Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, July 08, 1919, Page 17, Image 17

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    GAME ON ALLISON HILL TONIGHT WITH KLEIN CHOCOLATE TEAM; MOTIVE POWER WINS
Allison Hill Plays the .
Klein Chocolate Tonight
League Standing
t W. L. Pet.
•v Reading 1* 3 .823
Galahade 9 8 .020
Rosewood 7 19
St. Mary's 3 13 .200
The jazz game of hall arranged
for one -week ago on Allison Hill
with the Klein Chocolate Company
experts was set for this evening at
Seventeenth and Chestnut streets be-
ginning at 0.30 o'clock. John Breck
enrldge, long known in big league;
and a native son. is major j
flidomo of the occasion and he has a
v scheme for scattering copious cholo- i
late bars over the big crowds witl
i the aim of eliciting much coin which
may be used to pay off the expenses
. incurred in building a grandstand. .
The gam© should be of fast call- i
her for the chocolate company em- ;
Ploys only that sort to represent the j
team, but Manager Pressler, of the .
Reading club, will have a de luxe
band of all-stars. Yes, indeed; the> j
ure right In that little old Allison (
Hill League. Breckenridge said to- ,
day that Harrisburg may as well
start training to see another big
event soon, namely the appearance
here of Connie Mack's Athletics on
July 23 on the Island playing against
Klein folks. , ,
t Yesterdav Reading hooked Rose- ,
wood. 17-4. in a battle phenomenal
for hitting. Bunched wallops oft |
, Wachtman's flinging started Read
ing in the second inning with rue
tallies. Next trip they "fell down
badlv, only made four runs. And
finallv in the fifth the real slaughter
was staged, eight guys galloping
home. . .
Rosewood s downfall was due en
tirely to poor judgment of the bases.
In the third inning the first two men
to face O'Connell were given their
bases on balls and both were caught
out trying to steal. In the same in- j
ning O'Connell. who was also very
wild, issued five free passes but the
jbest Rosewood could do with this i
advantage was score one lonely
run. , .
. The game was featured with spec- ,
* tacular plays. In the first inning;
RESORTS
•-* ,
AT ATLANTIC CITY. X. J.
THE WILTSHIRE,
Virginia ave. and Beach. Ocean
view. Capacity 350. Private baths,
1 .inning water in rooms, elevator, etc.
Amer. plan, special weekly rates.
Booklet. SAMUEL ELLIS.
•2.50 np Dally. *1 *f>o nnWklT. Am. Plan
CLBERON
" * fireproof A one*. Tenners™ Av. nr. r.each.
Cap. 4W. Central; open surroundings: opp. Catho
lic and Protestant Churches. Criva'c Boths.
RUNNING WATER IN All ROOMS
Exeellenttable: fresh Tepetobbs.
screened. White serrice. Booklet, i. B. IUOY.M. D.
" CHESTER HOUSE,
15 & 17 S. Georgia Ave., nr. Beach.
Two sqs. from Reading Sta. $1.50 to
2 dly; $3 to 10 wky. Mrs. T. Dickerson
•uOTCD ro** IT'S
Al AVC.ATL.CJTY.N.J7** 1
Scrupulously clean, electric lighted .
throughout. White service. Hot and
cold water baths. SI.OO up daily. sl2
up weekly. Estab. 40 years. Emerson
Crouthart.el. Mgr. *
AMERICAN PLAN (with meals)
$3.00 up Daily, $15.00 up Weekly
Best Located Popular Price Hotel
NETHERLANDS
New York Ave. 50 Yds. from B'dwalk
Overlooking lawn and ocean. Cap. 400
Elevator; private baths; hot and cold I
running water in rooms; table
and service a feature
* SPECIAL FREE FEATURES
BATHING PRIVILEGE FROM HOTEL
IVWN TENNIS COURT, DANCE FLTL
Booklet with Pointa of Interest mailed
AUGUST RL'HWAbEL, Proprietor
(MfIARLES
\ II ON THE OCEAN FRONT
\ II p"levcr\ stories of real
l_Jcomfbrt witnaix onvi-
If ronme rvt of distinct reflne
ijjOl*SH rrumtwithoutextrovacance
F !AMTBLCAH PLAN. ALWAYS OPEN
| V 1 I LITERATUR£AVJTERMS MAILED.
L /\ il Win.A. LeechMnn
|
COURTESY. QUALITY, SERVICE.
HOTEL KENTUCKY,
KENTUCKY AV.. NEAR BEACH.
Euro. Plan—Rates. $1 to $3.50 daily.
American Plan —$3 to $5 daily; sl6
to $25 weekly.
Elev.; eiec. lights; tel. every room;
run. water in rooms- private baths
Phone 3105. N. B. KENNADY.
SOMERSET HOUSE
MISSISSIPPI AVE.
32nd season under same management.
$2.50 up daily. Special weekly.
MRS. RUTH STEES. Prop.
HOTEL ALDER
0 S. ML Vernon Ave.
Centrally located. American & Euro
pean Plans. Fine rms. Excel, table.
Mod. rates. Bathing from hotel
O. )L ALDER
rVJOINTICELLO
1 MUCELS IN CJOMTORT.SERVICE MO CUISINE
Kentucky av. & Beach. Heart of At
lantic City. Cap. 500; modern through
out. $3 up dally; sl6 up weekly;
American plan. A C. EKHOLM.
H E AL Y'S
Ocean End Kentucky Ave.
All conveniences. $2.50 day up. sl4
up weekly. Bathing from hotel.
Formerly of the Tennessee.
Vooleet and Moat Attractive Location
HOTEL ESPLANADE
WHOLE BLOCK. OCEAN FRONT.
Directly on the Boardwalk. Boston
to Sovereign ave., in exclusive Chelsea
section. Capacity. 500. Fresh and sea
water baths, private and public and
every appointment. Modern hydro
therapeutic department.
Orchestra Dancing.
Auto bus meets trains. Booklet.
Ownership direction. W. F. SHAW.
AT ASBURY PARK. N. J.
w HOTEL THAT MADE SHORE
DINNERS FAMOUS
-Tlaza Hotel and Gril'
On Ocean Front
Asbory Park, New Jersey
Headquarters For Auto
Tourists
European Plan
• * Garage in Connection
TUESDAY EVENING, HAJtRJSBURG TELEGRAPH JULY & 1919.
Challenger made a beautiful catch
of a red hot line drive off Levan's
bat after he had raced some dis
tance.
The score;
ROSEWOOD
R. H. O. A. E.
Reidell, ss 1 0 0 0 1
Fortna, lb . 2 3 4 0 1
Stroud, ss 1 2 1 3 3
Challenger, cf .. . 0 0 1 0 0
Bender. 2b 0 1 1 1 0,
Hoerner, rf 0 0 0 0 0
Johnson. If 0 1 0 0 0.
Wachtman, p 0 0 1 2 0 i
McLaughlin, c .... 0 2 7 0 1
Totals 4 9 15 6 6 i
READING
R. H. O. A. E.
Shartle. If 2 0 0 0 0 j
C. Swartz, 2b .... 4 2 6 1 0 !
Levan, 3 b 2 2 1 1 0
Ellenberger. ss ~. 0 1 2 2 0 ■
G. Swartz, c 1 0 2 5 1 ;
Bowman, lb 2 0 4 0 0 j
Murphy, cf...... 2 1 2 0 0'
O'Connell, p 2 1 0 2 ll
H. Swartz, rf 2 1 0 0 1 j
Totals 17 8 18 11 3 1
Rosewood A. C. 0 0 1 0 2 1 0— 4
Reading A. C. .054 0 8 0 x—l 7 j
Two-base hits. Ellenl erger, Mur- I
phy, Stroud. Levan. Three-base j
hit. H. Swarjz. Struck out, by ■
Wachtman, 6: O'Connell, 1; Levan, i
2. Base on balls, off Wachtman, 7; I
off O'Connell. 6; off Levan. 0. Stol- j
en bases, C. Swartz, 2: Ellenberger, j
Johnson, Bender, Stroud. Balk, i
Wachtman. Umpire, Dick Neb-[
inger.
Sad Tales in Wake of
Dempsey- Willard Fight
Toledo, July B.—All doubt con
cerning the number of knockdowns
Jack Dempsey scored in the tiYst
round of his heavyweight cham
pionship contest with Jess Willard
July 4 was removed to-day when
motion pictures exhibited here pri
vately to Promoter Tex Rickard and
a party of friends, revealed that the
dethroned champion was sent to the
canvas seven times.
There were no knockdowns in the
remaining two rounds but Willard
probably would have been floored
if the ropes of the ring had not sup- j
ported him.
Dempsey, the pictures revealed,
floored Willard with left hooks to
' 14 1
SUNDAY EXCURSION
Seashore jj
ATLANTIC CITY, OCEAN CITY, !
SEA ISLE CITY, WILDWOOD
or CAPE MAY
JULY 13 & 27
SPECIAL EXCURSION TRAIN
From Fare Lv. A.M.
Harrisburg $2.75 4.40
Hummelstown 2.75 4.56
Swatara 2.70 5.02
Hershey 2.70 5.05 \
Palmyra 2.60 5.12 1 1
Annville 2.50 5.22 j
Cleona 2.50 5.26
Lebanon 2.50 5.33 !
Reading Termin. (ar
rive) 8.15 1
War Tax 8 Per Cent. Additional.
RETURNING Special Train j
will leave Philadelphia, Reading I
Terminal, 10.00 P. M., same date |
for above stations.
These special excursion tickets j
will be good only on date of ex- j
cursion on above special train in I
each direction; they will be ac- j
cepted on any train, date of ex- 1
cursion. from Philadelphia to 1
destination and return to Phila- j
delphia.
Children between 5 and 12 years
of age. half fare.
Philadelphia & Reading
Railroad
V- 1
Hi |, r
LAKE LOUISE -1 .
r PRANSPLANT a famous Metropoli- j
y tan Hotel to the most exquisite' < <jk 11 jI I ■
| setting of lake, mountains and glacier,' || j!
I CHATEAU LAKE LOUISE J I
L where the windows frame million dol- I 11 I
s lar pictures of Victoria Glacier and the ;
f Choose your own recreation by day |
fc from Mountain Climbing, with Swiss -* 11 IH H
K Guides, Coaching, Pony Riding, Easy Bill ,
p| Alpine Trails, to Lakes in the Clouds
•' ana Valley of the Ten Peaks. Evenings, H} J ffl Ift] [A
[ Excellent Orchestra and Dancing. JfiHu IB liwl tf 7
Moderate Rates European Plan iijl | J
1 Include this on your trip to the coast |L DUfT V
' with stops at Calgary, Banff, Glacier, ™ fMltth
f Sicamous, Vancouver aud Victoria, all oMtingjpVa IB i]j j |'
links in Canadian Pacific Railway '''Jii jjjj! I •
I Call or write for Resort Tetir JJo. 11l '4 jjjii <ij [ i
| F. R. PERRY, General Apt, Pass. Dept. . Pjjljj jfßj, jl|] ||||
i CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY Gil 111 l
| | 1231 Broadway New York CHy Pa i||Ji I) I
! SNOODLES - By Hangerford
( HOIwS THAT TOft A SWELL UD- f IV3 PANAMA ANP |— —— f y ou S
- \
V IT'S - vaihat po A / p 0 PPYi X J ( voufl-HAT J
Argentine Senate Approves
Entrance to Nations League
By Associated Press.
Washington, July B.—Entrance of
! Argentina into the League of Na
| tions without reservations has been
I approved by the Argentine Senate,
j the State Department is informed.
• The action of the Argentine Sen-
J ate, according to information at the
i State Department made that repub
i lie the first nation to assent through
J its treaty ratifying body to the
League of Nations Covenant.
the chin for the first four knock
downs. He upset the defeated cham
pion for the other three knockdowns
with right and left swings. The
first blow that upset Willard was a
short right swing to the heart fol
lowed by a left hook to the chin.
Clerks are finishing the task of
checking up the gate receipts and
attendance of the match.
It developed to-day that conces
sionaires, who expected to reap a
rich harvest from the crowd at the
Fourth of July contest lost heavily.
[ Ad. Q. Thacher, matchmaker of the
Toledo Boxing Commission, who con
verted an abandoned five-story
building into a sleeping dormitory,
dropped $4,100 on the venture. The
night of July 3 only nineteen persons
registered, and twelve of this num
ber succeeded in avoiding the clerks
who were supposed to collect $5
from each sleeper. One concession
aire who invested S9OO in peanuts
sold S7O worth.
More Hard Luck
Emil Thiery and Barney Lich
tenstein of Chicago, who had the
lemonade privilege claim that they
got the worst deal of all. Bat Nel
son. with economy in mind, set up
a tent for himself just inside the
barbed wire fence surrounding the
arena. The night before the fight
he decided he would take a sponge
bath and seeing a lot of big tanks
piled up nearby made an inspec
tion and found them filled with what
seemed to be water. He thereupon
decided in favor of a plunge bath
and jumped into one of them.
Thiery and Lichenstein discovered
next morning that Bat had bathed
in some of their treasured lemonade.
Dempsey and Willard are about
the only ones who have not made
any complaint about the financial
returns. Dempsey, however, was
besieged by an army of creditors
soon after the fight, but he paid them
all promptly. He says one Salt Lake
man reminded him that he owed him
1 six bits.
Tex Rickard says his profits on
the Dempsey-Willard fight will not
jbe over SIOO,OOO. The gate receipts
' have not been counted yet. The
| money, tied up in bags, still reposes
; in a Toledo bank vault but Tex says
f the total will be only about $500,-
l 000, although two weeks ago the
i indications were that it would reach
! $1,000,000.
Willard, accompanied by his wife
! and two personA' friends, started
| from Toledo yesterday to travel
! home to Lawrence, Kansas, in a
seven-passenger car he bought while
, training. He expects the trip will
. consume about a week. The swel
• ling over his left eye had entirely
disappeared and the only marks he
| bore was a slight discoloration over
the eye and a cut lip.
TAKES MOTIVE POWER
TO PUT THE PEP
UNTO COMMONWEALTH
LEAGUE STANDING
W. L. Pet
1 West End 11 6 .647
Motive Power 10 8 .555
Commonwealth 9 10 .473
|E. and F. ...) 6 12 .666
\ I remember, I remember, that sum
mer of Nineteen;
I The baseball park at West End
I So inviting, sweet and green.
| You could glmpse the Susquehanna
| As you yelled your loud hosanua
When the horsehide lifted for a
home run, clean.
"Yes, sir; I'd sooner have motive
power than common wealth," med
itated the long faced rooter as he
left the West End park yesterday
evening to his friend, the fat, hap
py rooter. Motive power is what
wins a ball game and the name fits
the players; when you say Common
wealth Travelers, well, some of 'cm
can travel, but then again, the com
monwealth suffers because they skip
so many bases."
Y'es. they made a bunch of errors
last evening, so many that "Dewey"
| Eisenberger became miffed and quit
the box. The result of this was as
the West End poet laureate slip
ped it to the reporter:
When "Dewey" Eisenberger quit
And eased his teeth upon the bit
He took the zip from Common
wealth
Endangered, too, the rooters'
health:
To call him "Dewey" makes one
rave;
Old George would spring from out
his grave.
Motive Power huskies treated Eis
enberger pretty rude. but. at that,
the hitting was thunderous all
through. 22 bumps being registered.
"Pewev"was In fair shape and would
probably have won, only for con
tinuous sour playing behind him.
He endured this until half through
the second inning, then left in dis
gust and Washinger took his place.
Motive Power was not agitated at
this change, and all told, nicked
Washinger for 8 hits and four runs.
Empire Cook was among the he
roes of the day. for a foul tip smote
him so fair on the mask that he was
stunned, but he held his nerve and
poise and even when a hardened
fan called out "That's the best play
of the game" he did not lose his
temper. Cook is a clever man with
the indicator; he keeps the game
speeded up.
Bamford had seed and control and
in the third he signalized his work
by striking out Washinger on three
ST. MARY'S HITLESS BY
KARMATZ'S PITCHING
Standing of the Clubs
W. L. Pet.
East End ... 18 8 .692
Swatara 17 9 .662
St. Mary's 6 13 .316
Hygienic 4 14 .223
East End blanked St. Mary's in
the City Junior League game last
evening by a score of 5 to 0. Kar
matz twirled an excellent game for
East End. only allowing his oppo
nents three hits. East End started
right off in the beginning and made
sure of things when Strine walked.
Shover singled. Strine going to third.
Books walked, filling the sacks.
Dunkle sacrificed Strine home on a
bunt, Stoufer singled, sending
Shover and Books home, Reed dou
bled to left, Stoufer making third.
Peace tried to bunt but was thrown
out at first.
One more was added in the sec
ond frame and another-In the fifth,
while Karmatz held his opponents
at his mercy all through the game
and their only chahce of scoring
came in the fourth when two men
were given a base on balls after one
man was retired. The two next men
became victims of Karmatz*s curves
and the side was retired.
Tonight the two Steelton teams
meet at Nineteenth and Greenwood.
Hygienic and St. Mary's are both
putting up stiff games and to-night's
game is sure to be fast.
On Saturday afternoon Swatara is
scheduled to meet the Boys' Bri
gade, of New Cumberland, at New
Cumberland, at 2.30 o'clock. The
Bovs' Brigade squad has been put
ting up a fine record, winning
twenty-seven games without a de- ■
feat. The last game Swatara played
with this team resulted in a defeat I
by 4 to 3 in fourteen innings. The j
score:
EAST END
AB R. H. O. A. 1 |
Strine, lb, c... 3 2 1 6 1 0.
Shover, 3 1 2 1 0 0 1
Books, rf 3 1 0 1 2 0,
Dunkle. 1f.... 4 0 1 1 0 0i
Stoufer, c..... 3 0 1 8 1 0 |
Reed, 2b 4 0 1 0 0 0;
Peace, 3b 2 1 1 1 2 0 j
Shaefer, cf 3 0 0 0 0 0 f
Karmatz, p.... 3 0 1 0 2 0 j
Heagy, ss 1 0 0 0 0 0 j
Snyder, 1b.... 0 0 0 2 0 ® j
Cover, lb 1 0 0 1 1 0;
Total .30 B 8 21 9
ST. MARY'S
AB R. H. O. A. E !
Juas, c . ...... 2 0 0 7 1 0 j
Dal ley, 3b 3 0 0 2 3 0
Sanders, 1b... 1 0 0 7 1 ® 1
Hocker. If 3 0 1 2 0 0,
Brodinck, ss ... 3 0 1
Clade, 2b, p.... 3 0 0 1 0 0 )
pitched balls. Garverich was a big
feature all through; he had three
two-baggers, one of them bringing
in a brace of runners. "Johnny"
Smith, league leader In hitting, once
more made himself renowned. The
Tech star lambasted one In the fatal
fiflh for the circuit, scoring Gerdes
ahead of htm. Commonwealth made
some effort in this inning to catch
up, but after two runs came in Eb
erly stopped the assault by fasten
ing onto N. Smith's high drive. Wea
ver. the clever third sacker for Mo
tive power, entirely lost the ball in
the sixth with a monumental wallop
off Washinger; the ball never being
located in as it sailed toward the
Susquehanna. Another rally took
place in the sixth when Killinger
doubled and came home on Field's
single. Fields, by clever baserun
ning. came In with a secand run
whlch finished the scoring: Casual
ties:
COMMONWEALTH
R. H. O. A. E.
Gerdes, 3b 1 2 1 1 1
Hinkfe, s.s 1 2 4 1 1
J. Smith, r.f 1 2 0 0 1
Lightner, c.f 1 0 2 0 0
Klugh, 1 0 1 5 0 0
W. Smith, l.f 0 0 0 0 2
E. Killinger, c 1 1 3 0
L. Bell. 2 0 9 0 1 1
Fields, l.f 1 1 1 9 9
Eisenerger, p 0 0 1 1 0
Washinger, p 0 0 0 4 0
Totals 6 9 21 13 4
MOTIVE POWER
R. H. O. A. E.
Eberley, 2b 2 1 2 2 0
Stewart, s.s 2 1 1 2 0
Brown, c. f 4 2 0 0 0
Howe, 1 1 9 9 9
Gaverich, r.f. ..... 0 3 2 0 0
Weaver, 3b 1 3 0 2 0
Hocker, 1. f. ....... 0 0 2 0 0
McCurdy. lb 9 9 8 0 0
Bamford, p 1 2 0 1 0
Totals 11 13 21 7 0
Motive Power . 3 4 0 2 0 2 o—ll
Commonwealth .1 0 0 1 2 2 0— 6
Two-base hits, Garverich, 3; Hin
kle. 1; E. Killinger; 3-hase hit.
Brown: home runs, J. Smith, Wea
ver: sacrifice fly, E. Killinger, Gar
verich; struck out, by Eisenberger,
1; by Bamford, 5: Washinger, 6;
base on balls, Bamford, 3: Washing
er, 1: left on bases. Commonwealth.
6: Motive Power. 5; hit by p'tcher,
E. McCurdy: stolen banes. Brown,
Hinkle, 2; Stewart. Wearer Lightner,
Gerdes: wild pitches, Bamford. 2.
Time. 1.40. Umpires, Cook and Hen
ry. Scorer, McCahau.
Dolmar, cf .... 2 0 0 0 1 0
Verbos, rf 2 0 0 0 0 0
Lauder, p, 2b.. 3 0 1 1 2 0
Total 22 0 3 21 10 2
East End 3 1 0 1 0 0 o—s
St. Mary's 000000 o—o
Two base hit—Reed, Brodinck,
Lauder. Sacrifice hits—Dunkle.
Double plays—Books to Stine.
Struck out—By Lauder, 2; Clade, 7,
Karmatz, 7. Base on balls—Off Lau
der, 0; Clade, 2; Karmatz, 2. Left
on base—East End, 4; St. Mary's, 2.
Hit by pitcher—Peace. Stolen bases
—Strine, Shover, Books, Lauder,
Juas. Passed balls—Juas. Innings
pitched—Clade, 5; Lauder, 2. Time
—1.19. Umpires Moore and
Hocker.
BASEBALL RESULTS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Yesterday's Results
New York, 10; Philadelphia, 5
(first game).
New York, 7; Philadelphia, 2
(second game).
Pittsburgh. 14; St. Louis, 9.
Standing of the c lub.
, W. L. Pet.
New York 42 21 .666
Cincinnati 44 23 .657
Chicago 37 31 .544
Brooklyn 34 32 .515
Pittsburgh 35 33 .514
St. Louis 27 40 .432
Boston 24 38 .387
Philadelphia 18 43 .295
Schedule For To-day
Cincinnat at Boston.
Pittsburgh at Brooklyn.
St. Louis at New York.
Chicago at Philadelphia.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
jSAND
For contracting pur
poses. We will de
-11 liver good River Sand
to any point in Har
risburg and suburbs.
! Builders' requirements
promptly supplied.
Phone our main office.
United Ice & Coal Co. j
Forster A Cowden SU.
I 1 1 I
r
Yesterday's Results
St. Louis. 3; Cleveland, 2.
New York. 3; Washington, 2.
Chicago, 8; Detroit, 3.
Boston, 2; Philadelphia, 0 (first
game).
Boston, 5; Philadelphia 4 (second
game).
Standing of the Clubs
W. L. Pet.
New York 40 22 .643
Chicago ....: 41 25 .622
IF\.
li Some men
V don't like any I
\ Turkish" j]
at all.* Af
See Thursday's Papers
■ > V
—NOT AN ADVERTISEMENT
FOR ANY PARTICULAR CIGARETTE
—lt may even make you like
your present cigarette better^"-*,
THE HUB'S I
July Clearing Sale
Once each season we clear our decks. That time has arrived. No goods
are ever carried over from one season to another. Each season finds us
with brand new, bright fresh merchandise of the highest grades.
Tomorrow we inaugurate our JULY CLEARANCE SALE of Men's and
Boys' Clothing, Hats and Furnishings.
Here you 11 find hundreds and hundreds of wonderful saving opportuni
ties that no man who realizes what market conditions are will fail to take I
advantage of.
A comparison of qualities and HUB VALUES invariably means another II
customer for THE HUB.
MEN'S SUITS 7C MEN'S SUITS 7C 11
that sold at */ 1 112 that sold at X Xll2
$25.00, are .1. . ™* 545.00, are . Vw—_
MEN'S SUITS s*)/ MEN'S SUITS jn 7C
that sold at that sold at
$30.00, are .... ■ V—, $50.00, are .. . jtJnd
MEN'S SUITS so/\ 7c; MEN'S SUITS $ J/ 7C
that sold at * <i that sold at
$35.00, are .... V v $55.00, are ..... . .
MEN'S SUITS sr| J 7C MEN'S SUITS jf\ 7c
that sold at *<A IL!? that sold at
$40.00, are .... Vl $60.00, are .. . .
ALTERATIONS FREE
All Boys' Clothing Greatly* Reduced.
All Men's Silk and Madras Shirts Reduced.
All Men's Straw and Panama Hats Reduced.
THQRHIB
320 Market Street
Cleveland 36 29 .553
St. 'Louis 32 31 .509
Detroit 32 32 .500
Boston 30 34 .468
Washington 28 38 .425
Philadelphia 17 45 .2 74
Schedule For To-(lay
No games scheduled.
TROOP 11 WANTS REVENGE
Troop Eleven's baseball team plays
the Duncannon Boy Scouts team on
the island this evening at 6.15. The
following players are to report at 6
o'clock for the game: Young, Look
er. Selghman, A. Taylor, E. Taylor,
R. Walker, Thompson, Free, Mur
ray, P. Walker, Hylan, Wichello,
Nye, Stoner. Troop 11 expects to
surprise Duncannon by giving them
a stinging defeat. Troop 11 lost a
well played game at Duncannort two
1 weeks ago by a score of 3-2.
17