Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 3, 1909, Page 3

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J. L. LATHROP & SONS, 28 Shetucket Street, Norwich, Conn. Jy2ida 3 Agency Est. 1?46 . We have again moved our office— this time' to the end of the hall, second story, Thames Loan & Trust Co. Building. Iy12MWF ARE YOU AFTER the right kind of a pelicy in FIRE INSURANCE ? ’ Youw'll find that we can place you right. Don't delay—make use of our mervices before the fatal moment. Then you're safe. ISAAC S. JONES, Insurance Agt. Richards Building, 91 Main Street. auglsdaw N. TARRANT & CO., 117 MAIN STREET. Fire, Accident, Health, Liability, Plaie Glass and Steam Boiler . .. INSURANCE Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society, u. 8, Assots $2,769,422.10 Western Assurance Co., U. €, Assets $2,397,608.00. dec1la ATTORNEYS AT LAW. SROWN & PERKINS, Atorneys at Law over First Nat 3ank, Shetucket St Entrance Stairway, nex: to Thames Nat Bunk. Tel. 38-3. PAINTING! PAINTING! That Is our business and now is the time to have it done. We will he glad to give you estimates and our work will be done in a first-class manner at 8 reasonable figure. Give us a trial orger. BROWN & ROGERS, 27 Chestnut 8t mar28d A W. BURNHAM, Ege Specialist, yld s 257 Main Street. MISS M. C. ADLES, Hair, Scalp and Face Specialist ELEGANT AND NATURAL are the Hair Styles which Miss Adles is prepared to show patrons. She wih be absent from Norwich until the week of Sept. 6th, when she-will return with the Newest Parisian Styles. " WAUREGAN HOUSE, Norwich Boston. New York. Telephone 704. aug3od A Leader in Trunks THE INDESTRUCTO The Cheapest and most durable Trunk on the market today. We carry all kinds of Trunks, Traveling Bags and Suit Cases at BOTTOM PRICES. The Shetucket Harmess Co 283 Main Sireel. WM. C. BODE. Telephone 865-4. aug?28d bt sttt e E LA STV LRI o iao S. F. GIBSON Tin and Sheet Metal Worker. Agent for Richard=on and Boynton Furnaces. i 85 West main Street, Norwich, Conn. dec7a DENTISTRY The dental business established by my brother, whose assistant I was for many years, will be continued by mae assis: by Dr. V. D. Eldred. It will be a pleasure to ¥ee the former cuscomers of my brother and as many new ones as_will favor me with thelr patronage. Extracting 25¢ and up. movisd PR. CHA® B, ELDRED. DOMINICK & DOMINICK, FOUNDED 1870, Members of the New York Stock 3 Exchange. Bonds and High Grade Investmen's Orders ecuted in Stocks and Bonds, Grain and Cottonn. NORWICH BRANCH : 67 Broadway Telephone 901 FRANK 0. MOSES. Mor, ¥ | Wins Pacing Cerby by a Length—'flnw 3 , Place—Detroit Continues Winning Gait—Leaders all Beaten in National League. Reached Mass. Sept. 2.—Simon | for nearly an hour. d from the clouds | able to find any bones broken, but were American pacing | afraid the spine might be hurt. Simon Kenton, the winner of - the Derby, is the property of C. H. Tap- pan of Attleboro, but entered in the name of J. M. Simpson of that town. Margin Wins the Massachusetts. For the Massachusetts the road mare Margin, in the string of Lon MecDon- ald, was an odds-on favorite through het three stake winnings of this year, two~of them being valued- at $10,000. She won the event handily. In the other two races Carroll, the Cleveland representative, had it easy in the 2.09 trot, and Rosemary Chimes, a New York mare, took the 2.16 trot after losing the opening heat to the Doctors were un- Kenton fairly drop today and won t! Derby at the grand circuit meeting at Readville, as up to the time he passed the winning post nobedy had consider- ed him as worth a thought, the favor- ite being Asa Wilkes, with The Eel a strong second choice in thg betting. Twelve thousand persons were out to enjoy the double bill offered for the classic Massachusetts stake had fourteenth renewal decided beside the The weather was perfect, but the condition of the track was bad for fast time, the rain of yesterday having left it very ‘heavy, particularly next to the pole. All Eyes on The Eel, The thirty-seven starters Derby were at the post ten minutes before getting away to a perfect start, All eyes were centered on the Canadian the scratch horse. ‘While fully as good as 6 to 1 could be secured that he would not win, yet his reputation and disadvantage of having to overcome all of the big fleld placed in front of him made him the popular favorite with the general public. Wilkes, on the 2.09 mark, had been doped the best proposition by the tal- ent to bring home the money, his price being 4 to 1 and back to 3 to 1 before Derby race. Trotting Championship Today. Hamburg Belle and Uhlan meet to- morrow in a grand match for the trot- ting championship of the world. GERMANS FIRST AND SECOND. Foreign Sonderklasse Yachts Show Form—First Win for Challengers. Marblehead, Mass., Sept. third of the international Sonderklasse races, the eGrman challengers scored a victory. Captain Otto Protzen steer- ing the Hevella aroind a triangular course 71-2 miles, twice sailed, today with the same excellent judgment he displayed three years ago when he won a race here for the Roosevelt cup chal- lengers, with the Wanusee. It was a distinet triumph for the German yachtsmen, did the Hevella capture first honors, but the Margarethe crossed the line in while the Seehund IL, Jooking like a hopeless last at the end of the first round of the course, came The first of the American tc finish was the Wdlf, but she was badly beaten by both the Hevella and Maararethe, while twenty seconds wonder, The Eel, McEwen soon had The Eel at top speed and before reaching the first quarter the gray stallion had passed about fifteen of the field and was step- ping a whirlwind clip clear on the out- side of the track to aveid the horde ol horses in front that were filling the course from the pole to way beyond the middle of the track. bacause not only Crash at Head of the Stretch. second piace, It was when just turning into the stretch that an accident occurred that for an instant caused McEwen to take his horse back to avoid going down in the crash. Major Strong, in making a wild break, struck the sulky of Simon throwing out Driver King and knock- ing Baron Whips against the fence. i Dirl Led at the Half. At the half the position of the lead- ers was Dirl two open lengths to the good; Dillon Queen second, and then Outcast, Frank S., Charley King, Gent- ly, Chester A., and Bard Allerton. Wilkes was fourteernth horse and Th behind the came the Seehund II.. Next came the Ellen, winner of Tuesday’s race, while trailing in the rear was the Monday’'s contest, and favorite before the starting whis- tle was blown toda; erman yachtsmen were delighted at the outcome of the third day’s racing does mot fully seribe their feelings when the H dashed acrosg the line and received an ovation from the multitude of steam and sailing yachts gathered about. Ee! the nineteenth. Dirl held command clear to the mile and one-eighth, when the closing of the field to a bunch that swept clear acros the track made which of the number forged slightly In the lower turn Asa into sixth position, the crowd beginning to yell that he would This appeared likely to the long distance post, when he was raced into submission. Hartford County Circuit. Windsor, Conn., Sept. 2.—The open- inz me<ct of the lartford county cir- which was to have been held vesterday and was rostpcned en was held today at it impossible to tell ahead of him. Wilkes raced cuit races, account of rain, ‘Moore park. The carried a pures of $500, was won by Abner Hendee's Forest Prince. best time was made by Forest Prince in the first heat of the 2.21 pace and by Lulu Hunt in the second and third heats of the 2.30 pace—2.18 1-4. 2 Cook of New Haven was fined $50 for improper driving in the last heat of the 2.25 trot. Simon Kenton Rushes Into the Lead. In the foremost rank was Bard Al- lerton, Cecilian Frank 8., Gently and Charley King half way down the home stretch. creeping past vards from horse after hprse the wire and Simon Kenton rushed in The Eel in the final fifteen Donlin Case Reconsidered. President Ebbetts of Brooklyn says he made a bid for Donlin but has re- “From what I hear he will never be able to play his best game again throughout an entire says Ebbetts, thinking about him. universal experience that a man who stays out of the game for a year is never so good when he finally returns, so I cannot see where I would be ben- efiting my club by taking him on at unconscious, remaining in that state|the exorbitant salary he would want.” FINANGIAL AND COMMERCIAL. NARROW STOCK MARKET. Very Little Speculative Interest—This Condition Regarded With Some Sat- rds passing five horses and the last he big end of the $15,000 purse, but not to be denied, winning by a length, the same distance between Bard Aller- ton and The Eel for second and third imon Kenton was considered. % s : Tt he een a Driver King Badly Injured. A It was found in the collision whereby Driver Dan King was thrown from behind Simon he was severely in- He was taken from the trac 0 Am. Tobacco pfd Atlantic Coast Line Baltimore & Ohio. New York, Sept. 2.—The stock mar- kat today was narrow and very little speculative interest was shown Such a development is regarded with some satisfaction by the banking and larger financial interests which saw a menace of evil after effects from the violent turmoil The coming three days’ interval, from Friday evening to the following Tuesday sized the tendency to quietude in the The approach of such a pe- riod usually prompts to an abstention from importan: new commitments and also to a reduction of contracts already It was (o this cause that the advancing tendency of prices was attributed to supposed that a remmnant of the short interest built up on the recent break in prices still remains to be covered. News of the day had little influence on Not the current trade re- turns, but the prospects for the futur are what must be sought in the price fluctuations of securities and are what doubtless played their part in the rise in the price of United States St day to within a small fraction of its highest record price. produced on the cotton market by the appearance of the government's report of the condition of that crop on Aug. 25 deprived it of influence in the stock Bethlehem ~ Steel Central Pacific Central of New Jerscy.. .31 Chesapeake & Ohio. . late specula- b Colorado Fuel & Tron.. large extent, General Electric ) Great Northern ptd Tilinols Central the trading. Interborough M Inter Marive pfd International Paper International Pump The small effect Louissille & > Natlonal Biscuit deterioration is modified, the position of the industries depend- ing on a supply of cotton. by the large acreage planted, and, even more so, by after effects of is shown by just finished by the New Orleans cotton be theé largest the history of the surance thus Norfolk & Western computation deficiencies helps to neu- present year's prod tralize the consequences of the present dend by the Calumet and Hecla Min- ing company was of more influence on the market for copper shares than was the news of trade conditions. statistical pesition of copper is regard- ed as unsatisfactory on the whole, the piling up of stocks abroad indicating that the rate of production of the metal 18 still ahead of the consumption, with condition, of Tuion Pacific . promise, in early betterment of In the general duliness of the movements in industrial specialties continue to stand out con- The American Hide Leather stocks responded to a highly favorable annual to hold the entire ad United States Stee Carolina Chem s corroborat il sules, par valie days 2 3-4@3 per cent.; : 1-4@3 1-2 per cent.; six -84 per cent. New York, Sept. 2.—Cotton futures Closing bids: Septem- December 12.47, 7. March 12,51, April 12.52, points hxxiler; middling uplands, 12.80; middling gulf, 13.05; sales, 30 bal g ol L T almssuesum== Sl eeFeoome=3 Elswsuasmacs Runs; ford 2, riy, Willett. for Boston Niles ; hit Mlins 5 In 5 innings, oft : (wo base hits, Willet, Gessler: home sacrifice bits, D. Jones. Bush, T. sacrifice fly, Bush: stolen bases. Bush. Niles,” Speaker, Woller; bases on balls, off Coll . off Pape 1. hit by plicher, by Pape 1; first base on_ercors, Boston 1, Deiroit 1: left on bases, 2 out, by Collins 2, _double plays. Speaker to Stal ball, Donoliue; wiid pitch, Willett; time, 1.40; um- pires, Evans ad Perrine. Cleveland and New York Break Even. Cleveland, Sept. 2.—Clevéland and New York broke even today- Hughes held Cleveland safe in the first game. In the second game, Upp. a left hander from Columbus, zllowed New York only five hits. Iie won his own ‘game by a single in the ninth. _Scores: First game— Cleveland. abh po s bh po a e lick, rf 5 o0 2300 a 4 20 41200 4281 40708 3 5 41000 ‘ 1 4el 0 0 0 B'ingham.cf 4 o 4 3:35 1 Perring.3b 3 2 41000 Ball.ss 4 3 2010 Berger.n 2 0 . 0jHughes.p & X9 NN *Easterly 1 00 7 ————— sitton.p . 0 1° 0| Totals, 341027 T 2 **Sullivan 1 0 0 Totals, 36 927 11 1 *Batted for Berger in Tth. **Batted for Sitton in 9th. Score by innings: Cleveland ...... M 000 New York .... 02w 1 Rums, Yor Cleveland Flick. for New York Dem- mitt, Engle, Knight 2, Austin, Hughes: two base hits, Stovall, Birmingham: three base hits. Knight. Birmingham, Engle; sacrifice Sweeney; stolen bases. - Keeler, Lajole, Reilly: hits, off Berger 9 in 7 innings, off Sitton 1 in 2; first base on balls, Berger 2, off Hughes 1: hit by pitched bail. Berger 1: struck out. by Berger 7. by Hugl by Sitton 1: wild piteh, Berger 2; first base on rors. Cleveland left on bases, Cleveland 9. umpires, Connolly and Kerin. New York. Po abh po a e ] 36101 4 31200 8 q 40630 1 0/Engle.1t 30 10 FEasterly 7 1{Laporte.2b 4 2 10 B'ingham.of 2 0 o/Knightss 4 0 2 3 0 Perring.5b 1 0lAusiinz 3 0 2 8 0 Ball.ss 0 3 o0Kleinowe 3 0 9 1 0 Upp.p 2 0, Warhop.p 1280 Totals 37 8 11 - Totals, 1 One out wien winning run scored. Score by Innings: Cleveland . e of S New Yoik Rt W ns. for Cleveland Flick, Perring. e: two base hits, Perving. Stovall: sae b Keeler, Reily; double play, Stovall unassisted: bases on balls, off Upp 1, off Warhop 4; siruck out, by Warhop rst Dase on_errors . Cleteland 4. New York nnolly and Kerin. Parent Makes Star Play for Chicage. Chifago, Sept. 2.—Chicago defeated St. Louls 6 to 3 in a bard hiiting game today. the bases full with one out in the nint ut Parcnt made a remarkable one handed catch of a liner and turned it into a double play. Sco Chicago. St. Lo Mes'nger,rf 1:%.3..0f abh po a e Parent.ss 1 2 3 ofStonelr 524080 Cole,cf 12 0 OfHoffmanct 4 1 2 0 0 D'higerty. It 1 1 3 OfHarizellss 2 0 1 0 Isbell, 1b 010 1 OfGriges.db 3 1 9 0 1 Tan'hill,3b 12 1 ofin it 4110 At=.2) 2182 4 T’y Owens.e 351 423 F.Smith.p 300 110 Totals, 2 irahamp 2 0 0 Smith 1 1 0 Totals, 33112411 1 *Batted for Graham in 9th. Score by inning Chicazo 3001 St. Louls 30000000 0—3 Runs, for Chicazo Parent 2. Cole, Dougherty 2, Atz for St. Louls Stone, Hoffman. Griggs: two base hit. F. Smith: sthree base hit, Parent: home run. Dougherty: hits. off Bailes 5 in 11-3 iunings. off Graham 6 in 6 2-%: saerifice hits, Griggs, Howell, Dougherty: stolen bases, Hoffman, Owens. Dough- erty: double plays. Atz to Parent to Isbell, Sriger to Perris, Graham to Ferris to Griggs, Pa Atz: lcft on bases, Chicago St. Louis 7: on bals, off Smith 2. struck cut. by ¥. S Graham; time, THURSDAY BASEBALL GAMES. Eastern League Standing. W Rochester Newark . Providence Toronto Bu”alo Montreal Jersey City Baltimore Eastern League. At Rochester—First game: Providence 4. Roches- ter 1. Second game: Providence 3. Rochester 0. At ‘Buffalo—Bufialo 7, Jersey City 3. At Montreal—First game: Montreal 6, Newark T. Second game: Montreal 0, Newark 4. At Torpnto—Toronto 6, New England League Stan Rroekton Worcester Lynn .. Fall Riser At Brockton—Brockton At Worcester—First game: Second zame: Worcester 9, At Lowell—First game Second_game: Towell Fall River At New Bedford—Tirst ggme: Haverhill 5. New Bedford 0. Second game: Haverhili 2, New Bedford 1: seven innings. . Lynn 4. BLACK HANDERS AFTER COBB. Jennings Will -A;k_ Sp;:inl Police Pro- tection When Next in Philadelphia. A Detroit despatch to a New York paper states that as a result of the C'ohb-Baker spiking incident in the re- cent Athletic-Detroit series, Cobb Is receiving “Black Hand” letters from Philadelphia fans threatening venge- ance on the Georgian when the Tigers play in Philadelnhia on the next trip. One missive bore the skull and cross- bones and warmed Cobb that the % | “North End reoters will be after him” when Detroit hits the Quaker city. Hughey Jennings will demand special police protection for his plavers dur- ing the series.’ New Piayers in C. A, C, Lineup. Manager Frank Kane is shaping up his C. A. C. team to trim the West- erly nine at Sachem park on Saturday, adding a new first baseman, an out- fielder who is a fast one, and Sullivan of the old Sachems to take ¥Fud Sulli- van's place at second. Phillips, the Montville flinger, will bend them over and the local boys will be out to an- nex the scalp of the visitors and get the credit for trimming the leaders in the league. As Westerly and Stonington are now d for the top rung of the ladder, Westerly cannot afford to take a beat- ing from the C. A, C, team, promising a game that will be full of ginger and interest from the start Olambala Adds Another Stake. Sheepshead Bay, Sépt. 2.—Olambala winner of the Saratoga cup, added a other stake to his list loday, when he éasily won the “Twin City handicap, valued at $3,000. Grandpa made a new track record for the two mile steeplechase by step- ping it in 3.53 2-5. Single-room dwellings for the use of with i _being_ experimented by. ';:,:n.’n of qu:uflq England. | had scored twice and stopped the locals’ run get- 1060 9'g} ) . Fall River 8. | | Spade 2, off Sparks § i hits and his good tern was hit hard game. Scores: e led him out. Pittsburg Boston. called ou L s‘h -.bh.n:- called at the end of the seventh Pozms. agreement. o § 11 8] scores: Vs 2 2001 First game— : D3, 5 3| Springneid 2014 H 3% %10| Batteries: MeLean and Whalen; 2 3 0 0 2 0| Swanson, Bosk and Ahearn; time, 1.40; H 2 52 15 ¢ umpire, Lineoln. ¥ Totals, 29 1 Springfield 001083 *—4 1 “Battea tor Adams tn'the 8tb. Holyoke =& Batteries: Coffin and Whalen; Bosk -] : left on bases, Pittsburg 7, Boston 5; bases on balls, off Curtis 4: first base on errors, Toston 1: strue nuL“'. Curtls 4 by Bprue. b Leach.cf Clarke,if Wagner.ss Miller.2b Abstein.1b Wiison, et Gibson.c Philippe.p *Hyatt Camnitz,p Totals, 35 8§ 2 T O L osinBsammianlly Sleornomanomos - B - 00 05 00 Runs, for Pittsburg Byrne, Leach. Clare 24 Gibson, for Boston Shean. Beaumont, Coffey: two base hits Leach. Clarke, Ailler, Deaumont, Shaw; hits, off Mattern 4 in 21-3 innings, off Richie -4 In 62 off Philippe 5 in 3, off Camnitz 1 in 4: sacrifice I Pilllcpp: sacrifice fly. Autrey: stolen bases. Shean: double plays. Wagner to Miller to Absteln, Miller o Abstein: left on bases, Pittsburg 7. Boston 3, bases on balls, off Mattern 1, off Philippe 2. off Richle 2; first base on-errors, Boston 2, Pitsburg struck oul. by 3 by Richie 2. by Camnl 1; wild piteh, umpire, Klem. me, 1.3 Northampton went down again today before Hartford, 4 to 3, in a snappy game. Hartford won by buncmng le. o| The features were catches by lden 1land McAndrews and Connery's -all round good playing. . o 1 : 2 HHartford 0200000204 7 1 i o L and Ahearn; time, 1.10; umpire, Lin- coln. Northampton, Mass.,, Sept, 2.— The score: R.H.E. rth'pton 0201000008 5§ 1 Batteries: Fisher and Abrogast; Warner and Bridges; time, 1.45; um- pire, Cullen. HOW CHASE BROKE IN. Hal's Entry the Most Spectacular en Record—Boy Wonder from the Start. Baseball of the sensational kind has been the diet fed to New York fans by Hal Chase, the first base idol of the bleachers, but probably no event of his career was ever more spectacular than the way he first broke into pro- fessional ranks from the bush league. This first day's work of Chase’s is told i < 4 in Outing for September, showing how Marquard Loses & Game After Striking Out Eleven. | (}o g0 gtamped himself as a ball player New York. Nept. 2—Marquard struck out eleven | Sl SoLPOE, b TIECC OF 6 R 00Kk his men in seven poor that in 1ings today, but his support was so time St. Louls made five place the first time for Los Angeles which was enough to win from New York. §t. Louis’ | on the initial bag, replacing Captain sletory was its first after nine straight defeats. Bee- be relicved Raleigh in the sixth after New York ting. Score: abh po a eDoyless 3 0 3 0 2 1 6 0 0 OSeymouref 4 o 1 0 1 2001 24 8 L% ¥ 030 s ¥ 2 008 Phelpsc 3 1 5 0 30020 Konetehy,1b 2 1 8 0 61,53 Evansrf & 1 2 0 £ 0600 Del'hanty.ct 4 0 6 0 2114 30 Breshan2b 4 1 2 4 00000 Storkess 4 1 1 2 1f 20010 Raleighp 2 0 0 0 9 e 16000 Beebe.p 100 0 ofCrandallp 0 0 0 1 0 ? —_——— podgrass 1 0 0 0 Totals, 31 527 7 2/***Snodgr's, 1 0 0 0 0 Totals, 30 427 8 5 for Meyers in 9th. atted for Marquard in Tih. “Batted for Crandall in 9th. Score by Innings: Louls ... AT York 0 un,s for St. lLouis Barbeau, Evans, Delenanty. for New York Seym two base hit Herzog. Muarray, sacrifice hi Phelp stolen bases, ns. Brenghan, Bridwell, 0°Hara left on bases Louis 4. New York 9; bases on e rors, St Loul New York 2; double plays. Storke o Bresrahan Konetchy, Bresnahans to Konetchy; struck out, hy Marquard 11, by Beebe 2: bases on , off Raleigh 3, off Beebe 4. off Marquard off Raeligh 3 in 51-3, off Becbe 1 in 32-3, Marquard § In T inulugs; time, 2.05; umplre, Rucker Wins a from Cubs. - Brooklyn, Sept. 2.—Brookiyn turned the tables on Chicago today. winning a hoily contested game 3 1. Rucker allowed only four hits. Meyers, the new Brooklyn outfielder, was the hero of the day, his hits driving in all taree runs for his team. The score: Brooklyn. po a o abh po a e 10 2 0 Burch.ef 300 11 1 0 Clement.it EEE] 0 0 0 o|Lennox.5b g5 0 0 0 OiMeyersri 300 0 1 1 0fJordan.ib 900 113 0 0|Hummel b 01 0f 03 1 o/MMilan 2 8'1] Hofman.cf 0.1 0 ofiergen.c 720 Tinkerss 2 0 2 5 0|itucker,p 010 Archer.c 30330 . @00————e Reulbachp 2 0 0 2 1 Totals 301027 10 1 Zim n 1100 0 H'botham.p 0 00 Al “Ratted: for Stanley in Sth **Batted for Reulbach in Sth. Totals, Score by Innings Chicage s 0.0.0 016000 01 .2 0000001 °3 for Brooklyin Burch, uley, Chance, Clem- mmel: hits, off Reul- Innings: sacrifice fiy, Hoffman: sacrifi ._Evers, Chance. McMillas Ieft on bases, Brooklyn 7: bases on ball off Teulbach 1, off Ry off Hizginbotham 2: first base on errors, Cl . Brooklyn 1; struck out. by Rucker 6, by Ren'bach 4; time, 1.50; um- pires, Rizler and Johnstone. One Apiece at Philadelphia. | Philadelphia, Sept. 2.-Philadeiphia and Cincin- nati split_even in o double header here today, (he visitors winning the first game and the home team | the sccond. Scores | First game Philadelphia. Cincinnati. | abh po a e Grant.3b 3 Bescherlt 6 4 2 1 0| Deininger.cf Paskertef 3 0 2 0 9| Tritus.rf 5 $ 291 0} 203500 411 2 | 331883 0] ] 4 2251 30 43381, 1 0iSpadep 41 00 10 = - ——| 1 0| Totals, 36122712 1 *Marel 00 Totals, 37 11 1 | “Batied for Nparks in 9th. Score by innings i Philadetphia 12000000 n—s} Cintinnat .. il 0010403 09 Ituns, for Cininnati Besher 2. Paskert. Hoblitzel, Fgan, Downey 2, Hoberer, Spade. for Philadelphia | fn. Ward, Deninge:; two base hits, , Bescher, Hoberer; hits. off Corridon 6 § innings, | rks 5 in 3, off Foxen 1 in 1: sacrifice hits, | Paske:t. Mitchell: sacrifice flies, Mitchell, : stolen bases, Mitchell, Dooln. Grant, Magee Hoblitzel 2. Fgau: left on bases. Philadelpbia 10. neinuati 11: bases on balls, off Corridon 5. off first base on_errors, Phila- delphia 1, Cineinnatl 4; struck out, by Corridon 2, by Spade 1, by ris 1: wild pitch, Spade; time, 2.20: umpires, 0'Day and Kane. Second game- Philadelphia. Cinoinnati. ab . abh po a o Grant,3b ® Bescherdf 4 11 0 0 Deininger,cf 9 Paskertef 4 211 0 Titus,tf 0 Hoblitzel.1b 3 2 T & o Magce, It 0 0 Mitehell.ef & 1 2 0 0 Bnsfield. b 4 1 O/bgant 3 1 2 3 Ward.2b 1 0 Lcbertsh 4 1 1 1 0 Dowuiey.ss 03 0 0 Hoberer.c 06 0 0 Howan.p 00 —_-— — Cantwell,p 01 Totals, 31 927 9 0|*Oakes 0 Totals, 31 824 T 3 *Bated for Kowan in Sth. Score by innings: Philadelphia .. . 19880001 %3 Circinnati ... 02000100 03] Runs, for Puiladelphia Deninger 2, Titus, Ward 2, for Cineinnati Bescher. Mitchell, Lobert; three base hit, Hoblitzel; home run, lobert: hits, off Rowan % in 7 innings, off Cantwell 1 in 1: n. Moore. Doolan, Magee; stolen Paskert, Doolan. Deininger: double pl: Bransfield. P; t to Hoblitzel; k Philadelphia 8, Cincinnatt 3: bases on balls, off | Moore 1. off Rowan 3: first base on errors, Phila- delphia 2: strick out, by Moore 7, by Rowan 2, by Cantwell 1: wild piteh, Rowan; time, 1.40; umpires, Kane and 0'Day Connecticut League Standing. i Hartford H Holyoke Waterbury New Britain Springtield New Haven Northampton Bridgepori ... New Britain’s Sensational Fielding. New Haven, Conn., Sept. Unable to hit Brown, New Haven lost to New Eritain Irere today, 2 to1. Sensational fielding by the visitors was a feature. The score: R.H.E New Britain 1 1000 000 02 § | New Haven 0 0 000010 0-1 4 o Batieries: Brown and Hirst; Herbst and Waters; time, 130; ‘umpire, OF'rien. Meller Perfect at the Bat. Waterbury. Conn., Sept. 2.—Water- bury Hit hard and had no trouble (e- feating Bridgeport 11 to 4 todav The Dillon, ‘'who had been drafted by Brooklyn. The fans were in an uproar when the raw recruit from the Santa St. Louis. New York. Clara. prune orchards appeared on the bag and Chase's first day's work is de- scribed as follows: “It would be hard to imagine a more unfortunate first appearance. The game opened with a rush. The first batter smashed a ground ball at the Los Angeles shortstop and tore down the line for first. Mechanically the shortstop raced over, dropped his glove in front of the ball, and faced &bout to make the throw. Instead of Dillon there was the “bush league kid” on the bag. The base runner was a fast man; in the twlinkling of an eye the thing had been done—the panic was working. Instead of the perfect line “peg” to first, the shortstop threw fully eight .|feet outside the bag and correspond- ingly high, shooting the ball with the speed of a bullet. It would have been a vicious throw for a righthander to care for, even though on his glove side; the bush league boy was a left- hander and wore the glove of his right. he ball was coming to his bare hand and coming wfth such speed that there was little chance to hold it, even if a man cared to risk injury by reaching for a wide ball with his bare hand. ‘With the fraction of a second to de- cide what to do, the country boy whirled with his back to the diamond, hooked the spikes of his left shoe in the bag, and thrust out a long right arm for a backhand catch. The run- ner was beaten a stride on a circus catch which few big-leaguers would care to attempt. After the cheering, the bleacherites decided that it had been a blind back hand stab or a lucky accident. Twen- ty minutes later every man inside the grounds knew that he was seeing first base played as no youngster had ever played it before. The infleld still in a state of panic, threw the ball high, wide, and on both side§y of him, but the flat pan-cake glove was always there when it arrived. The boy ‘covered the ground with great loose-jointed strides, dug up im- possible ground balls beyond the reach of an ordinary flelding first base- man, picked line drives out of the alr, nipped bunts ten feet tiom the plate, caught advancing runners, and capped the climax by starting and finishing a double play thought to bhe possible with only one first baseman in Amer- ica, Fred Tenney of the Nationals { There was but one verdict at the end of the game: the boy was the greatest first baseman ever seen on the Pacifie | coast. He found his place in a single afternoon. Joining the New York Americans the next vear, he was the sensation of the season, and remains today the premier first baseman of the country and the star of baseball melodrama. When a ball is hit down to Hal Chase, you see the bleachers come up as one man. The fans never know what he is going to do with the ball when he gets it, but they do know there will be no fumbling or booting, but a chain-light- ning play directed at the one spet where the most damage can be don Chase is the personification of ba ball instinct and the most popular first baseman the country has ever seen. Murphy and Harris the Attraction. Two of the star duckpin rollers of this city, Aliie Murphy and Julian Har- | ris, were billed as the attraction on Thursday evening at New London at the opening of the Y. M. C. A. alley for the season. The two Norwich duck- pin artists were matched against a couple of Whalers and took two out of three from them in proper style, The corkscrew shoots of the Boy Won.- der ond the port side delivery of Har- | ris mowed down the pins in bunches, | giving the New Londoners an impres- sive demonstration of how the game is played. BASEBALL NOTES. Manager Lake is entitled to great | eredit for getting his Boston team hustling so. But who is the fellow that started things, the fellow that got most of those young fellows together? Jim McGuire is forgotten by many. Storke and Barbeau are to get a slice of the world's series prize money after all, if the Pirates win the pen- nant. Fred Clarke, it is understood, so informed them when_he traded them to | 8t. Louis, the money to be providéd by the Pittsburg players personally. Baseball fans of twenty years ago mav have had the old days recalled to them in reading in the accounts of the steel strike riots the name of Sheriff Addison C. Gumbert. Gumbert is now sheriff of Allegheny county and in strenuously engaged in putting déwn the disorder, but as Detective Sergeant John Henry of the Hartford police said last night, many will remember nim as Ad Gumbert, the once famous pttcn- er for the Boston Bretherhood., 325 .LOJIS H -BRUNELLE BAKERY We are confident our Ples, Cake and Bread cannot be excolled. Give uve a trial order. novzd 20 Fairmount ltn.l.. NEWMARKET HOTEL, 716 Boswell Ave. First-ciass w 1 and A, 2 e A e feature of the game was the batting of erder. John Tuckip Pros. Tel

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