';:cs = Does this mean that White will have [ ¢Amp of any along the border. The | SOUTHERN PLAYERS FOR NAPS, i s no chance at all to catch Freddie, | records of the medical service Will | Now Orleans, Aug. 21— Prosident combat. “I only know of one pitcher,” says | even in twenty rounds? prove heyond any doubt that this is | pre; e e . r. h. e.[Andy Coakley, “who had so much M authentic. 25 Brooklyn . +..001000000—1 10 1 |stuff he could*buzz it waist high over Daubert’s loss is a hard blow to In the second place, the water at Chicago . ---000000000—0 1 0 [the middle of the plate—and then | Brooklyn, or may be, but suppose | Nogales cannot he “beat” anywhere Batteries: r‘o_ombs and Meyers; | turn the batsman upside down. His some of these teams had suffered |in the west, or in Connecticut. It is Hendrix and Elliott. name was Rube Waddell.” what the Yanks have known since | aqua pura in the full sense of the twelve rounder in New London last |\00Ked very, very bad, in fact put up Thursday. One day the boys don’t hit their poorest exhibition of the pasq hind him and another day they gum | tW0 §easons. Only the sensational up things by a cf ling defense. Yes- | WOTK of Pumpelly in the box, wha torday they did both, The eone |made a decided hit with the crowd, T h ':hl-l(l the Remingtons to their twa New Haven ..00001000100010—3 7 3 |S5COTes, the big fellow pulling out of Eridgeport .. 0001001000010 5 v :“?ums which his teammates had dug exersi i s or him continually. v0 hi o Batteries—Weaver and Devine; | scowes tell the story orT“;\Z 1):;:;1“:;;: |sive for the day. nn of the New Orleans South- ern association club last night an- nounced the sale to the Cleveland Americans of Pitcher Clarence Smith, Catcher Henry De Berfy, and Out- fielder Milo Allison. They will re- — —_— ate July? word and is free from any im- s 1 e the 5 e Hughes Rescues Braves. The East will go out after the ten- laledus P purities th g = h, ”: »?1”‘. ”r.\‘mp»m‘“; BOUL o0 Sis Slose of the Boufhierniass Cincinnati, Aug. 21.—Boston won |DNis and golf championships on friend- Where other clubs were unable to | the drinking v IMeavy ship- | ly soil. But beating Johnston, Gard- [peat Plank, the Browns discovered a | ments of ice have heen delivered ar is no light task even | sure system of trimming the south- | numerous times the Sccond sociation season next month. House and Flaherty, S, in fine shape for his fight with White. | €Amps, that Nogales has the healthiest = ‘m-m a week ago yesterday and a | Ut the last man in the ninth, they { | the first game of the series from Cin- ! a | here yesterday. Mitchell’s | Ber and Tvans is no Ii ot ! on balls in the second inning |if you entice or inveigle them into | paw by making five errors back of | Connecticut regiment. If Private I® 5 sun parlor of your own home. him at critical moments. There's al- | kour had wished for a cool drink were costly, but at ba t three | the sun par a : hits out of four 1‘.mest \}:c = In f'hc e ways a way if you look for it hard [ of water he could have had it, g” a e e? e i (s A e e e One Answer. enough and long enough. for the trouble of walking over and eas a one out and the bases full Hughes | Fere is one answer to the so-called | “All Connle needs is time.” We | helping himself. Ny t % | amazing mystery of the Browns—a |know some people who can give him | Another statement attributed to this relieved Allen and f without further gmrfi:rmll;::sn :;;}:Z pair of pretty good catchers; at least | enough of that to last ten years. would-be soldier is also untrue, anc S 2 : that is his reference to the heat reg- time on he was complete master of e 1 e ; the situation. Maranville starred at tenin=g 20 sareosit i lojclonk In both the fielding and batting ends of GIBSON BALKS. Annex 3, Pawnees 1. the morning until 4 o'clock In the the game, getting four hits out of | Pittsburgh, Aug. 21.—George Gib- Annex. aiterooon N Therel kit Tasfmuchyl five times at bat. The score: son, veteran catcher, who was re- ab. r. 1b. po. Lrpeniinggl st smencile N R(he s r. h. e. |leased last Tuesday by the Pittsburgh | Snyder, 1f thaichiihe Salien makesilie menfelclc g 130000000—4 10 National league baseball club, an- | Johnson, s: The truth is that the temj rature Cincinnati ......011100000—3 9 nounced today that he will not join | Houck, 2b .... rarely ever goes over minety in the Batteries Allen, Hughes and |the New York Giants. He prepared | Chalmers, p .. suadeyandBontyvgocc s lonullyadoca Rt Blackburn and Tragesser; Mitchell | today to return to his home in Lon- | Bloom, ¢ ....... even reach that point. and Wingo. don. Ont. Gibson claims the local | Blanchard, 8b . Just why a man should make such olabh violated a gentleman's agree- | Selander, rf . false statement as arc accredited to Private Fakourey the men at camp 12 Cards Whitewash Giants. ment in declining to declare him a | Brayne, 1b free agent. Gibson says he does not | Hogan, cf here cannot understand. St. Louis, Aug. 21.—First one per- T £ = 2 At son, then anothe kes the waning 111“(‘“1;1 ““’ TotliegbeEa EL g (o g Y M S AGTIVITIES 4 URTCHA MUCH summer unbearable for the Giants. | Pasebatl. Pawnees. VY = 1 Yesterday in Chicago it was Zimmer. B ] St N & AN Itils 1Tl BE man, yesterc 1 St. Louis it was RESTA WINS AGAIN. Bottomley, rf . / eht Upd 25 epf=iay Committee for Coming Field Day is ¢ ) 1l HAD A Loose Betzel. In the fifth Inning of the e i | RO . New York-St. Louis arbitrament of | Chicago, Aug. 21.—Dario Resta in | (0 °" op T Named—Boys to Have a Banquet— } & P TooTH ONCE AnD P 4 HAD 1T JUERKED arms Betzel started in to pillage Rubo | @ Peudeot car won the Grand Prix | Schneider, 1f OUT THIS WAY awud Egnton's pitching. With a two-base | automobile race here this after-| p 0 "5, A meeting of the Young Men's s - . & Mo IT DIDN'T HURT F riend By BRIGGS o» " Ho O -1 coomHmD ormHHoHooo® o = - 'S 5 =3 hit in that inning and a three.base |NOON, taking the final lap of fifty | 1/ %g o g0 " ah | Athletes Shine in New Haven. ciety of St. Joseph’s was held hit in the next he formented insurroc. | Miles in 20 minutes 52:49 seconds. | sinary, o tions which yielded four runs, and the | Resta’s average ;"”“1 was cm:“;‘ | Dl Cardinals beat the backsliding Giants, Dourjipave 2.e Zw evening. Hon. President W. F. Do laney presided in the absence of Pre: ident Charles Gaffney. The gener: 5ol 0Mmns soora: 29 minutes 56:77 seconds Buzane, —h Galvin and D’Alene finished in the New York 000000000—0 8§ ¢ |order ‘“““i‘" ¢ commlittee to have charge of the field St. Louis . 00001301x—5 12 1 ANneEx .. .. e +..000002010- day was selected as follows: Chair- * Batteries: Benton, Smith and REDS SIGN TWIRLER. Pawnees ..............010000000—1 in Rev. J. Leo Sullivan, John Kocher; Steele and Gonzales. Cincinnati, Ohio, Aug. 21.—Mana- TWnIThns;) hit, Brayne: stolen bases. | o'Leary, Gerald Hannon, H. Patrick —_— | gor Mathewson of the Cincinnati club | ff‘h“‘:" o ‘T‘FP“", Blanchard, Hogan, | o'Connor, Wm. J. O'Brien, James J, ROURKE TO START 'EM. announced Saturday that Pitcher | S .dlr§~ Johnson 32, Bloom 2; doublo | nvreqrath, Francis J. Kiernan. I plays Schroeder to Ross to Havlick, | © mpis committee will meet this even- Zwick to Ross to Havlick, Bra¥ne |, iy the rectory at 7:45 p. m. The (unassisted) ; bases on balls, off Chal- | ro11owing committee was appointed { mers 1, off Scheidler 3; struck out. Py I 45 1561 “into the advisability of a | Chalmers 4 by Scheidler 9; wild [, revious qeld 1 banquet previous to the field d als pitches; Chalmers Scheidler,; left on | yrin v "¢ Doyle The foliowing bases, Pawnees 7, Annex 6; first base e Sty T W =2 £ NN on errors, Pawnees & Anmex 1: um- | COmmitteo was appointed: Wm. Me- HANNON PLAC MATTY SIGNS CUBAN. pire, Crowley; time, 1:30. GradvSharen gty Wlen sul Gerald Hannon, the High school ‘incinnati, O. Aug. 21.—Manager ot el RS O U0 e A et Al Sl ! Cincinnati, O., Aug. 21. ag . » ciety will be held Friday evening at t. Joseph's Young Men’'s society x | turda — - ] e ; ¥ | Mathewson announced here Saturday 8 p. m. and the ficld day committee athletle star, won third place in the | RIS S0 e services of Alpines 0, Rangers 4. e S ;’nbi‘l i“".',” ”'(‘:‘hf‘ athletle games held | o y¢felder Cucto, a Cuban, from the Alpine: e el ’ e Elm v ay afternoon. | portemouth, Va., club. Cueto will re- ab. r. ”‘L oS age. The society will be represented at 3 t here at the end of the Por ( i : S Amnother Good Davis L S e s el Johnson, 3b, p ... e the A. O. TI. games in Middletown to- | mouth club’s scason, September 10. morrow. ailey and J. Kiernan Laok out for the third in the series i e, b, p, 3b ... 0 2 SR e o SO0 Gkl DR of Richard Harding Davis' stories s N GETS A PRIZE. v er, cf 0 M printed in the Magazine Section of The KIERNAN G E “%- | Banner, If | 0 S il b T G D A Gt New York Sunday World. It is en- Vincent Kiernan of = St. Joseph's | Jackson, If Sk i i S R titled “Billy and the Big Stick” and | Youn Men’s socley and one of the | Campbell, 1b .... anno x P | i ik, ss Scheidler, p oHHoOoOWOL cococococococorof? Jack Rourke, physical director at | Bowman of the South Bend club of the playgrounds has been secured by | the Central le: ue ad been pur- the fleld day committee of the A. O. | chased by the local team. Jowman, H. of Middletown to act as starter however, will not be required to re- the games to be held in that city | port until after the close of the Cen- tomorrow afternoon. al league season on September 10. oppears in the issue of The Sunday | best all-around athletes in this city, | Kiniry, 1b i jump. Fourtcen —members of the World of August 27. The remarkable | won third place in the 1,000 ards | 7. Schroedel, 2b . 0 | club who TW nt the, T \\m'.l\ at detectlve story of Inspector Fraest of [ dash in the New Flaven games Sat- { McCue, ¢ Silver Sands returned home yester- Scotland Yard, called *“The M el- | urday at Lighthouse Point. Tynan, rf day. strom,” will begin in the Magazine | ey % 5 o =y 5 Scction of The Sunday World of Sep- | e TN N CARIT k 9 2 AUEX ISHS NIWAT = | NO HIT, NO RUN GAME, tember 10. You cannot afford tc mi e literary treats. Order your Sun- day World early from your news- /i EK Cincinnati, Aug. 21.—Accord 5 4% % 4 ves of this City defeated the records in the hands of the National PRpLs o 7 Nationals of Hartford, in Hartford [ Coburn, 3bh 1 7”3 5 22, ang,////ll yesterday, score 1 to 0. Dick Hyland, | Conway, 2b | 5 A4 one of the crack pitchers in this city, | Hincheliffe, == | pitched a no-hit, na run game. R e —_— Claughessy, 83 .. NOTICE v _ S o n Ellason, 1b baseball commission, the shutout e pitched by Alexander of Philc delphia Nationals here Saturday ¢ tablishes a new record for no run games pitched by one pitcher during 'a major league scason. Up to last ; £ year, according to the records, Math- The New Britain Wet Wash having Pittsburgh, Aug. —Al Mamaux, | o'perl, 1¢ owson, pitching for New York, held moved Into their newly equipped r pitcher of the Pittsburgh Na- | groiand ep oo the Konor with twelve shutout games building are prepared to do first class nal league team, has been sus- 3 during a season. Alexander oqualled work. We solicit your patronage. | pended for ten days by Manager ; 2 this last year and surpassed it Satur- Satisfaction guarantced. 38 Union | James Callahan because of alleged | Rangors . 200020x—4 | day when ho pitched his thirteenth Street. Tel. 583 2 : violation of club-training rules. L Two base hxc,‘ Mciw'um);; hits, off ! shutout of tho season. I oron® coocon