South Bend News-Times, Volume 37, Number 203, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 21 July 1920 — Page 8
MIV MORMVi. .11 I, V 21, IkJO THE SOUTH BEND NEW5-TIT.TE3 Sir Linton's Shamrock TV Wins Second S1oor Tlacp. fmvm Awprirmi ToioAo - - - - ' " - - " - ' ' - ' m vsv w v w v f Wfc V v If vv- IfL A I I Lly I LV Z ly 1 . t y f I y f II 4 1 , I
e
BRITISH YACHT NEEDS ANOTHER VICTORY TO WIN
Can Uncle Sam Repeat at Antwerp
Rnronrt IYels Confident Taking IVnter Muz Hack With Him.
of
U PCK WW AT He AT Dcrn-r
TTHiJ OUR, GEaR, FEED TU ATT ME MATTH 6RCWis
n.r An-jfi I'rM : SANDY TIOf .K. X S." Thorns Lippr. wa r. i r af.hvlr.;' a n.blM'tn r f Ms lif. i cup.
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A rr.
r-
t fi' w ; r. ' by c.ds r.
Tuesday hi? "Irish hHrrrork IV. ran u,. r.Kf to non- osr. dt fr,de r Ro',uTr. e.k arid n-rk "-,, ute and twenty . time, and r. dir. tr bur
tor to bar th bottom', muir h-i'k to England Th summary follows. ShJtrnrok IV Start.
f'.r. ifh. 3:2:r,;: r : 1" 2 : 1 S ; mrrct-'l Resohit Sr-i rr.
-v 4 : 1 1 ; 1 a ped
s w f f ; 1 1 . i r t rally of tv
An. re .i : r. tr it; two mi: ' r r f r inert' i'
p".
1
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tinv . trr.e. 5.J2:H.
. 12. 1:2: imi-h. tim. 3 : 3 1 : 4 . , cor -
r
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b
nii' inirMi
pserl !irr.(
rids
II o
t'A ( I'l
(to-, f.rr.f . 5:22
Shnnrr.r, won
twenty eimds el ir-.mi'fes. twimty-s.x
rrrf-1 tlrn. Th'-rp wer cheers rn Fir Thoni;iLipton's srteam y.i' l.t Victoria vh :i ShamrC'ck ak (it nrrd. th- limTuesday, but tl re was a hush wh n hr rrcw workvI feverishly fe free a J:b tortv.nl rh;rj fouled within the t';rtt fi v FcconiN i? the -nt-.'. Thif'u!in? p-r in I t f I Rcolut to glide .nto the lead. Tor part of the first leg th-Ann-rirao flnop k-pftr. th- fui . I u r vh'T. ho hit a .oft pot. th Iri-h raft pllppol ;i;mui Info lirrt plac rrlins: Rlrf i; untn sh was half a rnll ahc.i to th fJrpri?e of ynrhtinc: xprts afnrvy MttU- stay
atl-1 rlKrn on trie rnallrnc r j ervo.l h"r tittrr than Ilr.olut-' hi: l.allnftnr. I .f.rrtator era ft Jrrouprd n t thoi firt turn crctrl Sh.immrk wifhj tooting whistl .. as h rttniifd sf j
Vitras in in' irad. Awy on tn s- -ntiil th'y . p'l. with tho haI ncr ratrhlnt: fvry ratpnw anl R -ohir rolün- in thf lolilrnms.
('apt. William P. Hurton. who. It! was reported micht b1 ronvivcil from j onnnnd of Shamrock lciiisc of) Iiis hnwlnij in othr rares, wa. evi-!-nt!y making very effort to staKe: a ronieTt.ack. Kesolnt r.i.Tl n brav howinc r t fhe hpinntns? of the third h; anl' pickin up at the turn, fought lid', way homo un-ler the xuitlanre of j 'apt. Chat-le. I'rnneis Adams II. li.sput in? every second Hut it was no i t:.e anil y the time Sh'iiiireck hal ro-.,l the line it was pertain that; he ha-1 won by a safe thouul; tnr- ! ow margin. j The regatta committee r f nnon : ruet-,l:ty he!tatf,l 1 & minutes ttil lirn (It t'ith ,1 that the westerly ht --t vo'iM hold ati.l hoiste.l sic- i lil.s for n reach south-sou t he.ast. a iie.j' attout west and another r -u h ;
northeast by north. The Msrhf for position was rather t . j 1 1 as Skit'per Adams made no ef
fort to sraln the le,trl antl allowed! -'hamr'Ck to (ts as she phased i .".S s"roml ahead, w'nirh extenijeif J
llrsalite's time with her time allowance at the finish to 7 minutes ir.d seconds. It looked like a iriy liberal margin for the defender, but 1 was f'Miri'l t' e ten small to trive hr tbe r:c' The nrst ir.)minutts were fra'urei ty btjr.lincr handlinc on the Sha tin cnk. The 1 alloon jjh rei!5im1 to break out anl finally when
varkfl. It fouled nrouno the tav.
Then tlie pinnnkrr was tried and t'ttu'ol s o T roorlv. Two or thr
other head .allswere set and taken j in. Purine the expfriments Keso-j lute walked r:t;hf into tlie lr,n' and: it looked llk rep.'tition of ü.iturlav s contest. ; Motile Iown. I Cinally Harton settled down "m a number one J il top sail an.tl n little frl-iil. which looked like a down j ast rtsherman's main top siil. set "n a stay from the e-d of the how-i
vprit to in fot be'.ow the .-r"s reos. The-e was a btcr spare beMvcnn the two sails arid as He sohlt was streaking it alotii; under balloon m only, th- defmd. r drew
a
BABE RUTH GETS CIRCUIT DRIVE 32
Shamrock Passing Disabled Resolute
New York Wins First Game, But White Sox Win Second.
Hy Associated Presn. NRW YORK. July 20. By divld-
i mr Tufsuav s cunie neant-r rw
York won the .erits from Chicago, four frames to two. The visitors won ; the first game T to 5. by a ninth lni r.in? rally, ccrins; four run.-; after two wre out. New York took the
Kridjff's steady pitching and timely hitting by his teammates. Uuth hit his thirty-second home run of the reason In the fir Ft ffame. the ball
KALAMAZOO GRAND CIRCUIT STARTS
Bed Lancelot Takes Pacing Event For TLird Consecutive Time.
fas!
was 'Tore than n ilf a
bee.t rn I worked
rut until she
mil ahad. Then the wind Shamroek. which h.
windward, found tref io lust as the he crln.d srirh
lav. Nursinc tr.e draft of air ear Hurten ran by Resolute so fast
i: looked a.s !f th
fickle, j out to !
the .'dRO of tlie Resolute did wh n lrad last Satur-
fully. tin
defender h a
drorped her anchor. In 1 r minutes the chal!e-.cr wis half a n de to the pood, due rirrarerrtly to the rorlr work of the f.-.herrnan'.s topsail Just above the for deck. T H.'.otv This practically settled the race Resol'I'p could no! P.d Th brecte. -nd althouch Capt. Adams. haudli h'r wonderfnTly well the draft of a:r shur.r.ed her almost comj bdely. shamrock turned th f. rst mark three ritnat.. u1'! a half i'1 the lead md at our-' picked up a nice breez which kav ber more margin over t-ie drfnder. Tr ract. half w iv on. the. second Iter. whi'h through a rnntlr.5 of the wind pro ed a fetch for more than h-lf the wav, Shamrock at on time had a ad of a ml and half. Four miles from t he second mark, fortune ia!n favored the n'.e'hont. Tli wind dropped and then ram in from the southwest. This jrav both boats a cloe fitch on th port tack for th mark. Sham
rock nturllv picked it up at f.rs: i;ul'.1 still further a heat !ad at the turn beln? oor r.dn!tes
It looked like S
w i ; h ::! t e n miles to tf the r.n:-h. solute i z . ü var-.tc. : in brir.ir. brerze. However, the
I'.y Associated Press. KALAMAZOO. Mich.. July 20. For the third consecutive time In as many weeks, Charlie Valentine piloted Red lincelot to victory over the stake pacers. He was winner Tuesday afternoon In the 2:09 Park American event, taking the first and third heats, hut Iosi.iR the .second to Symbol S. Forest. It was the first head in which the Valentine mount had failed to finish in front . "Poii" (leers had a cood ay, winning two events handily He upset the talent by takln? the 2:16 trut in str.uu'ht heats with Herbelyn, thereby decisively defeating Norman Dillon, the favorite. He also won the i.' -1 1 trot with Peter June. The j :07 pace was won by Prin-
, ( ess- Mary driven by Flcmlnpr. She
finished sixth in the first heat and then came nlonjc and won the next two. The crowd was a his: or.o for the opening day and the trak was
Summaries
If) trot (thro heats) purc $1.000.
Herbelyn. h s. bv Manrioo ((leers), 1 1 1. Red Russell (Murphy), 2 5 2. Dottle Day (McDonald), fi 2 S. Norman Dillon (Thomas), .1 5 4. Maharba. Cold RcR. Dr. Coffman. Czar Peter. Fhlan. Brooke, Lotto Walts. Torbnv also started. Tim. 20s 1-4. 2:10 1-4, 20S 3-4. l!:0'j p.uv (tlireo hont) jnirse $2,000 Red Tincelot. b p. by Conttantine ( Valentine). 1 . 1. Symbol S. Torcst (Murphy), 2 12. little Direct (Sturgeon). 5 2 4. Jav Mack (McKinney). .1 5 .1.
Peter Lock. Lillian Silkwood. Col. P.idwell. Hallie Hoyt also started. Time. 2:02 S-4. 2:04 1-4. 203 3-4. J:7 ivic-o (tlirrc iicnts). purso 51,000 Princess Mary, br m. by Lloyd Hell , Fleming), 6 1 1. Hazel Kuestnor (Allen), 1 S 4. Drift Patch (McMahon). 2 2 h. Capt. Hclr-at-Law (Morrison). 4 T Fy Ann. Dr. Burpess. HettjHlacklock. Gold Quartz. Gray Hal also started. Time. 2:0.1 1-4. ;:ft4 1-2. 2:05 3-4. 2:0S trot (threo lira (.). purv- $1,000 Peter June, ch h. by Peter theGreat (Gcers). 1 1 1.
Dr. Nick Murphy). 3
Harvest Tide (McDonald)
Red Rond (McMahon). 7 4 2. Rusy's Lassie, sis Pinir. Roxanna Moor. Sunny Smiles u Iso started. Time. 2:07 1-4. 2:0S 1-4. 2:03 1-4.
5.
3.
Although rocK's rare sl!l down had 3 seen.'.: op ft b fer
br. srtftenet frshnir5 snd
1
: a m -
Indians Divide Double Header With Minneapolis Hy Associated Press. MINNEAPOLIS. Minn.. July 20. Minneapolis and Indianapolis dii.bd a double header here Tuesday, the hnif team takinc the flrt t o ;nd losinc the second h to
hauer's nirticht pitching baffled
1 fali tr.apolis one i nr.nrr
Scores : Fir.-t Ram 1 ndi.ma; olis . . O'1"! Minneapolis .. . 4 no
pitching
in the first ttame. rcaihir. second
0 (1 0 0 0 0
ore 0 l2x S
only base.
12 rti
RY izd nuGin:s. (Tü Famous Sport Cartoonist.) Foreign countries who quite rightly look upon your Uncle Samuel as the Cae6ar of the athletic world might well ask as did that great man's rivals: "Upon what meat doth this our Caesar fetd that he hath grown so great?" European countries, amazed at our remarkable athletic performance in past Olympics, have put the question to themselves. They have come to the conclusion that meat has nothing to do with It. Instead it was found that nothing but Yankee enterprise, energy, and a practice of the up to the minute methods of accomplishing things accounted for the repeated demonstrations of athletic euperiority. Uncle Sam Is going to repeat again at Antwerp this summer. That much appears to be fairly certain. Well Balanced. The American team is a well balanced rn?.chine, brilliant in spots and just a littl more than ordinarily efficient in others. America as we said before should win. Dut the idea of a walkover should be quickly got rid of. And It will be if you'll but consider the facts. America has always had more than an edge in the sprints, and the middle distances. Jimmy Rector's defeat by Walker, the South African, at London was practically the only big upset we ever had along that line. This year we have Paddock. Sholz. and other cracks to repreFent us. Wonderful sprintersHut it is doubtful if they travel the "century" in better than "even?." brahams of Cambridge and A. G. Hill, rrent English champion arc pood for the dash in this time. Strong opposition there. In the 400-meters we have Eby and Maxam and Hendrixon. Rudd of Oxford and Butler of Cambridge can beat 49 seconds which is somewhere In the neighborhood of the victorious tlgurts in previous Clymplads. Engdahi of Sweden hao also made for the distance, too. No Slieppard. W have no Mel Sheppard to represent us in the 800 meters this year. Rudd will certainly give Karl a tremendous Htruggle for th honors'. The Knglishman is a great athlet It i not at all unlikely he will triumph. Curiously enough Rudd and Eby hung up the same time for the half mile in the Penn re la vs. The 1Ö00 meter another American mjre thing of the past will produce a fine test between England and America, to all appearances. J oie Hay made the American record for the mile In 4 minutes. 14 2-5 seconds. Hill has covered the same distance in exactly the same time. No walkover there. The weight of events. Jumps, and the" fwimming should swing the balPnce of points for America, with no disastrous slipups elsewhere. Our marathon and decathlon ma-te-Ial is cood. But there doesn't pe?m to be a Johnny T laves, a Martin Sheridan or a Jim Thorpe in the outfit. Only a few days ago Ewert Nlelssm of Sweden beat the previous world's decathlon record by scoring 7. SRO rrdnt3. That almost equals Thorpe's best. Not meant to be pessimistic all this. Merely food for thought when some one mentions a V. S. walkover at Antwerp. That's all. Here's wlshinp- 'ein the best of luck!
NUMEROUS GAMES AT PLAYGROUNDS
going stand.
over the Score:
right held grand
Chicngo AB. R. H. o. A. Leibold. rf 1 3 1 0 E. Collins. 2b. . 4 1 1 7 4 Weaver. 3b. ... 5 0 4 1 3 Jackson. If. ... 3 0 0 3 0 Fel.sch. cf 5 1 1 I 1 J. Collin, lb. . . 4 0 1 ft 0 Risberg, ss 4 1 1 3 4 Schalk, c 3 2 0 3 1 Faber. p 3 0 n 0 4 Kerr, p 0 0 u 0 0 Murphy' 110 0 0 Totals 37 7 11 27 17 Ratted for Faber In 9th. N-w York AR. R. H. O. A. Peckinbaugh, ss. ö 0 0 2 4 Pipp. lb 4 1 1 13 1 Pratt. 2h 4 1 2 ." 7 Ruth. If 1 2 1 I 0 Meusel. rf 4 1 3 1 0 Rodie. rt 4 0 0 1 0 Ward. 3b 2 0 0 2 3 Ruel. c 3 0 2 2 0 Quinn. p 3 0 l 0 5 McGraw, p. ... 0 0 0 a 0 I'Wis 0 0 0 0 0 MVwst.r 0 0 0 0 0 Vick,, 1 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 5 10 27 20 Ratted for McGraw in 9th.
iT "?"rxry " ti 1 w ' pi y i- v. 1 1 A ''.-Vtr ' "ll - - - . . . ... , , . . -.e ?iWiSsJ ;e :-ty-.v A :-.-'ii;; ?-" '.- 5 " 7 A D ' i. " ' ' ' .-tv.tV;v. -v. 7 ib;;wr- "..'-. ,:. jHvi . ., Wx - r&X'ffi&K rf'.m&w ' -'-.--V:--:i-; A'f . 'vi : im- fXmM p ; -4d v-s
With her lee rail awash and leader of the challenger by a mil e. the Resolute'
iM.nji.-.wi lre sem on U1C OCCK. 'Itie Picture shows the Shamrock navsir- tl
was iorcea to abandon the race near the turning point, in the inset. The picture was taken from an airplane.
ar.i th -. w h .. h
The helples s condition of the R. solute sh"w -i
passing the
halvards
cup defend
Don Smith Hurls Remarkable Ball'in StutlehakerFranklin Tilt.
Ran for Lewis in 9th. Chicago 000 120 0047 New York 100 310 000 5 Two-base hits Pratt. J. Collins. Leibold. Weaver. Home runs Felsch, Ruth. Sacrifices E. Collins. Ward. Errors Jackson. Faber. Peckinnaugh. Tipp. Double plays
Faber to E. Collins to J. Collins:'
Pratt to Peckinpaugh to Pipp; E. Collins to Rlsberg to J. Collins; Risberg to E. Collins to J. Collins. Left on bases Chicago, 7; New York. 7. Pases on balls Off Quinn, 2; olf McGraw. 1; off Faber, 6; off Kerr. 2. Hits Off Quinn, 11 in 8 2-3 innings; off Faber, 9 in 8 innings: o:T McGraw. 0 in 1-3 inning; off Kerr, 1 in 1 Inning. Struck out By Quinn, 2; by Faber, 2. Winning pitcher Faber. loosing pitcher Quinn. UmpiresChill and Moriarity. Time 2:05. Second game Chicago Oil 000 010 3 10 0 New York 200 400 OOx S 2 Cicotte and Schalk; Mogridire and Ruel.
Playground Indoor ball and volley ball got under way at the parka Tuesday. In the afternoon junior boys' indoor was played, while in the evening the girls' volley ball and senior indoor was played. Only one baseball game was staged, that of Studebaker forge shop and tho Studebaker park nine, the park lads winning, IS to 4. From tho second inning on the heavy stick work of Capt. Wylie,
iJore ana W nitmer male tne game ;
a slugfest. Score by innings: Forge Shop.. 010 012 nnn 4 4 3 Park 034 150 0Ö0 IS IT o Swanson and Wagner; Grabowski and D. Whitmer. The Studebaker senior irdoor team, after staging their baseball victory, turned around and defeated the Franklin playground nine by the score of 9 to o. Don Smith, hurling remarkable ball for the Studio lads, baffled the Franklin nine the entire game, not one hit being registered off him. and only a lone man reaching .second. To top the good record he benched ten men. Svore by innings: Studebaker ... 100 f03 nno f f 1 Franklin 000 000 ooo o n 2 Smith and Clemmens; Crow and Seifert. The Oliver school senior nine failed to appear at the Kaley grounds. In Junior indoor the Studebaker nine defeated Leepers by the score of 11 to 8. Horvath hurled good ball for the winners. The stick work of Pretzel featured the game. The junior boys' indoor baseball team of Washington school defeated the team of the J. D. Olivt.r school in a game at Oliver field Tuesday afternoon by a 14-12 score. In a senior girls' volley ball contest Washington took three games from the Oliver school team by scores of 15-S. 15-14 and 15-1. The games were played at the Oliver school. The Studebaker senior girls failed to come through the winning streak that the Studebaker boys exhibited, and lost two sets of volley bali games at Howard park. The Kaley girls won the first set with two games straight. 15-8. 15-1, while the Howard park girls won th next tw o straight.
DETROIT W'WS TWIN BILL FROM SENATORS
Bv Associated Press. WASHINGTON, July 20. Detroit won four of its five games with Washington by taking both games of a double header Tuesday, 7 to 5 and 2 to 1. The first game was won by the visitors in the 15th inning when Rush hit safely and scored on Hale's Texas leaguer to center. The Ditcher's battle
between Ehmke and
First game:
A B. K. 6 2
. 8 , 7 r,
Shaw. Score:
lb rf
J-troit Young. 2b Rush, ss . Hale, cf . . Veach. If .
1 leilmann. Flagstead.
Pinelli. 3b Jones tfc Z Ainsmith. c Oldham, p Shorten Dauss. p . .
Totals Washin'n Shanks. 31 . . Mila n.lf Roth, rf Harris, 2b Gharrity. "lb . Mr Bride, ss . Piclnieh. c . . Courtney, p . . Johnson .. Snyder, p . . . . Torres . . Schacht, p . . Zachary Erickson, p . .
57 AR.
r,
. c, 1 0 1 0 1 1
m 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 (I 0 i It. 0 1 0 0 0 o 0 0 0
H. 1
1 0 0 1
0 1 15 H. 4 0 o
1 1 1 1 0 (I 0 0 1
o. 5 4 17 4 1 0 6 n 0 0 4 5 : 4 i 1 ; 14 5 5 ( 0 0 0 1 (I 0
A. 9 f. 1 1 1 o
ROBINS WIN ODD GAME FROM REDS Two Tallies in Ninth Frame Gives Brooklyn Gruelling Contest.
I League Standing
SISLEIVS CIRCUIT WINS FOR ST. LOT IS
CINCINNATI, July 20. Brooklyn won the odd game of the series from Cincinnnati Tuesday, 3 to 2. The fielding of Duncan for the Reds
was a feature. Score: Brooklyn AB. R. Olson, ss 4 0 Johnston, 3b 4 1 Griffith, rf 4 0 Wheat, If 4 1 Myei., tf 2 0 Konetchy, lb . . 3 1 Miller, c 4 0 Grimes-, p :; o Totals 3 2 3 Cincinnati AR. R. Groh, 3b 4 u Daubert, lb.... 4 0 Roush, cf 4 0 Duncan, If .... 4 1 Kopf, ss 4 M See, rf 4 1 Sicking. 21 4 0 "inro, v. 3 m Ellcr, p 3 0 Totals 3 4 2
II. O. A. 2 2 1
it 0 1 1
Cleve 1 und
New York Chicago St. Louis . Ronton . . . . Vjthhini;tn
I'bllailflpjjla
Amtrirt n
I.rntfxie. ."S
4.
I'.v
.4 4.". H
1 0 I I 1 1 0 o H. (i 1 u 1 I
1 0
n 1 4 10 1
o. M i 4 4
e. 1 1
1 4 A. 0 6 o 4 1 4
-s ". 24
Nutionul Lr.iguf Brooklyn Cincinnati 4C Pittsburg -5.1 ( 'hU rt o 4N St. Louis 42 Neu York 4' Itntnn IMiiladflphi.i r.4
.mran Aen iathm. St. Paul 114 Minneapolis ," 4J Titled (", 41 Iiuliana polls 4" 44 Louisville 4;: 41 Milwaukee 43 !'. K usus City '". .V.
f,4
:;' 1.". 44 4J 4.' 47
'.7 i
4.'4 ! 1,T s . '..: j w a li .:;:. J T,i. .273 1 St
! To
s..i i.it.-d 1' IIILADiibP ho;;.e ra.i i in the i-i sdiv. .. to 4.
I Uli
.I.V. .tu. O ' I : e I !l Willi f Score AR. R
.lit
. SS JOA
('..ill
Uli. It
-tt!l. . U
i Sisb r 1 b.
4 s-) j .la 1 o ; 1 s r 1 . Js ! W'iili-itns.
Smith. 'lit G 1 .-' r . S t r i d .
Ili.ru . 11
I a vis
( f. t f
1 1 1 I l
.711 ... .it 1 ;.i 1 ..Vit; .yi .t :
4
14 4
0 0 O 1 1 u 0 0 1 0 19
y 2 7 1 ::
Brooklyn 000 100 002 3 Cincinnati 000 000 101 2 Three base. Kit Konetchy. Stolen base See. Sacrifice hits Myers. Konetchy. Lroor Sicking. Double plays Kopf to Sicking to Daubert; Wheat to Kilduff. Left on bases Brooklyn, 5; Cincinnati, rt. Bases on balls Off Elr. 1; off Grimes, 1. Struck out By Eller, 1; Grimes, Umpires Riglcr and Moran. Time 1:43.
CHAPMAiYS DOUBLE HTPsS OVERTIME GAME
n e r n aRhou:
inste ol of rh Risolufe
under
ii
ickrd to Sl'amro.-k
loon 1 u.iti,'
pa!nd nearly a TT.e ? hts W-1r.e.''av over
rwn ni under balloorer.
m r.d win
1 wa r 1 t h e CUp
-' o vj
spinnaker ar.d. bila straight cattrse. r 1 i n ' : T e J pt t ! . e r 1 1 ri . will race acain 1 r.0-r.ii!e wir-.dwar.l
I Mi.in.rc K r r. otn.e.
Cavet. CJobism it h and Henline Schauer and Mayer. S cor.d game
: Ir.il-.anaptlis . . 20 t 000 (Minneapolis ...100 10 Jones and Gossen ; Hovük and Maver.
031 6 9 2 OOl 3 10 3 Robertson.
Kaley Junior Team Wins One Sided Game
ar''
Although other animal? decreased in numbers in Germany during the war. there are 10 percent moro c. ate than there were in 1914.
WajkhlnfTton Irr that thfy
unlly to top pii-1
rt o 1 -. c . ar o o 1 have r.o ; owa r
rtinc in fro
.
a r:
rmtant ard th Wh.'e House
uroptan trawler s.avs
won.fn of San Francisco most hovutiful in the world.
th u are
th the
Heavy hitting by the Kaley playground junior indoor team turned a game with the Oliver School juniors into a farce, the score being 31 to S. Capt. Harvath of the Kaley Sijuad led the batting with two circuits, and with the aid of his teammate clouted 3 hits. Th fioldlr.r of Carl featured for the Oliver lads. Score:
Kaley OS 3 t Ö 0 0 42 21 Oliver 200 110 211 S Brvtndy and Bedien: Kish Benko and Zusronta
Zd 2 K 6 and
Margrave's Two Clouts Feature St. Paul Victory Fy Aiointed Press: ST. PAUL July 21. Hargrave's batting again featured St. Paul's 6 to 2 victory over Louisville. With Louisville leading 2 to 1 m the fourth inning and Miller on base Hargrave drove a home run over the left held fence. Tho next time up, in the sixth, he repeated, and in th eighth he missed a third home run by inches, his liner hitting tho top of th fence and goln for a double. Score: Ioulsville ....101 000 000 2 7 2 St. Paul 000 211 Olx 6 U 1 Long and Kocher; Grir.er and Hargrave.
Totals
Batted for Pinelli in 10th. Batted for Oldham in 10th. Batted for Courtney in Sth. Batted for Snyder in 9th. Batted for Schacht in 11th. Detroit ... 001 002 210 000 0017 Washington 000 002 004 000 C00 6 Two base hits Rice. Bush. Pinich. Gharrity. Three base hit Oldham. Stolen bases Bush, Hale. Errors Harris. Gharrity. MeBride. Sacrifices Bush (2). Pinelli. MeBride; Flagstead. Double play. Bush to Young to Heilmann (2). Bush to Heilmann. Left on bases Detroit. 14: Washington. 7. Bases nlngs; off Oldham. 11 In 9 Innings on Kills Off Courtney. 2; Oldham. 3; Schacht. 1. Hits Off Courtney, 10 in 8 innlnirs; off Oldham, 11 in 9; off Dauss. 3 in 6; off Snyder. 1 in 1; off Schacht, none in 2; off Erickson. 4 in 4. Hit by pitcher By Courtnev (VeacrC: Erickson (Veach). Struck out By Oldham, 2; Courtr.ev. 2; Dauss. 2; Erickson. 2. Winning pitcher Dauss. Passed ball Ainpmith. losing pitcher Erickson. Umpires Dineen and FYiel. Time 2:48. Second game: rt. h. e Detroit 000 001 010 2 7 0 Washinct'n . 000 000 100 1 3 2 Ehmke and Stanage; Shaw. Snyder and Picinith.
I?y Associated Pr: BOSTON. Mass., July 20. A two base hit by Chapman in th". eleventh inning in Tuesday's game scored two runners winning the game for Cleveland.
AB. R. H. O. A. d 2 o 4 U .
Clot-land .htmieson, If. . Chapman, ss. Speak, l , cf. . . Smith, rf. Gardner, 2b. . YYanibsganss. Johnston, lb. O'Neill, c. . . . Morton, p. . . Nie hau m, p. . . Fhle. p Ia"by, p. . . . Totals . . . . Boton Hooper, rf. . . Foster. 3b. . , Menoky, If. . Schanr, cf. . . Melnnh. lb. . Scott, ss
MeNally,
Walters, Fortune. Karr, p.
2b.
c. P.
I. o . 5 . 4 . 0 . 1 . 1 . 4 2 AB. . r . a . .
o 4
1 t 1 0 1 o 0 0 0 0 R. . t 0 1 1 el 1 1 0 0
1 0 1 0 0 0 14 H.
0 4 1 1 0 0
3 0 1 1 fi 0 0 0 0 o. 4 o 4 4 R 4 i I 0 0
Totals 4 5 Cleveland ... 4 1 2 Porton 0C2
Errors Foster, (2); Karr. Two
S OOO 002
15 000 210
o it 0 0 0 l 0 IS A. 0 mm 0 0
i i 9
4; it
HLM LTS YKSTr.nn.X V. Amfrirun l.rsKur. Chicago 7; .3; New York 5; Cleveland '.; Hosten s. ill iiitiin SI. I.nuU ."; riii1;iie!I(t,i;i 4.
Rernit 1; . ; "Washington n
it- ii l u n l Ii irs. i National League, r.roitklyn .;; Cincinnati 2. Now York 5; rittlur 2. I'.'tston 4; ChliTigi 9. Only tlirep games. Americnn AoHatioi). C.ibinibiis S: Milwaevikeo 0. Toledo 4; Kansas City ä. Indianapolis 0; 5; Minneapolis Litiiisvllle 2; St. Paul 3. Southern A.ftori&tion. Mobile 0; ,'t ; Hirmlnirham i; 2. New Orleans .'; Atlanta 0. Memphis-Little Kork i rain Chattanooga 7; Nashville V International league, .lerse.v City . ; lb lienor .". Heading 2; Akron ;;. Syraeur 12; Ruffdo V Raltlniore 4: Toronto s. Three-I I.etitfue. Cedar Kapbis 1; 4; 1. Trre 7 ; 3.
Kock Island 3: 10; 0.
: l''; t.
.Molin 1 ; Iloi-kfard 4
Ko. kford 1; : Innings 2nd
Totals :::. Philadelphia A R. Witt, rf :. I M ki s. ::i ! Walker. If 5
Weich, cf :.
I email. 2b. . . 1 Vrkins. c . . Griftm. lb
R 1
H.
1 (t
3.
11
Peoria 7: 10; : 1. I'.vansville ; 1. Kvauille game I
Raute
Rloomlngtnn
2
1
GAM KS TOPAY. Ainerlcnn Le-aue chi'-.io at HoKton. St. Louis at Philadelphia. CpvHand at New York. No other frames. NiUlonul IeaKue. Rosten t St. Iau1s. Itrooklyn at Pittshur?. New York at Cincinnati. Philadelphia at Chi-ago.
02
01
McNall, Walters base hits Chap-
VIC-
Lip-
I'y Associated Prs: ABOARD STEAM YACHT TORI A. July 2 0. Sir Thomas
ton declared at the end of Tuesday
race that he beiieved the showing Shamrock IV had made justified him in the hope that he would lift the cup this time.
Fifteen tons of Gen. Wood's cam
paign literature were sold
I capo junk dealer for 500.
Io a Chi-
Kansas City Wins From Toledo in Ninth Inning p,r Associated Press : KANSAS CITY. July 20. Kansas City won In the ninth from Toledo Tuesday after Brady, the visiting pitcher had been injured and his place taken by McColl. Th score was 5 to 4. Score: Toledo 013 000 000 4 9 2 Kansas Citv ...120 100 C01 5 9 3 Brady. McColl and Murphy, McNeill; Ames and Brock.
man. Smith 2; JamJes-on, Hooper, Schang. Three base hits Johnston. Hooper. Sacrifices Johnston, Gardner, smith. Chapman, Wambganss. Karr. Double plays Johnston, (unaiirted): O'Neil to Gardner. Left on bases Cleveland 10; Boston 0. Bas k on ball off Morton 2: oft Bagby 1; off Fortune 2; off Karr 3. Hi.s off Morton ? in 5 2-3 innings; off Niehaus 1 in 1-3 (none out in 7th); off L'hle 2 in 1 inning (ncno out in 8th); cff Bagby 3 in 4 innings; off Fortune 8 in 3 inninps; off Karr c, in S innincrs. Hit Lv pitcher by l'hle (MeNally). Struck out by Mc-ton 3; by Nic-haus 1; by Fortune 1: by Karr 2. Winning pitcher Ba-sby. loosing pitcher Kaxr. Umpire Connolly and Dineen. Time 2:32.
New YftrkRums. If. . B.itif roft. ss., YounK. rf. . Frisch. 2b.
FROM BRAVE OUTFIT yVy y I Kmc. cf. . . Devi. . 2b .
CUBS TAKE SERIES
Thomas, : Moore, p. Burrus Naybr. p
1 o
M o (1 ft
1 1 ii 1 rv
1 1 " 1 f H-
Tota's 3S 4 12 Batted for Moore in Mh. St. Louis ooo o.i: rhilailelnlua H" 00:
Two-biie hit Gerbt r. Thre--ba--hits. Walker. Du wan. Home runs .Jacobson. Sisler. Sacritics I)ykCM. Left tn bas s St. 1uj.is. 5 ; Phil.-.d Iphia. ?. Frrr Hurwr.l. Rases on balls Off Moor. 2 Hits - )!"f Burwell. S in 5 (none ., jt in r.thi; off Davis. 4 in 4; off Moor.-. 10 in S; off Naylor. 0 in 1. Srru-k out By Rurwell. 2, by Dav!.-. 2. bMoore. 2. Winr.ins: pitcher -Da Hildebranl and Evans. Tim - 1:31.
NEIIF HURLS GIANT OUTFIT TO VICTORY
PITTSBURGH. July 2". Nev Y'ork defeated Pittsburch Tuesd-v. 5 to 2. The vLitors; bunch d hi with th" tni-plays i'f Whitt '. .c ' Grimm, while Nehf held the loeals to two hits up to the ninth ii-: -when a single, a tripl .tiid an a:t i r t scored thtir two runs Sc-
AB. . 4 . 4 . 4
CHICAGO, July 2". Chicago m.-ide it three out of five from Boston by winning Tuesday's game a to L Hendrix replactil Carter in th--first inning after the visitors had batted in three runs. Score;
Strawberries i.re brought by airplane from Pari to Covent Garden, the same morning they ar picked. Isir.plass is being manufactured In
Japan from the combination era! species cf seaweed-
of ev-
Itoston AR. R. H. . A. Powell, cf 5 I 1 1 1 Pick. 2 b 4 1 2 4 Mann. If 4 1 2 2 " Eayrs. rf ." 1 1 : ' Sulliva.n. lb. ... 3 " I . o Ford, lb 0 o i .t Rocckt 1. 2b. ... 4 m o i Maranville. s-s. :, 1 1 S O'Neill, c : o 1 1 Christenbury, . 1 o o Wilson, c o ti o o r. Scott, p 3 0 1 " 0 Cnjlse, xx 1 o 0 ö o Watson, p 0 0 0 ') Totals 3 4 4 f. 2 4 13 Chlcauo AR. R. H. O. A. l'lack. rf 3 2 1 1 " Hcrz.g, 2 b. ' 2 3 2 4 Terry, ss 5 0 Merklc. lb 4 0 2 : ' Roberts'.r., If. . 4 0 1 J o Twomblv, t. . . 4 1 1 1 U IaJ. :.b :: i l 2 I Kill if er. c 1 I . i Carter, p r' 0 1 1 Hendrix. p 4 2 3 o n Totals r.t. 'J 13 2 7 10 x Ratt-d for O'Neil in 5th. x Batted for Scott In Sth. Boston 300 100 0CÖ Chicago 00.t 20 1 I2x S Two has- hits. -Pica Flack. Errors Powell. Maranville, T'combly. Sacrifice hits Pick, M.mXI. I'eal.
. 4 . 31 AR
R. 0 1 1 1 ö o A 0
Snvil.er, c. ... Nehf. p Totals .... IMtt-sburirli Bigbee. rf. . . 'tits haw. 2'... Southworth. rf Whittel. 3b. . Nich'dson. If. , Grimm, lb . i':;t'i. s? Schnii it. e. . . Cour rr. p . . . Ti-taK-New York . . Pittsburg . . . Two-b.ts hit hits Your.g, c
Kins. Doyle. Snyil r. I'riseh; r.rhimi. Whitted. Left on New York, 5; Plttsburt:. 3.
R. 1 i n 1 1 I, ii n 0 ä
ri o o . e i't 0 Gr:mni. utsh aw.
H. fi 1 t f 0 fl n 1 s H f I fi n ft 1 0
0 13 C'l"C i n ( dZ Ti.r . -b S '-r;'.f f -
Rrr'
on balls' )ff Nehf. Struck o',t By .Wh 1. Umpire s H :i r;.' T;me 1 :22.
ff f : b
Pa.oo jir. 1 1
Kirhham's Lone Distance Hit Defeats Columbus
By Associated Pr s. MILWAUKKi:. .T-ih-wauke canie from rhl' defeated Columbus todr, y.
.vr- runs in ir."
scorir g
Kirkht i n r
Double play Killiter to T- rry. I-ft on ba" Boston y ; Chi ago R:i--s rn tall- off Hendrix 3; Scon
2: Watson 1. Hits off Carter 4 inj 1-3; otf Hendrix in 2-".: off Sett j 12 in 7; uft Watson 3 ir. 1. Hit by : pitcher by Hendrix Eayrs. ) Etru. k j
out by Hendrix 4: Scott 1. winning pitcher Hendrix. Lo-ir.g pitch r Scott. Umpires McCormack and 0'Iy- Time 2 hours.
in t h
Score : Mliw aukee Columbus Mulrer. na n
hart and Gas.! on
One
and .111 . I an.
h om w !r.n
Zr Mild and 3 to br e.shtli r-r-m tiro , mir r
Oin o:x CO 3 lloHartb v.
R
a p p.y test.
thlrfl of the :mni!:r.ir,t w - fer .'vdmis-iir. to th- lr.:t ! are Narred bv the !it-r.o
A proposal by alty to unite the
dian navlf-s has bren re
i Canadian Goverr.mnt
the Rr:t:sn Ain-.ir-Frfit'.sh and Car.a-
CT-d tr.
