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Show U" TT 1 r S3SCTIOM A i rvN t A "V" r --s I J J LU1 "i IIJ))l)lRA SALT LAKE CITY; UTAH, SUNDAY, JUNE 4, 1916 Ln mi ... Bill Piercey Pitches in Superb Form; PIERCEY DELIVERS GOODS Twirls Shutout Ball in Matinee SUPPORT BEHIND TWIRLER COUNTS Blanks Have on Swatting Togs and Hit to Ail Corners of Bali Yard. SENSATIONAL Made Exceptional Plays by Players on Both of Are . Contending Clubs. 4 0 0 0 0 0 ..... ABRHPOAB . Qlelchmann lb. 3 0 1 11 0 0 Itisberg 2b .... 4 0 0 0 5 0 Bates 3b Daley If Mattick If Griggs rf McGaffigan ss . Spencer c .... Arellanes p . . . Hess p 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 2 4 0 0 0 3 4 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 32. 0 4 1 3 3 4 .... 3 ...... . Totals . ... 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 5 24 9 0 0 only did the Salt "Lake Utes the Vernon Tigers yesterday, but as well they whitewashed the Bengals' hide in the bargain. 'The final score was four to nothing in of the Braves. Bill I'iercey, with' Vernon last season and more recently with the New York Americans, covered himself with clory and incidentally did much credit to the Utes. He held Vcrnonites to five the hits and kept them far away from the plate during the matinee. On their nart the Blanks made it lively for Frank Arellanes, who es sayed to twirl at the start for the Timers. Incidentally, they also made it sufficiently interesting for, his successor Otto lies., former hig leaguer. Arellanes Bumped. In a little over two innintrs there were two run scored off Arellanes on six hits. And at that there were only Vernon: Runs ............... Hits . Salt Lake: c: eleven at bat. lies?, worktnc the remaining six innings, was chargeable with two runs on five hits. He had twenty-thre- e men facing him. As a matter of fact all of the four Salt Lake runs were vharreable against Arellanes. The same was bustled over n the excellent time of an hour and forty-on- e minutes. There were many exceptional and sensational fielding plays on both sides, all of whirli tended to keep the crowd genuinely interested nntil the ljst put out was made. The victory of the TJtes may be summarized under the statement of clean hitting at opportune time?. The same clubs play this afternoon, starting at 2.30 o'clock. Kither Tom Hushes or Dougan will work for Salt Lake, while fJcorge "Chief Johnson, the big Indian from the Federal league, will work for the Tigers. In any event a close, tight game may be expected. I low Sfrf Were Made. is easy to tell how th four lone were made. The Utes got the first, another in the second and the other two in the third. The process in the first wan very Quinlan. evidently besimple. inTommy -m smashed first." preparedne lieving for a single right at the start. the ball Shinn was an obedient little Jimmv down a bunt as per orders boy. lie laid of Ulank. and Quinlan trotted alone to second. Runny Brief, who had been with his bat In the prepared, exercising ness parade, smashed out a double, and Torn m v scored. In the last of the second, after Rath Herb Murphy got hold had flown out. for a triple. of one that went to right matters by Truck Hahhah simplified on the nose pitch smashing the next fur the ungl that stored Murphy. (Hit Maa Opportunity. fTY-I,3St of ,he tn,r1 wa s a bit more I prolific Bunny Brief itked the limelight. lie worked out a walk. Up tame a nice piece of ball playing, the kind that takes advantage sinvry opportunity. Buddy raced toRyan third and gled to right. Brief drew the throw there. Ryan made the most of it and hiked for second. Both were safe. Otto Hess replaced Arellanes at That did not phase Kelthis stave. a Dartlcle. Kellogg elmply hamlogg mered the ball to right, while both Brief and Ryan scored. There were plenty of close calls on both sides thereafter, but that is all the actual bell ringing. From a fielding viewpoint it was a Sensation played game. brilliantly followed sensation. Just taking it that Buddy casually, it may be said Itvan pulled down one of the best of the ball yard catches in Inthe history on Doane the sixth. pulled off Runny ofBrief itpeatedly t'n sand that were praisedigs out and his whips to first KOt worthy,as schedule. Neither was tner per 5 1 2 3 0 1 1 .... 3 4 4 3 2 0 3 10 0 5 1 1 2 0 0 1 13 0 2 0 0 1 4 1 5 0 0 1 2 4 11 27 13 0 215 0 34 .Totals -- 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 or 'x . 1 2 0 2 3 3 2 0 01 hit0 vv --a 0 l.o rmnrNpo. An cries. Oakland Mountain handicap Saturday at Rocky Denver. Not brothers. it jc (lood-bIlHek Kid red. yea did all yen aad the fans vtlnh coeld tor the Vtea, . yoa luek. Welcome. Guigni, and may you hit as hard as Guisto. sfs ic )g Bill Piercey has decided that the best is to war to do with his mash notes editor turn them over to the sporting He does of The not mind the kind that says. "Bill. I am crazy about you." but he is fearful about thoe Inquiring. "What is your policy?' salary and Insurance je Ruses r.eistRl. who was given a chance to ' pitch In the Northwest accepted terms, league and who hadlater decided that to reports, according want to go, preferring to rehe didn't main In San Francisco. He can pitch a eemipro once a week hereabouts, and in addition runs the front end of a street car. SanJc Francisco Chronicle. Willie Zimmerman was not long out of a job. He was released by Oakland and was at once signed up by Toronto of the International:fc league. sje Dalton put his arm on exhibition for the first time yesterday and dem- a fans that he has onstrated to themust fear. In the first rivals whip all he up Kenworthy's picked inning and made a perfect heave to grounder the plate from deep right. It was not fault that Mlddleton beat the Jack's throw to the plate. ian Francisco Examiner. HOME RUN AID CRIMSON n. , 3jC TO DEFEAT PRINCETON Cambridge. Mass., June 3. Harvard defeated Princeton S to 1 today. Mahan excellent baseball except ob-In pitching Princeton the fifth inning, when tained it saolitary run on a single, two hit by Tibbett. Harvard passes and a runs in the eighth Inning scored three on singles by Coolidge and Nash and R, H. E. Harte's home run. Score: 1 5 S Harvard 6 3 Princeton ....t Batteries Mahan and Harte; Thompson and DouclnJJ. PRETTY SOFT. former McCormlck, Harry (Moose) the Giants, manager of pinch hitter forsteel etc.. is salesman, team Chattanooga, now handling an Independent at Montclair, N. J., a sort of a society affair backed by an athletic club. llr Detroit. Mich.. June S. The condition of Battllnsr Kelson, former lightweight an champion, who recentlv underwent for a,ODendicltis. was prooperation nounced "very serious" by his physician today. Morris Rath idle at third. Herb Murphy also handled several difficult chances. Swede Ttlsberg and Glelchmann also games. rtleberg played over fielding was all nifty the lot. to his left, and to his right, but always getting the ball, and then getttnjc it away quickly where if would do the most good. SRRIOtJSI.V "5 t " 't , ' t t i v 2 I ' - ' V , Veraon . S. Francisco I ,o Angelen Salt Lake Portland Oakland ' ' v. , 1 "t - s One .B32 A . ?."! .544 .431 .417 .338 f4" " r " V- - x Herald-Repuhlican- ANGELES, June 3. In a game by free hitting, the Beavers won today by the score of 14 to LOS - ng 11 10 J .550 .... .534 . 333 Splits. ...... ...... .... .567 552 349 Here is Bill Piercey, noblest Roman cf them all, whose masterly twirling yesterday was a factor in the 4 to 0 defeat of Vernon. Not xmce was Piercey in trouble and in nary an inning did the Pattersonites get more than one bingle off him. ELDRED GOES Batters Down Crump Andrew Miller's Roamer, FRANK HALL IS Ed Favorite, After Struggle. In a terrific old stretch .drive. Ed Crump, a owned Teep by colt, John W. Schorr of Memphis, overcame Andrew Miller's IToamer, American and favorite in champion of 1913-1the betting, and by a half length, won the fourth' annual running of the Kentucky handicap at Douglas park today. Hoamer, shipped here from New York for the race, found his Impost of 132 W. J. Young's filly pounds too much. Water Witch, lasted well into the stretch and was third, a length back of Roamer. and an equal distance in front of W. .1. Weber's Hodge. The time for the mile and a quarter was 2.04 Ed coupled enthe Schorr with Dick Williams as Crump, was in choice third the try, odds of slightly better thanaveraging five to one. At the rise of the barrier the eleven starters were away well bunched and in this order passed the grandstand first time around the course. At the Marion Goosby held a slight quarter, lead, but lost it to Harry Payne Whitney's Borrow, last year's handicap winner, while rounding into the back stretch. Borrow was unable to endure the g and stopped to strain of nothing. to Roamer had been running well up this stage and sprinted into the lead, to hold it well into the where he gradually succumbed stretch, to the winner. Jockey Guy Garner on Ed Crump rode a well timed race. Jefferson Livingston's English bred II and Dick Williams Royal were well up, but never could always get to the flying leaders. Water Blossom, Hank O'Day. Marion Goosby. Borrow and Old Koenig finished in the order named and were badly strung out over a quarter of a mile. Ed share of the said to beCrump's the richest on the purse, American d turf this year forSecond contestants, was $11,650. money was $600. worth 11500, third while the fourth horse saved its stake. SMART STUFF. take a pretty clever bookIt nvist' keeper in the office of President Tener to keep tab on disability shifts by Manof the Dodgers. Robby ager Robinson to keep up his shifts almost manages a thing made necessary partlv by daily, the injuries that Brooklyn players have suffered. FIGI JIF. IT YOURSni.F. Fred Toney says It's all in his shoulder, that it is full of knots and such and he can't get the stuff on. the ball. 's Which disposes of the charge that trouble was In his pay check; 3. WINNER OF THE TO SEATTLE IN DENVER GRIND TRADE BY BLANK ne 4, 3-- 5. pace-makin- all-age- To-ney- 1 10 42ft pari-mutue- 01 ' AT LOUISVILLE o'Day-Kvall- Ray Boyd 10, members of hoth teams being confessedly tired of running around the bases. In. the second Rodgers of the Beavers slid in Inning, to third, spiking Galloway, and cutting the tendons of Galloway's knee so the third baseman will be out of the game for several weeks. A"els Put over two runs In the i,Te,inning, third helped largely by Ilager-ma- n s wildness. Wolter walked ami stole second; Koerner walked; Hager-ma- n put over two wide ones on Kano and McCredie sent Iligglnbotham to the mound. Kane walked and McLarry forced Wolter, Ward to Roche. Bassler singled, scoring Koerner and Kane. Butler popped to Rodgers and Zabel fouled to Roche. . Beavers Show Speed. The Beavers commenced their wholeSAN FRANCISCO. sale in the sixth AB R H PO A E they put over five. Ward singledwhen 1 0 0 0 5 0 on a Passed ball and Brown rf fcond and, 2 0 0 0 0 Higginbotham walked. Wilie bunted Schaller If .....33 0 1 3 0. 0 to Zabel and the bases were filled Bodie cf on 4 2 0 the latter's error 0 4 0 Downs 2b 2 0 7 4 0 0 Vaughn singled to right, scorinf? Coffey ss 0 Ward and Higginbotham. 1 1 4 0 12 Wilie stole, Autrey 3blb . . ..33 01 0 4 10 10 third and Southworth popped to Jones c Guisto singled, Wilie. Sepulveda 0 3 1 3 Zabel. Spea Standridge replaced scoring Couch p singled, scoring Vaughn, and 4 1 walked: Roche forced Guisto Rodgers 27 2 16 32 Totals at tli to Bassler. plate, Kane OAKLAND. and Speas Rodgers pulled a double AB R II PO A E steal, the former 0 0 3 Chance Middleton claimed scoring. ...4 an 1 2 1 3 1 0 the argumentinterference, Davis 3b Roche stole secduring 0 0 0 3 0 .:3 ond. Ward went out, Kan to Cook cf The , Angels' four in the ,seven'h Kenworthy 2b ..44 ,00 02 02 09 00 a but five raoroi bv fh Gardner rf helped 0 0 1 4 0 12 Beavers inlittle, the lb c and three "moro eighth Barry 0 in the ninth gave them a cinch. 4 1 0 0 3 F. Elliott The 1 0 score: 3 3 0 0 Berger ss 1 0 0 0 2 0 Boyd p 0 0 0 0 1 1 PORTLAND. Lane cf 0 0 0 0 0 Elliott AB R It PO A E .....1 0 0 0 0 0 Wilie cf 0 Kleiif p 5 2 3 o 4 O 0 0 0 0 0 ..1 Griffith 2 0 2 Vaughn ss., 3b.. 36 1 0 o 0 Southworth If.... 2 1 Guisto 14 7 27 0 ..33 Totals 1 lb .54 3 22 72 20 1o rf Speas in for 2 Lane batted 2 2 Boyd eighth. Rodgers 2b 3 2 0 Cook in eighth. Grif- Roche c 4 0 Elliott batted for 2 O 7 0 in F. ninth. Elliott 3 1 1 fith batted for Ward ss. 2 t 0 Hagerman p. ... 01 o1 o 0 2 0 Score by innings 0 n 1 o p. Higginbotham San Francisco: 0 2 Kelly p 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Runs 0 0 4 Noyes 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Hits O 1 2 3b 'on 0 o Stumpf Oakland: 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Fisher 0 0 l Runs 1 1 1 0 Lush p 0 0 Hits .... ...... 0 11 0 1 1 0 2 off Boyd Summary: Two runs 4 hits 37 14 16 27 Tl Totals 1 29 at bat in 8 innings Home run LOS ANGELES. Couch. Charge defeat to Boyd. Bases on balls Off Couch 1, off Boyd 3. off AB R" IT PO A K 2 1 1 o Klein 1. Struck out By Couch 2, by Maggert cf. j2 ..4 5 1 4 0 O Hit by pitcher Bodie, by Ellis If Boyd 4. 3 0 0 0 0 0 Boyd. Double play Coffey to Downs Wolter rf 4 2 3 8 0 o to Autrej. Runs responsible for Boyd Koerner lb 0 1 0 2. 0 O 3d. . ... 1 Left on bases San Francisco 7, 2 2 3 1 3 Oakland 7. Time of game 1.21. Um- Galloway Kane 3b il o 4 1 3 1 2b pires Guthrie and Finney. McLarry 3 6 2 2 2 0 Bassler c 0 0 2 2 3 Butler 3b. .0 1 0 1 0 2 1 Zabel p. 0 0 0 0 0 p. Standridge 1 1 1 0 0 0 Ryan .... HOW THEY STAND 0 0 0 O 0 Kahler p. O 0 0 0 0 n Horstman p O 1 0 0 0 0 Boles . Hogg p 1 4 0 0 0 O 0 PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE. 34 10 10 27 13 Totals IV. L. Pet. 30 20 .043 Vernon Fisher batted for Noyes In eighth. Shu Francisco ;.3.1 25 .560 Ryan batted for Standridge in sixth. T, I o 31 Anseles .554 Boles batted for Horstman in seventh. 23 2T .400 Salt Lake Score ; 20 2T .426 Portland:by inning3 Portland 21 40 .344 Oakland 0 1 0 0 0 5 0 5 3 14 Runs 0 2 0 0 1 4 16 216 Hits Yesterday's Results. Los Angeles: 0 0 2 0 0 2 4 0 2 10 10. Runs Portland 14, To Angeles 0 0 1.0 0 2 4 0 3 10 Hits Salt liake 4, Vernon O. San Francisco 2, Oakland 0. hits Maggert, Summary: Three-bas- e Wilie 2, Kane. Two-bas- e hits Rodgers, Games Today. Kane, Bassler. Sacrifice hits Speas, Salt Lake and Vernon 'at Majewtle Butler, Wilie, Rodgers, Roche, Ellis. Struck out By Hagerman 1, by Zabel 2, park. San Francisco and Oakland at Oak- by Horstman 1, by Noyes 1, by Lush 1. Base on balls Off Hagerman 7, off land. (Two (earaes.) Portland and Ios Angeles at Los Lush 2, off Zabel 2, off Noyes 3, off Standridge 1,1, off Horstman 1, off Hig-1. Angeles. (Two games.) off Kahler 1, off Hogg ginbotham Runs responsible for Hagerman 2, ZaNATIONAL LEAGUE. bel 3, Higginbotham 2, Hogg 6, Lush 2. TV. L. Pet. No 5 at bat off Hagerman . . 15 .595 in 2 hits 2 runs ..22 Brooklyn 6 hits 5 runs 18 at bat off . .22 16 .579 Zabelinnings; New York in 5 2 Innings; 1 hit 1 run 3 at . . 22 IS .550 Philadelphia In off bat Inning; 0 hits Standridge . .21 24 .467 Cincinatl at bat off Horstman in 1 in. .19 20 .487 0 runs 3 2 hits Boston 2 runs 13 at bat off Hig. .20 24 .455 ning; Chicago 1 hit 0 runs in 3 innings; ginbotham . 22 .19 .463 Pittsburgh 0 inning; 3 hits in bat off Kahler l'at . 25 .432 2 runs 4 at bat off ..19 St. Louis In 3 inKelly to defeat Credit Hogg. ning. Charge Yesterday Results. to Noyes. Double plays Ellis victory 3. to Bassler; Southworth to Roche. Hit Chicago 2, Boston New York 7, Cincinnati 4. by pitched ball Koerner, Hagerman. 0. 2, St. Louis Passed ball Bassler. Umpires Doyla .Philadelphia n "Pittsburgh-Brooklygame postponed, and Phyle. Time 3 hours. wet grounds. If. BEATS CHAMPION June 3. Sf. D Louisvilla FRANCISCO, June run-getti- 0 FOUR-YEAR-OL- SPIKED . ....... .... .40S - -- FXOS . Wins Loses Two Two . Francisco .583 ... .... ernon l.o Anaelen. .569 Salt Lake Portland ... .44! 365 Oakland y, B KT 'v - & t'5 ' He negligent. Rowdy Elliott. )C )f( ?C .The Hall family Is some winner. Bert wins on Fridays, and Frank won the jjC T$t ....'.355 S. should name some old thing after 'Bill' Tiercey, and let it go at -that. Rut nobody names anything after Herald-Republica- . alt Lake... .471 Portland ... .438 high them. He also wanted to Jump nothWhile there is at the same time. such a performance in the ing book. Red Held decided that Mr. rule against desire a sideshow on Murphv did not his ball park, and. consequently. Daley went to the- clubhouse. Shin sun and warm up Tom Hughes right, for that old ball game- is needed. 3(C 4J .ATA - . Is One Vernon S.- Also Daley got banished. Seems as if there was something .the matter with Daley's nostrils.to Maybe pinch hay fever, and he wanted Some advertiser i Ti. GETS Special to The Herald-Republica- good' baseball for the Oaks was unlucky in bumping he today, but an up against unexpected homer by Couch, who drove the ball over the fence with Sepulveda ahead of him. Save for that slip, which proved so expensive, Boyd rated the Seals "nicehits ly and held them to four scattered until the eighth inning, when he resigned in favor of the ever ready Eddie Klein. It was a good day for the Couch fast ball. It was cloudy, and Johnny really never faltered till near the close. Two Oakland hits were bunched ln the eighth for a near rally, while a and an error by Bobby Jones single them gave hopes in the ninth. Then came Griffith to ground the pitcher for a double play that" sent the Oaks galloping for the clubhouse. The score: Wins Loses Jfe sfc: - If FANS ARE GOSSIPING ABOUT Ltee win. Tigers lose. s . Kirn ft all the time. :fc sic Ham Patterson, manager of Tigers, was punished. sic Umpire Red Held made him sit down in a kitchen chair near the visitors' clubhouse Instead of on the hard con- crete. a 1 0 0 0 ANGELIC TRIBE Afternoon Made for Pitching Rodgers Slides "Into Third; Abilities of Youngster on Spikes Put 'Long Jim' of the Staff of Seals. Seraphs in Hospital. SAN 01110 15 1 HITTING DEFEATS DAY IS DARK AND GLOOMY GALLOWAY 0 0 , UHAT-JH- WINS OWN GAME Unexpected Homer by Frisco Members of Both Clubs Are Tired by Running Around Twirler Sends. Home Runs That Wins Game. the Bases. j 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ...41 4 0 .... ..v 0 0 hits Brief 2. Three-bas- e Murphy. Summary: Two-bas- e Sacrifice hit Shinn. Stolen bases Mattick, Rath. Bases on balls Off Arellanes 1. off Hess 2. off Piercey 2. Struck out By Hess 2, by Piercey 4. Tvro runs 6 hits 11 at bat off Arellanes in 2 plus innings; 2 runs 6 hits 23 at 'bat off Hess in 6 innings. Charge defeat to Arellanes. Runs responsible for Arellanes 4. Left on bases Vernon 7, Salt Lake 8. Time 1.41. Umpires Brashear and Held. NOT fa-T- or ... BEAVER'S HEAVY JOHNNY COUCH Specjal to The Runs The score Salt Lake 4, Vernon 0. The batteries Salt Lake, PierArel-lanc- s, cey and Hannah; Vernon, Hess and Spencer. Probable batteries for today's game Salt Lake,. Hughes or D origan and Hannah; Vernon, George "Chief Johnson and Whaling. Tho game today starts at 2.30 o'clock. Quinlan cf Shinn rf Brief ss Ryan If Kellogg lb Rath 3b Murphy 2b Hannah c Piercey p IT BY HOME BIFF Score by innings Hits . scores ITone In HAS SWATSMITHS PUZZLED SALT LAKE. AB R H PO A E VERNON. Doane. cf hard-hittin- w PREPAREDNESS; THAT IS THE STUFF CLEAN HITTING, FIELDING : I nJ ls. Chief of Utes Gets Classy From Northwestern League for Utility. In-fiel- der Manager Cliff Blankenship. of the Salt Lake Utes late" last night announced that he had made a deal utility outwhereby "Brick" Kldred, man for man, has been traded, fielder, and with nothing to boot, to the Scat-ti- e club in the Northwestern league, in return for Jnfielder Guigni. Kldred leaves for Seattle today. Guigni reports to Salt Lake in L.os Angeles. Blank states that the only reason for the change is that Kldred is a natural outfield utility man, whereas, what the Salt Lake club needs at the present time is an utility infielder. In Guigr.l is a versatile-youngster1914 he played first base for the. Ballard club, in ten games. He had 97' five assists, no errors. As a third baseman for the. same club he played 142 games with n. percentage of .959, leading the league in this position. He hit .256 in f42 games. Last season, Guigni at third for Seattle for S9 games, made 94 putouts and 66 assists, and was charged with 11 errors. His fielding average was .959. His batting average was .274 in 89 games. He got 91 hits. -- put-out- s, 'DASEnAUi college; a "baseball college" at the old home of the Cubs on the west side in Chicago. There amateur players will be taught the rudiments of the game and Artie Hofman will act as professor. Jl HATING THE GAME, There is a new rule in force in the National league which bars the players from throwing an extra ball around between innings, but the players, by a tacit agreement get around it. The pitcher hands his teammates the ball In play. A Chicago newspaper has established ItAIlE ADAMS IX HAD. Babe Adams is no longer a hero in because of the poor showPittsburgh made, and there are darning he has ers that he be disposed of by the club. it Ted Johnson of the Deseret Salt Lake Close Second. of Gym 3. Frank Hall, the DENVER. June long distance runner, captured first over today in the mountain marathon place a course of ten and miles, from Littleton to Denver. Hall's time for the course was 1 hour 5 minutes and 1 second, slightly more the record of 1 hour 4 minutes than 41 5 seconds, which is held by Ted Johnson of Salt Lake City. Johnson, .who established tlie record for the course in 1914, sped over the tape 1 minute 34 seconds behind IlalJ. Robert Finn was third, J. C. Croskej' fourth. Edgar Taylor fifth. First prize is a trip to Newark. N. J., to compete in the national championship contests in September. two-fift- hs 3-- PURDUE BUNCHES HITS AND BEATS INDIANA 17 ...0 ......0 1 .......... 4 1-- 2- -3 . 1- 2-- . Bloomington, Ind., June 3. Purdue bunched hits and won from Indiana, 3 to 0, here Purdue's sharp today. fielding cut off two Indiana runs at A3IERICAN LEAGUE. the plate in the seventh. TV. L. The score: R. IT. E. 26 17 .. 3 4 1 Cleveland Purdue 23 16 0 4 4 New York Indiana ..24 .17 Washington . Batteries Shrode ' and Walters; 22 19 Boston Swain. Shively and 19 23 .. Chicago 18 22 Detroit 17 25, St. Louis PENNSY SHUTS OUT YALE ,,...15 25 Philadelphia . IN PITCHING BATTLE Yesterday's Results. New York 5, Chicago 0. June 3. Pennsylvania St. Louis 3, Philadelphia 2. Philadelphia, the deciding contest Detroit 3, Washington 2. of the today won Cleveland 11, Boston 2. annual three-gam- e baseball series with Yale, the score being 3 to 0. It was a AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. duel between Spielman and pitchers' , the Pennsylvanian being giv4. Toledo 3. Garfield, Louisville en brilliant support. Garfield allowed St. Paul 6, Kansas City 2. four but the errors of his hits, only Minneapolis 5, Milwaukee 3. 4. were costly, none of the teammates Columbus 4, Indianapolis Pennsylvania's runs being. earned. The R. II. E. score; WESTERN LEAGUE. o 5 4 Yale 5, Sioux City 1. Topeka 3 4 1 Pennsylvania Denver 17, Lincoln 5. B.atteries Garfield and Munson; Omaha 5, Wichita 3. . Des Moines 1, St, Joseph, Spielman and GJlmore. " -3 Pet. .605 WELSH OFFERED $8000 TO MEET AD WOLGAST .590 .585 Denver, June 3. toAn offer of $8000 .537 has Freddie Welsh, been made .452 lightweight for a. twenty-roun- d champion, .450 Ad Wolgast match with boxing .405 here July 4, it was announced today by .375 Denver promoters. TV AS PECULIAR. The odd thing about George Tyler's two-hi- t came asainst the St. Louis Cardinals was that Wilson, the only man to get a hit up to the eighth inning, was taken out that Butler might bat for him. And then Butler scratched the Recond hit off What's in a manager's Tyler. mind when heworking" out the only man who lias made takes a hit for a pineher? COMPLIME.YTS EXCHANGE!!. Callahan is quoted Jimmy Hans as Manager Wagner highcomplimenting ly as a player. That's Wonder what Hans thinks ofinteresting. Jimmy as a manager i ,. , - |