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September 11, 1912 Fddle Collins Steals Six Bases Eddle Collins all but stole the Detroit City hall and Grand Circus Park on Sept, 11, 1912, The actual fact is that he did steal no less than six bases right theré under the eyes of Hughey Jennings and Ty Cobb and Catcher Kocher. Teammates stole five additional bases, also. The score: > Athletics Murphy, rf. 4. Maggert, cf. ... Collins, 2b. Bakeér, 3b. McInnis, 1b. . Walsh, 1f. Barry, ss. Egan, c. Houck, p. . Coveleskie, p. Plank, p. .... cormowocapoos Total Bush, ss. Deal, 8b. . Corriden, 3b, Crawford, rf, Cobb, cf. .. Veach, if. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Yesterday's Results. New York 23, Boston 1-—First Now York 8, Boston 0—Second Brooklyn 0§, Philadephia 1 Pittsburgh 8, St. Louls 1 Cincinnati 6, Chicago 3 Standing, W 84 54 79 5 1 5% . bl 48 New York suvvis Brooklyn Pittsburgh Cinelnnati Chieago St. Louis . Philadelphia . Boston ALT B76 eehraenen 448 Games Toda; No games scheduled, [ R < AMERICAN LEAGUE. Yesterday's Results, Philadelphia 2, Washington 1.— First Washington 6, Philadelphia 65— Second, Chicago 12, Detrbit 8 New York at Boston—Postponed; rain, Other teams not scheduled Standing. Washington New York . Detroit St Douis . | Cleveland ..... | Philadelphia . Boston 60 59 v INDENVER TONIGHT Democratic Candidate Leaves Mountams lor City Assoclated Pross, ¢ Estes Park, Colorado, Scpt, 11— Ready after three days' rest in the Tockles for the strenuous days of campalgning that are ahead, John W. Davis, demecratic presidential nominee, had before him early to- day ‘w 60-mile automobile drive through mountain passes and’ plains to Denver. There tonight he will deliver an address on reclamation, irrigation and conservation, His adviscrs say that in connection with these 'sub- Jects, he will renew his assault upon the republican administration, both oh its record and on the basis of proposals its spokesmen have put forward for the future. Tmmediate- ly upon his arrival at Denver, the democratic standard bearer will be a guest at a luncheon and speak there briefly. He plans to remain in Denver over night, leaving tomorrow afternoon for Cheyenne, Wyo., where he has an engagement to speak to- morrow night, - On his last day in the Rockies yes- terday, Mr. Davis was made an hon orary member of the Boy Scouts of America during a visit to the en- campment of scout executives in the Rocky Mountain national park and was greeted by villagers and tourists at an informal reception at the Estes Michaels, =5 ,. Wheeler, p . Miller, zas . Totals M3 w—Batted for Rlake in #a—Hatted for Hartnett win— Bt In Tth, for Wheeler In 9th, Chucinnati 600 000 000—6 ARy iiiiiiiiene 001 020 000~ Two base hits, Donoliue, Cotter, Hress- ler, W three buse hits Pinelli; home rn Crite; stolen base, Pinelll; sacrifice Heatheote; doublg plays, Donokiue to Critz to Daubort; loft on bases Cincinnati §; Chicago 6; base on bglls, off Jncobs Bl i Donohue 1; struck out, by Keen 1; Blako 1; Donohue 1; hits off. Jacoby 3 I 1-3; Blake 4 fn 6; JKeen 4 hn 2- Wheeler £ In 2; umplres, Hart and Pfir- man; 10stng pitcher Jac tme 142, BRITISH VETERAN LOVES GIRL IN VAIN Distinguished Soldier Ordered Deported in Strange Case f | New York, Sept. 11, — Ordered deported because s for a New York broker's gdaughter bad, In the words of immigration officers, “deprived him of the seif- coptrol required by the conventions of modern soclety,” Dr., William H. | McCullagh, who was a licutenant- tcolonel in the British forces dur- ing the world war, is being held at Lllis Island. He will be given a | hearing next Tuesday in corpus proceedings which he stituted yesterday in an effort avold deportation. Dr. McCullagh obtained a stay in- to infatuatios.| habeas | Iy before the salling of the Maure Aanla, on which he was to be de. porteds In the petition for a writ of habeas corpus the charges ugatnst the physician were cf terized as “frivolous and sham. The girl is Miss ay Furbeck, 19 years old, daughter of Rollin G. Turbock, gnd member of an old New York family, Her father Is a member in the New York stock ex- change firm of Post & Flagg. During the hearing on Ellis Is- land aftor Dr. McCullagh's arrival last month from London, testimony was glven of alleged threats by the surgeon against Miss I'urbeck's father, her brother-in-law, also & London surgeon, and others who might fmpede his sult for the girl's hand. The evidence given at this hearing convinced Cgmmissioner of Tmmigration Curran'and the de- partment of labor that the girl was not in love with the surgeon and that she had not Induced him, as he alleged, to belleve she would marry him, The application for the writ of stay yesterday stated that Dr. Me- Cullagh had served with bravery in the war, receiving the distin- guished service order and the mil- itary cross, and since becoming a fellow of the Royal College of Sur- geons. We have no animosity or bit- ternees against Dr. McCullagh,” sald Miss I'urbeck’s father, “but he has been seized with this obsession, and for the sake of everybody’s pro-~ tectiofi it was necessary to appeal to the authorities.” Dr. McCullagh met his daughter which she was visiting her sister, in London, Mr, Furbeck sald. The surgeon twice proposed mar- riage, the father sald, but his pro- tence ‘created & situation which cavsed fhe girl to suddenly cut shert her visit and return home, according to Mr. Furbeck. ALL WORLD PLANES NOW AT GAPITAL Lient. Nelson Reaches Washing- fon Without Pomp or Bands — Washington, Sept. 11.—With all three planes of the army world fiight squadron now at Bolliog Fleld, the filers settied down today for another two days' lay over In the national capital under & revised schedule which will keep them here for participation in the De- fense Day test Friday. In contrast to the heralded ar- rival of the planes of his two com- panion pilots here Tuesday, Lieu- tenant Erik Nelson uncermonious- ly dropped down In his plane, New Orleans, at Bolling Field late’ yes- terday. He flew it from Hale« thorpe, near Baltimore, where he was forced down In the flight from New York, without even many of the service men at the fleld know- ing he wag on the way. Golng out from here to inspect work on the plane, he found it ship-shape after the installation of a new motor, climbed aboard and flew it in him- self so there would be no break of even a few miles In his record as FORTUNE TELLER PREDICTS SAFE YOYAGE FOR ZR-3 Frau Balle Bases Readings Made of Wives of Members of Dirigible Crew, Optimism On By The Associated Press, Friedrichshaften, Germany, Sept. 11,—~Frau Anna Balle, fortune tel- ler, predicts a safe trans-Atlantic voyage to Lakehurst, N, J., on the ZR-3, the glant dirigible built here by the Zeppelln company 4 for the United States navy. She bases her concluslon upon Sy her wives of 16 members ble's crew.' y Most of the wives of the employes consulted the fortuns tel- ler prior to the long sir ralds dure ing the war, In some cases, it 18 stated, pilots took*her advicé and changed the days for cortain vey- ages and, when they did so, théy always returned safely. Alrman Crashes Parls — Flylng over Bourg 1A Reine, near Paris, with the objéct of paylng a surprise vislt te his mother, Marcel Rapin, an army air- man, crashed to the ground out- side her house. He was seriously injured and the plane was com- pletely wrecked. | Chicago Louden, 2b, | E. Onslow, Kocher, ¢ Lake, p. xJones ... agalinst the deportation order short- | posals were rejected. His persis- Enter—Football! Games Today. Washington at Philadelphia New York at Boston Chicago at Detroit fCleveland at $t. Louis Park office. NATIONAL-AMERICAN LEAGUE BALL GANES (Continued I'rom pilot of the world girdling craft. Shortly before his arrival, the war department announced that at the request of Lieutenant Lowell H. Smith,* flight commander, the or- iginal trans-continental route for the fifers had heen changed to avoid the high altitudes encoun- tered along the air mgall line from Chicago to Sacramento, Instead of taking this route to their terminal at Seattle, the department an- nounced an itinerary that will take the fliers over a southerly course down through Oklahoma and Texas, & after leaving Chicago. The department explained in an announcement that owing to the ¥ strain to which the planes have 4 heen subjected having _ “consider- ably reduced thelr efficiency,” it would be unsafe for them to at- tempt to fly at an altitude of over 6,500 feet, A careful inspection of the craft since their arrival in Boston, it was said, has led to this decision. The fliers are now scheduled to leave Bolling Field Saturday morn- ing at 8 o'clock for Dayton, Ohio, where they will probably remain over Sunday. Although the new itinerary would bring the planes to Seattle on the afternoon of Sep- tember 23, it was emphasized that there would be no effort to hold the squadron to a hard and fast pro- gram, and that weather conditions would be carefully considered throughout the reémainder of the flight. What's Under Your Car? Strength! Of tires. Resilience, surely. Safety, always. Mile after mile, Goodyears. Only because we bufld Goodyears . Not in the usual ply apon Ibum ot;tmuwbutby?mcdllm the heat is reduced and the life of the tire is lengthened. rated \We might add that our serviceis the mfle, 1b, Lake in the ninth. Athleties 011 410 110—9 | )etroit 200 100 004—7 | Two-base - hits ~— Walsh, Kocher, ! Louden, Hits—off Houck 10 in 8| 1-3 innings, Plank 1 in Sacri- | fice hit—Houck. Sacrifice flies— Crawford 2, Veach, Stolen bases— vt Collins 6, Murphy, Bak-| New Haven 4, er, McInni: Louden, Dou- Second; 10 innings blé play— Coflins, MeInnis,| Bridgeport at Worcestor— Rain Teft on bases—Athletics Datroit | 7. First on balls—off Houck 3, | Coveleskie 1, Lake 6. First on er-| rors—Athletics 3. Hit by pitcher— by Houck 1. Struck out—by Houck 2, Lake 4. Passed ball—Egan, Wila H pitches—Houck, Plank. Time- -\“’;"“nl(llulwn 3 Iigh, 2h . s Ten ot ) e andl SEant W sfield . . g J. Mitehell, ss Umpires—Connolly and mrl,:“,m ot he ; | Albany Twg men {1/ ? | Bridgeport EASTERN I psterday’s Resu Hartford 4, Pittsfield 2 Albany 2, Waterbury 0--Tirst Waterbury 4, Albany S—Second Springfield 14, New Haven 4— Ireceding Page) Mokan, If ..... ¥ 0 0 [ Willtams, ef ..... o 0 Harper, rf . vees 0 Wiightstone : 0 Ferd, 2b . : ) 0 Wilson, o lalke, s o Betts, . [ Siheh ity Weinert, p . o0 o Standing, Bishow, D ......ie..0 0 W, <. Mitchen, 1 87 83 81 Springfield 3— Goodyear Service, intended to g every Goodyear Tire you buy, age built into it at the factory. NOTE THESE PRICES ON GENUINE GOODYEAR CORD TIRES 4 Straight Side $18.98 g:!%&dflnflh 2458 O’Neil Tire & Bai Co. 39.45 Washington St. 900 GOCDSYEAR By GLUYAS WILLIAMS Waterbury | Springfield Hartford Totals 2 s~ Batted for Weinc BIOCKL AR [ Tomorrow's Y . 64 score: 30 x 31, Cllnehlr’ $10.60 32x4 Straight Side 18.38 1e 12 hits and score 11 runs. Oh, Sir Henry 's Gamws, riford-~Two Waterbury at Pittsfield | ‘ Tos | ‘ Bridgeport at Springfield | | Albany at } Totals 30§ 7 x—Ran for Fournicr in 4th. Philadelphia INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE, i B i Two' base bits. Harper, lheme runs, Wrightstone o fices. J. Mitehell; loft on base, phia 5; Brouk Retts 1; Weinert 1 out, by Betts 1; Bis bits off Betts § in 6 Weinert liop 0 in 1; losing pitcher, Betts: ul McCormick, Rigler .and Moran; 1:20. New Haven at Worcester e 100 Yesterday’s Result: Jersey City 7, Baltimore Baltimore 11, Jersey Second Iteading 16, Newark 10—First | Newark 3, Reading” 1—Second [ I Syracuse at Toronto—Postpored; | time cold weather Rochester at Buffalo—Postponed; | rain —First City 4— . B . . Bedtime Stories. Bl | & ) R = Bedding/On A Sleeper PITTSBURGH 3, PIT'! The Stan Maore 0 [ ey, Vol S i 2 5 0 1 ? 0 Maranville ceen 20 3 0 500 | Crimm, 16 L 197 | Goorh. ¢ . 3 0 T lxehmidt, o . . 0 A80 | Adaps, p ... 2 0 479 | Bigbee. x ..uiul 0 g,';';f_';“‘,"j"‘v“ 'f;ff font Rt 1 Colleges now are getting their football teams in shape even i s ALt g ji fockoions the though the baseball season is just getting interesting. This | Today's Games. AT r.|shows a group of New York university players, Charles Snow- Jdersey City at Baltimore "idon, halfback being tackled by Frank Hawley, while Coach R 2 Tom Thorpe is showing him how. Above Coach Percy Haugh- Iochester at Buffalg o 1jton is telling a few Columbia university players the fine points - Jou £, . - "1of the game. on balls, oft Adams 1 GANT WHITE AND NEGRO MEET TONIGHT Follow the Crowd T 0 3 TO RogersRecreation Bldg. 50 CHURCH ST. Bowling and Billiards .Hmmw [ A good place for Ladies and Gentlemen to spend Itimore Toronto . Rochest | 5 N 5 YoU START T PEEL OFF A BLANKET BUT PIND THAT T0 THE PECULIAR INTERIDCKING SYSTEM OP MAKING (D o BEDDING KNOWN ONLY TO PULLMAN PORTERS Y00 DECIDE THE REASON YOU DONT 60 T SLEEP IS VOU'RE TDO HOT AND WONDER WHY BERTHS ALWAYS SEEM TO BE MADE UP IN DIRECT RATIO TO THE WEATHER = THE MORE HEAT, TRE MORE BLANKETS e TR Horr 2 of Sir Henry Thornton, president of the Canadian National Railways, eels’ a lot better now, thank you! e has just finished a little swim in mous salt water in Lake Mani- | katchewan. Sir Henry, by is an ‘American by birth | anta graduate of the University of | Pensylvania. e e———— HAR STAYS COMBED, GLOSSY Millims Use It - Few Cents Bus Jar at Drugstore » ha basea, =z THIS TONCENTRATES ALL OF THE BEDDING SQURRE- LY ON YOUR FEET AND SINCE YOU NEVER GAM. €00 SLEEP IF VOUR FEET ARE 00 HOT. @ =S THE ONLY WAV T0 GET ANYTHING OFF (5 TD KICK. EVERYTHING DOWN' WITH YOUR FEET on lases, Pittshurgh 10 | (Continued From Preceding Page) ] — | ot Ad 10 Tawny Tarzan,” “The Argentine L | Cave Man"—and Harry Wills, “The Brown Panther of New Orleans"— fit ulv\ls\ktll_\' well into their roles as gladiators ro vs. White | Wil negro, is easily pictured | as a symbol of the savage fading into a jungle curtain; but no small part | of the power in the magnet of this fight will be the spectacle of a giant negro struggiing with a white man who represents an even greater throw-back into primitive life, In this fight it will be Wills who will employ science to evade the sav- age rushes of Firpo, whose one idea is to crush quickly; it will be the negro who will carry the sympathy that part of the crowd which pities the underdog. It will prob- ably bb a brute battle, with science torgotten and the victory to the | strong. Experts, in final published opin- |p ions, disagree almost evenly upon | the result. Broadly, their specula- | tions credit Wills with the superior science and Firpo with the greater power and aggressivgness. Those who favor Firpo maintain that his sheer force will override Wills de- | . AR DN) \'QN.TVH; spite the ‘latter's ‘cleverness. Those | : : J i BUODYT \ NRLKE\;{ (uy] who pick the negro declare that the | Argentine will be an easy target and that Wills has enough punch to drop him. 2 YoU RESORT O A SERI - IONS WHICH FINALLY END IN A POSITION THAT SEEMS TO PROMISE COOLNESS AND PERHAPS SLEEP N 52 Y ) JUST AS YOU'RE DOZING OFF NOU BECOME UNCOMFORT= ABLY AWARE OF BEING T00 COLD-THE WIND MUST HAVE CHANEED AND YOU REALLY QUGHT TO PULL SOMETHING UP OVER YoU BY THS TME_THE BEDDING HAS BECOME A CONFUSED YOU'RE SOTIRED THRT Y0U GO COMPORTABLY TO SLEEP - MASS AND AFTER KNOCKING MOST OF YOUR CLOTHES CFP DER A TANGLED PILE OF SHEETS, BLANKETS , TROUSERS, A THERACKS N TRVING TO TIND THE RIGHT ENDTOPULL UP STRAW HAT, SUGHTY DAMD UMBRELLA, AND VESTERDAVA D a pleasant evening. Bowl before the leagues start. Hartnett, SALESMAN SAM Good Job for Sam Q00 LUCKY DOG-1 WK ST THEN [3) ( POLICE-MAN —_ Final Statements The fighters expressed confidence in final statements. Firpo declared unequivocally that it was “Wills' doom™ and that he would go on to the championship. Wills was more conservative but quietly certain. Both men were judged to be In splendid physical condition. Their | probable weights were announced to- day as 215 for the negrp and 218 for the Argentine. Danny Sullivan, who will referce tha struggle, is known as a capable, | courqgeous and experienced judge. | g | | pooed hai any style stays combed all day in ou like. “Hair-Groom™ ed combing cream which hat natural gloss and well- effect to your hair—that *h to gcod dress both in and on social occasions. ir<Chroom™ reaseicss grow heavy, nair Tew greasy also| Mirrok tustrous$an " Alde barracks to armful | Tommy ns to inspeet betbre gding on parade haye ot been installed at heips £hi enable himself | are of imitotions v