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BODGERS EVEN UP SERIES WITH YANKEES—PITTSFIELD 1S GRANTED NEW LONDON FRANCHISE IN EASTERN LEAGUE—JOCKEYS LOFTUS AND LYKE REINSTATED BY CLUB STEWARDS—BUTWELL HAS BIG DAY AT BOWIE TRACK—FLYNN MENTIONED AS MANAGER OF HARTFORD BASEBALL CLUB EERS EVEN Ui} ] S a— . SOMEBODY 1S ALWAYS TAKING THe Jov OVT oF TiFe i :A“m; '» Stock. - — v IBAN IS LFTED ON = THESE MAD Jim- CLEAR THINGS OFF ;Hflg \:JASD ( SOME THING HA HA WA 348 406 s 4 onn EE = (2 R e ‘ Sl e A o :idockey Club Restores Crack "Twirling Deleats Huggins' Men | fey Fon 2 et T | Riders in Good Standing . ; el o 64 AW H-n s 10 . Phe ¥ (%5 . 2/ / 1282 | New York, April 11—Johnny Lof< s b Jacksonville, April 11-Th Yan- = ( ;Q = ({f” : i 5 tus, America’s premier jockey, was re- Pces and tho I \.i"-; «5-‘{““ are dead- 7 ('(\ &7 2 5 5 | instated yesterday afternoon by tha £ fe‘d OHV i L‘n;(l Ié;’)’\' “;‘“"-l ! i 7 I . 4 6 | stewards of the Jockey club which 3 )l‘s hvlfl bat R . ¥ hene; S ), met at the offices of the club, 18 East Yerb pitching were too much for the X 3 Forty-second street. The ban on American leaguers here at Southside ) : > - Lofgren ........ Lawrence Lyke was also lifted. Boflx park yvesterday afternoon and th(\,‘ ~ " McCarthy .... 3 3 | Jockeys will be permitted to acceptus Modgers triumphed by the score of | Lo : ! 5 ; | | mounts beginning May 1 to 2. : Frir i B A : -1309 | With the announcement of the re- Much of the sting of defeat to Hug- L E % Sl Tl g Dept. 609, instatement aof t > two boys came Kins was taken away by the splendid | R DY E p -3 | B. Chalme e 0 7{word that the suspension of Joe ‘twirling of Ernfe Shore, who in his e 3 b et fes i < { Humphrey 75 | Byrne and Sammy McGraw had been maiden debut in Yankee regalia let 3 ; e Osterholm . o I 6 | continued. Entries of Thomas Mc~ the Dodgers down with a pair of 3 PRt £ Jcalen BN 5 5 | Elroy were denied and B. Travers and Yits in the three innings. One of the | = { Burkbardt ... .— 293 |J. B. Dunn were refused a trainer's Rits was an infield scratch which SOMEBODY 1S ALWAYS E license. ! many scored ss an error by Ward. v 5—1341| The epplication of Willlam Doyle, Jack Quinn started on the mound | TAKING THE JoY | | £. Smith, W. E. Dinkinson and W. A. for Huggins. Though the Dodgers ouT OF LIFE * | Dy, E 262 | Mondane for jockey licenses were laid knicked the veteran for caly five I ThAT S > > | Tuester . ooC o0 5- 68 | on the table in five innings Uncle Wilbert’s slug Eine GIGAR i e By The reinstatement of Loftus cama P gers unloaded their blows when hi TRA s | R N | as no surprise to thousands of race- t nieant runs and registered their full = Fe IEATIIOniNE i S 91 3 | goers. They knew that the great rid- f complement of six runs during Jack's = | —_— er had committed no crime h as @pdministration. The Dodgers not onl z 447 487 409—1293 |pulling a horse, and were confidént hit Quinn timely but they pounded | 2 | | Tool Inspection, {he had been punished for a slight in< him hard. A home run by Grifiith Williametz 4 98 f and doubles by Zach Wheat and z S W o odidn [5G son were mixed up in the Brooklyn - 1 N JAP BEATS AMERICAN tion of the rules. 4 allon Fo s 8 a4 hit barvest. S i, V) i T o g ’ e ; S, = Maln ........ 107 r. h e - New York . 100010000—2 i > .- 3 445 471 Brooklyn . ... 2000400x—86 T 0 \ ‘N Dept. 500. . \ = Barb g 7 Quinn, Shore and Ruel; Cadore, a . y B g .S_tar:gr ceee. 8979 86 ards in Semi-Finals at Pinehurs( ©heney and Krueger. = g 4 2 si 98 ) N Herdeline ..... 82 o7 AL i - - Z——| 3 J. Chalmers, . 87 @iants Beat Sox Again. ! - faed 3 y : . oo . S Pinehurst, N April 11.—Vin 5 T ] s , 5 : 2 - ent Richards and Ichiva Kumagad Giants are making a strong come- . . i met in the semi-flnals of the men's singles in the North and South tennid ¥ 487 Jeck against the world's champion % § . 3 2g: I Mot X ey g |tournament at Pinehurst yesterday oo ¢ ¥ Dept. 410, Boston Red Sox. Yesterday McGraw's 3 B . = t n : ennant aspirants won another clean M. Cusas o : o7 and ”"’, Jap won in two straight sets, cut decision over the crack Hub nin — Kuppler ........ 86 113 A0 6-2. In the other bracket Wil« Playing on a wretched ground, the RIDES THREE W[NNERS iFLYNN’ HARTFORD MANAGER TRYOUT GAMES. Wacker . ..108 90 liam T. Tilden, Jr., plaved against S ————— \ — Kumagae Takes Two Sets From Rich< Tourney. QT o & wrekohed eround, Tiho SFIE[J] BAEK T S8 118 g9 Howard Voshell and won at the end [Barnes and George Smith with er- Candidates for Atlantic Fieet Team to i 3 of an unexpectedly close contest, 6-1, [Torless support and batted out vic 434 507 “3%13“14»6. 7- tory by a score of 4 to 1. The serie ] 5 el P T L o It is difficult to say which resul 5 Jimmy Butwell Has Big Day at Bowle | Former Leader of New London Plant- Crmmee 60 Mo, L] 3 First Floor. e aGhed istoroaes now stands four to two in favor New York, April 11.—Candidates | 'acey S 2 b 2R o lasalcontoatt bebias iR iotn s 1 a ¢ bthe Red Sox, with the last game of | " Track—His Mounts V in Easy| ers Believed to Be Jim Clarkin's | ror Abrahamson .... 92 92 3 268 Aroecanc ositions on the Atlantic fleet’s < 3 e - ras he set sqheduled for Winston-Salem, | A Begley .........117 107 - _ 05 Kumagac generally was anticipated track and fleld teams, to be entered and even that idea went gl B .t ; 24 3 ; glimmering B e in the inter-Allied games in France | Dormeley . 80 112 308 | 7 T 8 The score: o Hickey . 104 118 306 | When Richards started off by taking Jack Flynn, former Springfield | during the summer, will compete at the first three games in a row. Tha . ! Bowie, Md.. April 11 —Jimmy But- y S o6 - — - New London Framchise Granted wen had anctncr banner dap in the | manaser, mas be plasiag mansger of | Travers Tsland on April 25 and 26, 55 i1t io1iic3| b (served the Orst game and sedil seddie at the Princa George Park | the Hartford club the coming season. | The meet will defermine what men Richards a hard fight for the decision, ) 5 S - on-Production. { Jh F F track vesterday afternoon. He rode | At the Eastern league meeting in | &re to wear the navat colors in the | .. 3 T the game going to 18 points, but the 040NN . eny three winners, Jack Leary in the first, | this city Flynn and Owner Jim | French competitions. Giomaa e as next two went to Richards in quicl New York .. . 00012001 Red Sox ... 000000001 Barnes, G. Smith and [Jones, Bhea and Walters, | Fashion. l Selection for Managcrial Bertlu | ! Kingling II. in the second and Puts| Clarkin had a couple of whispering | The meet also will decide the | G2 H0 81 84 jorder, the Jap being allowed to win = ‘and Cails in the third. Under the | sessions in well-selected places of | Championship of the fleet, all teams | " %% - 91 84 only one point in each of them TRINITY “GRID” SOHEDULE. | Springfield, Mass., April 11.—Pitts- handling of the teteran jockey all | the lobby of Cooley's hotel. Asked belug entered mnder (he pames lor;!;m,k o RN ——— deld ag: is @ gue baset vn, three horses ran kindly and fast and | if he had a manager in view for | the hundred ships which compose the | "o = - °° N 9 . thall Season Will Open October 4 B ey e L O ST e e A three were heav- | Hartford, the shrewg Jim Clarkin re- | Plg fighting ‘unit. S i , X \\'rm AN _Bmmtum mmwmuox, T e . ily backed and went to the post fa- | pied: “Yes, three or four. Four, - — LD ot UADHL Q1 ATt News L | Cooley’s hotel yesterday afternoon, ac- vyorites. that's it, four. Yes. Why? What do ROBRY AWAITS RELEASE. — = | oos O Begekive, New York st | Hartford, April- 11L.—The Trinity | copted the offer of the so-called Pitts- Genevieve B. a chestnut filly owned | you mean ” When further questioned z i De ROUSCH REFUSES TO REPORT. | antinoa) puliard champion, won thd doliege football sehedulo for the fall| felg Athletic club for a franchise by S Pinkerton, won the fourth race, | Clarkin did not seem to understand | j Richmond. ~Va. Apnl 11.-Dave] & ' 2 : i national title here last night, when in of 1919 as approved by the faculty ' apiar a little sparving with Jack the feature of the card. This daugh- | the queries and so answers were not | JoPertson. star B s e moridis| oakiand, ‘l';d‘ April 11—md, the national three-cushion carom BT ot e e el ot ot yahre el oaelet ot eyl ety et o e series of 1917, sald vesterdar e ex- | Rousch, outfielder of the Clncinnati | championship he defeated Farl Pater< phnounced yosterday by Manager | ity, ind Jack returned to his homa badly. but worked her way up en the | Flynn was just as shifty. “Oh I | Bects fo be released to the Washington | National league basebail club, yester- o o.foflw3 Chicago athletic_associas Jast’ nignt onihusinstie over the pross | outside until at the homestretgh sho | have three offers and T dem't mow | Americans and that the deal for his ’ day gave out a statement declaring he | ton, 50 to 81, in 82 innings, He madq | The Bastern league, at its meeting at lAlfred P. Bond. The schedule com- o el : i . brises six games, opening with Prince- | pecis’ i his to But Terry is no Wa§ in command. Then she drew | which to take” That let Jack out. | release from the New York Giants will | would remain on his farm here unless | a TR ofeix u his 780 Aot soored A fon at Princeton, October 4, and clos- | yiore onthusi I the rest of the Away and won easily by a length. | But the little bird says that Jack | e concluded within a fow d e b aranelagtiofiest 1 ninige ing ‘with Iafavette at Faston; Pa.’ magnates who nsed their circuit Plurenzi finished second and \wwnku{and Jim with their threc offers and | B ovenibor: 15. | The (comDlote for ihe'coming estaon. plcked the fime | WAS: third. their four applications, respectively, schedule is as follows: ! limits for their piaying schedule and e = willlsoon beflemployed and employer. September 27, open. handled r details are needed T =ygialedilovonrmatiers ibuthe; October 4, Princeton at Pri before the championship season opens ' e Samielo i oldernil efsersemiencibutii B L Connectisat i o looks as though they will reach an keollege at Hartford; 1S, Amherst The circuit includes: Springfield, pogersiand i fin i fopddays anaftn by Hartfora: ; e “orcester, Pittsfield, Hartford, Prov- geckulynoRwilnayedistihaseflend Worcester. idence, Waterbury, New Haven and , New York, April 11—Willie Ritchte, | manage the Hartford ball club the November 4, New York university | gridgeport. The last four towns will Who is to meet Benny Teonard at|coming seson. Clarkin knows Flynn’s t New York City; 15, Lafayette play Sumday ball. A better way o the Newark Sportsmen’s club, April | terms, Flynn has a line on Clarkin's B ston, Pa. 3 28, sought e McKay, the promo- | terms. ter yesterday, and asked if there RITCHIE IS CONFIDENT. Former Lightweight Champion Wants Referee Who Can Count Ten. state this would be to say that all S e clubs in the league will play Sunday BEST HORSES AT JAMATCA. peventeen Features Attract 941 Nom- nations for Metropolitan Club Races. New York, April 11.—The 17 stakes o be run during the two meetings pt the Metropolitan jockey club at its bopular course at Jamaica in May d June closed with a total of 941 hominations. There are likely to be ome additions to this list when the nails from Cuba and the far west- rn points arrive. Nambered in the of nomina- foms are all the principal stables, and also includes every horse of mnote | m training as well as a host of lesser ; fights. As with the other associa- Hons, the number of entrie fal- en off as compared with last vear. t the quallty is there and there is ! ery prospect for the best vear of cing since its resumption in 1913 CAPABLANCA CHESS VIOTOR. ostich Quits in International Match Held in Cuba. Hawvana, April 11.—Jose R. Capa- hanca, of this clty, known the world cer as the Pan-American thampton, has emerged wir haten with Boris Kostich, fopert, who resigned the at furtner play, according ouncement made at the Club de jedrez de la Haban av | The uropean mast: nz failed to ore as much as a draw in five games liayed, saw the futility of continuing Ind acknowledged defeat. The latest performance of Capa- lanea sunpasses even his record in e first set match bf his career out- de of Cuba when he defeated Mar- hall, the United States champion, by to 1. In that contest, howeve ere were 14 drawn e— | We bave alleys open for ladies’ aft- | ‘noom parties. AETNA BOWLING ALLEYS. Church Street, | ball as the Providence, Waterbury, New Haven and Bridgeport clubs will have the pleasant duty of competing with a visiting team on the Sabbath. Pittsfield had little or no opposition in getting placed in the league. A# the start of the meeting the mag- nates conversed among themselves and then invited Jack Terry in to have him explain the situation in his town. Jack made a very favorable impres- sion and little time w Jost in vot- ing his city a membe eeding ! London. Ferry will probably serve as | Pittsfield manager, but, of course, the has not consid- ager 3 But Jack has the inside track and is one of the men ! responsible for the return of his city to league ball. Holyoke, Fall Rive and other towns that had done more or less talking about baseball wera i not represented and there was no sur- prise that those places were without delegates. ‘With the nchise, Ferry obtained 14 ball playe of whom four have been suspended. There is some do about some of the others. While no definite shareholders of the club have been named, it is quite certain that no trouble will be found In getting packers in Pitt 1d. John F. Coone; ‘has promised his support and at’ the last meeting of the fans enthusiasm was rife and nearly everyone present was willing to ‘‘do his bit” financially to bring league haseball to the city The Pittsfield Athle: association has not vet heen formed, but will organize either today or tomorrow. The players whom Councilman rry rcceived with the franchise 1 Champion, Brady, Henry Fred Oakes, Hammond, Desmond Beattle, Ru, 1 Martin and the 1ded list: J. H. Bemis, Ir ardin Herndon a4 Robe cssens It is under- oo d { mond and Beattlc he available for the Pittsfleld club But the new owners are entitled to all | players “owned at the time of the franchise tranafer by the New London were any mathematical referees in Jersey. McKay asked for a diagram and Ritchie sald he meant a referee who could count up to ten without any hesitation in his speech. “If Leon- ard is down,” said the former cham- ‘pion, “I want him to get a good count. And T want a good count for myself if I unexpectedly go to the canvas.” McKay promised to inquire into the mathematical qualities of the Jer- sey referces. Willie Ritchie has opened his own home in New York city, and has be- gun training. His work consists of | road work in Centrai Park in the mornings and light gymnasium work | at home in the afternoon. Next weck [ he will begin hard training at Grupp's or Bothn RESERVED. Manager Warren €. Slater of the Y. M. C. A. basketball team an- nounced today, th all seats for the game with the Nutmegs of Hartford next Tuesday evening at the local as- sociaticn gymnasium, will be re- | served. The reservations will include the seats on the bleachers, chairs on the running track and at both ends of the hall. The tickets will be put | on sale at 1 o'cl this evening, at the association offi ANNEX TO PRACTICE The first baseball practice of the season for 2 x team will be held at St. Mary's playground tomor- row afternoon. 1 r Campbell requests that all members of last vear's team and candidates for this year’s team be on hand. KOPF NOT MISSED. Tvan Olson is playing a great game | hetween second and third for Brook- Iyn. Kopf, the shortstop, who is hold- ing out, {8 not missed. MACKMEN SWAMP SEMI-PROS Philadelplia, April 11.—The Kenat, semi-professionals, were defeated b the ladeinhia Americans nere yes- E] 4 REDS BEAT TULSA, Tulsa, Okla., April 11.—The Cincin- nat{ Natjonals heat the Tulsa team yesterday, § to 0, Clarkin’s ball club will hold out at the Wethersfield avenue park as usual. | PENN AT ANNAPOIJS, | | | | Coach Wright Predicts Victory for | | i His Oarsmen Annapolis, Md., April 11.—The Pennsyivania -~owing squadron, con- | isting of the members of the varsity, cond and freshmen crews and sub- stitutes, under (Coach Joe Wright, ar- | ved in Arnapolls vesterday and were able io get on the water for practice, The midshipmen were aleo on the water yesterday afternoon under the direction of Richard Glendon. The rival oaremen were cyeing each other turday’s races will be for blood. The main crews split even on the {wo races last year and this vear. Wright has announced that he expeots to sweep the river. Naturally the mid- shipmen e keyed up to a high pitch. urday afternoon, the freshmen first and the vassity last, an interval of | about twenty minutes between the races belng cxpected. MIDDLEBURY SCHEDULE. Middlebury, Vt., April 11.—Eight games are on the Middlebury college football schedule announced vester- day. The season will open Septem- i ber 27. The schedule follows: | September 27, West Point at West [ Point. October 11, Fordham at New York; 18, Boston college at Boston; 25, St. Lawrence university at Middlebu November 1, Norwich at Middle- bury; 8, Willilams at Middlebury; 15, Clarkson at Middlebury; 22, Vermont at Burlington. TUFTS TRACK SCHEDULE. lege track schedule was announced last night as follows Mey Middlebury at Middlebury; 10, Springfield -intercollegiaic New Hampshire at Durham; 24, New Fngland intercollegiate Athletic asso- d ciation at Boston, osely and it is easy' to see that | The races will start about 4 Sat- Medford, April 11.—The Tufts col- | THE TRAPLEY The deep vent which ex- tends to the “Robo” waist seam—The “Bell-Dell” sleeve and shoulder effect with the definite flare to the skirt— make up a practical Norfolk style which will capably meet every active requirement. $35 and more Wilson's