Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Sept. 10, 1915, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
"V.M mm :;:::::::::: -Motoring Aeronautics Tennis Golf, Etc. Baseball : Boating Yachting Angling m is fill SsSvX-S v.v m S PORTS SHORE ALLOWS BUT ONE HIT; BLANKS ATHLETICS Tigers Win Close Game from the Cleveland's Senators Win Double Victory From New YorkBrown Was Weak In First and Yankees Were Un able to Hit in Second. - RESULTS YESTERDAY A. New York 3-1; .Washington 5-4. At Cleveland 5;. Detroit 6. , At Boston 5; Philadelphia 0. No Others Scheduled. . PHILLIES TAKE T ST HIRD RA16HT FROM GI NTS Brooklyn Blanks. Boston and Regains Second Place WHERE : THEY PLAY TODAY Washington at New York. Philadelphia at Boston. Detroit at Cleveland. No Others Scheduled. STANDING OF THE CLUBS Boston Detroit Chicago Washington New York St. Louis . . . v Cleveland . . . - Philadelphia W S6 78 ...71 59 59 . w 50 ...38 43 47 53 59 68 78 81 90 Pet. .664 .647 .593 .543 .465 .400 .383 .297 Boston, Sept. 9. Knowlson's passes 1 with occasional hits produced five runs for the Boston Americans while Phila delphia was being held scoreless to ,.day. Shore pitched !a tight game, only one Athletic hit being recorded. His support was errorless. Boston's re vised batting order proved an effective combination. Manager Mack - introduced another new, recruit today " in Corcoran, who was tried at third base. His fielding Philadelphia - 000 000 000 0 1 2 Boston 011 011 10 5 9 0 Knowlson and McAvoy; Shore and ' Cady. Cincinnati Reds Take Double-Header , From St. Louis and Move from Last Place In Race for the National Pennant. RESULTS YESTERDAY At Brooklyn 1", Boston 0. At Philadelphia 3-9; New York 0-4. At St. Louis 3-0; Cincinnati 4-5. No Others Scheduled. WHERE THEY PLAY TODAY Cincinnati at St. Louis. Boston at Pittsburg. New York at Philadelphia. No Others Scheduled. STANDING OF THE CLUBS w Philadelphia .,72 Brooklyn 71 Boston ,. .68 St. Louis .65 Chicago 61 Pittsburg 63 Cincinnati 60 New York 59 CLUBS L Pet. 56 .562 61 .587 60 .531 69 .485 66 .480 70 .474 69 .466 68 .465 New York, Sept. 9. Washington won both games from New York today 6 to 3 and 4 to 1. Brown weakened in the first game after he had a three-run lead 'and the visitors batted out a vic tory against Donovan's pitcher. In the second game New York could not hit Gallia in the pinches.,, Washington .000 000 230 5 9 2 New York - 200 001 000 3 5 3 Harper, Ayres and Williams; Brown, Donovan, Vance and Alexander. Second game: Washington 001 102 000 4 8 1 New York 000 000 010 1 9 0 Gallia and Henry; Pieh, "Vance and Krueger. Cleveland, Sept. 9. Detroit tooki ad vantage of Cleveland's errors an'a rHa german's base on balls and won 6 to 5. Lowdermilk started to weaken in the sixth and Boland 'replaced him, pitching effectively until the eighth when Dauss came to his rescue. Cobb reached first every time at bat, mak ing three hits and receiving two pass es. The Cleveland pitchers issued 12 passes. Cleveland 100 002 020 5 7 7 Detroit 100 102 110 6 8 0 Hagerman Carter and O'Neill; Low dermilk, Boland, Dauss and Stanage. St. Louis, Sept. 9. Cincinnati moved out of last place by taking a double header from St. Louis today 4 to 3 in 14 innings, and 5 to 0 in eix innings. Bescher's single and Long's triple tied the score in the ninth inning of the first game. In the 14th Rodger's trip led? and scored the winning run on Wingo's sacrifice.' Doak and Niehaus were hard hit in the ' second game which was ended by darkness. Cincinnati . .000 100 020 000 01 4 13 1 St. Louis ...000 020 001 000. 00 3 14 0 Dale, Toney and Wingo; Robinson, Sallee and Snyder. Second game: Cincinnati 120 0025 9 0 t. Louis 000 000 0 7 1 Schneider and Wingo; Doak, Niehaus and Gonzales. FEDERAL LEAGUE. RESULTS YESTERDAY No Games Scheduled. WHERE THEY PLAY TODAY Newark at St. Louts. , Buffalo at Kansas City. i, Pittsburg at Brooklyn. 11"! No others scheduled. STANDING OF THE CLUBS Pittsburg . . St. Louts Newark . . Chicago . Kansas City Buffalo ..... Brooklyn Baltimore . . W ,.".73 ...70 ,. .68 ,..70 ...68 ...67 ...63 ...43 L 56 60 59 2 62 68 Pet. ,.568 '..538 . .535 ' ,530 V.52S 1496 70 J. .474 85 .8.36 DOWN HOMERS TAK E 2ND GAME FROM TRUCKERS Three and a Half Thousands Witness Great. Contest MINOR LEAGUES Philadelphia, Sept. 9. Philadelphia made it three straight victories over New York by winning today's game 3 to 0 and 9 to 4. Alexander and Ben ton had a battle in the first game, the visitors being able to get only "three scattered hits. Benton was taken In the eighth for a pinch hitter, and Schupp finished the game. In the sec ond event . Philadelphia hammered Schauer's delivery hard while Demaree let up in the closing innings. In this game Cravath made his 2th home run drive of the season. The crowd filled the park to its capacity and all the gates were closed before the second game started. New York ...000 000 000 0 8 1 Philadelphia 100 000 11 3 7 0 Benton, Schupp and Meyers; Alexan der and E. Burns. Second game: New York 000 010 120 4 11 3 Philadelphia 310 302 00 9 11 1 Schauer and Dooin and Wendell; Demaree and E. Burns and Adams. SOUTHERN LEAGUE. At Atlanta 9; Birmingham 6. At Chattanooga 4; Memphis 0. - At Mobile 2; New Orleans 8. At Little Rock 4; Nashville 2. 2nd: Little Rock 2; Nashville 2; innings, dark.) (S AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. At Columbus 5; St. Paul 6. At Indianapolis-Kansas City, rain. At Louisville 3; Minneapolis 9. At Milwaukee 1-3; .Cleveland 4-11. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. At Buffalo 2-8; Richmond 1-4. At Montrfeal 4-5; Jersey City 5-1. At Rochester 3; Providence 4. At Toronto 4; Harrisburg 1. CAROLINA LEAGUE. RESULTS YESTERDAY At Asheville 8 Raleigh 6. - At Greensboro 3, Durham 4. At Winston-Salem 5, Charlotte 1. STANDING OF THE CLUBS W L Pet. Asheville .33 . 22 - .600 Charlotte ... ..." .....31 25 .554 -Durham ... ... i....30 26 .536 Raleigh 28 28 .500 Winston-Salem ... ..26 30 .464 Greensboro 18 35 .340 Brooklyn, Sept. 9. Although obtain ing only one hit off Tyler today, Brook lyn defeated Boston 1 to 0 In the final game of the series, and thereby moved back Into second place. The only hit off Tyler was a grounder by Getz whfch Schmidt was unable to field cleanly. Pfeffer allowed the .Braves only two hits, a single by Moran in the fourth and an infield single by Egan in the ninth. Both sides fielded brilliantly. The only run was made on a pass to Meyers, Getz's hit, a double steal and an out by Nixon. Only two Boston players reached second and none got to third. Boston 000 000 000 0 2 1 Brooklyn 010 000 00 1 1 1 Tyler and Whaling; Pfeffer and Mc- Carty. 8SS '...V.V KSftMM Si:::: You can R A. both ways ! Rocky Mount Team Defeats Portsmouth Aggregation After , Latter Had , .Led Up to If th inin.?- ' Game of Features ., " (Special Star Telegram.) Rocky Mount, N. C, Sept. 9. Eight to six was the score of the Tar Heels' victory of the championship series this afternoon in the clash with the Ports mouth Truckers. Three and a half thousand people saw the great set-to which, as the game of yesterday, was journeying for the visitors until the seventh inning when, after the Truck ers had taken one run In the third, Gray whelped over the right field fence with one man on and gave the Tar Heels a lead which they never lost. Alton, the visitors' slab artists, last ed but one more inning and Leake worked his undoing when the hefty flinger dropped' one safe beyond the right field fence with two corners fill ed and the Down Homers made the lead 5 to 1. It was in the next that Wood, to the relief, sledded into trouble when after passing Gray, Eisel hit for two corners and then Wratten singled and both scored and Wratten, drawing two errors, chased over the pan. In the ninth the Truckers launch ed a great rally, when five hits, two of them for extra corners, counted for five runs before Leake stemmed the onslaught and stopped the run-getting, just two runs-short of tieing the score. From a fielding standpoint, the game was a classic save for two nobbles by Short, who otherwise caught a great game, while offensively both clubs hit the ball, ran bases like demons and never burned up a chance of paving a runner tally.- Portsmouth, ......001 000 005 6 12 2 Rocky Mount ,-000 002 33 8 10 0 Alton, Wood . and Short; Leake and Ulrich; umplres&BuBsey and Culliflow er; time 2:00; attendance 3,644. Copyright R. J. Reynolds Tob. Co. Prince Albert is a regular double-header for a single admission; a two-bagger with the bases full and two out in the ninth! Yes, sir, it pleases the jimmy pipe smoker just as it satisfies the cigarette roller ! You can't put P. A. in wrong, because it has everything any man ever hankered form the tobacco line! The, patented process fixes that and takes out the bite apd parch ! Now, you listen to this nation-wide smoke news, men, because we tell you P. A. will come across like it was an old Mend. You'll get fond of it on the first fire up, it's so good, and so cool, and so chummy 1 PACER DIRECTUM I, LOWERS THE FORMER TRACK RECORD Hartford, Conn., Sept. 9. The fea ture of the fourth day of racing at the Grand Circuit meeting at Charter Oak Park was the successful attempt of ' the pacer Directum I, driven by Tommy : Murphy, to lower the track record of two minutes. The former record was made by Star Pointer in 1899. The ;chestnut stallion was in fine form and on a fast tracK clipped one and one-half seconds off the track record. The first quarter was not very fast but the second quarter was paced In less than half a minute and the third in j 29 seebnds. The last quarter was Just a trifle slower than the third, as the stallion noticeably tired a few feet from the wire, though he did not stop The mark ties the season's record of 1:58 1-2, made by William. - CAPTAIN RICHARDS WINS INDIVIDUAL RIFLE MATCH Seagirt, N. J., Sept. 8. Capt. William R. Richards, of Ohio, today won the Hayes individual match at 600 yards with a perfect score for ten continuous targets at the 25th annual rifle tour .aament here. - Sergeant Roscie; Arnett, of the United States marine corps, was second with a 49. ; -. .' The company . team ' match was won by troop A, of squadron A, of New York. The econd New Jersey regiment won the Columbia trophy match. ..: BROOKLYN NATIONALS ARE AGAIN IN SECOND PLACE New. York, Sept. 9. While Philadel phia increased its lead in the National League today by taking two games from New York, Boston and Brooklyn again exchanged places. Brooklyn's victory over the Braves shoved Bos ton back into third place and'" the Su perbas regained second, position. The Superbas, now three games be hind. Philadelphia and the Braves, four full games behind the leaders, start west tomorrow. Both have proved poor road teams this year, while Philadel phia also has played better baseball at home than abroad and all three will meet the same clubs during their western tour. Philadelphia has anoth er game to ,play with the Giants to morrow before beginning its trip.- The Superbas have the advantage over Bos ton, for in addition to being a game ahead they will have to play four games less than either the Braves or the Phillies. . Boston and Detroit retain their re spective positions in. the American League race as the result of today's games, Doth teams naving won. xne Red Sox still hold the lead by two and one-half games over the TigerB, but Detroit will have to play only 21 games while the Red Sox schedule calls for 26. IB the national joy smoke just let's you go-to-it all the day long without a come-back I And you don't have to take a correspondence course in tobacco smoking to under stand how to smoke P. A. You take-to-it, natural like! We tell you Prince Albert will put new joykinks into your palate!' If you roll 'em, P. A. will sound a new note as to just how good the makin's can be! Realize that men everywhere all over the world are smoking Prince Albert tobacco. That certainly ought to put a lead-me-to-it whisper in your ear! Prince Albert sold everywhere in toppy red bags, 5c ; tidy red tin, 10c, and in handsome pound and half-pound tinhumidora; also, in that dandy pound crystal-glam humidor with the eponge-moutener top that keeps the tobacco at the high point of perfection. R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Winston-Salem, N. C ''ina an mini Federal Reserve Board has been offi cially notified of the commission's coming. It is stated on best authority that the subject has not been broached to the government officers who, nat urally, would be most concerned, either by representatives of the allied govern ments or by American financiers. It was pointed out today tha't any arrangements that may be made would be wholly between the bankers and the commissioners. Officials here think for them to take any hand in deliberations which concern only the Allies might be interpreted as unneutral. It is realized that establishment of a large credit fund in the United States may result in the re-discount of ac ceptances based on the exportation of goods bought with that fund. The Re serve Board, however, holds that it has no power to draw any line of de- count of such acceptances when the pa per offered is sound and conforms to the board's regulations. WRESTLING MATCH TONIGHT. Max Miller, a Strolls "and Active Man, to Meet Hanson the Popular Idol. The wrestling fans have been look ing forward to tonight for an oppor tunity of seeing Frits Hanson, the pop ular mat Idol, in a match where he will have to make use of his best skill, or go down in defeat. Max Miller weighs nearly 20 pounds more than Hanson markation which would prevent re-dis ana nas an excellent list or clean victories. The announcements were In error at first when It was stated that Miller was a champion. He is not a cham pion and couldn't be unless he could throw Frank Gotch, because Max Mil ler is in the heavyweight class. It is true that he has beaten a long list of wrestlers, but is too heavy to hold the belt in any of the lighter weight classes. The fans don't care much about Mil ler's championship, or no champion ship, it is a matter of seeing Frit Hanson put on his mettle, and they all know Fritz is going to try to save his record. MRS. fANDERBECK AND MISS STIRLING WILL MEET TODAY. Seml-Frnala 'ln Women's National Golf Championship Tournament. Chicago, . Sept. 9. Breaking the course record for a second time within four days, Mrs. C. H. Vanderbeck, of Philadelphia, today survived the third match round in the women's national championship golf tournament by de feating Mrs. L. B. Biefleld, of Chicago, 3 and 1. . . i Tomorrow Mrs. Vanderbeck. will meet Miss Alexa Stirling, Southern champion, who eliminated another Chl cafeoan, Miss Marjorie Edwards, 5 and 4 Chicago, Sept. 9. -Disturber IV., own ed by James A, Pugh, of Chicago, broke all records today in winning the sec ond of the motor boat races for the national hampionsnip and the Wrig ley cup. "The tig racer ' covered the thirty-mile course In 33:0,8 1-8. Miss Detroit, of Detroit, finished second. : . , ; -v: -t New York, Sept. 9. Pitcher Phil Douglas, of the Brooklyn baseball club, was sold today to the Chicago Nation-; als at the waiver price. - Greenwich, Conn., Sept. 9. Yale de feated Princeton five points to four in the final match for the inter-collegiate team championship at golf today on the .course of the Greenwich Country Club. Princeton won the title last year. Prior to that time Yale was the champion for nine successive years. MEETING TODAY TO DISCUSS BIG LOAN (Continued From Page One.) in Mr. Morgan's library. they will raise a financial problem of proportions nev er assumed before in -the Western Hemisphere. Not only is the immediate future of Great Britain. France and Russia involved, bnt, in the opinion of local financiers, the continuous pros perity of American exporters is vitally affected. . -y Whether Great Britain and her al lies will continue their lavish spending in tne markets of the United States, these financiers assert, depends almost wholly on the score of the commis sion's work. Unchecked buying, they declare, cannot continue unless a way is found to pay, and the only plausi ble way seen ahead at present is to lend Great Britain, France and Russia tlie money vwith which to do it. How much money is needed, unon what terms it will be borrowed, what collateral win De onered, how long the mammoth loan1 will run, and numerous other details are what the commission will endeavor to adjust. COTTON MEN ARE IN SEMI-ANNUAL MEET (Continued I-iom rage One.) The sinews of war must be provided by the latter before the former can be de veloped to its full extent; and by com mercial preparedness, I mean not only the strengthening of those industries which would necessarily contribute supplies for. a possible war, but all enterprises Of manufacture, transpor tation and distribution, so that we can put behind any body of men enlisted in the nation's defense 'a united, pros perous, contented and determined pop ulation,' and be able to supply all the varied wants of our people and fur nish the fullest support to the govern ment in any time of trial. "We have learned the sad lesson that trade relations with other countries, however firmly rooted, are secondary to military exigencies. We have seen our mills handicapped and in some cases forced to close or curtail, many of which our country would have been amply able to supply if the Idea of commercial and industrial prepared ness for any emergency had been kept in mind." Mr. Duncan decared that while the industrial depression in this country had been in part temporarily righted by a demand for products which the United States alone could supply, the fact should not be overlooked that the present difficulty of the settlement of foreign balances in American favor might seriously curtail prospective ex ports. "Our national honor, and even our existence," he said, "may depend upon the extent and the thoroughness in the next few months of our military pre paredness, but as a basis and ground 3 ft o I OPEN FOR BUSINESS A MODERN AND COMPLETE STOCK OF AUTOMOBILE ACCESSORIES, AND EVERYTHING MARKED IX PLAIN FIGURES. WILL MAKE A SPECIALTY OF SUPPLIES FOR FORD CARS THE WONDERFUL FRANKLIN WILL ARRIVE THIS WEEK. LET US SHOW YOU. H.L. FEN NELL 111 CHESTNUT STREET. (NEXT TO STAR OFFICE.) FENNELL'S SERVICE AS OF OLD work which alone can make possible the enormous expenditures involved, our domestic affairs should have equal attention. In the midst of internation al complications, when we know not what a day may bring forth, it is the duty of every true American to stand by the President in his efforts to pre serve our national dignity and- honor. On the other hand may we not urge it as an equal duty upon the President to stand by us in an effort to bring back and- maintain the business prosperity of the country." NOT GOVERNMENT AFFAIR Improbable That' it Will in Any Way T! n Ile -egrotiations.: - ,Washlngtony Sept. 8. Although Treasury officials aaC: members of the Federal Reserve Board are interested ta the outcome of the conferences be tween the. Angio-r-rencn commission a?,d -American bankers, it; is not prob able the: government ( will in any wa figure in the negotiations: weuner Secretary McAdo nor the A TALE OF TWENTY STORIES'' Absolutely the Most Hair-Raising Comedy Ever Filmed. Hank Mann, Vin Moore and May Emory in Two Full Reels of Rip-Roar-inpr, Heart-Failure Producing-Stunts. "ROMANCE OF ELAINE When the New Tennis Champ ion Won His Crown. The Mysterious Del Mar Gets in Bad When Elaine Receives a Cu rious Note. Full of Thrills from, Beginning to End. ANIMATED WEEKLY As Usual, It is Brimming Full of Great and Interesting Things. BIJOU W. I ma- ... J J -iWi .Ti- 1 -w'jyyj.V'So- 'cv In the tennis final at Forest Hills. 1 nis thamninn.n. i ' Long island, Tuesday. September 7, the rnu? P5-SH1"-red headed youth from California; WJ1- ston is hal-X mn Uflin- John liam M. Johnston, won the singles ten-j age. but hU ftenniT VsTeen ? afrevelaf rt."wAMj"A...:v:v:-.4w William M. Johnston. was that of wcLoughim WI1C" began, to shine. : V HO'. .
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 10, 1915, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75