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Babe Ruth’s Freak Bat May Be Taken In Court Soon yTEW YORK, Aug Another storm is brewing in he started on a batting spree that bas brought his home After permitting Ruth to use the bat for six week Hugging in any atand bis manager decides to und is perfectly round. The rules do not slate that the the joan league between President Ban John run total to 29 and his i average ¢ to the 400 mar resident’ Johr New York Yankees, Crawford's bat, which has been named “Bets n ) be as serious as the Carl Mays dispute wih” An pobativicted ‘Ot fauk bectites of the vers bact etter to Manager Huggins, of tho New York Yankeos, hin feelings, at ot a trick bat, but simply an improvement on arried Into the courts and almost disrupted selected wood, so that it is uniform thruout and can Johnson say The ban on Ruth using the new style bat came at e old type, A four-plece bat is much stronger than on has pronounced it iMegul, In a Ruth ts sore and doesn't make any attempt to conc bat must be made out of one plece of wood. Ruth's aKue ® be held in any manner by the batsman without payin Tho spe at George Ruth 4 ig does not a time when he was within « fraction of a point of plece affair and of course has much more driving the antral figure in the impending any attention to the grain of the wood. The fou conform to egulations preseribed by the rules and atching the league leadership in batting this ay Bingle,” ts the cause of the tions are glued together. So cleverly are the bat must be discarded at once. The American league um Hince that time Ruth has dropped back slightly ¢ shipped a bat to President Johnson for his Owner Ruppert to go as mado that it is impossible to determine where the s« pires ha structed to stop Ruth from using 1 can see no reason why Johnson should bar th nxpection; also sent a letter telling my reasons why T Mays case in order to prevent Pr tions are ed. thin new bi hich I understand ts the invention of Crawford model bat,” says Man gins, “I mus belleve the Ruth bat perfectly legal. I am sure stru sam Crawford differ with President Johnson when he says tt does not President Johnson will reverse his ruling by the time ne bat tion of the bat can be gleaned from the fact that the Owner Ruppert, Manager Huggins and Babe Ruth conform to the rules we open in the West.” anted his old style bat and started new bat retails for $8, while the ordinary bat used t e n the alr over the ruling onager Huggins ‘The rules simply state that the bat must be round, Owner Ruppert backs Huggins up in his stand, and © invention of Bam Crawford, for big league players costs only $2. There is much more * at Johnson f# in error and will forced to entirely of hard wood and conform to certain dimen says he feels that Ruth is being discriminated against. r of the Detroit Americans. Ruth drive to the new bat because of ity unusual constru ve his ruling when the facta in the case are prop sions. He has wired President Johnson to that effect in at the time, With the new bat ton. nted, Owner Ruppert says he is buck of “The new bat used by Ruth t# made-of hard wood strong terms, rence, Johnson has ruled that Some idea of the care and expense of the cx They're Fans and Fane|M’ 'Graw Combs Minor Leagues Helen Wills Is National Women’s Col. Ruppert’s Idea * Tennis Champ; Beats Mrs. Mallory Sport Writers as Bugs iG IANT. L EADER SEE KING "NE WwW MO UND TAL r NT! Helen Wills, California girl tennis wonder, won the American women’s singles i i Man ULY EVANS champi nship at Forest Hills from Mrs, Molla Mallory, seven times champion, poserding Fight Jake Se i of an ideal baseball N steht Ey BY ANE! Je Saturday, 6-2, 6-1, completely outplaying the champion thruout. Miss Wills, game, according to the semi-facetious remarks of his friends, 1s one in the pitching department has who is only i7 years old, was runner up to Mrs. Mallory last season. in which the Yankees would score 15 runs in the first inning and the other |bee? the greatest handicap of tho 4 * # & * * & SS side wou! t a hit or a man on base in nine innings. eae rk Giants this season ce BY HENRY L. FARRELL baie gen veel ect ke! ea a mead casera bag oye yr great club sae taune wal carte b 2AM , | REST HILI S, N. Y., Aug, 18.—California’s fair young daughter, pretty little When s were sharing the Polo Grounds with the Glants, the | {font In the National league race, In Wass: ee. Helen Wills, d the second big moment in her 17 years here this afternoon colonel use: pe a daily occupant of the press-box, and the tide of the | Pots the pitching has ‘ ‘ ‘ when she was given the second chance to become the queen of the American tennis game could be re ed from his seat, When the Yanks would be way out al Rages late : court. me re eine eins cee aera Ecsaniths ape ee McGraw attem; 0 pl ‘ ‘ Just as it happened last year, the Berkeley school girl found herself in the final would be empty colone! would have retired to the darkness under the | ml deals with nal leagy ‘ital re round of the championship against Mrs. Molla Mallory, seven-time champion. stands to sweat there until the noise had abated and something had hap-| clubs, before the dat “ Just as it was last year, the Pacific Coast Miss found almost a nation back of her, ned one way or the other limit on all such trannactions phew i m ta lack of courage that impels the owner of the American league | Watson of Boston was the only b plugging for her to win. way under the pressure of excitement. He hasn't the | aguo twirler he was able to secure i & “J From clear blue skies a comfortable warm sun beamed down on the green-bottomed in business, or he never would have amassed a fortune | McGraw js strong for left-handers ut 4 ‘ 4 concrete stands and added a lustre to the colors of the fashionably dressed feminine that runs into millions. Perhaps it may be that he can't see some enter- | He has always held to the belief that 3 ‘ ( Ge. gathering in the stands.|— Do ee rise of his losing when he {s powerless to have a hand in getting on the | Very successful club must have at A bah anighos Jah line in defense himself, }least one star left-hander, Two star There was just enough breeze | oie ee |left-handers ts just. twice as good, ac Ai 5 Aree to flap the half-masted flags | Molla Held Title 7 Years contrast Is the case of Harry Stevens, the caterer who made a | cording to theories of McGraw } 5 a | on the rim of the stadium! ; couple of millions selling peanuts, “dogs,” cones and soda to the crowds at © & number of years Art Neht LM < land it was just cool enough ATURDAY’'S victory of M Willis over Mrs. Mallory the races and the baseball games in New York. has played the role of star southpaw ’ | ‘fer en ye shag tas Sau th ¢: Stevens has his office and headquarters {n the dark caverns under the | of the Giants. Neh ts now a veteran ; : to make it comfortable for||\J marks the first time in eight Ee ae e cham. concrete stands at the Polo Grounds and he emerges, hatless, collariess and | in a baseball sense, nearing the end the spectators and ideal for || pion ship has changed hands. Mrs. Mallory first won the perspiring profusely, only when the big excitement is on. of his career as a big leaguer Robert Groves (left) and Dennis Gearin che two players. || title eight years ago and has successfully defended the He has too much to do to sit through the monotony of a one-sided game | McGraw, realizing he needed pitch : There were about §,000 in the|(honors until Miss Wills appeared on the tennis horizon. that thrills Col. Ruppert, and he has so thoroly learned the meaning of |ing strength—left-handers in par ever to make the big show, He{ Manager "Kid" Gleason of the Chi- |stands when Miss Wills appeared various yells and shouts from the’crowd that he knows just what is going | ticular—set out to get it, With the) ® 1 et 4 inches, That | cago White Sox recently tried to’put| on the courts. She posed for| —_ on and when to come out just in time for the big doings. major leagues closed to his bankroll, | makes him even smaller than wee over a deal for “Kewple,” but could: |r asenoher in front ct a table| Pecame a » when Mrs, Mallory|net for the next point. ge Mal- Be Sire" a8) he shifted his att mn to the minors. Diek Kerr ia |not see the price Milwaukee had set. | fiicg with Cupless forthe tous | ers out. Miss Wills misjudged a | lory scored a placement for the Another go type of the fan unusual is Perry Grogan, the genial wire| Recently from the Milwaukee club| When not on the mound, the "Kew: | ‘Gearin doesn't impress because of nainents iuhaee drive and it fell in her court for ajnext point. And Miss Wills fole chief in the two New York parks, who has m watching baseball every | of American 1 F 7 available for outfield duty, He nize.” sayn Gleason, “but he's a ae 5 I paint ‘The California girl dropped a| lowed it with a beautiful places © day for more than 20 years. Millions of words about thousands of games| hpaw, <ewpie"| 1s a good fly-chaser and a good hit-|m promising recru®. “He has| sare Mallory followed her on ia soft stroke over the net for a point,|ment across court. Miss Wills have lover the wires that Grogan sets up every day for the writers. | ew! 7 t tting average in 60 games ed, considering hix lack of stature urts Just in time to get some of| ia it was deuce again. Mrs, Mal-|then lost a point on a net. Mra Perhaps because as seen so much of It, read so much of it and heard | closed 1 . 460, y at curve ball. He ts a fine |*B® ovation that grected the ap! 10. drove into the net and drove| Mallory drove out. of court and ba mush, Gr long censed to be a fan. 3 : 1 a for Robert . who have seen him work | f u really have five infield. |Pearance of her young rival lout. Miss Wilis took the last game|the score was deuce. The Califors He ca t name the ¢ eanup man in two of th © 16 batting orders, he doesn’t fty : e str Du ri A certain to be of consid: | ers when he is pitching. When play sntspagin iptog alifornia | oF the first net at 64, which 4 her | nia girl then drove wild out of Keep track of Babe Ruth’s home-run record, the noise of the crowd bounc h nizat wea s ) I MeCira Hox & Sik SEAL ce be Saeed e heey aat Pty aa, veg | the net at 6-2. court. Miss Wills scored another off his ears and the only time he shakes an air of bored lassitude is w y 4 to Met iroven| 7 vera picked Gearin up from|to pick the apota for Gearin, And if|(2® pet and Jost the first point. se i te eet | Out, however, and: Mrs Maligamy some shout comes up the line is je until the © year, | the nd in the Pacific #, ‘Kewple’ in almoat certain to |* TN the wend poine | with a beautiful placement in-the far| YO" her first-game of ths “My wire’s open to the Star.” ot ‘ ¢ McGraw i ‘They paid » * of valuable mesistance to the Gi.|2et 8nd dropped the second point. | With a beautiful pla ve far | aet, 5-3. j Pers ape ecg a tS» 6 i hard is naid to ha yee M Sa Ha a rie 2 age ote i) nie Mrs, Mallory gave Miss Willa her| Corner. Mrs. Mallory lost the sec nd)" Miss Wills started the fifth game Spo rs are supposed to be the most cold-hearted, calloused reaction-| Ge 7 itch: kee $15,001 ; : VSears piankat rage!” |first point by driving out of the | orere tate stay ohashecemiace risen with a nice placement and Mes aries of all games. Yet some of them—a few, it 1 e—are the wildest - ~ | court. | Mallory netted for the second of fans | Tht California girl lost another Pehte a abies the first game) point, Miss Wills drove out again. One Cincinnat! writer, who has been following the Reds for years an Fir Pid point on an out but the champion ,| Mrs. Mallory lost a point on an r4, 1s s0 wild a rooter that he is known all over the National league cir- irpo uts Kana, Ex-Solon ake ANAL | inex arove tn the net twice. Miss| Mrs. Mallory lost the first point of out. Mrs. Mallory drove out of | as “Wild Bill" He become so enraged when the breaks are going Wills again drove out of court and| the second game on a net. The Call-| court, giving the game to Miss his team that his shouts arise in a high, screeching c indo over S T ° ° became deuce again when Mrs.| fornia girl then netted, andthe polnts| Wills, 41. ‘The score was then the nolse of the crowd. Once, not so long ago, Bill Kiem, dignified umpire owney in ent to havea wim ute fallory 4 to clear the net. | Were even. Mra. Mallory dropped a|4-1 in games with Miss Wills lead: stopped the game and threatened to haye him ejected from the press box, in | The champion netted the ball for| Soft lob over the net and scored a| ing. New York, if he didn’t cease to differ so loudly with the umps on his judg- the next point but the gcore waa| placement. Mrs, Mallory netted| ‘The Californian lost the last point ment of balls and strikes. - os D 1 t al ent to the Wichita Fi ol On ] uesday tied again when Miss Wills drove|@sain and evened the score. The! of the sixth game on an out. Mrs” Another former sports editor in New York, now one of the most famous Texau league. Ho out of court. A net gave Mrs. Mal-| Champion drove out of court and! Mallory won the second on | # and widely read of columinists, gets so worked up over the Yankees that NDIANs APOLI A under option and will be Qearrise sport lovers will flock|lory a point. Miss Wills drove| shook her head. Miss Wills drov | placement. Miss Wills then scored — he occasionally shouts, “Robber,” at the umpire like a regular bleacherite ¥, of ¢ i, Ohto, Ww Ib, 1 in Septemt the Lake Washington canal|into the net again, giving Mrs.| oUt of court and the game went tolon a beautiful placement and back Then there is one of the country’s best-kno cartoonists, a baseball 4 & 10-round “b * had th t Tuesday afternoon to witness the| Mallory a game at 7-5 | coee Mrs. Mallory lost the next| court. and boxing expert for years, whose heart has gone back on him. His doc- with Luis Firpo here in the National league, but || two-mile swims to be staged by| Mrs. Mallory Jost the first point] Polnt after sho had been chased all| Mrs, Mallory scored another place= | tors have forbidden him to watch a baseball game or a fight, thru the fear ht, was taken to a hospi n control was poor. Manager || T Star lot her service on an out and she| Over the b court. With a beau-/ ment in the far corner and Miss that excitement would prove fatal. ambulance today as the result of In-|| stokecknio figured that the With a fast field entered, the} followed it with another drive in| tiful placement Miss Wills won the| Wills returned another placements On the other hand, there are many competent baseball writers who | Juries rece ular work he 1 get in Texan || races promise to develop some keen|the net. After a long rally, Mrs.| Second game at 5-3. Mrs. JMallory| With a most beautiful placements a tell you the score an hour after the game without hesitating to} Altho th: @ bout! | would prime tov. next’ bedi et |Mallory scored a point on place-| drove at of court and lost the first | Miss ws pohetlgp odventaat ae 4 make s to see that ot ti sis The champion drove of | point of the third game. Miss Wills | fluke chop shot over the net ‘ ¢: @ Of ei@ into a pi , Downey took a " conditions are expected | ment Fe Sara 4 ne pop £ | son thie; pasond Arith aeibe: ae Mallory drove out of court. A clever | Fight managers, as a rule, are the most flighty and excitable persons in | hard pummelin, t J the two races and/ ii. witie at 4 1, with a drive In| Ment at the champion’s feet and| placement gave the game to -AMfiss 8 n they are holding a corner in an im ant fight counter, which n 7 fe thwest records for both men | 10" Of scored another placement with an-| Wills at 6-4. When Ben! was flopped for the count o ein a fight several : Pm TWO GOLFERS 1 women are quite Mealy to yah s Wills made two clever nets| Other. Miss Wills then netted. Mrs,| Miss Wills lost the first point of years ago w He us fo je Lake Ritchie Mitchell, his manager, Billy on, became so panic- Was unconsc Torney, Green beach | it Mrs Mallory. scored on har with lory drove out of court, and it|the seventh game ona net. Mra stricken in his corner that he couldn't speak. His mouth went thru all the | after reaching the hospital, KILI BIRDS and fo star member of), piacement tn the far corner, The| Ws Miss Wills’ game at 4 to 1. pepper dade Rete intoaaa , but not @ sound came from his helpless vocal organ Id, but recovered hin sen in Lake Waptane| A Tw cia drove int the mee ThA’ secre tak ker net and gritted her teeth in ange | : | 3-0 in games, | 4 earns, manager of the heavyweight champion, becomes #o excited| The fight got under J won the race last year, and e f le an Wi The champion drove into the net ~ fight that he works almost in a daze. After Dempsey’s fight with | midnight, after an hour's B will defend his title again ‘Tuesday. | ‘ a piven hia is aabra ake Leatacaan oe prey and greatly) again. Miss Wills then lobbed out | Kearns swore and wanted to bet that he didn’t offer smelling | payment of the money. There LTHO birds often have deen| Mitrie Konowaloff, the Crystal |Pewerde tn a ee ve meth ee namplon of court. Miss Wills scored the next the champion after the Frenchman had given him that famous right | talk of cutting the fight to four Nea by driven gc te the | Club star, will also be in the race.|" MAAS It wai Mone Manto The California girl lost the first|point on a beautiful cross court in the d round. Kearns refused to believe that he had rogistered | rounds. jence of two players on the| Konowaloff won the national junior pasha PY re ae $ point of the fourth game with a! placement. ' ‘ such signs of concern until! he #: f in the ac en the ty ree » ew Shank. auctioneer: : Se hs phos thet io yeas eo Ss ich signs of ¢ rm until he saw himself in the act when the pictures| Finally Lew han! 1H n » Hall course, Essex, Eng-|™ hampionship two years ag | Miss Wills scored the first point} , one of the best known of the fight managers, loses con- line cag mA toe the ntiee tf they : unique for each account/and is rated as one of the fastest] tne sourth game with a beaut | RICHARDS AND HAP MORSE IS : in the same round, | distance swimmers on the Coast, | ide Py gece hits nuch he corner that he drinks the water himself, out | didn't nru with the 10 rounds as {n long a hot from} In addition to Torney and Konow. area : bib be Be paced TILDEN BREAK f offe it to his fighter adver no would have the bunch | yy, talaloft, ‘Bob aay bn Watate: | ennis. Miss Wills cross: , | aS te ee Bauer, So ee ere nave he w ave th ach | +4 ee, W WwW uw hisjaloff, Bob Smith, Harry McWat me Bra lory sith another place-| The decision of Bill Tilden to play| Hap Morse, | a néVer abows.a sign. of |. For five rounte the boxers sparred ‘r'lment, The champion drove twice|in the national doubles with Sandy | baseball circles, is playing in the net, then it was Miss Wills'| Weiner, 14-year-old. Philadetphian, |®@8¢ fF St. Paul in the American uted when Britton was in| at each other. Then Firpo began Ten minutes later W 0 i . f ‘en minutes later Wass's part-| race. leaiea sociation race and beiieve it or noty would have been in many a J wade into D y. He rocked Dow A. F. Hart, playing a mashie| Katheryne Brown, the Crystal) FT bi ine netted for the firat|™eans the breaking up of the team|he js hitting third in the batting « ready to go 0} d of pro: 1 5 frame heavy nts tol. S - se | cl ee ta] . ready to go on any kind of pr ion. | ni frame ¥ heavy rights tO! snot down the 12th fairway, struck|club star, who won the women’s point of the fifth game, ‘The cham-|° Tilden and Vincent Richards, na. | order. titlark and cut st cleanly|Gust Jarvie, Lin Prescott and Ca two. |Markin will comete in the anen’s = | the head and face as the fight wore! a singing lark in flight, killing It] race last year, is coming over from on. One blow sent Downey spinr | outright Tacoma to defend her tite. Heste! rl “" “ FIGHTING FOOLS OF FR H WATER halt way across the ring, but he|° ano birds are to be stuffed and| Eastman, who won the race two| Tice Dincement. Miss Nhe. ordi seasons, It also means a change in| RIP COLLINS ES pose nat eral F Janother placement on a deep drive|tne doubles te h Spee tuck on. set up in the club lounge—alrendy| years ago, will also swim. Frances |°"% andiod| rn bies: tenet: onthe: Daxis: cup. R In the 10th it was merely a aues-|the home of a partridge and a/ Ruth Schwimmer elyn Brisbane, | ‘hat soe pers ebb ante a squad. Tildren and Bill Johnston HAS SORE MUSCALUNGE AND PIKE ton of Downey's abliity to stick for) green-finch killed some Years @€0|Catherin Atwood and Blanche sten-| Miss Wills chopped another Pitew| a camry the whole burden again| Rip Collins, Detroit pitcher, iad the round. He held out, but took! by members in play. |moe are the other women entries. |Ment across the court, Mts. Nt) vgainst Australia as they did in |®b0Ut thru for the season. He is Gum BY MORRIS ACKERMAN terrible punishment as the Argentine Sy | Whe men's race in to atart prompt, {tory drove into the net and it was with a sore arm. His failure to aime ‘i = ‘ 7 siant <-livered a furious shower of | Misa Wills game, 4 to 1. hamsbasn “a Bagepinw tate ‘: Nationally Known Authority and Writer on the Great Out-of-Doors, ana ||" rhb pe DUTCH ANDT [1 at 2 o'clock ‘Tuesday afternoon, é Haale? be has been a low to the Detroit a. ) an effort to by © noc Miss Wills ade three remarkable Editor of Ackerman’s Sportsmen's Gulde Bt LORE: 0, Win ry) ®, MnO GK CH BR | while the women's: race <will/ stare’ a | a mi Tigers. ; : LOSES VERDICT | ew minutes inter [nats and Rone: ei beceital alo Le) NEILL IS FAR hen SECOND ARTICLE—HOW TO HOOK ’EM NOW ORTBANE Aug: ihc: Ube veabal coures, hich will pa) Poulton Roodimie x) Weck Pal “plaoe PIRATES MAY A GRASS-P! his viclousfphantom minnows r with | MANY GOLF lo N ; 220 ds in length, will be swam|™ent for th % FROM SEATTLE Charlie Ferra w Orleans, won | "s 4 ar eight times for the mile. The race|*xth_ game. Jimmy O'Neill, shortstop, has been H | |a decision over Dutch Brandt | s, Mailory protested against * 2 caliney ale A HEMI AeTPMIETGEL DT Woleer tha: tablatoea BALLS ARE | Brooklyn here last night Wilt’ beth fall view of the: ‘spect: Nhe, eepiaueayce "ihe gallery and|*e" by Washington to New Haven,| Reports have it in Los An musc Ke, are a brilliant pair of| I know the treble-hook feathered a tors at all times. | groves Gebeee ourtteiees ‘giving tern league. He was sup-|that the Pittsburg Pirates will dumb-bells when you come to think trolling spoon is the accepted |u EING USED om | be bd to, have reported:t 4a | thes | | Aap aridibe: Ported to Seattle last | there next spring. They are sai about it. A grass-pike will take a sur-|both by the fish and the fisherr B JACK SILVER jthe game to Mine Wille at At et| season. When Ray Francis was|be negotlationg for the Li At pee) face lure trolling a hundred feet or} but, in my opinion, the phanto LE will be something like | HESTER IS IN | Mrs. Mallory netted for the first) shipped to Washington, But O'Nelil|Fred Clarke, ex-Pirate mal more behind a canoe, motorboat or|the “female of the species.” A . J point of the seventh game, and drove nagel OC bON ecie pala runel 1a the AGAIN WINNER)! | : s was in ill health and unable to re-|now in the Movie City, is t skiff—while the whole time, the pass- | pound line will hold a 75-pouad seta i pecs sees fais | NORTH DAKOTA) out of court to lose the second point. | port. making the accent ¥ ig hea ing of the craft, the long line showing | So will a 15-pound line, if you don’t = Saiipiied "by the “Cntted | gine meee Alles i ack Fe a EE eee a cucvancaceeel 7 —— a white streak in the water and final-| try to “hoss” ‘em. When a “lunge” |t0 fsures compiled by the United | sivor continued his winning streak| Herb Hester, for years Interested again. Mrs, Mallory drove out of| ly the whirling treble hooked spoon | of slze decides to rush after being |States department of commerce. | inst night by defeating Bobby Allen|in baseball in the Northwest, 1] court. and it was Miss Wills’ game, ° r . ver will | by a shade, Benny Berris of Chi-| piloting the Minot team to a pen- Are unfolded to the fish—and—he | hooked, it's up to you to keep slack |About one-fourth of this number will|/ by a shade. Benny Berris of Chi-] pilot d 43 B t a a B n 1 a érabs the spoon just the same, out of the line, That's your first and|be imported cago had luck with him and man-|nant in the North Dakota league. | Mrs. Mallory lost the first point on| oo S n if Ss Nl You troll a few inches deeper and) {ast business. The rest of the battle| The golf ball trade of the Amer: aged a draw with Johnny Jordan. | His team 1s well out In front Jan out, and the points were even| | ° you nail both ‘‘lunge’’ and pike, or| takes care of Itself, Jc un manufacturer will have | — |when Miss Wills drove out of court. ( JOSSI of the Pla you might snare beth on the sur-| Musky fishing reminds me some. |wholesale value of $3,520,000, with} ‘Phe 19th annual Dipsen race over} Canadian yachtmen are enthusias- |The California girl scored the next vers face. The thing is that n grass-pike| what of gri hunting. You start|pig additional opportunities for lee one Pine trail in Marin county | tic over the victory of the R-class | point on placement. Miss Wills drove apd & muscalunge will take a plece | out tishing for shiners and your ult!-| American trade expansion in export | adjacent to San Francisco, the Pa-| yacht, Miss Nayada which won the | ont of court, and the points were even f tin or a h of wood trolling| mate ambition is mucalunge—-which | marketa. | cific coast cross-country classic, will] Queen's Cup in the recent Dominion again, Mrs. Mallory scored the next | y utrighe te ane “Oak, wine vetecnes SutReL Gaal erin 8. Bo n nature should) you finally we. A grizaly has an| ine British monopolim this trade | be run off Sept. 2 day regatta at Toronto, point on a nice cross placement, It quite a winner | turned back to the Galveston club in the! e blessed them both with better | j 4 two Ago, He wax obtained | Texan 1 i independent air about him—sort of 4 exaw league, where he 1s sald to Be plays sense other markets. Golf playing is by the Braves from the Pittsburg Na- ag |. if you want to know who jin her me 4 he Pittsburg Na-| ing good ball again, tice . tlonals, firm established all over the w orld | boneheads of the first| things around this Joint commence | ethan ake tarteaaing l te eels, - : lgomething.” ‘That's. the way with [414 its devotees are increasing in}, Joey § ewe R ate e Up en Sacramento is certainly having a tough| Fort Worth and Dallas are staging @ ae ae . lunge. |number each year, Both in the do- |time with the umpires in’ the Const} erry race of it in the Texas | ue A wise old bird I know tells the Li mestic and export fields cloner at jleague, Recently Frity Mollwitz had a|the former slightly in the i world that the way to catch _In his water he's boss and when he nite h t R ki [rei Wiehe Ly eae Tee aa 8 | aan: ropmvact aeatliet cere een something that 1 rood t!he 5 Stine ‘starts right {n to show you|#hould result in increased trade, ac- day Charley Pick got the aame sentence | Club, RE Gis atrapada’ ee ie to how he conducts affairs in hi neck |cording to P. L. Palmerton, chief of | ~\yWvELAND, Aug. 18—One hard- | of a shortstop. And a good one at bat he tops them all. |from Prexy McCarthy for a run-in with and accurate and above all to|how he cond hie nec! % ; hia . Finney. have the lure reeling back toward|of water. ‘There are plenty of mus-|the rubber division, bureau of for-|{y jy can overlook Joey Sewell|that. At least if the yeaa ag | Sewel's all-round work this sea- s PL Jack Vournier is certainly taking — you “when it hits the water.’ | calunge left in many atates and Kaat-|elgn and donrestic commerce: when compiling a list of the stars|to be filled as capably as tt had This is certainly true with spec-|ern Sanada, : Pek teed w lease on life in Brooklyn, ‘The vet son has without a doubt been one} Pitcher Gay Cooper, who used to hurt | 2° Practically all golf balls imported | th pasoball firmament for 1923, |een for years past. for! baa tiaroad cantata te trl) gran first ancker Is not only fielding kled trout and holds in the majority | - into the United States come from |"... cormer Alabama university ; Rs Ray Chapman, the hub of the /of the features of the American ho birda whe saw him pitet here won: the beepers ie the acta’ Hae gana of cases with large and smail-mouth| Monday: -‘Trout Facts.” Bnglénd and fenfiand, The Average |. peaides: putting up a stellar | cleveland infield) not) long, ‘before ||cague campaign, Of the tomsers any ho ured to be a Wits! Prine their hinclen cece ee ee black bass, but with grass-pike and z banter imported from | ie afield, has been smacking the| had met w tragic death. The Indian Lacking in tho spectacular and | ner rotting helt Sineles every Hee fauscalunge it doen't mean any: MIT VERNON England t# 42 vei s each, and from |one is on the proverbial nose, |! the thick of the pennant fight, /minus that individual brilliancy she a tune go againat them, it ditterent, thing. Of course, a grass-pike may . Scotland, 29 cents each. Kany t far removed |Teduired a chap who could jump |other players in the big show pos : Ritoeen oak a sertaly Rarer not be considered a game fish, but ‘Ton American firms account for| At present he Is ca ipa Unweay,| to Ray's boots without too much | gogg, Sewell's work does not come in| ‘The veteran, turned back to Omaha by surely a muscalu comes in the| BOY SIGNED the bulk of domestic production. In. |from the swatting leaders. Unless) 6 4 rattle for the amount of praise it deserves, | Pittaburg, let Oklahoma City down with " front rank as a fighting fool | vestigation shows that imported|he hits a bad slump, he's almost) 1 coo wont that tough | Nevertheless, he's playing a nifty |£U% Mts the other day EW 1923 ah wel bove y ) 3 w/ It y yetserday my young | BY LEADERS isis retail around $1 each, while |certain to finish well @ | snment, But Sewell, a green, |article of ball, and is proving a most Strait, the old a8 yretty good average | | wee § Northwestern son was casting along the edge of a 1 VERNON t4—iny |AMertean balls ‘retail from $1 to 25 |.860 mark. A pr tty Mood AVCTARG |i CHorienced youngster, surprised | valuable asset to the Sponker en- siar, Who used to he quite the HEVRO weed-bed, He got a backlast vig Gt INT VERNON, Aug: 18-—Billy | conta in any league. ‘even tls udmiters; tounge for Seattio, in now in Elmira, Ni. out the tart 4 10¢ y, A ; P seako 4 where he playa ball and rine a Buale t the tangle, started to reel in ayne, local boy, Playing In| United Slates exports of Kolf balls| ‘This is Sewell’s fourth season In!” Crevoiand won the pennant that| Jooy Sewell nover may reach the Adah ereedele ry roe Oy ‘ angle, t . sig Ph hens there, Joreey Clty, In. the Interna: re AM |the ts ba ihe ear an a are not Important. the majors, tho in reality he has | season—the only flag it ever copped. |heights attained by Honus Wagner'| tional lengus, Is amderstood to he after SEDAN hat's a grass-pike for you, and| signed for a trial w a only been in two complete cam: |Now young Joey Sewell may not{and some of the other star short. |!" but he's making so much “doush I’ve seen munkies do the same thing,| Francisco Seals next year, it was N ‘ 3 J Mf in Elmira that tho Skeetera would have jen do the same thing 1 Mee ens, Joey came to the Indians | yay hoon the "man of the hour" in| stops of bygone days, That might |to make It mighty. attractive fmanctalle on tom, indeed, does a bass do that j spouses ria! olen athe mdind JOHNNY DUNDEE in August of 1920, almost directly l¢hat case, but he at least did his|be asking too much, for him to leave, ‘ sa Lo a a e poor | wi y 6 Pi " C1 8 pviot y RY ide hae ini pat ot ines pe toe Sake at sil flier hd 29 YEARS OLD rrom tho college campus, Obviously lpi for the cause But if porformance to date can! sore, seth, former -Verbon. hurler, ‘as us n “‘lunge’’ and pike | Pirates spl f 0 ' rs nig 01 3 7 2 polley e to rite’ 0 y S 9, fishing, however. I'm not’ golng tolArk, but was sent back home for| Johnny Dundee, world's feather.|the Jump was a big one but at that) since then the ex.collegian has |be taken as a criterion, ho ts almost | nae been transtorred by Newhvllie tones Rowland & Clark tell you how to catch muscalurige, moro seasoning, weight champlon, was born Noven.|!t was no bigger than the Job he|come to the front rapldly until now}certain to emblazon his name. in| bile In the Southern lenge, Froth wea SIL Bast Pike Street 24 uf o fill, 5 ort Yar »|Rolng pretty Kood until lately, when I only suggest. that you include in| ‘The flashy local boy played for|ber 22, 1893, His right name is Gul.| Was naked to he ranks well up in the lst of the | big letters on baseball's roll of honor Jimmy Hamiton decided to whip him to East 0086 Your "‘lunge” tackle a brace or so of| St, Martin's college for three years, xeppe Carrora, No, he Js an Itallan,| Cleveland then was sorely in need best in the shortstop field, while at jere he bids adieu to the pastime, WH : |pion scored the next point on «| tional champions, for the past two SORE EIS