Democratic Sentinel, Volume 16, Number 17, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 May 1892 — On the Diamond. [ARTICLE]

On the Diamond.

Following la a showing of the standing of each of the teams of the different associations: NATIONAL league. w. li, sc.! W. Xi ¥O. 805t0n......15 4 ,iB9 Waahlmft'n. 9 9 .000 Brooklyn.... 11 5 .722 Philadelp'a. 9 9 .500 Louisville. ..12 7 .#32 New York... f 10 .4 2 Pittsburg....l2 8 .300 Chicago 7 11 .889 Cleveland... 10 9 .526 Bt. Louis.... 5 14 .833 Cincinnati..JO 10 .500 Baltimore.. 8 18 .158 WESTERN LEAGUE, W. L. #O.; W. I* SO. Milwaukee... 8 3 .727 0maha...... S 6 .455 Kansas Clty.lo 5 .6671 St. Paul... ~ 4 7 .364 Columbus. ..10 5 .667!Mlnneap’lls. 8 7 .300 Toledo 6 6 JOOi Indian’pi's.. 1 8 JU THE ILLINOIS-lOWA LEAGUE. W. L. f j.I W. L. tfc. Toilet 9 0 1.09 ; Jacksonville ..3 6 .375 Peoria 9 1 .900 Quincy. 3 6 .266 Evansville....B 8 .6-6,Terre Haute..2 6.250 Rockford 3 8 .500;R. 1.-Mo Line... 1 8.111 Cincinnati Girls. A 19-year-old girl of Cincinnati plaoed a chair over a hole in the sidewalk opposite her father’s house, where Western Union workmen were about to put a telegraph pole. She sat on the chair until her father obtained an injunction. This is the first occasion cm record when Jay Gould was sat down on by a young lady.—Pittsburg ChronicleTelegraph. Cincinnati young ladies are fast attaining' a reputation for steadfastness which will make them envied of their sisters. Miss May Grief balked the purpose of a gang of telegraph-pole raisers, who had dug a hole in front of her father’s residence, by placing a ’ chair over it. She occupied the chair while her father hustled around and got out an injunction.—Grand Rapids Herald. Cincinnati girls are doing themselves proud this year. One of them has refused to marry a count, and another, by sitting in a chair over “a hole in her father’s sidewalk, has prevented the planting of a hideous pole for electric wires in front of her home. Governor McKinley in hi 6 nejt message should make especial mention of these young ladies and congratulate the State of Ohio on its good fortune in having such daughters.—Courier-Journal.