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WEDNESDAY, JVLY 2, 1915 11 ditional Sport News THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES. Ad. -. giiii is? mmmmi -,Jr55f WMm&iiUr LEAGUE STANDINGS national league. New York 41 2 3 .641 Philadelphia 38 23 .623 Brooklyn 3 4 2 8 .5 4 8 Chicago Z? 31 .537 Pittsburgh 30 3G .455 Boston 27 3 7 . 4 22 St. Louis 2 8 39 .41S Cincinnati 26 41 .388 American league. Philadelphia 49 17 .742 Cleveland 4 2 2 5 .627 Chicago 40 22 .536 Washington 3 8 22 . 54 3 Boston 3 4 31 .523 Detrr.it 2S 4 5 .38 4 St. Louis 28 46 .378 New York 13 47 .285 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Columbus 4 4 27 Milwaukee 4 8 30 St. Paul 36 34 620 613 514 514 403 481 400 , 3S7 Louisville ...3 8 Minneapolis 36 36 Kansas City 27 4 0 Indianapolis 28 42 Toledo 2D 46 central liigue. Grand Haplds . . . Springfield Fort Wayne . . . . .43 .27 .4 26 30 - u 3 4 36 42 .623 .532 .507 .485 .463 .264 Dayton 32 Terre Haute 31 Kvanaville 2 4 RESUITS YESTERDAY. National Lea cue. Chicago 3, Pittsburgh 2. Cincinnati 11, St. Louis 4. Philadelphia 0, New York 10. Brooklyn 3, Boston 6. American! Lcaciie. St. Louis-Cleveland, rain. ' . Detroit 2, Chicago 3. New York 1, Philadelphia 2. Boston 4, Washington 7. Amriut Association. Indianapolis-Columbus, rain. Minneapolis 5, St. Paul 11. Toledo 3. Louisville 7. Milwaukee U, Kansas City 6. (13 Innings.) IVderal League. Cleveland 6, Chicago 1. fit. Ixmis-Indlanapolls, rain. Pittsburgh-Kansas City, rain. Grand Rapids 9-6, Ft. Wayne 4-3. Kvansville 4, Springfield 0. Terre Haute-Dayton, rain. GAM MS TODAY. National League. Cincinnati at Chicago. Boston at Brooklyn. New York at Philadelphia. St. Louis at Pittsburgh. American League. Chicago at St. Louis. Detroit at Cleveland. Washington at Boston. Philadelphia at New York. Central League. Fort Wayne at Terre Haute. Dayton at Kvansville. Springfield at Grand Rapids. American AsMX'iuUon. Louisville at Toledc. Columbus at Indianapolis. Minneapolis at St. Paul. Kansas City at Milwaukee. BOSTON TAKES THE SECOND AT BROOKLYN Dodgers Start Off l ine, Getting a Lead of Two Huns Off Kudolph But Fall to Lust. BROOKLYN. July 2. Boston took ihe second straight victory' from Brook lyn Tuesday, winning 6 to 3. The home team started of? fast, getting a lead of two runs off Rudolph. The visitors landed on Curtis In the fourth and batted him out of the box, scor ing five rdns on a triple, a double, a pass, two single and an error. Ying ling checked the fusillade but Ru dolph tightened up in the last seven innings. Fast fielding featured the contest, Daubert and Maranville at tracting especial attention by their clever playing. Boston 000 501 000 6 S 1 Brooklyn 110 100 000 3 S 1 Rudolph and Rarlden; Curtis, Tingling and Miller. Umpires Eig ler and Byron. PFEFFER WINS TWO FOR GRAND RAPIDS GRAND RAPIDS. July 2. Jeff Pfeffer pitched Grand Rapids to vic tory over Fort Wayne in both games of a double-header Tuesday winning the first nine to four and the second six to three. Pfeffer did not issue a pass in either game and save for the first inning of each game kept the hits well scattered. He also hit a home run and a single in the first and a two bagger in the second. Both Keen er and Atkins were hit hard. First game: Grand Rapids .000 402 21 9 15 1 Fort Wayno ...200 001 100 4 8 0 Pfeffer and McGraw; Keener and Martin. Second game: Grand Rapids .00 2 00 4 00 6 12 2 Fort Wayne ...200- 010 00 3 8 3 Pfeffer and McGraw; Atkins and Wagner. Umpire Flynn. MACK KNOWS HOW TO HANDLE HIS PITCHERS It Is In the handling of a pitching itaff that a manager shows his worth. Tako Mack for instance and he has proved himself a really wonderful manager in the way he has manipu lated his pitching staff, w hich is prin rlpally made up of youngsters. He has held Bender and Plank in perfect form, thoug-h he has had to work them hard, and he has done so by Jisplaying rare judgment. Callahan 5f Chicago did last season what Pir-nlng-ham did this. By overworking his pitchers he got a big lead in the race, only to fall down I idly after they had been worn out. TO TRY FOR A RECORD Swimmers Will Cross San IYnnclsco Bay Next Sunday. SAN FRANCISCO. July 2. Duke Kahanamoku, the cracK Hawaiian iwimmer, Ludy Iangor of southern rallfornia, and other expert men in the wat-r will compete next Sunday .vith Walter Pomeroy of the Olympic flub, this city, in an effort to better Pomeroy's tim across an Franciso hay. Pomeroy made the distance last September in less than two hours. gi:ts nfav place. EVANSVILLK. Ind., July 2. -After in association of 12 years as manag ing editor. Earl Mushlltz has severed his connection with the Kvansville Journal-News to become associate editor of the Indianapolis Star. FIVE RUNS IN ONE INNING IS ENOUGH ToIcIo Hons Go Myitis' nml LouI.Millo Colonel Itomp Home With a 7 to 3 Came. TOLEDO, July 2. One bad inning proved the undoing of Pitcher George and the Toledo club here Tuesday aft ernoon, singles by Buemiller, Huls wltt, and Weinberg, doubles by Stans bury and Niehoff and Osborne's lucky triple which Basketto misjudged, coupled with a double steal and an error by .Stump netting Louisville five runs in the sixth which gave It a commanding lead. Prior to that Toledo had driven Wood burn from the box in the fifth. A home run over the fence by Pitcher George starting the pitcher on the downward road. This was the first over the fence homer of the season. Toledo 200 010 CK)0 3 7 2 Louisville 000 005 2007 12 0 George, Stevenson and Devogt; Woodburn, Northrup and Severoid. Umpires Handlboe and Johnstone. HOLD WOMAN FOR" DEATH Mrs. Augustus Ekman Is Held But Husband Goo; Free. SALT LAKE CITY, July 2. Mrs. Augustus Ekman, confessed slayer of her 12-year-old daughter Frances, whose body was found in a trunk at Ogden, last Saturday, was formally charged with murder in the office of the district attorney Tuesday. C. L. Andersc. the woman's first husband, with wh. m she was on the way to Michigan, was released from custody. open gates. PANAMA, July 2. The sluice gates at the Gatun spillway were closed Tuesday to allow me vater of the lake to rise to what will be its perm anent level. The process Is expected to take about three months. DAMAGES CAR. While driving his car Sunday morn ing on W. Joseph stM Ronald S. O'Neill had a narrow escape from serious Injuries, when the car struck a telegraph pole, breaking the pole, smashing one of the lights on the auto and bending the gender. LEAVES TO EXPLORE CANADIAN ARCTIC Yilhjalmur Stefansson Will Join His Ships at Nome and Start for tho Northland. SEATTLE. July 2. Vilhjalmur Stefansson, commander of the Canad ian arctic exploring expedition, .sailed Tuesday on the S. S. Victoria for Nome, Alaska, to join his ships, the whaler Karluk and the gasoline power boat Alaskan. With him sailed Dr. R. M. Ander son, his lieutenant, and James Mur ray, oceanographer, who was a mem ber of the Shackleton south pole party. Stefansson will arrive at Nome about July 10, and the Karluk a few days later. The Alaskan is already at Nome. Dogs and sleds will be purchased at Nome and nnap preparations com pleted there. TRY NEWS-TIMES WANT ADS It is Never Too Late to Buy Spring Papers Reduced to Nearly Half This is painting time. Freshen your floors, window boxes and little things about the house at very small cost. Tine L W. LOWER DECORATING CO. . 120 S. MICHIGAN ST. Km, aI J UUuln nULU c ST DIG MONEY Barnum & Bailey Have Search ed the Entire Globe For Something New to Delight the Eyes of Spectators. When the Barnum and Bailey cir cus comes to South Bend on July 18, It will present something different in the way of street pageantry. The equipment is spick and span new and It cost the management upwards of $1,000,000 to devise and build it. The work of constructing the outfit was done in the foreign worshops of the show in England and occupied the greater part of last winter. Several hundred artisans and artists were kept busy da' and night. For the last two yeare the foreign agents of the show have been gather ing novelties for this parade. They overlooked nothing that money could buy, unless It was too big to ship by boat. The' Invaded ravage islands. Their expeditions extended into jung les where white men had never trod before them. They stripped art gal leries and ancient palaces. They stopped at nothing. They spared no expense. The frutt of their labors cannot be expressed in words. It is a sight for the eyes. Naturally enough this parade hears not the slightest resemblance to those of the past. It excels anything be fore attempted In beauty. It is world wide in Its variety. In novelty it is right up to the last tick of the clock. Every strange type of human race is found in it. Every animal recently discovered by science is displayed, in an open cage. It is a world's fair on wheels with a thousand wonders in every mile of it. Constantly passing before the eyes are the crude vehicles of savagery, the howdahs, rickshaws, palanquins and chariots of Oriental despots, carriages of state from rich empires, fanciful floats of bronze and burnished gold, engines of war, gro tesque images of the oigan, Italian statuary, mythologica. spectacles, horso fairs, fairyland carnivals, brass bands, barbarian orchestras, tom-tom players, weird pipers, silver chimes, cathedral organs, siren pipes, chant ers, dervishes, castanet iballets, kir miss scenes, fete-day tableaus and mardl-gras pageantry. The hundreds of vehicles are built of the finest materials. They are carved by hand and embossed with pure golf leaf. The tapestry and throne rugs were woven in Persia and Turkey. The costumes were made in France. The laces are from Ireland. The scarfs, flags and banners are from Japan. In this parade are employes 1,280 people, 700 horses, 40 elephants, 30 camels and many teams of zebras, deer, dromedaries and llamas. MOTHER PRAYS AT GRAVE PERU, Ind., July 2. A pathetic feature of the funeral of Harry Mar tin, the race driver killed last week at the Indianapolis motor speedway In trying out a new car, was the prayer offered by the driver's mother, as the coffin was being lowered into the grave. The prayer brought tears to the eyes of all assembled. The funeral was conducted by the Moose lodere of which Martin was a member. m i", 1 (rill I ELjK Mil - J 1ST L J brl T 1 Foster Gilbert on Way to Prison Looks For Woman He Says is a Good Little Girl Re grets His Act. DETROIT , Mich., Ju'jf Foster Gilbert. Detroit bigamist, brought from Alpena to Detroit Sunday on his way to Jackson prison, where he is to serve a sentence of from two and one-half to five years for bigamy, asked Sheriff John Simmons of Al pena, as a. last Livor, to summon his Detroit .wife to police headquarters. Gilbert, who was looked up in po lice headquarters and not taken to Jackson prison until Monday, was as much disappointed at the sheriff's non-committal answer as he was when his Detroit wife, who was his first, was not on the D. and C dock to greet him when the boat came in. "I nm Sorry" lie Says. 1 wanted to tell her that I am sorry that this thing ever happened," said Gilbert. "Anything that I can earn in prison I am willing to give her. She is a good little girl, and the mothers of three of my children. I wanted especially to see her because of the chlldron, so that she might keep the family together until I get out. Then, I think, I can make good with her and devote the rest of my J life to her." "I wouldn't tell you Just how I hap pened to get mixed up Tlth my Al pena wife," said Gilbert. "She has brothers here and thoy might cause me trouble getting a job when 2 get out of prison. "I appreciate the fact that thia talk would have sounded better if I had never done my lirst wife and chil dren the wrong I have," concluded Gilbert, "but it is true. Just the same." Gilbert is 2 7 years old and his De troit wife about 21. Gilbert has never served time before. XILKS. On Saturday, July 5, Rev. F. Rahn will observe the 25th anniversary of his pastorate of St. John's German church. The occasion will be ob served with special services and a banquet and social hour. William Skalla of Niles had his faie and head severely cut at Kala mazoo when he came in contact with a water plug at the Michigan Central station. Skalla Is a switchman and St. Mary's Grounds Not Open to Public The authorities at St. Mary's have decided that hereafter the grounds of the institution will not be opened to the public. Owing to the imposition of some persons "who have been freely al lowed tho u of the grounds, this decision has become necessary. The speeding of automobiles, be sides, being a menace to safety, has also aided In damaging the drive ways and shrubbery. Persons who have business with the institution, or have children In gUtendmce there, will And no dif ficulty in enjoying the same priv ileges as in the past and they shall receive courteous attention at all times. Visitor's Received During the vacation months, visitors who wish to be shown through the buildings at St. Mary's will be accommodated on Tues day's and Thursday's from 10 a, m. to 5 p. m. was riding on a freight car when the accident occurred. The attending physicians state that the injuries are not serious. The Hoosier Carnival company ar rived Tuesday from Three Rivers and are occupying the main streets of the city. They will be here for one week. C. C. Opfel is in Epworth hospital. South Bend, where he was operated upon and the broken bones in his arm were wired together Tuesday. Carson Parker and bride arrived in Niles Tuesday from their wedding trip to New York and points on the Hud son. They will remain in Niles for the summer and Jn the fall they will go to Florida to reside. Irery Patient d Booster for SWEM, The Chiropractor. Rheumatism. 302-300 Dean Building. Homo Phono 2565. 2C TMTIfrTM M A WW Wfh TMHT If I do Not Cure You IT YILL NOT COST YOU ONE CENT Do Yoh with sour stomach, bloaUng after eating, headache, backache, dlzil- r.ess, specks before your eyes, hot and cold flashes, lame back, scanty high-colored urine, burning, sting ing or difficult urination, splotches under skin, Iohs of energy, ambi tion, vim, vigcr, vitality, baahful, timid, nervous, weakness, loss of confidence, brooding, blues, lack of ability to concentrate mind, thoughts wandor, cold feet, itching of skin, vital loss, excessive thirst, pain around the heart, at base of brain or down limbs? Do you have difficulty in fixing your thoughts? Is your memory poor? Do you get-weak suddenly? Are you nervous and irritable? Are you the man physically and men tally that you formerly were? Can you accomplish what your healthy friends and acquaintances can? If not, you are laboring under a great handicap. Come and let me make you strong and veil again at a very small ccst. I CURE FOR BLOOD DISEASE 696 If you have Inflamma tion of the mucous membrane in the mouth and throat, eruptions on any part of the body, aching of the bones, spots and all discoloratlons of the ekin. let me give you this now FAMOUS CURE. Results are marvelous. All symptoms vanish immediately as If by magic, never to return. I have NEVER had a single failure to . cure with this wonderful remedy. I use, the genu ine SAIA'ARSAN (or COS), Import ed from Prof. Ehrllch's labora tories. I am the only Specialist Adver tising 606 In South Bend, who uses the genuine 60S Imported from Germany, ajid employing the Intra venous Method the painless, au thorized method for giving this famous remedy. Few, if any, of thes-5 caae3 are hopeless. What is needed Is the right treatment. I have seen and cured hundreds of these cases. What I have done for others I surely can do for you. Suffer HOURS 9 to 12, 1 to 5. EVENINGS 7 to 8. SUNDAY 9 to 12 ONLY DR. FLEENER CO., SPECIALISTS SOUTH BEND, IND., 1094 W. WASHINGTON ST. Entire Front Floor Over Peck' Shoe Store. 5 Large Rooms Fully Equipped it parley neias The strength of all kernel of Barley entering into the brewing of taoweiiser 1 "The Friend of the American Farmer The tonic properties of the finest Saazer Hops properly blended with selected Barley make Budweiser alive with health and vigor.. Bottle J only at the Hcsje plint in Stleuls Anheuser-busch brewery St. Louis V. J. YORE, Distributor South Bend, Ind. n Special Sale Of Ice Tea Spoons. Long handled, three patterns to select from. $1.28 per cet. Warranted 25 Years. This item is on our Special Value Counter. Come in. CLAUER'S 3-Floor Jewelry Store M DR. FLEENER Expert Doctor for Men. VS. H i ma in . -; ,. . .. ".?,- -. ; . . . ,- ' . ':,v- :A,, J - . v .. ' .- ' . . ' ...... I t :. ... . ; .. ,; - -: MEN AND MEN ONLY XER VOUS Mil-: A K DOWN A n d nearly all nervous diseases are the direct result of chronic or imper fectly treated Pelvic Diseases, such as Varicocele, Piles, Fistula, Stric ture, etc. I not only remove the cause, but many years of exper ience In the treatment of nervous and pelvic diseases enabk-s me by special methods to revitalize the entire nervous system and to re stores to perfect health nearly all sufferers from nervous breakdown and vital weakness. VARICOCELE I cure Varico cele in a few works' time without the use of the knife. STRICTURE I readily remove Stricture by my dissolvent method without the use of Instruments. fat.-.-"- - The Kin? of AH Bottled Brm mm nature is found in every o x uriMnnfM SCREENS til Porch, door nd every description. Order yours NOW. Estimate! fur mrhed. S. I J. Sotcct & Wood Novelty Co. Home 71C1 812 C Ilonmaa HARRY LYERRICK FUNERAL DIRECTOR 219 So. St. Joseph St. Personal attenxloot pi ten all work, day or night. Lady asitant- Homo phono 5t45. Dell phone 745 I Will Accept Your Case on the FVI low ing Definite Imposi tions: 1 I CHARGE FOR CURES ONLY CrUK OU NO PAY I am the onlv Sioialit In South IlotuI iln makes no charges unlets tin pa tient K ontlrtdy atl'nctl with ilie results aHirnplIlietl ai?l who gitcs n viritten guarantro of not a ernt to ho paid for service If tk complete and permanent cure Ls not effectual. A speedy, permanent and lasting euro is what I will give you be yond a doubt If your case u cur able; if not. I will not accept your money and promise to do any thing for you. Thf bet rpftrenc I could give as to profsMorral re liability is the many cured, ratis fied patients I d'.Fml.'S and prove that my I-xclusive Methods cure when others fall to even benefit. n u 0 n ii PILES, FISTULA. I7TO. Cured wJthout detention from business. HYDROCELE Cured In ono treatment, and permanently, with out pain or los3 of time. PROSTATIC ENLARGEMENT Results from inflammation. I re duce th enlargement and have been able to cure about 90 percent off all cafes. EXAMINATION My facilities for examinations are unexcelled. I learn the exact condition of tho rectum, the bladder and every or gan of the gni to-urinary system. This In itself is of the highest im portance, inasmuch as & broken down nervous system and many cr most of the troubles of th stom ach, liver, kidneys, etc, are re?!ex. and are tho direct results of ome pelvic, lesion or disease. Pilealtn 3 MEN