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THE BEF OMAHA, WUDNESDAY MAY 31, 1918 RED SOX TWICE —= Ry — WHIP SENATORS|: Sl ROUT ALEXANDER frie ' | » : By Willia Bawit 40 Rar k g League Leaders Lose Two Battles BT : | Visitors Drive Philly Star From | wautet 4 o H ' : to American League il ETT g Rubber in Seven Innings ! 3 ! ; ! Champions. 0 s in Closer Reritens 1.3 4.0 om SCORES ARE 4 to 3 AND 8 TO 2 |HOT TIME FOR ONE UMPIRE To's N Boston,, May 30.—The league lead X £6) Phila (s feiiag . i ing Washingtc ost twice today to| 4 th A world's champions, Boston win- | 8 | » 3 and 8 to 2, in morning | n respectively. McNally, g for Barry at second base Sox, played an important part in both victories. His batting rec rd this afternoon was three hits and | three runs in three s at bat ) as decided at opportune the Washing to solve his delivery I'wo runs scored by the Senators were for the largely due to field lapses appear 1% in the error column re | - BOSTON WASHINGTON ! A H.OAF AR H.O. { 4 0 0M'rgan2bh 3 pires: Chill and Dir 7| Brandeis Crew Is - 2 ; Victor Over Rats ey From 0ld Tennessee "« v b : ) . " A " # The Tennessee Rats made their |catch and did ge ore, first ' H first appearance at R yark | an ] ' fore a large Memorial day crowe NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA i e s were vanquished by the Bra A T Uity o AD N 0 0w i | stores by a 3 to 0 count ff ‘0 s Olson~ worked along in s glicid : LI 134 HICAC fashion and was invincible at i : T, LOu Ma0.4 times. But one visitor reached thi : 1% e hy,2b 4 ‘| base, by grace of an error a s . wild pitch, but he suffered his de when Olson fanned Little for the final out The Brandeis copped the battle in | | |the opener. Dygert was punctured | |and Rohen moved him along with a| ' | sacrifice. Dygert set out for |\m‘\‘ on the play and continued his jo ney when Gates dropped a thy from first. Graham followe safe one and score on Lawler's Tennessee Rats return park on Saturday return engagement Totals. 81 92710 Brandels 20000001° Rats 0000000000 ¥ it New Derby Stakes Umpires New Market, England, May 30.— The New derby stakes of 6,500 sov ereigns was run today and won by Fifinella. Kwang Su was second and Nassovian third. Ten horses started The event was for colts and fillies foaled in 1913, and the distance was ' battle, | about one mile and a half key, & former Nassovian is owned by John San ford of Amsterdam, N, Y., and was ridden by Frank O'Neill, an Ameri can jockey The betting was: Fifinella, 11 to 2 against, Kwang Su, 3 to 1 against Nassovian, 11 t ainst ' |SEAVEY HUDSON RETAINS TITLE OF H. S. GOLF CHAMP Shooting an 86 over the course of the Happy Hollow club, Seavey Hud son retained his title as h school golf champion of Omaha when he de feated Joe R hal, the runner-up. in a match M fternoon | young Huds was 7 up | son was the | | pionship in 1915 i Uil 720 | BLIND BOGEY GN LINKS ; - ON'T expect a gal to be e OF SEYMOUR LAKE CLUB | AR 7 always as sweet an’ com- ‘ i U panionable an’ comfortin’ as yo’old pipe. Remember, even the nicest gals are ; ' 2 A only human, e f;c. Mileyet £ 1081 Mén:and wo . ¢ fron.an our Lake ey | E he y ik | IVE “yo’ old pipe” a Radzuwait 108 Jerey MeCarty 110.| P2 chance to be a real com= : iR A £ ' panion,by using VELVET, y the most “companionable” tobacco yvou can buy. Armours Win Ha That velvet-smooth mellowness of VELVET comes from natural age- ing. VELVET is Kentucky's best tobacco, matured to the full by Nature's way - two years' ageing in wooden hogshead ‘é’yyn.lf‘ Woors Xbacen 10¢ Tine B¢ Metal-lined Bags One Pound Glass Humidors ¥ Changesandimprovements | \ \ 1 [ | | | | | | | | | 'Effective June 4th, 1916 B IR LN S e . O DARlo hoera N GREATER OMAHA Defeat Bourgeois by Ninth-Inning| Rally, in Which Art Dyck Plays Leading Part ntinued From Page One. it and bruised, but his mec! Rog Mo A 1 was taken to the field hos- | \RMOURS ~ TRIM BURNASCOS, The Luxus swep ead inf| the Grea ! vhich the tted the vie 1 us ¢ i Ra e Art Dyl ‘ ent the $S ) ) cue stuntd ario 1 vhich the brew-) lad hurling Larson Wing Pool ; Game from Chapman 3 from Chapman last |1 RS RN T T A In Passenger Service TRAIN NO. 5: “Chicago-Omaha Limited” will leave Chicago at 6:156 p. m, instead of 6:00 p. m., arriving at Omaha| it 8:00 a. m., as heretofore; it will be operated into Omaha over the Plattsmouth bridge and our westside line, carries the Obgervation-club car, with lounging room for women, TRAIN NO. 1: “Chicago-Omaha-Denver Limited” will leave Chicago 5:30 p. m., arrive Omaha at 7:00 a. m., via Council Bluffs, and leave at 7:10 a. m, for the West; carries the sun-parlor lounge car. TRAIN NO. 10: “Atlantic Express” from Denver (with No 14 from the Northwest), will be operated through Omaha, arriving here at 1:00 a, m., leaving at 1:10 a m., arriving Chicago 2:30 p. m, TRAIN NO. 3: For Denver and the Pacific Coast will leave Omaha at 4:30 p. m,, instéad of 4:20 p. m. TRAIN NO. 41: “Burlington-Northern Pacific Express” will leave Omaha at 4:15 p. m.; passengers for Beatrice and Wymore should take this train from Omaha (not No. at 4:30 p. m.) in order to connect in Lincoln, TRAIN NO. 42: “Burlington-Northern Pacific Express” fro the Northwest will leave Lincoln at 1:15 p. m. and ar. rive Omaha at 2:50 p. m. TRAIN NO. 20: Morning train for Kansas City, will leavd Omaha earlier—at 9:056 a. m., instead of 9:15 a. m. TRAIN NO. 22: Night train for Kansas City, will leave Omaha earlier—at 11:00 p, m., instead of 11:05 p. m. TRAIN NO. 9: “Colorado Limited,” from Omaha at 12:20 3 m. (Omaha-Denver sleeper ready at 10:00 p. m.) ; high class night train for Denver, Colorado Springs, Ested Park and interior Colorado. TRAIN 9-43: From Omaha at 12:20 a. m., “Northwest Ex. pres NEW SERVICE FOR DOUGLAS AND CA PER, WYO., NORTH PLATTE VALLEY, OMAHA. CASPER SLEEPER READY AT 10:00 P. M. “Burlington-Great Northern Express,” for Ho Springs, S. D., Glacier Park, Spokane, Puge Sound; Omaha-Northwest sleeper ready a 10:00 p. m. For other incidental changes effective Jung ith, please see Burlington folders., Tickets, in formation, etc., CITY TICKET OFFICE, Farnam and 16th Sts. < Phones: D-1238 and D-3580 iflmlmg}fin! | Aoute | Susy Brook g "\\\o\ns\)e( tor . 1s Back 0f General Distributors Omaha, Nebraska Persistence is the cardinal vir- tue in advertising: no matter how good advertising may be in other respects, it must be run frequently and constant- ly to be really successful,