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Show BASEBALL GB i . . The Fourth ward boy acouts defeated defeat-ed the Sixth ward scouts In a base-bill base-bill game Saturday afternoon. The score was 16 to 5 and the lineup follows fol-lows . Fourth Sixth Simister , , c Oborn H.Stratford p .. L Stratford Doxev ss... V. Stratford ' illlams lb ... Herrlck L. Brown... 2b. ... Anderson Talor :)b .. H. Goddard C. Stratford of Spiers J. Brown rf Weaver Goddard If Weaver Thirtieth Street Sluggers. In a one-sided baseball same, plajed Saturday, the Thirtieth Street Sludgers Slud-gers defeated the Twenty-seventh Street Stars. The score was 24 to 6 and the lineup follows Sluggers Stars Moyes C... B. Bowlwarv Pagan p ..... Anderson Buckner ..lb, Ogden Cdson 2b Sanford Blrney 3b Allison Crltchlow 68. ... R. Byhe1 Tite rf. . . . G. Bybee McBratney.. If.. R. Bowlware Arrowsmith cf Blake Invinclbles Win. The K. C. K. ' invlnclples" defeated the K. C. K. Scrubs yesterday afternoon aft-ernoon winning the club championship. champion-ship. The Scrubs will now have to purchase a pennant for their stronger strong-er brothers. Yesterday's game ended with the score 1 to 2 and the liueuo follows: Scrubs Invincibles Checketts c Smith Tribe. Fagan p.Rounds, Stevens Trlbe lb lennlnps Farr 2b eras'" c,ass sb Klngsford Morri8n 3b Shields Barton ff Greenwell eeu W .Winters BrPh' cf a. Greenwell Owls Team . The Owls' baseball team defeated the State Industrial school team yesterday yes-terday afternoon on the state school grounds by the score of 22 to 2. The feature of the contest was the liitch-Ing liitch-Ing of "Bill" Shipley, the Owls' "star" twlrler, who struck out 18 men. Chris Hansen, who managed the Owls' team last year, again holds that position and Is to take his players to Gariand next Sunday for a game with the team of that town. Lafayette Sluggers. Sluggers Stars L Turner c Lauck O. Blackburn p Newey Swartzfager lb Scrivm W Landfcs 2b. . T. Harbor Johnson Beryr . . 3b. Olsen Clinos ss Olsen Taylor, Gancer rf . . . Eggleston Slater, H. Harbor Bklnd G Blackburn cf C. Eggleston Taylor Johnson, Gancef If H. Harbor NATIONAL LEAGUE. At St. Louis St. Ix)uis 8, Pittsburg At ( inclnnati ( incinntti 4, Chicago Chica-go 4 ( 1 innings, darkness). Cincinnati April 25. Chicago and Cincinnati played a brilliant 15-inn-nins game today, which was finally called on account of darkness with the score a tie. 4 to 4 The game was replete with marvelous catches by the fielders and fairly good pitch ing after the eighth inning, when Stand ridge and Douglass went into the box. Both these pitchers were wild, but they managed to hold down the opposing batsmen. Chicago ...100 200 010 000 0004 Cincinnati .000 (104 000 000 0004 Batteries Cheney, Staudridge and Bresnahan; Ames, Douglass and Clarke, AMERICAN LEAGUE. At Cleveland Cleveland 3. Detroit At Chicago Chicago 1, St. Louis St, Louis-Chicago. Chicago ApHi 25 -Chicago made it four straight from St. Bull todav! when Russel struck out eleven men and won a pitchers' contest frum Baumgprdner 1 to 0. In the fifth inning in-ning J. Collins walked, advanced to TizrUice Wtt and "? d St, I;ou,p ooo ooo ooo-o Chi2L e, ooo 0!0 OOx-" Battenes-Bfiumgardner and Agnew Russell and Bchalk. 6,1 Detrolt-Clevoland. dvIehand r,Apr11 25 -Cleveland to-day to-day browe Detroit's v. inning streak winning 8 to 1. Morton was a e and b, k , Detroit until the elgh'h SS!? ,acoon's double and cSbVi single resulted in a run. Detroit had' - I two on in the ninth with two out. but Morton retired the side by striking out pinch-hitter Mortality Cleveland got i to first two runs by bunching hits on Reynolds in the first Inning. The other came as a result of Boeh-ler's Boeh-ler's wlldness in the eighth. Cleveland 200 000 Olx " Detroit 000 000 0101 Batteries Morton and Egan; Reynolds, Rey-nolds, Cavet, Boehler, Dauss and M.- k kee. , FEDERAL LEAGUE. At St. Louis St. Louis 0. Pittsburg 3. At Newark Newark 2, Buffalo 1 At Kansas City Kansas City 3, Chicago 10 (first game); Kansas City 4, Chicago 2 (second game). Kansas City, Mo . April 25 Chicago Chi-cago and Kansas City divided a double-header today, the visitors taking tak-ing the first game Each victory went to a pitcher named Johnson. In the first contest R. Johnson for Chicago held the locals to one hit up to the ninth inning, while his teammates were piling up ten runs. In the second sec-ond his Indian namesake George Johnson occupied the mound for Kansas Kan-sas City and kept Chicago's hits wHI scattered. First game Chicago ... , m 12 i Kansas City 3 4 4 Batteries R. Johnson and Wilson; Main, Cullop and Easterly. Second game C hicago n 1 Kansas City ... .!....! 4 6 1 Batteries Hendrix and Wilson G Johnson and Brown. WINS IN FOURTEENTH. i ,r'urk N' Jl A"rn -J- A single by Huhn. following Scuaeffer's double in the fourteenth inning broke up a Pitchers' battle here today between .Newark and Buffalo Buffalo ' j - j Newark jq 3 Battortes -Schuk and Blair," Allen KaiserlUig Hnd Rariden. (, REBELS BLANK SLOUFEDS en? 'sift f5 25 Pittsburg shut out St. Louis here today 3 to 0. or.nK,fraKted the ,ocals five scattered scat-tered hits, but the visitors' field work !5L Heruiabl,lt to pitch tight ball aSGS ere occupied presented pre-sented the home team from scoring Srfbu7 3 1 St 1 OUiS A j Q Batteries Heam and Berry Watson, Wat-son, Herbert and Chapman (Continued on Page J ) fo'clT jokes! unat is a man-of-war?" said a teacher to his class." ;A cruiser " WM th t , L w hat makes it go?" "It's screw, sir.'" "Who ,oes witb It?" 1 "'ti crew, sir." I |