The evening world. Newspaper, May 18, 1922, Page 22

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m) . _THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1922, UPTO DODGERS’ Copyright, 1922 (The New York Evening World), by Press Publishing Company, TRANSLATED AD AFTER THE TH MiSsED eo ae (>) 7 ae PUTT THE PLAYER He Par ANE 4 ‘g_®, SHOULD CALMLY AND Aa Ak CONTEMPLATIVELY STRIKE petite YHE Balu Sous BY ° SouSe WeST= ‘ Brooklyn “Vets” Have Failed —The Club Has Won Only One Game and Lost Seven in West So Far, (Special to The Evening World.) GME. | j i ST. LOUIS, May 18,—It will be up S j f to the young pitchers if the Dodgers are to be saved from being cleaned up " in the West, where they have already Uncovers New Heavyweight | won one gume and lost seven. Burleigh Grimes reported yesterd 4D WING INTO Possibility. that he was in shape again after hiv : : QND AFTER DRIVING He visit to Bone Setter Reese, but when ROUGH WITH YOUR BRASSIE A ‘VERY now and then a new heavy- he tackled the Cardinals they ate him / Few WELL CHOSEN WORDS MUST BE alive, The first man to look over TNE weight pops up. Some pop back} Grimes’ stuff was Jack Smith, who CREED Cm iene a ST IN ADDRESSING THE BALL CARE to obscurity again after a fight| doubled, and the next was George To- sis} = ALARM ‘or two, and some go on steadily until! Porcer, the New York born wearer of SHOULD GE EXERCISED IN THE oes Eyelet emery they have a chance at the champion- spectacles who has beon leading the USED - LADIES SOMETIMES PLA PAY ANY ATTENTION” \T 1S USED BY MANY PLAYERS JUST TO ANNOY OTHERS league in hitting. George smacked a ship. The latest heavyweight to hop} home run into the right field bleachers Mato the limelight is Joe Burke, one| with Smith on second, and those two of Jimmy .Dunh’s stable. Burke|Tuns started the Cardinals to an 11 to 0 victory with which to open the series TH lachieved fame recently by giving Bob] of fu, camos the Dodgers hive Mere | 4 TO Avoid (Martin, the A. E. F. champion, a 8e-| Grimes had more speed than he has PRIWING INTO THE WATER vere beating in a ten-round bout at| had this year, but his arm was not as Must GE DONE Akron, wa @ARRY F AFTERS’ , O. good as he thought it,was, or as good THE BALL 2 GE \ = Burke substituted, on a day’s no- | 0% \t will ba later, when it has entirely! OVER (N YOUR. C= q NEARS your. =e 3 recove! ‘rom the yanking at thi 35 gee ‘< tice, for another man matched with] tendons in the right shoulder to whicn| .HANO>_ THIS >> yj Toma SCORE (S NEVER. Martin, and was regarded as so much] Dr. Reese had to subject him. ‘of @ setup that the Boxing Commis-] The Dodgers went all to pieces in a : that game yesterday, Grimes and sion wouldn't have permitted the bout) Gardiner, who pitched the last four to go on if the show hadn't been| innings, and allowed four of the runs, staged for the benefit of disabled sol-| each made wild throws to first to catch runners asleep. Bernie Nels, who d ,| usually is a reliable thrower, shot a “Burke is twenty-four years old," } 5,1 into the dirt at Johnstoa's feet in gays Dunn, “He was born at Maha-| trying to stop a runner at third. Jim- hoy City, Pa., worked in the coal mine} my Johnston made a bum chuck on a ‘unt, and Jimmy muffed a foul from until recently, looks like a real find i EAS eiay grow into the logical oppo-| T™tnctt, who tock advantage of the Yankees Increase Lead St fain nea ewgarmeneteae| While Giants’ Advantage Geren and, ult he, Sar Tom) eee! = Is Cut Down Half Game to the plate. They made seven hits, from 193 to 195, has plenty of courage} but they were widely scattered and . ‘and is quite a puncher with his left} only in the first inning did the Dodg- ‘ . ‘The Yanks have now won two more Mas, “{o0kb livsione ot thé.cld tknera/fars geb'a man beyond esoond tanc. | Augmen:, Win) While Browns: (78 cates Stes thet the et, Louis las he puts everything into his jab—| Bert Griffith is doing all he can at IS i i boys. ‘the blow with which he cut Martin to/ first base but pulls raw plays in his Lose and Cards Win While It's strange that a St. Louis team We McGrawites Are Idle. should be second in the. National race, 100 YoU SHOULD RESIGN Kuroeuror pauronl AND NOT CLUTTER. UP THE CouRse” Young Yankee Pitcher Not Only Stops Indians _ But His Hitting Beats ’Em LIVE WIRES By Neal R. O’ Hara. The Red Sox aren't out of the race yet, but they will be as soon as they . in the third inning and went against Value of the dollar is increasing.}| Game Surprises Fans b Dave Keefe, the only three-fingered For $5 now you can tell an Taabire Surprises Fans by twirler since the days of Miner Brown. where to go to. . As soon as doubleheaders start By B B Washington fans can see two defeats 'y Bozeman Bulger. for the price of one. When they told George Murray to * ee ‘The second division is always Phila-| St 19 there and finish up the game, delphia and three other team the boy, wonder of Charlotte, N. C., was born on the Philadelphia Athlet- back as we could go. Dave did well, ‘pieces.’ innocence, and y Schmandt may ” “Billy McCarney phoned me at mid-|be seen there In the near future. too. The Cards won yesterday from ‘might Sunday to get some one to fight | Schmandt went to first base yesterday . the Robins while the Giants were kept ‘Martin, and I phoned Burke to come |in the fourth inning, when Wheat com- By Alex. Sullivan. from pluying in Pittsburgh owing to yer once. They were betting 6 to 1| plained of his ankle and Bert Griffith] The Yanks are increasing their lead] the rain. Consequently the Cards in the A & : race, but the| £#!ned a half game and are now only Vance, Decatur or Shriver will prob a ‘i edule an sae atts iad three full games behind the World’s Burke's taking the fight on| ably pitch for the Dodgers to-day, alants are steadily dropping the big) Champions, advantage they had before they started on their Western tour in the National League race. While the Hugmen were 82 lonly one for the Cardinals, Jack Smith,| Wi"iNs again from the Indians yes- for that circuit slap. Later he re- collegian, this time from the Univer- A champion is a guy that starts with tin ears and ends with gold bonds. did so well that nothing else hap- pened. ho said in just so many words. Robert Shawkey, the Gob, had de- see Clark Griffith says he’s still In the race, but Clark means in the league. 8 8 was up to his neck in a terrible mess, llegers had a field day. It ill be- ‘ of ! Ho had walked four Indians in one| OOOves 5,10 eneek ct us. Al cemiens, maybe, but there are two boys on the and one-third innings; had yielded three singles, a two- ‘ger and four » eS up two years ago and thought this runs, big league stuff looked so easy that In veteran vernacular ‘‘finishing|he sent for his pal. The poor Indians, who have bee The way a magnate looks at it it Is almost universally picked to either better to have played and lost than to beat the Yanks or give them their | have had the game called before 4% closest contention, are in fifth | innings. place, and the Tigers, who were eee deep in ihe cellar at the outset, That ‘Washington team is getting are in fourth place. Baseball sure |ulong like it was under Government in the|terday, the Browns, their closest rivals, were losing to the Red Sox. Sewell and Stephenson. Sewell came Fenl name is Joseph Kones. lee it aoe wit tr cine Ruth and Meusel Will Play diel waracendr my Saturday, Declares Ruppert strength that only a Jeffries could| Believes Landis I$ Satisfied tim out when he was in| Both Players H ' out when he was in 01 ayers Have Been Burke has done ittle fighting ana| = Sufficiently Punished. record is short and, except for his cenion ecg faalbs \ By Ed Van Every. Oh, boy! Oh, Babe! has had only twelve bouts, and| “Babe Ruth will play ball Satur-; However, the fans are lable to dis- (hes won nine of them. A year or #o|day,” assured Col. Jacob Ruppert,|*PPolntment in one way. While the My, but won't New York fan- he was knocked out by Tom Gib-| nar COs Sank in an in.| PPearance of the Babe is assured for} dom be disappointed Saturday at s in two rounds. He also lost to owner of the Yankees, in an in-} Saturday, it will not be the same old| the start of the all-important se- Roper on a foul after fighting |*TV!eW 8 this important point.| Babe they will accord their tremen-| rics with the Browns, if through rounds, But you can't always|Which means that while the baseball] dous ovation. The Babe is not quite] some technicality Babe Ruth isn’t ‘tell by their start how they'll finish. |season officially opened on April 12 himself pirealy mlnige Bis aacent cp reinstated in time to play? Jack Dem: once eration, he grea’ er claims he Ribrofaesica Kecause he. be ieardor| cc at oo Ae By pe ba oe s feels just as good as ever but he is] The Cards are having hard luck. out in a round by Fireman Jim Flynn. |r 3) @ first capacity crowd] ingt ut present several pounds under|Clarence Mueller, centrefielder, ani “Jot the year at the Polo Grounds this] weight. He probably lacks consider-| Shortstop Johnny Lavan are badly in- Saturday afternoon, able of his normal strength, 80 do not| jured, and there {a no telling when a most uncertain game! control, Some young pitcher, in need of ex- perience, can get in and take the rest of the beating. But to the quail hunter from Char- lotte to finish a thing means to finish Rickard After rea Many arrived at the scene of action—of disaster—two runners were perched on the bags and Tris Dempsey to Sign Bor Wilts Boek) sr: oc «oe som more + Tex Rickard will be waiting at the] for his geneaation promptly passed) ormcago, w sesatol | the Indian chieftain and then got }O, Seay 18 CAmpocinted yreny) Stuffy McGinnis on an easy bounder to short, The Indian flurry was over. Wallie Pipp opened for the Yanks|hi# term of suspension fram the New se 6 The Braves are still plugging away. That is, they':s plugging away ball games, in two runs, The Indians made four. After that they decided to recite the Alabama motto—Here We Rest. oe: Up to the last half of the ninth the Red Sox looked like sure losers against the Browns, as they were behind three to nothing. Suddenly, helped along by two errors on easy grounders by Mc- Manus, the Bostonians started things and before the fun was over had scored the necessary four runs to win with, still one out to go. George Herman Ruth and Robert Meusel will reqch the Yankee head- quarters. The exact wording of said telegrams cannot be set forth, but— Two and one-half hours later, or at 1.80 P, M., the Babe will stroll out on the fleld up at the P. G. and then— Babe Ruth Will Have to Ask to gang plank for Jack Dempsey Friday when the champfon arrives from Europe. Tex wants to sign Jack for a bout with either Harry Wfils or Jess Willard. ‘Tex wants to take Dempsey and Wills New York Yankees, will not be auto- AUSTRALIA TO SEE LEONARD. “Dt course,” said the Colonel, “|e disappointed if the big fellow fails} they will return to the lineup. Mueller USTRALIAN papers say that 3 to bat one out of the lot for the first] is in the hospital having his put Johnny Kilbane's trip was to}®™M not in a position to know just}row games. Ruth and Meusel were|in a cast for two weeks? where. have been extended to the An- | what is now in the mind of High Com-|poth out for batting practice yester-] Lavan is so weak as a result of an _ } tipodes gy say be mal arranged to| missioner Landis, but doubtless he is/day morning and Be ats eacinte attack of the ‘flu’ he suffered during ; jn @ featherweight champion- strenuous hour of bat swinging this] the training period that he can’t stand Aith Ak Updnay of. Melncuras. |e rens tt te Dlazers, Ruth and}, the strain of a full game. 's also said that Benny Leonard wili | Meusel. have been suffictently pun-(" 1 oouia only be a matter of a few ‘} visit Australia and give the Australian | ished for their mistake of last fall.|days before the Bambino regains his ights a chance to win his title.| They have done nothing that should] normal weight. and, incidentally, his is one of the finest sporting| lead to a continuation of their sus-| patting eye, and by May 26 he should ries in the world and turns out] pension, and it is only eeasonable to] pe able to start something toward boxers, swim-| suppose that they will immediately | cutting down his handicap of twelve » oarsmen, tennis players and|be restored to good baseball standing | homers, Last year on May 25 Ruth » ON proportion to population, }on May 20." The Colonel might have| made his circuit clout No. 12. any other country on the map—|added that the Yankee owners have mean a fifteen round affatr to a decision while the New Jersey bout would mean twelve rounds to no decision, Sie aS Sal Up came Mr. Murray of Charlotte, despite plaintive cries for a pinch hitter. George, it seems, had no- tions about that hitting business him- self. He had been told to finish the thing up and—— “Bang!"* He flattened that old onion like a pancake. It went sailing high into the left fleld bleachers—the longest poke of the season—for a homer on which Pipp and Scott took a ride. O'Connor, Mr. Landi: to-day. CECIL LEITCH WINS ANOTHER GOLF MATCH SANDWICH, England, May 18 (Asso- clated Press).—Miss Cecil Leitch, the «ing up great young players. Heim-| champion, won her match in the fifth ach, a recruit from the Moline team| round of the ladies’ open golf cham- of the Three I League, held the White] Pionship here to-day, defeating Miss Sox to eight hits in thirteen innings beating them 8 to 1, thanks to Tillie Walker's homer with one on. tour after the cl Connie Mack has a knack of dig. make his request, Mr, O'Connor said, Babe expresses himself as confident too, until Frank Baker bumped him] ™Major league that can get along Cleveland club from the U. of A.— Be Reinstated —Babe Ruth, home run king of the matically reinstated on May 20, when ith a smack to centre and Ward| York Club expires, but may apply for 1 in July or pit Willard | ™' z sralnat bin at Boyle's Thirty Acres on} Walked, .In trying to kil the old|reinstatement to K. M. Landis, Baseball Labor Day. The Montreal bout would] baseball Schang struck out. Commissioner, at that time, Leslie 's Secretary, sald Ruth, who was suspended until May 20 with Bob Meusel, New York out- fielder, and Bill Pearcy, pitcher, after]came from Cincinnat! to New York the three had gone on @ barnstorming fall, will not be compelled to appear in person before Commissioner Landis to ‘The suspension order, Mr. O'Connor| Joy Winn, of Aldeburgh, by 4 and 3. The pastime wasn't quite finished] said, prohibited Rujh and the two Miss Gladys Bastin, of Crowborough | but it was well on its way. others from participating in leaguel aye been experimenting with Taw Beacon, defeated Miss M. Cox of Royal] In the very next round #ewster got}games until May 20, when they were} aterial McGraw has stuck to his Davids, by the same score, Missa walk and Baker singled, both com- | given the privilege Of Haling rinse} ans and built up an invincible telephone or in person and would be] Billy Ryan of Holy Cross is the ECRUIT GEORGE MURRAY LOOKS LIKE AN EMBRYO BABE RUTH -IHOW TO PLAY GOLF ‘(Ilustrated) - + = By Thornton Fisher|(lANTS WILL SOON HAVE TO BOLSTER PCHING STA Douglas, Nehf, Jess Barnes and Toney Doing Well Enough, but They’re Vet- erans, By Robert Boyd. PITTSBURGH, Pa., May 18.—The pitching problem is bound sooner or later to be one of greater concern to Manager McGraw in guiding his team to another National League pennant. Much of his past efforts have been concentrated in the fortifying of his defense and increasing the offense of his weil moulded and evenly balanced world’s champions. Very little has been done in the way of acquiring new pftching talent that might be able to jump in and fill the shoes of Douglas, Nehf, Jesse Barnes and Toney. These four hurlers are among the oldest in the senior organt- zation and have seen their best days and before long will be passing out of the big teague picture. Just now all four pitchers ara doing well enough to hold a steady, berth with the New York club, not so much that they are twirling the great ball, the records and the box scores from’ day to day might reveal, but because they have a team behind them that with the possible excep~ tion of Ralph Shinners compares favorably with Frank Chance's great Cub machine; Fielder Jones's hitless White Sox; Fred Clarke's Pirates, or the once great Athletics team that Connie Mack whipped inte shape and lose enough games, Recruit Sent In to Finish|*fternoon the Yanks knocked out Ube} inen tore to pieces. ‘There were games this season when the Giants never needed f&any pitching despite inni , he ancient theory that good pitchin, Cleverly Winning It. We tried to look up Dave's home town | y that g a y g but the record books indicate that he}'® Necessary and it constitutes sev- enty per cent. of the defensive ics many years ago. That's as far|Strength of a club. There is no other team in either with less pitching than the present tired and a Mr. Edwards, another|World’s champions. Every man on the team is practically a three hum- thought Miller Huggins meant what\sity of Mississippi, took a hand. He|4dred hitter with the exception of Shinners. Greater than any major league team to-day on the defense and all endowed with baseball brains, veloped a wild kink in his arm and] All in all the Southerners and the|inspired and handled by baseball's greatest strategist, directed not as in- dividuals but cogs that go and act as one great and perfect machine. Is it any wonder pitching here would not be such a potent factor? Jesse Barnes twirled a no hit game this year. Douglas has been going along well and Nehf's work has been up a game” like that means that] For an afternoon's work these boys| creditable. Toney has only pitched earned their day’s pay. Each got two] in one game, That was against the hits and a base on balls. Each drove|Cubs in Chicago and he performed well considering it was his first stars this season. But sooner or later the team will be forced to call upon theix pitching resources to win games for them when the hot summer sun turng the campaign into a gruelling strug gle. Then the test will come, Barnes is twenty-eight years old, He came to the Giants from Bostom in the season of 1917-1918. Before that he spent three years with the Braves and nearly five years in the minors. Douglas is thirty-two years old, He came to the Giants in 1920. Before that he was three years with Chicagoy fn 1915 he was with Cincinnatl, Brook« lyn and Chicago and previous to thaf he spent five years among the minors and the American League. Arthur Nehf came to the Gianta from Boston in 1919. He ts thirty years old and spent four years in Boston before coming to New York, Before that he spent three years 2 the minors. Fred Toney is thirty-three. in 1918, Before that he was two @ of the season last} years with the Reds and one year with Brooklyn. He served seven years in the minors, ‘These records reveal that there are no youngsters on the Giants’ hurling staff. While other big league managers staff who might be termed a young- ratic and ,profited greatly by the ¢ even excepting the U. 8. A. Al|taken the punishment of their star and ve his 192 5 Joyce Wethered, of Worplesdon wonling home when Miller doubled up| ment am around them, ce at the Sydney Referee, of|its box office effect with commendable [that he will be able to eve Nis 10°} Although the White Sox lost, | irom Mrs. ond, Ashdown Forest, by |Sewell like @ pretzel with stiff shot | (3i4yitont or made by etter, telegraph, | te ich Mr. Corbett, W. F., is sporting | sportsmanship. iifal tassie, The going, however, | Urban Faber fanned thirteen Ath. | 2, and. 1, and Jose Bisoser vanau shed Ito short, taken under consideration by the com-| only acquisition to the Giant hurling jeditor, with as many solid pages of] ‘On that date, which in next Sat-| Vii be hard, as it means making a letles) an svarene ot ona tohevery, | al i ice MS el Sho was getting finished fast, Mr.| missioner. ane by tet el i e han every two one of the thirteen innings the Murray of Charlotte all the while A request for reinstatement ele-! ster and he in the past has been er- Col. Ruppert continued with | Homer in wines horetotors, | game lasted. BOSTON UNIVERSITY Pitching like a pump gun, The Yanks| raph, if answered in the affirmative by j the suspended players, Ruth | iis been one every two and one-half really had runs a plenty but to trim] Commisstoner way the Australians go in for]and Meusel, will wire to Commissioner | 4 ¥ days. The Braves were badly beaten in the affair up and give it polish Home- her at once, would, {t 1s thought, give| strong team behind thut McGraw has = Ruth an opportunity to appear Saturday} assembled. ‘ ‘ Landia, /requesting that they be per- |" int Gontt forget," says the Bube, | thelr opening game in Cubland, BOSTON, May 18—The Boston Uni-|*%" Baker blasted the ole pill into the] with the New York Club when it faces ens a Pi, eo htee cane sie “that I hit ‘em a@ little harder and = versity entries for the New. England} "ver tler of the right fleld stand for}, Louis with Kenneth Williams, who INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. EPPER MARTIN, who knocked "We are taking re," again the tagien every oe Donohue pitched ‘air-tight ball for] Intercollegiate shamplonahip games at] trot around the bases. as an eleven home run lead over Ruth, out Babe Herman at Madison|Colonel smiled, “that Judge Landis Re eee yee a oust. Mo dtonnath| the Beas and tne Bhite were bites Worcester to-morrow and ‘Saturday| Hardly had the old patriarch|in the line-up. Square Gardqh in such sensa-| Will be wired early enough. vere anpnunced to-day, | her e| plopped his ten and a half double E style, 18 Ukely to be another 1 to 0, only securing three hits, two of} {ifteen, as follows: Limrto, 100. ——=>— them by Williams, ; Woodward and Robertson, last on the plate when the score board | QwEETSER MAKES RECORD y ‘Moody, 880 yards c showed that the Red Sox had trimmed Bow mile; Stacey, Bowen, the Browns in their last inning. ‘s and Dixon, two mile: The Y ae igs nelton, hurdles; Macdonald, he Yanks were a game and HERE’S HOW THEY STAND | ee ie ae eee ee Mr. Murray's idea of a way to fin- Mrs, Gavin Out of British Wo: ish up a game had shown to Miller Williams and other home run rivals, have a care, ‘Our arrangement is to have Ruth Harris thinks so. Sam says that|¢" Landis at Chicago at 9 o'clock Sat- n is nearer to McGovern in ac-|Urday morning, and allowing for the than any other little fighter he} ‘fference in time the players should saw in @ ring. He js a tearing, | b8ve Word In New York by 10 o'clock hing fighter, and lke McGovern |ST@2ting them official sanction to take ‘hits £0 fast that he has little neea| Part {9 the kame that afternoon, Toronto 19 12 Roch’er 17 12 Buffalo. 15 15 400 500! Newark 11 19 .367 OF 72 FOR GOLF COURSE. GAMES YESTERDAY. Jersey City, 3; Toronto, 0 (1st game Jeas Sweetser hung up the new mark|” Toronto, 6; Jersey City, 1 (second), of 72 at Morristown, N. J., yesterday on Syracuse, 6; Newark, 5. the Morris County Golf Club's course. Buffalo, 2; Baltimore, 1. 2 : Rochester, 11; Reading, 1, While Col. Ruppert did not infer AMERICAN LEAGUE, Golf Tourney, Huggins a new hitter of homeric di-| Me did it in a competition which gerved i Gefence,. Terry McGovern never writer has very good reson nevork Bi 47 185i poston, WY 4 Gj] SANDWICH. Bngland, May 18 (As-)mensions, as the boys say, and had] se the curtain raiser to the trisdistrict| | GAMES TO:DAY: believe that High Commissioner -Yor! joston, 2 ted Press).—Mr: Ap yaa ite into the| matches to be hel - jewark at “ fighting, although he met and|yandis will be awaiting a message 19 12 .613\C) ‘52 | 20° New York, of ‘the met-| eat tee Peso Jersey, Long Island and Westchester Baltimore at Buffalo. the greatest lot of little men}trom the players, Ruth and Meusel, \ 15 14 .517| Wash’n 12 19 .387] ropolitan champ! title, was elimin-| “Ty Audition to hie homer, Murray of | Players as contestants, The old meth Reading at Rochester, @, over had. from George Dixon }around § o'clock’ Saturday morning. | Chicago 18 13 .636| Boston. 8 18 .308] Detroit. 15 16 .600|Chicago 11 18 .379| ated from thy Woh Opes Ba hati tchasiotte also got a three-bagger and eee eee ree mer in, playing on these Pediar Falmer to Eddie Hanlon. | what his action will be no one har GAMES YESTERDAY. GAMES YESTERDAY, Vor of Royal St, David's, 2 up and i[on his last appearance at the bat he}iinks with Chick Hvans against Harry] piyy myrite & vanderbit Bl any good reason for positively stat-|g¢, Louis, 11; Brooklyn, 0. New York, 6; Cleveland, 4, hit another into the bleachers which] Vardon and Edward Ray. TONIGHT. Pop.Pri to Young Corbett when Young] ing, However, si Johnny Gray ve, Hari y Gray ve Harry Martin “a metropolitan champion, has been called) GLUB '*"Rheo a tour-round Bout’ hard ice the suspended hey hiladel 5 Os, A ‘i , went foul by inches. Moreover, our] The New Jersey team will be minus ING Mel Coogan ve. Micks pein th «Ebr jag oed Nght [players do not become automatically Pinennan ee Pama & bie bei HH Siena, UA tone hero held the hard-hitting Indiansf/its two best men, Oswald Kirkby, thrice SPORT! . ie J eGovern often] reinstated, and can only play with y i: h i ai ty, ifeat down to lone hits for the rest of the me that his system was to hit #0] the official consent of the baseball New Verk:Bittaeurgh (rain). Dotroits Washington (rain), EHTS, Say Se a and gave them a clean coat of | © Texas and William Restle, Cormeny and #o fast that the other fellow] ruler, more than a good guess can be GAMES TO-DAY. GAMES TO-DAY. versity of Ponnsy barity Whitewash from the moment ob the] New Torro aingly, Jerome D. Travers, in’t have time to land a good] made as to what will happen in the|New York at Pittsburgh Columbia yesterday in a heavy hitting Cleveland at New York. ———-:--o left the box in distress. .Not} former national champion, has been Brooklyn at Sf. Louie. Detroit at Washington. FARE bad for one afternoon. shoved up to No. 1 place, reviacin: Around 10 o'clock on the day in Philadelphia at Cincinnati. St. Louis at Boston. -D, Kirkby. Charles T. sing, Knicker- question @ telegram addressed Ao Boston at Chicago. Ghicage at Philadelphia. GBASiPYckuse ve Uevslend adver” Among thelr many, capers for the kecker too, has been forced to withdreyy, - Seteuniiinanemiataiie 2 7, SI iroadway Ex. Avsn., Halsey St. Bigs 2Dave “Recenbere "re" TO-NIGHT, Special Show—Memorial for Brody—! iwi "Khe Pig AGe aS treo rawee pada 38a¢0%

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