Newspaper Page Text
Giants Blank Phillies; Yankees Win Two?Mrs. Mallory Retains Jersey Tennis Title
(Copyright, J'JIO, Neu; York Tribune ?nef
Art Nehf Has
Field Day as
?eason Wanes
Si
Pi?ehe^s Ruiiless Ball and
Hits Triple and Homer;
Slimmest Crowd Attends
By W. O. McGeehan
. e ( ml picked on the Phils '?' h<*
Po . Grounds yesterday for the next
to the last meeting of the season under
Coogan's Bluff. The overcoats were out,
and those who gathered to pay their
respects felt the touch that reminds
at wo have thrown another sum
into the dump. The final score of
; p unn? ces -.. ' ;? foi mal ? iv;\s G to 0.
Ara Kehl took t : tl nj* sei iously
and wielil r. .. ist; bat. A h oui run
. Jai h ter w? re hi cont ribu
tions to thi final statistics of the de
g season The Giants and the
i will do it once more to-day be
i'i/i Turning over the grounds to Henry
.' ... ?:, the hermit of Coogan's Bluff.
The crowd that gathered for the first
afternoon of the wake of the season of
?010 was about the summest of the
year It was made up mostly of the
conf?n . - ?' were wonder
?.- ? .: ?? iart ;.. nark
,. . :. '.. ' looks like n
i owded fall and iv in ter for Jack Doyle.
Larcy V.'v.t rich has made the first ap?
on for parking space near the
i r.fi iator.
Jjhn .Joseph McGraw \*ras not with
the Giants. He left them flat after
1.1 . y cinched second place, rfd when he
i ?es any of them on the street pretends
' at he doesn't know them. Christy
Mathewson, the emifrient traffic officer
who ! as been keeping the Giants from
exceeding the speed limit at third base,
vas manager of the wake.
Giants Score in Opener
The Giants got their first In the
opening inning, when Burns got a base
on bails and stole second. Young's sac
rifice put him on third and he came
home on a sacrifice fly by Kauff.
In the second inning Bancroft, of
the Phils, roused the lingering mourn
? rs from their brooding over the com
ing f II and the high price of coal by
* akii ?s a circus stop. Fletcher shot
< ne a couple of yards over his head.
Bancroft made a leap and na'Jted the
1 all. The applause helped to waivm the
? d digits of the guests at the wake.
Frisch then beat n bunt to first with
?. ] retty dash of speed. With Kelly
out he stole second. Snyder planted
v. single along the third base line : nd
Frisch scored.
In the fourth inning Art Nehf took
advantage of the enfeebled condition
of the season to fatten his batting
average before the hibernation time.
lh> plastered the hall against some
vacant chairs in the riir-lit field stand
and trundled around for a home run.
In the fifth inning Mr. Hogg got con?
siderable of a plastering. Young
started it with a double. Benny
Kau the eminent tire merchant, put
over :; scratchy double into right.
Young pulling up at third. Doyle
lifted a long liy to centre and Young
h-.-ored Kauff rjoinpr to third on the re?
turn. Fletcher s-ored KaufT with a
smash to centre.
Fine Catch by Williams
The pounding might have continued
indefinitely but for tlie ability and
enterprise of the long Mr. Williams, of
the Phils. Frisch busted one out to
centre, and the worst it looked was a
double. But Williams, who wears
seven '? ; .? .' baseball shoes, camo in
?>n it. His roach enabled him to
gatl er it in before it kissed the wither?
ing grass top.-. At this feat mourners
warmed then- hands with a little more
appla? se.
X walloping fury continued in
the si h. He started the inning with
?i ?To ible to left field, but was trapped
between ccond and third when Burns
poked one to Blackburne. Burns
reach I second In the meantime and
-went to third on a single by Younpr.
On the double steal Burns scored,
while Kauff was run down between
first. ,nd second.
.Jim Cooney, son of old man Cooney.
?who was considerable of a ballplayer
in his day, went in at second in the
eighth. He got a hatul when he
blocked a poke by Blackburne. With
one oui Williams singled to centre, and
old man Cravath himself came up to
do some pinching. He made Benny
Kauff run after one at that.
The score:
ri;n,.\ <\ r. ) i new tork in. m
. i a p fth r 1' po .i ?
I/B ? '' ' ' 0 : 0 0 V.V.I If ..3 J 0 4 0 0
\\U -. ?.tv4 0 1 1 0 Oi Von g, i-r ..It 'J Z 0 ?I
v- Hilaros . : 4 0 J fl o o Kauff, rf . .1 I 2 fl 0 o
MeiiflOl, rf...'i>i; 2 ?n 1? i ) 2b. .20 0 1 10
?Aiilerm, lb.4 0 0 I lOlf'ooncy, ?b..0 0 0 1 to
Hi r ?'? n. 4 0 0 " 5 f I".??? ihor. as.4 0 1 1 7 0
I'-i-i i-'e. 2b.4 0 1 l 2 0 r'risch. Sb ..4 1 1 0 1:0
?A nu, o ..402 f. lOlKclly, lb ..40 ? 10 00
" e ...2 0 1 0 1 OiSnvcler, o ..3 0 1 2 Ou
IXel f, p ...3 1 2 0 10
totals ...8307241001 TYitnls ..80? 1127120
Iflphla. 0 o o 0 o o o ?? n?o
> ? ?? York .. . i 1 0 i 'j 1 o o x?6
Two i,,.,.... hits?Snyder, Tonn?. Kauff,
"*.i iif. Home run -Nehf. Sacrifico lilt?
Vo?npt. Sacrifice ?!<--? -KaufT, Poylo. Ftolen
V,uHOn ? Burns. Frisch Double play ?
Fletcher, Hey'." and Kelly. Pasfj on hail?
- ? ft Nehf, 2 off Hogg, 3. Struck out?
1*5 Nehf, I; by Hokk, ' Lofl cm bases?
K i? ? oi I . 6 Phila ielphta, 7.
Reds Again Defeat the
(!u!)s by 7 to 1 Score
CINCINNATI, Sept.27. The National
League champions again defeated Clii
CRfro this afternoon by heavy hitting
in two inning . Tue score was 7 to ?!.
Four hits were bunched off Martin in
the fifth for two runs, and four more
hits camo with two walks and two
errors in the seventh, yielding four
runs. Captain Groh of the Reds, who
; ? been out of the game tor three
weeks with a smashed tinker ?., n?H
right hand, returned to the line-up to?
day.
lb '"ore the gftme George Wright, of
Boston; Cal McVey, of San Francisco,
and Taylor, c Atlanta, the three sttr
viving members of the famous Rods of
1869, appeared on the field and tossed
the ball around. They are here for
tho world's series as the guests of the
local Chamber of Commerce.
?I . . . re;
CHICA'in (N t. l CINCINNATI fN. L.)
ali r ti i?> n ? ab r h po a e
MiObe, rf B ? 1 '?' 0 o tutb 2b ...5 1 S s til
Ho - '.-r ? 15 I JOln lubert lb 4 :: in o o
Tlan-i.g. .'!? 11. 1 0 ?Iroh \ ...4 1 'Z 0 0 0
1 - 11 Ko :-h i-f ..S 0 0 4 O e
;? I 0 0 0 t 1 Ihn -.'n. If. ? O 1 1 0 0
r ?...:! 1 ? o . M . r'...4 0 0 4 1 0
i ?? cf.. 4 ?. - . ..< l i i : n
O'I ' ' M'i-fl. C...428SS1
... p ?_. .1 | <. n o
? . 10 0 M p 1 -? 0 n 0 0
*-- ? t P 21 i rotai? ,337 11 27 12 5
. : . ? .'i.
t , . .. , ?/ ,i i
!??..-... I 0 0 0 2 0 i 0 x- -"
Two-base hit Lear Three-base hit?- -
: : ?i? ?. O'Farrell Stol. . bas s
. i . h it s?B reu
s v fly Daub? ' Doubld
i. v - liath : ' . ub? - Smith Kal h
and Daul irt: Hollocher, )?? : : s and i ...
? -.? . rhlcasro. ?; Cincinnati, 7
on I - i. ;. ? i , 1 ; off r-es. ?
?1er. 1; off Martin Hits i iff Rtn ther
? ? i. * "i 4. Hit by
, i..,- i -, >; her. : Si rue! ,. u Dy
i . ?.-.? WIM pitches
Kuether, ? Martli?. 2 W limlns pitch?
i ? .01.
(.mill* ?%?. Philadelphia, to-day - g*n\*
i r.R p m !\ . *?.. mils? A in I
A Blue Rejoinder
' Yo i may talk about Blacks that arc Keivpic,
\You may weep for the days of 'led Coy,
?You can laurelize Brickley till tonsil* grow tickly
?Or remark of E. Casey, "Some boy!"
I There's no doubt, that the I'oes had remarkable toes
For impelling an oval i o flight?
j But when Yale has a captain named Callahan
j It's going to be "Harvard?Good Night!"
All the ivizardry practised by Haugliton,
All the sorcery schemed by Tad Jones,
The tackling Shelleyan of Brothers ForceUian
And the horrible secrets of Bones;
They have aided the Blue and the Crimson We true
To grasp for the crown of the proud?
But wfusn Yale has a captain named Callahan
It's "Harvard, come order your shroud!"
Oh, the Irish arc always the Irish.
A)id the Bulldog holds on fi?! he dies.' ?*"
Where the fighting's the thickest the hair is the brickest
And the brogue it near covers the skies.
For a Swede can smash yards through ends, tackles
and guards,
And a. Wop he may punt for great guns,
But when Yale fias a captain named Callahan
It's "Boston, go weep for your sons!"
Gumdrop
"Jack Dempsey is willing to meet any contender
for $250,000." Well take on Russia and d'Annunzit
for that money.
Money may bo pretty cheap and useless these reck?
less days, hut $250,000 would be quite a bit if it wai
made out of hay.
"The Reds are going in this series to win," write;
a Redland fan, "and that means more than all tin
dope in existence." This is often true. But what an
the White Sox going in for?just for exercise?
The Hard?est Hitting Club
A correspondent desires to know how the White So:
compare with the old Athletics as a hard hitting club
There is very little difference. The Mackmen on.
or two seasons went a trifle above .280. Collins i
about the same Collins. Jackson can outhit Baker o
?VIcInnis at their best. Collins, Jackson and Pelch ar
about as dangerous as Collins, Baker and McGinn?
While Weaver, Gandil and Liebold are batting full o
a pai- with Barry, Strunk and Oldring.
i These two clubs are the hardest hitting machine
1 the American League ever sent into action?harde
! hitters than the Red Sox or the Tigers of 1909.
An Unsung Star
Read Sportlight: 1 noticed your line about the
Brookes-Dunlop combination being better than tho
Brookes-Wilding outfit. Comparisons arc hard to
make, but I consider Dunlop the equal of any doubles
player in the world in the vicinity of 1908. I won
the Australasian championship doubles in Sydney that
year with him as a partner and the game he put up
against Wilding and Dr. Sharpe, tho latter a special?
ist at the doubles game, was about the best ? have
ever seen on a tennis court. His service was consid?
ered his only weakness, but though soft, it was well
placed, and, like Harold H. Hackett, covered by him
so no opening was left to shoot the bail through, It
would ? be difficult to pick a weakness in the rest of
Dunlop's game. America has never seen him in his
prime, as when he was here in 1914 he was past the
age of grade A tennis. I may add no greater tactician
ever stepped on the court. This dope may be of
some us? to you twenty years hence.
FRED ALEXANDER.
Limerick of the Links
.'1 duffer who topped every shot
Remarked as his niblick grew hot,
"If 1 get rauch punker
FU tear down this bunker,
And that ought to help me a lot.''
And then there's Sherwood Nottingham Magee. He
has been waiting fifteen or sixteen years to break
into a world series and with all this pent-up display
at hand he may decide to hankgowdy the show at any
given moment.
Tris Speaker, as a batsman, failed to bat .300 this
season, but as a manager he came near batting an
even .1000. Tris conferred a great favor on the State
of Ohio by failing to finish first. The Buckeye Com
monwealth could never have stood the double strain.
Even as it is something may blow apart before the
week is over.
It may be that some English promoter will pay
Dempsey $250,000 to meet Beckett, but for all that
we'd like to have a year's salary equal to the differ?
ence between $250,000 and what Dempsey will finally,
get.
Some statistician has discovered that the National
League is accustomed to winning a world champion?
ship every five years?1909-1914?and here is 1919.
If you care for hunches you are at liberty to bet your
.-hirt whenever you desire.
Yale's captain is named Callahan and Harvard's star
is named Casey. Who said the bally war was over?
I Dodgers Wind Up
Season by Losing
To Braves by 14-6
BOSTON, Sept. 27?The Dodgers
j closed their season here to-day, losing
! to the Braves in a burlesque contest
by a score of 14 to 6. A! Mamaux, al
i though batted hard, was kept on the
i mound through the nine inning3. Mc
, Quillan, who started the pitching for
i Boston, was hit by a pitched ball in the
i fifth, and retired. Al Demaree finished
j and was hit hard.
j Despite the large score, the game
was speedily played. The heavy bat
j ting was the only feature. Runs came
j in bunches and at frequent intervals.
. The locals began their marathoning in
j the second inning with three runs,
? took a big lead in the fourth by adding
five more, and five more again in the
seventh. As a ball game it was n great
i track meet.
The score:
j BROOKLYN <.\\ IY) | IH'STw ? . r. ?,
nb r >i po a ?? ' : '. i" if
' Palrd, ib ..500 2 in Christy. ? ! . i 00
i Malono, sv.4 1 0 3 4 1 Pick, . ? 12 1
i Griffith, rf. .4 2 2 I o l! Powell. ; - i 00
Konetchj In 4 12 11 0 Ol Carroll, . :.. ' - .: 1'2
Hlckman, cf.* 0 1 :: 0 0 Hoik?-. II.. - : .4 0 0
Sch'andt. 2b.4 1 1 1 2 n Bocekol, 3! i i 1 0 ?1
All??, if ...4 0 0 a I 01 Kord, ss .1 .. 2 2 f, 0
? Krat.ger, c.4 0 1 2 1 ll?owdy, c...'. 3 4 3 0 0
Mauiaui, p. .31 0 0 S 0 M'Qull'n, pli 1010
'?35. Wheat .10 0 0 OODemaree, p.2 0 1 0 2 0
Total? . ..87 6 7 24 15 3] Total? . .42 14 17 '27 1? 4
"Hatted for Mamaux in ninth Innin?.
Brooklyn... 00000212 1? G
l?oston. 08050160 x?14
Two-base hits ? Schmandt, Konetchy.
Thn-o-bas? hit?Hlckman. Homo run -
Griffith. Stolen bases?-Carroll ?2), Pick',
(lasos on balls?Off Mamaus, 3. Sc.ru?. k
nil-?By Mamaux, l; by McQuillan, 2; by
Domaree, 1. Wild pilch?Mamaux. Hit
by pitcher?By Mamaux, 2 t McQuillan,
Kord). Left on bases?Brooklyn, 3; lis?
ton, ?!.
Hale, Cleveland Amateur,
Beats St. Louis Browns
CLEVELAND, Sept. 27, ?Cleveland
won easily from St. Louis to-day, 11 to
3, bunching hits off Wright in the third
and fourth innings. Hale, who was nn
amateur n year ago, pitched for Cleve?
land, and won his tenth game of the
?season. H;s former amateur associates
presented him with a gold watch.
The score:
ST. LO?I3 (A 1,1 I CTJ3VI:l.AM> (A. 1.1
tli r h po h ? al> r li no a e
Tobln If :> O 2 4 0 OIGranfy, If..3 i 1 4 0 0
bthovelln, -2!...4 ii I 8 4 O'Chap'&n, s?.S :' 2 * 4 0
Jacob'?, cf.4 0 1 4 ? c lu,-.... SS...2 f? 0 0 II
M.?ior, lb ..4 1 3 7 1 e Speaker, r-f.3 2 1 :: 0 u
Dent'ltt, rf,4 0 o 2 0 OiJamle'n, cf.O o o o oo
Sohepn'r, 8b. 4 0 0 0 t'Pll.urU. lb..4 2 SU 00
Billings, c.4 I ?f 2 1 of.iolin'u. lb.0 ?) 0 1 nu
Gorber. 93 ..41 1 1 1 OIGardner, Xb.3 1 2 0 50
Wright, p..2 0 1 1 2 OlW'am'as. 2b. 4 1 2 8 40
Vaiigll'r, p.o 0 0 0 1 0 Smitti rf . r, 1 1 t 00
?Gedtson ..10 0 0 O 0 lianas, c 3 0 0 1 0 0
tAustln ...10 1 0 0 i' liait?, p..4 1 2 0 20
Totals ..S7 3 11 24 10 0: totals .84 1114 27 16 1
?Batted for Wright In seventh Inning.
IBatted for Vangllder In nlnih Inning.
St. Louts.... 0 0 n 0 1 0 1 i 0? 3
Cleveland. . 0 0 .. 6 0 U :' 0 x? : \
Two-baso Hits?-Gerher, Chapman, Harris
(2L Three-base hit Speaker. Stolen
-Wambsganss, Smith, Sacrifico lilt
-Thorns - s . ? lb ?. 1. -Sh ivolln Doublo
play?? Wambsganss, Chapman anil Harris;
< l.ii-tiiit-i-, \Va,mbsganss and Harris; Shove
IIn and Gerber. Left on bases?St. Louts.
Cleveland, 3. Bases on balls?-Off
Wright, 2, oit Vangi;..!t<r, t; off Uhle, 1.
Hits?Oft Wright. 10 In H Innings; o?T Van
glldor, 4 In ?. Struck out -Bj Wright, I;
bv l.'lile. 1, Passed ball?Billings. Losing?
-, 1- -\\ right.
Commerce Heats Mt. Vernon
An intercepted forward pass enabled
tho High School of Commerce to win
ita opening football game from Mount
Vernon High School on the gridiron
of Concordia College, at Bronxville, \.
V., yesterday, by a score of h to 0.
Captain Rabinowitz made the catch,
running sixty-five yard" for a touch
down, t
- -
Football Results |
Harvard, f>3; Bate-?, 0.
I'ennsj-lvniiia, IG; l?ucknell, 0.
Brown. 27; RIxmIp Island ??t'tte, 0.
Amtierst, 8; Howiloln, 0.
Army, 14; M'ulill?-linry, 0.
Dartmouth, 40; sp.-ingtleld, 0.
Rutgers, 34; l'rsinus, t).
Vermont, 41 ;? t'Iiirkson, 2.
?tVilliiiins. 20? KruMM-laer, 0.
Lchigli, 47; Villa Nova, 0.
*>V?>h> Virginia, 61; Marietta, 0.
New Hampshire, 13: Conn. Aggies, 0.
Indiana, 27; Wubash, 7.
Clip.!, 40; Baldwin-Wallace. 0.
Ruth Gets 29th Homer
As Red Sox Drop Brace
WASHINGTON, Sept. 27..Washing
ton won both games of a double-headei
with Boston to-day, Russell beiii'
charged with both defeats. Ruth's driv,
over the right held wall with La mar ot
base ahead of him in the fir^t gam?
was his twenty-ninth home run of th.
season, and one of the longest hit
I ever madii 7>n the local grounds. Th
' scores:
FIRST GAME
P.OSTON fA. I..) J WASHINGTON (A. L.
ah r h pu ? f ab r li pu n
Wllturit rf..3 10 0 0 0'tij.l-ee. lb ..:i0 1 B2
VIM. lib ...411 0 20LeOnard, 3b..4 0 1 111
! L?mar, uf ..4 12 4 0 OlSlianks. ts...",0 1 2 3
lintli, If ....4M ! 0 0 ',".-\ if ....4 1 1 1 0
1 M.'Im.ls, lb.4 0 1 10 I 0 Ellerbe, US ..4 1 11 0 2
Shannon, 2b 3 0 1 -J 1 OJMenosky, If..S 1 1 2 0
i Walter?, c. .3 0 0 0 0 0 Gharrlty, n'..4 1 1 3 0
|*Sehtuig _000 0 0 0 AgT.-w, a ..3 1 1111
Si'ott, a ...4 0 0 1 SOUorctan, ?I....10 0 00
Russell. p.-.llO 0 1 OlIKoster .11 1 op
: Hoyt. p _100 0 :: O i-lri---!_;.i|i. p. .2 1 1 0 0
tRoth .I Oo 0 0 0?
Totals ...32 5 6 24 12 0 Tet?is ...32711275
?Hatted I'm Halters In ulnlli inning.
I IBntted for Hoyt In ninth Inning.
{Batted for Jordan in fourth Inning:.
Boston. n 0 r, o 0 noon.
Washington.. 0 0 0 C 0 0 0 J x
i Two-bass hits-?Shannon, Vltt. lion
'run?Kulli. Stolen base?-Leonard. Sun
i flee hit?Judge. Left on bases?Boston,
?Washington, T. Base;, on balls?Off Jo
dan, 2; off Russell, 4; off Hoyt, 1: i
, LrJckson, i. Hits?OfT Jordan, ?:? In G I
nlngs; off Russell, :- In 3 l-J (six ru
scored, one on base ?n fourth); uff Ho
. :. in 4 2-3. Hit by pitcher?By Ericka
(Shannon). Struck out ? Bv Jordan, 2;
Russell, .: by Erlcks-oii, 7: bv Hoyt,
Wild pitches?Jordan, Hoyt. ?W-.nni
pitcher?I'hlckson. Losing pltcner?K.
SECOND CAME
BOSTON (A. I.) I WASHINGTON (A. I
ab r a [?i a <" ab r b i>o .1
WUholi, rf..2 11 l o 0 .?mlgc lb ..3 12 t? H
Vltt, l.-i -3 0 1 0 2 O'r^eonari. 3b..4 11 0
. I.amar. cf...4 0 1 n 0 0 Shanks. r';..,3l)U 0
Ruth. If _100 0 0 0 ,'iii-u. rf if..4t3 3
Roth, If _30 1 1 OOlillerbo, <?s...H0L II
! Si.-li.ing. o ..200 3 3 0 Menosky, If..2 1 1 2
Mclnnla, lb.20010 1 0 Gharr'y, cf rf.3 0 1 3
Shannon, 2b.4 0 0 4 J 0 Agnow, ? ..2 0 0 6
?Scott, n ...301 .. S 0 Courtney, p. .300 1
Russell, p ..300 o 5 0
Totals ...2715-4130! Total-; ...2749^7
Boston. 0 ?? ti ?i 0 i 0 0 0
Washington . 0 10 0 1 ... 0 2 \
Two-base lilt?Both. Home run ? L'
>ird. Stolen bases?Wllhoit, Schang. H
ilfii-i> hits?Mclnnls, Bllerbe. Agnew, V
Double plays? -Rice and Agnewj Leona
Agnew and Judge. Left on base.-*?B
ion. 7; Washington, 4. Bases on balls?
Courtney, 6; ol? Russtli. 3. Struck out
Courtney. S; by Russoll. ?. Ba-ssed ba
Aarnoir.
Tigers Stage Rally
In the Tenth Inning
And Beat Sox, 7-5
CHICAGO, Sept. 27.- Detroit staged
a ten-inning rally to-day and defeated
Chicago 7 to 5. Veach opened the
tenth with a triple and put Detroit
ahead by scoring on Heilman's sin?
gle. A sacrifice and another single
clinched the game for the visitors.
Tho score:
DETROIT (A. L.) ! CHICAGO (A. I, I
ab r h po * p ah r li po a ?
Bush, s?, ..5 1 2 4 2 l|Ltebold, rf. 3 0 1 o 0 0
Toinig, 2b..3 1 1 5 1 0 Murphy, rf..2 0 1 1 10
Cobb, Cf ...11 '2 5 lOiECol'ns, 2b.t 0 0 1 00
Vouch, If ..5 2 3 1 0 0 M'Mul'n, 20.4 1 1 2 2 0
Heil'an. lb.5 2 2 10 0 OlWeaver. 3b..1 0 10 10
Hlags'd, rf.4 0 2 2 0 OiMTIel'ii, 3b.4 0 -112 0
Jones, 3b ..4 0 l 1 8 OUacteon, !f..l 1 1 0 00
Alns'l'.h. 0..5 0 1 2 3 0 r Ool'tis. If.2 0 0 5 10
Ehmko. p.. 10 0 0 1 OIKclsch. cf...4 1 1 0 0 0
Love, :> ...30 o 0 1 0 Gandll. Ib..41 111 10
ItUberg. ss..4 12 13 0
ISoliallt e. ..10 0 2 0 0
iI.TTin. o ...80 1 r, 10
'.Vines, i? ...2 0 1 1 0'I
?Mayor, p ...10 0 0 3 0
?Jenkins ...10 l 0 00
Tola's ..40714.10171' Totali ..3881330150
?Batted for Mayer in tenth innlr?,-.
Detroit. . . 1 0 1 0 o :; o o n 2.7
Chicago.. 0 :: 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 ? o
Two-base hits?Bush (2), Cobb. Three
base hits?Oandil, McMullin, Veach. Home
runs?Felsch, Risberg. Stolon 1>h.-?c? Bush.
Sacrifico hits?Flagstead, J. Collins. Young.
Doubla ploya?t. Collins and McMullin;
Jones and Heilman. Left on bancs?Chi?
ngo, 4; Detroit. T. Bases on balls??iff
May?-r, 2. Hits?Oft Khmke, s in 2 1-3 In?
nings; off Love, ; in V 2-3; off Noyea, 10
in ?; off Mayor, 4 In 2. Struck out?By
NoycH, 4; I?,1 M aver, 2, fussed Imll?
Schalk. Winning pitcher?Love. Losing
pitcher?Mayer.
Stuyvesant Ties Willi
Commercial on Gridiron
Stuyvesant High School succeeded in
holding Commercial High School to a
vio-score tie in their opening football
match on the Commercial Field in
?Brooklyn yesterday. Stuyvesant out
p ayed its rival and twice had the bail
on Commercial's 3.0-yard line. In the
ast period Hassell intercepted a Stuy?
vesant forward pass and run forty-tive
yards to the 12-yard line, but a 15-yard
penalty spoiled the chance to score.
The line-up and summary:
COMMERICIAL (0) Pos. STUYVESANT (0)
Bernstein.L. H.Soltalon
Talmadge.L. T.Volk
Coombes.L. Q.Stelman
Grieve.C.Meapass
Mull?ame.It. G.Brauen!ich
Sontag.H. T.Mugadlccio
JacobUz.R. K.Leavltt
Breddon.Q. B.Randall
Hassell.L. IL B.Jlran
Greenbaum.R. IL B.Wpsu-i
O'Connor.F. B.Kaplan
Referee?Hastings, Cornell, Umpire?
Dickler, Columbia. Time of quarter Ten
minutes.
American Association
Kansas City, 10; Columbus, 7.
Minneapolis, 4: Louisville, ?.
St. Haul. 4; Toledo, 0.
Indianapolis, 10, Milwaukee, 6.
Standing of
Major
League
Clubs
NATIONAL LEAGUE
GAMES TO-PAY
Philadelphia at New York (two)
Chicago at Cincinnati
Pittsburgh at St. Louis
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
New York. 6: Philadelphia. 0.
Boston, 14; Brooklyn, 6.
Cincinnati. 7; Chicago. 4.
St. Louis, 3; Pittsburgh, 3.
STANDING OF TEAMS
W. L. Pet. W.L. Pet
Un'nati. 96 13 .691 B'klyr . 69 71.493
N. York. 85 53 .6 I 6 Host on. 37 82 .?10
Chicago. 71 65 .532 St. Louis. 34 82 .-'<97
Pitts'bh. 70 68 .507 I'hila ... 17 88 ..'Sis
AMERICAN LEAGUE
GAMES TO-DAY
Detroit at Chicago '
Boston at Washington
YESTERDAY'S RESUI TS
New York, 4; Philadelphia, I
New York, 9; Philadelphia, 2.
Detroit, 7; Chicago. 5 (10 inns.).
Washington, 7; Boston, 5 (1st).
Washington. I; Boston, 1 (2d).
Cleveland. 11: St. Louis, 3.
STANDING'OF TEAMS
W. L. Pet. W. I . Pet.
Chicago. 88 51 .633 Boston. 66 70.1*0
Cleve'ld. 81 54 .609 St. Louis 66 72.17.8
N. York. 7!i 59 .572 Wash'n. 55 84 .396
Detroit. 7960.560 Phila... 36 103.239
i Qiiiim-Sliawkey
I Keep N.Y.Team
lia Third Place
?Hugmeii Fi<?ht Har<l for
Slice of World Series Re
eeipt*: Scores.4??1,9?2
, PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 27. Practi?
cally till ol' tin otlit :? major league
club? have wound un their season, but
the Yankees are still i,truggliiig foi a
part of that world';-; series dough. They
won both ends of a double-header from
tho Athletics here to-day, -t to 1 and
1) to 2, and although Detroit also won,
the "anka have third place by a one
game margin,
The New Yorkers have another game
to play here Monday; the Tigers will
play in Chicago to-morrow, Should
the Jennings crew '? ... the Yanks will
collect. If the Jungalccrs win, th ? Big
Town lads Must win their fina! con?
test. _
Qtiinn and Shawkev were responsible
for the victories of the Hugmcn. They
twirled :-o ?..?Ticiertly thai the lowly
Mnckmen never had a chance. The
Yankees) had their batting eye with
them as usual and had little difficulty
in pounding the delivery of the Mack
ian recruits.
; Shawkey especially was in wonderful
; form in the second contest '?"? the
' ?' loi pitched the i?? : gamv? ;.?
tv ir'a'tl Ihi season rw:.l - ?ni? 1: oui 111
it er. ...' t , loca i hatters, a sea: ?>:.'
iecord in ; ha major longues.
The first game was better played.
Kinney managed to hold the visitors
to nino hits, but the fact that they
were bunched proved his undoing. The
locals managed to hit Quinn frequently
enough, but Jack never allowed his
opponents to get dangerous. When
things got warm he tightened and re?
tired the aide.
Pratt got a home run in the first
game and George Burns, of the locals,
got four hits in four trips to the plate.
The Bccond tussle was a walk-over for
the Yankees.
The scores:
FIRST GAME
NEW YORK (A L.) i PIULA (A L.)
ab r h po a o ah r Ii po a <?
VIrk, rr f> 0 0 0 ?) O'Dvkrs, 2b... -10 1 3 5 0
Puck'gn. us.4 1 l 1 4 0 Strunk, cf...3 1 1 1 0 0
Baker. 31>..4<>2 2 I 0 Griffith, lb.4 0'2 13 10
Plpp, lb .2 0 114 1 OlBunis, rf...4l) 4 0 0 0
Pratt. 2b ..4 1 3 3 4 OlWIneo, If. ...30 0 1 00
Ia'wIs. If. ..4 0 2 0 1 OICiLllo'y. si..2 0 0 0 2 0
l-Vivsler, <f.3 0 1 1 OOlTimior, ss..0 0 0 1 3 0
Kur I, r ...30 0 fi n n *- iv..T.|t. 3b. 3 0 1 1 3 0
Quil?n, p...40 0 0 4 0! Vi!i.,T. C...30 0 '.' o o
2 0 ') 0 10
io o ii ii o
10 1 0 ?i n
liioo o o
10 I) 0 0 0
Tunis ..33 4 10 27 15 0| Totals . .32 1 10 27 15 0
"Batted for Galloway i'i sixth inn-ing.
IBattod for Turnio- in ninth lining.
'l!f?M<i.l Tor Ewaldt In ninth liming.
?Balted for J. Walker in ninth inning.
. N'.-w Vori;.. . . 0 10 0 0 10 2 0 ? t
I I'hlladelphla. i o o o o 0 0 o o?1
Two-base hit?Baker. Home run?Pratt
Sacrifice hits?Plpp, Wingo. Stol-n 'i;i*\.
Plpp, Witt. St ru<-l< ml -By '..' linn, ', .
by Klnney, 7. Bar.es on halls ? >:T Qulnn.
2; riff Klnney, 2. Doubl?- plavs- : i op and
i'ratt; Turner. Dyk-'.s and Griffin: i'<-ekln
p.-iugh, Pratt and Plpp; Hiker (un.-issisteii).
ill- by pitcher?By Kinnev ( FVwsP-r >.
I,.-ft mi buses?-New Vurk, R; I'hila I? 1
l hin, 7.
SECONB HAMi:
NEW VORIC (A. I.) PIULA. ? *. LI
ab r h pu a. ?? ?b r h in? a ??
Vick, rf ...31 1 0 0 o 'lalloway, ss.GOO . 40
Peckin'gh, ss.3 1 1 2 1 I Wingo.
Raker. 3b . .5 2 1 0 2 0 *IIik!i
.0
0
lb ...5 13 4 0 0 Brlffl
2b ..4 2 1 3 1 0 Strun
Lnvis. If ..4 1 2 10 0 Wflsl
If. ..1 0 1 OOOl'ivi .
.vster. cf..5 12 10 OlU'ltt,
1 10
I It.iel.
,;.-,.,
pi
I n IRur
IThoi
Style?,
IM art In,
ItZI.-in
IKirkert,
SK :.:.
. . I ii n o 0 0
. 1 1 i n 0 0
.111 0 .. 0
.1 0 4 13 0 0
. r> o .i s ?' o
..3 0 l :-: o i
. .2 1 n I 3 0
.10 1 0 0 n
...200 1 2 0
, . .1 0 l) ,. 0 .1
b..O 0 0 0 I 0
. . 4 0 I :; 10
. .0 O .i ii 0 0
.10.
0
0 0 0
Tuais . ..8S II 13 27 5 i Totals .. .33 2 8 27 12 1
'Halted fur Martin :?. -? rond Inning.
tBatted for Eckert In ninth inning.
.Vow York...... o 0 1 0 o 0 0 1
Philadelphia. 0 1 0 o 0 0 0 0 1 ?2
Two-base lilt?Griffin. Three-base hit ?
Pewstor. Sacrifice hit?Vick. Left on
bases?New York, 3; Philadelphia, 7. Bases
? m balls?Off Shawkey. 5; off Martin. ,:. off
Heitert, 12. Struck out?By Shawkey, 15;
by Martin, l : by Bekert, 2.
! Women Plan Dale
Change for Title
Net Tournament
One of the most important changes
in tho conduct of women's lawn ten?
nis tournaments iti this country since
the inception of the game will probably
be effected at the next annual meeting
of the executive committee o?' the
United States National Lawn Tennis
Association. It is a change that th?
women have been advocating ever sine?
last spring and one which bears tht
ofiicial indorsement of George Town
send Atice, president of the governinj
body. It is the plan for shifting t'?
playing date of the women's annua
championship tournament from Jun?
until the week following Labor Day ii
September.
it. is the aim of the women's execu
tive committee to so arrange their tour
naments in the future that the serie
of clay court events, including the Net
York State, New Jersey State. Pclhan
New York. Woodmere, and the Norfol
and Richmond tourneys in the South
will lead up to tb.c.* national clay cour
championship tournament in July.
From that time on the fair sex wi
devote itself to the turf courts, wit
the Metropolitan, Ardsley, Nassau, Sei
bright, Middle Slates, Cedarhurs
Merion and Longwood fixtures pavin
the way for the national tourney. C
course, the junior events will be ru
off simultaneously with tho s?nit
fixtures.
Coming, as it will, about a week a
ter the closing of the men's natiom
championship tourney at the West Sic
Tennis Club, of Forest Hills, the won
en's event will undoubtedly draw mat
of the stars from the Pacific Coast ai
other points, for the women ??laye
from these sections will accompany ?J
mer. to the East, as in t.;." cases <
Mrs. Thomas ('. Bundy and her fiu
band; Miss Mary Browne and possib
some of the other Sutton sistei
There is also the probability that Mil
Suzanne l.engten, the fanion.- Fren?
girl champion, will be able to roach th
country in time to compete in tho wot
en's national next year, something si
would be unable to do were the tou
nament held in June, for it. would co
fiict with the great tourney at Wii
bledon.
Joseph M. Jennings, a member if I
executive committee and also chai
man of the tournament eonimitts?
the Philadelphia Cricket Club,
whose splendid courts, ?he womei
championships have always be-.o ci
cided, has announced !;: : ???. Ilinj tie
to stage the tournament on the .-'?
tember date.
Ben Boynton Brat* Rcnsuclac
TROY, X. Y.. Sept. 27. Ben Boyi
All-American quarterback, with '
frste?t team Williams ha turned ?
ir years, defeated th? Rcnsselaer Po
tt chn ic institute her?, to h y, b,
core of 22 to 0, in the open ng ga
f the season. With ?^i1 Williams t
regation alone Rensselaei . . ?
i is ou n. b .i w ith Bo
the Cherry and White found unal
:-j i ope with their rh,-? j.
.Chappie to Defend Speed Crown
In Title Races at 'Bay Saturday
World's IVeniier Motor?
cyclist to Meet C.linih
pions at Sheepshead
Lieutenant Arthur Chappie, the
world'? speed king, , coining back to
the motorcj ele i acin? game. rl ho
pr iviici pilol ? ;hl ' : gi apl ed
from Springfield, Mti .. hi entry foi
Fu- professional championship meet
to be held next Saturday nf^inoon at
the Sheepshead Bay Speedway. He
will compete in live of the eight titu?
lar races?-in the four national events
at two, ten, fifty a ;?l one hundred mues,
ami in the ten unie metropolitan cham
pioni hi)).
i..:- int repicl rider "': o reigned bu
pr. me for -;?? .'? it . irs at t he old
Brighton Motordrome., attached to
lin- i. 71 h Iteguneril Infantry, Brooklyn,
iioids neatly every neon.! on tho
steep-banked track from one to 10")
iiiLes. It will b?.' ?us iirst appearance
in real competition in nearly two
years, as he sei1ved Uncle Sam during
i uai time.
"Chappie" will have no en<;y time to
su?ccsstully defend his crown as
sp.'iil king, for he will be cailed upon
I.? en; i ? ; :.; ainsi ?? ho mo.- t i orm i
dahi- crop i yi in ?-, ; itlers the gam
;. .- ,--.. s l?velo;? ?:. Hi t'oremosl
rival .. ; '! (.- Kug?iie Walker, ? he
"Southern Streak," who a fortnight
ago annexed the national professional
championships at one, live and twenty
livo miles, and who is determined to
make a sweep of all the titular events
this season.
Many Champions Entered
Other champion riders who have
already enteret! and who will end'-avor
; to unseat Lieutenant Chappie from his
pedestal aro:
.?like Costello, the Italian speed de?
mon, an old Brighton idol; Otto Walk?
er, who ha.-j just returned from France
after fourteen months on the firing line,
and who, on July 4, 1917, swept the
card in the champion hip meet at the
Sheepshead track; Charle:; "Shrimp"
Burns, the dirt track champion; Ralph
Hepburn, winner of the 200-mile na
IEUTENANT AKTHI K < HAPrj.F,
I t world's r-|i?-?'?l King, who will de?
fend hi? crown in li>o national rliam
piotiship motorcycle rare mwt nt the
Hheepsliend Buy Spee?lua.v nett Hnt
iinfny ?ifirrnooii.
tional championship recently; Roy
?\;?! ley, : hi- Pac ttic Coast champion ;
'.r.-.t. )' ' ,; !" Po '.;??!?. ">-. " : I* of : 1.1;
Xew Jersey championship endurance
run; "Ted" Carroll, the twenty-four
hour champion; Kay Weishaar, the
iifty-mi!e title holder; Jimmy Frenen,
the fifty-one-year-old pioneer racer, and
about a score of others of slightly less
repute.
The Eastern Motorcycle Racing Asso?
ciation, which is reviving the perilous
game after a lapse of nearly three
years, is making an effort to inject a
little international flavor into the com?
petition by getting Percy Coleman,
the undefeated Australian champion, to
enter. Coleman has just come to this
country alter cleaning up all opposition
in his own country. Another much
nought entry is that of Leslie "Red"
Parkhurst, who has won more cham?
pion, lip events across a stretch of
years than any rider in the game.
Final Major League Averages
NATIONAL LEAGUE
IN D1VI DUAL B A TT J N G
Week
-f- ? l.i :n
Player, Club. G. AB. R. I!. SB.PC?Lows
Miti hell, Bltln, 34 48 ti 1 . 0 ,:17? - --
??-???:. Phil S3 21.1 31 7:: - .340 -f -4
lialley, Chi.. ..21181 60 333 - 39
Polish, ?'In ]..t29 400 68 159 21 322 -
Statz, N. V... !H 53 5 17 3 .321 ?.22
Hoinsby. St. L.135 499 63 15S 18 .317 -f .8
Carey, Pitta. . 63 231 :;:) 72 17 .312 f .10
MyorH, Bkln. . 1 : 50?1 GO lf,i 13 309 - ?
Barber, Chi... 72 220 25 68 6 .309 - .8
Stock, St. L. . 133 l-.l 55 149 I ?'. 308 + .2
Groh, Cln.120 4 10 70 135 21 307 -
Young. N. V .?27 17s 71 146 25 05 -f- .5
Hulk-, Bos. ... ! 35 503 17 150 IS .295 ? 1
. id o is, 'Phif.J . : I 146 7 " ? ? ? '.:
Hill ns, X. V. . . 136 61 ' ?" 113 39 ,292 ? .1
'?'kick, Chi_115 171 7-1 137 10 .291
:>? nl, Chi.11- .. ?' 36 113 11 .289 -
Stehi?o?, Phil!'. 89 323 38 93 12 28S ?
Fisher, Cln.... 25 56 10 16 2 .286
Chase, X. V..110 407 58 116 16 .285 + .
, McHenry, St.L.107 359 41 102 .' .281 ? .
Shot ten. St. I. 1*5 271 15 17 1". 2SI ? .
: >oyl -, X. Y. .110 1171 59 105 13 .28 ' ? .
Eller, Cln. 37 SO 10 25 :: .2- i -
Williams, Ph.105 41 t 52 116 9 .280 ? .
Mi l'art-.', N. Y. >5 2! 1 1 , 59 2 .2-0 -f- .
tlrlflUli, Bkln.12-1 4S0 63 134 7 .270 -f- .
Heathootc-.S.L.IH 401 .1 112 23 .279 ? .
Killeier, Cht.,100 308 18 S =? 4 .279 -f .
.loi n.stiin, Mr, ; ? ?'? -ii?) .. : III Hi .27- ? .
(.'lemons, St.L, 85 235 14 65 t 277 -f .
Olson, Bkivri.. 1*9 586 7 1 163 24 .276 -j- .
H..kit. Phil.... 24 58 4 16 0 .276 ?.1
Biiibee, Pitts. .12.1 473 61 130 23 .27:. ? .
Daubert, Cln..136 521 76 142 11 .273
- '.n ter, i'i.i . . . . 2 ,' ::. : il l .27:1 +.1
l-'letchor, X. Y.125 178 54 130 G .272 -'??
Bancroft, Phil, >? 320 15 S ,' i .272 -.1
Kelly, N. Y. . . ::s 92 11 21. 1 .272 -
Kauff. X. Y..133 4X3 71 131 20 .271 ? .
Herzog, Chi , . .123 46! 4 ! 12:, 27 .27! -f .
Kopf, Cln.1 32 -i .., 51 133 1* 270
.'.. ... -, Chi. ... 123 ill ..1 1 20 16 .270 ?- .
Wingo. ' '111 . . . 75 1 2 i 30 65 .'. .27" ? - ?
Barbare, Pitts. 82 2S? 35 75 1? 26s ? .'
Barnes, N. Y.. 45 116 13 ..I II .267
-il il .:. "X. ? . 19 .. '. I .267 H .
Il .;?? rlier, Chi. Ill 411 IV 109 14 265
M ... ? ';,i . . i .i ;-.-; ;..: 129 21 ,2? 5
Bat rr. . ..-.,,??-... i - i , ._.,;:
Mar'ville, . . ? : U 178 I ! 26 1 .263
huit; ? .-?,'? . 7 .263 ? .
Vine.?, Phil... . : .: 0 6 0 .261 -
' loll, St. ? IS 46 1 12 0 .261 .1
VYII [j ton 70 1 ill 4'J _ .258 - .
tfiin Html, X Y.123 44,1 56 11 I 9 2,. ; - ?
ll.i is lings, lins. 77 27?' 30 71 9 .25"
KUi.tll l-, 1 ';:. . . 4 ' : ! s ;;;: | ;.,.. ...
Hunean, Cin. . . 27 75 : 19 ...
Schmidt, Pitts. SI 263 32 66 1 .251
Bo eel, Bos. ! ?:- 513 : '? I.: i 20 250
... Bu Hon * .' 2 ?0 2 1 60 S .250
1 '.. . . ? Ihicago, 21 13 4 12 ?' .2:," ?
PITCHING RECORD
w i
I'M: In ?-. Club. VV l. PC la il .. -
itju ? ' '. ?? n n i ' : . . 1(1 ' ,'.'??? .;
Rut?! :-.- ; Cincinnati . 10 ,7?D o -
s . : ?????. ? 'iaettinai :.;;.? ? .741
Hi n i, N i? i't.i ?c. ...21 ? .:?; l -
i ??lier, ? lincinirai i.... : . 722 6
; '?' : r, ? Im Innai i.: ?? S ,7ti4
ru ;? ::? w Vor.M i; ,700 : -
Ailams, l'itl ?liurgli... . I ', ..... t ,. -
Muter! I"-; burgli. . ...2.1 4 -
? .... i.-j ,2. v. fi ,,(??!?. ? . - . ? i y ?
'? u ?,'iin, C'hkitt?.L'I 1.. ,U1S i -
? ',>..p--i-, i'\< tstiurnli ?.. lu i - l
l uibuc N -v. ? oi'lt . . . ?'? l ?100
Ne '. Boston, N*. Y_S . : -, -
lie B .',-,.. 7 . . - ; t ?
', >..:.; . ? ..:?,. , .15 il ...77 3 ?
l't'i il .-. : in ..-.:-. n.17 1.1 . ?;'.' : ?
?iootlwin, Si Louis....10 s .556 1 ?
' I ?ouglus, ?':,; ? . \. V. ' ? .. I . ?
(..'adoro, Brooklyn.14 12 .-..
M tut ili, ? ? i. .. ;... -, ', '?'. : 2
Itinff, ? ' innatl.1" i 2?i ?
..;?-. Pitt ?ourgii.; ;. 20 ;
:.??: Boston. s ; . '?>? 1
? ? o. ?? ? ? i? i
? ?. s. ii -r i .: ??; v , Bs. i - .;?'"> i
Ml ??-'.,-, Bro. il- u . 00 --
I oak, ?.-??. Louis.: ' : i ,481 ?!
Man lux, oui; _10 ; : 176 2
: i
'atk.ii .. ;
?-.-.. . L-M., SC.l.. . ICI '
'm ii n. Pu ?bu ix h. - ? .444
11., mill ..: :':: sbi ;?;.. - ! ; .421
Un -.' . Bostoi ... .J ' - .-un
il- n Iris, Chi ??? i. .10 ! ;
it. !..
UcQui : II, Ho: toi. 2
' 18 I' ? . 7
? - Phi..12
Bailfj Chicago.
-?..,. -...i
;? l' uhia... ?
, B r o o _ ?
.-:,. : i? ,:. ?-- Lou
, . . ? .
Wi -r,..- '
. .,i.- ?.. : l'i '...'
r ?, ... >: i- Voi
? iti ' .
? . ?. ; ii:?
>; 'i i! lu . .
r?;.-; Bii ?. - . t'a.
' ' ? Louis. . . . . .1
; ? ?Il IlEti. . . 1
i h r u ?j I ' ? -
.417
I I
?. AB. E. 11. SU
y r>r 152-5 f- 3
?.:...-.- ? , . .j
? - . ? ..n
4 .
? ?? ' ? ' ? ? ? . . i ;
; -
I
ly s lii In I ittlns
. ? ? . . ? - ' . ?<
. pi ?on, .-'t L.115 443 OS ! I.! 10
.... ?hi. 137 ;'.12 85 165 : .
AMERICAN LEAGUE
[XD1Y1DUAL BATTING
4-Gain
Player, Club, r, AB. B. H SB. PC?Loss
Murphy, ?'hi.. 28 26 0 12 0 .162 ?.18
?iibb, Del ....122 490 90 185 20 .378 ? .7
Harris, Clev. 60 1 13 29 65 2 .37" -f.13
.lamleson C 'V -2 17 5 ?", 1 .363 - .22
Yeach, DH 136 52.1 S3 jx" j s .250 -?- .3
.laekson, Chi 137 "14 71? 170 11 348 4- .1
Sislor, St, I. Ill?) 503 92 171 28 340 ? .5
>' . -harv. Wash 17 15 0 5 0 .333
?? .bin, S! L. .125 474 53 155 S .327 ~- .1
r iRSH a.i, 1 >cl -.I 27 1 37 89 4 : 25 -.12
Kulh, B-. s. .. .12-? 426 102 138 8 .221 ? .1
1 1.1 10 .323 J- .3
.322 ? .1
i ? ?-. ? : '? i" 69 i? - .
1 Wash i:i: 541 77 174 27 322 .14
-, r ! V ??-.! 1 - 438 >6 137 ft .313 ? .4
Si l! ?;:, . 13 id. . 109 321 42 99 17 .308 ? .2
l'hit-, Ci .- ... 25 'i.? ?; 12 n 30? 21
vlolnnls. Bos. .lli 438 31 133 f .304 ? .6
S roi ' "il I let . . 94 26 ?35 SO 3 .304 4 .1
./. : 'ton, Clev. ioo 228 41 99 2:: .302 -? .2
Chap'an, Clev.113 425 68 12.8 18 .301 -
?'?urclner, Clev 136 516 67 155 6 .200 ? .2'
1. ?bold, Chi...119 127 81 128 17 .300 - .2
f, lllianiu, St I. '15 227 22 68 7 ,300 ? .6
Weaver, Chi. 13.: 558 88 165 22 .296 _ .1
i '.,l.lv... II Clev. 39 71 9 2! 1 .296 ? .3
?Ian.ill, ?'hi. ..Ill 42') 53 124 13 .295 ? .3
Speak r- - le\ . 132 4M 79 143 19 .2'..; ? .4
Pi-alt, X Y....136 511 ?'.'. 149 20 .292 ? .3
Bti ns, Ph I. . .125 467 62 136 14 .291 ? .10
H ? ter. NW. . . 137 G52 62 160 12 .290 ? .1
M M Lili in. Chi. 58 162 27 47 6 .290 -
Both. Bus....107 409 64 US 20 .2S9 ? .1
Milan. Wash., ss 22" 11 92 10 .OSS ? ..
V. alker, Phil.,127 463 47 133 7 .287 ? .4
Ju.ige, Wash. ' 2 510 8" 145 23 .287 4- .1
. I'Neill, ? .? ?.. 12-: 39 , 15 113 3 .287 ? .1
Me'kev, Wash. 115 329 59 94 12 .2 S6 4- .4
:'? - st. r, N.Y.. 77 229 36 65 7 .2-4 ---.1 1
Schalk. Chi...129 393 56 111 ?* .282 ? .7
: inn? y, Phil, . 6 I So 1 ! 24 n .282 ? .7
l-Ylsch. Chi . 134 194 ?' I 138 20 .27;? ? .5
Boiiie, X. Y..134 4,", -i?; 132 15 .278 ? .3
Sn Hi. ? lb v. .112 3.8- 59 10S 14 .278 -? .1
Bagby, Clev. . 36 83 S 23 0 .277 ?.11
W'bsp-'s, Clev. .136 : ; :? 59 142 I ." .171 - .1
Scott, Bos . . .135 493 10 125 6 2,4 - I 0
,1. Ciillins, Chi. 57 161 7 44 3 .272 - -.15
I.amar, Bos. . . 56 150 17 41 4 .27 1 -f-.13
Ayers, Dot.I ;... 0 :? 0 .273 ?? 6
Hooper, Boh.. 128 491 70 133 23 .271
Lewis, X. Y....137 542 61 140 9 .269 ? .1
Plpp, X. Y.. . .134 510 6S 137 269 ? .5
i.'har'tv, Wash 109 .1 91 4 .268 ? .!?
Piein'h, Wash. SO 213 IS 67 4 .268 ? .1
McXally, Bos. .22 : : 9 il : 268 ? .5
. ' ! ?oui, X. Y. . 18 : .. 2 4 t .267 - .5..
i.--..?.'.i. Wash. 70 192 25 51 4 .266 ? .4
HI I.The, Wash . 70 193 25 i 4 .266 -.2
'?' W ill. 119 4 77 56 12.; IS 26 4
Dug m, Phli. .105 ? 25 103 ' .264 ? 1
Bui-rus, Phil. . m. 17S 17 ,7 3 .264 ?
Shannon, Bos 117 437 61 115 10 .263 ? .5
\ insmil ir. Dot .11" 350 40 92 8 .262 .2
Witt, Phil....120 459 54 120 10 .261 -
Love, Dei. 20 2 . 1 6 0 .2->l -
Broukie, St. J,, 6; 197 2.: 51 3 .259 -i- .1
Jo. Dtl.122 426 33 109 14 .256 -??
.;??:?.; St. L.119 133 67 lit) 4 ..254 4- . 1
Bl :???:,-. Chi. .115 399 17 I 30 18 .251 4- .1
\ r :.. V Y_102 3SS E .' :?? . .2 0 ?
PITCHING RECORD
Pit? lu r, club. W. L. P.C.TVi n
N ?'...?t:. New v ..:??... . : 0 1.000
Cic? "?-. Chi? ago. '.' . .80? ?
I '. u; s, ! let l'Oit.20 .
? liil.lwell, Bos., ? '!ov. , : b .OSS
,?'..-,'eleskle, ? llcvolan-l 24 31 ,68'i :
-.-. Chicago ...:.' 11 .673 -
Fli ?'?'? key, N. Y.19 11 .033
Poiinoch Boston , .... 16 S - ?.;
; Russell, >:. V . Bos. .It ; ? ? 7 :
Ulevt land. 9 ?
?" - . : - roit.17 10 ,030
H. ?! iron, - ? Louis. .2.) 12
?.' ? ..i, n, ?it. Louis 10 ?'? .625
! K.-r:-, Chicago. 12 S .011
Ru 11, lios?oi . S ;. .03
B; .... . . :???. .laiiti. . . 17 11 . ..
:?:
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: ' un, Cl vela n I
'I i oi mahlen, N". Y. . . 13
Johnson Wa -' Ing ??
l'a?. ?'?. ' Ihli ago. U
r ho? ker, s'. 1 ou?s .. 13
Myt ... Cl eland... S
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: gridg . . - ? Vori; ?
Leonard, Detroit. ... 14
. ha - Waithingt.? n.. IS
Cinlnn, N't w V irk ... : 4
Ma : s, i los . ?? ... 14
M irton, Cl ? ? . 9
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lohnsoi : I:
Shore, New Vori
Jones .stun.
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lap? .- ? : ??... 0
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NorseOiampiou
(iains One M0re
Prize on Court
Former Miss BjurstedtD*
feats Miss Sheldon m*;;n<
irles Final l?v 6?.]. f. ,
By Fred Hau
M r ?? . F r a n 1
natioi
hack into her ol
Ye ??' nia.-.
court - of the
Club, at Mo ? ?
won the
rh>':i:r:':t ship in I
Miss Floren?
round bv a score ? I
-\ -
'-.
??? 11 ; pla; _. .
indftr a
semi final bra -. ts
As Mrs. Mellor -, .
Mrs. Mil -. v?
title or F i'iday and \ entere
tho mixed doul ?les, there
e-lie for h?-i to do ? . ?-..
hack to N-.-.v Voi
chief prize? v. ?
Miss Sheldon ? ? ?
?ng t! " ram ' ? ?
'?
li both
Mailory
chani pion, i
ond year' ? . .
won the hon r on
Another ???? in will
possession of the cha ,
.Mrs. Morris and ?1er '.'? ;i
Mrs. Lewis (.??? ? " rri?
Alexander lier ?
iinal round of th?
defeating Mr. .-.? IM - .- :i rtru
in tho semi final
6?4, 6?3.
In the other - : ? -
?.vinners were Mis ! . -.
and Ca] tain I.'..1..
gnined -i : .
Madelon .".....???
O'Boyle, by a icore
1 he two winning c
meet at 3 : !0 o'clock
the champi? nsl
M'S^ Sheldon's
Mrs. Mills was
nal ire of a sui ? ?
rneni y. -?- r i ij
such sp'ei : : '? !s ? .
tourney th .' ;: majori'
*].,,,;,.',. .
young Montclair
glected *
tors, namelj , that M ? :'
her best game in 1
and that Mrs. Mil's, .
the en: ire bui de n f i ? ? ? ?
nament. w? s b>und
strain t.f manag
til on.
The f.rst two ' '
about ?-?'.' ,.'y mi !
wer?' divided, Mrs
first at ?'? ! and M
the second by tht
in the third a;; !
M ills wa - iitera
her ag?e y o
I i : e s ? ' v. : '
Mrs. .'vi.!Is was - ? ? ? ted
tage 'iia' -;." : in i '
on the ball.
Miss PoMak Ficht- Game!*
In the mear, time M. -
?'veeping M iss Pol ' ik the
'he other semi-final mai
the second set the
of the sever, gain to d?
admitting defeat. [(
driving duel from tti
court, and at ti ese tact - '?' - P
managed to hold th? chan ? '?? ?
close. It w i ? .-. ' ? ? i.il?
whenever Mr . Mallory ??iv
time to fini ; th? -
her way inside the sei f
to take the :
send it crasi;:!,;.-: hack for
The summa;
Women's Xnv .1
sh . p sing .? ?;
Franklin I Ma
Po al ,6?2, :
defeated M
Final roui 1?-Mrs. 1
del eated M iss Florei
.. - :. :
round l- M Iss 'a roma
Stewart defeated 5!
M. An.i - in;
Third round '?'? I :
M ,. rl ? and A
Si i ? i ??: and I-*
Murgu? rite Mol
Van ...
I f? 11- It Da
Ion ilulqueei
feated Miss Car
art, l
Se:., i Ruai rouiiil
Morris an . >
Ingo Hart ... ? 4. ?
Four-Run Start Gives
Cardinals a Victory
ST. LOTJLS.' 1
assault on '?' ibui
inning enal the < -
the Pittsburgh Pir '.?
5 to 3.
irih
co11 i s i I ' ' ' ?
v. ere < i ? ''
: :''; .
Tl ? -ore:
?: ? Bi Ki.ii
^irl
Perry,
Totti
!? ti
:-'t l,i.
Tu ?
Hornsby Takt s i a
In national '
?.-,:i Hi
PI i-?r.
Cobb, Detr? il
?\ each, !' .rou
Ja -s .<? v ''-?... v
1 1er, S?
in, Tl I ;
NAT! ?
Player,
!! -rr bj it. I.i
Hou ,h, ? incinn M
?.nil. < ii"-,. -, ? i
Meoael, i h
Mr,., .. Uruok'yn
Billiards V
Prie- and Te
REPAIRS BY EXPERl
l,... Brtinawl? I, I;.., .
M Ht?< f. i -i -v.... !?. ,