The star-independent. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1904-1917, April 23, 1915, Page 10, Image 10

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    10
fUrquharts
In Patterns
"Just a
Little Bit
Different"
The cloth sensation this Spring is a double plaid
called the Glen Urquhart Over Plaid.
The popularity of tJiis double plaid has gone to great
heights. Many of the patterns are almost too
common.
We have Glen Urquharts in all wool guaranteed
quality whose patterns suggest tone and exclusive
ness. This is because we are exclusive headquarters
for
Styleplus Clothes
$17.00
made by the largest users of woolens in the country.
Hence confined patterns.
The Hub's Special
$25.00
we have collected a selection of fabrics that you can
not match at a merchant tailor's without paying a
"DANDY" price.
And don't forget the styling. Both STYLEPLUS
and The Hub's Special are cut by famous master de
signers.
Get the Habit! Come to the Hub!
THEIHUB
320 MARKET STREET
NEWS OF THE SPORTING WORLD
MERCHANDISE SHOOT FOR
POLYCLINIC HOSPITAL
Harrisburg Sportsmen's Association
Will Manage Benefit Event at Sec
ond and Division Streets. Starting
at 10 O'clock To-morrow
The Harrisburg Sportsmen's Associ
ation will manage a shoot on the Sec
ond and Division street grounds of the
association starting at 1 o'clock to
morrow nt'ternoon for the benefit of the
Polyclinic Hospital. The program fol
lows:
Event Xo. 1, 50-targets, $2.50 on
t \
SUITS TO ORDER
$15 u P
You «an choose from more styles,
fabrics, patterns and color effects
than you will find anywhere else.
You are assured absolute satis
faction from every standpoint.
Your money back if anything goes
wrong is your guarantee that every
thing will be right.
LOU BAUM
13 N. Fourth St
trance; event Xo. 2, optional sweeps.
All shoot from 16 yards. Prizes to be
distributed Lewis class system. Target
thrown about 50 yards. Target thrown
from two sets of traps. All contest
ants shooting through event Xo. 1
will receive a prize. The same has
been donated by the business men of
Harrisburg. An invitation is extended
to all persons to join us in this shoot,
ami as the object is a charitable one,
we hope to have a great many entries.
Merchandise prizes which will be
awarded the successful contestants and
which range from a ton of coal to a
box of writing paper follow:
Mahogany chair, upholstered; steel
fishing rod, silk wound; Gem shooting
jacket, ton coal, Fry Coal Company;
ton coal, Sam Mentzer; pipe, meer
shaum; pair pants, fishing rod, trolling;
hand trap, hand trap, five-pound box
candy, pipe, French briar; picture,
flamed; hat, select; half ton coal, box
cigars, shirt, box cigars, umbrella,
shirt, fishing rod, steel; necktie pin,
pipe. French briar; box dog cakes, 25
pounds; pair pillow cases, cap, box
writing paper, razor, shell bag, quart
Sherry, box candy, box paper and en
velopes, bottle lilac, pair slippers, quart
wine, boxes soap, jar cream, 1 box
soal, 1 towel, jug bath salt, box cigars,
fishing rod and ton coal.
FOREMEN PLAY BALL
Washies and Friendship Laddies to
Meet To-morrow Afternoon
The fur will fly to-morrow after
noon at 4 o'clock when the Washing
ton Fire Company and the Friendship
Fire Company diamond representatives
will (neet on the H. A. C. fiel'j. There
is greater rivalry between these teams
than between the Feds and Organized
Baseball. The clubs have been faithful
ly practicing every day for this occa
sion and will make desperate efforts to
win.
The Washies will appear in their
new grey uniforms. Trainer Charles
Ripper will pick his team from the fol
lowing:
"Punk" Geiger, rf; R. Rudy, 3b;
Mike Winn, cf; K. Schwartz, 2b; J.
Blessing If; George Huber, lb; Earl
McCurdy, ss; B. Sawyer, c; H. Cheno
weth, p; E. Swartz, p; G. Chenoweth,
p; W. Herschlev, p; E. Kelly, p.
Checked Dead Baby in Grip
'Berwyn, Pa., April 23.—A P. R. R.
baggage agent Wednesday found a
grip which had been checked from the
Broad-street station on April 1. In it
he found the body of an infant boy.
The cane is being investigated.
HARKISBITfm STAR-INDEPENDENT, FRIDAY EVENING. 28, 1915
BASEBALL SUMMARY
STANDING OF CLUBS
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L P.C.
Phillies 7 0 1.000
Cincinnati 6 3 .667
Chicago 4 4 .500
Boston 4 4 .500
Pittsbrugh 4 4 .500
Brooklyn 3 6 .333
St. Louis 3 6 .333
New York <2 6 .250
Yesterday's Results
Philadelphia, 8; Boston, 4.
Brooklyn, 6; New York, 4.
Pittsburgh, S; Cincinnati, 2.
St. Louis, 9; Chicago, 5.
Schedule for To-dsy
Boston at Philadelphia.
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh.
New York at Brooklyn.
Chicago at St. Louis.
Schedule for To-morrow
Boston at Philadelphia.
New York at Brooklyn.
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh.
Chicago at St. Louis. '
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L P.C.
Detroit 7 2 .77S
Washington 5 3 .625
Boston 4 ,571
Cleveland 5 4 .556
New York 4 4 .500
St. Louis 3 6 .333
Chicago 3 6 .333
Athletics 2 5 .286
Yesterday's Results
Boston, 7; Athletics, C
Washington, 5; New York, 1,
Detroit, 5; Cleveland, 3.
Chicago, 5; St. Louis, 4.
Schedule for To-day
Athletics at Boston.
Detroit at Cleveland.
Washington at Now York.
St. Louis at Chicago.
Schedule for To-morrow
Philadelphia at Boston.
Washington at New York.
Detroit at Cleveland.
St. Louis at Chicago.
—— — i
FEDERAL LEAGUE
W. L P.C.
Newark 7 4 .636
Chicago 5 3 .625
Brooklyn 6 4 .600
Kansas City 5 5 .500
Pitsburgh 5 5 .300
Buffalo . ' 5 5 .500
St. Louis 3 5 .375
Baltimore 3 8 .273
Yesterday's Results
Newark, 3; Brooklyn, 0.
Buffalo, 3; Baltimore, 0.
Other clubs not scheduled.
Schedule for To-day
Baltimore at Buffalo.
Brooklyn at Newark.
Chicago at Kansas City.
Pittsburgh at St. Louis.
Schedule for To-morrow
Pittsburgh at St. Louis.
Chicago at Kansas City.
Brooklyn at Newark.
Baltimore at Buffalo.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Philadelphia, 8; Boston, 4
Philadelphia, April 23. —Playing
with a determination and dash that
fairly smothered the World's Cham
pions and brought victory in the Sth
innitig, the Phillies opened the National
League season at Broad and Hunting
don streets yesterday in a manner that
made 18,000 fans happy.
R. H. E.
Phillies ... 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 5 x—B 10 3
Boston ....
Alexander and Killifer; Hess and
Gowdy.
Brooklyn, 6; New York, 4
Brooklyn, April 23.—Brooklyn open
ed its home season with a 6 to 4 vic
tory over New York, batting Marquard
out of the box after Rucker had met
the same fate earlier in the game.
R. H. E.
New York .03000001 o—4 8 2
Brooklyn ..00002310 x—6 11 0
'.Marquaril, Ritter and Meyers; Ruck
er, Del! and Miller.
St. Louis Beats Chicago
St. Louis, April 23.—'Errors by the
visitors and bunched hits off the op
posing pitchers helped St. Louis to win
the opening game of the local National
League season from Chicago yesterday
afternoon. The score was 9 to 5.
Chicago ... 100 0 2 20 0 o—s 5 3
St. Louis .. 04012002 x—9 9 1
Vaughn, Standridge and Bresnahan;
Meadows, Doak and Snyder,
Pittsburgh, 8; Cincinnati, 2
Pittsburgh, April 23.—Pittsburgh
opened its home schedule yesterday
with an S-to-2 victory over Cincinnati.
. R. H. E.
Cincinnati ..00100100 o—2 9 2
Pittsburgh .. 00402020 x—B 9 0
Douglass, Brown. Dale and Clarke,
«ingo; Adams and Gibson.
KEENER AT HIGHSPIRE
Last Practice Game for Central Penn
sylvania League Team
Highspire. April last of
the practice games to be played by the
Highspire A. C. nine prior to the open
ing of the Central Pennsylvania League
schedule v.ill be played' on the High
spire grounds Saturday afternoon at 3
o'clock, their opponents being the
Keener \. C., of Hamstjurg.
The latter team defeated the High
spire aggregation last season and, to
prevent a repetition, Manager Walte
meyer will place his strongest lineup
in the field. Calhoun will do the re
ceiving, while Cramer will occupy the
mound at the opening innings for
Highspire.
ARROW
COLLAR
, Let's gather around
for it's the open season for chumming it with a jimmy pipe
that's all packed jamfull of Prince Albert—tobacco that never JMM^llilH
bit any other man's tongue, and won't
bite yours I ->:3j^Kfl^S||iMß^^^H|KMgWW||Pß|Hw^roMW
For it's mighty widespread news nowa
days that Prince Albert is made by a
patented process that takes the teeth out
of the smoke and leaves your tongue
calm and peaceful-like. Just sunshine,
and happiness, and quick repeats for ' :
yours! That's jimmy pipe joy via
the national joy smoke *i*2SS<S?
It will interest you to know that since s' \yf!?'^W^ / /wjßKßmWrf/ t \ W tH#
Prince Albert hit the pike three men / jMI \ jj'/Pyjffl(J* // mffnfffMl '/' njffj , ' \*>\ jl i] 'MyX
smoke a pipe where one smoked /( 4frr . yfh // { ffil t'< lm£ l' iV (\((fr " l 'hl \'v
before. It blazed the trail to pipe joy. ( /fAJ^jfiAtAK|M(y x JA\/
such as men before never could know. \ fwf''''"' / m \ I V
You put faith in your old pipe once •' '' \ : L
more; pack it right full of P. A. and • \T~~ir — H / f\ tw^wi h
go to it like you never were tongue- __—- \ f/MJ (jl y)nWAk'\\f( )
tortured in your whole life. For P. A. / . ' M?,,' ) iljr Jnij'&nt.- 4
will prove out everything we say C Cd 7 y v wllw//
about ft that's good. Just can't ' ''''■[ f '
You like P. A. fine in the tidy red tins,
sponge-moistener top. It keeps P. A.
and half-pound tin humidors
R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., Winston-Salem, N. C. '.y' jl
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Boston, 7; Athletics, 6
Boston, April 23.—The Athletics
lost to the Red Sox at Fenway Park
yesterdav afternoon.
R. H. E.
Boston ....01010012 2—7 9 2
Athletics ...00401100 o—60 —6 10 6
Shore, Comstock and Cady; W r yckoff,
Shawkey and McAvov.
Washington, 5; New York, 1
New York, April 23.—The New
York Americans opened their home
season here yesterday by losing to
Washington 5 to 1.
Washington .0010111 01—5 11 0
New York ..00000010 o—l 4 3
Shaw and Henry; McHale, Brown
and Sweeney.
Detroit, 5; Cleveland, 3
Cleveland, April 23.—Cleveland
lost its opening game to Detroit, 5 to
3, a "bad inning for Mitchell allowing
Detroit to bunch four hits with the
pitcher's own error, producing four
runs.
R. H. E.
Cleveland ...00000300 o—30 —3 7 2
Detroit 00040000 I—s 9 0
Mitchell, Hagerman and O'Neill;
Dubuc and Stanage.
, Chicago, 5; St. Louis, 4
Chicago, April 23.—The Chicago
White Sox nosed out the St. Louis
Browns here yesterday by the score of
5 to 4.
D T . R. H. E.
St. Louis ...0030 0' 100 o—4 8 0
Chicago 00 0 00000 5 —5 6 0
Wielnian, Loudermilk and Agnew;
Jasper, Faber and Sebalk.
TECH LOSES AGAIN
New Bloomfield Academy Wins Easily
10 to 3
The New Bloomfield Academy again
defeated the Technical High school
nine yesterday afternoon by the score
of 10 to 3. This time the affair took
I lace on Island Park. The visitors
pounded out a victory in the first in
ning. while Reeder held the local bat
ters to six well distributed hits. The
score: ♦
TECHNICAL
R. H. O. A. E.
Stewart, ss 1 o 3 2 0
'Mell, If 0 1 0 0 0
Weaver, 2b 1 l l 4 0
Beach, e 0 1 8 1 0
Andrews, 3b 0 1 2 0 2
Lescure, lb 0 0 10 0 i
Wagner, p 0 0 0 0 0
Reiff, p 0 1 0 3 1
Kutz, rf 0 0 2 1 0
Heagy, cf 0 0 0 0 0
Challenger, cf .. .. 1 1 1 0 0
Totals 3 6 27 11 4
NEW BLOOMFIELD
R. H. O. A. E.
Harner, ef 1 3 2 0 0
A. Reeder, c 1* 3 4 3 0
Mutzebaugh 2b .. 1 2 0 2 1
Fr 'use, 3h 1 1 0 3 0
Welcomer, ss 0 0 5 0 1
Babcock, If 2 2 5 0 0
Rittcr, rf 2 1 1 0 0
E. Reeder, p 1 1 1 3 0
Shearer, 1b...... 1 2. 9 0 0
Totals 10 15 27 11 2
Technical .... 09200001 0— 3
New Bloomfield. 80100010 o—lo
Two-base hits,'Babcock, 2; Ritter.
Sacrifice hit, Welcomer. Sacrifice fly,
Andrews. Struck out, by Reiff, 5; by
Reeder, 4. Base on ball's, off Reiff, 3;
off Reeder, 4. Wild pitches, Reeder, 2.
Time, 2 hours.
FEDERAL LEAGUE
Newark, 3; Brooklyn, O
Newark, N. J., April '23.—Harry
Moran, the young southpaw, twirled a
two-hit game against Lee Magee's
Brooklyn team yesterday and won,
3 to 0.
R. H. E.
Newark 10001010 x—3 3 0
Brooklyn ....0000000 0 o—o 2 2
Moran and Bariden; Wilson and
Watson.
Buffalo, 3; Baltimore, O
Buffalo, N. Y., April 23.—The first
shut-out of the season on the home
grounds was a victory for Buffalo over
Baltimore yesterday, 3 to 0.
R. H. E.
Buffalo 01020000 x—3 6 0
Baltimore ...00000000 o—o 7 0
Bedient and Blain; F. Smith, Con
ley and Owene.
LICKNOW LEAGUE OPEN'S
Foreman Geisking Tosses Out First
Ball—Predicts Success
The Clerks defeated the Smith Shop
by the score of 1 to 0 in the opening
game in the Lucknow Shop League yes
terday afternoon. C. Geisking, general
foreman of the shops, threw out the
opening ball after a short speech, in
which he predicted the success of the
league. The game was featured by the
good pitching of Marshall and Gilday.
The score:
CLERKS
R. H. O. A. E.
Wohlfarth, rf ... . 0 0 0 0 0
Waltz, 3b 0 0 0 3 0
Green, lb 0 0 S 1 0
Geary, ss 1 1 2 3 0
Fagan, If 0 0 0 0 0
Smith, 2b 0 0 2 1 0
Leedy, cf 0 0 0 0 0
Fegley, c 0 0 3 0 0
Marshall, p 0 1 0 2 0
Totals 1 2 15 10 0
SMI Hi! SHOP
R. H. O. A. E.
Hocker. 3b 0 0 0 2 0
Bricker, ss 0 0 0 1 0
McCriger, 2b..... 0 1 0 0 1
Snyder, lb 0 0 6 1 0
Douglas, cf 0 0 0. 0 0
H. Hess, rf 0 0 1 0 0
B. Hess, If 0 0 0 0 0
Carl, c 0 1 8 0 0
Gilday, 0 0 0 2 0
Totals 0 2 15 6 1
Clerks 0001 o—l
Smith Shop 0000 o—o
ASK FOR-,
Lancaster's Favorite Brew
RIEKER'S BEER
JNO. G. WALL, Agt.
Harrisburg, Pa. Frank J. Rieker, Mgr.
AT THE CASINO
Lead-Off bowlers even score with
Anchor Men bv 94-pin victory—
ANCHOR MEN
Barnes .. . 184 J25 247 — 656
Kobb .... 183 156 161— 500
1 Trace 192 202 184— 578
| Ibach .. . . 125 196 194 515
Atticks ... 177 231 159 — 567
Totals .. S6l 1010 945—2816
LEAD-OFF
Boss 205 214 166 585
Basch 179 185 224 588
Bentz .... 192 219 199 610
Jacoby ... 166 179 212 557
Montgomery 166 192 212 570
Totals .. 908 959 1013 —2910
Harrisburg Baking Co. bowlers de
feat Schmidt team —
HARRISBURG
Smith 87 87 Sl 257
Ogden 92 103 134 329
Hinnenkamp 110 96 92 298
Mell 51 87 92 230
Dwyer ... 113 121 116—350
Totals . . 455 404 515 —1464
SCHMIDT S
Storm 99 10S 96 303
Balsbaugh . 81 90 110— 281
(Hoy 99 85 101— 285
McLanachan 110 9 9 113— 322
Schmidt .. 82 9 0 93 265
Totals .. 471 472 513—1456
DR.KLUGH, Specialist
ri»T*|plan and «nrffo«
Office*: COrt Walnut FVarrlahnrar. Pa
l)la«flapa of nomra and roeni apeflal,
private, spedflc. nervous and ckronla
dlaraafa. General office work. Consul*
tatlon free and confidential. Medlcla*
furnished. Work gnarnnteed. Charsea
moderate. 20 yearn' experience.
UK. KLUGIX* tlie well-known Specialist
Paul's Shoe Store
Formerly Located at 418 Market Street
Now Located at
11 North Fourth Street
AMATEUR BASEBALL
The Hiek-A-Thrifta will open their
sot.son tomorrow afternoon 011 the Is
land Park grounds with the I'. R. R.
Elects. Manager Atkinson will have
the men out this evening for practice l .
The Shamrock and Allison Ki ro
Company teams will pry otf the lid at
Fifteenth and Verbeke streets to-mor
row afternoon at 2.30 o'clock.
The following players of the Baker
A. A. are requested to report for the
1.30 train to-morrow afternoon for
Dauphin: Murphv, Leader. Wagner,
Kistlic, Johnson, Rheum, Ellenberger,
Sterick and Williamson.
Edward Ciaig, 1237 Walnut street,
manager of the Laurel A. C., would like
to arrange games with teams whose
players average 17 years of age.
The Camp Hill scrubs defeated the
Camp Hill High school last evening by
the score of 2 to 1. Sutton and Met/or
piti lied good ball.
The Riverside baseball team will
play the Rosewood A. C. on the grounds
of the Ilarrisburg Academy to morrow
afternoon at 2.30 o'clock.
Some of he Senate pages are skill
ful ball players and two of them are
trying to qualify for places on the Rein
hard clui» of Pine Street church,
for right field and Stiteler for catcher.