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It Wasn't Luck, but Readiness that Gave Jess the Title = (fiAHA WINS, 9708, \TENNIS HOLDS THE STAGE RECORDS SMASHED SPORTS SECTION of 'WHAT ARE CHANGES BY RALLY IN NINTH ™ oot vewevemea |~ AT DRAKE MEET| Track and Field at Nebraska i | F THE ROURKES 4 University. s Blodgett of Local Pitching Staff Six Teams in One Event Cross Tape !WIU This New Team Do as of Old rries A\Iuy Portion of MANY MEETS IN PROSPECT | Ahead of Previous T\lme in | or Forge Ahead and Play Good Day's Honors. e | Sixth Annual Affair. Base Ball? By JAMES E. LAWRENCE. i | LINCOLN, April 17.—(Special.)~Tennls i o PLEASING GAME TO SPECTATORS | promises to get more attention from the (CHICAGO LADS IN THE LEAD |ALL 1S READY FOR OPENING athletic department of the University of Omaha came from behind yvesterday and | Nebraska than it has for some years. | By F. 8. HUNTER v { o W ’ 4 | v t the h and won one of the most interesting and es- | Athletic Director Jumbo Stiehm has re< | DBES MOINES, I April 17.—(Special ‘p::::;‘Tlvn? "r::n:':v-'l“' ‘to ll:m\(:l't“htm citing games a fan could wish to see, |celved a letter from tha University of | Telegram.)—Guy Reed's quintet of hope- the Rourkes will once more face the Lincon golng down to defeat in the ninth | Oklahoma, asking for a date for a ten- | ful sprinters encountered just a little too barrier In the Western league race next inning by a score of 9 to 8. nis tournament between the two schools. [ much class in the asixth annyal Drake | Friday, rearing to go and make a fight 3 Red Styles started the box work for | The letter suggested May 2, and Stiehm | relay meet here today and were forced to » " - o for R‘l;urkr ahd Rourkeville. As usual the Rourkes, but fared so badly that he | says that this will likely prove accept-|béat a most ignominous retreat. The Ne- | . e S - o the season opens with Omaha playing was vanked at the end of the fourth, |able to the Husker braska athlotes were entered in but two OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 18, 1915, | away from home. Magnates around the after a quartet of runs had been added In addition, Nebras! will entertain the | and, although they did not fintsh last in | Western loop all have a propensity 1o one made by the Linx in the first in- | Missourl Valley conference members at|either, ‘he coveted places were far dix- | S p— —— _ me—— | joward opening day. They beg for it, ning. the annual tennis' tournament, May 14 |tant at the finish p | plead for it and fight for it and it never E. Closman took the red fellow’s place, |and 15. Each school will enter four men, | Bates, Decring, Scott' and Zumwinkle PHILS ONEUNBEA N happens that Rourkes doesn't tell ‘em to but gave way after one stanza to Blod- |two for the singles and two for the |comstituted a team in the half mile uni- | X JESS WILLARD'B WINNING SMILE-—Jack Johnson take it gett. The latter gent was the real thing | doubles and all of the schools, including y relay. The going Wwas consider- od 'his 0 “gold ile" ha a Thia year it will be in St. Joseph. There from the $ump-oft and had the stateamen | Washington university, Drake, Kansas, |Sbly too fast for the Cornhusker. team NINE l“ THE MAJORS a s famous ‘‘golden smile ve undergome an || L.\ Dienty doing in St. Joseph that B g v il ety by e Bt s Mg vk o DRl g v s g i i Il eclipse and now Jess Willard is to the foreground with ||| day. Paradee, band concerts, smoker in n opening wo on each | Nebraska, will be entered in the tourna- | 0 , —_— “ ; " the evening and several other events sup- uide netted & run aplece, bt tn the fourth |ment. The matches will be played at the | Chicaso ccpped the eveat and three Qnik of - w /|| his ‘‘winning smile. The photograph was taken when pl:mtnhx to the ball game. uuu:r and fifth rounds, respectively, the opposi- | Country club courts, which are the bast | Missourl valley coltEne i Mot b o e ity Aggregation Wins ||| he reached New York after annexing the world's heavy- ||| Marshall will chuck the firat pill and tion secured four and thres runs. All |y the city and the State university [8nd Missouri, vomped home in . Easy Victory Over New York | weight title. Mayor Dahlman has been invited to af came as the result of timely and consist- | grounds, which have been placed in good named. Giant C | y tend and cateh it. ent swatting. Numerous three and two- | sondjtion by the athletic board. The go Winner Disquaiified. A rew. | There will be much celebrating all over baggers accomplished much of the foul | pyygkers will award trophies to the win- | Deering donned a large sweater coat by e | I the circuit according to reports. To the work. ners. when the one-mile relay was called and | FINAL SCORE IS SEVEN TO ONE| average person perhaps it was thought Krug Connects with B Nebraska's tennis chances are not | Guy Chamberlain, the foot ball star, took | Sloux City is the only village which has The home boys dallied along without |overly bright, although Harry Ellis, the | his place in the Husker team. With nine| Npw YORK The Phithde any particular cause for rejofcing, but NEW YORK, April 17.~The Philadel 3 creating a deal of disturbance till the | gtate doubles’ champion and Gardner of | teams antered Nebraska came home phia Nationals remained the on unde the base ball bug is peculiar and he cele- gixth, when a hit by Manager Krug and | Omaha, are in school. sixth, ahead of Illinols and Kansas. Chi- e iieq toam In the major leagues today brates anyhow. Thus the doings in St a couple of errors on the part of Mc- i L Dedps chgo, the ninth team, was first in the | ECt O e victory over New Joseph and eclsewhere. Calister and Krueger gave Omaha one | . po o ob e (0" wquad, which is |Tace, but disqualified because Desmond.|y,ry 751 Alexander had tha Tediil ot Have Rourkes n Chance? more. Incidentally, it might be mentioned | Joiiine down to business for the series [® darktown sprinter and hailed as .. soc- | o mercy and was at his best in the But enough of openings and celebrations t here that Boss Krug advanced to the pan | oo b 0 o cithin the next six weks, | ond Howard Drew, forgot to carry the | o L™ e star opp 2 Chel and to more serlous subjects. Where ¢ five times during the heat of the after- | { o Ul T Nebraska coach |baton ail the way. e iin W L 2oF et ot the box | | will the Rourkes finish this year fa the b noon and five times shot bee-liners di- | (o 'y .4 ) work with. Coach Reed has Alunzo Stagg's young men proved to be 15, Gios tiulic Melting itour 'runs. ONS question which 1s pounding hard within rectly to center fleld, whers they reached | (Vel (O B 0 T rking out. The | the best of the meet. The Cherry Circle |7 8 g & ns. Crd- the gray matter of every Omaha fan. Schrieber’s hands each time on the first 1ads won first in: the half mile and sec- | V&th hit.a home run in the first Innins, 's’ B Routhe: " hounee Huskers sent representatives to the | & .0 on s tour mile relay. It was merely |S¢oring Byrno ahead of him, and followed Uy O s st <t - 3 . ¢ | were at the top at the close of the year. ) Narveson was yanked nfter the sixth J::ll::u:e‘:e};(n:::ur‘didy v;l‘l’lt 2:':]: clu‘: Desmond’s ‘Merklg” that resulted in the :::'fl“':i:tyl. double off Mathewson in "“’i Every spring |‘: was the same oM w,:a.- & and Mason, a fermer Omaha boy, took | o0 ooiition will not start until the last loss of a second Win in the mile event rd, driving h another run. ‘Score: | | tion, where will they finish? Always the PHILADBLPHIA NEW YO { his place. This didn't get the last men- | "y “nonin, when Weslevan will be Relay Records Broken. B0 A E EY oA | Rourkes looked pretty good in spring on | tioned Iad anything, as immediately our | "o "ol one Records were shattered ruthlessly by Byme ab..4 17171 dsnoderss o4 120 {:‘ ! paper. Then the machinery siipped = forces began to mangle his shoots tn a | Tir T Il e of the last week |the competing athletes. The day Was|Becker it 3 0 3 0 - IR I 8 | cog, & player here and a player there manner that bade ill for the capitalists. [, " 0 0" po g i sending the squad|warm and the track hard and fast. In | 42 10 OFletcher, so. ¢ 1 4 1 1/ | tailed to deliver even though his work A threc-bagrer to right center by | 0 Ti"y fugy pace. Out of the wealth | the university class two relay records 4 0 3 3 OMerkie, 53 100 0 |in the spring bordered on the sensational. Whalen, a two-bagger by Breen, singles | T terial, these men loom up strongest | were broken in the four events. The | Luderus. 1ng 2 § 1 oMurray, rt. 4 1100/ |1t waa ever the old story, the players by Krug, Payne and Huelsman, coupled | B0 0l b Bl laces on the teum: | Chicago team which was disqualified also} M sl 811 1o 5e 8 & 08 who twinkled brightly in spring flunked with a gacrifice fly, base on balls and & | "5 0P 0T L vin, Deering, Sloan, | broke a record. But the disqualification | ' — — — —*Robertson .1 0 0 0 0 and flunked badly in June and July. wild pittli, netted Omaha five scores. In | oot Ankeny, Balster and Henry. 'l oak0e it Gnottiotal 10 EhG TOBRARIIE wess | PN cel B0 11 AN - 1 0708 & But this year things are brighter. This | the elghth nothing of consequence was g .’J)»’_\'flr(l Dash—Zumwinkle, Scott and | versity six teams made time better than | Ritter, p....0 0 0 0 0 sounde like the old chatter, but there is perpetrated by either side, but in the |Deering. 3 £ the previous record. | *Grant 10000 a difference about that Rourke squad. final half of the ninth, after Lincoln had .:fi’:lnrr'k:-.’“h’mm' geott, Zumwinkle | T PO three college events new records| otaal,... W $ 7715 | | Tt doesm't look lke the spring teams of been blanked, the Rourkes won out. Krug | " Haif-mile Run—Claar, Kubik, Clarke, |were established and one high school ,R:ggg ;g; .’fg'r:,'\';;:“fi;"h.'.'»' :".“'f“:"l‘;:"‘r | old. Nobody has appeared to be a sensa- made his fifth straight hit, Thomason u\‘xlln:-lht“:%_l:;l’:::‘e Gribble, Anderson irecord was busted. *Batted for Ritter in the ninth | tion, there lan't & star in the bunch. But walked, and, after Huelsman had flown | Gl "t0Y 3 " ! Pkt ths MR gh".fl,lph.- TR i 0 & BedvE §58: 654 they play ball. »? a < v d a two- > o ol i d ew York 000 0000 0~ :::::z;«?r (t:'(l:'n‘t:l ,;:rfl”::or:lm;(t:s,nflfllr:‘n Py s e Ricker, BentZ{ sppe prettiest race of the day occurred Buses ‘on errors; New York, 1; Phila- | A GosliiBisndy Seame the score. Schiegner's single to right | Broad Jump—Liebendorfer, Hill, Keefe, |in the four-mile university with Wisconsin |delphia, 2.~ Two-base hits: _Doyle, Lu 1 1t looks Iike a good steady team which he 8¢ M L e Scott, Ankeny and Reese, and Michigan fighting for first place from ;x{er\IF, Fetcher, Cravath. l!nlm- run will plod right along up near the top rung brought Thomason in and won the game. [ “'Hilo Vault—Reavis. e sort to finisti. . At no_ Bime i mew::;:nnl.mséiflen‘ m.\‘:‘ Banc mui Snod- of the ladder all the year through, play- . W b 2. O 1 o sta X h uble play: Meyers to Fietcher. ' oyt OMAHA. sty e o e utopoltk, Loman | - ners fall back ‘more than ten feet athewson, off {Ing good ball all of the time and never MASAR. H. 0. A, E |_Hurdles—Roberts, Israel, Ruthefford, | and when Carroll of Michigan and Har- zfixruck out: By the erratic, in-and-out style of previous Payne, b £ 170" 1 "0 | Booitand, Gostss, ney of Wisconsin started the last lap. | | ok Tt years. Krug's men, have put up good ‘l(lreeh. “:b. § ‘l\ H ‘l) .‘; Coach Stiehm and Secretary R. G.|mpes were neck and neck. Carroll took ¢t Stroud, 3 in battles inst the teams played in ex- Thotmason, ¢ 3 5 3 8 0|ciepp have counted the mail ballot on o jgaq and the pole and held it uatil |four innings: off Riter? in two innings hibition games. They won and they loat, Huelsman, © 2 1 0 0track captain, and Otto Zumwinkie of {4\ jost 220 yards, when Harney sum- Umpires: Rigler and Ha but they always played good ball and BENS O 8 1 45 § §|svracuse, for two years a sprinter on|moned all his strensth and made one of ' e that s what counts. The results. of Sehllebher. 9 2 1 9 §|the Husker team, will lead the 1815 track | the greatest sprints to the tape ever seen Braves n Form' Bea,t ante-season games go for little, it's the 0 0 0 4 0|team. The election of a captain Was|., tne Drake stadium. He came home character of ball played. " 0 8 8 & 0|necessitated by the withdrawal ot Cap- | with flying colors, twenty yards in front Dod_gers; Evers Hurt Probably the Rourkes look stromgest © 0 0 0 oftatn Cupid Myers from school. [0, the Wolverine. in the box. With Crabb and Willls of - = = - - —_—— Campbell, running third for Chicago, A last vear's team to act as a basis, a A’ W 0 2 R'eds Win Bl‘eakin lalso ran & wonderful race. When he BOSTON, April 17.—Captain Johnny mighty neat quintet of hurlers should be R. H. PO. A B ’ g | took the baton he was behind xm mv:no‘f t:‘-. ll!:‘:t:n N-;\omx- nlrm::d & nu:.u.’f:m Closman, Blodgett, Everdon Wolfe, 1f [ 0 13 o | Drake and Minnesota. He put on & n eg and was carried o and Johnson. MoGaifigan, 56 o e ven on the T1€8 |5 ‘speed and passed ail three, giving hia | the field during the game in which Bos- i Savioton 'zt 1021 0 ik O P hance 1o, finiah in third |ton defeated Brooklyn, § t0°1, toduy. The i rwanits r 1 1 1 1 1| CINCINNATI Apsil 17.—A nintb-inning | position. " . ' ccident occured when when Evers siid the bat. ¥rank Kafora and Brnie ggmh o .ql) \‘) 3 fy 8 finish fn Which Pittsburgh forced Pitcher Firat All the Way. into second base in the eighth inning. It Krueger will neither one bow 10 a peer uoCum:r, c. 1 5 § 2 1|Brown from the box, scoring two rums| The two-mile uhiversity was easily | probably will keep him out «f the game in this elrcuft. That battery team will Norveson, p 1 1 1 2 0| pefore the tide was stemmed, enabled the | Purdue’s.: East got the jump at the start | for two weeks, unquestionably prove the olass of the Moty B iy 0 0 0 0 0 'yuitorn to win'today’s game, § to % and [for the Bollermakers, and at mo tmo The Braves showed a return to batting league. y Totals .. 4 8 12 2 11 3 |break even om the series. was the lead threatened; although Os- | form, their runs being scored by bunched On first Schliebner's ability fs known. OBt ‘When winning run was made. | Killifer was credited with a home run |borne made a nice finlsh for Northwest- | hits. ' Three Brooklyn runners were He._played, In flashes last year during *Batted for, Closman in the- fifth. in the first inning when Lejuene mis- l"" and came in second. caught of the bases, two of them in one | his brief career here, but he is a kid yet Llnu.)\n . ; g g 3 an g g g o;g judged a high fy. Adams pitched splen- | Stagg's men. had no opposition .in the (Inning. Score and should settle down this year, espe- O v Hite: Fuslaran, "Brees, Ka~ | 4} ball-and was only taken out to allew | it tle. The Misssnrl Valley schools, o N cially with an old fox Wke Dick Breen fara, Carleton, Krueger, Blerbauer. | Wagner to bat for him at the beginning | constituting the only other entrants ex- e ) playing next to him v/ Three-base hits: _Whalen, Carleton, | of the eighth Inning. Score: cept Towa, which finished last, not being 0 0 Breen looks like a blg improvement at Prodgett. Sacrifice /. Kafara. Bases | carey, it AB.H.OAB ABH.O-AF | he last event on the program was the 0 10 around that sack last year, but none o’ balls: Off Narveson, 4 oft” Mason, | Jehusion, 163 018 8 Z4 134 9 mile university, ‘and it wea a thrilling H 1 |"‘°""l‘“"‘""‘l‘m'° e "“’“I‘ :" 3"’;" 1 Wild pitch: Mason, Blodgett. Passed | Viox, sb.....4 10 Chie: battled 3 3 s & veteran with & wise old head. He < ey TS b : " 4200 "1 0 ¢ o ojcurtain. Missourl and ago 1 f‘allfi‘ Reists (). Struck out U() 21 3/8 2 000! for suremacy at -every point, and the | 2 H ¢ is & good fielder, a good batter, but above Narveson, R E =3 392 9 Missourians: had -the lead until the, last 0 H all & wise ball player and Krug wade a ‘l_.mqi-\(‘,m, [ .00 z 0 ng-fim}rw : :‘g g g 1ap, when the dusky-hued Desmond took . 90059 % ;:ml:‘"mtl n':v' ‘when he appointed Breen ba o 3. 1.8.0, SRoLRRS 3R | d beat Niedrop out several Totals.....28 9 27 e s | (39 4 1 oCinke. .. 3 0T 10 P 1o R0 o e Demond | JBatted for Altchison in 'the eighth Whalen at short is as good a flelder as Corbett's Brother & $308 3 Bl 3ed § 10 tonk I e e et G| BUSTLT e Hashert Jntie. slghth Freddle Thomas and that is going some. J 1a 8.y 2222 108t the baton and was disq , giv- [Brooklyn 0000000 2 . 20220 roaw..5 $7 1 1 ing Missourl the only first place made by | Boston .. 10 i 16.not 86 strong at the has 40 B SNb & y I Dead Of Pleurls tale.... 34 72713 0 the *Miiadosirt *Vialley . 9600} base hits: O'Mara, MoC to sting the ball so hard, but he is a S i tBatted tor Adams in clghth | T A ey 3 Smith «(2), Magee. -Stolen fair batter and {s pretty dependable in thiusd (or MECRA, Bbah [ . Mages Mewt tnterentiis. S nawss o Eals, ol Comiter 3 0% i, I tho RS o SAN FRANCISCO, April 17.—Thomas A | *Batted for Olson in ninth. Some mighty | interesting racing was loff Ragan, 1. Hit Oft Altchison, 6 in shortstop there is in the loop. Corbett, brother of James J. Corbett, the Fflltn‘bur.h 2 3 3 g 3 3 : 2-3 [ staged by the colloge teams. In the one- |seven innings; off Ragan, 3 in one Ifining; Payne Is a Questi T onid's neavywelght boxing cham. | Cincinnati ...l 10 0 0 0.0 0 0-3|ruiie college Cot won after a desperate (ol ol (i¢'Shran, 'in oo and two-thirds Payno at third is an enigma. Doc is plon, and himself widely known in the | Three-base hit: Groh. Home run: Killi- { battle with Grinnell. Des Moines was Struck out: By All(‘hlnun,nn‘, a ball player, he knows how to play ball, -] sporting world, died here late today of ;gr. gtolen. haa’e'l:l\d-lnhm‘t‘un." lg'l::lnr third and Cornell fourth ,‘&y Strand, ‘1: by Crutcher, 4. Umpires: but in the past he has played in flashes. pleurisy. He had been ill two days He ,;‘;;'ng“‘:"'L Doub,:"r';' ’,;:"M.m"‘(‘,; Morningside had things Its own way |PYromand Orth. - Last fall he appeared to have overcome was 37 years old. Gerber to Johnston, Olson to Herzog to |in the two-niile, with Carleton an easy I do [] that fault, which was probably the result He contracted a cold Easter Monday, | Mollwits. Bases on balls: . Off Adams, 1; | ndian’s eHl of timidity, and in the oft Mavaaux. ‘1 oft 1; off Ames, 1. | (Continued on Page Two, Column Two.) samgs the day of the Johnson-Willard champlon- | pjeg. . Off -Mv_mflgc'," "soven innings: | o et Tl ) this spring. He even steps into a south- Whin fighf at Havana, which settled on | off Mamaux, 1 in two innings: off Brown, | : In Dubuc’s Hands BAN. plant, wiish: he Dever uss v e his lungs. 8 in’clght and a third innings; off Ames, | DASE DA, oach 18 ! If he continues to show during the sea- ; 1 in two-thirds Inning. Struck out: By —_— bt When Jim Corbett was fighting his| Adams, 2; by Mamaux, 2;: by. Brown, 4; : DETROIT, April 17.—Cleveland w won as he did last fall and this spring way to the world's championship, Tom, | by Ames, 1. Umpires: Kiem and Emsiie. staggered by hls,nwlpm. el B < R oy b oo B M k Sl ht ed ) 9 he will make good without a doubt on « vounger brother, usually was with him| ., t o i today. And) DOt fwuned: 0.4 Morten aCKs aug er St' Berchma’n 5 Gu.ls m’:‘rd.' d 85 a traveling companion and second. For Nl h I nin Ran o D v g . py ) . . arty Krug and Artie Thomason are 3 Irant, pent the winter in | Was knocked off the rubber in the sec V Y 41 o travaling companion and sscent. For| NINGN INNING RALY | uasie Grane. who spent the winter in | 7hs Ehospol oft e robmer B S ecoma| DY, V10t0rious Yanks; 2y Baso Dall at tho: e et sasdeels Se Aatee as a betting commissioner, figuring con- | lees cards Vlctory ehoo! team for.a week of 80, The head | delivery before Steen repluced him. Vitt : Fhat o Kot by, Vs FOs: SENpI, spicuously in the Johnson-Jeffries fight | master told him that he wanted the boys | &nd Kavanaugh made thrilling one hand SCOI‘G Nlne tO One school Each Noon o DOW.558. SAPAReS 18 & UK SN at Reno in 1910 and other large events.| to learn all about the inside game, but | 5tops of sizzling liners. score AR i something like Congalton. He is a pow- In the last presidential campalgn he| CHICAGO., April 1T.—A ninth-nning |, cqutioned Grant that he did not want EVELANR. DETROIT | PHILADELPHIA, April 17.—Bad b e T e A ,.m"mc,h ok & Colan handled, it was said, $150,000 for clients, | rally gave St. Louls the inal game of the | e (o acquire ‘“professional prac- | Leibold, et S A nue ABHOAE | (ory work by Philadelph 7—Bad bat-| That a deep and adiding love for the |l knoWeIiED OF TO0 ecmppbeistr g o wldow and twe children and his|series with Chicago today, 7 to 4. After [y 0 . Bt it 10 et b8 88| thg wictors b elphia gave New York | .national game' is not confined to the Play batters, however, overcome his lack ; TN and. Frank, | Cheney was forced to retire Vaughn's | 0/ X Chipeman st o 1 3 Sfouns. Zv...4 ¢ 3 8 0lthe victory by 8 to 1 here today. The|sterney sex Is demonstrated each noon |Of speed considerably in this respect. brothers, James J., Joseph a ank, v ¥ - What do you mean?’ asked Grant. |Jackson, rf..4 1 2 1 OCrawtord, rt4 2 1 o 0| Visitors were given fifteen passcs to first v : ] D 1l When the bell for th and three married sisters survive him. | {irst ball was a wild pitch, which allowed { ..y}, yaid the principal, “‘wh p Graney, If...4 1 1 0 0Veach, It 341 on the grounds of St. Berchman's acad- en the rings for the opening at 4 H t thet % 1 9 | ell,” sal the principal, “when & bat-| porpere 302 0 0 1 & e i ‘Il||‘| stole nine base Maisel leading In " " “ St. Joseph the teams will probably line uggine to score the ng run. Long's na', ib. 4 113 3 0 where the “Injuns” and the “Am- 4 James J. Corbett is in Australia. triple scored Bescher with the winning ter has three balls and no strikes, 1 i:hlrm- 1b. t:' ("‘ $ 1 0Vit, 3. 2120 ol|the latter respect with four, which In- ha Iready d“lh e up as follows: —_— don't think he ought to wait and let two | \Eee © 11 OMciee, ¢....4 2 2 0 0|cluded steals of second, third and 79 . ARG VAPINAE THl SRR . . P2 v | Morton 00010 H , third and home, . b o British Army Two AN | e e ptve soday and was |D81is €0-bY. 1t the pitcher sives. him. & eion it 8 0 3 b R B0 1 4 0] ity High was at’ bat in the NIBtK.I-[ T un o it he e ks Third y the season with the umplre 1044y and WA% | gooa one 1 think it is only sportamaniike QNelll €02 1 8 01 Totwls...3 103,16 0|nink. Wychoff gave five bases on Selie| SHIS and fo stow. (At they BORN Thae - Sasoud Half Mh ion Of Mell sent :‘;_ ‘h‘m,":“ use 'fl:’l';"m to hit at it.” ! Toade and hit ' a bastman in two innings. ::;": ;:;I" ::"“l hos & "'l‘:“'l:u 160 .:G‘;::u” 111 T ABH.OAE AB.H.OAE e 4 a11e | Bressler gave seven bages on balls and | . WA, VARY: TARARES S0e any Center . | Hugine, 23707173 0000t w4028 e | ENGLISH ATHLETES GO | Totatn.. 0 U181 | hit & batsman in six innings and Harper r,""".""’. shout, tae. intich, sad Miss | Sepiiuner, et (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) | 4140 Ochulte, 1.4 991 TO WAR, SAYS CARTMELL] span for Hesn 48 thod, {gave one -bade on balls in- one inning, | POrothy Fleming takes charge of theIYRMlem.......... BROTL LONDON, April 17.—It is impossible 1iul 113 s iatted teen in elghthh | Score . Alase T they forget their halos. |ciouman. Fitch ... 4 even for members of Parliament to find 1100 43181 S an ey RUEL YOS S | Dgtaests i 3 181000 —s! NEW YORK. PHILADELPMIA, w:' ‘; I;‘:;"‘Wl"’“:':-:d: great 1:--1 of e " .5 000 21010 . .~Nate J. Cart- 'wo-base h urner. -base h | O.A. AE hal lope Is | bl it o o masy airn Great Britain has b1 BT O e e o | oo Sl st Kaersuehcdh, M 14 4 § § famtr, 4 8 488 cch svaing and o 4 irom big brower | INTERNATIONAL SOCIALIST in training. cy have pu e q n . B DO, " | Jackson. Earned runs: Off Morton, 3 " . B #.4 ol 2 | in the House of Commons and the war SRR 19180 University of Pennmivania. track team, 'ono and o Third’ mnings; ‘off Bl 1 Rl one stiief g0 8 A0udetng - 4.8.4 4.8 |day. o The Beothars of. several. of the sirt WOMEN ARE FOR PEACE office has refused to answer it, saying the LR 38 3.8 {rooontio; rturnes trom Wastond, :atioe | S5 1ot SO VSSRRY: off et | St f § 1 § fEGave 111 1 81ICTUN (N leasts se thae siiers meler ‘ O e o e - ms o5 okaley Y1100 ::M- beenice ':flmfi;:::".":::nln:l ‘:.: o ¥oung to Kavanaueh Toses on vall | Beckinps. 42 ¢ 3 2 IBRER :t::zueru at least, so their sisters main- 40;,3-;%.;:"’.‘? :;The:ulc‘w:‘leg Press.) enemy that it must remain secret. - - - - b , orton, 1; o teen, 2; off Dubuc, 1, | Swee .20 61 41230 <N, /ON! B uesday, Apr! .~News has tarted. “‘Athletics, v’ “are Hit Off Mort 14 McH 300 o 0 E . o A prominent official with knowledge of| «Batteq for Archer “'lro.a:l:i“ ®»Tns :1:.:(:; g ":ml;:li“ l‘:y:;.:‘:::::el::_”:r‘ B S "ng:n. A Tn na:eun:ndg l{:‘ll:.” » 3 e ie r-m aretaker of the grounds Is re- | reached London of a secret international the situation is the authority for the| *Batted for Vaughn in ninth. € ot o it ot by g grrion "'u’; | thirds {nnings: off’ Coumbe, none. in_one Totale.....31 4926 1 (RERE ported to have collected enough hairpins | conference of ";‘"““ "°‘;“'° which was statement that the British troops so far Louls. ... 7107002000 4710 " | inning. | Struck out: "By Steen, 4 by Du. | ‘ Davies © 18 8°8 3|to start a ten-cent store. held in Berne, Switzerland, last week. . hicago 02200000 01 If you have not enlisted in the army, ue, . 2 mpires: Hildebrand ~ and | - Se fap the ‘“Unjuns” . h | The confergnce was called by the Inter- put in the field, including Canadian, New | CForsp ity Zimmerman, Saler, Wil | gaid Cartmell, “you are ignored by nearly | 0 1oushiin. Totals.... % 9 18 3| “Angels,” the s e ave it on the | | ional secretary of the woman socialist Zealand, Australian and Indian units—|son. Three-base hit: z. Stolen basos’ | ovorvbody, especially the women folk, All *Oldring out, hit by baited ball nvn“ - [2 1" SN0 Sue 1 Ehe 110 ogly organization, Mrs. Clara Zetkin, one of regulars, territorials, v;l)umurl ond on | Mishaua. Bestner. " Varneg e n 5 | the atbletic men have gone to the front GOULD AND HULIN WINS | cRatisg for Siychett oo foeted ,'\.m::-‘n:' e S 8 hitan i e adars of the Germsen Setialiot Bt ~-probably amount to 2,500,000 men. fle 2. Double pl % 5 | o ol 4 New York 020 2 03 2243 < - o S Nishous, 2 Double plave: Al 56 |or the barracks. and there iare Sow. male | DOUBLES CHAMPIONSH!P | Billadcishia 21080600 o) una .. - 8 5 1 3 13| csatio.Darty, ta consider $he polier 30 W Miller (unassisted). Bases on ball ¥ 4508 o Two-buse hits: Lapp, Barry. Three- ho linenp. adopted by the organization in regard to } MRS. WILLIAM KENT HAS e e onaus 8. off Chendw & |16 and # who do not wear the uniform." | pHILADELPHIA, Pa, April 17.—Jay | e, P, LD, Solen bases: amaugh, | Maurine M W il - the pressnt war.. -The delegates prgesat . i p i e sl s s - g . = h, Cree, Pipp, Cook, Peckinppaugh. aurine Me An | POSTPONED HER VISIT | fite: Off Zabel 8 1 four 20% na Ywo |Gould of New York and W, H. T. Huhn | Bates an batsr” Off- McHale 1 "Sff | Ruth Wheeler, second. base represented Germany, England, France, | innings: off Cheney, 4 CLAIRE TO CALL SQUAD | 5 2 aSotend 29ge. uasia, ~ Pol Holland, Switserland, i thirds innings and none out in ninth; off {of Philadelphia, today again won the na- | Wyckoff, & off Bressler, 7: off IHarper ret Queénan, third base. Russla, lw:». ), Bwi 3 ; The visit of Mrs. William Kent. wife ‘V-ufh‘r" I’m‘: n°mm‘.'5"l.'.':fi:“!,'m‘\::h:fi.'m‘j TOGETHER ON APRIL 26 1 tional court tennis doubles amateur cham- | ¢ Bresser, 7 in six innings: off "_r';:f,,: “':.:f‘,",,"vl"“ff"'l‘,,l.l“:" ‘Jhonllup ll:b' -ndnll\“l‘ . o ! of Representative Kent of California, | bt *Eallee, none in one inning. Struck jplonship by defeating Joshue Crane and |0 in one ining Hit by pitched ball BY | Loretta Rydu, center field § o . i '", e g ho s expected here Wedneeday to be | aut: By Zabel, 1: by Niebaus. 4: bY | Cunk Claire, ‘manager of the Grand|o. F. Fearing of Doston three mets to kot ey iawaty, | Rita McVey, right fiefd. e fove] h:c;':"’; st e Wty & e ot e, Pdward L. Burke, has | Cheney.'s.” ‘Wiid pitoh: Vausha. ~Uni- |, 1l 0 (GTo o ol "om catt s ath- |£70 The seores: &1, 04 14, 1, 63 by Bressier, & Umpires: Chill and Con: | jathicen McCrann & catcher gy 47 oll- exvlel weeng fune leen postponed on account of the con pires: Quigley and Eason g o ol lprin" B o " { nolly Agnes ( nllll\m,\;\l,\;:llz'ilm piteher. to Belgium, impose no humiliating condt- ¢ ¢ . — . | ANGELS. " tions 7 ma recognize gressman’s flinéss. Mrs. Kent 15 promi Boston Sigms Low. {2 Clalre will have a squad of thirty-| o ;"’"'J""' ts Detevmined. High School Lad Signed Madeline O'Grady, first base right o‘;nulma'-tlon:l?iau. and ..:.' nent in suffrage circles and the Equal| The Boston ciub has signed Shortston |iwo tryouts from which he will select resident Johnson e reported as being A . Margaret Foley, second base. Pela Ben I e e e o try #cl Aetermined to oust the Cleveland Amer-| Hugh Culbrecht a Chlcago High school | Mary Stewart, third base. to independence and self-govermment.” Franchise society had planned to en- ourteen. The list includes some mighty | ican assoclation team from Cleveland catcher, was signed last week by the ) % Pl . et o~ tertain her at luntheon during her stay. | '™ Ontract Chicago Nationals Qlabe Cdinell, oxorsates. | good potential talent and Clink expects Stacia Hogan, left field, : Call Buffeds Blue: Bill k."'"'..“"' e (o v anciher Remmant winslaysoad:| ;o fl.k’n;nwn:':mzux;'m:l::f the ;u‘:::or“gl"roob"’r'tl;.n': ol oF ‘and ~H le u : . e Jacl ) e 2200 = . The Bulfeld Federals have becn christ- [says that Donovans M sague umpire, | He may also et @ player or W0 from|,,vy with & broken bone in the index [ lLeslie Mann may play the Infield for | Florence McCrann, catoher, the Louts h obad the ‘Blugs’ per cent stronger than & Year ago. the castoff Rourkes. tinger of his right hand. the Chicago Federals this season. Florence Foley, captain, pitcher, season.