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— ag _ — ——\+-— ‘ ; THE £E NING WORLD, TUESDAY, BEPTEMBER 16, 1913. ROBERT EDGREN Zasccuwss| NEWS OF ALL BRANCHES OF SPORT [2222 ~ OF NATONAL LEAGUE RAC) | SEES = ple » ‘AND AY SAID AY DIDNT) declared that he would have the Amer. |{0* Varsity or freshman teams, a BELIEV fean League pennant clinched beyond je regilar members of the team, te \ any mathematical pomibiiity pefore| 4" Capt. Shelton and Ingersoll, re 5) starting on the fina) road trip of the) P°"" J Z| |eeagon. Aa & reauit of yesterday's vio- : i 3 ¥ ° . ger Stallings, by Clever Handling, Devel- ¢ Thy” cart ur ue om, and] gg gg Ate oped Team of Misfits Into a Winning Com- bination—Pirates Prove a Big Disappoint- ment, Although Pittsburgh Looked to Have a Great Collection of Pitchers. EDITED BY We BAO , feady for the '@ sertes hi When the Naps) beaten yesterday their last hope FIRST WORLD'S TOUR GAME WILL BE PLAYED IN REDLAND CINCINNATI, ©., Gept. 16.—Charies Comishey, Prealdent of the Chivaxo American League Club, announces that the first game of the tour of tne world which the New York National and the By John J. McGraw, N ie : \ N | Chicago American teama will make this \. « year will Be piayed in this city on (Mtanager of the @iants.) a Mf « — ae Oct, 1 From this city the two clubs OSTON has been the sensation of the National League. Stallings took ¢ \ a = : bly proceed weatward by easy stages to hold of a crowd of misfits and he has forced his team to the top 4 —— of the second divison for a time at least and {s still forcing. No : ws 4 ciNcINNAT! ert Beut a Draw. man is a good enough player to lie down on Stallings r g : ; Ne b He pute “pep” into the outfit. He hes also shown rare ; th He and Dish Oilvert met tn @ ton round | ' comtest. The fight wae not quite sntie- discretion in picking up youngsters and has built up factory. For eight rounds Giibert ball club. Boston ie Mable to be a contender next | @eomed 10 have his tall epponent com- aN Y C. . q Pletely at bis merey until, in the ninth, peason. A "7 , ’ Christie cut loose and pummelied the The Pirates have been the disappointment of the hf \ S @hort and stocky Gilbert af will, getting CHRISTIE Bh. the new league. Lack of pithcers has held the team back, al- : ; \ f a draw. though Clarke's staff looked like a wonderful eollection . “ 5 before they were seen in action this year, Nearly qyery z ITHACA, man on the staff has been # big filvver and has oe dt MISTER} IP _ Dractice at 6 lived up to what was expected of bim. MoQuillen, . HE GetSourt pes 4 _ Amceanie iwho was rated as being through as a big leaguer and reclaimed by Clarke . = on Ts. from the American Association, has made as good shewing as any ile Ae q iy Bitoher in the Pirates’ collection. y be Gt , IN THERE! ae ddd Bvers has done well with Chicago) cause opportunity was practically kiek- Gr i + , | ) Fa Gas" S When the difficulties he has faced are the Cleveland door down. But the 0 4 WV Rane 7 5 “ Teas taken into consideration. He has kept could not do it They cracked as (4 t ~ i wae fighting in spite of internal disorder on and Ungengg worse than Le i f 3 1A the team and rtain amount of roast-| Athletics, When Mack's team woul Pn “ok ing from the fans who are still pore | lose one géme in a day Cleveland would Do You THINK over the treatment of Chance. vers} drop two if possible Just thie kept the a) “he. a ; } | WANT, BE IN MT || || fap en has not had the team to make @ con-| Athletics out In front. Cleveland pit- <7, & ' @istent fight for the pennant. He has|chers fatied to hold up, although there ° ee y i) r Here Ths pest r Jacked steady pitching, Cheney being | was pienty of them. : \ i f Practically the only man who could be| The real big surprise In the American @ounted upon to go to the front and| League, of course, has been the show. @ake good. ‘Cleveland has never won a pennant. ing made by the Boston Red Sox, who : P 7 ‘ : C tis: 3 | Leare will probably not finieh in the first dl- OR J it i “ t ; - HEN DR or wet ae | wette Te ‘B will be @ long time before that team | vision. “Jimmy MoAleer told me just R ‘é 3 he ¥ oR Bas @ better oppor.unity than was of-| before the season opened that he ex- ey ~ 5 2 gs ee va. B30, . he @ared to it this summer. The Athletics | pected hie club would get away to a fiy- ) =e > Oi yee iz ¥ NON YT Bin ; it through the middie stages of the/ ing start and leave the fold before any " 7 ae z fa! ty r ao if nothing short of @ raliroad| other team got going. fous. ond Sate 2 18 i p them from cinching} “A club never looked eo goed to me . CEN 5 -3 ae ‘ Tes, tena KISS ME QUIC the August. But all|/as mine does after epring practice,” Vy Ty SE TAMILY COFBOKEE Bee rt] ‘Coanie’ Mack was worrying | sald McAleer proudly last April. Bod | to pile pitehera are in good form. ‘Joe’ Weed 7 if he on thin ice,|1s going to have even @ better season @e thin ico det than last year." = | cagoan tasted ieee than f . @maa pitchers who were fighting aleng-| But you never can tell what a clud is; . rei, ee " _ After he had heen kt With John Rai 7 @le a flock of uncertain youngeters. rides ae Do ° fea tol Me pant of Bh ta th yo gacond MANHATT! ah Be ek ever jardt, race ted , ty 1 eer ere ot test teiers bse game. tosore the pitchers basen to ture in i° Dunches of Charile White, but the Chi- gave the bout to Whe. N ": The OF) Hamesteed Ww d to work the limit. He realised they} himself all season. The dectine of the fade before the end of the race,| Red Sox has been a tough blow to the thought his crashing, fighting| American League, Because it has best would have piled up euch a tead| much of Ke fermer prestige in Boston. the time this had occurred that he| The improvement of the Braves at the sneak through with his young-| Same time helped this, combined with keno ragged games. ‘/ood has not been 4 a Rd ‘ a eet : — a te E | su HH MMMM AT nM tT \ Hi ll iy Mh Hi A i a certain soreness which many footers | > felt toward the management because By Bozeman Bulger. 7 A) A F amiliar Sight 4 'e series. His calculations certain seats were mot set aside for the JEN the Yanks went to the field in the sixth inning of the second tussie , NY y d mn w th W. Id Ov F eat well except in one particular, loyal rooters in the next to the last with the Tigers there was but one player in si:ht who was on the pay-| if Hi) e or: er @ame near being his undoing. game of the world’s series, eed atc PB aia the New York club at the bexinning of the season! The sole sur- sf be tq | ness would have been quickly healed wor was Jack Warhop, the pitcher, Aside from Warhop, there were but two saber 4 arneescee S Sinners USS i raced whe She Beh Ger Eniant ama Eeiden—thay the fans Bad ‘ever aoan (before e mont apn And Enough “Bull” Durham 4 Box turned eat to be losers thie sum- battle this team of #tranke faces put up to Jump the Yanks out of the!) Id "e Paster and Pian peman te vil mer. cellar wae a striking attest to the untiring efforts of Frank Chance to give us a fe ina year to roll approximately 22,000 cigarettes every min- ute of every day. itt el The Highlanders have also been @ ball club that could win, Enthusiasm over the work of the new-comers was ee ateored Hite on aapescesiaies hitting | aisappointment. Chance has been fight- great that there was little left to the veual sting that follows defeat. The heart @ump, which caused the team to lose| 1.) airy and nas ob.a med few resu.te, Of the town has gone eut to Chance and the Yanks. @ame after game Right here was! ail he can look forward to Row is an- where Cleveland should have jumped in| etner year. @né made the most of its chances, be- (Copyright, 8918, by Jobe J. MoGrew,) —_— AT LAST CHANCE HAS THE TALENT. , Atter a whole season's work Chance has at last dug up @ trio of outfleiers that come up to specifications, and he has a third baseman who {ts well worth $12,000 er any other amount that might have been paid for his release from Baltimore, Whiteman, the new man from Texas, handled himnelf beautifully tm the outfield and showed that he knew what he was abeut on the bases He @cored two of the five runs, stole » base and took advantage of slight mishaps with the alertness of a veteran of several years’ standing. Looks Like Roches:er Will Beat Out Newark in Race ‘or Pennant. ‘The battle for the pennant in the Internationa! League this season io ene of the mos: unusual in the history of baseball. Some four or five weeks ago Newark looked like the surest kind of a winner. The Indians enjoyed a lead even gr r than the Athletics of the Ameri- can League or the Giants of the National League have enjoyed at any HE cowboy rid- ing his lonely night watch; the millionaire at his club; the toiler in the fac- tory; the “‘chief” in his 25" office; the sailor before the : Seater & ai mast; the admiral in his cabin; the . soldier in the barracks; the general in hie quarters; men of every nation, occus pation and class—all find unequalled enjflymem and satisfaction in ‘‘Bull’” Durham hand-made cigarettes, Frank Chance was quite right when he ald the dark days have been passed otage of their respective races, Newark's stump Gates back to the tine when the Dodgers weaned Outflelder Collins, Pitcher Aitchison and Catch- er McCarthy away from them. The Rochcaters are now travelling at the ewiftest kind of a pace, while the Newarks are losing practically every game Only eleven pulnta separate the two teams now, and by Sunday ‘afternoon, when the race clones. Good judges deelare that the Bronohos will nose out the Jersey boys. Newark fans are up in arms against President Charile Ebbets, who also owns the Newark club, because he pacrificed the minor league outfit for the majors, and many of them are vowing that they'll not attend any of the games next year. New- ark fans gave up hope of capturing the pennant on Sunday last when Cateher and Manager Harry Smith was put out of the game for the rest of the; season because of a broken kneecap. GENUINE BULL DURHAM ik SMOKING TOBACCO (Enough for forty hand-made cigarettes in each 5-cent sack) WE WOULD HAVE BEEN CHEAP AT DOUBLE THE PIRCE The wiserd of yesterday's game, however, was little Maisel, whe looked every cent of $12,000. With the bases full and one out im the third, he made a marvellous catch of a foul fy from McKee's dat that wns easily the star stunt of the day He caught the ball within two feet of the concrete wall, and after making the circus catch Browns Luckiest Club in Draw for Minor League Ball Players ——— and New York Americana got 2 each, while Washington and the St. Louis J| and that trom now on he would have @ ball club that could be figured as @ real Ii Hl | factor in the race. He has speed, youth, goe@ pitching and a Aghting spirit | [HII | that seeme to have got a grip on the whole team. Where the old fellows, | ehowed lassitude, due to constant defeat, the youngsters, knowing nothing about the old Gaya, are fired with ambition to make good. | | ——w | 1 ; PUT A CROSS MARK OPPOSITE THIS FELLOW'S NAME. | 1 f ‘There seems to be no doubt but that Holden has cinched Wie foh in centre | and (hat with @ little more work Gilbooley will be able to deliver the goods | |IHMlilf ht. They are both exceedingly fast and Holden i» the most polished out- | jer that roken into fast company for a aumber of years. His run-hack on a long drive from Bowman's bat in the eizhth that was hit far into centre j was as neat a piece of work as Jimmy McAleer could have done in his paimy Gays Helden also has a great arm. hed te do an ecrobdatic whirl to keep from running into the wall and elso to make a throw to the plate to prevent a score. In the very nest inning he added to his laurcle by making one almost as good | > on a foul fy by Bowman, The Dodgers Obtain Seven, | Nationats obtained 1 cach. Owing to @ new National Commission | Tg x, EINFORCENNENTS LED THE FIGHT. the Giants Five and the rule, stipulating that the major clud bf he State of Texas, however, that gave the Tigers the rea! battle of drawing for playera from o miaot|the day. If Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Missouri and Kentucky had | hla ders Two Men, league club must be selected by lot.| given the Lone Star boys a hand at critical moments, things might have been |} Highlan . the names ef the players to be obtained| dierent, These two Texane—Whiteman and Williams—made four of the Ave || by the major from classes A and AA} runs and were still fighting when the Tigers passed under the wire a winner Wore not announced immegiately andjon the long wallop of Pitcher Willett in the ninth inaing, i ¢ CENCEINATI, ©., Sept. .~One/ will not be officially announced unt! to- —_—_— Dbunéred and eight minor league| morrow. However, quite a number of On account of the predominance of Texans in the Yank team it has been players were elevated to the major|the playere to be chosen were given out) suggested that the name of the club be changed te the “Lene Stare’’—not « bad | via the draft route, when the unoMclally to-night, among them being:| idea. For a long time Frank Farrell has deen Roping that a new aickname | sengwes, League obtained 6) players, By Detroit—Williams of Sacramento! would attach tteelf to bis club, it being his Belief that the elé ames of “High- | pgp lity tha National re and Mains of Buffalo; by Chicago Amer-| landers,” “Hilltops and “Yanks might have been the jing. The Texans on by draft, League an- ‘cans, Roth of Haltimore aed Rarow | the club are Wildama, Whiteman, Reynolds, Boone and a couple who have not newed 41 minors at the drawing which Lincoln, Neb.; by New Yorks Amar: | yet reported. was made before the National Baseball ) Cole from Columbus, H Comantssion. C Sead ate [roe Samed Whiteman showed some real basedall intuition in the fourth ‘Tee St. Louls American League Club were hina: from Bt. Peat, priboced inning when he stole second and, acenting a possible fumble on aw wee by fr Se ipo inet Io See GoM ob] crom Newark and Kraft from New Or- count of what started like a bad throw, kept going right on to third, foarte of the total number obtained by | 40—® ime Har tess from Forenie wae He bee os bd bod sete orem ye Ley yo ed mei all major learue teams. The Cine fannie fee wensteres, ere 4 ne fame pened oh Dit. ARR ESO a AREY ANE team was sccond with 11; the Chicago / bel uf Winnlpes and Keating of Colum: i Americans came next with 10; Detroit! bus, Ge; by Cincinnati, Nelhof off WELL, HERE'S HOPING! has 9, the Philadeiphia Americans and | Loulsvill y Chicago Nationals, Jonn- The Yanks have another good chance to-day to cacape frou the shackles Boston Nationals had 8 ecucn;| Mon of Ban Francieco and Bronkle of! ¢nat nave hound them to the cellur. The Browne lost again, and with b - +h I. ut | obtained 7: Bovton Ameri: | Iniwuuues, Deal af Protas wet Ot | theee pointe separating the two clube a gain of one game will lift us Into | Enough ‘‘Bull’? Durham is sold in a year to make approximately 12 billion cigarettes—about the same number as all brands of ready- made cigarettes in this country combined—and the sales are still growing. This proves that the majority of smokers know that ciga- rettes rolled from ‘Bull’? Durham Tobacco afford greater enjoyment and satisfaction than any ready-made cigarettes they can buy The delightful freshness of “Bull’® Durham hand-made cigarettes is a revelation. They have a rich fra- grance and satisfying favor not possible in ready-made cigarettes, Get a sack of ‘‘Bull’”” Durham foday and learn why it is smoked by more millions of men than all other high-grade tobaccos ined/ On] A OLUMB'AS 4, Lu: lecque . ViOLLi: WiLLI MS oN § AC Li M WH: S! nTa. ern “a witk DAILY weer eeehe rr. 1520 loiter s anh ¥, @ema, §; New York Nationals, 6; Chi- t! of Rochester, Stock of Mobile ana| seventh place As the Browns are going badly now and the Yanke aro go i HUAN) et (\(!! Mont Week... Dave age Nationals, 4; Viilladelphia Na-! Kruteher of St. Jes; Wew Wash weed, the chanecs of St. Leule having beth teams at the bott ft the | THIN | | S guts, 6 Clovelaa and Pisueburgh Uansin, Sonnsca ef Omaha wel axe ensalions sii de tt Auta it ° j { | UVATATAUA TH i dT HF anh HA tiniest tae ee - —- . ——e . —r3— eer | Fe ea STAR era “ME DEAUIY PARADL & @