The evening world. Newspaper, September 12, 1918, Page 12

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oe £ 12 Big League Baseball Has Gone Into Retirement Until the End of the War. | Coperight, 1918, by the Prem Pubiisuing Co. | (The New York Evening World H 1G league baseball's last gun has been fired till it's over Over There, Fandom now must de- vote itself exclusively to winning the war, the big thing that confronts us al. Though, through Government orders, the Big Show can not again | put up tents until*the Aliles have @ompleted the job of driving the! Kaiser back to the tall and uncut, | baseball will go on. It will be played fm every village and hamlet, on city) street and city park, in every vacant | lot and schoolyard, in training camp army cantonment—wherever | flies The Flag! | The series just completed in Boston leaves a taste of both the bitter and the sweet. The wrangling over money between magnates and players marred an otherwise splendidly w series, one the fans gladly will remember big league baseball by. ‘The Cubs were defeated but not dis- . The margin of superiority enjoyed by the Red Sox was decided by the breaks of the game, afd that eione, As far as playing went, the series abounded in everything that goes to Make baseball America’s national pastime. Those who were fortunate enough to see it will long for the time when the Kaiser and all he represents is wiped out, so there can be another one. Perhaps in the time intervening magnates and players will have time to ponder over things | and realize the harm they have done | themselves and the injury they have done the game by their repeatedly Pronouncing the bat bag subservient to the gold bag. If professional base ball gets a thorough housecleaning before its resumption, the vacation will be worth the price. 4 UN BRIAR is a great colt and is capable of running a mile in ex- eeptionally fast time, but it will) be exceedingly hard to convince the dyed in the wool racegoer that he is enough to run a mile in 1.34, as he was credited with doing yesterday at Saratoga. Last year we sald he was the champion and we sent him to winter quarters wearing the juve- nile crown, despite the fact that Papp wen the Muturity and several other classle This season we placed him on the top rung of the three-year-old cham- plonship ladder along with Johren, but we cannot believe that he is as good a miler as Roamer, Andrew Miller's old gelding is the champion of champions and the American rec- ord holder. He beat Salvator’s record at Baratoya in an official test and was timed in 1.344-5 by the official timer of The Jockey Club und a thousand expert horsemen held stop watches on him. All agreed he had smashed Salvator’s mark of 1.85 1-5, and The Jockey Club has recognized bis mark as the American racord. Sun Briar's trial yesterday was nothing more than an early morning trial. No one represented The Jockey Club and none of the timers are known to the rank and file of race- goers. For a Superintendent of Police to attempt to time a race is as ludi- crous us if he were to ride the colt Another reason why we question the time is becaust we are of the opinion that no horse, even the mighty Roamer, could hang up a record over the Saratoga track now. It has not been used in nearly two weeks, and for @ track to be at its best it must be used often. Supt. Meyer is a mar- vel us a track butlder, but we do nét believe he is capable of doing the impossible, and that is what he has done if the track is as fast as it was Inst month. Besides, there were sev- eral heavy rainstorms at the Spa since the racing seasm ended there, Men who remained for a day or two after the end said that the storm of Aug. 31 washed part of it away, and that to make it extremely fast again | it would be necessary to cover it with new top soil As we said before, Sun Briar is a great colt, but he will have to show us beforc we will believe he is cap- | * «(BESTS |has been greater than Cobb an 1 THINK YOURE @ NICKLE WHEN @ B.B, STAR WINS HE GETS a, PRIZE FROM THE MINT MANUFACTURING co. GENTLEMEN (THANK YOU ay { WAS GETTING Storr ON Socks- OY BEST TEAM DID NOT WIN BASEBALL CHAMPIONSHP oo Expert Fullerton Declares Red |, fearfully close one, and the wall a y by Th Daske alked dM Je Sox Were Lucky to Tri stung ‘i hard ‘anae to lett which scored Flack, who had stolen third umph, All the Breaks of ile | scoted Flack, whe had 3 inst Cubs rom that on the game was one Game Going Against Cubs, of the most desperately contested wer tet ones I ever have seen. The Cubs were fighting. They stopped the Red Sox in the By Hugh A. Fullerton. Comnrigiit, 1918, by The Prew Publishing Co, fourth after the bases were loaded, hon Sore: Bening Woes.) forcing one man at the plate and Boston, Sept. 12. | another third after Deal by a OSTON's Red Sox are c! grand one handed stop and kicking ¢ champions | Tickward, touched third base and of the world and the dope is} (iced out the runner smeared all over his play was eclipsed in the sev- th wh Thomas, jumping side- ways and backward, grabbed Merkle’s hard hit straight back of third base the baseball map. The series ended when two bases) and, whirling, made a perfect throw on balls, followed| which nipped Merkle by inches at by Flack's muft] first. pee: Ay, ip rhe entire game was marked by of a line Ay, wave) at kind of individual effort, and the Red Sox two} this series between teams of’ sup- runs, which was|posedly low ability. will go down in one more than|the records as the best played of all Nilakeatn’ World's Series. Chicago's Cubs} rey odd to state that the best could = manufac- | team did not win ture out of more] In fact, after watehing six games, ’ 5 and — healthier |I am uncertain as to which team is Vitrde : ore, | the better, but the fact is that if the chances to 900! series should be started over again Boston won in the fourth inting}io.morrow, the majority of the ex- for the fourth time in the serles.|perts who have watched all the : 8 e ca es would wager on Chicago, They won on two passes, one of} kanes wou which was given by the aid of an| The breaks of the came have been in| steadily against the Cubs, All their umpire, which makes six games IN) mistakes have counted against them the series that have been decided onj and the Red Sox have been uncanny passes or hit by pitched ball. in following up every opening while nae » dopo | the Cubs have fallen down hardest But the man who smeared the eee ee ee oes was Whiteman, this fellow and Tris yea " ‘This is less true of yesterday's game Speaker than of the others, for yesterday Mays pitehed twice as well as he did in Chicago, even though he seemed un- certain of his control after the fourth inning. me into baseball from Texas and White- man was adjudged ao failure, He has been in and out, up and down in baxe- ball, I have no desire to “bunk” the | fans of Peoria, Toronto or other way| The valedictory of baseball was stations, but Whiteman, in this series, | rather in the nature of a dirge or a luck-| requiem. A chill east wind swept fer than C. Webb Murphy. He has! Boston and chilled the ardor of thos been the active principal in all four| fans who were not ly disgusted of the Red Sox victories, has beer on| with the players for striking and the bases more times and in more ways! National Commission for tts failure than any other player, has made the| to be on the job during the emer- THE EVENING WORLD, WORKS HIS HEAD OFF THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12 , 1918, Copyright, 1918, by the (ress Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) WHEN CHICK EVANS THEY HAND HIM & cuP- THE NEW TOD SLOAN WEIGHS S7 POUNDS, SMOKES, GAMBLES |Pee Wee Schwartz Rides Bo- gart to Victory, His First | WHY NOT GIVE THE POOR JOBBIE SOMETHING HE Can usE®. PORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK WHY NOT GIVE ’EM SOMETHING USEFUL? By Thornton Fisher THE TENNIS ASSN PRESENTS T YOU WIS PAIR OF SHOES FOR THE BABY IN Honor OF YOOR- } VICTORY — be OF JESS WILLARD > ACCEPTING A CUP FOR. FIGHTING - Fistic News and Gossip By John Pollock After trying for soveral weeks to Mount in a Race. ae Special to The Evening World.) HAVRE DE GRACE, Md., Sept, 12. A new Tod Sloan has appeared on} the jockeys’ horizon, He is strug- sling along, handicapped with tne} German name of Schwartz, but other- wise he is all right. This new star of | | the pigskin rode Bogart, the winner of the fifth race at Havre de Grace Owners’ Mutual Benefit Asso- nary soevty. Adare Fight aye vet ciation is over, It is too early to learn to the wales the crowd in the grand-! w, 1 stand was Just able to see what ap.| WhO won, as the change hasn't been peared to be a Midget automaton| Counted. moving its arms and legs in its ef- forts to force Bogart close to the| Judges in order to obtain their per-! mission to dismount | ‘The taidget was Schwartz, the pee-| wee of the turf. When he is fat and| healthy, particularly after a good) meal, ho pounds. HE World's Series between the Boston-Chicago players and the The spectators around an up- town bulletin board who had been watching the returns by innings said the score stood $4 to 50 cents in the sixth, welghs fifty-seve An enthusiastic mob downtown in 111| his kelly on his head and jumped a Ms i PRUNES) BORAT WAS | Aaxlened Shonts shuttle for home. \pounds in the race, #o it will be seen that in order to make the weight Schwartz had to pack fifty-one pounds in the lead pads. This dead weignt Ruth Up to and including yesterday Babe was exempt. was nearly as much as Peo Wee players depending on him for support. | Schwartz weighs. It war Tee Wee Schwartz's first| Public opinion can't make Jess mount in a race and his first victory—) Willard fight, But there ia still | riding average to dute, 1,000 | | Last winter he was shining shoes and welling papers in New ‘Orleans, When the races opened in the Cres-| jcent City he got the horse fever and | applied to one of the stables for a : |job.. He took as naturally to riding as — Willard has eighteen reasons for not a German to sauerkraut. He learned fighting. The first is pressure of im- so rapidly that B. E. Chapman, the mediate business and the other sev- owner of Bogart, gave him the mount. enteen seems to be Dempsey. This was what impressed horsemen about Pee Wee: Instead of taking @ chance that his draft board may—and there won't be any moving picture money in it either, ' He may walt until the train ser- With his saddle he welghed sixty|front of a scoreboard straightened | He had eight) and the Kaiser has pigs’ knuckles in Paris, THEN THER! a Board | They're la golfer |ing up p | provid wielder, birds upo | Bogart to the front, like most novices, vice in the subway ditch is perfected frowns like the Swiss Alps reer ggcoen | Pee Wee held Bogart back in the sec@§ ——————_______. ——~— sstatesctdante Seema | Sheela my AN vaNromenl tint At, | ond division for the six furlongs, then | Olympia A, A. of Philadelphia on Montay eve pulled to the outside, challenged and ning, Sept, 50, Two clule were after this rode a strong finish through the J Kk A b 0 fid match, but as Jack manager of 1 htreteh. Pee Wee is totally lacking in |S OCKEY AMOPOS8Ee 8 PUCLCONMAENCE | MiP veces ie of the men the | what is called nerves, being phieg- . e Yest inducements they quickly signed up with | matic and utterly feuriess. Although (Ol R l d. Ni HH d. | his club mae ane Ue wesnonver en | COSt Routledge Nursery Handicap | |helght, and being new to the game, | Jem Willant, the world’s hearrwwizht cham | he has, on several oc | horses over the jumps | have watched him say that when fly ing over the jumps he looks like monkey on a horse, with this differ- | lence — that he controls his horse, whereas a monkey merely clings to a| horse's back, In three casentials Pee | Wee Is like Tod Sloan. He is a nat- |ural rider, likes to gamble or bet, | and smokes big, black cigars, the big- |ger and stronger the better. He {s| just sixteen years old and hopes be- |fore he ts twenty, he says, to be as | noted’ on the turf as Sloan, pil Stocks, a steeplechase rider t | the employ of Billy Garth, was killed | |, ; green three-year-old Jumper over the | Routledge and Rodgers were so clo steeplechase course. The horse fell|together that only the judges could sions, schooled Which Seemed to Be a Dead Heat Between Three of the Entries, Rodgers Being the Other Contender. By Vincent Treanor. HIE Nursery Handicap at Bel- mont Park furnished one of the most thrilling contests of the from will give urday. jStride again. ‘winners | Shackamaxon. of 0! to go 1) over cking boxe; urriers for the Still, we know a couple of| four-leaf clover nm whom the ug to make it the course ything but will be used to} spiring stick A MINUTE OR. TWO With Thornton Fisher LL BE NO FIGHT, A freckled face kid with Jam on his | chin may still be a freckled fac: but a new guy at golf who can give) Directors speak to head waiters without an in- | troduction wil! quaél before the scru- | tiny of a freckled face infant—if the| | polka-dot kid is his caddy, Ze af hard for Trainers who The Trump Awarded This Race, | ‘®t either is likely to run off with the Futurity. yesterda: Maxey Hirsch and M | get on a match with Jack Dempsey, the contender for the world’s heavy- weight title, Battling Levinsky, the the chance. He was matched over the long distance telephone to-day by his manager to meet Dempsey in the | main event of six rounds at an open National League basebal! grounds on aturday afternoon, Sept. 28, Levinsky will train faithfully for this go, as he | realizes that he is going up against kid, | and a Howard of the newspaper who. recently got Jett Smith in an eight-rousd bout in Jemey City, has been ar ranged, ‘They were signed uo tocay ly Dave | Driscoll to meet in an round go at the | Jermey City baseball grounds on Fridaj ‘ | Sept. 20, Howant has woo his laat whieh o peerean KAaMem Witle Jacknon will figure in anotier aera np Philadelphia on ne night of S | will go againet Ii the ¢ | weight, in the wi show to be of the atx recently pat battle at t club, and ' at! Han we him in a cor q Ck- | Jackson, ought in this city » few tg under Leo Fiyon's management, was matebed 1 pion, hag donated a championahin belt for com: tition by the boxers now quartermd at the ach will improve | Great Lakes in Chisago. A ament race and both| dr wil b werd, the winner to recel! ikey Daly, their | *mblem, Willart wired from Denver to the respective trainers, are confident they commander at the Great Lakes, stating that he a good ‘account of them. | ™F come oa from Denver to referee and decide | selves in the historic classic on Sat- | ‘’* ‘ua! contest, Matt Hinkel, the popular fight promoter ot Cleveland, is to stage a ‘ig open air boxing Jimmy Fitzsimmons {s back in his! ahow at’ Fira, ©, on Satuntay afternoon He {8 saddling more | the nenipte to be umd to purchaw Wer Sarings than any other trainer | Stamps, Every purchaser of a 810 ticket will re. Almost every day since | roeive $8 «orth of Seringy Stam return ‘around he he returned from jcharges romps down in front. | with every one of his victories comes | ‘great shouts of joy from the r: fle. ratoga one of his nk and | There are no secrets about while the f purchamns of tickets will also @ stamps in return, Hinkel expwts to realise over 830,000 for the gord cause, All the prom nent fighters will round bots, And Nis | phe fall boxing season in New Orleans w Hebrew heavyweight, is finally to get | air show, to be staged by Jimmy| Dougherty, the fight promoter of Beiperville, Pa, at the Philadelphia fighter who will try his hardest to| stop him | | its . The oroened| match between Clay Turner, tbe ryweig! aod Jobnny | WE. TRUESDELL “KELY 10 REPEAT ~ HIS 1917 TRUM Garden City Golfer Wins Gross Prize With a 36-Hole Score of 172 for First Half of Seniors’ Tourney at Ana- wants. W. E. Truesdell of Garden Cit aptured the chief award a y seems in a fair way to duplica 19 at Apawamis. | By supplementing his 82 on Tue: day with a 90 yesterday, Mr, Truesdell returned a thirty-six bole score of and won the gross prize for t first half of the tournament Darwin P. Kings! chief execu- tive of the association, won gro prize for 18 holes on Tuesday with a score of 89, the cup, while Col mington, who b garded as senior golf Mr. ‘Truesdell, under could take only one 1K. Smith of Wil- is for years been re- one of the best of the had the lowest 18-bole round yesterday, with 86. Winners in the various | thirty-six holes net were: Class A, J. Sothern of Siwanoy, 1044-149; ¢ B, W. H. Claflin of Tedesco, 14—40— 154; Class C, J. W. Herbert of Oakland, | 184-153, and Class D, Rev. J. Gray | Bolton, Philadelphia Cricket Club, 2iF | ©-151. ‘The Rev, Bolton headed the list |for the net prize on Tuesday, but by | taking the thirty-six hole event he left | George Wright, former baseball player, | as the first duy's winner with a card conditions classes at Ww. | of 16-4. Wright had been ted with Clattin, but the latter took the Class B | trophy. _ Thoma Kirby of Bedford, | 106—30- S. McClellan of iwanoy, 5, tied for yesterda: award Morrill, the Wolla- ston golfer, the ting compett- | ton with « of 3 the eighteen | holes, while Hockmeyer took see- ond prize W pite th hat the wind hi ered mo ly so far as the driving tne firat toe was ¢ able to mark set Deal on of drive credited in most cases the cards were higher than on the first day, one noticeable improvement went. to’ the Credit of, Herbert. who shaved” nil strokes off hia first round. The Oal land man finished so well that he ca within an ace of getting a “bird” at tl Jhome hole, his putt for a 3 missing by hairta bi . a | | | By Themselves Dixon's and Dixon's alone stop Friction. Automobile LUBRICANTS Prevent metal contact and form smooth, long-wearing coating on tran missions and differentials that insures against Wear and tear Ask | your dealer for Dixon Lubricating Chari the | | JOSEPH DIXON CRUCIBLE Co, XOX Jersey City, New Jersey Established 1827 Last 2 Days of Autumn Meeting TOMORROW and SATURDAY BELMONT PARK TO-MORKOW'S FEATURES Cedarhust Handicap A 2-Mile Steeplechase Northampjon Handicap And % Other Spirited Contests, FIRST RACE AT 2.30 P, M Special Kace Trains ve Penna, Station, 28d st Fiathush Ave The very color and pattern you have in your mind is waiting for you here. ollars Arnheim TWO STORES BROADWAY & NINTH STREET AND T., BET. FIFTH & MADISON AVES, RP he jhorses. If Fitz thinks his horses are . Smigion 6 able of beati: pte decisive plays, and yesterday he capped | gency on Tuesday, The smallest crowd , te in Mone | : at les x pen ob nett Monday nigi my i ng Roemor's record. the climax. His line smash, made| that ever has attended a modern | 0n%,!n his struggles to rise, hit Stocks |yenarate them. There was a grea |foad enouRh to win he tells all his en, ‘the boxing rumoter of at ity, li HE Old Boys are having their|#Mer two strikes were called, with) World's Series came out to witness | + Sa difference of opinion among the race heed ae tnermaste ghar 19) ball mise the curtain on the ont by waning © show 00 i two on bases, wag muffed| the requiem mass of profe: | lien front, ends and a bis big open air arena known as the Loaisi innings 0 the golf laks these | (yout snd (Woon Dante wan mused ihe requier mans oF professional | mumal BOX SCORE OF jRoers as to which finished sly were|MBNt meetin their travels who Is| ase Auiitorm In Um main erat Hat, Dulas days and, by George, they are going | home Boston's two runs, Then, !n}even when great plays were made. | WORLD’S BASEBALL SERIES | the ju es erg verdiet | oaemplatiog making a wager, Asa CRB OE oe ML great guns. Keports from the Seniors’ | the eighth, when Mitchell was rushing he trouble between the National right when they awarded the jresult every horse he sends to the |)" a denusion, tournament at Apawamis say they | up his reserves, Whiteman iuado the! Commission and the players a} puunpane to The Trump. He came with a great | post has a host of followers and a| Adair, the promixing local lightweight, | Gisplay as much skill and energy as|most cular play of the series | owners was patched up at a mee CHICAGO (NATIONAL L ¥). rush in the last fifty yards and was |"Oar greets them when they pass the fitom of Brooklyn “will extange wal the young championship aspirants, | and Barber was | yesterday orning. Just what ter AB R B) he and judges in front n cigbtrond go at the next | tring All are real amateurs, too. While | hitting a vicious line upon ts not to be an- veneer 1|running over his horses at the end. Yesterday he t Lady Dorothy to i, Ne each is in quest of the cheap but {drive to left, Whiteman came tearing | nounced officially. The club owners : | But he was not the best horse in |the post for the Peconic Handicap, a) to mmii in & Precious prizes hung up, it ix the| forward, dived at the ball, clutched it, | re that they conceded nothing | Mann Wf oss eeess the race. Routledge was much the {highweight affair at six furlongs. | mep lovides vein figures on their cards that appeal to/turned a somersault and rolled ty his|to the players, but the fact ls that = oe Sg ol b this chestnut son of |“This mare is ready to rac he an- | an . them most. To make a round better | feet with the ball still clutched in his| the players seem a lot more satisfied jbest and that this he |Rounced to a crowd in the paddock, = than the other fellow is their sole de- | fingers. T hit seemed i land are happier. It is rumored that Toddington did not carry home the |+and by Georgie I think she will os sire, and when they return with ajtriple, and the catch stopped the last| the owners compromised with the long end of the purse for Walter M. | win.” | card showing improvement over their|rally of the Cubs, who were fighting | players and that the actual partict- etfords was due to overconfidence| The crowd took the tip, scattered, | last effort or better than their friend | desperately under the heavy handicap | pants in the series will receive about 0} ‘cay Aimbi He | 8nd @ few minutes later a small army 9 they are as jubilant as a schoolboy | of nearly perfect pitching by Mays 1 third more than they would have Ajon the part of Jockey Ambrose. He! was ptaving Lady Dorothy at the| > who wins his first competition. But independent of their hard luck | done under the plan adopted before | seemed to think George W. Loft’s| good odds of 7 to 1. Fitz was. not aes) thea @ hundred competed tn |and the umpiring which went steadily | the series started ©| Rodgers was his only opponent and; mistaken in the mare, She ran as | A Hes) firat intye ole ho on Tuesday | against them, the Cubs lost their best nus endeth baseball, which can - —|while watching him he failed to see, 8¢ expected and romped home two | ¥, and @ similar num-|chances and perhaps the victory, by |r scat in as much peace as it | Totals ...........27 2 a| |lengths ahead of her fleld | ber are carded to go out to-day and |overeagerness on the bases, ox, | rves, BOSTON (AMERICAN 1 |The Trump on the outside of the — | This is the time. SOOT ch eced vom eusht, wel who made the fatal muff, also was| To-day we all register for the only AB R | field until It wag too late, | the siewards earned the aratitude insta (a hal place ed home for being a | pul: ‘a blunder on the bases when, | real game. A fi e rdget 0} 0 ds 0 © goers yesterday | iy mere child we would do our best to |f Are SER RADY 20 Te HADPR Ln, | TAAL RT geerrenie Haopets 28: +++ wi 9| Baulieden and Rodeers. booked up pf novaenia, Gf Dene Rone yen eraey And here are all the new Fall suitings. hook up with them to learn some im- | ten menawan Nimaste Tis Mhbauhed im Plilck Sand o Ojat the eighth ps ° n led Off Heddest, the er- Rortant pointers about the famous |CiVEN on fret on a throw. trom | ¥or the nen A jendny, iH Clream until a alxteenth of a mile from |fatic old gelding owned by Triple ‘ sport. pp § ‘om the first thine this year big league | math, I ry o| 1 Se hia {Stings Farm, This fellow has Your suit to order. aa Mays |baseball will be seen at Olympic Field, rn ©l home, There Routledge stuc *\burned up more money this season STAR BOXERS IN CAMP DIX | That incident, however, was unim- | 195th Street and Fifth Avenue, on Sun- o head in front. Kelsay on Rodgers jthan any horse on the turf. He is 7 “4 portant compared with the break of |day, when the celebraied Rube Mar- 8 8 2 2 Olwent to the whip, but try as he might |fast, and as a jumper has few equals hirty to Sixty D CARNIVAL AT ELI |fea Mann, who, perhaps, wan think: |4urrq"ang his tou of melon’ lerwee to the whip, but try as he might |faut,and aa a jumper hag few equals, | T ’ +] ing more of the strike th base-| stare will play the fd a Mays 8, 2 2 9 8 Oho was uae ° |mastered. When he wants to run| Overcoats, too. reernenesy ball. Mann wrecked Chicago's one | St" I play the iancoln Giants. lai “SO Ie Te | fords colt. Aware of this Ambrose | je") run, and when he doesn’t he id A big slice of the boxing world will big opportunity. He prevented them | Marquard has always been at his Totals... ++. S58 sy seemed content, He did not do his;won't budge. A dozen times this sea- migrate to Elizabeth, N. J., to-morrow| from at least tying and perhaps from | best axainst the Giants, but the col- ‘Belted fee Deni ie heat Sle put u weak hand ride/son he has “refused,” and twice | for the Camp Dix Athletic Carnival to Winning the game in the fourth in. |ered champions have been especially | ¢ Hy jor Tylor ta pes' oF pe wee " aused Robby Haynes, his rider, to be | fe hele in the Second iteximent Arm Flack led off that round with | strengthened for Sunday's tuesle and | nose OE ee Omg }and before he realized it Georgie pended. Yesterday he w forth in that city, Ted (Kid) Lewis, Cla bth of . Whix |are confident of sending thy Rubs. back i ol | Walls sneaked reset - : Re went for Turner, the fighting indian: Jack rit. Tee aR tothe bench onthe losers’ end of Uie| Molen Basem=Flack, Sacritice Mie— | %ll8 Ked The Tromp UP FFM ito do battle ageing one opponent ion, Battling Levinaky, Frankie Burn . i Shag Ollo- | score Hooper, Thomen, Tels on Busee=-Chicage, {the rear utd by a Garrison finish | He was Max Meadows, and on pa Rartfeld, Johnny Howard, |cher’s hot bounder to check the as ——_—_—_--— 2; Boston, 4, First Base on Brrore—los-|janded The Trump the victor. jperformances Reddest looked like a 90£. 420 Callahan, are only a few of Sault. Mays looked wild and a bit De. John EEG, ton, 2, Bases on Balle—Olt Tyler, 5; off jelnch, But Reddest wouldn't do his boxers ‘who will Azht for ¢ ‘ters. There will be other ath- tests, @ military bind concert, omas’ Bgan, the famous irish = high notes, uncertain of the location of the plate and he finall: hit Mann on the leg | with a pitched ball, and crippled him, off first with Jocks Paskert at bat, when Schang shot fern te fret end ae Mann aval Training Station. PR data CHICAGO, Sept, 12.-Dr, John Lavan, formerly shortstop with the Washing: | Out-—ty ton Senators, has reported at th it 1% wc stt 2, Hite——Oft Tyler, & le seven im | Rodgers ran a mighty good \nings) eft Hendri tn ‘ pinees ett Hoodrtz, none le ene inning. | Ho was interfered with several tim ‘Tyler, 1) by Mays, 1. Losing race. and after displaying a world of early | th speed hung up gamely and was hold- ing hig own at the end.. So impres- jaa patina, Wainy best wu He took a couple of obstacles | PS and then absolutely refused to take|* °~* third, So badly did he act that crowd groaned. The stewards heard the groans and ordered that all future entries of the gelding be re- Provide for those who Save and Buy W. 8S, 8. fight for you, — Arnheiut riumph in the senior golf tourney, * t \4 | | —_——

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