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BASEBALL ? BOXING BASKETBALL ?TENNIS Jfet* Itotfc STrfttine ATHLETICS- ROWING RAC1NG-SWIMMING ?1 18 * * SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 1919 Yankees Win Rubber Game With Dodgers?Giants Shut Out Baltimore Clufi Flatbush Team Piies Up Errors Galore in Getaway Huggins Men Especially Busy in Third Inning, When Five Runs Cross Plate?-Mogridge and Shawkey Do Well in the Box for Winners By W. O. McGeehan JACKSON'V/LLF April 12.?The Yankees plastered the Dodgers in the getaway gv.ne z/. tho citrus series on South Side Park to-day. In the third inning the New York Americans bunched the hits', while Robbie's men bunched the errors, ar.d tive runs resulted. The final score of the long and baimy'afternoon was 7 to 3. The score was one apiece when ! calamity began to hit the Brooklyn machine in the slats. Up to this time it had looked as though the Yanks would crowd both error columns. But by timely swat and untimely error the entire Yankee batting line-up passed up to the plate. Sam Vick was safe when O'Mara^ booted one. Pcckinpaugh, seeing that ; the Dodgers were certain he would bunt, crossed them nnd clouted to cen trefield. Pipp, with a dash of speed, beat a slow one to O'Mara, who was r.o irritated that he threw high to hrst, and Vick scored on the error. Pratt drove a nice hit to left, scor :ng Peck and wcnt. to second when flickman let the ball roll beyond him. f.ewis drove a hit to centre that scored Pipp and Pratt. Bodie sadly and re uctantly sacriticed. Ward popped out o second. Hannah was safe when Olson made a bad heave. George Mo gridge, who i-louts them once in a vhile, drove one tc? centre, scoring f.ewis. Mogridge Pitches Well Mogridge and Shawkey pitched nice ?all, Mogridge pulling himself out of *everal tight places. George had re oived poor support from Ward, who vas fielding nt his worst to-day. He eeeived even poorer support. from the 'inpires, nnd there were three of these n tho job tliis aftemoon. Al Mamaux, the prlde of the ship ards, who startcd for the Dodgers, Tined to brcome dcmornlizod when Is support shot from under him. The ullder of the merchant mnrine still is h yery able wing, howevor. Rubc farquard, the able scaman who salled ii<- shlpa that Mamaux bullt, was orking nlcoly, But lator on in tho cason the mariner Is bound to clash ith tho balk rule, ThoUgh thcro were three umpirei on ho l"i it took a consultatlon to docldc question of rulea in the olghth ln nig. Olson ijnglod nnd Mnloiie fol? iwed wiili n l'exn-i Leoguer. Miller rove Olson home with another single. /Ith Marquard out, Johnson rappod le to I'cckinpaugh, who threw to the luto. Ilaiiniih nailed 1 he ball nnd Btarted ) phaso Malone back to third. By the ine he reached that bag Miller was 10 there. Hannah touchod both <?f iem and threw to Pcckinpaugh after liller had started back. By that time ohnson, who was at second, scurricd ick to first. ?The three local umpires ere dazed by the rapid combination of vents, but flnally they votcd that liller was out at second. According i experts he was out at third, but it ?d not alter the main result. There was some loose and wobbly laying by both teams. In the seconil \ imng Hannah had .nailed Krueger off hird. He proceeded to ehase him to le bag. Finding that he could not vertake him in a tcst of speed Truck irew. to Ward, who was off the bag, istead of to Pcckinpaugh, who as covering it at the .time. By lis time Mogridge was beginning to orry about his support. When Ward :ashed one at him and Kreuger again :arted for home Mogridge ran right up nd tagged the runner himself. He fig red it would be safer. Dodgers Score in First The Dodgers got their first run in tc opening inning, with one hit and -rors by O'Mara and Miller. The Yanks vened up when Pcckinpaugh walked, ont to third on Pipp's two bagger nd scored on I'ratt's fly. The battlers got one each in the ;ghth. The Dodgers got theirs on hits y Olson, Malone and Miller. The Hnk*. got theirs on drives by Ward, . ^rftr^ and Shawkey. One lone run -as scored by the Dodgers in the ninth - ife>c Gnffith ninglcd, was permitted > st'eal his way to third and scored t Olltons fourth hit of the afternoor,. The vgame was a benefit affair for the >cal 9 'aughters of the Confedcracy. hey ., ot what Harry Sparrow and :ruire .bbets did not retain from the ite rei, ipts. Miller Huggins made the first swing the mc to-dayi A? ,? result, Elmer ?iller v ii take the rattier to St. Paul. lmer h~* been carried on the Yankee jster sinco i&i?. If he has the goods > stay witn this organization he has ot shown it iJ that space of time and iree years ip rc?nrded as being almost ,ng enough for a young athlete to dis 'ay all that he l,aB. ^Miller ciinu> ^riginally from Mobile. ? fteV-" ?noxt tfr-ial with the Yanks he as shipped to nHaltimore, then recalled hen Roy/Ha,T-tz..ll started to droop, his leavea rbo Yanks with five out alders, Du(n*y Lewis, Ping Bodie, vorge H?yas, Sam Vick and Kane. ast ceflsusj says that all five will re ?ain. Pinf Bodle's latest adventure was' ?rnewhat disconcerting to a gcntlcman t his native Italian chivalry. He was rolling through one of the little local arks when the cries of a lady in dis- ; -ess came to his ears. With a burst f that speed with which he strives so -equantly but fruiUessIy to slide to econd, Ping dashed up to her. "My little dog has fallen in there. on't you savc him for mc?'' begged ie lady in dietress. "Leave it to I'irig," said Mr. Bodie. 'e danhed to the fen.ee which covered , sunken place nnd was about to vault ' when he paused. He was looklngl own at tha iargest alligator in these ;rts. The saurian was eycing him with itn interest and he was grinding his eth with assurned premediation. Ping Itrpped back somowhat non ussed. The I?dy was looking at him Tseechingly. Huddenly the eye of the ;sourceful Ping caught a sign which ?ad: "Do not annoy the alligator." "Lady," said Ping. "f'm awfol sorry 9% I got to respect the local laws. t ain't going to annoy no alligator." The itinerary mapped out by the 'Odgeri and the Yankees include six .ttUf. before the etrenuous travallers ock anywher? near the Hudson. On onday th?-y wij) p|ay Hl Brunswick, I ' *- Tue?day v/ill find them edlfylng ?t? inhabitants of Orangeburg, H. C. h*n they da*h for Goldsboro, \. (? -?rn whieh j-alubrious burg they make ! owport ,N>w?, On Friday they ,,).-,y ' amondge, Md-, which in within strik '- dUt?nei? 1,1 the voried [ndtfairiee ? './??i?b are now occu^ng the mrttd of J. i Uncle Robbie Smiles! BBOOKLTN (N. I,.) ' NEW TOBJt (A. U) U) r li po ? r; an r li pt> n <? ?Inston, it) SO l porrnick. rf.... 5 1 o l o o OMara. 3b ;. 1 1 1 irr'pauitli. ss 3 2 1 4 0 :: f.r fllth. rr 5 0 I 1 0 OJPlpp, lb... 4 1 3 7 0 0 II kniaii. if 3 0 J 4 OOil'ratt, 2b. 3 1 1 8 80 /. Uli't. If 2 n 0 0 0 0'Lewls. If .. 4 1 1 1 0 1 Myers, cf.. 5 1 n i o 0 Bodle, rf .. 3 0 o 2 <>n Olspn, ss . 4 1 4 3 -H 1 Ward, 3b. 4 1 1 1 2 ] Malono, 2b 4 0 1 2 3 Ol ITaniiall, r.. 4 0 1 7 7 1 Knieger, c. 3 i> :: i o o Mogridgo. p 30 l l r< o J il!""^ '? ? l '? ! 2 2 0Shawkey, p 2 0 l o t\ o Maniaux, p 1 0 0 0 3 1 M'quurd, ,, ;; n 1 0 0 1 Totals.... 40 3 1324 11 4 Totals. 34 7 10 27 15 D Brooklyn .l n n o o n d i i_3 ?N,'IV lorii .1 O 5 0 0 0 1 0 i?7 Kirst bn.s>> on ntots?Brooklyn 2; Now York '', rwo-basa Mts?Kruegcr, Plpp. Sacrltl<-o hlts? Mamaux, Bodlo. SaorlBce flv Prait. Stoloi basea -Myers (21, Olaon (2). Left on baam Brooklyn, ?? m , ,rk\ '? BaJM,s '?" balls--(in' Mogrldgc, 1 ? ?IT Rhawkejr, l; off Mnmam, I; off Marouard I Stnick out?By MnKrMm\ j, |,v Shawkpv 4:'bv ""'*h(,V,l',nl""|!"r,i' :;- wiM i''""1' Mamaux II ?? Off M..(tri<l(P-, , In :, Innlngs; off Bhawkey, 8 in l Innlngs; off Mamaux. 7 \<< 5 liminR..- off J RWiard, 3 In 3 Innliigs. Tlmo- 2:20. Uruplrra Franklin Pakcr, the home run mon arch. Wllmlngton, Del., will see them Saturday. Aftcr that plana aro merely tentative, Sunday baseball will guide the astute business manager, Harrv Sparrow, The chance of Sunday baseball In many citlos of tho fcasl Is loyful to tho icouts, many of wliom nre hIiII tany i"K In this vlclnlty. Joc Kelly, dean ol he Ivory huntors, and Oene McCami ire Jubllnnt With the revivnl of Ihq iiiimr louguos their work will bear """'? frull In another ycor, The failure ? f the mlnor league teams has made the liscovory of new players nlmost impoH ilble in i he lai' few year . I "Tha! In what him almosl made baiie I lall ilull," declarod Kolly, "Old playcn 1 lavo to be held, and some of them on j ixorbitant torms. Basoball fans want ;o boo new faceB, Thoro le n BCarclty of omers and too niiiny goers on all of the big league teamg. With the minors rrnck nnd working it. wouldn't be so lard to grab a good outflcldcr when me waa needed," Gapt. Wasliburn Loses In Court Tennis Play - LONDON, April 12.- Captain W. M. Washburn, of tho American army, was ' eliminated in the semi-finals of tho :overed court tennis championship at ; .he Quecn's Club to-day by P. H. Da .ison, who is ratcd as among the best Df the English covered court players. rhe score waa 6 0, 6 3, 4?6, 7 -6. The match was sharply contested throughout, Wasliburn volleying more than usual. Davison played in extra ordinary form. LONDON, April 12.?Miss Ryan, of 'alifornia, was defeated in tlio women's semi-finals by Mrs. Chambers, the Hritish women's singlcs champion, 3- 3, 6?1. Mrs. Chambers will meet Miss Holman in the championship round. Although Miss Ryan played a bril liant camc, her opponent scored through ' steady play, her cross drives being particularly effective. Miss Ryan's foot work was faulty at critical stages of the match. Navy Oarsmen Over Peni Midshipmen Win Varsity and Freshmen Brushes, but Lose in Junior Race ANNAPOLIS, April 12. Py winning the 'varsity and frcshmari races from Penn this afternoon the midshipmen had the largcr share of the triumph, while Penn saved its feelings to some extent by winniriK a hard-fousrht con tcst for second crews. All the races wero rowed on tho upper Severn, the course ebbing the Honley distance of a rnile and five sixteenths. The N'uvy won her races with comparativc eaae, the main event most decisivoly, as four leriKths sepcrated the crews at. the liriish. The Qunkers got a bad start with their freshman, and were never in the lead, while Penn second crew over came a lead which the midshipmen ?|,. tained at. the start and lod by a length when it croseed tho ftniah line. The Winning time for the first naval crew was 7 minutes nnd 17 seconds, while Penn's 'varsity did the course in 7 minutes ,'M seconds. Penn's second crew covered the dis? tance in sevon minutes and thirty-five seconds, which was just one second slower than its first crew, while the Navy juniors woro four seconds slower than Penn's second. The Navy plebes rowed the distance in seven minutes thirty-seven seconds and the Quakcr freshmen in seven minutes 'ifty-two seconds. Conditions were almost Ideal, the only fault, a slifrht one, being that there was some wind against the row ers, ?o that the time was a second or two slower than it would have been. The start was three rniles aiiove the Naval Acadcmy and the direction of the rowinjc towurd the railroad bridge, which v/a.H near the finish line. The races were rowed in inverse of their importance, tho plebes starting first and the 'varsity eontost flnishing the events of the day. In Ihe main event the Navy oarsmen simply outdi* their rivalu in every element of rowing. Por the fir?t third of the way the Cennsylvanians clung to them, but they had to row at forty Jury Gives Feds ln ItusHuill Suit WASillNGTON, April 12. A vordicl r"' tlio phiinf.ilT wltli damugcs lixod nl $80,000 ua relurned lat.o to day by the jury in thc suit of thu llaltimore Federal Lcnguo club nguinsl the Ameri? can nnd Nntlonal lengucH and certain ofllcers of tho dcfuncl Federal League, As the suit was brought under tho Shermun nnti-trust law, thc dumages will bo trehled, making thc umount $240,000 if u fiiial judgment iH entered. Tho jury deliberated about six hours. Immediatcly after the vcrdict was re turned counscl for organized baseball announced that an appeal would be taken to fhe District of Columbia Court of Appenls, and, if nccessary, to thc United States Supreme Court.' Associate Justice Stalford, the trial judge, in charging the jury, said "the acts of thc ?det'endant, alleged and proved, by way of maintaining thc sys? tem of organized baseball, constitutcd in law nn attempf to monopolize the business of competitive baseball ov hibitions for profit and, as an insep arable part thereof, to monopolize com merce between tho states, and were done in violation of the anti-trust laws." W. lege Equals College Record HANOVER, X. II., April 12. I Thompson, 1920, equalled the c( record of seven scconds in the sixty yard low hurdlc race in thc first in terclass meet at Dartmouth College to day. E. K. Myers did 12 feet 7 inches in the pole vault, But the mark was not allowed, as it was not measurcd ' officially. Tho junior class won the ; meet with 44 points. Triumph isylvania Eights Ktrokcs to the minute, which was two faster than the midshipmen, and pulled With such effort that. they could do no more when the navy crew began to fprge ahead, as it did after rowing a third of the course. Ilalw way to the finish the Navy I boat was a length ahead, and thc lea'd was inereased steadily as thc race pro cecdod. That Pcnnsylvania had given it.s utmost was proved by thc fact that. it could not summon the semblancc of a spurt, though c\cvv oarsman strug glcd gamely to hold thc Navy crew. The race between the second crews turnished the thrills, as the Navy crew led for a third of the distancc, but was overhauled and <lefcated by a length. The Pcnn freshmen got a poor start and were a length behind when they got into their stroko. They were '?'I at thc finish by nearly ' three lengths. byerything combined to make inter? est intensc as thc big race startcd Thc Instltutions had made an even break on the prcliminaries. They had mel twicc last year and had divided honors evenly and most ol" the men who rowed ! last year were back in the boats again i Thought to be thc best college crews' last year, both are cager for tho su premacy this season, and there have' not been many races in which were! combined so many elements of rivalry Ihen Coach Joo W right, of the Penn sylvanians, had been quotcd as saying that his crews would sweep the river If anything was needed to put the midshipmen complctely upon their met tlo it was this. ami they cerlainly gave all they had this aftemoon. Big Bill Ingrani, brother of two former Academy oarsmen and football playors, himself captain of the football team, and highest runkest midship man in the regiment, was stroko to day, and thc stroko was the kind that few crews could follow. Navy Beats Dickinson ANNAPOLIS, Md? April 12. Hitting the ball hard at several stnges the mid? shipmen won from Dickinson on the local diamond this afternoon 16 to 0. Brock was touched up hard in the\fifth nnd sixth, three trinles nnd a single in the lattcr seHsion, with Wenver's error ricounting for seven runs. 1,. \. Haker,' a left bander, waa ve-y efXcctive for the navy. PAST TA^t MlrslE OFF \Fi Yoo DA5T \ BeTCHA MOVJ The first Barefoot of The ?5eaS6m C35hQ POGTLKHT '& Grantland Rice (Copyright, 1919, New York Tribune Inc.j Back Again The pink is back in the xun, And the blue is back in the sky, The cleek shots lea,}> and run In the walce of the nlibi; Tiie green is had; in the grass, And out where the bunker sits, I'll soon l>e back on an ancient troe.k, Back in the sand-filled pits. .The bunkcrs wait for me, And over the crcstcd fpavi, Over the rolling sca . The deep traps call me home; Home to the hook and slice, Home to fhe alibi; Home to the dread of fhe "lifted head," A nd home to the alibi. Beyond Thirty Bagging thirty victories 11 season may not be one of the roughest assignments attached to the pitching department of the pastime. But it is remarkable how few star pitchers have slipped by this figure. In the way of a few illustrious examples it might be notcrl that Babe Ruth has never won thirty games in a year. Neither has Jim Vaughn. In fifteen sea sons of fine pitching Chief Bender was never able to lift himself to the thirty-game height. Neither was Eddie Plank. And both were backed up year after year by winning clubs. yos-and-no route, our bleak opinion is that the division was fairly even, Haughton was undoubtedly a great coach?one of the greatest in football history. Haughton also from 1912 to 1916 was allotted some of the greatest material football has ever known. There was Brickley?a trained star and a greal: kicker before he came to Harvard? Hardwick, a great footballist before he ever slipped into a Crimson jersey; Bradley, Pennock, Felton?all eminent luminaries in the football sky. And later there was Mahan- another well trained marvel, who was a star the first day he stepped upon the field. After 1911 Haughton had fairly easy sailing. But for all that if he had been a poor coach he could easily have spoiled a lot of his best talent. To produce such a regime as Harvard enjoyed in 1912-'13-'14-'J5, when she stopped Princeton steadily and ran up over 100 points against Yale?while Yale was scoring .r>?requires a combination of first class coaching and first class material. Right-Handed Stamina Most of those who possessed both tho skill and stamina needed to win thirty games were right handers | ?Alexander, Mathewson, Walsh, Johnson and Young. i Such Ieft-handed stars as Marquard, Plank, Ruth,! Vaughn, etc, were never able to arrive at the classic j border. The "iron man" in baseball is nearly always a [ right hander. It's the right hander who nearly al-! ways goes the long route and pitches the greater num ber of innings. Right-handed stamina has more than a thin edge upon left-handed stamina?-if records inean anything beyond mere words. Harvard and Haughton Before Haughton came to Harvard the Crimson machine hadn't beaten Yale but once in ten years?and hadn't scored a touchdown in something like six years. With Haughton's arrival the scenery turned turtle. Out of the next nine Harvard-Yale claasics Harvard won five, lost two and iied two. In the same way Harvard had the Princeton tiger I securely caged. Haughton, of course, had the ma | terial. But there is a vast difference between im I proving good material and handling it poorly. There is still some argument extant as to whether | Haughton made Harvard's football reputation or whether Hardwick, Brickley, Mahan, etc, made Haughton's Those who take the latter trend of the debate show that before such well trained prep. stars as Brickley, | Hardwick, Mahan, etc, arrived, Haughton had won only one garne from Yale out of four attempts. In 1908 he won; in 1909 he lost, and in 1910 and 1!)11 the best he could get was a scoreless tic. Hardwick and Haughton "Haughton," remarked Tack Hardwick one night last summer, in France, "had the coniidence of his men more than any coach I ever saw. They all be lieved he knew more football than any one that ever lived. When he told them to do a certain thing, they all believed that was exactiy the right thing to do. If he had ever said: 'I want you men to run and jump from this 200-foot cliff?I'll catch you as you come down,' I believe we'd have done it to a man. And I believe Haughton would have. caught us." The Eternal Outcast The world may noon forgct the Hun, Through brief existence's fickle ranges, But when the last word'a said and done, The Umpire'n slatus never changet. Forced Marches The soft road is a good one to take if you are not going anywhere. There i.-, a battlefield back of every front that is full of dead dreams. It is remarkable how few ba'se hits you can niake by holding your bat on your shoulder. With all the debate surging back and forth we may not know who won the war, but at least we know who didn't. According to Ludendorff, the Kaiser decided late in September that Germany was about through. Which took the same amount of genius that it takes every August to say the same thing of the Cincinnati Jleds. At tllat, you can't blame the average doughboy from grinning when he reads where such-and-sucn a gen? eral won &uch-and-sUch a battle. Fifty-Fifty With no desire to play it safe by the old fifty-fifty, through The Hon. Ping Bodic'a idea is not so much to "hit 'em where they ain't," but to hit 'em where they can't get to without jumping a fence. Babe Ruth has the same quaint idea. And it's remarkable how well . it works when properly put Jack Dunn 's Orioles Get Bad Beating on Home Lot Charles Stonehanu Head of New York Oub. and Hernian Schaefer on Hand to Enjoy Frolic. Rube Benton Shows Class in the Pitcher's Box By W. J. Macbeth BALTIMORE, April 12.?Back to the North where a nip pemeatej the spring air and where ball parks approximate some idea of major league class, John J. McGraw's Giants this aftemoon showed the OrioJ City fans a few pointers about the national frolic as it should he playe* New ^iork smothered Jack Dunn's International League 1919 entrvunder a 9 to 0 shut-out, which was as it should be, as President Charles Stone-' ham and head ivory hunter Herman Schaefer turned up in time te' appraise the Polo Grounds candidates in aetion for the first time. The hoss magnate and his attpnHantifc couldn't have seen the club to better i advantage, for making due allowances in class. the Giants still played "one of the most impressive performances of the spring." Baltimore was good enough, at least, thoroughly to test the defensive skill of McGraw's machine. The old combination stood out iike a stone wall, in particular the infield. Heine Zimmerman gave fcuch a per? formance as was his wont back in 1917, when he was considered the class of third sackers. Hnl Chase was the Chase of old; enough said there. Rube Benton should have had a nn hit shut-out in his six innings, a fly misjudged by Benny Kauff being the only hit ofF him. When Steelj wns unleashed in the seventh thc Giants already had the gamo so securely cinched that Bob simply dallied along with thc boys, Show Wicked Punch Offcnsively the Giants showed a wicked punch against any and all as sortments of pitclung prcscnted by Jack Dunn. Every rcgular gol at least one safe blow. Captain Arthur Fletcher and Burns led in the slug gmg. Fletcher. who scored throe rtins, had n double nnd two singles In four Mmes at bat, Burns who doubles in three tmieo ()p. The Giants put Rubc Benton on easy street with u snortlng rsllv, organlswd u? ?oon ns Blll Brcnnan turned tho imme loose, Much heavy hittlng, Lhnl brought Into play Johnin McGraw's comploto bntting order rollod up i i "?uns in n i oiiiny InnlngK nnd i lim nated Knelsch of Germun name nnd southpaw procllviticH right from the plcl ure. George Burns organized this ortfe h.v his patiencc, He drow a pass with out much troublc. George was forcod ?f econd by I'ep Voung. Then tho heavy artillery go( tjie proper rangc , ( hase rattled a pretty doublo off the x short right field wall. Kauff smgled sharply to right, scoring Yourig and < hase. Zimmerman popped an en y ! foul to Deal. but Fletcher walloped off ; the left. field wall for two bases and Doyle tallied bchind Kauff, when Egan ; dropped Maisel's relav from Clarke McCarty doubled to deep centre, BCor , ing Fletcher. Rube Benton, the ninth batter of tho preliminary melee lined : to right field. I The'Giants picked up another run in the second. After Maisel had whipped ' out Burns, Young worked Frank, * I nght-hander, for a walk. On a hit and | run plny Chase pumped a wicked one down Maisel's alley. Young slid around i Fritzie toi safety on third. forcing the ! little thir'd sacker to make a hurried j play on Chase. The result. was a 'low | throw that put Hal on second and cn j nbled Young to score. Kauff lined to centre and Doyle 1 in?_? cl wickedlv right j into Deal's mitt. ; In the language of one of his irasci i ble team mates, George Hurns "won the I brown derby" in the fourth inning. George came up with one out-and took j for granted that Clarke would clutch ! his towering fly. Hence Hurns gol onlv as far as second when the fie'lder lost j the peliet in the sun. A moment later : Young beat a hit to deep short., hut no I runs deveioped. The runners were | held to their corncrs when in a hit and run play Chase rapped wickedlv to thc I box. Kauff lined to right centre field. Fielding Slip Helps | A fielding slip by Pitcher Frank helped the Giants add a brace of counts j to their tally sheet in the fifth. He j threw wild on Zimmerman's ensy i bunt, giving Heine three bases on what should have been an easy out. Ftetch cr's single 'to centre registered Zim. McCarty skied to left, but. Benton as , tonished the natives as well as himself | by singling to left field. Hurns then i pumped a doublo down the third base I line that scored Fletcher and should 1 have scored n fast man from tirst. | Young walked for tho second time, fill | ing the bases, but Hal Chase ended it j with a ffy to left. Mr. Benton meanwhile had been step i ping along in midVseason form as if I bent uoon a no-hit shut-out. By grace j of the cunning of Rubc's left a'rm and gilt-edged assistancc from his support j ing cast, the Oriole battcrs fell in one, j two, three order for four innings. This j no-hit performance might have gone on indetinitelv had Kauff not misjudged Clarke's easy fly in the fifth, which proscnted the batter with a two-basc hit. Clnrke renched third on a wild pitch, bui Deal wafted gently to Kauff Our old friend Heine Zimmerman. who played n brilliantly Bpectacular de? fensive gamc the kind that earned him much distmction in 1917 got the "raz" from the crowd in the sixth, when h? blundered into a short throw to prc vent a double steal. Zim had singled with two out and raced to third wl.cn Metcher shot a single to right on the hit and run. Heine fell for that worm eaten play, a throw to tho pitcher. ln the last few innings the Giants appeared satisfied to get the. gamo over with as quickly as possible. McCartv who opened tho seventh with a double off the left tield wall, was eaught steal ing third after Benton whitTed. Boh Steele and substitutcs Sicking and Hnird were ;hrown into McGraw's linc up in the seventh. Thorpe had pre ceded them by an inning. Honig Bcratched a Texas league double to left with only one out in th,- seventh. but Chase made n brilliant running catch of Boley's Texas leaguer and Steele struck out Clarke. 1 ho Giants got a farewell run in thc ninth. Sicking wns hit with one out. O Neil Bingled and Steele scratched a hit through the box, tilling the bnses. Thorpe flied out to left, hut Young drew a pass. forcing home Sicking with n run. Miller. batting for Chase, fanned for the third time out. l\?to Qrnunds To-day nt 1:30?Ftcld d?\ for Hciu'tti. of Artnrn' BMnd Of America AthlPiu- Rports, Miiitnrv Bands, leroplan* i-iiKlit.s; iiaifimii, Actora \n Bong Wrltara, i mptraa, cnpi. John ,i. Rvara. K C Bonny |J(onurd ini.i wiilie Rttchfa. Ad? rnission. COc 76c. 11.00.?Advt. GIANTS | BALTIMOJU: ,, "'' r li t"> ? o . m ?? r 3 0 2 l.ir.i... ,f .._??? i (| ? ii io , ii, i, rr . . ]: ?? " niai; 8b.411 0 ei (5, Sf*1 ?, ?> ? '? o i. .... J lOiKratil p 100 0 -j ;,'.?' -: la-rf. p...i oo a i, 11 Ncll, a 1010 Ucntoii p .. .4 0 1 1 ?? 0 Stci le, p ...10 1 1 lt| TMata . 42 9 lj 27 10 I Totalj ?Ustled f.,r Prank i- i | '?" ,,'?' '" '.0 0 ? rin.1 ; asr i i orron N>? ... , : ,uf'.,,s ' ,: ?? 1? ,:, - ? . .. ?. . . | ? ? I; off i rank nff 11 4 - i ?? ??? u ? II H ?*rbert. 1 M|. br pll i i; n,rbrtti f Off Knplorhoi . , . n il , ' ? ' n? I <" i mplfM Un miai irnl I Jess Willard Poatg Forfeit lo liind ili'iii|isi \ Vl.ilrh By Fred I Ittwthorne Our old joui rial ilc . i um, i'i?? (Joldhorg, will have lu tl nl i|i Hhothgf cartoon, H ?? have diacovored * flj ? "?' l ho "Man of Mj ? i , IT other than Tex Klckai |, ui<- good ???. gol who ia going Lo give Jeaa Uni.r.1 $100,000 fi'r (aking ii C< ?. ilapi on iha* noae from .1 u< K Uempsoy on July I. Te> Blippcd into tha city aboul fc o'clock yesterday afternoon on i Vork ( entral train, nnd in tead of walking to hia hotel, the Biltmore, up on the street, like any ordinai . ?? rt#J, the fellow who'a going to ', Willard and Dempi i y nl i a -^; . let of pin money tunni lled h r the station into the lower rcg of ihe hotel, and thi n look. thi ? te his rooms. Righl . aj tery aboul Tex, and all l aj hounais vsaited broatl :n? promoter di scended b( lo ? and I eld a "commui q\ ? " "V\ here are you j -c fight '.'" came in a ? | w pencil chauffeui Rii kard Monna Lisa i ; th.-n wh ispered I a ho didn'l iusl kno v "Bul ['II :? 11 j ou boys one i g, W i Lj ard haa deposited hia $10,1 aricc mo'ncj and I've gol tbe i-posit receipl hen ii mj pocket," ai rj Tdl brought fort] t he "pa pc ? . i . i: icka rd ai i ced t hal h I ai deposited the im i $15,.I part of the conl ract, ? IC,. or .lega and $5,000 foi la< l<. [I< nnd .lack K-.n :s had not p $5,000 yet, bu1 he waa no l about the small changc. "What is it going to I"-. Easl e? West?" was the ncxt qucsti m I red ?t i Tex, and the latter siip] ? gu j'mask and declared he hadn'1 nc-idad yet, but would make a po ? ? nt probably within the i i ? ???o. "i'vi jol ? hree of I he W< - "at are hungry for it, and whei l eia be held, and if New Yorl don'l reraa through thore'a still New Jersi they booated the show to ten i ? <>h, tho bout will come <>'r. < 1 have to pitch the ring in a desertjw and Tex removed hia i-r*y fedora and mopped hi i pro -E brow: Rickard did a lol ? r'raj. including a statement thal pla -? for an arena seating 50,000 :? ?rr being drawn and thal coi ''??' the lumber w ?' oon ?f aa anything definite n lite fi f ii" July i battlc wa coi cern< d ha qualifled as the 'Man of Myatcry." 'I <???; will mal ?? hI . in thia city for some weeks, and will d*: vote Iim ontlre time fron *'' preparing plans f<.r the ch ")' bout. Exhibition Gamen \t I'llll XIilll-HI \? II 11 ? I'n veruli ? uf i' iidii . h .in:.i ... Hntti i Vl 11 Btld VI < :?? i Ml \ AT 1.(11 |h\ !i | 1 I Pll Isbui Kti \ ,i ? nnl y Li uihv . a ? i n:<\ i n imiinx ?< < ii.iii- ? [i,n. A.ld !'? Miea, Krl*nj .?? .1 Ko. VT MKMPHIKi, TKXN.l r St. Paul (Ami ? ?. ? < ? ? 1 Nlemphla ? Soui hern . ? * \ l l> \S V II II , \ V.: I ictrott .\ mei li ina ' Hoaton Nation ( 1 ? uld and t tanagr >t? ??*, AT ST. I.oi lv: u 'I K St Loula Nai lonala. , . - '<* J St Loula Amerli .ins ? ! Batti gea Sh< ??:?'. 11, ralman aiid ?ron and Mujer. AT < HAHI.OTTI.. N. < .: R H K ' Waahlngton Amerlcana.* ? Phlludelphla N'atlonala. ? % * Mau.ii.i- Johnaon. Hovllk. Mattoajfu ?nii Agnow, Plchlntk: Jacoba, W.i**tm. i leaoher and Adama, Cadj . AT NKW ORI.KANs: ft 1! *. Clevi land A.m< rloana 7 i" J New Orlcana (Southarn) .n 4 * Batterlea Morlon, Coumba an.l ThomjB Nunamaker; Koberte>.n. PhllHpa *m KUchen AT t'OI.I Mlil S: R. H ? Columbua Amarioan Aaaoctatlon r< n * L*nlv?raUj of Mlchtgan l * ? Batteriai Leyme and Wagner; a**f> Scheidlar, Croekatl an.l Sclniii. Casoy Ruck h* Harvard Eddie C'aaey has reported for \\*T"' vnrd football. H? will take parl H the remaining Spring practice sessio** on Soldiera' Field. ? .