The evening world. Newspaper, June 2, 1913, Page 11

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F GANS HAVEN'T TRUE sr? STRIDE YET, SAYS M'GRAW Sport Under New ¢ New Conditions | Gratnary tolls Ons deviate ap races, can jad a century deposit purpoues’ Continues on Trial at Bele |**™" ‘°F _—_ , “a . : _ mont This Week. ac tre, tn Sete ; iin Manager in Review Declares Team . ; “ay ergy is od al Was Handicapped by Weak Batting and Un- oN, ic = | certain Pitching, but Players Are Born 1; Fighters and Will Show Better ; ‘ Form on Western Trip. 7 Manager MoGraw wil conte hls baseball series’ In “eer pees yo tr {o-morrow’s Evening World, when he will take up the sub- ; tng just how far the sport Is going ; ‘leat of the Eastern Teams’ Western Invasion and the Ameri- “ih PACT IB ae vere Cm tratn of cing vathsasa ian { “Gan League Outlook. ’ - My 3 Die enough to support racing as = i rs fit . BY JOHN J. MGRAW. E ‘Manager of the Champion Giants, HB Giants are not quite right yet. I'll admit that, in fact, 1 did when I made the recent ge trade wif Oincinnat! by which I Jet if ne one player go who helped me to win : ; =] UL yers of four champlonships and another who iD ci tina ace what in sporting Darien Lgeorde Paar ine ads id YE ‘ ere nan a6, he whole” sald been return: & pennant bringer. 4 C v af ee offering any alibis for GY y C CHARACTER M fs ebelis™. when bbe ones @howing so far. 2 sbut th ien't anythis Plain facts are what count. One \ : tate them, or let ale fect ta that the club had not been’ hitting with eny degree of regularity or timeliness. When the rer have deen hitting, the pitching been . a distances One, mnt, when the pltehing das been a 5 rede tant come under the bend’ of good, the hitting bas been of the = j to called handicapping, this feature le featherweight brand. Take, as an =< example, that gamg¢ which Mathew- gon pitched against Boston last week, as pretty a game as I ever saw him ‘werk. Several New York newspaper men with the team blamed a mis- placed bat for beating us because the winning and only run would not have been scored in the ninth inning if the ball, on # good throw home, bad not |, to Gtrudk Sweeney's stick where he dropped it in front of the plate, and been | ——————______. oo |e wn he eee SP deflected. That was kind of the newspaper men. I do not blame the bat. CARPENTIER KNOCKS OUT round bout. The blows that esting ove, Carpentier was made grogsy | during the reat between the rounds, and! go and Bo — id 3 to 1 againet It was poor which beat my club in that came, Dik NA ae heavy rights and 1 2 by the blow, and at the o¢ count of “oine” | with his head down he rushed wsiay & Gat forge, be BAD BASEBALL BEAT MATTY IN| club—in. fact, never ‘have been—ana| WELLS IN FOURTH ROUN te ants cere My cartes te tse | eee ore hey? THAT BOSTON GAME. the second is because they are setting GHENT, Brussele,.June 3.—Before a Ta tue frat place, I want players who fear eet end fils strain will begin t0/arge gazhering of ght enthusiaste, tell on them soon. The pace making Georges Carpentier, handsome light out for the little thirigs 08 | position is the hardest one to bold, rd heavyweight of France, furnished ry ittle thipgs win games of | baseball through the early months of dig surprise here by knoc! been eeaso: Dool rdier Wells, the champion hea raigh| and jab to regent Fo for the third rou hcked a sat Say gr peed as % bee Fag devtee pigs has Swjient of England, in the fourth Found face, sending him to the floor on Ms | eorner rather tired, y knocked tart working. that It’ would. not interfere 9 G7 ty and it i taisesne to [ef what was to have been beck, with Glood flowing freely ee Carpentier had recovered somewhat Nia ‘Bvon if this ts © (and wee biek tavow. It was not. That is bed shee oF, nt wide = —_—_—_—_—_—__— See — SS = a a teat een keep UP HOT PACE. 7 Ni Buch a statement may be rated as a Prejudiced one, coming, as tt does, from ES EE me, the boss of a rival team. But Iam : trying to give my honest opipion re- Gardiess of my interests. It is seldom —— —— that @ whole team gets going at once ae the Quakers have this apring, and it wecdéses ge eece ocak tae tee cond usuaramtees sanitary working SEE aS through one hundred and fifty-four OF: tape Tne Boston Ted Sok caise a It guarantees that there will be he ® haar doing that thing last season es aay | ly no swest shop labor, CK ‘The Red Box were husky test year, 2 ‘ Bven so conservative @ campaigner as this jand' be lo foe author of the tden ork, peed Bo u | iH i ee H il iy this and he 19 he author of the idea | that there is no such thing as luck ‘n the run of 164 games. He declares that in waa cS ood feet the’ union embraces : a v / Blue Serges, Worsteds, Crashes, Tweeds and if i siek ii sat i is Patan | Ince agen wh in, aly tp Cheviots Rt are ends of s ple 8 aero, wines on ; PSU eee NT) Y for $20, $25 and $30. Gtataneed all Pe ina ne at | Hi ach garment bearing the U » AN Sys the the A 1 Se they'll st come ls while the. winning of four or fi games ie bound to put my team in ite i ig ip ba. 5 i : NZ, ~@;', : ub dwiging with confidence and eae ee in tne iaeos) Lesmus t S ) y tira consecutive pennant back eee Ge: 8 ince lati a fy ‘ M sides iene hE kame 0 tie OP the Pandya rca, , cori and Yy ; | each garment that you My] ff | TO P] whole batting orfer and/ Chicago and St Louis teams. é $ tots per the appearance of the team y folks may consider unjust The weather has deen against my| statement, But T bellove they ‘will nat hg, but it has not been any more) /*Et, Louis has been playing sensa- agsinet it than it has against the Phil-|tionai ball so far this season, it is we or the Brooklyns or three or four| true, away shove the for of el ron. we'll come when the weather Goseesees, the pitehore : up, and We work under the hot Soe & ood shape an aa renner ked one of my players after | @ opposing clubs. well i in the double defeat in Boston last week. check te 7. Will notice carefully, EXPECTS TO PROFIT ON COMING | pitching ere the ones in the free divie ? * TRIP WEST. sion now, with the exception of Chi- “Tf you are going to let your baseball eather,” I told t searching for you try work: I have a number of ends of trouserings in stock—some of Last season 1 had a Gents’ Furnishing Department in|the ends of suitings, others crashes and flannels—and I want to my Boston store, which # have discontinued. The only thing clean these all up. Some sold as high as $6.00 and $7.00. My remaining Is this order of 200 DOZEN STRAW HATS S that | ba Trousers to order, cut with stationary turnup, belt loops, had to take. These were bought “ aie yen arene #4225 29. eee eens Ss Have oO) | 96 a 1 Site Sonne \ Lai na iM ITCH EL the Tailor, from Boston, "ate | ===: Open Evenings Until 9. Saturday 10 ‘o’Clock ul ak & aA ing in @ green house?” Now I intend to attempt to show some reasons why I atill believe the club ‘wil win the pennant, In the first place, it Lr ph piers een a stubborn road ail the men are fighters, bor ahvas the Bering Ot hostile crowds only gets their blood up and makes tham go the harder, We are just starting ona fong road trip now against the Western clive which showed during thelr re- OME TREATMENT. cent trip east that they represent the| ‘The ORRINE treatment for the Drink weaker half of the circuit this season Habit can | be used with absolute confi- @or the first time in several years, 1 eal to profit by this jaunt, The toughest team we will meet while in the ‘West 1 figure is the Pittsburgh bunch, Zcan bear my readers advancing the eee rasta ument that the Philadelphia team | Costs only 81 on | “faBea the same sort of a trip and the gett results from Bese ire , same teams. This {se true, but I do por tl ae fdeon| f Tot look to see the Quakers profit by it iby Riker: Bong re we should, for two reasons. One them aie tree booklet tel | ‘they ore not @ very @ood rond OASINB.. (3 pone is : vi < , . ’ ba + ele i* « ¥ s : ‘A ’ - a

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