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NEW. BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1916. White Sox Lose Chance to Gain Second Place Through Errors---Indians Break Losing Streak at Expense of Tigers---Pirates Stage Ninth Inning Rally---Dudack Allows Annex Only One Hit o WHTESOX ERRORS. DOLI%E by DNGONDSHSTR | Chicago Is Kept From Second ! Place hy Collins and Ness - PIRATES PLEUP | Carrigan Says Red Sox PLENTY 0F THRILLS =, VICTORY IN NINTH; Are Sure Pennant Winners| |\ BAS@AHW RLD | | Phils Sensation of Older League— White Sox Best in American ix Runs Gallop Across Pan Through Timely Bat Wielding | Y Grantland Rice [ | | | A . ! Chicago, Sept. 11 by Ed- p. rt i i re | players 3 > who ever 2 A ‘ New York, Sept. 11.—Changes came | G0 e ol 15 COmEIG SO i) B, WL R0 G0 ST die Collins and Jack Ness cost Chi- “hicz s ; S iebire | than a matter of slowing up physical- | reached the height at seventeen that ° L e ol owe Chicago, Sept. —Pittsburgh | quickly among the three leaders in = | go second place yesterday & L S e L enml Io116 Donmant el i I¥. It is also a matter of over-taxed | Jones has reached at fourteen G e G e scored six runs in the ninth inning the National leaguc ant race dur- | nerves, of knowing the slight margin | h's age the game in this country has & Leais ; . ! ast week 1 followe ] of the serics, 5 to 2, in ten innings. yesterday, beating Chicago, § to |ing the past week and followers of ! Ietween victory and defeat. never developed anyone with Thase who watched young Bobby | combination of physical | Jones, the fourteen-vear-old Atlanta|tulldog determin | the game were treated to probably ti | most exciting we 8 Sox prevlously had won seven The Pirates drove Packard from the error pavéd Kk of the 1916 season. : o aight games. Ne slab and pounded Prendergast hard ion, me 2 : Brooklyn, leas ]wyl(-ml('r > the first | molfer, play at Merion this past week | skill and coolness against the test. .,,’,‘:1 \:m}“”fin' ‘(,::‘,‘ ,‘“: ‘l{‘:::u‘r‘r‘,r,)\’(,.:f,:; Imer Smith, an Omaha recruit, week of May, .H.rl\lho lead when the | marvelled, not only at his surpassing | He is the most remarkable Kid Pro- im qie eovonth. Marsans . singled O e &t bt for B, s Labor Day games began. The close of skill, but at his coolness under fire.| digy we have ever seen—and here ' . 1% 3¢V Weaver, who threw Grimes, a pitcher from Birmingham, | the top-most rung of the champion- JEsess artley hit to ) They failed to figure, that in one way, | and there in sport we have looked | sion with : to made favorable impre: Collins, but Eddie fumbled the points ahcad of Brooklyn and Phila- i feat; the kid with the wonderful heri- a 9 - i) | <. play that day found Boston clinging to | he had this advantage; the veterans, upon one or two { 5 B Pittsburgh. The score ship ladder, but less than two full| were thinking of the passibility of de. | ponso) - | ball, and Marsans went to third and By . r. h. e. : 5 T | scored on Austin's sacrifice fiy | Pittsburgh 15 2 delphia, tied for second place. Tues- | tage of youth, the heritage of hope, | . oo spall The game w r‘n\f}m"?d an extra ‘1: Chicago ...... 00200—7 9 1 day the Superbas and Phillics went | only thought of victory. And supposs| With the tennis and golf cham-|ning. Russell uf,uon(“ 1‘1“-‘ ‘(1 m] (;. Batteries Mamaux, into a tie for first place, while the | he was beaten? Al right. Tomorrow | PIONShiDs over, sporting interest Shotton walked and Miller singled. and Jackard, Prendergast | Braves dropped to third. Philadelphia | for him was another day and life, | #\VIN&S Dack to baseball and the Sisler sent both home on his single, double drive down the September and went to second on the throw and Archer. g 5 e : A first place by one point because Brook- — "’“,“::h't e o . ’i‘;m H”('m"””“‘“' HEOER LR ¢ nly break even in a ble- An Athletic Marve S VoS Ralhes: Sixed fpaychiolog e 2 B ‘1"‘,'1,‘:;‘ e couBlal WEE 2t iede Marvel: gloally for a pennant drive are De-| Plank was hit hard, but only twice neader agaist Ne k. | In many ways Young Jomes is.0ne | {1oft and Philadelphia in the rival were the Sox able to bunch them. The champions clung to the lead| ¢f the most remarkable athletic mar- | |egues Marsans' catch of Liebold's long drive throush Th:l",gm:nmd "1"}"-“' ]‘”fi’ ; \(]l:‘ of \he game. 7 | For the first four months of the in the eixth inning saved the game BIoghlyg s s n s Surc aRc LaTni i e ol i onIaRrRen byl hin col thsimigeral wers mever figured ini foniSt AT Ouis TICoTAals R mad s and the week ended with Brooklyn in | vears old when he beat Vardan and|tpe running. They were under no | sensational catch and started a double the coveted place with a gain of four | Ray. As remarkable as his play wi did not play Wednesday, but went into | after all, was only beginning, Rousch Swings Willow. St, Louis, Sept. 11.—Cincinnati hit Steele hard yesterday and defeated St. Louis by a score of 7 to 2. The ne, a loosely played contest, wound up the home season of the Cardinals. | The Reds gathered fi‘teen hits, of | s | 1 | nervous tension all. In the Na-|play in the St. Louis half. The score: hich Rousch, former Glant, garnered | points for the week over second place, | then, there Is a vast difference be-| (jonal league yn and Boston r. h. & three. The score i Philadelphia Was second at the end, 11 | tWeen fourteen and twenty—a far| pelq al] attention and the Phillies St. Louis ..... 0100001008—5 7 0 r. h e | points behind Brooklyn, and Boston | Breater difference than six Years upon | \cere overlooked So Jennings and Chicago ...0000110000—2 12 8 Cincinnati ....220021000—7 15 ;g’ was third. the average measures out. | Moran were able to start their big Batteries: Plank and Rumler and St. Louis .......000000200—2 3 Philadelphia played the best bail of To find a kid fourteen years old| arives with fresh troops. Their ma-| Hartley; Russell and Schalk. Batteries Moseley and Huhn; ! the three contenders and Boston made | Who could drive 250 yards and play | chines managed to reach top form e Steele, Lotz and Gonzales and Brot- | the poorest showing. The champions | a1 Iron ltke Chick Evans would be | just at the right moment, when tho Indians Break Streak, tem. took every game of the series with | thousht beyend belief. | cthers were beginning to get fagged| (leveland, Sept. 11.—After losing —— Brooklyn and continued their good But to finc a fourteen-year-old boy | oyt from the long strain. The Tigers b, SR s i § ! 2| e ke soroiion i it seven straight games Cleveland ceke- 1ts Beat Yanks. \ work against Boston, running their | | f" 8 )‘ Gl ed i e tough ibattle [ianq Fphilliest have | been paying fine | piatad its! homecoming yestorday by New Sept. 11.—Although | string of victorles up to eight. They | Pefore a blg gallery is even further| paj) now for over three weeks, and If | gegeating Detroit 8 to 2. James, Who charity supposed to be the key- | met their first defeat of the week in | PeYond the ordinary. | the ecternal dope is to be figured at New York on Friday and then lost #1l we will not have G. C. Alexander two to the Giants on Saturday. One Instance. facing T. R. Cobb. Since August 1, Philadelphia has Here is one instance of Jones' re- —— started to pitch for Detroit, was wild and ineffective. Morton developed the third and gave way to Bagby, who note of the diamond attraction be: tween Giants and Yankees at the Polo Grounds yesterday, it was not carried upon the a wild streak in jeld. There was little love been playing more consistently than | markable cantrol, or lack of nerves, | The One Big Winner, held Detroit runless the remainder of fost between the fighting warriors, | at any time since the fall .of 1915. [ Or unbounded nerve, as you care td| a4 the season's end Alexander will | the game. both teams responding with a d Brooklyn, with a good advantage on | €A1l it. ) & be the only major league pitcher With Guisto made his big league debut as play of the national pastime that kept August 1, has appeared to play 1 Playing against Frank Dyer in the | tpirty victaries to his credit. { a Clevelana first baseman. He played the 17,000 spectators enthused and lessly. The pitching has been bril- | afternoon the kid was 1 up going to | mhere was a time back in the days| brilliantly in the fleld Pitgher ended with the Giants exultant and liant at times, but not continuously | the twenty-second hole. Dyer's drlve| op Mathewson, McGinnity, Young, | Ehmke, late of Syracuse, made his victorious by the score of 4 w 2. £00d, and two or three men have been | l¢ft Nim in a wretched lie. Some one | joghro and Walsh when a pitcher first appearance in the box for Detroit The struggle got so fierce several doing the bulk of the hitting. Boston | [°1d Jones that his opponent could not | \no' coulan’t win thirty games was|and did well in his one inning. The times that . thick and has played good and bad ball in turn, | PPSsiPly get out on his neck shot. no part of a star, score: : two Giant cscaped in- The Braves have not been hitting | Dut Dver, by a wonderful pitch, | “"py¢ pitching flesh Is becoming T h e capacitation. Buck og made a much lately; their pitching has not | 410PPed the ball within twelve feet| p.itflo or the pitching arm is grow- | Detroit .........002000000—2 9§ 0 sweeping tag of Elmer Miller com- been as good as that given Brooklyn | °f the cup.. You can understand how | ;¢ fragile, for the pitcher today Who | Cleveland -..04000040x—8 5 1 pleting a double | in the second | and Philadelphia, and they have lost | '"iS Teécovery would have affected the | tyrng in twenty victories considers| Batteries Morton, Bagby and inning and received a nasty cut on his | { their field leader, Captain Evers. average golfer. But the kid, In place | nat he has done rare work. O'Neil; James, Boland, Cunning- left lez from Miller's spikes. Her- Beginning this week the leaders face | UL P¢INg disconcerted, never —even| pjtchers have become too pam-|ham, Ehmke and Stanage. ) 2og refused to leave the game, how. | the western teams on the former's| "2 (¢4 until the applause had died | pered. There is no reason why a e ever. Dave Robertson was ager home grounds and the championship | 4o d“ ”:““;1‘1 a2 ]11“5}]‘(““‘5 delay he | iirong, husky slabman shouldn’t work SOFT FOR GONLIN;S TEAM to set on base in the cighth that he | pogon Mass, Sept. 11.—Bill Carri- [cuit. With an even break in luck | probably will rest on the result of the | ey it shot tasia “f' ?)rml? 8nd | overy fourth day on a steady diet. IR nee s GronucTialpiiohiodd A wee S iy WSl s i B ie i motnTig iollstor | is MDeErOIE | [elosing | InteraactionBl e mes M online | Reeonba e IRRE DS RO D eTE But the race is setting feeble, or Pt ot ball and dropped to the ground as | 5an says 8 surefihes X are | ong, but we arc stronger. My |year. The won and lost record of the | ., [T thie shot there was a combina- | something, for only one thirty games lrf £ Iylr\ rubbed mln \‘v\lurz*r! ~;m1‘ | soing to win this year's American | hidyors"re now In good form and |leaders for the week follows. Bhiladel. \r:‘\)‘xtw ::e;:”‘;’;‘:‘L‘m::{im;-":emcourfls; winner stands up in both leagues. Bill Dudack Has the Annex Team or several minutes and also resumed | Jeague pennant. In talking about his | with the return of Barry I look for the | phia, won 5 lost 3; Bro. = S & ore. ; oo 3 a, st 3; oklyn, 5 and | g e o Emn b e e teams' chances of capturing this sea- | team to lead the band from Septem- | 4; Boston 1 and 7. The Phillies and | | ripe. xi}itzht?fi1€&;;nfsso‘;:‘xcfizt(;f The Golfer's Kenleyesque Invictus. Eating From His Hand—One Lo pecially with the action so interesting. | gon'g fig ader of the Sox said | ber 15 to the finish.” Photo shows i o JOUE £ L) Viley e G b , [ ighoors: | the i fl‘:?]o?n:rx e stronger | Manager Bill Carrigan as he looks frhfe:g:_vcs plaved a 0 to 0 tie game | ahout the sting of defeat, but only| Out of the blight that cavers me, Hit Is Losers’ Portion. 5 = - | than any other in Ban Johnson’s ¢ the boys over from the players' bench. |~ my ot o 2 thinks of the great fun of the game. Deep as the pits from hole to hole, | pi\o bugack added materially to Glants .....%:..01100101x—4 i = L Hasiofgmuchiichan sefiniine ealpm 1 thank whatever gods there be his baseball fame yesterday afternoon Yankee 0001010002 i fiz‘j\” = ""“g"f’ 'l“‘l"“d'““ during the | Or, as Mr. Kingsley almost wrote: | If I can only keep control. at the East Ellls street diamond, Ba Schupp, Anderson s e o s aRtan s GlonSiodfirs inlace, when he came within an ace of pitch- Ra exts AE ussell 'and VWaiter Wwhile Detrn\} and Chicago crept closer | “When all the game is young, lad, In the fell clutch of circumstance, ing a no-hit game, the only bingle se- ; ll to the world’s champions. The Tigers | And all your dreams are pink, I will not wince nor loudly whine, | °8 % P68 | €305 L€ B0 o seratch D ta o L | asepa ews na uts x:nd hwmte Sox did not have much | Refare your songs are sung, lad, With Guilford I will take my chance, | Sured off his delivery boing a sorateh x. rouble in their ga B8 ' T v Y J 1d the line. > N s 5 New Haven, Sept, 11.—The Brook- in ERNG e e e Sse R DRSE os I pone ohe dp e s biink AT canion VROl S | just fell out of the reach of Kahms lyn Yannigans, headed by the veteran | '~ = ; T e e S [ S B o () L der desires to know how the | The game itself was a farce demon- Nap Rucker, were defeated by the NATIONAL LEAGUE. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. 2 Samesivith Now work | A Cros € morning's spin, A EOa g oL s 4 strating that the Annex team is not in Colon A b s N i and took three out of four games from | No man can beat a kid, lad, Carl Morris-Frank Moran contest o dame cisss Lih ths Plonssrs i Colon a tean ollege stars, | — 3 Philadelphia. Unless St. Louis and Who thinks that he can win.” came out on Labor Day. In the rush|he sé L 4 g yesterd 4 to 1. Yesterday’s Results, Yesterday’s Results, NoW York bises suadenly the Amon of other events we forgot to notice, | elving a 11 to 1 drubbing. It was Mails, who succecded Rucke: . o s T ias A > 8 y, the Amerl- ¢ 0, Gl .| a merry day for the Pioneer batsmen, choe R P m"';ng'“_"m‘: Pittsburgh ‘\.fi\ m;(-,;, & Igfl[x;:‘o»\uumh 10, Newark 6, (first|can league race will resolve itselt | We have had some remarkable | Has anyone saved a box score on thiy| & MECH [h:n S e e 5 e : e Cincinnati 7, St. Louls 2. | 0). into a contes o S 102 s than s s and incffective, three runs being | s { Newark 6, Providence 2, (second | troit and Onis between Boston, De- |young 1s, golf and baseball | grapp . | securea oft the offerings of Blanchard red on him. Appleton finished the | Standing of the Clubs. game). ThelRed S‘“B"’; e e i % and Chalmers which included extra gam rck Wheat's hitting fea- b 2 I Montreal 2, Toronto 1, (first| teams, will :::ét“"z: the other e““‘”; AT ST. MARY'S PLAYGROUNDS. | base wallops by Blinn and Bill Dudack. " } 7 game). the west this week ng for rh e ;;L‘_‘;’“lhl“)h'i;'“ o |, Toronto 10, Montreal 1, (second | cago will hal‘l‘::“‘- Detroit and Chi- Enthusiasm Continues to Feature | securing four safe slams out of five 000000100—1 6 3 lladelphla o game). (e e e advantage of facing Games at Popular Amusement Place. | trips to the plate, receiving a base on .03010000x—1 6 4 | Boston ; -rt} }.’,rmxnciq «A contingent on their home | Pirates Make It Two Victories Over balls the other time. q e o rosorg. | New York 5 2 | 5 S. As in the National, fi lac Th i apparent evidence of Che umpelly and Waters; | =€ 5 1 Standing of the Clubs. 1 5 ational, first place . o ere is no app s The losers seemed to be struck by and Wheat. 1’}‘1“3“""4" '2; [ = = | s';er:"; nloz‘lfit American league race { Ancient Rival—O'Brien Displays | the popularity of St. Mary's stage fright piling up seven errors most Chicago ° | " to rest upon the result of | grounds growing on the wane, $ which roved o8tly “Red" S o K b 7 4 | eni S Class in e &) s of which proved costly. e St. Louis_ 58 | Buffalo 8 5 ; lflfle approaching intersectional clashes. iclouteritasture Saturday's attendance being of a mid- | \elsh tried his hand at Ty Cobbing NIOR DIVISION WINNERS. Cincinnati 53 fr;fr’;::’tf’“flc ;2 Z; q(‘\l: 1e:trenmh of the Tigers and White The Pirates defeated the Colliers at | season size, with enthusiasm plenty | it vesterday, pounding out three safe L _ | = - E: ©s greatly in the ability ir | o, oy i dominating. Some fine events ) ol : : y | Montreal 63 516 | batting siare i 1S 8bllity of thell | collier's fleld yesterday afternoon in | Predo s, Some fine ovents|slams. Dudack retired eight by thel A, C Who Will Wear Games Togay. B aitimere 65 &l Darently ars, while the Red Sox ap- hoEsocond T ha sesiesibefora|limere staged with the owing s. 0. route and gave but one free ticket| ampionship Crowns. Brooklyn at Boston. e 22 ot ¥ have the advantage in pitch- i ERNOK0 i > | sulte: to the initial sack. The winners had] ? | Richmonad 72 -455 | ing. The White Sox play best {& large crowd. The Pirates had The Nutmeg soccer football team p ¢ strended on th gLlrela T i g Philadelphia at New York. Rochester 73 430 | ball Sox played the bes e D a number of men strende o Newark, N. J.,, Sept. 11.—As a re- | Rochester '1 . | all of the three American league lead- | everything their own way until the | defeated the Annex, to 1, Intheli ca ™ mhe ore sult of the senior A. A, U. champion- X —-*—-—v R Newark ey 8 .386 ‘y :}:w during the week, gaining both on |ninth when the Colliers started a rally | opener. In the fifl\" rds juvenile Ploneers. ship held here Saturday, the AMERICAN LEAGUE. | | the Tigers and the Red Sox, Chicago |which netted 3 runs. O’Brien of the | three-legged race Heisler and Mee- S e B ins =rc ho fcld and track — | Games Today. Won seven and lost none, Detrolt 6 | Pirates played a fine game in left | han defeated Hayes and Peters, cov- | Clancey, 8b ...... 5 1 1 1 1 1 B e Sl ] 2 i Yesterday’s Results, | Newark at Richmond. and 1 and Boston 5 and 3. {fleld. Both pitchers were wild at | ering the distance in 10 3-5 seconds. | Goeb, If . 4.0 2 0 0N Blonel CorgEhe son oo Lot Clevelana 8, Detroit 2. Toronto at Montreal [ Johnson of Washington, Vaughn of | times but pitched good ball. Morehead and Hall won a race Over | Noonan, 5 0 111 T o Tracks Events, St. Louis 5, Chicago 2. | Buffalo at Rochester (2). | the Chicago Nationals ana Schupp of | The score: the same distance in the junior class, | Blinn, cf .. T TR G 100-yard dash—A. E. Ward, Chica- i I providence at Baltimore. the New York Nationals led the pitch- Pirates. Doolittle and Herman coming in sec- | Lynch, 1b Sy A Standing of the Clubs. f:-*) f“j‘, the week with two-hit games. ab. r. h. po. a. e. |ond. In the senior class Daley |iSE Didackreld e 1R a0 2. Ward, Chica- = | ffaber and Benz of the Chicago Amer- | O'Brien, If. CHE 0 0 |Dooley came in first with Kelley Kahme iobt S0 n A e 1 g Boston READY FOR 1916 SEASON icans and Cheney of Brooklyn turned | Crowe, 2b. g4 0 i 2 0| Kenney trailing them. In the boys'| welch, ss TRt T e B 3 Thomas J. Halpin, | Detroit in three-hit gamcs. Benton of tne | Kiniry, 3b. 3 oA Q 1 0 |obstacle race over 75 vards, J. Peters, | \, Dudack, p .... 4 1 4 0 5 Boston A Chicago | SISy New York Nationals pitched hoth | Crowley, s: 5 5o 1 1|J. Hayes and F. Nestor came in in | s T e 5 1. Se is = : zames 3 e or i pauls 5 3 rder na d. an, Hayes and | 38 7 87 11 0-3 run—Don M. Scott, Mis- | New York g i ; Bames of a qouble-header against | Paulson, cf. 5 00 0 0lthe order named. Dolan R | 11 17 27 i 2 e Plans for Busy Bowling Season Form- | Brooklyn on Wednesday and broke |Crean, 1b. .. 26 0 0 0|Kelly finished the obstacle race of Annex Ivan A. Myers, Illinois | Washington ulated—Richter Again Heads City hes["m Perritt his team-mate, qia | Mack, rf. 2 0 0 0 0|75 yards in the junior rl"x‘ss in the | ab. r. h. poda. A Gl Sana €r on Saturday by defeating Phil- | Mintz, rf. 5 0 0 1 0 |order named and Elliott, Burns and | Schneider, 1If ... 10 0 0 0 LRl el O » unat-| philadelphia 5 . League—They're Off Tomorrow. ‘:(i‘t‘“fi“mll\\'u c allowing only eight |Conley, c. 23 60D 3 (1) Connelly m-nl leml" “ ho ]“h“ ?;‘“]‘”r‘.lnhxfion. 2D 40 00 48 hed, Chicago. * s in the two games, Schmidt, p. . 4 2 2 0 event. For girls, Helen De elen | Houck, 1b, rf..... 4 1.0 3.3 120-yard h « Robert Simpson, { G T : The City Bowling league met at the = e — — | Long and May Mayne won first, sec- | Chalmers, p, 1f 3 0 1 0 & of i i ! ames ofln.\.' } Aetna alleys Friday evening and or- DOYLE OUT FOR ASON. 35 10 8 2| ond and third, respectively, in the f_)”— | Bloom, ¢ .. v - O Y Fred Murray, | New York at Philadelphia. ganized for the season. The officers | y s Collioea! vards obstacle race for the junior |G, Blanchard, 3b. 3 0 0 1 3 ached, Palo Alto, Cal Boston at Washington, o o wore o acted a8 fol. | XY Shows Small Bone in Larry's S a o |Eirls, and over the same distance in | Kilduff, of ....... 3 0 0 1 8 0-yard hur -W. A. Hummel,| Detroit at Cleveland. ;“ ast y a vl Left Ankle Broken. Buddy, 1 3 0 1 3 0 o0]the senior class, Helen McCue, Anna | Campbell, ss 0 0 2 2 Mrinoman LGS T oriding O | St Louis at Chicago. lows: President, O. Richter; treasurer, | pittshurg, Sopt. 10—Larsy Doyle, | Wolsh Ber 2 0 1 2 0o |Ryan and Julla Byrne took places. A :Scheider, rf, 1b 0 0 5¢0 Three-mile walk—George Goldi — | J. Foote; secrdtary, G. C. Rogers. second baseman for the Chicago Na. | Koloshi, rf. 110 0 0 | feature attraction which proved pop- | T Blanchard, p. 00 0'0 Toronto, Canada. i EASTERN LEAG Eight teams were entered and | tionals, who fractured his ankle in the | Miner, cf. - SR TI 0 0 |ular with contestants and audience | St T vontst 1 schedule will start this week as fol- | first game with Pittsburgh here Satur. | W. Wojack, 3b. A0 1 0 |alike was the 2 rds medley race. | 29 1 1%*23 14 Pale van B s e | Yesterday’s Results, lows: day, rested comfortably today. An | Beckman, 1b. aoa 9 0 0|of which 75 yards was walked, J3 | *welen out on bunted third strike b e g i 1] _ Tuesday—Harpoons vs. Live Oaks | X'ray of the injury was mado this | Campbell 2b. A G 0 0 |yards run and 75 yards ridden on bI- | Pioneers .............20340101x—1 e e South Ends vs. Tigers. morning, but a preliminary examina- | S. Wojack, c. 2 0 2 2 0 |cycles. Connelley won this event in | Anpex X . ...000100000— e W’m St niversity | —_— Thursday—Wanderers vs. Annex; | tion showed that a small bone in his = Flood . ’ 3 0 0 0 0|47 1-5 seconds in the senior clas: In Two-base hits, Blinn 2, W. Dudack 5 High jump—Wes Standing of the Clubs, Kenilworth Rangers. ankle was broken. v ST — — | the juvenile class, F. Nestor won the | hits, off Chalmers 10 in 3 1-3 {n Wi vork A, C i P.C The Annex, Live Oaks, Tigers and | At the hospital where Doyle was | 1 727 5 0|event, F. Hayes was second and Hen- | nings, off Blanchard 7 in 42-8 in ¥ H lmmé‘r’t‘)‘r!“ New Tondon! _\V:mdorcrs are teams which all fin- | taken it was said he would nave 1o re- | Pirates 020100130—7 | nessy v third, the winner’'s time |nings; stolen bases, Clancey Goel i American AC/C ' | Portland ished strong last year. The South Ends | main there for at least ten days and | Collier: 0010000 being 57 2-5 seconds. For the junior | 2, § Dudack 2; sacrifice hits, 8¢ Du e ind welght (tfrow ; ield Kenilworths and Rangers are mnew | wil] not be able to play again this \te O'Brien, Crean, Con- | class, Dolan came in first, Hayes sec- ‘, wck, Goeb; double plays, Campbel e AliLitan A | entzicsfwhiloftie Hlarnoonsihaye threslliseason! Zwonac it B ulen s S ond and Lahar third. | to Johnson, Kilduff to Johnson; basel B, e Worcester of last year’ 5]"‘9””‘““ ?If ‘]b yearwy ley, Schmidt; three-base hits, Miner, - - | on balls Dudack 1, Chalmers Y . Sty 5 Tr a o 1t ~y - 21 A s elin throw-—Gedrge ow Haven . bl T SMOKE Crowley; home runs, Beckman; stolen SYRACUSE WINS. | Blanchard 1; struck oul by Dudack § Yelih Kk AR AiC YorL Inndgoport L flxn‘";tf‘o m”‘n'her s ‘m;“'g 'hm_“;g > bases, Crowley, Buddy, O'Brien, Paul- Utica, N. Y., Sept. 10—The twen- H‘hn:mn-\-r rlgl:mr;har‘:l [:.“ b B Hartford ... # 6 . 5 i 5 . lays, v, jeth season of the New York State | Pitcher, by anchard, S. udack iser o rlie M increased each year. son, Crean; double plays, Crowley, | tiet e ! Sy ' o Prize money ;Imounflnp: to $65 will Crowe, Crean, Crowley to Crean; bases | league was brought to a close yester- 1 yru’\ss«-d ball, Bloom; wild piteh, Dy Dan Ahearn, ames Toda be divided at the end of the schedule. on balls, off Schmidt 5, off Flood 10; | day aftcrnoon. Syracuse, which spent | Gack; left on bases, Pioneers 16, An| [ Portland at Worcester, Individual prizes to best average men struck out, by Flood 13, by Schmidt | a, great deal of the first part of the ;nex 2, first base on errors, Plonee \ 1 Voorthington, | Springfield at Lynn on second division teams will be a| A MyI), PLEASANT 5¢ CIGAR 10; hit by pitcher, O'Brien; umpire, | season in the second division, won the | 4, Annex 2; umpire, Haugh; tim ' Eoston | New London.at Ha 0 ford. | teature this year. Roache. pennant, with Scranton second. | 1:40.