Evening Star Newspaper, June 14, 1921, Page 24

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St. Louis Jinxmen Arrive Tomorrow for Five Games NATIONALS PLAY FINAL WITH THE TRIBE TODAY Indians Hammer Erickson, Johnson and Zachary for 10-6 Verdict, After Grifis Pile Up Big Early Lead. BY DENMAN THOMPSON. EE FOHL'S St. Louis entry rough the west, not to appear o when the White Sox open the secol The Fohls may be expected to make things hum here, despite the; of sixth place and showing no signs fict they occupy the lowly position of climbing higher. At is a habit with the Browns, mdintained over a stretch of many years and regardless of switches in management. to indulge in. & spurt every time they face the Nationals, whether here or in St Louis, and there little in what happened to the Griffmen in the Mound city last momgh, when Mc- Eride’s men dropped ‘three of four gumes, to warrant the belicf that this particular clash will result differ- ently from most of the others. The St. Louis pitchers have not deen showing much ability and the teem is minus the services of its stur shortstop, Walter Berber, who is i with a broken bone in his right hand, but they still have Tobin, ler. Willilams and Jacobson, whose bats must be reckoned with, not to mention Frank Ellerbe, who has been. getting his one or two a day since he was exchanged for Earl Smith. Final With Indians Today. This afternoon the Nationals clash in the final with the Indians, and affer the 10—6 drubbing they ab- sorbed yesterday are busy figuring on how to obtain an even break in the set instead of taking three straight from the world champions, as they had hoped. It is produble they will be called on to face Jim Bagby, while McBride will make his choice of hurler from Shaw, Courtney and a. Whoever Mac picks will have ibit @ great deal more Drowess rickson, Johnson and Zachary did yesterday if another defeat is not to be incurred, however. Olaf got along nicely for five rounds and with a lead of five runs obtained off Caldwell. -who failed to last an in- ning. and Mails, it appeareq the jinx Eric is supposed to hold over the Tribe was in good working order, than Home Run, Pair of Doubles and Two Singles for Rice ,am Rice extablished the se: son’s best record for hitting a mnine-i ing game yesterda: when he was credited with a safety on all five of his appear- ances at the plate. In the first ing he xhot a double down he right field line, plunked single to left in the third, lined | past Speaker to the its center for a home rum in the fifth, scratched a safety in the sixth, amd with amother two bagger to right center in the eighth. And yet the Griffs were Teked. Maranville of the Pfrates, who also has made five hits in as many times at bat, got nething t singles. - £ but the old hoodoo got out of joint in the sixth, when the Swede was reached for a pair of tallies and in the following frame he retired in disorder after yielding three safeties. Johnson essayed to halt the Red- akins, but was even more rudely treated, being bombed off the hill be- fore a single put-out could be regis- tered. Acosta then was summoned and did check the enemy. but he was withdrawn in favor of a pinch hitter, Milan, who didn't pinch hit, and Zachary met the same fate as his predecessors. All told, seventeen bin- gles for an aggregate of twenty-five bases were chalked up by the cham- plons, while the Nationals, although they garnered an even dozen swats, could make no headway against Cove- leskie, who hurled the last three frames. Quick Exit for Caldwell. Caldwell failed to last an inning. Burns got Smith's roller, but Harris walked, took third on Rice’s double over the initial sack and scored with Sam on Brower's single to center. Miller plunked a safety to left, Brow- er taking third and Miller reaching second when _Jamieson fumbled. . Caldwell faded from the picture here and Mails, who got his job. was greeted with a swat to left by Shanks good for two more markers. Shanks died stealing and Gharrity popped. O'Rourke reached the far corner in round two on his double to right cen- ter and Smith’s fumble. Smith also got there, after Erick fanned, while O'Rourke W%as being run down on Harl's tap to Sewell. Harris left him. Rice’s single and a pass to Shanks availed nothing in the third and Earl Smith was stranded at the far cor- ner after he walked, stole second and teok an extra base on Nunamaker's high heave in the fourth. In the fifth Rice personally escorted & tally to the platter by walloping to the tarpaulin box in center. complet- ing the circuit before Sewell could relay Speaker's throw to the plate,} and in_the sixth another local tally accrued from O'Rourke's single, Erick- sen’s sacrifice, Burns' fumble of Smith's_roller and Harris' long fly. Rice also scratched an infield hi which led to nothing. 3 Tribe Gets Under Way. It was in the sixth that the Tribe started the barrage, which sunk a pair of capital curvers, and _resulted in the visitors attaining the lead. With Speaker out of the way, Smith walked, advanced a notch on Gard- ner's bingle and tallied with Larry on Sewell's double to left. Doe Johnston started the' big do- ings, which netted a fistful of coun- ters in the seventh. Batting for Mails, Johnston singled over second and, after Jumitson popped, scored on Wamby's triple past Rice, Wamby counting_when Speaker singled to right. This ended Erick's regime and in came Johnson to the slaughter. Walter lasted long enough for sin- gles by Smith and Sewell, a triple by Gurdner, a double by Burns and a pass to Thomas. Then Acosta was called on_and he halte§ the Tribe, momentarily by fanning Johnston on oy R T 33 32 33 2 7 41 8 2 3 1 o cocemmonSuoiBaBolBa 123 8 31 216 33 114 22 10 2 4 [1 8 TODAY BASE BALL 305 AMERICAN LEAGUE PARK - Washington vs. Cleveland Tickets on sale at Spalding’s. 613 14th St. N.W., from A to 1 P Tickets on sale at Hecht Co.'s, 517 7th St, several || will be the attraction at American League Park tomorrow for the first of a series of five contests, Wirough Sunday, whea the Nationals leave for a sojourn of nine Philadeiphia and New York, returning then for five\ games with ackmen before departing, July 3, for a hike to Boston and all n their own lot again until July 26, nd invasion of the western teams. Flabby Box Work CLEVELAND. - Jamieson, 1f. Wambsgansy, i 13 ails, p | #Johnston’ l:Coveleskie, p. out of the game for perhaps a month | wlcococcmmcenccnl® 3 0 0 o 0 0 o 12 Totals. ... *Hatted for .. 43 10 unamaker in sixth. #Hatted for Mails in seventh: Eari Smjihe § e A% Harris, 3 3 0 Hiee or 5 = o 0 rower. ib. 3 Milter: 1g: P o 0 Shanks, 3 3 0 10 Gharrity. c. 5 0 o 0 O'Tourke, ‘ss. T o0 Erickson. p. 2 0 0 s 0 Avost S0 H 10 o o o o 37 e 0 seventh. 0000025 2 110 40001100 0-8 Two-base hits—Rice (2). O'Rourke, Sewell, Burns. — Three-base hits—Wam ner, Speaker. " Home run—Lic. —Earl Smith, Wa c rolar] Smith, Wambseanw. Sa Washingto 1; off Mails, off Coveleskie, Caldwell, 3 in 1-3 innin innings; * off Coveleskie, 2 in 3_innl | Brickeon, © Jn & 13 iaaluge: o Johnsan, 4 scored, three o seventh): off Acosta, 0 in 5.3 matnes ot Sach ary, 4 in 2 innings. 4: by Mails, by Zachai Losing pitcher buganss, G Stolen bases —Eri Left ou bases—Cleveland, inning; off Zach- = Struck out—By Erickson, 2; by Acosta, 1: by Coveleski, 3. ;‘an' n{_(\'llelrfil.'ul’ehslle. i himer. M el Nallin, “Chill d Owens. = iy —_— his second appearance of the ro causing Jamicson to loft to Rice. " The Redmen increased their advan- tage at the expense of Zachary in the eighth, Acosta having been with- drawn in favor of Milan, who failed as a pinch hitter the inning before. Wamby singled and stole. He count- ed on'a triple down the right field line by Speaker, who also tallied, aft- er Smith walked and Gardner fanned, when Sewell forced Elmer. Their tenth tally was chalked up with two out in the final frame, when Jamie- Son’s Texas leaguer and walks to Wamby and Speaker preceded Smith's safety to right. Wamby also tried to register onsthis blow, but was cut down at the plate on Earl Smith's perfect peg to Gharrity. The Grifts' could do little with Coveleskie's damp shoots in the last three frames. S Caught on the Fly Joe Judge, who turned his ankle in a collision with Burns in Sunday’s game, may be laid up for a week. In his absence Brower covered the initial sack yesterday and Earl Smith cavorted in right field. Smith failed to accomplish any- thing at bat in his first start as a Griffman. He contributed a fine throw to kill off Wamby, trying to score from second on Smith’s single in the ninth, however, and made a spectacular leaping stab of Burns' fly ‘i':I the eighth, after misjudg- ing Smith showed a fine turn of speed in getting from the plate to third while O'Rourke jockeyed on the line between the far corner and the counting station in round 2. He also swiped second after getting a walk in the fourth. Brower had little to do in subbing for Judge at first, his day's work there consisting of only four put- outs. He got his daily bingle in the first inning, but failed to get the ball out of the infleld in four suc- cessive appearances. Joe Wood probably will be able to get back into service within a day or two. An X-ray examination of his injured foot disclosed no frac- tured bones. These heavy hitting games are salty affairs—when the home crew gets licked. Yesterday’s affair oc- cupied two hours and forty-five min- utes, the only consolation for the toilers in the “pest” box being that Tim Jordan had some ice water on tap. In view of the fact that it was Coveleskie who held the Nationals scoreless after the Indians had taken the lead in the seventh, he was given YANEES POUND EHKE Get Sixteen Hits and Win Third Straight From Tigers—A's and White Sox Score. Yankees, White Sox and Athleti triumphed yesterduy in the Ameri- can League. The Hugmen continued their murderous clubbing and crushed the Tigers for the third consecutive Red Sox in check and the Macks beat the Browns, evening their series. The Yanks got to Ehmke for six runs in the first three innings and slugged along to a 13-to-8 victory. Ruth was withdrawn from the slab after yielding four runs in the fifth inning. The Tigers slammed Mays for the remaindder of their tallies. Besides Ruth's two. homers were made by Hawks and Baker. The Yanks made sixteen hits and the Tigers thirteen. Five runs made off Sam Jones in the lirst inning sent that worthy to the showers and the White Sox into a commanding lead that helped them to a 6-to-i win over the Red Sox. Faber was batted hard, but never was in serious trouble until the ninth, when the Red Sox staged three-run rally. It was Faber's thir- teenth’ win of the season. The Macks drubbed the Browns, to 4. counted in «the sixth inning. mond hit Dykes, Tilly A clouted for the circuit and Welch doubled: Burwell replaced Rich- mond, but a single followed by two errors and a fielder's choice brought two more runs and Harris' double ran the total to six. Harris also drove in another run in the eighth. Tobin, Ellerbe and Williams made homers for the Browns, but Harris Six of the winners’ runs were Rich- kept the hits well scattered. It was the thirteenth consecutive contest played at Shibe Park, with home runs as outstanding features. Down Treasury Nine in De- partmental League. " Union Printers slammed their way toa 9 to 4 triumph yesterday in the Departmenial League. Gahagan of the Treasury team was solved for fourteen safeties, totaling twenty- three bases. Suess, with a double and triple, and Desper, with two triples and a single, led the assault. Four runs, made in the third inning, clinched the game for the Printers. Bray held the losers to seven hits. Rallying in the last two innings, Barber & Ross defeated Carroli Electric, 4 to 1, in the Commercial League, Ball, first baseman of the winners. clouted for the circuit. Steele of Carroll Electric got three hits in four times up. Potomae Council nosed out Spal- ding Council in a 12-11 Knights of Columbus _ League contest. Both teams hit heavily and fielded poorly. Masons scored another victory in the Fraternal League, drubbing the Knights of Pythias in a 10 to 4 game. Buscher was hit by the Knights for three runms in the first inning, but was steady thereafter. credit for the victory, Which gives him the distinction of recording two wins in the series. 20 21 Works Overtime Babe Ruth, the world's || greatest glugger, made Ty Cobb, the manager of the Tigers, look like a “busher” yesterday on the Polo Grounds, New York, with his two home runs, one of which was the longest ever seen_ by Gothamites. Ruth” toiled thtough five sessions, his first pitching of the year, and had the satisfaction of fan- ning the Georgia Peach. | | | Navy Yard blanked Bureau of En- graving and Printing, 10 to 0, in the Government League. The winners made fifteen hits oft Ferguson. Humphreys held Bureau to seven. Director of Sales shut out Quarter- master Generals, 6 to 0, in the War League. Geib of the winners made a homer. The Q. M. nine got only two hits off Neidfelt. Registers outplayed Prohibition in the 13 to 10 Treasury ,League en- gagement. . D'Arcy of the losers clgited for the route. Hecht Company vanquished Pepco 18 to 8, and Peoples Drug Store beat Swift & Company, 19 to 5, in the Merchants’ League. In the latter geme. Hawes granted the Packers but ve time, while the White Sox held the | Walker | PRINTERS SLUG 10 WIN | Get Fourteen Hits Off Gahagan and Mea's ALWool| L One-Piece and LTHOUGH Bill Tilden, world upon to play until the challen A an absces There is no game more suffer if the pace is kept up. SPEARWORT WINS ASCOT British Royalty Sees Sir H. Cun- liffe-Owens’ Entry Take Famous Stakes. By the Assoclated Press. ASCOT HEATH. England, June 14.— The Ascot stakes of 2 vereigns over a course of two miles, run here was won by Sir H. Cunliffe- Spearwort. J. Shepherd’s s Tdler was sccond and W. M. Singer's Chat Tor was third. Thir. teen horses ran. REX NINE SEEKS RECORD Must Vanquish Sturdy Semi-Pro. Teams to Excel Mark Set During Last Year. Rex Athletic Club, in the midst of the most successful base ball season of the organization's ten-year exist- ence, expects to excel its record of last year, when the team won twenty- nine of forty-four games. The lead- ing semi-pro teams of the east are being encountered during the present campaign, and to date the Rexmen have triumphed in eight of twelve starts. Two of the defeats were by mar- gins of one run and were sustained during the recent Pennsylvania tour. tex halted Clarendon Athletic Asso- ciation after the latter had won twelve straight and took the measure of the Quantico Marines, who had trounced all othér opponents except George- town University. The northeast clubmen are well for- tified in every position. Giovan- netti is doing the receiving, while Owen and Bryant are the first-string pitchers. Carroll and Eagle also are moundsmen. _ Lemeric, Bernhardt, Roche, McCarthy and Fraser, infleld- ers are about the best on the 'District sandlots, while the outfielders, Bleler, Fitzgerald and Lynch, are high-class semi-pro performers. Rex will play the Dreadnaughts in Alexandria Sunday and a week later will meet the Knickerbockers at Union Park. A trip to Philadelphia will be taken next month for the fol- lowing games: July 2, J. B. Stetson Company; 3. Nativity Catholic Club: 4, North' Philadelphia Professionals (double-header). American _Chain Company of York, Pa., will appear at Union Park July 10, and the Quantico Marines July 24. Games with other strong nines are being negotiated. Virginia Midgets have a Sunday game with the National Athletics, who de- feated the Triangles, 10 to 9. Games with the Virginians may be arranged by writing Carlin Mason, Liberty Loan annex, 401 14th street southwest. Brookl Stars desire engagements with teams in the ten-twelve-year class. Telephone challenges to North SOZ-W':h nleytown Athletic Club_took e :l;l-!ug of the Western Buds in a loosely played 10-to-5 game. Tenley- town will play the Registers of the Treasury League Sunday. Park View Athletic Club scored a 7-to-6 victory over Clover Athletic | Club on Catholic University field. at Wimbledon, it is possible that his physical condition may pre- vent him from defending his hard-won honors even then. predicted before the St. Cloud hard- low physical condition, and now comes news that he is suffering from Tilden is going, and he is not the only one of our stars who is likely to SPORTS In round two of yesterday’s marathon with the Indians, O'Rourke was on third when Ear] Smith rolled to Sewell. the platter, but he jockeyed on the line Iong enough to permit Smith to streak around from the plate to the far corner, which he reached with a fall-away slide just in time to avoid being touched by Mails, who had just tagged out O’Rourke. ILLNESS OF BILL TILDEN MAY COST TENNIS TITLE BY WALTER CAMP. tennis champion, will not be called ge round of the British title matches This column court play that Tilden was reaching severe than tennis played at the rate TORONTD CREW T0 VT Will Race U. S. Eights in People’s Regatta at Philly July 4. Dibble Not to- Enter. PHILADELPHIA, June 14.—The University of Toronto’s eight-oared crew will compete in the people’s re- {gatta to be hold on the Schuylkill river July 4. Other entries in the| eight-oared event include tne Union i Boat Club of New York, composed mostly of Columbia University oars- men, and the Vesper and Undine clubs 10f this city. Canada also will send the Argonaut four-oared crew. They will be op- posed by crews from the Duluth A. the Vesper and Pennsylvania Barge clubs. Dibble, the Canadian sculler, has notified local rowing officials he would be unable to enter the regatta this year. Twelve Crews on Hudson. POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., June 14— Twelve crews, the largest number that has been on the river since train- ing for the coming regatta started, were out for practice yesterday. Only the Cornell squad was absent. The Tthacans will arrive tomorrow morn- ing. What May Happen in Base Ball Today AMERICAN LEAGUE. w. L Cleveland . 3§ 20 New York 21 Washington 25 Detroit . 28 Boston 24 5 St. Lovis . 2 3 Chicago . 20 43 481 412 Philadelphia 118 33 (333 365 346 GAMES TOMORROW. AMES TODAY. Cleveland at Wash. St. Louis at Wash, Detroit at N. Y. Tetroit at Boston. St. Louis at Phila. Chicago at Boston, Results of Yesterday’s Games. Cleveland, 10; Washington, 6. 3 . 13: Detroit, 8. - Iphia, 7: St. Louts. 4. Chicago, 6; Boston, 4. Chicago at New York. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Pittsburgh New York &t. Louis Boston Brooklyn Chieago . Cincinnati . Philadelphia GAMES TODAY. Boston at Chicago. N. Y.at St. Louis. 2 Brook'n at Cincinnati, Brook'n at Pittsburgh. Phila. at Pittsburgh. ~ Phila. at Cincinnati, Results of Yesterday’s Ganfes. Pittaburgh, 12; Philadelphia. 5. 8t. Louis, 10; New_York, 1. Brooklyn, 3: Cincinnati, 1. Chicago, 5; at St. Louts. Boston N. Y. at Chicago. All-Wool Blue Trunks, White Shirt, White Belt COTTON AND WOOL SUITS If you can wear 34 or for . | women's French open golf champion- MEN’S ONE-PIECE ALL-WOOL BATHING SUITS, NOW ... . . .. EXTRA SPECIAL BARGAIN! size, you can buy $12.50 suits HOWARD A. FRENCH & CO. &4 Cardinals Staging Annual Spurt e Iatter's throw beat Blackie te IS STIRLING A VCTOR Defeats Mlle. Chasseloup-Laubat in First Round of Woman's Open Golf Tourney. By the Associated Press. FONTAINBLEAU, France, June 14.— Mixs Alexa Stirling of Atlanta, the American woman golf champion, de- feated Mile. Chasseloup-Laubat of France by 7 up and 6 to play in the first round today of the women's French open golf championship tour- nament. Miss Alice Hanchette of California was defeated by Misx Cecil Leitch, the Britixh champion, by 5 up and 4 to play in the first match of the tourna- ment Mins Hanchette won the first hole, but was outclasxed thereafter, being weak on her iron shots and also in her drives. FONTAINEBL June 14.—Ameri- can, British and French woman goif experts began the first round of the ship tournamgnt here today. The American team was headed by Miss Alexa Stirling of Atlanta, Ga. the other members of the team being Miss Hanchett of San_Francisco. . F. E. Dubois of the_Baltusrol, X. club_and Miss Isabel Kent and Mrs. A B. Graves, American residents of Hanchett was called upon to tace Miss Cecil Leitch, the British! champion, in the opening round. Both appeared to have considerable trouble with the difficult Fontainebleau course yesterday, Miss Hanchett ma ing the round of eighteen holes in 90. while Miss Leitch picked up her bali| before completing the course, and did not turn in her card. Par for the| course is 70. Miss Kent began the| tournament in a match against Mrv.| E. Hill of England, and Mrs_ Graves| R. RICKEYS HAVE CHANCE FOR FLAG IN NATIONAL Mound City Club Has Swatted Its Way to Vic- d tory‘in Sixteen of Last Nineteen Games. June 13 a Day of Records. BY JOHN B. FOSTER. T HE St. Louis Nationals have squared away for their annal diversion of shooting at the top of the National League flagpole. The sturdy swatting Shoemakers of the west have won sixteer. out of nineteen games, beginning May 27, when they returned to the west after their eastern trip. To go back further and ascertain just what kind of base ball they have been playing since they began their round of the circuit on the Polo Grounds in May, add seven more victories and six defeats. That gives them twenty-three wins out of the last thirty-two games they have played. Percentage accrued for that period is .750. Maybe the Cards aren’t sorry now tlgey got - such a bad start in April. hey may come through yet. Cer- nly they've a chance. Anything and anybody has a chance in base ball these days. There's one thing always to be remembered about St Louis. The Cards have kicked up like this before. It's the prettiest thing they d After they have threatened to lift the beaver worn by that staid old party known as National League. their execution has been bad and they've slunk back to the corner of the dance hall to sit down and peeve. If they keep on rocking down the pike for the next fortnight at the same pace as now, it will be time for New York and Pittsburgh to sit up and look behind. Meanwhile the St. Louis birds are singing sweet praise to Hornsby, ask- ing him “Isn’t he glad that he didn't get tied up with a poor team like the Giants?” Southpaws Bothering Ruth. Of the twenty-one home runs which have been made by Ruth in 1921, nine- teen have been batted against right- hand pitchers. The left-handers are stuffed up with elation in conse- quence. “If a left-hand pitcher throws a natural left-hand curve low to that big guy he can’t hit it,” said Oldham. “Low, slow and a natural break down around the knee—and good-night.” “That’s what you think,” retorted another. °I pitched to that bird before 1 was a Yankee. I fooled him two or three times and I allowed that I had something at last which would keep him off the home-run map. He got me one day just like he gets all the others. When he centers that old bat on the center of the ball he can make a natural home out'n any variegated curve that any pitcher ever threw. By the shift of Frisch back to third base, those who argued that the Giants were very much in need of Groh insist that they’'ve won their point. Attention is called to the fact that the Giants be- gan to brace last year after third base was well taken care of and not before. Monday a Record Day. Cleveland and Pittsburgh lead the big league sweepsteaks today. just as they had been doing, but see what happened Monday. Ruth made two home runs, five in four consecutive games, a new record even for him. He batted the ball into the centerfield bleachers in the Polo~Grounds for the first time in tory. He made his twenty-first homer and is ahead of last year at this time by twelve days. Ehmke, the Detroit pitcher. hit Schang on the arm, and the Yankee catcher will be out for two weeks. Ehmke plays no favorites. He pitched the ball that put O'Neill, Cleveland’s catcher, out of the game. Fifteen home runs were made by both leagues. _That tops the single day's record. Ruth was not the only one to make two in a day. Mann of St. Louis grabbed a pair, and Whitted of Pitts- burgh took two for his share. Carey hit the ball over the left field fence in | ! | i { by the Giants burgh. Leather hasn't been so high in base ball since the old game started. St. Lomts National won their tenth in successlen. a hew season’s record in the National League for consecutive vi tories, going Pittsburgh one better. Heinie Groh played his first game of the season for Cincinnati, deciding no longer to try to make a touchdown against Commissioner Landis. - For the thirteenth game in succession a home run was made on the Athletics’ field. Two teams, the Yankees and Pittsburgh, each made four home runs on the same day. Out of it all Pittsburgh and St. Louis in the National and the Yankees and Cleveland. in the American reaped the substantial gain, but it was a thirteenth day of June that won't be forgotten in !a hurry in base ball. GARDS MAINTAIN STRIDE Capture Tenth Straight, Despite Giants’ Triple Play—Pirates, Dodgers and Cubs Win. Branch Rickey’'s Cardinals held to their dizzy pace yesterday in the N tional League, registering their tenth straight victory. The triumph w: achieved, despite a triple play ma The league-leadin Pirates overwhelmed the Phillies. the i Dodgers nosed out the Reds and the Cubs blanked the Braves. The Giants made their three-ply killing when Hornsby, on a_hit-and- run play, lined to Monroe, who threw to Kelly. doubling Stock off first. Kelly tossed to Patterson, catching Fournier off second for the third out. Heavy hitting at the expense of Nehf and Ryan gave the Cards a 10-to-1 win. Haines was effective after th first inning. Mann made two homers. The Pirates slammed Baumgartner for fifteen hits and drubied the Phi lies, 12 to Hamilton also was hit hard, but was effective until the latter art of the game. Whitted made a pair of homers and Bigbee and Carey clouted one each. Maranville got five hits in as many times at bat. The Reds outhit the Dodgers, twelve safeties to seven, but the lat- ter broke their losing streak with a 3-to-1 triumph. Cadore and Mamaux pitched against Brenton and Coumbe. Kilduff got three and Wheat two of the winners' wallops. Heine Groh re- turned to his old position at third with the Reds, and made two hits in four times at bat, fielded perfectly and scored his team's run. A walk, double and triple retired Braxton and netted two runs for the Cubs in the fourth, and they went on to a 5-to-0 win over the Braves. York was wild, granting six passes, but he yielded only six hits and was accorded sensational support by Fol- locher, Barber and Flack. s. was drawn to meet Miss E. Helme, also of England. Miss Stirling made the course ges- terday in 79. while her opponent, Mile, Chasseloup-Laubat of France, today turned in a card for 82. Both these scores were considered very good, considering the conditions under which | the round was played. : The sky was overcast when the first| of the plavers teed off, but the sun broke through occasionally and there was very little wind. Prestige Isn’t Accidental There is always a sound reason forit. !nthel"-h B e b oo worde elibly strang For over forty years it has fj SFORGE FROST CO., Maxtas, BOSTON e —— Phone F. 6764. SUNDRIES. Howard A. French & Co. Indian Motor Cycles and Sport Goods 424 9th St. N.W. Motor Cycles Repaliring look good on you. 0 9 NOW §3 *8 36 424 9tl On Cool, Comfortable, Styli Breezy S Others Ask $40.00—Our Pri These Suits are tailored by America’s foremost clothing man- ufacturer; they are silk lined, and guaranteed fast color—styles that Keep Cool in Hess Oxfords —that combine style with comfort and quality with both. The smartest creations in footwear this summer are the Hess Sport Models in white buck with leather trimmings and Hess White Oxfords in buck and canvas. N. Hess Sons, 931 Pa. Atje. its ‘30

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