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[Pic cienlietineriaaimeteldea FEB EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JUNE 20, fers. BIG ; ArT “ eon EDITED BY __SURE TO BE CLOSE NEWS OF ALL BRANCHES : OF SPORT ROBERT EDGE CRUEL WORLD = By VIC|“The Man From The World,” ¥ : NJ ; Ww Copyright, 19%, by The Press Publishing Co. ontiuaeealiasbei WU. Ti. hi denen Watch for Him in Seve i” lien: wall m seauia rewouomen) SA Cerrine yeatanony — Se wr a’ . and Get a Baseball CATGH + f ANT @ free pasa to the ball game? It's easy to get. All you to do ts to find the “Man from The World.” y :" He will take a. seat alongside of you. He always roads a Before They Left for Washington the Highlanders Recovered ; Z F Brening World. You must be @ reader ; Their Long Missing Punch and Banged Out Fifteen Hits eC ie tue current iseve he will ee © SOC . 2 = Ba of the current issue he will take a seat Against the Browns, . 3 . aide of you. He finds the readers of ‘ ; E = Evening World a companionable and \ : ; lot of baseball fans. ‘nay all You must not forget that iy By Bozeman Bulger. : : ¢ ~ . c i! ; also included in this hunt for the HE muchly alibied though still loved Highlanders breesed into Washing- from The Wo. You won't really ton to-day with heads held high, @ fresh hope and considerable of that 8 4 Ram enti the coventh tnalag, SNe SF: Dlotech rubbed off emer escutcheon. Having olosed their defense of the i, politely hand you an crier for a free Western invasion by shooting S¥tcher Mitchell as full of holes as @ colander : CORRES to a future game. Romemver, though Gnd swamping thelr cellar rivals with a shower of hits, Frank Chance re- “ GUOSING FROM WHO'S COMING must have a copy of The Evening ,MAjusted that emile that he wore during @ certain play-off game here in 1908, 4 WHAT'S AHEAD OF How STRANGELY in your posseasion. an4 began to figure. During the home stay of fifteen games his club played (1M ABLE TD FAMILIAR. HE Thilo “Man trom The woerte” to @ /@t © walt of .400 despite Zelder’s dunion and the split fingers of Ware Midkiff. ben Lams St Me gooter, He will net confess his They jut with four successive de- = feats t of the new infield imme Giately becomes apparent. Since its introduction team has played .122 points better than thelr official average of .278. If that rate uf increase in efficiency = (= My His PICTURE. 4 continue until ¢he end of the season the Yanks would be rapping for ission into the first division. The long missing punch returned yesterday @ the shape of fifteen clean clouts against the Browns, one of which, a two- ‘Masted blow by Birdie Cree, cleancd the sacks of three runners, “PRESENTING ED SWEENEY, HITTER EXTRAORDINARY! That a man can ascend from the slough of despond to a glad hand of wel- ,@ome every time he comes to bat by the simple application of hard wood to the cork-centred horsehide is proved in the case of Big Ed Sweeney. Two weeks o n ego, ted i remember, those boys in the grand stand with thin-spaced eyes 4 : ‘Were clamoring for the release of Sweeney, figuring on just when he would ; c a : QETS PLA air We traded and begeing for the presence of Gossett, 7 = ‘ sag en my , Wasn't hitting then. After he had peeled off his fifth ve FINALS IN ENGLAND. ya Browns yesterday I heard one of those 61-4 size boys re: \ y . y _ @4a to give that fellow a Iittle encouragement and he'll be best batter in z oF ito . the world.” And there you are. ae a Being as there is no game to-day and we have plenty of time for } Weflection, it might be worth while pondering over the fact that Borton and Birdie Oree also edged themselves into the pastime with three safe wallops each, all of: which told heavily in the bombard ore that scuttled the Browns. Who said “I told you to wait and THIS BEATS THE OLD “SIX HITS AND NO SCORE” PROBLEM. : A Here we have @ new baseball problem for the backroom calculators: How e) j is hy (Ege. as fF Be bh, more team ae area succession ed not reach third base? The answer rN 4HAD JUST HEARD ‘8 hoo 28 cam, . Chaos, Posbody & very apparent e spectators who sat in at the Polo Grounds yester- The Seared Makers of Arrow day. Cree singled and moved up a notch as Sweeney singled, Hartzell then hit enna: swat BAIS ME GRANDMA ae @ VERY ; ot @ Uner that knocked Sweeney down on thé base line. Sweeney was out for being : TT THE (S SuRm GONNA | i] hit by a batted ball and Hartzell ts credited with a hit. That retired the side Latino GOAk BRENT: a NTS, without Cree reaching third base. Simple enough, isn't it? HIGHLANDERS ; wT Ma! i SING There's no use in talking, some one has been fecding that fellow Sweeney oe iv meat. Not satisfled with getting five hits, he stole third in the last inning, oa te _Aaaredy lowering his long-standing record of .000 in third-base stealing. SAND STILL THEY CALL IT AMERICA’S NATIONAL GAME 4 Shades of Kelley, Keefe, dhabede and Duffy! What is this we if ere coming to? Can you imagine McGraw, in two days, signing * Bchauer, Pies and Lothrop! As Pat Moran, born in the County ts ou {9 Nor Mayo, says: “The firet thing you know the league will be overrun TO GE Funny! _ with them foreigners.” {This fellow Pies, by the wa: Seorker. 1 saw him at work down in Richmond this spring. Considering the t that he only hit .253 in the Caro- | ina League, fans may wonder why MoGraw was in such a hurry to grab) shim, but the answer stands out like| Zelder's bunion when you know that he | has one of the most remarkable throw- | tag arms in the world. While playing | with Greenville he threw out twenty- § three men at the plate, which led all e the outfielders by many points. So ROER CLOTHIN + this spring he has been hitting like QRPER CLOTHING BRANCH & “house atire. | Rube Waddell, who te now pastim- 9 in the Michigan League, prob- ably gave Rube Schauer the best fecommendation that “there is,” according to his way of thinking, when he wired Dick Kinsella; “He's @ good us I am.” Our inadvertent placing of Harry : ws at the head of the “all-bone” | , we: of the national pastime has B brought forth a storm of remonstrance. i Yd Terp thinks the honor ough! with the bases full, whil | Gebest insists on a niche in + fame for old Tug Arundell, who, when None dropped the third strike on a bat- “ter with the bases full, ran so far to touch him out, instead of throwing to b @yet, that be chi in three runs. ‘put they can’t take the tough luck record away from Burch, formerly of the Cardinals, In Boston he smashed @ line drive that hit the pitcher in the forehead and bounced back into the cateheys hands for a put-out, ‘the pitcher suffering no injury. The tough though, is that when Burch got to the bench Manager MoCloskey * fined him $60 for disobeying orders comand not ing for a sacrifice! Now, 7 tana, th ‘one for you to shoot at. Mo, there won't be any game to-day, thank you. —— OTTAWA ENTRIES, GONNAUGHT RACE TRACK, OT- AWA, Ont., June 20.—The entries for | joGt!, 100;° *Incision, , 38: Cherry eed, Tid: duck" Nunoally, 315, WEVENTH BACE—Pure, $500; for three ‘and up; selling: and ‘sity Godmother, ; All things being equal, a man working for a living to-day or the man in business for himself who wants hygienic conditions to prevail in his clothing, should insist and demand the Union Label for his own protection, as well as for the benefits that may be therefrom to the Union Tailor. \ > _, Union Tailors are the best class of men employed in this craft. They are paid:a uniform wage; they demand and have healthful, sanitary conditions in their work rooms, ; , : and they are the public’s protection against sweatshop labor. __,, The working man who is looking to better himself should believe in reciprocity. Prices being equal, the employer of labor should insist on the Union Label for quality, as he knows if he employs union labor in any capacity, he insists on the betterment of conditions. The Union Tailors’ work is all week work; no rush piece work is tolerated. Mothers, wives and sweethearts demand that your men folk protect you from disease-breeding sweatshop clothing! For your protection insist on the Union Label! I have just purchased the stock of Edwin Tolles, 49 Ann Street, Hartford, Connecticut. Mr. Tolles, whose death recently was recorded in this paper, was for years in the wholesale woolen business in Hartford, and his woolens came direct from the finest mills in this country and abroad. — * : bots ._,The principal part of this stock was from the Broadbrook mills, located within 75 miles of this city. He carried nothing but the finest of stock. His death necessitated the closing of his doors. At this season, when woolens are a drug on the market, I bought these goods for about fifteen cents on the dollar. I consider them the finest line of stap!es ever shown by a Merchant Tailor—bluc and black clays, grey serges, Shepherd plaids, narrow and wide wale; pencil stripes in blue, black, grey and brown—practically all this season's goods. _ 2 have placed these goods in my New York Store and to'each customer ordering a suit I present free a pair of trousers, your choice from a selection of 1,000 styles. For instance, you can select a Wanskuk Blue Serge that sells for from $40.00 to $50.00 in the regular tailor shop and get an extra pair of Flannel or Blue Serge Trousers free. Wanskuk Blue Serge Suit to Order, $4 4.00 Extra Trousers Free. Blue and Black Clay, 18-0z., to order, $4 4.00 $35 or $40 Value. Extra Trousers Free-—1,000 Styles to Select From. egular Price $75 he My Price, Including Extra Trousers Free, And 1,000 Styles of Worsted, Cheviot and Tweed Suitings to Order, $14.00, Including Extra Trousers Free. Balance of ends from my regular stock, sold by me as high as $18.00, $20.00 and $25.00, including $8 75 e German Dupi Full Dress Suitings, &.: $4 §.00 Lymansville Blue Serge (cloth stamped every 2 yards), Suit to order, each garment bearing Union Label, without Free Trousers MITCHELL The. Tallor Cor. 40th Street. Open Evenings Until 9 o’Clock, Seturday 10.