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. - DEFEAT ROBINS AND GIANTS— | « DAY BASEBALL SEEMS CERTAIN IN NEW YORK STATE—CORWIN RESIENS FROM YALE ATHLETIC BOARD—44 HARVARD FOOTBALL ~CANDIDATES | NUTHEGS | PECK'S BIG CLOUT 10 DECIDE TITLE. DEFEATS ROBINS Game Wil Be Held at the Local | Seventh Inning Proves Luucky for Association Next Tuesday Yanks, Who Win, 8 to 4 New York, April 9.—Barely had the i 1 b SN | ;i A The New Britain Y. M, . A, ana Jacksonville, Fla., April 9% —With Aseball enthusiasts of Now York and f: iy X the Nutmegs of Hartfard will clash |the Dodgers leading, 4 to 3, in the Wicinity received the cheering news A\ Bl P [ Sain nexe Tuesday night in the third | seventh inning here yesterday, two B el : 3 and deciding : the state |out, the bases full and the count “2 Bill ‘permitting baseball on Sunday | ehampionship. he game will beland 2" on Pegkinpaugh, Roger B0 been passed by the assembly by i § § e W {played at the local gymnpasium, with | caught one of Burleigh Grimes’ shoats votle of 82 to 60, early yesterday y 5 | Dick Dillon officiating a5 referee. | on the seam and cleaned up the paths fmorning, followed by nnounce- - i | Manager Slater and the management | with a long triple over Zach Wheat's e R it L, i : i : P | of the Hartford team have arrived at|head in right field. Roger himself rode fuz thac Governor Smith would fold ‘ : ) | satisfactory arrangements. The Nut-|home astraddle of Pipp's following e o e [X 7 s | £ 2 | ved here several weeks ago, | single. Peckinpaugh's clean up clout Bacrmen arranged for the introduc- [ : i : ) |and they forced the locals to top |and Pipp's single gave the Yankees a i b o o Vo i ; 3 : 3 p {gPeed. In the game at Hartford last | four run margin which they increased fon 1 Inight the lacals were overwhelmed, | by another marker in the eighth, New While the general impression pre- | s that the governor will sign the feasure, the executive deelared that ibefore taking final action on the bill he would give the citizens of New WonDER WHAT THE STATUm of LIBERTY THinKS ~ THeY ALWAYS \WAVE AND Tuose AviAToRS! To ME AND SEEM GLAD THEY ARE GETTING JUST To sge Ms, THEY Bven| AWFUL Boud. | GAVE THROW KISSES AT ME ONE A NASTY Loox THE BUT DaRMN IT | CANT OTHER DAY, vz CAME RETURN ‘€m — BECAUSE-~ A UTTLE Too neEar i WELL MY HARDS AR® FULU AND WAS Too eresA STILL- THiS LIFE_HAS - ol £R AFTER YEAR MY ARM WwiFH mMore SoLDt 15 NEARLY KILLING ME, | BOYS TuAn AMY OTMER WOMAN 10 AMERICA oW York S;l}'is Pa‘ss Favorahle Action 82 to 60 i i x {losing 36 to Yark 8, Brooklyn 4, was the tale the g = oPLE CoME t ANOTHER | The winner of the coming contest |score board told when the smoke of i WH;IIGASHEMZH:;E\:;’\%SM T LOS-ESE fiAFE r)EOPI NEVER LO?EROEF CSO";LE];EQ& THEY Vill be ¢ rightful claimant to the | battle drfted off the field b P WEA i 2 © G AND state honors. The Nutmegs have had Though Grimes was charged with NEVER ssome. AND 1 STARTED SHOUTIN! o he g : . s was chargec ! DoidYou KNow 1 N GET LONE es erful success beating many of | the loss of the game, none of the runs VIEW ME MIL s g ¥ ks » none of the runs York an opportunity to exp their YeTtHAVE FELT OUT OR | poye A WONDERFUL s;;’:g“\:fi._;% ouT AT SEA the wrac ms in the state, fnclud- | scored after he entered the box in the. - eguniamaas e = el CEEDs OF PRESIDENT WiLsoN v ormAN WoULD ing the Brussells, Goldenrods and oth- | seventh were earned, and the great [l e NESS t DOoN'T HAVE | WHEN HE GoES BACH AND '&1’:’,5 C‘A;’ eR WEAD s !lhlw little matter of who 1s ta be | Brooklyn right hander now has a Tec senate by 25 to 21 e e zM__l,“,m}; DRESS To (WORRY ABOUT | ForTH- 1SN'T HE THE TURNED IF SO MANY | ‘*“‘l'm“l‘m:“‘y_m“k":m\.‘-‘ “‘: '“.‘ A. C ) :Hxlvn} r‘{m lor \.wix.-lli]nr: :cu innings against the Dy 82 to 60 indicates the favor with , REGULAR LITTLE P> Fine LOOKING s s e e Canas e ROl S Mowing san fekin ol wir‘mh the state solons regard the AFP G aDA-BoUT, THO emanated from | run. o errors by Ivy Olson, who FeELLowS MADE et . it Springfield, Mass. to the etfect {hat|had his first bad d ] : ) SeaIcsan 2 SUCu A _FUSS : ! : effea 1at | had his first bad day of the year, help- fi:fi'o:?'}h:;fi-,rfi"L‘f“<|‘xf-,f,'ffn R ouER THEM. El the Y. M. (. A. team of that city|ed to manufacture the four Yankee line with the action of the state leg- | wouli continue the series with Mid- | markers in the seventh and a wild peg islators, and insures the playing of ! dletown for Hu-}.\'r‘\v England Y. M.| by Krueger helped along the New P €. A. championship. This is receiving | York tally i ) elg champlonship games on the first day | s Altantion ool the e ('lr':\r-l :\()r.w LcieEn of the week @s-soon as the zuberna- | ¢ 4 ast prellminary game will be ar- | i torial signature.has been given to the | 2 % i - for ¢ | measure. - 5 % The passing of such an ordinance | was 2 good sized delegation| Pfeffer, Gorimes and Miller and means that chumpinne_hm games will L 2 i il iy S from this city at the game in the West | Krueger; Russell, Shawkey and Han- be staged on Sunday in greater New M 5 e N i i Middle school gymnasium last vé- | nah. York by the Giants and Yankees at o : ning. The Nutmegs plaved rings| e Polo grounds and the Dodgers in ! Ak ek . ound Slater, et al. The work of the | Brooklyn. | ‘ 2 - \ L i \ AR eI N {entire Nutmeg team is worthy of | Make Tt Four In a Row. Prestdent Robert T. Moran of the | \ ; i i i A ks [ praise. Merwin Jacobsan of this city, | G&inesville, Fla., April 9. —The Bos< IR 55 aldermon laponncedi thatite [ b i . ; § z ;| | formerly center on the local “Y|ton Red Sox, champions of the world, would introduce an ordinance to put , A o i § l At . 4! i team, played with Hartford and he | Stll are manhandling the Giants, They into effect the legislation as applied i 4 = put up a swell game, tossing in several | Smeared the proud Manhattan Island- B v M e nia i e Bodls tiom the AGor into the Florida sand in hera heartily in favor of Sunday baseball | 4 - - ! sterday and clinched the series. The I onTA 15tradne: iheloinnins { Sox added a shutout canquest to tReirm BB e wood canic that ths bovertor | | previous -successes and trounced the Biad signed the meastire. CAPTURE_D GERMAN U-BOATS e | Grants by . nco S I New England Institutions - Wil Be | the fourth ctory for Bare BOWLING NEWS. b TO BE EXHIBITED IN U.S.| i somi o —msocon | S ioe mors s b i Sote ; hip ST «tin High school, the champion team | { G8CY ! BOYLE Ihah neasiaids ks entered Do || wrerdie) Schupp,sthe Toulsville' lery 5 ¥ RAVLE nder, was McGraw's opening pitch- - r. h. e. next Tuesday night's Brooklyn .....300 100 000—4 8 8 ng will follow New Yark .....120 000 41x—3 12 1 ENTERED. at U. of P. Games. | ron’s chamy and as the series hag N. B. MACHINE LEAGUE. 2 2 Praining. . ~aTIONAL )t the fez < of the Unive Baldwin veve. 85 100 94 a : cHAMPION Of e eaitnes ol dhe Snie nd his showing was not encourag— Collins 57 Mo D B . il ar s varos o > ¢ SR e 55 s After Schupp's splendid work im / N swiammne 8 v 2 held here on April and 26. Other ties hi - e Turner . i e . . it ; B : 3 Sl SeN Bl ce pitching it v rmly believ= Krans ... S 5 | PiuneE i ' E x A P ) 2 that the sensational little “Schup= % 5 " vould make a eat comeback. held on the first day of the meet, in Howard clude Philadelphia, Buffalo, Tole 431-—1309 1 2 . er his performance yesterday Newark, Buitimore and Boston High | Schupp's future s dubion | | school teams. | | 1 In the ol | four innings he walked six men and in eventy-nitic parochial, seventy | the first inning the Sox bunched fivel $Terdigan 68 . 92 231 grammar and it large number of prep- | hits with tiwo passes for & ook of : iz e > ¢ | aratory and high schools are entered | five ns—whi - . Heinzman ...... 88 90 - _ e { five runs—which virtually won thel Hollogon. . .....4%96 94 95 : : o ¢ i : % i , [ in the various clags races and relay | game for Boston before New Yorld R e 54 94 : . 3 ¢ : ; : 5 championships. n addition 1o the fwent to bat, Bovle - £ : ; - . < A : 2 £ ; school events, the sprint medley Te- | The score: e S Sl : : e lay championships, the pentathlon and r . &l 441 466 = B v | : 4 : g i several specinl events will be held | Boston ........500 000 000 s o Dept. 500 } % : ' : g ; E i . ! ; on the opeming day. | New York ....000 000 000—0 8 o Barber . 5 97 9 & o ! i S % S | B frdman, of Princeton, castern title- | Pennock, Dumont and Walters and Street ... 98 . led®. - - 8 AV ‘4 G holder; Smitii of Cornell, American | MeNeil: Schupp, Benton and Smith A 9 1 i / ; Sy - 4 ndoor chawpion, and Thomas of line . -8 94 T 4 T : : indoor chawpion, ar of | I;{e Maiinc 1 ? : : | Dartmouth. American champion, wili 303, Miller .........100 96 90— 286 443—1411 SALLEE SENT TO HOSPITAL. | 1 s = | Jockey Erickson Pilots Victor in To- - Pitcher Wili Undergo Treatment for | Nashehwenz Strained Muscle. | boggan Handicap, the Feature| Carlson . f : Grey ... 3 . % g g 3 2 $ A ‘incinnati, Ohio, April 9.—Pitcher | Robertson ....... & 2 - : £ e ; | Harry “(“Slim") Sallee of the Cin-| . = S ' . i : i i | cinnati Nationals w resterday or-| Bowie, Md., April 9.-—Harry Brei- 466 5 434—1315 v : g 3 . v e dered to a hospital by Dr. H. H. Hines, | Yo8¢l made his opponents look like *Record. i 5 § . ) . X : i % the Cincinnati club’s physician, where | the ~Thfiipef‘ kind of selling platers Dept. 607. it 2 : s f 3 4 | he will undergo the “hot air cylinder” | It the Toboggan handicap at Prince, Bloodgood eAgn: 86 % - 3 | 3 M trea nt for a strained muscle on | George n‘.q-k yesterday afternoon.; Doherty ........ 8% : - : P ; . : : teeth the right side of the sprine. Sallee | Jockey Erickson shot him away Morrissey ...... 97 4 4 3 s . 3 ¢ % was compellsd to leave the Reds' | from the barrier in front and kept| Chapman ... 269 % ¢ FonE ¢ d \ $ training cump several days ago be- | him going at his best until he passed MecCarrol . ...... 9 J ¥ ¥ da 3 i < g . | cause of a recurrence of trouble with ;1"' Jy"-ifi 5. At the end he was five S f : 2 his back, which interfered with his | lengths in front of Cobalt Lass, which 471 445 RSl : a2 f o ek ; ¢ ¢ 3 L S rectie whilel with the. New “ tools second honors half a length Dept. 303. “ 3 § A 5 3 s 3 S kS SR A York tionwls last season | ahead of Dan Bright. Harry Brei- T. Boyle .......109 103 ! . B £ Sl SR W ] Dr. Hines bopes by the treatment | YoBel sped over the seven furlong Hartigan ....... 88 86 | . : i s . (t the hos| to “iron out” the sore- | course in 1:27 4-5. Goodell .. ... 9178 | o L . e et e Ile says an X-ray did not re- Harry Payne Whitney met with his Afller .......... 86 98 £ E veal anytling wrong bevond .- the | first reverse of the meeting in the Folmgren o ' Sy ol first race when his pair of juveniles, ¢ Querca and Cobwebs, were beaten went to J. H. Chreve's K with Querca second and Mlss ent Yesterday at Bowie, 447 Five caplured German submarines o : » are now on their v across the At . : | : Jantic and expected within two week Shackleton third Cobwebs was CRIMSON GRIDDERS 0UT | AT T L e b Sourth. - } Victory loan drive. The above photo 11 to 1. | Quercw ran a winning race. Tt was Philadelplia, April 9.—The Univer | her first race and &!hw uh 11v very | sity of Pennsylvania defeated Ursinus | reen. She propped as the barrier . rors.” | college 14 to 1. on Franklin field yes- | Went up and was practically left af () Underwood & 3 | the post. When she got going at best PENN SWAMPS URSINUS, | Walker's Homer Featurcs—Scorc Is | The vietory of Miss Charlotle Boxle S e R of the New York Women's . A, in , SNOTE Y the recent 100-yard indoor swimming 11 Candidates: Report to Coach Rol- lins for First Spring Workout— | Work Wiil Dast:Three Weeks, Cambridge, Mass, April 9.—When 44 husky athletes clad in mole- skins trotted into the Harvard sta- dium yesterday afternoon. a new mark was chalked up in the annals of ear spring football practice at Cambridge. Only one “H"” man, William Murray, quarterback on the 1916 Crimson | eleven, which sent Yale down to de- feat, 8 to 5, reported. Several men |Local Boy Is Trying Out as a Tiwo- Added Duties Causcs Yale Athletic Chairny who played on second varsity elevens | in past years and a number of for- mer freshman stars were in the group, but most of the candilates are green men. It was expected that Eddie Casie, the fleetfooted back, will re- port soon Head Coach Rollins directed the work of the backfield candidates. Wil- liam 3. Snouw, captain of the 1917 gridiron tear took the linesmen in tow, while Frank J. O'Brien of the | 1913 eleven ‘nstructed the ends. H. H. Dadmun, captain of the 1916 gridiron | machine, showed the centers how to handle the ball and Bill C. Murray | guided the quarterbacks The spring training term will con- | tinue for three weeks. | | | JAKE WITH ORIOLES, Merwin Jacobson of Wakefield court left today to join the Baltimore | team of the Internattonal league. championship in Philadelphia, earned her a trip to California. It was an- nounced some time ago that the win- ner of the event would be asked to visit San Francisco for the outdoor title race. BRADY ON SQUAD Colgate, Track Team Under Jack Rourke. coach of the sque TO BURY Cleveland, The body was placed in awaiting ren Washington street is New Haven, April squad of the Colgate | to Yale followers work out for| ment yesterday that Philadelphia, | Corwin, the famous captain Jack Rourke of | rush of the 1886 the home of his| will carry as cf " CORWIN OFF BOARD Resignation er, Much to Advance ame the announce- ! | purchase resigned his position plcased with the waorlk | the Yale board of contr versity athleiic association, has held for the last FRANKIE ROBINSON. Prof. Corwin was xnown to every 9 —The body of | Yale man, because of the high stand- | America’s premier | ards of amateur sport he has at all killed in an acci- | times required. It had been thought ic race-track last|that he resigned because of the stu- wken to Louisville | dents' clamor for nnounced here ves- | athletics, but the crvices were held | that the additional five years. reconstruction committee on entrance examinations val to Louisville, | made it impossible to continue in his the home of the noted rider's widow. | former capachy GIANTS AFTER DUBUC. Former Tigers Star May Be Saved From Minors By McGraw. Gainesvilley Fla., April 9.—Jean Dubue, the famous old Detroit pitch- may become i member of the Giants' pitching stafr Jean finisiied last season with the »x, but he is the proper: of the | Salt Lake City club. Barrow would | like to hold him, buf demurs at the pricc asked by Walter AMe- Creedic, and with his consent Mc Graw opened negotiations last night with the western manager. Something may come of it. Dubuc showed last fall and this | spring that he still has a lot of pitch- ing in him. He is a good batsman, having heen used as a pinch hitier { by Jennings when he was with De troit. WHITTEMORE'S FINE CARD Pinehurst, N. C., April 9.-—Parker W. Whitte of Brookline, playing i a four wateh on the cham- pionship course here vesterday, went { over the who is here with the Red Sox, | _ LEWIS WINS TVTLE. Breaks 98 Out of 100 Clay Birds in Long Island Tourney. Port Washington, L. I, April 9.— | Tracy H. Lewis brokc 98 out of 100 clay birds in the annual Long Island Sound mpionship fournament at the trups of the Manhattan Bay Yacht club here yesterday and won the champiciiship Despite the fact that he missed only | two of the artificial birds out of 100 Mr. Lewis failed to win the trophy for the longest run of the day. The honor in thai respect fell to Dr. | George H. Martin of the New York \thletic clul, who broke 92 straight — tbe last 92 at which he aimed and | the physician was going so strong at | the close that Ralph L. Spotts, for- | mer American champion who was one | of the contestants, remarked that he | would “be shooting vet if the con | ditions did not place 100 clay birds COAST LEAGUE OPENS San IFrancisco, April 9. e i Coast baseball leigue, now an eight- team organization, opened its 1819 | terday afternoon A home run b | clout came in the fifth inning with | two on and brought Pennsylvania’s ‘,l‘r\nns_\'l\'nnia‘ . 01024308x—14 15 Harry Walker, the Red and Blue new | third baseman, gave Pennsylvania a | commanding lead. Walker's circuit | total of runs up to eight. Titzel held Ursinus to three hits. The score: T hite Ursinus ...... 000100000— 1 38 6 2 Batteries——Isenberg and Hefferen; Titzelt and Warwick COBBE LEAVES FOR SOUTH. Augusta, Ga.. April 9.—Ty Cobh left his home here yesterday to join the Detroit American league team to- |day at Rock Hill, S. C., where the | Tigers play an exhibition game. Cobh does not expect to sign his contract | until he reaches Detroit, but said he had accepted the ferms offered him. He has had no spring training, but said he was in excellent physical con- dition JACKH BRITTON FLOORED. Canton, Q. April 9.—Jack Britton of New York. welterweight champion of America, and Brian Downey of Colnmbus, hexed a tweolve-round draw here lasi nighi, according {o news paper eritic In the eleventh round Downey floored Eritton for a count af nine. she quickly overhauled her opponents and would have won in a few mora Jumps. BURNS STARS FOR ATHLETICS, Gets Two Singles and Two Doubles— Orioles Beaten, 11 to 5. Philadelphia, Pa., April 9.—The | Athletics made it three out of four over the Baltimore Orioles by winning vesterday afternoon, 11 to 6. Georga Burns was the individual hero. Ha connected for a brace of singles and the same number of doubles Two big innings clinched the gamey the runs coming in clusters of a foud and five, accumulated in the third and fourth frames. The score: r. h. e Baltimore ...., 000113000—5 8 4 Athleties ...... 00450200x—11 10 4 Batteries—Nehf, and Tragessory Johnson and Perkins., 1/mpire—Kee< nan, BRAVES BLANK TIGERS, Florence, S. C., April 9—The Bosto! Braves blanked Detroit yesterday, 7 to 0, The score Boston Nationals Detroit Americans Batte Nehf and Ehmke, Golding and Ainss