ir.- tiTl Jl fcfl t v Y- APR 'irt npjwPT Stes'MAR RECORD-THE PHILS MISSED CLEAN SLATEBY SIX BEATINGS j r-V PENN PENTATHLON jYiAjTACK PpiLS HAVE SHOWN A HANDY MAN ABOUT THE HOUSE HAS STAR ENTRIES Hoot, Local Lad at Swarth- more, to Vie for Berry's Title DATE IS OF ANCIENT VINTAGE. iN OFFENSIVE THAT IS OFFENSIVE Hf:r4rXY tJM'T Vrti I Tki I ft.1 Vt we OUGHT To DIG UP OUR is Soon Will Resurrect That did and Noxious LITTLE SVACG iery, "What Is the Matter With the Phil- M Trie BACK Yard amo Hae a It; lies?" Unless Reform Is Accomplished ON FRIDAY'S PROGRAM mBmmnmm w,JmmaMiMe-mmmi m$:-yg9BWWU)i, yaiiZSSSii7! epeiewrw r wnaniMBT .t t v nrifl irriu rrwg m t . v K H I I i A 1 J JffDn I V: ' ' VV.I2i.LUJ .EiO.L.flL-1 11 1 J fou've Gof y0u KrJOVAJ Howj I nAOST ifs eMOUSH 1 i uoue PUMPKirJ DO .. ..'P"I., ACRE FARM ' 'V wc ouuni I -j , - mS X. .T Tyv UAItC . " '" "" flfe. S t KGK in the dark ages, before tho Phillies cantoicd to a clinmplonshlp under ,the leadership of Pat Moran and woro Hadelphln, a iuery was born on tlio lips often that It becamo a dirge of failure. of our national pastime met they ;thcn chanted the noxious words, "What IS the matter with the Phillies?" J4frecalI this unpleasant history not with ply to furnish Patrick Moran and his plastered players some food for reflection. 'toesplto tho fact that tho Phillies have thins fundamentally wrong with the tayers simply are In a rut, but If they stuy Mnd that there car) bo tio catching up. In trt, which placed them In a position to annex a championship. Iast season they am teat the barrier and were up there on. Thev will miss tho nilvnntnces nf n f$ Up to dato tho Phils have shown a Hat, tlness. Their offenslvo has been very .which has only ono system of attack ilng goes for a baseball machine. Moran's ily after day and perpetrating the same old I, hot stuff In tho days of Cap Anson, but by back-lot artists today. Such base skert are getting on tho hassocks and then Dpe that some pal will kindly come along hey can move along. THE mere fact that twenty-one of Moran's athletes have been stranded on tho pads In the last two games lolls the story. They have not been advancing on their own initiative and the timely blows necessary to move them have not been forthcoming. The Old Army Game Should Be Shot at Sunrise WE old army gome may bo line business 1 terrlflo hitting streak that may como onco tin sure way to tho cellar. It Is distinctly up how something on the bases. To date aclflsts In Ireland. Their attack has lacked i a consequence somo splendid pitching has jfferer has been Joo Oeschger, who performed In flno style on two occasions, bnly to see tho game frittered away by a sastrous. than the mere loss of a couple starting as u regular big league pitcher and Ictorlcs. A few more such discouraging Ki Thoso who can see nothing but mlsfortuno in tho fact that tho Phils are olng Into a series with the powerful Giants H Vi In fi nliitt-in fin lint finrinrctntirl llin unrl Ifctrn. It will probably prove a good thing Ifcthtlng spirit and force them to play the playing. Tho men of Moran need some strong medicine to cure their tendency to acksllde,' and .a clash with tho aggressive jptalp because of the events of last season) may Thero Is no disposition on the part of ilcGraw machine. Yesterday they were ghastly ruin they are going to mako of tho t'orrl la "Watch us co." and thev mean every THBHI3 Is always a mountain of hope for tho team which is ready to right and has a proper amount of confidence. It must be lemembered that Whltted, Slock and NIohofT, one-third of the team, did not enjoy tho benrflts of southern training, and as u consequence tho club was not a smooth working machine when the season opened. No-Hit Games Arc Quite Popular This Year EOKGE MOGIUDQE busted Into select society with his no-hit game against hM the Kcd Sox jestorday. George got by o enemy one run, which came after an error, a pass and two sacrifices. But 'e Tankce hurler chres pothlng of the ono score against him. That hltless stuff the goal he has been shooting at since entering the league, and now that he It Ge&rge-doesn't feel any better than u ave tried In vain to hurl a no-hlt battle, exander the Great never got by with lt.i wo or three occasions. In 1912 ho had the rid Doc Miller spoiled everything by hitting hopelessly b'eateri, two men out In the ninth and two strides called on him, Butler Sklf a perfect strike for two bags and again Alex was foiled. Wc don't know whether this Is true or not, but It Is said Stvritten law that the last man up will overlook a few strikes If his team Is far behind and the pitcher has a no-hlt game In his grasp. That means Alex was Eerossed when ho deliberately tlucw a perfect strike on the two occasions he tried. apply tho whitewash. , Mogrldge Is the second twlrler to win ithe moist artist of tho White Sox, blanked April 14. Thus we have two of those ason went along until June lfi, when Hughes, of Boston, used the double blank fen Pittsburgh. FIvo days later l-'oster, of ind after that there was nothing doing until Cleveland that day and gave them tho whitewash good and plenty. Tho final net if the season Was put on by Dutch Leonard when he took advantage of St. Looey. rAfter a severe struggle with tho mathematics of the case, we find that out of six Ikltless combats five were staged In tho American League. NOW wo are prepared for an avalanche of questions, entitled "Are the pitchers In tho American League hotter than thoso In the National League or are tho batters In the National League stronger than thoso In the American League?" Right now we decline to answer. We are neutral. Athletics Have a Game Baseball Team PfTlHE Athletics havo made more than one TTJ- vanaulshlnir tho Bed Sox In an cxtra-Innlnc I) Washington with another and won out. jintll the last man Is out In the ninth do ffeenators is an example. Griff's men walloped Elmer Myers for six runs In the jfpecond, giving them the lead by the score 4idn't worry Mack's maulers to any great extent. Thoy came back with a score r$rv the fourth and In the seventh they put on ono of tho batting rallies which netted three runs. Thnt put them only Jhard to get them. Because they failed Is Ijob. They threatened in tho last chapter, had men on bases, but tho needed hits Lrfld, not como through. Connlo has a dangerous club this year and thoso sluggers are likely to bust up the old ball game at any jr There is something wrong with Elmer a.frrv mrwli hnl wiipn hft I nn thn hlinlc. .... c , -. ........ ..- ... . .-.- ......... . -.--- ,, ,... ...,uuk uimnn UUWI1 Uhe fences with their terrific drives. No pitcher In the big leagues looks so sad 63 Elmer on an off day. One day last year In Cleveland he had all kinds of stuff n the ball, but lie got few over tho plate. et the Dan cerore it got over ana siammca ippened In Detrojt, but a fow days later he 11 twlrler is an englma, and Connie is anxious to have him forget those off days d do some good work. wr ... ESV milE A's registered seven legal swats yesterday, thus proving that they ih '- havo not yet lost their batting eyes. Stuffy Mclnnls headed tho list K'A. wlthtwo which adds to his record. ?.ii attention with his hitting and has n chance to establish a unique record. Eji.. ... VKTROIT, again fell by tno waysiae wnen St.'Louls to score seven runs In one Itohers fllvved and the Browns did the ije -regular twlrler?. ... "WTiito Sox beat Cleveland and made only two hits. AH of which goes to -Mw"that the number of hits do not rid, series contender is picnea. una inaians f'yar .when It came time for Jim HeOraw shipped him to Milwaukee. : ftorely Is . going back. ;-: i iBJMfSONythe world' greatest hurdler, will not compete in the Pennsylva- u oif Drjpay.-Riicrjioon. uwing to tne cessation oi puouo competitions rfoWiwouf I, ttiia Itself without any f undsta, send Simpson East. Ht! tfc- r vtOflntlnA iAn jytvMvv SV .M W i-r fcrf. WjT V ,-",. jnrnv. i'l. .4 . . I- . &! r. r- jnn nvf iMte known as the PennnntlcM Prides of of Quaker City fans which wiis repented Iti those cheerless days when two fbl- cozed at each other with cheerless eyes any deslro to probo old wounds, but lost six out of nine games, there Is team. The trouble Is not chronic. The In It much longer they will bo so far 19ir tho Phils Rot away to n splendid or thereabouts throughout tho entire llvlntr start nlnnir about next August. colorless nttack that lacks resource- offensive to their followers. A football cannot hopo for much, and tho name menials havo been going t thcio moth-eaten methods which were touted which are not even considered good - runners as Whined, Bancroft and furnishing studies In stlll-Iifo In the and knock the pill out of the lot so when a team Is In tho throes of a In a season, but as a dally dish It Is to tho Phillies to digest this fact and stolen backs havo been as plentiful as flro as well as everything else, and been totally ruined. The most ncuto puny attack. This may prove moio of ball games, for Oeschger Is Just ho needs tho encouragement of a few nfternoons may spoil the youth's carect. today at a tlmo when they appear nf mn P.it, AInrnil hns Working" for for the Phillies, for it will nrouso their sort of baseball they uro capable of Giants (for whom they feel no frlend- be Just the sort of tonic they require. the Moranmen to bow to the powerful out thero describing to each other the Giants In this herles. Their watch- word of It. In swell shape, although he allowed guy with a ?1000 check. Many pitchers but few havo been rewarded. Our own although he threatened to breakln on Braves hltless until the ninth Inning safely. In 1915, when St. L,ouis was that among ball players there Is an un- hltless games this year. Eddie CIcotte. St. Louis without a score or a blngle things within ten days. Last year tho the Ited Sox, operated on tho Yankees, August 1!G. Joo Bush worked against gamo uphill fight this season. After came, thev camn rlclit Imolr nt " --r.--- They are lighting every minute, and not they quit. Yesterday's gamo with the of 7 to 1. But a little thing like that threo tallies to the bad and they tried no argument that tho lay down on tho time. Myers. When ho Is good, he is verv. thn rmnnKlni? tpnm nlmnaf hronVn .,... Tho reason for this was that tho batters it an over mo jot. The namo thine had them eating out of his hand. Tho Stuffy Is beginning to attract much it naa tne game eewed up and allowed inning yesterday. As usual, the Tisrer rest. Too bad Jennings can't dovelon figure In the percentage column when a maae nve saroties off Scott. Thorpe to make his annual pilgrimage. This year ho was sent to Cincinnati. a iffnrf Avns EI . .. iw unci Mjyv .,o cimpson win stay "'Tr,,.!Stfia JC - ,7T i 'i T' . irir wjL'.ji.MffttftrfffffffffffffM.dr,& - ai u -m a . RieetlBKof tlie'executlve, f at nooit'M'Jiiiiirkav. vm i f?ivcfWllng, ty JMBtolUgiate track;-and field IHIS is VJATGR M&4 I 3ARCEM Tools ) lw GLt M LtrrTuce-- Bep.Msy . I . GERMANTOWN HIGH ! BEATS WEST PHILA. Coach Lewis's Boys Sudden ly Come to Life and Win League Title CENTRAL HIGH ALSO WINS Cicrmantown IIIkIi pulled tho sui prise , cstcrday w lien tho upto n team took West Philadelphia High School into camp by teore of 7 to ". In addition to losing this Kiime, the West Phillies woro Informed that tliey must play Tiades School over agal,n, us the ten-inning victory of last l-'ilday would not count In the league. Dixon pitched for the Orange, and Illue, but he was in ery good trim, while Kulp, the Gcrmantown twlrler, was dolnp great oilc. Ilo did not allow tho West Phillies a slriRle hit until the fourth Innlnp. Uu chnnau's timely triple In the first Innltie cored Ileln. Humett and Suircsmii. It was Just the tonic the (Jcrmantonn players needed. Keyed up to their highest form, they added threo more inns In the fifth InnhiR. Schacffer's timely clnfile and an error en abled SurReson, Kldd and Khkby to tally. Itiown's home run hi tho ninth was the only redecnihiR feature for the loserN. 'eritral Illgli la roIiib btrong In the. Inter-si-hol.ii-tlc League race. The lct"iy over Frankford IIIkIi yesterday, 9 fo I!, e.ive the Crimson and Oold second place In the league. Tiades Hchool Is now leading with one game won. Silverman's work with the stick was tho feature of Central's victory. Martin and Cravls did the pitching. When Drew, tho Northeast High Twlrler. hit the ball clear down tho field he scored the homo run which tied the score and helped Northeast to end tho game C to C with South Philadelphia I.a Salle College and St. Joseph's Col lege play their flist big game at Potter's Field, Front street and Krle avenue, this aftornoon. Francis Siena, a Mexican, will twhl for La Salle College. Coach Panzullo also has Wescott ready to send on the mound. Brown Preparatory cannot very well help to win baseball games when "Bob" Mc Kenty pitches. If Connlo Mack hasn't already signed him up It wouldn't hurt tho Athletics' manager to look McKenty over, lie has tho stuff, as tho Chestnut 11111 and many other schoolboy players will admit. Brown beat Chestnut Hill yesterday 4 to l. nathcr. McKenty beat Chestnut Hill. In spite of the fact that Romctsch "brought down the house" with a catch In right field, a one-handed grab that robbed Mc Kenty of a two-bagger; notwithstanding tho fact that Cramp gathered in Wlttmaier's long lly to deep center field by making an "ovcr-tho-feft-shoulder." catch and regard less of Taylor's wonderful running catch, tho Brownies won. McKenty Is tho nnswer. He allowed only one hit. That was Boss's single along the third-base foul line. Tho Brownies think he should bo credited with a no-hlt game, but the Chestnut Hill scorer thought otherwise. At any rate McKonty's feat was excep tionally good, According to tho Germantown Academy boys tho St. Luke's School baseball players thought they wero perfectly Justified In leaving the field In tho third inning and de faulting tho gamo to Gcrmantown Acad emy when Umpire Crcer ruled that tho coacher at third base had no right to touch tho "Wuyno players who rounded third on their way to tho homo plate. Greer nays tho Wayne coacher touched the men. Tho rulei state that a player can not be touched'. If ho is ho la out. There fore, St. Luke's players erred In leaving the field. Even If tho umpire made a mistake tn rendering such a decision the game should havo been played and protested later. It is a poor policy for any team to leave the field, and schoolboys should know better. TWO PENNSY ATHLETES JOIN NAVAL RESERVES Johnny Tltzel, pitcher of the University of Pennsylvania team, has enlisted In the Naval Coast Defense Reserves and expects to be called out within a week or so. In Tltzel, Penn will lose the best left hander It has had for several years. He Is a sophomore and was the star of the fresh man team last season. Jim Clarke, the 158-pound wrestling champion of the lied and Blue, also enlisted with Tltzel. , In addition to being a baseball, star, Tltzel was a sub 'on the varsity .football, team. Bill to Legalize Sunda Ball HAnniSBURd. Pa., April 23. Bund'my bae ball will bs a reality in Fcnnorlvtnla It thn bill rrttntcd la th Hou liat nltht by fupreaenta Its Naary, o(,PMlP,la. I paacted. Tb bill wt4 UtUa". baseball fbetwean with lajoie, wagner, et al. on THE OLD BALL LOT HE WAS YOUNG; AND AS VETS FADE HE, TOO, AGED Youth Remains With Fan as Long as It Does With ' Old Stars, and When Players Pass He . Grows Old Overnight By GRANTLAND RICE HL' WA of tho S what you n ght call a fan o old regime, lie was a con firmed delegate to Hooters' Itov more than twenty years ago back wnen LaJolo and Wagner were ju.st breaking in when big ICd Delehanty was tearing down fences and Wlllio Kceler was piking along around .372. Tho first tlmo we ran across him was back In 1905. when Mathcwson smashed all world series records by pitching threo shut outs In a row against one of tho hardest hitting clubs of tho game. He was then nearly forty and that was twelve cam paigns ago. But ho looked to be something under thirty. For his demotion to sport the game that fielongs to youth had held him young. He was following play, and in doing so he had forgotten to grow old. Last spring, when he had passed fifty, he had still forgotten that Time had been checking off tho hours and days. Ho looked to bo under forty. "Old?" ho sain -Why. fifty Isn't old. There's Hans out lliero at tony-two, biiii showing up most of theso lnflclders around twenty-five. And Larry at forty looks like a kid. Fifty may bo old ft you woric in a bank, but it's nothing when you are out hero In tho stands watching these kids llko Wagner and Lajoie and Matty flop uround." Wo saw him again a few days ago, and we hardly knew him. He looked to bo be yond sixty. He looked wrinkled and tired. In a yar ho had put on over ten years. Ha was 'looking across tho field In a listless way. We thought nt first ho probably had como upon some Fcrlous Illness. "No," he said, "I haven't been sick, but I guess I'm not as young as I thought I was. But I never realized It until a few days ago until I looked over the box scores to see how Lajoie, Wagner, Kvers and Mutty were getting along. But all I saw was Waul and G rover and Masscy and Schneider whore the old bunch used to be " "Ward and Grower and Massey and Schneider In place of Wagner, Lajoie, Evers anc. Matty and I had been thinking they wero still a lot -of kids " Snort and Youth Sport comes iloscr than anything else to being that fabled fountain of eternal youth which Ponce de Leon hunted for over a sportless waste. This last winter at Plnehurst wo watched two golfers leave the first tee. One was soventy and the other was seventy-three. But neither looked to bo a day over fifty five. Both were tanned a healthy brown and tho eyes of both still carried tho vital spat k. "I remember," remarked an oldtlmer, "when these first started coming here, over fifteen years ago. They looked older then than they look today, and In everything except years thoy were." Tlio bun and the wind and the open places, mixed with the spirit of play, are the great Youth makers. And not even three-score-ycars-and-ten can hold them down. The Wild Ball A short tlmo ago the Boston Braves sud denly began an exhibition of wild pegging. JUl.A-A.l..A.HJA-l-l.,mAJ.AWAI.l. &fwCi never get an your nervem Shade-grown Real Havana 10c and up CS lyij (i jt I I'll Maranvlllo threw far over Konetehy, and Koney, In turn, pegged over Masscy at sec ond into center field. As Kcllcy's return to third went far to the left of Bed Smith, Sherwood Magee, In n foghorn volco, sounded the alarm. "My God," ho yelled, "tho ball's wild. Cage it ! Cage it 1" Son of the Stalwart Beaten lint iiei-pi- broken; Ilattcred hut without shame; Vo laurel crest for the token Of how wc plaucd the ijame; .Vo laurel iavc in the. knowing Of brave hearts after the fall, We fought the fight and the causa was right And that Is the sum of all. lleutenbut still unbending; llattcrrd but never down; Heady for fight unending, With never a thought of crown; Onu with the oft-dcfeatetl, Hut sweet from the gory wall, W- form again-for ilia charge like men for that Is the sum of all. Wagner, Lajoie, Matty, Walsh, Brown all over the hill. But tho old Ghost of Gettysburg one lMdlo Plank still floun ders along, using his left arm largely for the purpose. No wonder those oldclme Mackmen wcie unbeatable. There's John Wesley Coombs and Lddlo Plank still winning for the Dod geis and the Browns; Barry, the main stay of the Bed Sox ; Collins, tho star of the White Sox; Baker, the storm center of the Yanks with no less than five ball clubs bolstered up by the talent that once grew and bloomed In Connie's ancient orchard. In those days Connie had four or flvo good ball clubs packed and jammed Into one. t A few days ago some one asked John Lawrence Sulllxan what he thought of present-day fighters. John Lawrence told him. But on account of the strict war-time cen sorship now prevailing we can't tell you here what John Lawrenco said. Just a suggestion Benny Leonard vs. Freddie Welsh 25 per cent of the receipts to the Bed Cross fund. Yes? No? Golfers will find that wielding a while preparing divots for potatoes great doveloper for "taking turf." can't beat It. pick Is a You SUITS $11 2 TO ORDER . Reduced from $30, $25 and $30' PETER MORAN & CO. "IffiS' 1STII & MARKET. ENTRANCE ON 1STH B. E. COR. 9TII AND ARCH 8T8. car You won't get the Uat full measure f aatia faction that cornea from driving Ford until you inatall a Gray & Davit Starting awl Lifbtiag Syrian Price, US, tit baUUad Sl.-111'1ssssWMi Ford ?a OLGA DORENER IN "220" TITLE SWIM Philadelphia Star Will De fend Tank Crown in New York MEET SCHEDULED MAY 5 The national 220-yard championship race for women will be held In New York on May 5, and will bring together the great est women swimmers In the country. Kn tries havo been received from swimmers all over the country, but Miss Dorothy Burns, of San Francisco; Miss Clalro Gallegan, of New York, and Miss Olga Dorfncr, of this city, aio the favorites. Miss Dorfncr, the present champion and record holder, will bo on hand to defend her title, but will have to swim In lecord time to win. On May 17 the annual Intercity swim ming meet between the women swimmers of New York and Philadelphia will be held in the Philadelphia Turngemelnde pool. The Phllllo swimmers splashed thtough tho drink a handy winner oer tho New York ers last beason, and expect to repeat this season. Miss Dorfner, the champion and record holder of tho 50, 100 and 220 yard races, will competo In theso races. Miss Penne packcr, tho Middle Atlantic dhlng cham pion, won tho diving event last year nfter a hard battle with Miss Bartlett, tho metropolitan champion, and n. member of the New York squad. DARCY'S BAN IN OHIO RINGS IS NOT LIFTED COLUMBUS. O, April 25 Lcs Darcy won't box In Ohio. Governor Cox said so emphatically today when informed Promoter Stambaugh and a party from Youngstown are coming tn see him. in regard to Darcy's mill scheduled In Youngstown next month, Cox said he would glo out a statement later today explaining his refusal to per mit Darcy's appearance in this State. The Leather's The Thing these days! Better pin your faith to the good old-fashioned vat-tanned sorts, that we are still supplying. SeraPalt 1420 Chestnut Steic St." "Where Only the Best Is Good Enough" Tssir EIGHT 60? !i!0'?Sprtcarth.?ulk i. ".- .V"3raceamnapof ite"deatroverM 1-ne.wu.jtacrowdat.vecui?. l3Ss KINO CAR PHIlAnc.... pww 8I8-S20 North BJ .. , The pentathlon championship on Friday tho first day of Pennsylvania's two-day rel lay race carnival, promises to bo ono of th big features. All eyes of Philadelphia will bo turned on Howard Berry, one of tho mos famous athletes In America and a real Philadelphia product. Berry has won this all-around competition, emble matic of tho collego all-round championship of America, for tho last two years. n will need to bo In tho best of shape, for th entries nro tho best that havo ever been received for such a college competition. They contain fifteen names. It is possible that Burke, of Wisconsin and Thomson, two very good men, will not bo allowed to como becauso of the war but even without them Berry will, 'have very hard competition. Coach Mercer, of Swarthmoro, has been grooming another Philadelphia boy over slnco Christmas for this event. Ho Is Hoot, formerly of the Friends' Central School. Hoot Is good with tho javelin and the discus and a fair broad Jumper. Ho should run Derry very close In theso threo events. Coach Mercer ex pects him to win tho discus and possibly tho Javelin. Ho has thrown tho long spear more than 1G0 feet in practlco. Berry also has dono this, and It may bo that the re sult of the contest will hinge on this event. It Is thought that Berry will win both the 200 meters and tho 1500 meters run, though it la said that Hoot lias shown excellent speed for tho shorter distance. Glllo, of Colgate will bo backed by hie Hamilton, New York, friends to beat Berry. Glllo is a flno all-round athlete, being espe cially good at tho runs and tho broad Jump. Ills chances ngnlnst Berry will depend on his ability to throw tho discus and the Javelin. Jones, Dambly and Wilson, of Penn State, havo worked faithfully for tho last three months on this ovent. Coach Martin pays that they aro all good men and that ho thinks one of them will prove to bo the winner. In addition to these men, Ganzel, of Bucknell; McCarthy, of Lehigh; Roberts, of Syracuse and Crelghton, of Pennsyl anla, nre entered. Tuohcy Easy for Dundee NEW YOItK, April 23. Johnny Dundae, of this city, w-as nn en-y winner over Tommy Tuohey, of Patrrson. N. J.. In a ten-round bout In Brooklyn last nlsht. 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