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Show NATIONAL LEAGUE Won. Lost. Pet Brooklyn 7R 54 ,591 Philadelphia 77 54 .588 Boston 75 54 .581 New York 67 62 .519 IPitl3buig 64 70 .478; Chicago 61 76 .445 St. Louis 59 79 .428 Cincinnati 63 85 3S4 I Yesterday's Results. Pittsburg 6, Brooklyn 3. I St. Louis 7, Philadelphia 4 (first Uamo); St, Louis 4, Philadelphia 5 .'second gamo). Cincinnati 0, New York 3 (first I game); Cincinnati 4, New York Jm (Continued on Page 3) Ki . ' ' . , jSj (Continued From Pago Two). Ij (second game). Chicago 3, Boston 7 (first game); Chicago 6, Boston 11 (second game). Today's Schedule. PitLsburg at Brooklyn. Chicago at Boston. St. Louis at Philadelphia. ; Cincinati at New York. Boston, Sept 13. Winning twice ? from Chicago today the Boston Na-, Na-, tionals gained ground in the pennant :'t race and are now one and one-half games behind the leading Brooklyns. 'j The scores of the games, which were ' marked by bard hitting, were 7 to 3 i and 11 lo 6. Smith's five hits, includ-i, includ-i, ' ' Ing a double and a triple out of five '1 times up in the first game, and Mar- 1 anville's fielding and batting in both contests were large factors in the ;1 Braves' success. Magee made a home run with the bases filled in the sec- ond game, Reulbach pitched thirteen 8 , of the eighteen innings for Boston. Firo.t Game. ' Score by innings 5 J Chicago '..100 200 0003 J Boston 001 113 Olx 7 1 Second Game. Score hy innings Chicago 300 000 030 6 Boston 100 400 33x 11 j PIRATES BOOST STOCK BY BEATING SUPERBAS Brooklvn, Sept 13 The Pirates beat the Superbas 6 to 3 today and Mi tightened up the National league race. fi ' Cocper held the Brooklyn batters to six lilts. Wheat registered his twen-M twen-M ty-sixth consecutive game without A . missinsr a hit The Pirates knocked ' Smith out cf the box in the seventh, ?-j : and Dell failed to slop them. Rucker j held the visitors scoreless in the last two innings. "Warner was put out of the game in the sixth for arguing, bcore by innings Pittsburg 000 003 3006 Brooklyn 010 001 0103 BROWNS AND QUAKERS TAKE AND GIVE -ONE Philadelphia, Sept. 13. St. Louis got an even brenk here today, the visitors winning the first game by knocking Rixoy off the rubber in the seventh inning, 7 to 4, and Philadelphia Philadel-phia taking the second, 5 to 4. Cra-vath's Cra-vath's home run drove in two runners ahead of him in the sixth and his double in the eighth helped to score the winning run. For their trouble with the umpires yesterday. Smith of St. Louis was suspended ifor three days and fined 525. while Bescher was fined $25 by President Tener. Bescher and Long were put nut of the first game in the first inning 'today by Umpire Byron for arguinc about a decision. First Game. Score by innings St Louis 200 003 2007 Philadelphia 121 000 0004 Second Game. Score by Innings St ljuis 000 020 002 I Philadelphia 100 003 Olx-fiG HOLKE, GIANT'S CUB, SCORES WINNING HIT New York, Sept 13 New York mado it eight straight by defeating Cincinnati in a double-header today, 3 to 0 and 6 to 4. In the first game Schupp held Cincinnati to three hits, two of them bunts. Holke, the young first baseman of the Giants, won the game in the sixth with a three-base hit when the bases were full. In the second game McGraw tried out George Smith, the former Columbia Colum-bia university pitching star. The Reds knocked him out of the box In the sixth with four hits. Now York won the game by batting Schneidei for five runs in the first inning. First Game. Score by innings Cincinnati 000 000 000 0 New York ..000 003 OOx 3 Second Game. Score by Innings Cincinnati 100 102 0004 New York 500 010 OOx 6 SCHEDULE BY NATIONAL, LEAGUE New York, Sept 13. The following list of double-header dates fixed for the playing off of postponed and tie games has been announced by John A. Heydler, secretary of the National league: At Boston Pittsburg, September 23, 25 and 26. At Brooklyn Cincinnati, September Septem-ber 18; Chicago, September 23 and 25. At New York Pittsburg. September Septem-ber 16 and IS; St. Louis, September 23 and 25; Boston, September 2S and 30. At Philadelphia Chicago, September Septem-ber 16; Pittsburg, September 20; Boston, Bos-ton, October 2 and 3. The extra Pittsburg game at New York on September 16; that of Boston at New York on September 2S, and Boston at Philadelphia on October 2 and 3, are contests which, postponed, cannot be played in the cities where the schedule originally called for them to take place. In case of postponements in the final Pittsburg series at Boston the clubs will remain in Boston and play there on September 27 and the same rule and date will apply if there are j postponements in the first Cincinnati series at Philadelphia. |