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Show BASEBALLGAMES ' The Twenty-fourth Street "Moon shiners" defeated the Patterson team yesterday morning in a game of base ball and are now out with a challenge to any 17-vear-old team in the city The contest today lasted 11 innings and the final SCOTS was 15 to 12. The lineup follows: Moonshiners Patterson?. Conroy . c Smith Horroeks P Patterson Poorer lb Chamber Jackson .2b Sllrilster Flvgare 3b Ward Matson ss Sumner Myers If McFarland Evans cf Williams Winters rf Smith In a "Marathon" frame nf baseball played yesterday morning, the Tbirt -first Street Federals defeated the "Tipperary Staggers." The score was 36 to 19 and tho lineup follows Sluggers Federals Garner c Evans A Tritchlow p Norton Flinders lh G. Bybee Bateman 2b Porter Baliff 3b. Coleman r Tritchlow sb S. Bybee Shldder . . if Huasoy Gutke rf ....... .L Evens Evaldson cf Crnsslev FEDERAL LEAGUE. At Chicago Chicago 1, Pittsburg.1. At Kansas City Kansas I Ity 4, S Louis 3. u Brooklyn Brooklyn it, Newark New-ark 8 At Baltimore Baltimore 2. Buffalo Buffa-lo 6. Brooklyn. April 15. The Brooklyn Federals scored ten runs In the firth inning against Newark today. defp;ii ing the ieitors by 17 to 6. Fifteen hatters faced Whitehouse and Billiard in the big inning of the game, six hits, five passes two errors, two steals and a wld pitch accounting for the high total of runs. Seaton had a hit-leas hit-leas came up to the sixth, when he eased up Toward the end Manager Magee used several substitutes The hitting of Magee. Kauff and Westerzil were features. Score: Newark 6 5 5 Brooklyn 17 14 4 Batteries C Whitehouse. Billiard, Billi-ard, Brandon and Rariden, Seaton and Land. Watson. Suggs Hit Hard. Baltimore. April 15 Buffalo fell on Suggs for eight hits and six runs in the first three innings, winning today to-day s game irom Baltimore by 6 to 2 Smith v, ho relieved Suggs, allowed onl two hits In six innings Bedlent pitched good oall lor Huitaio throughout. through-out. Buffalo 6 10 1 Baltimore 2 5 3 Batteries Bedlent and Blair; Suggs. Smith and Owens. Nose Out in Ninth. Kansas Citv. pnl 15 Rawlings single and advance to second on a bad throw, Easterly's bunt and another an-other wild throw gae Kansas City a ninth-inning victory, 4 to 3, In the last of a three-game series with St Louis. St. Louis 3 10 2 Kansas City 4 11 2 Batteries Davenport. Plank. Wil lett and Chapman, C. Johnson and Easterly Errors Lose Game Chicago. April 15 -Poor fielding spoiled Morde.eai Brown s chance of winning his first game with the Chi cago Federals today, so that Pitts burp Inflicted the locals' first defeat of th season. 1 to 1. Dickson struck out seven Chicagoans and played a clever fielding game. McConnell sue ceeded Brown when the latter retired in favor of a pinch bitter. Pittsburg 3 6 Chicago 1 Batteries Dickson and Berry; Brown McConnell and Wilson. AMERICAN LEAGUE. At Washington Washington 1. New York 3. At Detroit Detroit F. Cleveland 4 At Philadelphia Philadelphia 3, Boston 6. At St Louis St. Louis 9, Chicago Ifi New York Washington Game. Washington. April 15 Fisher passed pass-ed eicht men today, but his zood work in the pinches held Washington to one run and New York won a 3 to 1 victory Three of Fisher's bases ba-ses on balls were given in tbe seventh sev-enth Inning, but a strikeout and the good fielding prevented Washington from scoring. Harper for Washington was taken out in the first innlnp after he had passed three men and made a wild pitch Ayers and Bentley finished the s;ame New York 100 101 000 3 Washington 000 100 0001 Detroit-Cleveland. Detroit, April 15 Detroit defeated Cleveland by 5 to 4 today in a game made noteworthy by the large num ber of extra base hits The visiting players made four doubles, while the Tigers garnered three triples and a home run Cleveland had a good chance to win in the ninth when Dauss passed two substitute batters, but the necessary hit was lacking. Cleveland 010 080 ooo 4 Detroit . 002 OOP. OOx 5 Philadelphia-Boston. Philadelphia. April 15. Clever work by Lewis at bat and on the bases, to-cpMkt to-cpMkt with Speaker's fast running and a single by Hoblitzell In the ninth inning enabled Boston to defeat Philadelphia Phila-delphia here today by 5 to 3 Bus'i was taken out owing to wildness in the fifth inning and Collins was knocked off tho rubber in six innings Wyckoff and Mays finished tbe contest con-test Schang had his hand split by a wild ball in the second inning He will be out of the game for two or three weeks. Boston 001 100 102 '- Philadelphia . .000 012 0003 St. Louls-Chlcago. St. Louis. April 15. The Chicago Americans, by bunching hits with er rors and bases on balls in six innings today, scored sixteen runs against St. Louis, which failed to send a man across the plate. Faber was invincible. invinc-ible. Chicago ... 720 221 00216 St. Ivouis 1... 000 000 000 0 NATIONAL. At N'i'v York New York 2, Brooklyn Brook-lyn 0 At Boston Boston 1, Philadejphia 7. At Cincinnati Cincinnati 2. Pittsburg Pitts-burg 1 At Chicago Chicago 2, St Louis 1 New York Brooklyn. New York April 15 Rube Mar-quard Mar-quard pitched a no-hit game todaj and shut out the Brooklyn Nationals, 2 to 0 Rucker. the veteran lefthander of the Brooklyns, opposed th New York er, and it was a great pitcher's battle Only three men reached base on Marquard, two on bases on balls, and one on an error by Fletcher. Only three balls were hit to the outfield Marquard also helped to win his own game bv driving in the second run scored on Rucker Next to Marquard's pitching. Lo-bert'8 Lo-bert'8 all-around work was the fea ture. Until he filed out to Wheat in the seventh inning he had reached first base eight consecutive times including in-cluding yesterday's game. Brooklyn 000 000 000 0 New York 000 100 lOx 2 Clnclnnatl-Plttsburg. Cincinnati, April 15 Cincinnati evened up matters with the Pittsburgs by winning the second game of the series here today. 2 to 1 Two wild pitches by Benton in the fourth inning in-ning were responsible for Pittsburg's only run. Otherwise he pitched in midseason form. Hannon pitched good ball, Lejeune's error making one of Cincinnati's runs possible. Pittsburg loo ooo ooo l Cincinnati 000 001 lOx 2 Chlcago-St. Louis. Chicago. April 15. St. Louis defeated defeat-ed Chicago by 4 to 3. in a listless game today Chenej s wildness in the third inning caused his retirement In this inning three bases on balls, three wild pitches, a stolen base and a single sin-gle each of Cheney and Standridge, the recruit pitcher obtained from San Francisco, gave St. Louis the game Doak pitched in midseason form in the pinches St. Louis 004 000 0004 Chicago 010 001 0002 Boston-Philadelphia. Boston, April 15 Philadelphia defeated de-feated Boston again todav, 7 to 1. Hits bunched in two Innings, together with errors by the Braves' infield, accounted ac-counted for all the visitors' runs Mayer, May-er, the Philadelphia pitcher, wa in fine form. Alternating flurries of rain snow and hail swirled about the plavers during the game. Philadelphia 000 400 3007 Boston 000 100 0001 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. At Kansas City St. Paul li 15 2 Kansas City ... . 5 12 2 Batteries Williams, Steele and Johnson, George, Regan jyid Geibel. At Columbus Louisville 2 7 0 Columbus o 5 2 Batteries Northrup and demons; dem-ons; Eayrs and Coleman. 1 At Cleveland-Indianapolis Cleveland-Indianapolis ... ....10 11 2 Cleveland j 12 1 Batteries Willis and "Goss'ett; James, Brenton and Bassler, Vogt At Milwaukee-Minneapolis Milwaukee-Minneapolis 4 9 3 Milwaukee . . . . ...6 10 1 Batteries Williams and Sullivan. Hovllk and Hughes. |