Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Sept. 9, 1921, edition 1 / Page 15
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1 THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, CHARLOTTE, N. C FRIDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 9, 1921. 15 LEADERS IN THE S'MATTER POP? THE TEST FOR RUBBER. By C. M. PAYNE i AMERICAN LOST Nom sense. NrlAT -3 o Vou Know Athletics Trounced Yanks fFkNT'. VOUV65. "BEEN i Tigers Manhandle t-OOLED ALL. t at vy av, m aw. ill . Erstwhile Champs. AMERICAN LEAGUE. THi s A STATEMENT I M ALL- T5 EL $E1?lOUir4tS $ ( LI B STANDINGS. r1 m l!?1 i c'nh Won r-oit Pet, Iv.nv York 82 49 .626 ( land 82 61 .617 w I.ouis 70 65 .519 ishinntim 66 68 .493 I- ,-;on 62 66 .484 j ; mat 64 72 .471 ' r uvi so 55 77 .421 a : hi. 'tics 47 81 .367 TODAY'S SCHEDULE. Cleveland at St. Louis. New York at Philadelphia, lirston at Washington. 1'otroit at Chicago. NINTH-INNING VICTORY. Philadelphia. Sept. 9. A double by ivrkins nd a single by Pinch Hitter .r -hnson Thursday grave Philadelphia two runs and a ninth-inning victory . 1 1- New York, 6 to 5. Rutb made :.is ft 3rd homo run of the season. He :., w r.c-eds only one more to equal his M'i-ld's record of last year. Score: V.w Yorfk .. 003 ,110 000 5 5 0 rh:lAilolphia --012 001 002 6 9 2 U". Collins, Rogers and Schang; Rom ir '1 and Perkins. CUEVEI-AXD ENDS DISMALLY. Cleveland. Sept. 9. Cleveland wound its li'-l home games Thursday bj 1, :nc to Detroit 13 to 1. Seoro p, !roit 000 035 250 15 20 Clvtl.in.-l 000 100 000 1 10 2 l:.;is and Bassler: Sothcron. Cald well. Clark, Morion and O'Neill, Shin- ST. I.OUIS FOUGHT BAd. Louis, Sept. 9. St. Louis over ,-;r,e a thiM -ru.i lead by Chicago and w r. Thursday's game, 4 to 3. The .'.ash was the' linal of the season !v. , u the two clubs. Score: Iv.cueo 300 000 000 3 6 -: ' I.ouis 000 001 201 4 10 Wilkinson and Sehalk; Bayne and stvereiil. NO others scheduled. ASPIRIN Name "Bayer" on Genuine mi ZAHNIZER HANDS! VOLS A SHUTOUT Mobile Twice Succumbs to Crackers, Who Backed Up Good Pitching. CLUB STANDINGS "VTon. lost. Memphis 96 New Orleans 92 Birmingham . . .. .. 85 Little Rock 69 Atlanta 70 Nashville 58 Mobile 51 Chattanooga 49 46 53 59 70 71 85 89 95 TODAY'S SCHEDULES Mobile at Atlanta. Little Rock at Birmingham. No others scheduled. Tot. .676 .635 . )i)0 .497 .497 .406 .364 .340 National League CLUB STANDINGS. "Won. IjOSt. Pittsburg 80 51 New York 82 54 St. Louis 75 59 Boston . . .... . . 72 61 Brooklyn .. 69 . 64 Cincinnati ........ 60 74 Chicago 5.2 81 Phillies 46 91 Pet. .611 .50 .541 .519 .448 .391 .336 TODAY'S SCHEDULE St. Louis at Cincinnati Philadelphia at Boston. Chicago at Pittsburgh. Brooklyn at New York. Thursday double-header with Philadel phia. Oescnger pitched brilliantly in the first game until the ninth and had a 6 to nothing lead. Then Philadel phia made eight runs, winning 8 to 6. Boston easily won the second game, 13 to 2. Score: Philadelphia .. ..000 000 008 8 10 2 Boston 001 10S 100 6 16 3 Winters, Betts and Peters, Bruggy;; Oeschger, McQuillan and Gowdy. Score: Philadelphia .. .000 100 010 2 7 2 'Boston .. .. . ..-315 013 OOx 13 15 1 G. Smith, Sedgwick and Bruggy; Watson and 0'NU1. Boston, Sept. 9. Boston divided GRIMES' TRIPLE DID IT. Chicago, Sept. 9. Grimes triple with the bases filled and two out in the fourth gave Chicago a lead which- Cin cinnati was unable to overcome 'and the locals won Thursday, 6 to 2. . Score: Cincinnati 010 000 1002 7 Chicago 000. 301 02x 6 9 Donahue, Coum.be and Win Cheeves and O'Farrell. 0 0 r No others scheduled. MARINE SETS WORLD'S RE ORD Camp Perry, Ohio, Sept. 9. Another world's record was broken Thursday when Sergeant Theodore B. Crawley, marine corps, piled up a possible fifty and had 166 bulls eyes over, which, in cluding one sighting bulls eye, gave him a continuous string of 177 bulls eyes. This score was made on the ight-hun-dred-yard range at slow fire in the W:n Chester match. PHIL UTLEY SECURED BY LENOIR AS COACH Hickory, Sept. 9. With the arrival of Phil Utley, of Raleigh, former Wake Forest football, baseball and basketball star, hs coach at Lenoir College, the call for candidates for the football team has gone out and before the' -end of the week a vigorous set of youngsters wlU respond. Mr. Utley hopes for a light, fast team this season, but little more. The boys have no regular schedule and will be content with a few scattered games this fall. A football contest dur ing fair week here is expected to at tract a large crowd. Mr. Utley will coach all the athletic teams at the col lege. Mrs. Utley is expected here fror.i Wake Forest in a few days. APPALACHIAN LEAGUE. At Greeneville 2; Knoxville 3. At Kingsport 6; Bristol 3. At Johnson City'B; Cleveland 4. VIRGINIA LEAGUE At'Tarboro 18; Newport News 4. At Norfolk 3: Suffolk 4. Richmond 0; Wilson 7. At Portsmouth 4; Rocky Mount t. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. At Columbus 3-7; Indianapolis -4. At Minneapolis' 10-S; Milwaukee f-T. At Toledo 7; Louisville 5. At St. Paul 3; Kansas City, 7. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. At Newark 12-3;; Jersey City 5-3. At Syracuse 5; Buffalo 0. At Reading 4; Baltimore 1. At Toronto 8; Rochester 6. tttt Beware! Unless you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin pre scribed by physicians for twenty-one years and proved safe by millions. Take Aspirin only as told in the Bayer package for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lum bago, and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of Aspirin cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the tra,de mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monocetlca-cirlesu-r- .u Salicylicacid. ZAHNIZER PUZLED NASHVILLE r l ; r. . r-, . r rr , -unnyuis, icnii., csepi. v. Ziannizer S i airtight pitching enabled Memphis to defeat Nashville, 4 to nothing here Thursday. Score: v Nashville 000 000 0000 3 0 Memphis 000 010 03x 4 10 0 James and Jonnard; Zahnizer and Hungling. CRACKERS COPPED COUPLE. Atlanta, Sept. 9. Good pitching by Bedgood and Osborne enabled Atlanta to take a double-header from Mobile Thursday 3 to nothing and 4 to 1. The second game was called after four and a half inning because of darkness. Score: Mobile ..000 000 000 0 5 2 Atlanta 000 201 OOx 3 10 "0 Torkelson and Schulte; Bedsood and Ruriden. Score: Mobile 100 001 Atlanta ..103 Ox 4 Wells and Schulte; Osborne Schmidt. 3 1 6 1 and PELICANS DEFEATED 'NOCGAS. Chattanooga, Sept, 9. New Orleans defeated Chattanooga .in the opening contest of the series, Thursday, 7 to 3- Score: New Oreans .. ..211 120 000 7 141 Chattanooga .. ..000 020 0103 6 6 Bailey and Deberry; Vines, Noel and Neiderkorn. Clothes that fail to wear and don't fit are e travagant at any price. You will find our clothes are economical because better style and hand tailoring moans longer wear. Price cheap as pos sible for quality offered. RAIN CAUSED DOG FALL. Birmingham, Sept. 9. Little Rock and Birmingham played a scoreless tie here Thursday, the game being called in the Barons' half of the sixth inning on account of rain. Score . Little Rock 000 0000 3 0 Birmingham 000 000 0 2 0 Jonnard and Davis; Whitehili and Brandon. MANY ARE AFTER TILDENS CROWN Five Foreign Nations Have Tennis Stars Entered in U. S. Tournament. BY HENRY L. FARRELL, United Press Staff Correspondent. Philadelphia, Sept. 9. Five foroifjn nations will reach out a hand todav for the American national singles championship, when the annual men's tennis classic gets under way at the Germantown Cricket Club. One hundred and twenty-eight play ers will start in the first round today of what is the greatest international sporting event of the season. Members of five foreign Davis Cup teams and the best players in Amer ica will compete for the crown that is now worn by William T. Tilden, world s singles championship. S. Gordon Lowe and A. Wallis My ers will represent England; James O. Anderson, Jack B- Hawkes, Norman Peach and Clarence V. Todd will carry the colors of Australia; Eric Tegnsr will represent Denmark; Japan will have her Davis Cup stars, KJumagne and Shimidzu, and the India team will also be represented. Anions: the foremost American play ers competing with Tilden are William M. Johnston, Richard Norris Williams and Watson Washburn, all of the Amer ican Davis cup team, and Vincent Richards, the Fordham boy wonder. Little fear is entertained by critics that the American title will stray fro-a the home shores. Uncle Sam will ba represented by one of the most for midable arrays of talent that has ever entered the championships. Tilden, because of the great for.-n shown all year, is regarded as the fa vorite in the tournament, but there are many who believe that Johnston and Richards have a fine chance to win tha title. Richards went stale In mid-season, after he had scored the rather sensa tional victory over Tilden. He let up on his game, however, and then camo back. In the final match of the doubles championship in Boston recently.-Rich-prds, who was teamed with Tilden, de feated ulmost lone-handed the Davis oup doubles pair, Williams and Washburn. Tilden has had a long, hard training grind, extending for over a year. Ha has been showing the effects of tho strain all season. The champion kept after his game on returning from the Davis Cup victory In Australia last win W and finally had to lay his racquet aside when he went completely stale. Bill Johnston, on the other hand, let up whn he returned from the An i podes, and now is in as good form as he has ever been. EitlTike-iukk ttm CATARRH ef the BLADDER Safe, Sactwhl From Maker to Wearer 14 North Tryon Street T7s n if We now present to the public of Charlotte, our new line of FALL AND WINTER SUITS, OVERCOATS, TOPCOATS, GABARDINE RAINCOATS AND EVENING CLOTHES IN THE MOST COMPREHENSIVE ASSORTMENT EVER SHOWN IN THIS CITY. During the past summer months when other plants have h4cn closed, we have been working to capacity. Our craftsmen have been busily engaged in the manufacture of Fall Clothes for tht patrons of our 27 stores. v Domestic and imported woolens of exclusive patterns are shown in the most stylish metropolitan models for both men and young men, and despite the glowing praises of high-priced advertised makes, we claim without hesitation that the tailoring of TRIV ERS CLOTHES by our own organization of master workmen is second to none in the clothes-making industry of America. A ,1 2 -iff WWWH As in seasons past TRIVERS FAIR PRICES ARE FEATURED our prices have always been right it has always been our purpose since our organization was formed to please the public to win confidence and give every man a full dollar's worth. 3f&r S?jf?f Today we supply the clothes wants of 300,000 men. Our business run into millions of dollars annu- i ally. We are KNOWN AS SMALL PROFIT TAKERS our motto is VOLUME and we are goinj to mm : r,, 4A n c4;il Mi , nl.imn Kv n-ilnrr flTiV. AT17.P VAT TTF.S ThAIV eVKR. and w ran Pilar. lllCi. case w a, oliii ivuivi iviuiuc uj 6 ' vji-i.4ir ...ivi.u o antee you a positive saving of $10 to $20 on each garment. f i Call on Us Without Delay Our Salesmen Will be at Y our Service cinct You, Sir, Will he Under no Obligation to Buy Factorv and Executive Offices 801-807 Broadway, New York City. 27 Branch Stores In 26 Cities Each Capsule JMIDtf 34 S. Tryon bears name w VV Beware ofcounterfeita L
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
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Sept. 9, 1921, edition 1
15
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