La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959, May 22, 1913, Image 2

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    THURSDAY, MAY 22, 1913.
PAGE TWO
LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER,
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'HI
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WIN
HIGH GRADE OF BALL
BLISS BEARS.
HUM-
Second Gme of Series Taken by Lo
cals in Finest Shape.
Walla Walla's prides were hum
Lied yesterday afternoon in a pretty
exhibition 2-1. James, bettor known
us Jamison, was the performing in
dividual on the mound and well ho
performed at that True, once or
twice, other than the time the Bears'
scored once, the visitors threatened
the pan at home and in one instance
in particular, a quick peg to King by
' Deafness Cannot Be Cured
By local applications, as they cannot
'"w-1" "iu uiauttjHiu portion or mo ear.
There is only one way to euro dcafnvss,
. and that la by constitutional remedies.
Deafness is caused by an inflamed condi
tion of tlio mucous fining of t.'ie Kuata-
chian Tube. When tlila tube is Inflamed
you have a rumhlinir sound or Imperfect
, tiearlnfir, and when it is entirely closed,
I-toarncM is the result, and unleBS the In
flammation can bo (alien out and tills
tube restored to Its normal condition,
hearing will be destroyed forever: nine
casts out of ten are caused by Catarrh,
Jhlch is nothing; but an Inflamed condi
tion of the mucous surfaces.
We will sire One ritindrfwl 1 Milan fornnr ease of
IKwfnoM (oaiiMol Uj caturrItlili'annol Natural br
lull's CaUrrU (Jure. Bond far clreulara, freo.
F. J CM BNBT, ft 00., Tulodo, Ohio.
BotdbrDranKlt,7!. I
Tsk. UU ssiallj HUs for eooaUpaUsa,
JiecK saved the day. Green was
twisting them over for Walla Walla
and did a fair good job of it too, but
was not in a class with James' form
The big crooked arm heaved with
good results from the start to the
finish, and, when compared with the
bang-up game of the day before,
takes a notch higher in that t lack
ed the disastrous one-inning feature,
Nadeau hit into a double in the
first inning that stopped a register,
but in the third, Mr. Pitcher walked
as the first man up for La Grande
and Corbin's bunt toward third was
mussed up by Green. With the two
of them on, Bock dumped a pretty
bunt and Druhot came up with a long
foul fly to Martini that scored James,
Walla Walla tied it up in the fifth
however.
On that occasion Sheely singled
and the runner was , sacrificed by
Martini and came home on Green's
drive. In the second, however, Da
vis' double came near being costly
for Brown and singled, only to die
between bases while attempting a
double steal, yet had Beck missed a
hard fly and not got it to the pan as
he did, and King hadn't put it on
the runner as he did, the score would
have been different. The kind of
playing that has been making King
and hi.i team popular as the deuce
prevailed in the pinches.
James did much toward winning
has own game for after Naughton
had gone down in the seventh, Mil
ler singled and Walters followed suit
only to be caught between second
and third when bad coaching pulled
him by second on James' hard drive,
Miller had scored, however, and the
miscue in coaching happened to pass
as a trivial sin. Toward the end
Jamison was going like wild fire and
after the sixth, Bears were mowed
down with ease. Like unto, the day
before, it was a great game. The
score:
WALLA WALLA
ABRHPOAE
Harmon, cf 4 0 0 1 0
Childers, 3b 3 1 0 4 0
Lundstrum, us ,..4 0 0 4 2
Davis, 2b ... 3 0 11 2
Brown, c ....... 4 0 1 1 2
Sheely, lb ....... 4 0 19 0
Martini, If 2 0 0 4 2
Johnson, rf 3 0 0 01
Green, p ...3 0 1 0 2
LA
Corbin, 3b
Beck, rf 3
Druhot, If 2
Nadeau, cf ...... 4
30 1 4 24 11
GRANDE.
AB R H PO A
...4 0 2 0 0
King, c . .
Naughton,
2b
Miller, ss 2
Walters, lb 3
James, p 2
3
1
1
9
1
1
11
0
20 2 7 27 10 2
Sib
Retail Department Phone Main 8
For Lumber. Lath
Shingles, Sash and Dors
Ruberoid Roofing
GEORGE PALMER LUMBER CO.
Potatoes and
A 1
ipDJ
A JL
ies
Both very good varieties
Apples 35c Box Potatoee 35c Sack
THE GOOD THINGS COST NO MOKE THAN ORDIMItY
TUJffOS IF YOU KN OW WHERE TO HUY.
Ran for Sheely in fifth.
SCORE BY INNINGS.
Walla Walla 00001000 01
La Grande ..00100010 x 2
SUMMARY.
Left on bases, La Grande 5; Wal
la Walla 5. I wo base hits, Davis
and Druhot. Double plays, Martini
to Childers, Beck to King. Umpire,
Burnside. Time of game 1:45. Struck
out, by James 8, by Green 1... Bases
on balls, off James two, off Green 3.
Sacrifice hits, Martini and Beck. Sac
rifice flies, Druhot. Stolen bases,
Davis 1, Green (2), Druhot.
Tuesday's Box Score,
revised score for , Tuesday's
game is
WALLA WALLA.
AB R II PO A E
Harmon, cf 4
Childers, 3b .,
Lundstrum, ss
Davis,' 2b
Sheely, lb
Martini, If
Johnson, rf . . ,
Brown) c
Shader, p
33 3 6 27 12 1
LA GRANDE.
AB R II PO A E
Corbin, 3b 2
Miller, ss 4
Druhot, If 4
Nadeau, cf 4
Stageberg Grocery
PHONE MAIN 70
VEGETABLES IN SEAS0J ALL THE TIME.
King, c
Naughton, 2b
Peterson, rf ..... 4
! mMm
- 5 tf.flfcSfca 1 'A'-iLA
I AM
b 5
i
LUMKER
WILL NEVER
CHEAPER.
BE
Walters, lb
Fitchner, p ,
Jamison . . .
0
3
2
0
13
1
0
7
1
0
they do say now, and they're serious
when they say it, that Brooklyn may
be reckoned with the contenders for
the pennant.
Moral: Why not?
By diligently scraping away the
cobwebs of the past, some of the
oldest inhabitants may remember
that at this stage of the National
league race one year ago the Brook
lyn Dodgers and the Boston Braves
were flirting with and had a very
close acquaintance with last place.
The Braves being conservative souls,
have not seen fit to change their
ways, out wnat tne uoagers nave
done in the way of jockeying for po
sition during the early weeks of the
present season s scramble has
brought delirious joy to the heart of
Good Fairy Ebbets, and caused all
other team managers and owners to
gnash their teeth while awake and
see things while asleep.
The Dodgers have shown that they
have built up an air-tight defense.
With Jake Daubert at first, Cutshaw
at second. Fisher at short stop end
Red Smith at third, team play has
been perfected. Cutshaw covers a
world of ground at second and in that
immediate vicinity. In the outfield
the Dodgers have a real outfielder in
Stengel, who is establishing a record
as a fence buster this season. Wheat
has not been batting up to his usual
standard. With Wheat going natur-
lly there will be another argument
why the Dodgers should keep going.
Hummell, completes a much better
than average outfielding according to
is work of this season.
One of the failings of the Dodgers
at oni time was their failure to hit
behind Nap Rucker. But Rucker won
three of his first six games this sea
son. One of the three losses was that
thirteen inning dual with Old Master
Matty. Rucker has been going good
after only a fair stact and Ragon has
been pitching air-tight ball. Allen is
fast developing into a star left hand
er and though he lost some of his
early starts he ought to spin along
nicely in hot weather. Stack and
Curtis are in prety fair shape and
Yingling, Hall and Wagner look
really better than they ever have.
Wagner came from New Orleans with
a reputation as good as that carted
in by Demaree now with the Giants.
Behind the bat is Otto Miller, who
ranks with the best. Then there is
Erwin who has caught the new
Dodger spirit and is coming along.
All in all, the bunch from across the
bridge look pretty good. Washing
ton did if ater geeting a new ball
park that is they jumped from
humble ones to slashing, fighting
pennant contenders almost over
night, so to repeat, "Why Not Brooklyn?"
strike which so befuddled the Bear
infielders that he landed safe on it.
The nervy trick, spelled victory how
ever. A neat sacrifice, then a long
fly, and the score was in which is
real baseball.
o
When it comes to being a gang of
robbers all in one, a fellow has to
slip it to Green. The pitcher stole
from one to third yesterday.
No more ball game3 for these
many days.
,nE LATEST FASHION NOTE
Says: "H is procaullon agaln,tgeul
boles in delicate hewiery to powder lhe ihoJ
before puttlug them on." Many people sprlnki, '
the famous antleeptlo powder, Allen's Foot-Eaj.
Into the ahoea, and And that It aaree It. costtei!
times over in keeping bole, from hosiery as wu
as lessening friction and consequent amarUae
and aching of the feet.
Baker Shows Speed.
Baker, May 22. It was bargain
day for the ladies yesterday. Aside
from witnessing an eleven inning
contest, they saw Grause the new
pitcher signed from Pendleton win
the game for the Gold Diggers by
first tying the score in the ninth by
a home run with a man on bases and
coming to bat first in the eleventh
and swatting another over the left
garden fence. . Yakima's first run
was made in the third, Ford walked,
stole second, went third on Fuller's
single, and came home on Jansen's
sacrifice fly. In the fifth they an
nexed three more by two errors, two
hits and two bases on balls off
Woods, who was replaced by Krause
in the tenth after going m as a
pinch hitter in the ninth for "Smoky
Joe" No. 2. Fuller went to first in
the seventh on short stop s error,
stole second, advanced to third on
Grover's single and came home on
Stolkhe's drive. Stolkhe managed to
cross the rubber ' on two fielder's
choices.
Baker made three runs in the third
without registering a hit, but Jan
sen, Grover, and Engle made costly
errors. In the fifth West crossed
the pan getting first on a fielder's
choice, stealing second and coming
home on Harrod's single. In the
ninth Cress hit a two bagger and
trotted in on the home run by
Krause who made the long drive in
the eleventh.
The score:
R.H.E.
Baker 7 C 6
Yakima 6 10 3
. Batteries Woods, Krause and
Cress; Kile, Gordon and Stanley.
LOW FARE
MAY 28
1
to ; .
SEPTEMBER 30
YOU CAN GET
Round Trip Tickets
FROM ALL
O.-W. R. & N. Stations
TO
PRINCIPAL CITIES
IN THE EAST
Final Return Limit Oct. 31.
Chicago .$ 72.50 J
New York 108.50
Philadelphia 108.50
St. Paul 60.00 J
Denver $ 65.00
Boston 110.00 !
Minneapolis .... . .... 60.00 !
Omaha 6P.00 !
Equally low Round Trip Fares
to practically all other
points East
LET
ME HELP OUTLINE
YOUR TRIP. .
J. H. KEENEY
Agent O.-W. R. & N.
Monuments Concrete Blocks
' T 1 : " ... '. . Made In La Grande ,
LATEST DESIGNS Best Building Material
Made in La Grande. ' . KnOWfl !
E. C. DAVIS Cor Greenwood S Ave.
" " La Grande.
BASEBALL GOSSIP
33 2 8 27 12 2
Batted for Walters in 9th.
& BROOKLYN RUNNING WILD -
(
than now. As you know, thfr
lumber fit for milling is getting
scarcer every year. Then why
not begin building now and take
advantage of the present mr
kot? Later o nyou will regret
it. We have full supplies for
liigh-grade lumber for both ex
terior and interior construction.
WENAHA LUMBER COMPANY
ebtjtt(Sfst4tAki
New York, May 22. Once upon a
time there was a decrepit baseball
team known as the Brooklyn Dodg-
rrs Mint lilnvml in nil nlil hnll lnf clirf '
so full of holes from the rifling bat
ters of opposing teams that the play
ers hnd to hobble over the field like
ants running a Marathon over a
Swiss cheese. Then a good fairy
named Charley Ebbets came along
and built a new park, all dolled up
with a grand stand that cost much
moneys. This good fairy had been
hanging around the team lo, these
many ears, but it was the first new
park he had buildcd. When other
teams came around, as they are wont
to do at ball parks, these same
Brooklyn Dodgers, who always be
fore had yelped and run when ap
proached by a stranger or even by
their step-brothers, the Giants, from
across the Big Bridge, proceeded to
lick the very daylights out of them.
At first these strange, unheard of
doings excited merely scornful laugh
ter and the wise ones said it was an
acrident, a flashing in the pan, but
with each succeeding team these
erstwhile lowly Dodgers licked the
impression began to grow that they
were going some, and, miracle of
miracles, eighth wonder of wonders
From Boise to North Yakima, the
fans are admiring the grade of ball
put on here this week. The two
games have caused a general sitting
up and taking notice from all
centers.
Walla Walla had no particular
stars yesterday, all playing with a
vim and a snap however. Green's
support stood him in hand several
times.
o
Only one Spud strucrc out yester
day, which indicates all are landing
on the pill anyway.
o
Baker is showing unexpected
strength, which is shunting Yakima
into a lower strata than that occu
pied by La Grande so long as La
Grande keeps winning.
o
A general upset of the standings
is due, all of which is as it should be.
Pennant races decided early in the
season spoils interest.
o
Admirers of the Spuds, claiming
the outfield of Druhot, Nadeau and
Beck being as good as any in the
league, and the infield needing only
one change which is coming in the
form of Lomond, see a rapid advance
by the Spuds from now on.
From the left field to the La
Grande bench is a long journey each
inning and Polly Rruhot is thinking
of hiring a motorcycle to get out and
back.
L
a
Grande
Thursday
May 29
Free Circus Street Para& Ift-Qiw
9 bands, 250"h6rseifei!of ,danIa
oeoDleof all climes in native . 'J "Rl811 camels400
Two shows daily-afte noo7at 7 niTf 7" t""''
and 7 p.m. Waterproof .tent? AdmS & MA
vvma iu see it an.
a
Real baseball won for La Grande
yesterday. Corbin boldly outguessed
the infield and bunted on the third
no JBBQ (i'Stiiir.
jib 5 nn rt i ins nil
NORTONIA HOTwt.
A hotel whose homelike comforts
and safety will appeal to you nd
your family. Indies' tea room -beaufful
roof gardea and large lob
LoJT Pk'aSUre and convenience
ftt. olf Washington.
PORTLAND
' OREGON