The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 84, Ed. 1 Monday, September 3, 1923 Page: 6 of 8
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PAGE SIX
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1923
REDDSKIN MANAGER
MC
Classil
HE
MAJOR LEAGUES HIT
HELPS RANKINITES
FORT WORTH, 2; SAN ANTONIO, 0.
"AMDERGS
PUT OVER 11-8 WIN
SNAGS ON SUNDAY throughout
THE YEAR
Won. Lost.
I
R H. E
(72
Wachtel and Haworth;
Marshall, Adama and Kohlbecker.
HOUSTON, 5; WICHITA FALLS. 2.
Ghdycu Kee on seng em
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
Won. Lost.
There’ll be no dull times
R HE
in your business if there
are no lull times in your
Advertising.
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
TELL them regularly in
Won. Lost. Pct.
LODGE
Thirty-five squares
here yesterday.
district the
Score, first game.
Connally and Witry.
Connally and Wendell
f
LOST A
TEXAS LEAGUE.
Won. Lost.
BOSTON, 3; NEW YORK, 2.
)
)
Score _by innings:
000 103 010
1 ..... 000 001 000—1 6, 1
s Haynes and McCurdy;
AB R H PO A E!
BY LLOYD GREGORY.
2 6
Donohue, Harris and Hargrave.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
PITTSBURGH, 8; CHICAGO. 6.
WASHINGTON, 7: NEW YORK, 2.
... 0
R. H. E.
Score by Innings:
R. 11. E.
Pittsburgh ....001 120 002 02—8 15
1
. .. .000 130 200 00—6 13
Hoffman;
Hamilton, Meadows and
Gooch; Kaufmann and O'Farrell,
ST. LOUIS, 4; DETROIT, 3.
1 13
HELP V
Phillies Sunday, .12 to 3.
troit, 4 to 3, Sunday.
Batteries:
Dic erman; Smith and Fay lor.
Totals
Tn listing Sunday the Varsity letter
sour
i
HELP W
Miss Antoinette Folta.
A wholesome
the
FOR RE
THE GU M P S — HIS CARDS ON THE TABLE
TWO BOYS CONFESS
MURDER AND ROBBERY
■'
I
41
0s-g
l
-e
MI
I 0
9s-
■
o
L
o
FOR RIC
■ ■ — T-em==5a5
. ""22
SPORT NEWS
And Comments
Dial
will
3
2
4
4
veston won both games of the final
double header with Shreveport Sun-
day, (Jeorge Conally pitching effect-
ively throughout the sixteen innings
Dennis Burns’ string of seven straight
wins was broken in the first contest.
6
8
born, Lucasville. Ohio,
physic that sweetens
2
0
WANT
Or Swede
0
0
2
Manager Hill said in answer to a
question that "Bus" Estill, Austin um-
pire in the Texas League, was getting
along in great style at his officiating.
Estill was “ragged” quite a bit in Aus-
tin when he was working in the Texas
Association, but with the exception of
one little scrap at Beaumont with the
fans, "Bus’’ has had no trouble at all.
Shreveport
Galveston
Batteries:
7
7
M •uNIN AS •EL$IDEMT of
TE CONSOLIDATEV COMGIHAMION
WARBRVS* AND MIRROR COMPAFN. INC .
St. Louis
Cincinnati
■
1
3
3
23
29
34
37
39
41
Shreveport
Galveston
Batteries:
S,e
53
6.3
64
66
69
72
71
90
WANT
bookkeep
miliar w.
pre ferred
giving e>
talcasieu
Texas.
FOR
bedroom,
lino. Pri
Phone 44;
43
66
67
58
65
64
68
71
Fort Worth ...
San Antonio ..
Wichita Falls’..
Dallas ........
Beahmont .....
Houston ......
Galveston .....
Shreveport .....
make him a pitcher of Texas League
class.
FOR I
also gara
house, 1(
constder
Phone 61
FOR T
rooms to
limited n
at Ia
R. H. E.
-4 11 A
Chicago
Batteries:
Score:
Fort Worth .
San Antonio
Batteries: "
AT
©)
2
2
0
1
2
0
2
Giants Walloped by the Boston
Braves While Yankees Lose
to Washington.
E
NICE 1
13th, just
Phone 57
Score:
Wichita Falla
Houston ....
(tent with the single exception of Pitts-
burgh.
One of the few conflicts of the sea-
BARBE
petent in
reasonabl
alogue e»
lege, For
LOST-
August 2
Reward.
A. S. BURLESON FILES
ANSWER CONTESTING
WILL OF MRS. BEE
Game Poorly Played Affair;
Both Brooks and Schmid
Off Color.
New York .
Cleveland ..
St. Louis ..
Detroit .....
Washington
Chicago ....,
Philadelphia .
Boston ......
WANT
general I
eluding <
4104 Ave
tonqs the liver and cleanses the
Morley Drug Co.—Adv.
.643
.541
.525
.519
.472
467
.438
.398
Pct.
.620
.584
.595
.543
.504
.476
.336
.331
Austin .....
Mexia ......
Corsicana ..
Marlin .....
Sherman ...
Waco ......
Ei < vi
.. 84
.. 75
. . 73
.. 73
.. 65
.. 66
.. 65
.. 47 '
| frated New York. 7 to 2.
Score by innings:
KIRBY
Ave. Twe
and cold
Transtent
Phone 31
manager.
Austin:
Cannon, rf ..
Lewis, ss ...
Chaney. 2b ..
. Anheier, 1b .
Gillespie. If .
Clements. 3b
Griggs, rf ...
Bedfor d, C . .
Brooks, p ....
Johnson, p . ,
- Collins, p ...
•Ferguson ...
••Autry .....
, Pittsburgh ..
Cincinnati .,
Chicago ....
St. Louis ...
Brooklyn ...
Boston .....
Philadelphia
HOOSIER STATE’S
PROUD OF BEAUTY
WANTI
ferred. I
49
. 52
61
68
63
65
83
83
Where They Play Monday.
Corsicana at Austin.
Marlin at Waco..
Mexia at Sherman.
Where They Play Monday.
- (Double Headers.)
Wichita Falls at Fort Worth.
Shreveport at Dallas.
Beaumont at Houston.
San Antonio at Galveston. '
ret.
.613
543
.533 1
.525 !
.485
.478 ■
.478
.343
Results Sunday.
Brooklyn. 3; Philadelphia. 12.
New York;, 2; Boston, 3 (10 innings).
Cincinnati. 1; St. Louis, 4.
Chicago, 16; Pittsburgh, 8.
1
4
0
0
3
0
2
0
0
0
h /
I
SUFFERED WITH BACK:
RECOVERED.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 3— Washing-
। ton hit Bush timely Sunday and de-
... 79
... 66
...63
... 61
...58
... 5«
...52
COUGHS DISTURB SCHOOL WORK.
School teachers should give the same
3/07,7
GMirh
2
7
0
0
4
1
5
0
6
4
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. . 4
... 4
... 2
... 0
... 0
... 1
... 1
Chicago Nationals lost to Pittsburgh.
6 to 8. In eleven innings, while thirty-
five squares south of the business dis-
trict the Chicago Americans saw their
...44
...39
... 33
...30
... 28
...28
2
1
0
1
1
0
0
0
1
1
2
3
1
1
1
1
0
Q
0
0
0
1
tomach,
bowels.
0
0
0
0
0
0
8
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
2
0
1
4
0
0
0
0
0
...2
... 3
... 4
... 4
... 4
8
Ph
2
1
1
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
Boston ....
New York .
..80
... 73
...75
. .. 69
...64
...69
...42
... 41
... 5
. . . 5
... 5
... 5
. . . 4
ANDREW’GUMP
PRESIDE Is* 1
St. Louis ........003 100 00X—4
Batteries: Johnson and Bassler;
Vangilder, Shocker and Collins.
A
features of the national pastime, the
Brooklyn Nationals, which for two
O’Neill; Barnes and Snyder.
ST. LOUIS, 4; CINCINNATI, 1.
Results Sunday.
Galveston, 2-7; Shreveport, 0-3.
Fort Worth, 2: San Antonio, 0.
Houston, 5; Wichita Falls, 2.
Dalia*-Beaumont, rain.
7,
•on resulted in an amusing situation
NATIONALLEAGUE
7
\
Results Sunday.
Austin, 11; Waco, 8. i
Sherman, 4-5; Marlin. 3-2.
Mexia, 6; Corsicana, 2.
Williams’ twenty-sixth home run of
the season wth two men on base in
u ■
.. . .33 11 9 27 12 5
\ 1
\
J
Pct.
.657
.574
.493
.448
.418
.406
PHILA., 12: BROOKLYN, 3.
BROOKLYN, N. Y.. Sept. 3.—After
winning two straight from the world
0 .0
0 0
north of the downtown
FOR F
room wil
reasonabl
Went Six
WATCH DIGESTION IN SUMMER
Too mu h ice cream. pie, salads,
pickles and cold drinks during the hot
MEN <
velopes,
eulars, :
Work u
written,
honest, i
responde
Internati
364D, 89
/:
___________THE AUSTIN STATESMAN
TEXAS IEASUE ] LEADERS IN BOTH —
Sunday before the Boston Nationals, days turned back the world champion
who won in the tenth inning, 3 to 2. ' Giants, fell before the last-place Phila-
it was the Giants third straight loss, ‘delphians by the score of 13 to 3
Score by Innings: R. H. E. Rabe Ruth showed poorly in the
game with Detroit,the Yankees falling
before Washington, 2 to 7 The Babe
It was only to be expected that both
the' Indians and Rangers would take
it easy Sunday. The way the play has
kept up to standard for the greater
'part since the Rangers won the pen-
nant has really been remarkable Ra-
kin's players are naturally concerned
ne w with the play-off avainst th* Red
Sox, and the fact that they have let
down but little since clinching the
pennant contrasts strongly with the
play of McIver's Sox during this sec-
ond half.
. . .001 000 001—2 7 0
300 000 13x—7 10 4
. I
Waco:
Comstock, rf . .
Hall. 2b ......
Shires. 1b .....
Lacy. If . ...L..
Strickland, ss .
Schroyer. c ...
Dupuy, 3h ....
Gouger, rf ....
Schmid, p ....
Munch, p .....
Totals .......
ABRH PO A. F Mogridge ana Gharrity.
bagger which sent in a pair of runs.
The Philadelphia Nationals pounded
four pitchers in Brooklyn and scored
a lop sided victory, 12 to 3. The Cleve-
land-Chicago game was called because
.of rain.
although he held the Sand Crabs to I There are eight doubleheaders sched-
three hits, the score being 2 to 0 With uled in the major leagues today, laabor
the score tied in the last inning of the Day. The careful schedule makers have
second game and the bases loaded, I arranged it so that holday crowds will
Red Ostergard pounded out his twen- 'click the turnstiles in every city which
ty-second homer of the season, giving has a team camping under the.bi8
2
0
6-5
TEXAS ASSOCIATION.
WEU, THATS A NW LookIN6 LrTE
CAW>- HE MIGHT HANE VSEV A LITTLE
MORE INK ON ME WoRv "rREsTEN
BVT ."THE ENGRAVG WS Swew- A
BLNV MAN CAa RVw M'S .Ficts
OVER IT AND KNOW TVS HOT " A
vWCKET TO A "TUG«N RAFFLE-
Luther Brooks, as has been his cus-
tom of late, was pounded severely by i
the visitors, who would have won, de- ’
spite Dupuy's awful play at third, had ycv,
Manager Johnson allowed Brooks tom *
stay in the box any longer than he did.
Mike Schmid, the best pitcher in the
league, was not up to his usual form,
but he would have won, nevertheless,
with any semblance of support. In the
eighth, Schmid walked off the rubber
when the bases had been filled with
■
CHICAGO, Sept. 3.—Johnny Rawl-
ings broke up an eleven inning game
Sunday with a two-base hit which
sent two runs across the plhte and
gave Pittsburgh an 8 to 6 victory over
< hicago.
CHICAGO, Sept. 3.—The Boston Na-
-tionals defeated the New York Giants
at the Polo Grounds yesterday, 3 to 2.
when Art Nehf weakened in the tenth
inning. The New Yorkers scored their
two runs in the first inning and after
that were held close by Genewich. The
Giants lost none of their letd,. as Cin-
cinnati was defeated by St. Louis.
The New York Americans also went
down to defeat, being beaten by Wash-
ington, 7 to 2. Mogridge, pitching for
the Senators, allowed seven hits.
Ken Williams’ twenty-sixth homer
won for the St. Louis Americans over
Detroit in St. Louis, 4 to 3. It came
$40,000, consisting of land in Hays
county and the family residence on
East Laurel Street and Main Avenue
in San Antonio.
The first will was filed for probate
Manager Dupuy of the Waco Red-
skins. who played his last game of ball
several years ago, essayed to hold
down .the third sack for the Indians
Bunday, and his three glaring miscues
contributed very largely to Austin’s
11-8 win. The game, played before one
of the largest crowds of the season,
was a miserable affair and wax notable
only because of the fact that the Ran-
gers overcame a big lead to win the
verdict.
R H. E.
.3 5 1
.7 7 0
Batteries: Genewich, Oeschger and
LARGE
or unfurn
desired;
porch an
Dial 6039
Brewer and McDade;
..................2 3 0
D. Burns and J. Burns; *
AN L
Sex. may
correspor
325 weel
unnecess
suggcste
tional I
York..
WRITk
Inc... tor
the Burt
class ba
guarante
las, and
Texas.
Bush and
J tTs ABOVT TME THAT
( FuoRAVER SE CARVS- V
-\ vW.H, WATEV LOKGER
F V BE Too ocv No ErAD .
\ ML MINKS TIE woev
k "WoSH° MKANS “DorFT HURRN
WANTI
of neat >i
car. Leo
Where They Play Monday.
(Double Headers)
Cintinnati at Pittsburgh.
St. Louis at Chicago.
Philadelphia at Brooklyn.
Boston at New York.
feverish stomtte h are symptoms of this
malady that can he corrected with
Foley Cathartic Tablets I had stom-
ach trouble and tried Foley Cathartic
the Crabs, a 7 to 3 victory. It was
Ostergard’s sixth homer of the past
five days, a season’s record. It was
also his fifth homer of the season
with the bases filled, what is thought
to be a Texas League record.
WICHITA, Kan., Sept. .3.— Alon
Iawless, 18, and Harold Knowles, 23.
of Hell Blaine. Kan., have confessed
to the police here they they killed J.
F. Todd, 39, superintendent of the
Jamar Light A Power Co. of Lamar,
CoL. as he slept in his car by the
aide of a road near Derfield, Kan., last
Wednesday night.
The boys also Emitted robbing
their victim and appropriating his car.
, PRIAT |
9
The athletic accomplishments of
Texas University athletic teams- the
most notable of recent, triumphs being
the winning of the national intercol-
legiate tennis doubles championship:
the winning of the Texas Association
title of the second half by the Ran-
gers: the victory of the Deep Fddy
swimmers at New Orleans- all these
sport triumphs hnve brought and are
bringing Austin mukh worth while ad-
vertising.
- -- - ---- ------- weather causes indigestion, coated or
advice to children who have coughs as! furred tongue, bad breath, and
did this Florida ten her "I r< om-
Behan and Henline;
Tablets. They gave quick relief and
now I can eat anything,” writes J. Os-
Fifteen thousand persons gath-
ered at the trirstate acquatic con-
vention at Michigan City. Ind., re
ently proclaimed Miss Antoinette
by Emma Kyle Burleson and Lly Bur- 1 Folta. Michigan City girl, the -
leson McDonald and was executed i Hoosier state s prize beauty
June 13. W23.
Score by innings: R.H.E
Detroit .........000 002 001-3
Pence, the curve ball pitcher of the
Waco Indians, will join the Houston
Buffs Wednesday, Manager Hill said
Sunday. Pence is a pitcher of much
promise and needs only a fast ball to
The al
secutive
Irregu
at qne-ti
All at
numbers
words.
We wi
than on
Advert
iu writi
order by
but it L
next day
all insr
injcrest
....2 7
.. .5 11
Ba ttories: Wheeler and Bischoff;
Kircher and Griffith.
... .010 000 001 1—3 10 1
straightened And that Abie will play
for Vatsity. Curtis is one {of Coach
Stewart’s best beta for a regular wing
job.
The Sherman baseball management
objects rather strenuously to’the pro-
posal of the Rangers to stage more
games at Austin than are played at
Sherman in the saw-off series. Secre-
tary Art Falk has been firing tele-
grams every few minutes, but the
Sherman officials have not yet come,
across, and it may be necessary for’
the Rangers to play three games in:
Sherman, and then to toss for the de-
ciding game. About five times as
many fans are expecte’ to see the
games in Austin as are expected at
Sherman. and tne local management
feels that Austin should have more
games than Sherman. Some definite
agreement will likely be reached today.
. . . 200 000 000 0—2 9 0
/ THNS TE WND OF A LmE
ADUANCE A6EM that CHANGEs )
"IMSvs 1O "SHOwHI IN*- A
016 8VSINESS man WyTH A
CHEAP CARb it A SoLVIR
WIW A RvSIN Gun- vm rot
Going To OVEQLOOK ANNMTHING
\ THATS NECESSAEN To MAIMAIN
NEW YORK. Sent 3—The New
York Giants went down to defeat
HOUSTON," Texas, Sept. 3—The
Buffaloes won -the deciding game
Sunday from the Spudders, with Rip
Wheeler pitching, 5 to 2. Mike Kirch-
er, hurling his first Sunday game in
Houston this season, was effective
throughout in the second inning, with
Stansbury on third, Bischoff threw to
catch him on the bag, but the peg hit
Bell’s bat and , caromed into left field,
Stansbury scoring.
in the third inning with two men on
base and gave the Browns their third
‘straight game from Detroit
1 Haines pitched the St. Louis Na-
"I had a long spell of Typhoid Fever
which played havoc with my kidneys
and I suffered a good deal with my
bark, lower abdomen and bladder. I
went on in this conditlon until I used
Foley Kidney pills. I have never been
bothered with my kidney* since,” writes
Mrs. W T Clary, White Plains. Va.
For quick relief from backache, dull
headache, rheumatic pains and kidney
and bladder trouble use Foley Kidney
rills. Morley Drug Co.—Adv.
BAN ANTONIO, Texas, Sept. 3.—
Thanks to Ike Boone, when he stayed
glued on second when Simon hit what
should have been a double and Simon
was touched while both men were
standing on the middle sack, the Bears
lost the third game of the series to I
the Cats Sunday, 2 to 0. Wachtel
pitched beautiful ball for the visitors
and while he allowed the Name number
of hits as the Panthers got, he struck
out six and kept his hits well scat-
tered. On the other hand, Marshall
was wild, walking five and hitting two
batsmen. Sensational fielding kept
the score down. .,
Score by innings: R.H.E.
Philadelphia .:. 010 323 210—12 14 1
1 Brooklyn ....... 000 201— 3 13 2
0 — - — . — -
tionals to victory over the Reds in
Cincinnati, 4 to 1. Johnny Rawlings I
cAvEe~N-.e~ETepA~--_e broke up an eleven-inning game in
GALVESTON.27; SHREVEPORT,0 S , (-hlcag(J and won for Pittsburgh Na-
GALVESTON, Texas, Sept 3.—-Cal- tionals, 8. to 6, by !ining out a two-
NICEL
venlent
Mrs. II.
Ave. Ph
Hunter Hill, manager of the Houston
Buffaloes, watched Sunday's game
from the press box The Buff boss
was in the city for the purpose of
looking over Ranger and Redskin ball
players. Needless to say, his impres-
sions of Sunday’s play were rather un-
favorable. Brooks had been highly
recommended, to- Hill, but the Buff
manager could not see him at all, after
watching his poor mound work of
Sunday.
mended FOLEY’S HONEY AND TAR
to the children in my schol vhoihd
the 'flu’ and good results came when-
ever it was used.” writes Mrs. Lu. Arm-
strong, Okeechobee, Florida. Foley's
Honey and Tar contains no opiates.
Ingredients printed on the . wrapper
Quickly, relieve* colds. coughs and
croup.* Morley Drug Co—Adv.
failed to get a hit in four times at bat
and fanned in his ultimate effort.
We had thought .that Brooks would
pitch the first game of the ptay-off
series for Austin. but Manager John-
son. after watching, the pounding Lu-
ther received Sunday, is not likely to
work Brooks in the first game against
Muns. Personally, the writer hopes
that Johnson himself works the first
game. Rankin has been pitching won-
derful lmll of late, and he will be at
his best in the big games. If Johnson
doesn't work, either Whitworth or Col-
lins Will get the call.
Longhorn, training camp gets under
way. Curtis withdrew from school last
spring and there is some question as
to whether he will be eligible for foot-
ball competition, It is thought, how-
ever .that the difficulty will be
Results Sunday.
St. Louis, 4, Detroit, 3.
Washington, 7; New York, 2.
(Two games scheduled.)
------------- j . ■'
Where They Play Monday.
(Double Headers.)
New York at Philadelphia.
Washington at Boston.
St. Louis at Cleveland. •
Chicago at Detroit,
nobody down,, and Munch took his
place. Munch walked in one run and
Gillespie's double cleared the bases,
•ewing up the game.
The visitors jumped on Brooks in
the first two rounds and tallied five
runs on seven hits. Luther had noth-
ing at all, and,he was trying to throw
the agate by the batters—with little
luck. Brooks got * by the third and
fourth rounds without being nicked
for runs, but in the fifth two hits, an
error, by Clements and a passed ball
counted three tallies. Manager John-
son pitched the seventh and eighth
rounds and retired the side in order.
Johnsqn retired in favor of a pinch
hitter in the last of the eighth, and
Collins finished the affair.
Cannon was hit by a pitched ball in
the first; he stole second and counted
on Anheier’s single to right. In the
third frame, the locals pushed three
runs over after the side should have
been retired. Chaney, the first hitter,
doubled; the next two men were easy
outs; Clements was hit by a pitched
ball; Dupuy erred on Griggs' grounder,
and Chhney scored. Clements and
Griggs counted, on Bedford's double.
A base on balls issued to Lewis, a
double by Chaney. singles by Gillespie
and Clements, and a sacrifice fly by
Anheier accounted for three tallies in
the seventh.
The eighth round was a riot Autry,
pinch hitting for Brooks. delivered a
double down the third base line Can-
non was hit by a pitched ball Lewis
bunted to the pitcher, who threw to
third Autry should, have been an
easy force out, but Dupuy stepped off
the bag before the ball reached him.
and all hands were safe. At this point
the disgusted Schmid sens relieved by
Munch, a wrong hander, who walked
Chaney, the first man to face him,
and Autry crossed with the thing run
Anheier forced Cannon, Hall to
Schroyer. Gillespie cleared the bases
with a double to center. Ordinarily,
the hit would have been a single, but
the ball bounded over Comstock's head
in center and went to the center field
fence. Gillespie, came All the way
around, but very carelessly neglected
to touch third on thewuy. Comstock
threw the ball to third, and Gillespie
was called । out.
■ The box score:
The Austin Statesman
I CINCINNATI Ohio, Sept. 8 —
Haynes pitched effectively Sunday
while Donohue was hit freely and St.
Louis defeated Cincinnati, 4 to 1.
WOF
30 or* le
31 word
21 word
33 word
34 word;
25 word;
26 word
27 ''word.
28 word
29 word
30 word*
31 word;
82' w ord
33 w-ord
34 word;
35 word!
36 wordi
37 word;
38 wordi
89 wordi
40 wordi
41 wordi
43 wordi
48 wordi
44 wordi
45 wordi
46 word
47 wordi
48 wordi
49 word)
50 wordi
The first game of the double attrac-
tion with the Gumbo Busters starts
this afternoon at 3 o’clock Because
-of the holiday, about the largest crowd
of the season should be present for
the doubleheader Scott and. Johnson
will likely work the two games for the
Rangers.
J. r.
-- -- . < ----- -- —-- -champion Gants, the Brooklyn Dod-
the third inning, enabled St. Louis to. gers fell down hard before the tail-end
win its third straight game from De- -
e2#2
ST. LOUIS. Mo., Sept. 3.—Kenny
R. H. E.
0 9 1
contest with the Cleveland Indians
rained out.
When the Americans ground keeper
removed the tarpaulin from the infield,
it was just in'time to subject it to a
game-killiyg deluge
in the National League yesterday,
Cincinnati failed to gain when the
champion New Yorkers fell before the
lowly Boston Braves, 2 to 3, in ten
innings Pitching for the Reds. Pete
Donohue failed to hold St. Louis, and
the Cincinnatians remain three full
games from first place.
Presenting one of the inexplicable
0
•Bitted for Brook s in sixth
••Batted for Johnson in eighth.
Score by innihgs: R H E
Waco ...________________ 230 036 '000— R
Austin ................103 000 34*—11
1
. Summary: Two-base hit*. Comstock,
Hall. Chaney , 2, - Bedford, Autry. GH-
lesple: struck out. by Se hmid 2. by
Brooks 2, by Johnson 1; bases on balls,
off Schmid 3. off Munch 1: left on
base. Warn 6! Austin 8; passed ball,
Bedford. Schroyer: double play. Chn-
nto Lewis.to Anheier:' stolen bases.
Cannon, Shires; hit by pitcher. Can-
non 2, Clements: winning pitcher.
Johnson; losing pitcher, Schmid; time
of game. 1:50; umpire. Hill.
....« 8 11 2410 3 New .York —
W ashington .
Batteries:
The money donated by Austin
sportsmen to send the Deep Eddy
water team to New Organs was cer-
tainly money well spent. By winning
the Southern A. A. C. water cham-
pionship, the local lads added quite- a
bit to Austin’s fame as a sport center.
Great eredit must be givn to Captain
.Joe Gilbert and teammates, who
trained so hard and faithfully for the
big test. However, Coach Roy Hen-
derson. is deserving of more credit for
the success of the Austin team than
is any other one man. Henderson
worked unceasingly with his charges
and developed every man on the team.
A little help from his mates in the
infield would have kept Clements from
making one of his two errors Funday.
In the fifth, Strickland hit a hard
grounder to third that Clements
grabbed by a wonderful catch. "Bish”
had all the time in the world to make
the throw, but no on told him so, and
he made a wild throw to first: If he
had takem a second to straighten him-
self out, "Bish” would have doubtless
retired his man. But, of course, he
could not judge how much time he had
to make the play, for the force of the
ball turned ’him half around.
. - in » i , \. ond will there is a bequest to Williar.
men.who willhe back, to.’try for the Negley, an 8-> ear-old grandaon of
tonehorn 1d team of 1923. we neg- I Burlenon
lected to mention Able Curtis, substi. . The estate is ania to be valued at
tute wing man of last season, who will ] -
probably be hero Monday when the I
Contest over the estate of Mrs.
Carlos Bee of elan Antonio was indi-
cated when Albert Sidney Burleson of
Austin, former postmaster general of
the United States, filed an answer to
the application to probate. 1 Burleson
stated that a second will had been
made.by Mrs. Bec, who was a sister
of Bilesch:
| Under the first will the estate was
left to Emma Kyle Burleson. Lily
Burleson McDohald and Carins Bee,
"husband of the deceased. In the sec-
Score, second game: >
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The Austin Statesman (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 84, Ed. 1 Monday, September 3, 1923, newspaper, September 3, 1923; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1435075/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .