Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 232, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 24, 1921 Page: 7 of 12
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TRIBUNE
GALVESTON
SEVEN
-LNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1321.
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PURE
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. "rhe Hat Beautiful”
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Totals
Ae.
$
CREAMERY BUTTER
R. H. E.
Score—
Philadelphia ....003 000 200 1—6 11
221 000 000 0—5 13
Chicago
it
H
3056
Totals
MADE B
CI
3
R. H. E.
Score—
/
222
-
Knox Hats
.7
■
AUTUMN 1921
BASEBALL RESULTS
222
,04
5 69
TEXAS LEAGUE,
3
S3
DOTLGHI
Exclusive but Not Expensive
Grantland Rice
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Copyright 1921, New York Trbune, Inc.
R.HE.
AMIRICAN LFAGUE.
000 000 010—1
San Antonio ......030 000 00*—3
DIAMOND D UST
Whore They Play ’Tony.
ROSENTHAL PACKING COMPANY
2210-12 Strand
Phones 1578-6316
$
g"w""E
NATIONAL I.TAGUE.
I
We Deliver
AB a E PO.A.E
A%
IlI-Starred France,
France has drawn a stormy time of I British champions under the home roof
., ,,114
St. Louis ,,.
Cincinnati ,,,,.118
Chicago ,
117
Philadelphia . . .118
SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION,
SOUTHERN LEAGUE
-
Dixie Battery Shop
i
2210 Church.
Phone 6011
have stumbled upon the way of golf, into a double volume anyway.
40
8
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al
Boston
and
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BOXERS ON EDGE FOR
NATIONAL
Permit For Bout.
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MORE MEMBERS WANTED.
Launching
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E==zea:
STOP
AMERICAN.
Purfy Your Blood
disordered
Freeman and
O’Farrell;
Meadows and Henline.
Reds 7, Dodgers 2.
aqa
BITE
CHILD IS BURNED.
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R. H. E.
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Merely to bring to your atten-
tion the smart simplicity of the
New Knox Sailors for early
Autumn, we picture one of the
several creations as a hint of
many more just as charming.
> Davis, Vangilder, Burwell, Palmero and
Severe! d.
. . .. 1
. .. 3
. .. . 4
. . . 4
. MEATS
SERVICE
PRICES
Market
Phone 2174
0
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0
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3
0
0
0
2
0
3
5
0
2
2
0
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1
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1
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Louis 15 to 2.
Score—
13
17
21
23
25
27
29
31
Money with the Guaranty Building &
Loan , Co. earns 5%.
3
1
2
Boston ,
Brooklyn
45' '
44 '
56
60
60
64
67
73
Galveston ...,
Shreveport ...
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
2
0
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Schirmer’s
3415 M
Perryman hurled good ball for ix
Innings and then went to pieces in The
seventh.
Score—■
Dallas___
2
4
1
0
0
2
0
3
0
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
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1
3
6
0
1
0
0
3
1
2
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Completely equipped for bat-
tery recharging, repairing and
full Willard Service.
.120
.116
85
78
72
63
61
51
■ 47
40
Batteries: Moore, Rommell and Per-
kins; Faber and Schalk.
•Ran for Knight in ninth.
**Batted for Glenn in ninth.
Score by Innings—-
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
Boston at St Louis.
Washington at Detroit,
New York at Cleveland.
Philadelphia at Chicago,
There can be no better cream than that
from the FALFURRIAS JERSEY
Herd.
That’s why there can never be better
butter than Falfurrias regardless of the
price you pay.
FALFURRIAS—The Better Butter
At all Good Galveston Grocers.
t
$
Most of the temperament in football
belongs to the old grads, who naturally
get all steamed up over the situation
and frequently become rabid. What of
it? No harm will result as long as the
player retains his scholastic standing
and his temperamental balance.
' .615
.614
.533
.492
.478
.471
. 436
.371
Batteries: Tipple, Harper and Rob-
ertson; Tiner and Brock.
Pittsburgh ,.,,.117
New York .....120
Ownbey and McFarland
Work Out Daily.
cago.
Score—•
Chicago ....
Philadelphia
Batteries:
Homers By Eibel and Hol-
lahan Contribute.
pm-aa
gua
Tad Jones may not have overthrown
the universe last year, but looking back-
ward the vital statistics show that it
took Percy Haughton four or five years
Score—First game—
New Orleans......... .
Money with the Guaranty Building &
Loan Co. earns 5%.
=
Watt, 2b.....
Hartford, ss .
Vann, c......
Gleason, p ..
.705
,646
.563
,521
. 444
,426
.356
.326
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Results Yesterday,
St. Louis 10, New York 7.
Cincinnati 7. Brooklyn 2.
Pittsburgh 3, Boston 4.
, Philadelphia 1; Chicago- 0.
SMOKED PURE COUN-
TRY PORK SAU-
SAGE '
CHILI SAUSAGE
tin Rings)
BREAKFAST LINKS
LIVER PUDDING
BLOOD PUDDING
FR ANKBU RTENS
PRESSED HAM
LIVER SAUSAGE!
BOLOGNA
WIENIIs
AND 18 other kinds
. 686
.614
.581
.525
.492
.408
.376
.320
Where They Play Today.
Shreveport at Galveston,
Fort Worth at Houston,
Dallas at San Antonio.
Wichita Falls at Beaumont.
CRABS DROP FIRST
TO SHREVEPORTERS
Results Yesterday.
Shreveport 4, Galveston 3.
Houston 4, Fort Worth 3.
San Antonio 3, Dallas 1.
Wichita Falls-Beaumont (rain).
Then comes Mlle. Lenglen with the !
most depressing turn of them all. Guil- !
BASE BALL TODAY
4:30 O’CLOCK
39
49
52
.57
63
74
78
85
Try our $1.00 and 52.00 Loads—themost
for the least money.
STY BLEACH
me
EMPMIS. UAA
Rexults Yesterday.
New York 6, Cleveland 1,
Philadelphia 6, Chicago 5.
Boston 15, St Louis 2.
Detroit 12, Washington 3,
2022
6sam
WE’RE AUTHORIZED
WILLARD DEALERS
22222
#2
J. SINGER
Every Kind of Insurance
Complete Service
308-309 City Nat’l Bank Bldg.
PHONE 1241.
Your business solicited and appreciated
Eczema,
other skin
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.517
,509
.449
.402
.331
For Better Service and Highest
Quality Meats
■ call the
Union Market
622 21st Street Phone 821
We Deliver
| fir
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.. . . 5
... 4
... 4
. . . 4
. . . 2
. . . 1
Standing of Clubs.
Clubs— Games. Won. Lost Per ct
Showing a
Full Line of
Women’s Edwin
Clapp Fall
Oxfords
i
i
B
M
Frankie McFarland of Boston, feath-
erweight champ of the United States
army, is a gentleman of Italian lineage.
He comes from that sturdy race of peo-
ple that live on the shores of the Med-
iterranean, the same race that has pro-
i duced such great men as Gabriel D’An-
nunzio, the late Enrico Caruso and Pete
i«
2885
Cleveland . ........000 100 000—1 5 3
Batteries: Quinn and Schang; Cald-
wel. Mails, Morton and O’Neill.
Where They Play .Today.
Chattanooga at Nashville.
New Orleans at Little Rock.
Mobile at Memphis.
Atlanta at Birmingham (2 games).
E
=
Resuits Yesterday.
Nashville 4, Chattanooga 3.
New Oleans 7, Little Rock 2 (first
game).
New Orleans 4, Little Rock 2 (second
game).
Memphis 9, Mobile 3.
Atlanta 15; Birmingham 0.
Bears 3, Marines 1
San Antonio, Tex./Aug. 24.—San An-
tonio took the first game of the series
with Dallas by a score of 3 to L Clar-
ence Tiner’s timely single with two men
on base, coupled with Henry’s single,
acconted for all of the Bears’ scores.
Tiner. kept the Marines’ hits well scat-
tered.
The score—
SHREVEPORT.
EeMda
SUMMARY.
Two-base hits: Gleason, Ellam.
Three-base hit: Knight,
Home run; Eibel, Hollohan.
Stolen bases: Long.
Innings pitched: Perryman 6 1-3, 7
hits, 4 runs; Glenn 2 2-3, 1 hit, 0 runs.
Struck out: Perryman 6; Gleason 3,
Bases on balls: Perryman 2, Glenn 2;
Gleason 2.
Wild' pitches: Glenn.
Left on bases: Galveston 6, Shreve-
port 6.
Double plays: Ellam to Schliebner, El-
lam-Hughes-Schliebner, Vann-Hartford
Eibel.
Time: One hour and forty-three min-
utes.
Umpires: Spencer (bat) and Brashear.
Umpire Spencer was escorted from,
the park to Leopold’s car by an of-
ficer. The Crabs’ boss took the two
umps from the park to town.
' Where They Piny Today.
St. Louis at Boston.
Chicago at Brooklyn.
Cincinnati at Philadelphia.
Pittsburgh" at New York.
lemont, Carpentier, Lenglen—and the
fleur-de-lis stripped of its last laurel
sprig upon the field of sport.
j to score his first touchdown against
| Yale, Once safely through Haughton
I 1
We notice where Princeton will have
ten coaches this season. But a combina-
tionof Bill Roper, Don Lourie and Stan
Keck is enough to get a running start
if a cluster of tackling dummies have
to be interpolated for a spell.
Babe Ruth, as some have suggested,
may be an Overpraised Institution. But
the cove who can point to 100 home
runs in a brace of seasons hardly needs
any accompanying ballyhoo. If-100 home
runs can’t chatter for themselves, what
else can? .4
FALFURRLAS JERSEYDAIRY CO/
. standing of Clehs.
cub-— Games. Won. Lhet Perce
Well, well, well, the Crabs will have
to do better than this if they push
Shreveport down out of sixth place.
And at the rate the Bears are coming
the islanders have a good chance of
beating the San Antonio bunch out of
the cellar.
Brooklyn, Aug. 24.—Cincinnati took
its last game of the season in Brooklyn
yesterday, 7 to 2, in ten innings
Score— R H E
Cincinnati ......029 000 090 5—7 11 3
Brooklyn .......000 100 100 0—2 8 2
Batteries: Donohue and Hargrave:
Mitchell and Miller. ‛ 1
tetter and many .
troubles are due to
it in her international competitions up- : every passing summer and so we might
on this side of the Atlantic. , just as well keep the hullabaloo well
Guillemont comes over with a wound- ; stirred up. ’
ed heel and hobbles in a bad last, Car-
pentier leaves with a wounded mauler,
due in the main to Dempsey’s granite
jaw.
Boston 15, Browns 2.
St. Louis, Aug. 24.—Boston made six-
teen hits count for fifteen runs in the
first seven innings and won the first
I game of the series yesterday from St.
a game, with two more of the present
series yet to be played. Quinn held
the mound for nine innings for New
York. Spectacular fielding and brilliant
team work by the Yankees twice saved
the game for-the Easterners.
Score—
New Orleans 7-4, Little Rock 2-2.
Little Rock, Aug. 24.—New Orleans
took both games of a double-header
here yesterday, 7 to 2 and 4 to 2.
(•he
/ N<
New York
Phillies 1, Cubs 0.
Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 24.—Cy Will-
iams duplicated his feat of Monday by
driving the ball over the right field
wall for a home run yesterday and gave
Philadelphia l-to-0 victory over Chi-
T
V
34 3 7 27 13
Britain and France,
There has been less of the spectacular
theatrical effect about British entries,
and while Great Britain has suffered
her full share of defeats she has taken
it all with far greater calmness, and, in
the main, with the old-fashioned stoic-
ism of the race.
■When you figure that the British
After watching Hans Wagner for
eighteen years and then shifting the
view to Walter Maranville there are
few new kinks that one crowd upon a
Pittsburgh fan in connection with
shortstop play. Not enough to crowd
blood. If you ar©
afflicted with skin trouble,
don’t suffer the maddening
torture longer, but start right
away to purify your blood with
S. S. S.—the standard blood
purifier for over 50 years.
for which he was appointed. Mr. Armi-
stead’s term expires in September, 1922.
Cy Williams won his second game
from the Cubs in two days by lofting
the ball over the short rightfield fence
at Philly.
slillliliiiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIT
——r---
103 000 00*—4 10 0
4 ft. Oak and Pine Split Wood and
Heater Blocks.
Women’s
/. ? ' r:. <
Made by Duncan Coffee Co., Houston, Texas,
Batteries: Glazner, Carlson
Schmidt, Watson nad O’Neill.
No wonder so many thousands are
looking forward to the approach of
football. In football' there is more ac-
tion and less temperament among the
players than in any other sport.
0 ' 0
0 0
0 0
Our old friends the Boston Braves
staggered the league leading Pirates
with a 4-3 victory yesterday. But it
is too late in the season to have much
effect on the Pittsburgers.
HeiskeliWoodlard REST
30th and Mechanic St., Phone 238-
R. H. E.
.' 7 12 1
■Plans are
0 0
2 5
1 11
The Top Contributien.
Other entries have won more national
championships than Bill Tilden, but
when it comes to the top contribution
from an American viewpoint the honors
still rest with Bill Tilden by a dozen
jumps.
Tilden’s three-ply triumph last year
has passed the triumph of any other
American. His feat in bagging the Brit-
ish title, the American title and then
leading the assault upon the Davis Cup
stands alone. It was -a height that Lar-
ned, McLaughlin and Johnston were
never able to achieve.
Perhaps the top climax came when
he went back in poor condition and
against all odds defended his title,
59 A
—ye
E-93
1 11
0 1
1 1
STevCC
Reliabilitylways
, Boston ..........
! St. Louis .......
! Batteries: Bush,
Boston 4, Pirates 3.
Boston, Aug. 24.— Boston hit Glazner
hard enough in the first three innings
to defeat Pittsburg, 4 to 3 today.
Score— RHE
Pittsburg ........000 003 000—3 13 0
9 2
7 2
About the only bright spot in yester-
day’s game was Jack Knight’s slam to
left that went for a triple. It was a
tremendous ride that the pitcher gave
the old ball to left center. Jack puts
about as much power in his drives as
any man on the team.
-mwaQu
Genius is supposed to be beyond re-
straint. This may work in art or liter-
ature, but.it doesn’t go in sport. Not un-
less the temperamental, cove is quick
at ducking a flock of poisoned arrows
shot in his general direction. He can re-
main temperamental as long as he does
not mind being an open target.
Fine Arts Association is
Campaign.
Special to The Tribune.
Austin, Tex., Aug. 24.-
212 100 000—6 7 1
mmnanz2-semrazzmEaxzMe2=2/2z-
THAT ITCH!
For Special Booklet or lor indi-
vidual adyioe., without char^a,
write Chief Medical Adviser,
S.S.S.Ca-, Pep’t’ 43Q> Olanta, Ga.
wet SSsat your druggist.
€€c
• 0 a p3o ba”a
The Standard Blood Purifier
98482M2KKeHsxaacasnarazaaeuamn
l
, Storey, cf........
Swaldt, 3 b . ....
Jackson, if .....
. Eibel, lb .......
Long, rf .......
.Hollohan, 2b ...
h
A Woman With a
Pretty Complexion
Always Appears Charming
Your complexion makes or mars
your personality. If you have a
clear, smooth, velvety skin, free of
pimples and mother unsightly blem-
ishes, you need never fear the im-
pression you make on all you meet.
Some women are endowed by na-
ture with a clear, smooth skin; oth-
ers not so fortunate can acquire this
beauty by the use of
BLACKANDWHITE
BEAUTY BLEACH
and Black and White Soap. Go to
your favorite drug or department
Store and buy a 50c jar of Black
and White Beauty Bleach and a cake
of Black and White Soap. Use it
according to directions and you will
be delighted with results. Beauty
Bleach is an exquisitely perfumed
flesh-tinted cream. Use it according
to directions and you will be greatly
pleased.
Literature for Black and White
Beauty Bleach as well as samples of’
Talcum and Face Powder sent free
on request.
Clip and mail this to Black and
White, BOx 1507, Memphis, Tenn.
Standing of Clubs.
Club— Games. Won Lost. Per er
Herman. That Frankie is a straight
up toe to toe fighter was partially dem-
onstrated at his initial workout yester-
day afternoon.
He is a fast, clever boy, and he packs
Tigers 12, Senators 3.
Detroit, Aug. 24.-—Detroit hit Zach-
ary and Courtney hard yesterday and
won easily from Washington, 12 to, 3.
R. H. E.
110 362 200—15 17 0
000 010 100— 295
Thomalen and Ruel;
By Associated Press,
Wichita Falls, Tex., Aug 24.—The
small son of Chester Zink was burned
to death shortly after noon yesterday,
when the family home at Iowa Park
was destroyed by fire. Mrs. Zink was
asleep when the fire started and was
severely burned in an effort to rescue
the little boy.
Eegwmiresen
Yanks 6, Indians 1.
Cleveland O., Aug. 24.—Two home
runs by Babe Ruth with one man on
the base each time, the weakness of
Pitcher Caldwell of Cleveland, three
errors, all in bad spots, yesterday, cost
the world champion Indians their game
with the New York Yankees here. New
York won, 6 to 1. after batting Caldwell
for three hits in as many innings and
then taking two more from Walter
Mails, the premier pitcher of the cham-
pions’ hurling staf, and Morton.
The victory yesterday for New York
cuts down Cleveland’s lead to one-half
25688
“ess
By Associated Press.
Cleveland, Aug. 23.—A permit was is-
sued today by the Cleveland boxing
commission for the 12-round decision
bout between Johnny Kilbane, feather-
weight champion and Danny Frush of
Baltimore, here Sept. 17, following the
posting of $15,000 by the promoters.
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Philadelphia 6, Chicago 5.
Chicago, Aug. 24.—Philadelphia came
from behind ond defeated Chicago 6 to 5
in ten innings.
The Yanks drew first blood in the
crucial series of the season with the
Cleveland champs. Two homer# by
Babe Ruth, together with Quinn’s
hurling gave the New Yorkers the first
of the three games. Another victory
today will put the Yanks ahead of the
Indians in the percentage table.
something that strangely resembes a
mule kick in each mit. He has copious-
ly indulged n bathing while, here and
says that it has improved him very
much.
Tickets for the scrap are on sale at
Gai do’s and, the Dairy Lunch Room on
the beach front and at Two Brothers
Cigar store and Queen cigar store and
the American club on Twenty-first
AAKMINIA MIAIA MAI,- street. Ringside seats only are on sale
COMING RING BOUT attheAmericanclub. . .
Indications are that a large crowd
______ will witness the Friday night’s bill.
We have tried to serve you
well in the past. Let us
have the honor of serving
you better in our new
plant.
At Your Market
mi
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Sailor Ownbey and Frankie McFar-
land, the two principals who are to
meet’in a ten-round main go at the city
auditorium Friday night, worked out
before a crowd of several hundred fight
fans at the American club gymnasium
yesterday. Much interest was mani-
fested in their work and the spectators
were generous with their applause.
Ownbey showed his classy form,
flashing and dancing’ about as he feint-
ed and jabbed and hooked his fists into
his sparring partners. By his speed and
cleverness yesterday afternoon in the
first workout here since the Abie Sacks
fight he clearly showed that although
he has been visiting his folks in Okla-
homa, he certainly, has not ceased his
daily training. Ownbey is in the very
proverbial pink of perfection.
took his place as a marvel, but his
fame was not built up with any running
jump. Even the master workman needs
more than a trial season to get under
steam. -
Homers by Hollohan and Hack Eibel
together with a bunch of hits in the
seventh round enabled the Shreveport
Gassers to take the first game of the
series by a count of 4 to 3 from the
Crabs here yesterday afternoon. The
game was played before one of the
smallest crowds of the season.
Umpire Spencer’s decision in the
ninth on Hughes’ batted ball which
{Hughes thought hit the plate for a foul
enabled the Gassers to complete a dou-
ble play and nip a promising local ral-
ly in the bud.
Against the Crabs, Joe Gleason hurled
fair ball, errors contributing to a large
extent in the run-making of the island-
ers. The Crabs scored first blood in the
second round when three hits and an
error enabled them' to take a two run
lead. With one dead Allen walked. La-
pan beat out a bunt to Ewoldt. Gleason
caught Lapan off first and in the run-
ning back and forth Hollohan hit Lapan
in the back and Allen scored from third
Jack Knight hit a terrific line drive to
left center good for three bases and
Lapan scored.
On the next play, Ewoldt made a
great assist on Hughes’ slow roller
down the base line. The Gasser third
baseman came running in at full speed,
picked up the ball a few yards from
the plate and tossed to Vann who
touched Knight coming in from third.
In the first four rounds the Gassers
got but one hit off Preacher Perryman,
Hartford’s single in the third- Hack Ei-
bel, first up in the fifth hit a low line
drive to right field that looked good
for a single, not more than a double at
most. The ball struck a few feet from
the foot of the fence, bounded against
the paling and rolled over the top for
a home run.
In the seventh the Shreveporters put
the game on ice by bunching hits and
knocked Perryman out of the box. With
one gone Hughes errored on Long’s
grounder. Hollohan hit a mighty drive
to left center for a homer, scoring Long
ahead of him. Hartford singled to right
his third successive hit. Vann singled
through shortstop. Gleason doubled to
rightfield, scoring Hartford. At this
point Izzy Glenn relieved Perryman,
and stopped the scoring by causing
Storey to pop to second and Ewoldt to
fly out to left field. The Gassers were
"unable to get anything better than one
single in the ninth off Glenn’s delivery.
The Ellamites scored their third and
final run in the eighth round. With Dis-
! tel down, Ellam singled through short.
Schliebner lined to left for a hit. Thrash
■ went out on a fly to Jackson. Allen
: Tolled an easy one to Eeibel who tossed
wild to Gleason at first, allowing Ellam
to come home from third.
Knight got on first in the last of the
ninth when Watt, who had relieved
Holohan at second after the latter’s
homer, messed up an easy grounder.
Rabbitt Hughes hit the ball at his feet,
and waited at the plate thinking it
was a foul. O’Brien, who had run for
/Knight, stood on second under the same
impression. After Vann had thrown to
second and Hartford had relayed the
ball to first, thus completing a double
play,Umpire Spencer made it known
that the ball was fair. The Crabs set up
an awful howl and Ump Spencer was
escorted from the park by a policeman,
after the game had ended. Bittie, hit-
ting for Glenn, lofted to Storey in cen-
ter.
R. H. E
000 090 000—0 7 0
000 010 00*—1 7 0
“Will the coming clash between Jock
Hutehison, British champion and Jim
Barnes, American champion, be a na-
tional or an international ! contest?"
writes A. K. G. Why not go the route and
make it national international, inter
champional and inter-New York-Chica-
go?
We don’t have both American and
Cards 10, Giants 7.
New York, Aug. 24.—St. Louis made
it three out of four from New York
by winning their last game of the sea-
son here, 10 to 7. Kelly made his
twenty-first home run of the season
Score— R. H. E
St. Louis ........022 001 023—10 15 0
New York .......100 001 104— 7 13 2
Batteries: Haines, Shredell and Clem-
ons; Barnes, Salee and Snyder.
Standing; of Clubs.
Club— Games. Won. Lost. Per et
Come in and we’ll tell you how
Threaded Insulation saves your
money and worry.
We recharge and repair fill Makes
of Batteries.
Cats 3, Buffs 4.
Houston, Aug. 24.— Eiffert's triple in
the fifth with the bases filled follow-
ing a walk, which forced in a run, gave
Houston the first game of the series
here yesterday by the score of 4 to 3.
Score— RHE.
Fort Worth.......000 001 020—3 6 0
................,000 004 00*—4 7 0
Batteries: Barfoot and Griffith; Whit-
taker, Phillips and Haworth-
Telegram Is Received By San Antonio
Postmaster.
By Associated Press. '
San Antonio, Aug. 24.—A telegram to
Postmaster George D. Armistead from
First Assistant Postmaster General
Work, received here tonight, advised
the San Antonio postmaster that his
resisnation would be accepted if wired
immediately.
Mr. Armistead announced that he will
not answer the telegram until the le-
turn of Postmaster General Hays to
Washington at which time he will
send a message saying if it is the de-
sire of that official that he resign his
resignation will be forwarded.
The plan to have Postmaster Arm-
istead resign followed- the arrival in
Washington of United States Marshall
D. A. Walker, recently appointed under
the Harding, administration, according
to Mr. Armistead. Mr. Walker, accord-
ing to Mr. Armistead, had several con-
ferences with Mr. Work. Walker is a
brother-in-law of Attorney General
Dougherty.
Mr. Armistead is believed to be the
first Democratic appointee as post-
master asked to resign since the Hard-
ing administration assumec control.
Recently United States Attorney Hugh
Robertson of San Antonio was removed
by presidential order, when Mr. Rob-
ertson refused to resign when asked
to do so by Attorney General Dough-
erty. Mr. Robertson at the time
claimed that he had not served the term
Li ttle Rock . .. . . : ............ . 2 9 5
Batteries: Phillips and Myer; Fields
and Mettere.
Score—Second -game—- R. H. E
New Orleans ................ 4 8 2
Little Rock .................. 2 4 2
Batteries: Matteson and Deberry;
Jonnard and Land.
......... 33 4 8 27 14 3
GALVESTON.
AB. R. H. PO.A.E
Galveston vs. Shreveport
Ladies 50c, Including War Tax.
polo, tennis and track jolts the total
lack of excuses and alibis is an amazing
thing.
1921 has been the roughest compe-
titive season the United Kingdom has
ever known. It has lost its polo cup, its
tennis cup and one of its main golf
cups. Yet if there has been any hyster-
ical depression it has escaped all notice,
Great Britain has been tangled up
in sport too long to ever get stewed in-
to a pulse fluttering turn over any one
year’s results. Not that her leading en-
tries are any easier losers than Ameri-
cans, or any harder.
But sport has been a tradition in
Great Britain far longer than' it has
been in France, And tradition still has
its worth.
Distel, 3b............4
Ellam, 2b ............ 4
Schliebner, 1b ........4
Thrash, If ........... 3
Allen, cf ........... 3
Lapan, c ............ 4
Knight, rf .......... 4
Hughes, ss .......... 4
Perryman, p ..... 2
Glenn, p ............. 1
♦O’Brien ......... 0
♦♦Bittle ............. 1
Memphis 9, Mobile 3.
Memphis, Aug. 24.—Memphis defeat-
ed Mobile, 9 to 3, yesterday.
\ Score— - R.H-E.
Mobile ....................... 3 g 3
Memphis............ 9 13 1
Batteries: Roberts, Fulton and
Schulte; Mohart and Hungling.
Chattanooga 3, Nashville 4.
Nashville, Aug. 24.—Nashville downed
Chattanooga, 4 to 3, in a listless game
yesterday.
Score— R. H. E.
Chattanooga.................. 3 5 0
Nashville ..................... 4 9 1
Batteries: Noel and Graham; Stat-
ham and Jonnard.
being made for next year's work, and
a membership campaign- is being
launched by the Texas Fine Arts Asso-
ciation. The Elizabeth Ney Studio in
Austin is the headquarters for the or-
ganization and the officers are mem-
bers of the University of Texas faculty.
Dr. W. J. Battle, professor of classical
languages, is president and S. E. Gid-
eon, professor of architecture, secre-
tary.
Joseph Pennell, an etcher of interna-
tional reputation, has been engaged to
lecture here in the fall, and there will
be an exhibition of water color 'paint-
ings by Alice Huger Smith, a southern
painter of national reputation.
During the summer a series of exhi-
bitions has been shown at the Ney
Studio. Chief among these were the
exhibits of Weyman Adams and Miss
Margaret Law of Baltimore.
Washington .....001 101 000— 3—8 4
Detroit ..........003 003 340—12 16 0
Batteries: Zachary, Courtney and Ghar-
rity; Oldham and Bossier.
2ega525
222452
Wichita Falls .. 44
Fort Worth___48
Dallas......... 48
Houston ....... 48
Beaumont 45
Shreveport .... 41
Galveston ..... 45
San Antonio ... 4 6
Cleveland ______.117
New York .... ,.114
Washington 120
St. Louis .... .. 118
Boston .........115
Detroit ........ 121
Chicago .......117
Philadelphia ..116
Memphis ......124
New Orleans . .. 127
Birmingham : . .124
Little Rock ...120
Atlanta .......124
Nashville ......125
Mobile....... .'.125 •
Chattanooga ...125
8
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RESIGNATION ASKED.
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 232, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 24, 1921, newspaper, August 24, 1921; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1579048/m1/7/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rosenberg Library.