10 I" BASEBALL TO KNOW ITS FATE TOMORROW; GALAHAD DENTS ROSEWOOD'S CHANCES GALAHAD JOLTS j THE ROSEWOODS Thoir Unexpected Victory May Cinch the Pennant This Week For Reading * • " L ALLISON HILL LEAGUE Jjjv-t Night's Results Galahad. .4; Rosewood, X. SliiwUns of the Clubs . ' W. re'. t ! Reading 14 7 .lit" I Hose wood 14 S . C3i" Galahad 9 13 .409 j Hick-A-TliriTt .... 13 .2S<; To-night's Contest j Heading -vs. Hlck-A-Thrlft. J Galahad put a deep dent into 1: - v.o . :'s j.- nr. irtt aspirations last j evening in an Allison Hill contest j by winning 4-1. Two men were out > in the last inning when "Bill" Fortna ! ty hooked one to right field for a home I run, the only tally scored by the "R0... f during the evening. Should Reading win to-night, j C . Ro-ewocl will* have to win loth tTie i rk conti fts Thursday nnd Friday nights : in order to tie Heading for the pen- j r.ant. The victory for Galahad was! unexpected, and put-; Rosewood at i a decided disadvantage. Thur Jay and Friday nisrht will bring .the two leaders together for the two most important contests of the seasop. < >tHcia!s have arranged for a double umpire system for these contests. "Pete" Shickley will be assisted by "Mickey" Fovd. -. :i. Jd in sl-.i'.pe for th" ■ s. inch ilng the lining of tje s and the base lines to the ri~ht and left field foul 'flags. . • The Heading Railway manage ment V i consented to allow a col ." Icct'on to be taken at the Thursday r.n-l Friday n :ht contests for t'te * ">c ■ ' of the Red Cross. Hod Cro> - S : co i: o* i w|| be on h.ui d -r the caves. The contests are played on ' ordinary to allow a collection to be " ■ 1 - *'° d a "'■* ■<• o* r''ns in *"o third when "overs reached '!rut on an error. Fellows doubled. Rrwers tallied on an error and a fielrier's'choi"o brought in Fellows. Another pair came in the fifth. Fe'l V- s : ng!e \ to deep short and took second when Kent threw will tVinsard singled and Fellow* scored. Co - '.', and the fourfh run cfoss;d the rub ber. The score: RC iSEWOOD * AB. R. H. O. A. E. Waltz, 2b 2 0 0 2 1 o Shafer, 1f.,,., 2 0 0 5 0 o K. Killinger, c... 3 0 0 3 0 o O. Killinger, 3b. 2 0 2 2 12 "deli 1 ...... 3 o 0 ' 0 0 Tncmpson, cf .. 3 0 "0 0 0 0 Ker.t, sr. 3 0 0 2 2 1 1 Fortna. rf 3 1 1 2 0 o L.ongenecker, p..3 0 0 ft 0 0 Totals 24 1 3 21 4 3 I GALA HAD AH. H. 11. O. A. E. Fellows, 1b.... 4 2 2 0 1 Campbell, ss ... 3 0 ft 0 3 0 Hinvlev. 2b 2 ft ft 4 2 ft Wugard, 3b .. 4 1 1 ft 0 0 c'ci a u g'i, 1f... 4 0 I for his se :• child. . But Hadley insisted on J3 K "How do you Jigure that?" nuiric, Me: tubal. "Well, ii>' youngster = are twins, t>c ■>, how are you going to figure th<- llrs child. They l>oth come under the 5" Efc. .?Had." answered Hadley. yi give up," I'.P. lared M<*rg.>nthal pftef l' zzlhi-r nv'-r t f r a few hours The deli it G_TisT \ you MUST / /' \ / ,Ni YER - 1 V C A,v ,' t * \Lm } V ( Tf3Y - ) \Gc ORPUL ( WARM/ ( BeeVeepreS} \ WEN r 0 66m ' ,M , ? S ; F'TfTpo S B£TTC *- ( - <** Catcher Kutz Is Star in Newsie-Suburban Game IMisrri VL 1.1 ,\(ius Lsist Evening's Results Newsies. S; Suburban. 7. standing of Uit* Chihs W v . U Pet. ApplfJbjr 1 i j Imont 1 o 1.000 < t End i ii i.ooo Suburbans ! ! 5 „ 0 I *'••• - i i I evangelicals o i .000 I Kia wants 0 i .000 I 1 To-nighl's Schedule C a ich r Kutz was an ace in the i!i Uistrial League same last even in :at the T n :ivin£ t*he horse j idf pe'let a ride for four bases and ..atidhng the slants oi the Newsies' pitcher, Ensweiler,, like a Johnny K! tiJ. K':tz drove in two Newsies j £head of him and was, therefore. I ehiet contributor. The Suburban i team's twirler fanned 11 Newsies i ;.nd his team outhit the other, but ; the Newsies bunched their ctubbipg I at the ri- ht time. The score* NEWSIES > I R. H. O. A. E. | Berghaus, if l i ii o! n. - 2 0 1 0 RiCbards, 3b 1 2 2 jo \\ ohl rth, ss ... . 0 0 i 1. 0 ' L. Kutz. c 0 2 *8 0 of Maniey, lb 0,0 5 l o Eudwig. rf 1 1 l o 0 , Ens w ellor, p 2 2 1 2 0, E. Kutz. cf 1 0 0 0 0 [ Totals 8 11 21 7 0 SUBURBAN R. H. O. A. E. | ; Hawker. If 1 4 1 0 0 1 rown. c 11l 1 1 0 ! •siiirey. If 2 0 1 0 0 auy, ss 2 i 1 2 0 ; ' ' 'ooper, p 1 0 0 0 0, Bauni-ardner. 3b.. 12 0 101 'Friedman, 1b.... 0 1 3 0 Oi Morris. 2b 0 1 1 1 0; Rosenberg, rf .... 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 7 13 18 5 0 ! Suburban 9 0 0 4 1 0 o—7 > Newsies 006011 x —B 1 Two base hits. Brown. Berghaus, : Ensweiler. Three base hit, Baum garilner. Home run. L. Kutz. Sacri fice flies. Berghaus, Maniey. Double ; ] plays, Ensweiler to Maniey; E;is- j wciler to Wohlfarth to Stanley; , Richards to Maniey. Struck out. by Ensweiler, S; by Cooper, 11. Base, on balls, off Ensweiler. 4; off Coop- 1 er. 1. Passed ball, L. Kutz. Umpire, , Porte. "We're Proud of You," | Pershing Tells Men' Pari*. July 23. "Your country is proud of yob, and I am more than ' r.roud tu command .♦ h m-n as you. Vou have fought splendidly." General Pershing thus addressed wounded American soldiers lying in 1 the American Red Cross hospitals In i Paris yesterday. In each ward of every hospital he talked to the men. ' Ho in tuit, n if they wt-re being will cared for, how and where they wer..* j : wounded, what regiments they 'be- ! | lyonged to and expressed his sym- j : • ' K.v 1 .- 'iWi <•;' j.-.itloYits. General Pershing also talked to the! pHys'.-ian-s. surgeons and nurses an.l thanked them foi th. work they wet j doinu in caring for the wounded. "No IK lan ask m.ire of •ny tight- ' j Int.' foree than that they should .it# a well as you have don," he said to his ' troops. The general atld-d thta J j Wished he could talk personally with r ch man in the hospital, but this wa < impossible. So he asked Major Per- j kins to repeat his message and say 1 to each individual man: "-■Me Anierii an people are proud of i ' you." OWNERS LOOK • FOR A TRUCE Impression That Federal Gov ernment Will Not Put the Kibosh on Baseball Not until to-morrow will thfe world! know tlie decision of Secretary lin ker and Provost Marshal General | Crowder. The hearing to deckle whether to extend tho effective time | of the work-or-light orderus it ap-l plies to prof - 01 1 baseball was j : :ni r t the Nation 1 ' Baseball Commission could set forth' I its views. I'rovost Marshal'Gencral ■Crowder .cave a hearing yesterday to repre-: sentatives of the Washington Amer ican League club preparatory to making a report to Secretary Baker | with recommendations as to whether the Secretary's order making the new re : :it tis imim ilia. ly applicable to the players should he modified soi ; as not to interfere with thi3 year's I schedules of professional leagues. L Representative Nicholas Long worth. of Ohio, appeared on behalf of August Herrmann, chairman of ! the National Commission, and ask- I cU ' -at the decision bo postponed 'so the commission could formerly present its case. , General Crowder said he was prc , pared to make his recommendations, , • :'it would postpone further action until Wednesday if the, representa tives of the Washington club present, i agreed. They did, and the matter i went over. • Manager Griffith, of the Washing-, ton club, announced that his team; would leave for St. Louis so as to I P ! 'y the game scheduled for Thurs day unless President Johnson r is applicable to profes- j : I sional ballplayers is definitely tied by •' at time. Otherwise, he said, the Cleveland club will not p'ay' iit. game with New York on that! day. i The p-:>rrs scheduled for Clove land at Philadelphia yesterday t.o-d:>.y v>-f>ro advanced and previous-! 1 leavlnr the Cleveland tea.-n j file until Thursday. 1 WHERE FINNS FIGHT FOR RUSSIAN COAST i ~~ ~ ~ ' t : . I " ' \ <0 % '. C HI! * .*\n -"''"O 3!vt / A c e A I 'I V -v, • , . OS ©OV *■ , '• •: • b S " y 0 > i r • fouosi Niijj .. * ! r */ \ M .vf . ' ,-V.t.cabobs if " : A (<_ v / /.> ]OE.(?MAN-riNNISH fKEV $• •: J\ - A s forces advance _/ y TO OJT RAILROADA / / . < t s.J\ °[ y\ Kjl supposed to ei J v .-*jOfcNSNU j "tOIH.FCP O'.CGA / M 9 ° n . ' / SCALE cf Mii,ec W:; : : The Finns, aided and instigated by the Germans, are trying to get possession of the town of Murmansk and the coast along the Arctic Ocean. Murmansk is a boom town, the terminal of the railroad which runs south to business down there in importations which once went across the ital- I' c i ,rla P shows where the German and Finnish .forces are trying to ci!t the railroad; also the Gulf of Onega, where German U-boats arc believed to be ready to co-operate with these forces. ' RATimSXrCTRG TStT-EQHXPH Red Cross Offers Medal to Go!fersi Through the United States Golf 1 Association, the American Bed Cross j has arranged to provide an Ameri-1 can Bed Cros prize medal to be of fered in competition by golf clubs which contribute entry fees to the, Bed Cross instead of using them for purchasing substantial prizes. The association has agreed to be come responsible for keeping the matter on a high plane nnd applica- > ions from golf organizations will he handled by Captain H. F. Whitney, seen tary of the association, in this matt er Captain Whitney is working I in co-operation with Be Forrest i Hicks, chairman of the American Bed Cross Prize Committee. t 1- The plan of issuing tho medal was | adopted when it was found that in ;he absence of valuable prizes it was expedient to offer some tangible evi dence of success in competitions. The menial in question while inex-| nen >ive. is handsomely wrought In ' ronzo with a cross of red enamel, and is inscribed-: "Awarded In Becog nition of Aid to the Cause of Humantity." The plan has met with great favor from many golf clubs, and the liureau of Knterta inments and Bene fits of tho Bed Cross purposes to < xtend it to tennis clubs, yacht clubs and organizations for trap shootinir i" ' siv ilar, organisations which are willihg to c .ntribute to Bed Cross funds the sums they otherwise would: expend for trophies. They Did Yesterday; Where They Play Today YESTERDAY'S RESULTS American I.eairoe. Washington, 3; Chicago. 2. Boston, 1: Detroit, 0 (First game.) j | Boston, 3- Detroit. 0 (Second game.) 1 ; New York, 4: St. Louis, 4 (16 inn- , Ings, darkness.) Other club nut scheduled. Nntlunnl l.fnsiip Pittsburgh. 7: Boston. 2. Other club not scheduled. STANDING OK TIIF O.t'nS American 1. comic. Boston 55 31 .61R ' Cleveland 60 52 .543,' New York 43 4 .529 , 1 Washington 47 41 ,5341 St. Louis 40 45 .471 1 Chi'",-ro 30 47 .-!53 Philadelphia 36 49 .424 1 D< trolt, : 36 50 .419' National I.fafUf Chicago 5R 2S .fi . • —■l TURKISH CIGARETIBS I /T^ ARE HADE ESPECIALLY FOR THE if. D!s^Rm,NATiN& an °i exper,enced I i J They are J"st y -imk \ meeting '%L JV y° ur Best Girl ky \Jff- * ace to face, f REMEMBER— There are no I others like your "B. G." -J .-- j the appellate division of the New ] ) ork Supreme Court In a decision j handed down last week. County j Judge Addington upheld the Judgment i °f the Police Court imposing a scn t. nee of three months in the Albany , j county Jail. . Justice Charles K. ! Nichols granted a certificate of reu-] j sonalile doubt on. which Wright was ; admitted to ball, but ho will now have to serve his .sentence. The case was | | made a test in New York to deter- j mine whether tHe operation of base- ' ball pools constituted bookmaklng. | which the appellate division has now | decided in the affirmative, without ■ opinion. This decision comes too i late, however, to do any present good. ; The baseball pools generally have. In recent years, hurt tuTnor league nt j tendanfte everywhere more than nny I other cause, because multitudes of j ' former patrons preferred loafing In j I po*d rooms and iiatnbling there to at- j j finding yie games. ! los Angeles won the Pacific Cor-:t| ; l eague championship to-d ay, hv ae- j I f. ating the Vernon team nnd taking five of the post-season games in th< . championship aeries, Vernon won f only two games of the scries. Tyrus B Cobb and Christy Math l ew-i,in have J, u ,i i,\ Jane s .1. [ t'orbett to manage two all-star buse- I ball teams to play In ten of the I ; largest cities of the country within ' | the next month as a part of the ath-j ■ letlc program of the International j , Patriotic Athletic Association ofl ' which Mr. Curbett is president, it 1 was announ . d h. re last night. Under the plan su \.. -1. p- I tio— with that board to permit the . pla; cr to continue in bar. '.all. In consequence, should the major ; lei'iaics decide to make further pro i gics i in their schedules, it may be a j month before the full strength of the i order is felt, it la posidble that the ! major leagues, by calllnjf In old play ers as fast as the young men are taken, and by filling their ranks with | men from thff tninors, may be able to : finish the season in a very creditable sort of way. NO SWDBOT CHAMPIONSHIP liuliann|K>lls, July 22.—The an-; i nu tl sectionu' and national tourna- j 1 ments of the National Amateur Base-! ball Association have been discon-j tinued for the duration of the war.! President James H. Lowry of In dianapolis, announced to-day. The | action is duo to the provost marshal general's work or ti.sht order and the; j fact that many players are in tho I National Army. Four sectional tour- ! J naments \yere to have been held, prior to the national tournament. Kennedy Won P. R. R. Shoot at Conewago A very interesting: shoot was hcM by (ho I'. It. k. Keystone rtifle Club, over their rango ut.Conewngo. This match consisted of shooting tho National Kiflc Association's marks man courso at 200 yards, with [Tac tically everybody shooting the Krj rifle. The match was very well at tended and some close scores re build, leaving tho.final outcome in. doubt until Kennedy, a new mem ber <>f til;- club, shooting, iii tljo last squad, came through with a great exhibition and flntshejl with a score of is", out of a possible *2OO, casilv winning the match, as the nearest competitor could score only 178. Out of a total of nineteen participating, twelve qualified as marksmen. and second highest scores jarri.-d with them prizes of Thrift *; a ,n-,,3 The next match will be V ®V in the near future, and will c&nsiat of shooting the N. it. A.'s sharpsficoter course. > The scores of Saturday's motch follow: Slow Rapid Total Nnme Fire Fire . Scoro Kennedy 9.3 92 js-. Flowers 93 S4 Dickinson .... 91 87 17^ Appleton 89 s 7 Mi'Howan .... 87 82 169 Williams 88 74 jr. 3 Swonger 90 r.9 159 Brown 86 72 ir.o Miller 81 71 ir.i I'oulton 75 77 J v> ■ Keplinger .... 81 r.G ]'-<) Diheler 70 76 111? Trickenhiser ~ "7 V Stoll 78 47 Feigler 73 .19 Km use fi2 52 111 Witfle 62 4 2 104 Borngesser .... 49 47 Brdley 61 31 92 Trains With Wounded Tie Up Rhine Traffic ! Oenevn, July 23. Railway traffla 1 between Rhine towns Is greatly dis organized, owing to the number of wounded arriving" daily from tba French front in hosuital trains. Trains from Germany are arriving ! at the Swiss frontier many hours i late. The German Empress returned to lierlin yesterday In mourning.