Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 July 1918 — Page 7
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MONDAY# JITLY 1, 191S.
PARIS LOSES RECORD y GAME TO UNIVERSAL
"Suckeri" Meet Defeat In Seventeenth Inning, 3-1, Muffed Ity Being Responsible.
HOW CI.I'BS STAND,
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Won. Pet.
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'°7! Her, lb Laughlin, .-ley, rf ..
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.. K 3 .« 3 •37R 3 5 .373
Joly Fourth Sehetale*
T. H. Mooae at Brasil. Pari* at I'niversal.
PARTS, 111., July 1.—All records for lOnf? game* In the Trolley league were broken here yesterday when Paris and Universal staged a terrific 17-inning battle, the visitors winning by a score of 3 to 1.
It was a pitching duel between King and Kerr, the honors being evenly divided until the last frarfie, when Kerr came out on top. Up to the seventeenth, it was air-tight pitching by both artists, and a prettier contest is not on record in the history of Paris baseball.
Both heavers had the situation well In hand until tho fatal last, when Joe Giovanini cracked out a scorching twoi baffjjer to deep center, went to third \on an infield out and came home on a ijnuffed fly by Gregg.
The battle might have lasted longer "Wd it not been for the muff, because 'JICS was under the ball close to the i tlild and the chances were ten to tgglth&t Giovanini would not have at•'^i"ted to score, had Gregg held the
James, who knocked the f.v, tn^ all the way to third during the flMP and scored on Ariana's single. _Jse two runs were too much for to overcome, as Kerr turned three batsmen In ea3y fashion In l^st half of the inning.
Pari* Lo*n Chance.
'ftfaris lost its only chance to break jw tie in the thirteenth inning. Mann, «t man up, got a life on James' error "V first. Gregg sacrified him to sec*jjW. Miller doubled to left, but Mann, uncertain as to whether Treasure was going to make the catch, lagged along and was then nipped at the plate. McLaughlin singled, ending Miller to third, but Farley was an easy out, Giovanini to James. This ended all hopes for Paris, as it was one, two three for the remaining four innings.
Kerr's pitching was one of the features of the game. Tn spite of the fact that he sprained his ankle In the second Inning by sliding back to first, he kept the Paris batsmen guessing and caused fourteen to whiff. Farley was his chief victim, the Paris rightfielder striking out five times.
Four double plavs, divided equally between the two teams, was another feature and the fielding stunts were sensational at all times. Roberts' ^catch of Treasure's foul fly against the rand stand netting, was exceptionally rtlliant. Sam McLaughlin was in the imelight—with double-play unassist- «.
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Vlaaera Score In Third.
TTnlversal jumped into the lead In hs third inning. Ariana scratched a ingle in front of the plate and stole /hecond, Dowell struck out. Kerr singled to conter, sending Orjana to third, felster, running for Kerr, started a ouble steal. Roberts' throw to Mclaughlin was perfect, but Mann inter-* 'erred by jumping in the air after the all, muffed it and let Ariana score.
Paris tied the score with an earned n In the fifth. Huff struck out. Robsingled to center and went to secwhen Ukey tossed out King at pst. Mann drove a terrific liner to '••ft for a single and Roberts scored. busted one of Kerr's shins, but ^j-le got the ball and threw him out. L^'hen things settled down to a real ^Ktle until the seventeenth. Then rranini got his two-bagger and CZnt to third on Kyle's tap to Mcughlin. Jame* lifted a short fly to who muffed and Giovanini
James went to third when the was thrown home. Ariana stn-
el,
scoring James, and took second the throw in. King tossed out —owell. Ariana going to third. Kerr Rhiffed. Score: eepfj PARIS. S3. A.B. R. .... 5 0 ..V* 4 .... 7 2b .7 .... 7 .*»•*• 6 5 •i.. 7
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SCORE BY INNINGS.
0 0 1 0 0 0 O I I 2 8 Paris— 0 0 1 I 1 1 s Earned runs—Paris, 1. Two-base 1 "hits—Miller, Giovanini. Stolen bases— ly' Gregg, Miller, Giovanini, Ariana, 2.
Sacrifice hit—Gregg. Base on balls— Off King, S off Kptt. «. Struck out— By King, 9 by Kerr, 14. l^eft on base* OR 1 —Paris, 10 Universal, f. Double plavs 454 —Mann to McLaughlin to Miller McjQp S liaughllB, unassisted Ukey to James ifj^us Kerr to Kyle to James. First base on —, errors—Paris. 1 Universal. 3. Time of game—3 hours and 5 minutes. I'm*««Pj plr«—Scanlon. OR roomi i BRAZIL CLIMBS NOTCH. !POR R* .Pari* Fur Lead By 8-2 Win Over fS'o'wS w~~. |OR Ludwig pitched the Braxil jnjr Trolley league champs back into a —. first plac4 tie with Paris Sunday afternoon, when he let the Moose down with five swats in an 8 to 2 success over OR r" the local club In a game played at 116 S. Athletic park. qp t«p The contest was hard fought until 118 n he ninth, when the visitors chased five runs. Tn th* first three inOR RKNSngs both Ludwig and Houck, who
Wabash.^posed him. were air-tight, but the TOR REirfirth brought action, both teams
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TRIBUNE Up To Minute
100 Per Cent Athlete of College Bars Dissipation and Narcotics
"Jos4cco L*Tt HOORS ft dissipation
NO FClCNOJT OF Hir ^7*
BERKLEY, Cal., July 1.—The University of California has named Richard Gordon Murray its 100 per cent athlete. He lias received a gold medal for his athletic versatility. He is a native of Little Rock, Ark.
Murray passed all the physical tests required in the last year. He was selected from a list of 1,500 athletes.
scoring a run. Houck drove in the Moose marker with a double down the right foul line, scoring Reddinger. wh« had lined a two-bagger to right. Brazil came hack with a tally in the fifth and added another in the sixth. After that it was tame until the ninth, in which the champs scored five runs and the Moose one. Houck again exploded a double, sending Reddinger ovW with the Moose credit.
It wasn't Houck's fault that Brazil is today tied with Paris for the Trolley league. Errors of commission and omission aided largely in the downfall of the local' club. Score:
BRAZIL. AB. it.
American Association
IUCHARD GORDON MIRRAY READY FOR THE WORD.
H. 6 1 3 0 2 1 1
Loyd. rf Bonham, lb Bridges,
O'Brien. 2b Hargrove, 3b Reddinger, If Houck, Kyle, lb Small, If .... Glenn, ss ... Pugh, cf Gailey, ....
Total*
Brazil .. Moose .. Earned runs-
P.O. 4 3 24 r. 2 1 1 11 0 0
PO. 0 9 0 1 14 3 0 0 0
ct
Tipton, ss .. Mullen, ... Cox, 3b ... Jenson, 2b Powers, If v, Ludwlg,
0 0 2 1 i i 3
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Totals
1
19
1
....36 $ HOOSR AB. R. .. 4
87
PO. S 1
A. 3 2 0 3 0 0 0 3 3
3 S 4 4 4 3 3 2
S 0
13 0 1 2 4
.30
6 27
14
0 6-
0 0 i
..*..0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1—2 •Brazil, S: Moose, 1. Two-
base hits—Reddinger, Houck (2), Cox. Bases on bal'" Houck, 5 off Ludwig, 3. S.. uck out—By Ludwig, 14 by Houck, 4. Hit by pitcher—By Bonham. 2. Left on bases—Brazil, 12 Moose, 3. Stolen bases—Bridges (2), Cox. Jensen, Powers. Sacrifico hits— Jenson, Powers. Umpire—Lotz.
IOW «LCB9 STAND.
At Columbus—. Columbus •»,. .0 0 0 Kansas City ..000
9
0
3 0
Batteries—George and "Wagner Hall and Anslow. Second gam#i Kansas City A 4 Columbus ...2
At Minneapolis— Indianapolis Minneapolis
Batteries—Stroud, Tyson, Luque and Kocher Hall and CoolL Second game: Louisville ...8 14 3 St. Paul 2 3 4
Batteries—Tyson and Koehef Merritt and Cook.
Toledo-Milwaukee, wet grounds.
Wanted Kauff to Hit
When Benny Kauff was at the plate for his last time before joining the army the fans at Ebbets field were pulling for the Giant to make a hit. But the rooters were hot alone in their thought. Manager Robbie and Otto Miller, of the Robins, were also wishing that the little outfielder would hit safely while up for the last time. Miller, who was catching, signaled Grimes to give Benny a high fast ball, the kind the Giant can slam. Grimes put it where Miller wanted It. Benny swung at it, but instead of landing out of a fielder's reach it dropped into Ivan Olson's glove.
HE CAN STILL PITCH.
Toots Schultz, pitching for a navy team at Newport against the Boston P.'twi iNt^d the Natio^-g-'* 1
'J.- i
Boston N York .eveland .. Washington Chicago .... St. Louis .. Detroit Philadelphia
Won. Lost. Pet 32 21 .604 31 21 F9fi 3(1 21 .588 31 26 .544 25 .519 24 20 .444 2.1 22 .418 15 27 .288
Kansas City ...... Columbus Milwaukee ........ Louisvilleit Indianapolis ...... Minneapolis ....... St Paul Toledo
0 0 0 0
0—0 6 2 •—5 8 0
2 8
2
7 1 "Wil-
Schang
Batteries—Caven and liarns and Kitchens. Second gamo: Indianapolis I 7 0 Minneapolis ........... ....... S 7. 1
Batteries—Rogge Schangf Xindberg, Humphrey a- Owens.
At St. Paul—• Louisville .....2 2 St. Paul 1 4 1
..
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He ia twenty, weighs 147 pounds and stands five feet eight inches tall. Murray and his instructors say the secret of his success lies in the fact that he never dissipates and abstains from narcotics. He held himself to a schedule of nine hours' rest a night and took a seriee of exercises daily while in school.
He cannot remember ever being ill.
Sport Spotlights
BY RALPH II. WHITE.
"Hedgie" Norcross, well known local semi-pro grid and diamond star, is again in our midst. The former star halfback of the Tigers has been over at Akron, O., where he was a member of the championship Goodyear team which trimmed the Goodrich eleven for the title, Norcross scoring two of the three winning touchdowns, returning home so far as to be ready when called to the colors late this month. While visiting at Camp Sherman "Hedgie" met our old churn, "Josh" Devore, who is stationed at the camp. Josh sent his best regards to the bunch in T. H. and predicted he would shine in the sixth world's series in which he has participated. Glad to see you, "Hedgie" old topi
And to tlitnk. that a muffed fly won Id decide a 17-inning thriller in the Trolley.
One of the few fans at the MooseBrazil conflict Sunday afternoon wanted to know what started the recent fire at the ball park. Another fan i informed him that it must have been a red hot Trolley game. Now that wasn't a real nice thing to say, hey fans?
The Trolley league, by the by. will MtaKe two (tamM on the Konrth with the Moose oppoKlnR he champs at Hrasil nud Pari* xtRrkiac up agrainiat the oaI Miners" at I niversal. Here's hoping there will be no terrific plosiona.
HOW CLUBS STA.\D.
Won. Lost. Pet. .. 39 28 .682 .. 36 26 .581 .. 39 31 557 .. 36 33 .622 .. 30 32 .484 .. 31 35 .470 .. 2? 35 .435 .. 22 41 355
ir..
The Tigers upset the dop« by bagging both ends of a double-header from the Indians, winning by scores of 10 to 2 and 2 to 0. Dauss let Cleveland down with five swats in the first game and Bwland stopped the Indians in the second on four. Cobb's clouting featured, Ty getting seven hits in nine times up. The Browns again nosed out the White SOx in the ninth, winning, 4 to 3. Demmitt drove in two of the Browns' tallies and scored one himself on a homer in the ninth. Shellenbach's wildness got him in bad. Walter Johnson lost a tough 10-inning setto with the Red Sox when Ruth tore off his eleventh homer of the season with a pal on. The final score was 3 to 1. Mays had the Senators, 1 to 0, until the ninth, when they evened it up. Then came Ruth's circuit clout. Scores:
First game— Detroit 1 0031220 1—10 12 0 Cleveland ..10001000 0— 2 5 5
Batteries—Dauss and Yelle Groom, Coveleskie and Thomas. Second game— Detroit 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0—2 10 0 Cleveland .....0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0—0 4 0 (Called end of eighth, darkness.)
Batteries—Boland and Yelle Bagby and O'Neil.
ft. TiOUtS ..00 0 0 2 0 0 1 1—1 12 Chicago 00000200 1—3 9 1 Batteries—Wright and Nunamaker Shellenback and Schalk.
Boston 0 A 1 0 0 S 0 0 2—3 11 0 Washington 00000001 0—1 6 1 Batteries—Mays and Schang Johnson and Ainsmith.
American Tfotea.
C^bb slapped out four hits in five times up in the first game and poled three out of four times up in the aecooid.
Tris Speaker secured but one hit in the two games. He was charged wun threo errors in the first game.
All Demmitt did for the Browns was to slam out two doubles a«d a triple.
For a change, Walter Johnson went hitless.
ONE IN MANY.
A new addition to .he baseball team at the Bethlehem steel plant ia the veteran Cy Seymour. One tttn can't say against c»=as™Jh.-*w*T th. ..... tea&j"
houathold
plowed up and
TERRE HAUTE TRIBUNE.
SPORTS
AT N. RANDAL TRACK
Tommy Has String of
29 Ready
Grand.
for
Circu^ Campaign This Year.
CLEVELAND, O., July 1.—Tofnrnr Murphy, who seems to have acquired the habit of topping the list of the Grand circuit's money winning drivers, is with us again.
Tommy arrived yesterday irtornln??, motoring from Poughkeepsie. His stable of Grand circuit campaigmers also arrived at North Randall. The string includes twenty-nine. twenty trotters and nine pacers. They are:
Trotters—Allan Watts, 2:05 Chilpoot, 2:11%: Peter Chenault, 2:04^4 Ante Guy, 2:13% David Guy, 2:18%: Expressive Lou, 2:08^4 Mokum Sellah Baird, 2:10 Dagastan, 2:13'/i Winnatoma, 2:13 4: Dark Flower and Harvest Lad, 2:20 Chestnut Peter. 2:1* Vn Royal Mac, 2:05^4 Dorothy Day and The Real Lady, 2:03 Measles. 2:10 Kelly De Forest. 2:08'/i: Petiex SI 16, and Ruth Mainsheet, 2:08%.
Pacers—Miss Harries M, 2:00 Direc-' turn J, 2:054 Billy Jackson, 2:17^4 Zombrino, 2.05% Oro Fino, 2:06 The Problem. 2:07^ Budlight, 2:12'i Hex De Forest, 2:06Vi, and Sanardo.
Assistant Trainer John Benyon accompanied the horses and will make the campaign with Murphy. Eugene Murphy will remain at Poughkeepsie and look after the horses at the home training quarters.
Murphy's rather late arrival was due to the Red Cross matinee he staged Saturday at the Hudson River Driving park, Poughkeepsie. That matinee marked the first endeavor of a mile track official in work for the Red Cross. That is was successful and netted $5,435 was due to Murphy's personal efforts.
Murphy himself auctioned off the boxes and sold thirty-four for a total of $3,775. He also took over all the l*cidental expenses of the meeting and the purses which Murphy won with Royal Mac and Directum J. were turned into the general fund. The meeting was successful in more ways than one and the performances staged more than satisfied the crowd.
Miss Harris M. was the star speed performer and stepped the fastest mile recorded over any track this year when she paced in 2:02%. Directum I paced in 2:04% and The Real Lady, although not yet in shape for a real speed performance, trotted in 2:11. To win the free-for-all trot Royal Mac had to step in 2:08% and Directum .T had to hit the same notch to win the free-for-all pace.
The stable of Walter Cox, next to the Murphy string, the largest due to campaign the Grand circuit, is due to arrive at North Randal today.
DOING A GOOD TURN.
It recently was announced that the Playc-rs' Fraternity, which had several thousand dollars In its treasury when it collapsed, had donated $1,000 to Griffith s bat and ball fund. Out of its remaining funds it has been paying relhf benefits to three veteran players who were found to be in need. Jake Daubert has, been handling distribution of this money.
National League
HOW CLI BS STAND. Won. Lost. ret. 42 18 .700 41 JII .67!?
Chicago .... New York Boston Philadelphia Pittsburgh .. Brooklyn ... Cincinnati .. St. Louis ...
SO 23 .475 :ii 4 28 34 .452 25 34 .424 25 35 .417 24 8? .3»3
Showing a burst of old time form, the Reds blanked the lbs in one game of a twin bill, 7 to 0, and tied the second, 7 to 7, in a contest that was called after eleven innings, because it
-/as
time for the Cubs to beat
it to a train. Ring baffled the losers In the opener which was decided in the first inning when Hendrix walked four of the first five batsmen to face him. Douglas, too, was rather soft for the Cincy crew. At one time In the added attraction, the Cubs had the Reds, 7 to 2, but a sixth inning mauling of Tyler knotted it. After that neither team could score in the mud. The Cards and Pirates divided a double header, both games being decided by a one run margin. The Cards took the first. 2 to 1, although held to one hit by Steele. It was a wild throw, though, by Steele that gave the winners their brace of markers. The Pirates nosed out in the second game in the eleventh inning when a triple was followed by a double by Bigbee. Scores
First game.— Chicago 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0—0 7 1 i n i n n a i 4 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 7 1 3 0
Batteries—Douglass, Hendryx. Killifer, O'Farrell Ring and Wingo. Second game.— Chicago 20050-0 0000 0—7 12 2 Cin'ti ...0 200050000 0—7 12 3
Batteries—Tyler and Killifer Schneider, Regan, Eller and Allen
First game.— Pittsburgh ..0 0000000 1—1 S 2 St Louis ...0 0020000 x—2 1 4
Batteries—Steele and Schmidt Ames and Gonzales. Second game.*—i s'g'h 2010000100 1—5 14 2 St Louis 3000000100 0—4 10 2
Batteries—Cooper and Schmidt Doak and Gonzales.
National Notes.
Ring was the only Red who didn't connect in the first game. Wingo led the attack with three.
Both the Reds and Cuhs sertrred an even dozen blows in the aftermath. Heathcote's double was the only hit off Steele of the Pirates.
Ames held the Pirates to five swata in the first game and would have scored a shut out bat for off-colored support in the ninth.
Today's Games
National League,
Biro6ltfm at Boston. Philadelphia at New Tork. American Ijeasne. Detroit at Cleveland. Kew York at Philadelphia* Boston at Washington. St. Louis at Chicago.
American Annooiation,
Indianapolis at Minneapolis (game played as part of double-header yesterday.)
Louisville at St. Paul. Toledo at Milwaukee. Columbus at Kansas Cit^.
Yesterday's Homers
American I.eajtue.
»utfc Boston, off .T'br.sQiP. lot bw wtjfa .w'. HA.nds. fret (^HOOmu 'W th* flcsst I
8
THE KAISER SAID: "Remember, I will stand no nonsense from America after the war.1'
Matinee Today
All Seats 25c Children I Oc
fit
Dutch Leonard Sure Did Show the Boys
Salve and humoring are the elements that bring out the best In some ball players. Others have to be gone after with a whip. They say that Dutch Leonard's recent no-hit game against the Detroit Tigers was the direct result of the Boston southpaw extending himself to show what he could do hecause he was boiling mad over a panning given him by a Boston baseball writer. "About all Dutch has left is s g-lore to toss out on the diamond when he is sent out to try to pitch," wrote the Boston critic, and he followed it with more caustic comment to the effect that while Dutch doubtless was trying his best, his case was hopeless because his arm was gone.
Leonard was boiling mad. He concluded he would show them back in Boston that, his arm still was there.'It was a warm clear day in Detroit on June 3, just the kind Leonard likes, so Manager Barrow told him that if he wanted to show up the Boston scribe there was his chance—and Leonard went to it with a no-hit game.
They used to pull the same stuff on Rube Waddell when he got careless— send out word that he could hoar that his arm seemed to be gone—and then the Rube would come hack and pitch his head off to win a bunch of gat e
But it wasn't supposed that Leonard was in the Waddeil class.
What Won't They Do?
PHILADELPHIA. Pa., July 1.—Ball players pull many queer things, but Second Baseman Dugan of the Athletics goes on record as doing something no other ball player has ever done. Dugan is a former Holy Cross baseball player and was picked up by Connie Mack last year. He has been holding down second base for the Athletics in great style during the season, but his batting has not heen what he thought it should be. Friday he was at hat twice in the pinch, men waiting on the sacks to be brought in, and he fanned both times. Saturday he handed in his resignation to Manager Mack and said he was through with the game. These hall players are certainly temperamental beings.
Connie Mack Laghus Last
Herbert Hoover has nothing on Connie Mack. When it comes to frugality, efficiency and far-sightedness the keenness of the national food administrator is acknowledged, but he might learn a few things from the long, lean boss of the Athletics at that.
Everybody interested In baseball thought that Mack had pulled a prize bone when he made his last big deal with the Boston Red Sox. Visions of the Athletics playing to empty seats and taking the role of the American league doormat were common.
Bnit! take time to look over the fruits of Mack's labors in getting a hall club together. You'll !ind that the A's are not the Worst looking ball club that ever posed as a major league organization by a whole lot. And Mack has made money—lots of it— and has the nucleus of another winner if the war doesn't hand him another solid kick in the slats.
Connie has made a better first baseman out of George Burns, ex-Detroit player, than Burns ever was before. George is playing hangup ball for the A's, and what's more, he's hitting like a pile-driver and his hits have been timely. In addition Connie has unearthed two young infleklers in Shannon and Dugan, who remind many fans of Barry and Collins when they came out of college. Larry Gardner. Rubo Oldring and Tillie Walker are good enough for jobs on most any man's club, while Outfielder Jamieson is developing fast. McAvoy and Perkins, the catchers, are delivering for Mack, while in Hcott Perry, the new* sensation from the Southern league Ven Gregg. Elmer Myers and Adams, Mack has four good pitchers.
How does he do it? That's Mack's secret. He simply goes out and gets them while other managers howl over the scarcity of talent. •Ml" 'Si
MOST I'SEP AVTOS CHATfCE.
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TOY FOUR YEARS IN GERMAN
LAST TIME TODAY
J. Warren Kerrigan
IN HIS BEST ONE YET
E U N A
BETTER THAN "MAN'S MAN'9
SEE WHAT BROUGHT AMERICA FACE TO FACE WITH THE KAISER SEE IT AGAIN AND AGAIN IT'S UNCLE SAM'S REPLY,fO
The Current Events
Adults Children
15c 10c War Tax 2e War Tax 1e
1220, 2:20, 4:10, 6, 7:45, 9:35
Jo
El A N
TODAY
AND ALL WEEK
2:15 and 3:15
Twice Daily
AMBASSADOR
JAMES W. GERARD'S STARTLING STORY OF GERMANY'S I PLOT INTRIGUE
KAISER
TOMORROW
"The
Price a Good
OFFICIAL BRITISH WAR PICTUR
The capture of Messiners, the important key town between Ypres and Arras, by the British in June, 1917, la graphically shown in "Messiners and Its Irish Captors, the second episode of the
A." A. INDIANS GET MATCHL
"BRITAIN'S BULWARKS"
MACK SENNETT COMEDY "The Kitchen li
Tomorrow and Wednesday
LMYT 1 iIV!c T03AY
Wallace Reid in "Tbe House of Silence"
Robins' Four Box men
Uncle Robbie is another major league manager who is proving the assertion that four or five first class pitchers can provide sufficient strategy. The Brooklyns are getting along with Marquard, Cheney, Coombs and Grimes constant work has made Marquard display the form that enabled him to star for the Giants. Cheney has improved his control, while Grimes has come around in the most encouraging style. Coombs needs more of a rest between hi" games, so that If Robbie can groom 'one of hi6! young recruits for a regular turn In the box. the ruglar hurlers will show greater electiveness, no doubt.
Ex-Central League Star Purchased By Indianapolis Club. TNT"*! A APOT,r? .Ti)~ Bratchl, of the Memphis Southern asu :-t* U.Hiu. v. .: Columbus American association club, has been purchased by Indianapolis, according to a telegram received here last night from Owner McGill, at Omaha, Neb. Bratchi is expected to join th* local club Tuesday in Toledo
BOEHHNG OFF FOR BIG WAR
.Toe Boehling, ex-big league hurler with Washington and Cleveland, left the other day with the draft contingent from Richmond. Va., for Camp Lee. Boehling is married, but did not claim exemption.
WHEY IX POl BT,
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