Evening Star Newspaper, July 4, 1923, Page 21

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SPORTS. ., WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1923. SPORTS. - ) ‘ g Going Will Be Difficult in Open Golf Event Griffs ually “Fan” | [ e snovoms_| | WILL TAKE REAL PLAYING cavcatronTEFLY. | Few Batsmen Actu NEW YORK, July §—wWaiter Jonn- | \:Overtime Game Poison to 15-INNING LOSS TO YANKS Gt ¢ son and ban niser were Donie e A% K 6B B Pa : IS ONLY A CASE IN POINT fifi-’htlffi:";{z:’fl}»flgf:c'fi‘tfiz'-’flfad\:r'"lcxf":'i{'- Statistics Prove Only About 15 Per Cent of Strikes Are g 1 ] TO BE AMONG QU ALIFIERS the Yanks this afternoon. Johnson, who did not accompany the Nationls when they left Washington Sunday. | was expected to arrive early today Ruth’s Homer on First Ball Delivered in Sixth Extra Frame Decides by 2 to 1—Mogridge and Bush in Great Duel. on Swings Where the Ball Is Untouched. —— iMcLeod and Diegel, Washington’s Hopes in Tour- ney at Inwood Next Week, Should Meet Test—Field Is a Record One. Capt:- Bucky Harris was presented with a gold card case Monday night at a dinner tendered him by brother Elks in Brooklyn. The brothers were at hand to appiand Bucky for his good work in yester pastiming. | A not uncommon phrase in base ball writing: “Smith fanned.” To readers of the news of the national game this presents a picture of batsman ingloriously swinging at an cal fan recently has been keeping count of the strikes at frmes played at the local park, with interesting results. Such a score was kept in the games played June 19, 20, and 30 and July In those five games mrmarstalatciS8IRRTualt orracmmobaioRRRARES. 8 ecccoomoncmOBRMOR Harrie' mont semautional fielding | Lo | 405 strikes in all we 2 BY JOHN B. KELLER. st oreurred e eleventn fnnin | elusive ball und missing. It is indeed | Gr' thcus 313 were “ested: by’ mik : BY W. R. McCALLUM. g 5 . A when Meusel hit sharply past Ghar-| & comnion misconception on the | umpire, 110 were fouled sad ‘Galy o3 ‘o0l E Fi Fashi il k EW YORK, July 4—Overtime games are poison to the Nationals, | ity Lo rght e By il 1'He | bar o vven om who. attons ana | Bobe Tommed™ ‘PHE: Bedac" toth ot "‘fienflfgfx:l‘:';e:';:]fM:;‘:;‘:io‘r’fs;SiE”‘f"’g SjeaiE ofjentraits i { arently. For many scasons the club representing the National ; e & 810 q from a prone| Cclosely watch the sport that bats- 1 of the strikes were de- , to begin next Monday a sl 4 D e (oo oo | red by the umpire on his own the course of the Inwood Golf Club, Far Rockaway, Long Island, position tossed to first for an out men often swing futilely at the ball. As a matter “strik Capital in the American League has gotten the worst of it in the long run in the matter of extra-inning engagements, and the old jinx! Judgment, 27.2 per cent resulted from fouls and only 16.56 per cent were fetual swings without touching the { will have to play golf of a real championship brand to quaii Three hundred and sixty players, numbering the finest golfers in the GOLFERS ARE BUSY Meusel turned the tablex on Harcis f fact, in but few cases certainly is clinging tenaciously to the outfit piloted by Donie Bush this | the fourteenti \ Bucky Iut s Bieh, = 4 e g e country—amateur_and professional—have entered to attempt o unseat vear. So far in the present campaign he Nationals have engaged in nine jabpeared sood for the circuil, but| in other words, the batsman rarely | with his curve. or. unexpacimin IN SPECIAL EVENTS the crown from Gene Sarazen’s raven locks. - But their chief test comes contests undecided after nine full innings were played, and but three | fie, Yankee oniepsirionel, [WOUGC] wholly mises the ball when he | giraight delivery more often than the in the qualifying round, when but eighteen and ties of each day's quota have entered in their favor. Of the others five went the way of the oppo- | & stariling caten. | the Sifikes declarsd by the uiplre | tige sainan offers at the ball. Tt s - of nearly one hundred will survive for the championship proper. S O l 4 Lo skal 488 Siitoiiatic called atrikos clo:" wmh::’m:' ‘:g;:cr Golfers of Washington are com-| As usual a few of the stars will | horn and Mike Brady. Among But for tense moments, pitching of a most unusual variety, fielding { ,Ruth, wax knocked out fn (00 are " the bats- 15 in the three-and-nothing nale sy | Peting today in special events, with |find themselves crowded out of the D B v e S extraordinary, opportune hitting and a great display of gameness by both i eatehing Goslin's v to deep right ek et fram B i box. More | buts one or pousibly two strikes over |minlature tournaments scheduled at|chance at the title by a missed putt | “3f; Walter Hugen und Jin Barnce clubs, none of the previous extra-session battles in which the Nationals | The big fellow hit the wround head | ctive swings thit Go not tonch | base® on mapolsman waiting for a | four clubs. or a badly played shot. Last year|stars at Inwood In quest of the title have figured this scason can be compared wtih that 2-to-1 fifteen-inning | foremost and aid not come to until | JERE, | inning Passes withont o wing, After | The Washington Golf and Country McLeod 'was two strokes outaide St this year, thelr absence will take struggle that was won yesterday by the Yankees. eyl ot aninu e pe To demonstrate this fact a statisti- ing swing. e MIs- | Club, Indian Spring Golf Club, Ban- JKoKle. AIONE Yah several other well | none of the thrill out of the title year before Bob|chase. The presence of the Britons / s ¢ B | ments. Mogridge Hurls >ty Game. | Of the two moundsmen, Mogridge | pitched & more heady game proba- bly bLecause he had to. Few of the National batsmen were able to get the range on Bush, but time and time again the Yankee artillerists threat- ened to blow the National's veteran southpaw from the hill. In every tight situation, however, Mogridge was equal to the occasion. With the enemy on the paths, George was in- vincible: when he had no runners to Lother him, in the eighth and fif- teenth, it was another story. Strangely Bush appeared to give Mogridge more trouble than any of the other Yankee batters. Six times Bullet Joe stepped to the plate and five times he got on the paths. Bluege's wild throw in the third was ponsible for the Yankee pitcher's first trip to the initial sack. In the fifth inning Joseph got a life when | his loft eluded Rice, who had made one-hand stab at the flving sphere. e passed Bush in the tenth and in the fourteenth the Yankee hurler clouted a clean single to cen- ter. With the other Yanks Mogridge was more successtul. He was nicked for safeties in the second, fourth, fifth, xth and seventh innings, but never when it was likely to prove danger- ous in the first seven sessions. Mo- gridge granted only one pass in regu- lation time, that to Ruth at the start of the fourth. Gets Into Hot Water. Then after Bush had blasted the eighth with a homer, George began to dabble in hot water, and several times was about to slip into regular geysers of trouble. But a cool head and an iron nerve kept him from being scalded until the fatal fifteenth. Following Bush’s four-base blow, Witt bunted a single and Dugan sac- rificed. Mogridge purposely passed Ruth to take on Pipp. Wally fanned ingloriously and Meusel's best was a weak tap to Peck. That plece of work earned George a hand from the scant crowd in the huge stands, but it was nething to the applause that followed his escape from a ticklish situation in the tenth. Bush walked to start this thriller and Witt sacrificed. Dugan’s single put Bush on third with Ruth up. Once| more the Babe was given four wide ones, and the paths were jammed. To the Plate trotted Pipp, and Mogridge put on more steam. Wally proved a tough customer this time and got a three and two count. Then came one of the several spectacular plays of the struggle. Mogridge grooved a pitch and Pipp met it fairly. The ball started on a line to left field, but Capt. Harrls leaped high, grabbed the sphere and tossed to Gharrity to dou- ble Ruth and retire the side. Mogridge got into more trouble in the thirteenth, but came through unscorched. With Dugan out of the way, Ruth singled through the box and romped to third as Pipp's hit passed Harri: Here Meusel was de- liberately walked to populate’ the paths. Ward's best effort was a weak tap in_front of the plate that resulted in Ruth’'s demise at home. Mogridge proceeded to toss three wide ones to Scott, then stuck a pair of strikes across and Everett finally popped to Peck. Bush in Fine Fettle. While Mogridge was traveling his rough road, Bush was picking out the smoother spots. He went along in easy fashion until the ninth, when the Nationals put thelr run over, then he had to work a bit harder. Two of Clark Griffith’s hirelings got on the bases in the tenth and an- other pair dented the sacks in the twelfth. It was in the thirteenth, though, that Bush performed espe- cially well under difficulties. Peck, first_ up, walked and pulled up at second when Goslin singled to left. Gharrity, attempting to _sacrifice, forced Pock and, after Ruel had skied to Meusel, Evans forced Goslin at third. That ended the Natfonals for the day. Only six batters faced Bush in the last two innings. The argument was productive of a pair of season records for the Na- tionals. It was the ‘longest battle that Donie Bush's cohorts have in- dulged in since the beginning of the campaign and the Nationals' first overtime engagement this yvear 1in which both they and their opponents finished play with their startin, line-ups. ~The latter feature is all the more remarkable when one con- siders how difficult it %as been for the Bushmen to get through nine innings without changes in team personnel. PLAYER GETS $4,000. BOSTON, July 4—Bobby Smith, shortstop 'of the Boston Nationals, has received checks for $4,000 cover- il&slth;'purchllu money vg:xch zasyit el n s coming to e ‘aves from dew. Orleans. w 34 4 Mogrid Finneran, ' Bee Z—wauke 5 Kansas Gity' .. Lingrel, Pott, Pi and McCarty. diow 20 Swintmmery Traine To Becore Champions How Johnny Weissmuller Was Taught to “Breathe Once With Every Stroke.” ARTICLE II. HERE will be little of direct benefit to the beginner in a further description at this time of the technique of Johnny Weiss- muller. It would be just like go- ing into details about Paderew- iski’s art to a pupil who has yet to learn the scale on the piano. The general reader, however, and many who now swim with some skill, may find something of in- terest in another point or two. Before Weissmuller came to me I had figgred out a new method of breathing, as applied to the crawl stroke in speed swimming. I tried it out on several of my swimmers who had become set in their ways. It did not work as I figured it should, because the swimmers found it hard to change. I figured that the best way to keep a speed swimmer strong in the water is to make sure that he gets plenty of air. Muscle alone is far from enough. We have muscular men come down from the gymnasium who swim a couple of lengths of the tank and then give up winded and tired. They wonder why it is. They could do the most strenuous “gym” work for hours, and still retain their “pep” and their wind; a few seconds in the pool and Swimmers Need Lots of Air Movie catches Weismuller at interesting stage of his stroke. 1 . 2 fn’ in 113 innings off Holloway. none kie, 15 in 72-3 in- nings; off Bedgood, 3 in 2 1.3 innings Hit by pitcher—By Bod!ood (Haney). Winning pitch. or—Holloway. Losing pitcher—Bedgood. = Um. res—Messrs. Rowland and Evans. Time of ie—2 hours and 37 minutes. they are exhausted. That is be- cause they are accustomed to get- ting more air and getting it at will. Lack of Air Burns Up Fiber. ! any kind of vigorous physical | effort you must have plenty of | oxygen in your lungs. Most I sprint swimmers before Weiss- muller got along with one breath every three or four strokes. y | they were swmming forty yards in a twenty-yard tank, they would take, perhaps, one breath going down and two coming back. | In the meantime they would be holding their breath under water, burning up their own carbon dioxide, instead of oxygen. Imagine sprinting fifty yards on a track and breathing only three or four times! ‘ They could not get enough air swimming like that, and, as a result, the effort tore down their reserye energy and consumed more muscle fiber than was neces- sary. They would be all in after a short swim. So when Weissmuller came along I decided tostry my idea on him. He was young, plastic, not set in his ways and easy to work with. He had learned to swim pretty well after a fashion, but his stroke was far from correct. What he knew he had taught himself as a kid splashing around the beaches. Two to a Stroke Too Many. was looking for instruc- tion, however, and that was Buffalo = : Ward and MoKee; Fisher, Urban. 5 3 Heitman and Syracuse (second game) £ & 0 | Buffalo ... ampeREsL LT Pierrotti, Frankhouse and Niebergall; Le. pard, Werre, Gordy and Snoy }“ ) why be came to me. One of the first things I taught him was this mcthod of breathing, once with every stroke. Some swim- mers think it is a waste of time, but it is not if you work it into the rhythm of your stroke so that the regularity of the stroke is_not disturbed. Weissmuller took to the idea and it worked fine. He proved my theory that the more air you get the stronger you will be in the water. That is, up to a certain point. Of course, you can overdo that, just 1 anything else. For instance. Weissmuller de- | veloped a trick of taking two breaths on every stroke. He would turn his head to the left as usual, when the left arm comes up at the hip. He would ;nh.fle through his mouth, turn his head down into the water and exhale through his nose. { Then h a quick swing he would turn his head to the right as the right arm came up and take another inhale. One day I saw him doing it and 1 told him to “cut it out.” “If you ever do that in a race,” 1 said, “I'll drown you!” There is such a thing get- ting too much air, I explained. You can burn up your lungs with oxygen as well” as deaden them with not enough. T told him as long as he did it only while fooling around 1 would not object. Weissmuller Fooled Witnesses. HAT trick resulted in an amusing misunderstanding by some San Francisco -swimmers. Weissmuller was having his daily workout in the Olympic Club ool. We were on our way to awaii last spring, and stopped at San_ Francisco for a race or two before sailing. Weissmuller started inhaling on He has just completed one revolution of arms, turns his head to the side and inhales throu, his mouth. His arm is caught in the film at the n of relaxa- “Photo by Atias Ed both sides, twice to one complete revolution of the arms. The spectators noticed it and mar- veled. At once they got busy and announced their diseovery. At last, they thought, they had found out one of Weissmuller’s secrets, accounting in part for his great speed. Of course, if they had only asked me about it I-would have- explained that Weissmuller was only fooling, that he would not dare to try such a_system in a race. But the stories went out, and thus one more myth about the world’s greatest swimmer got currency. I hope it has not misled many swimmers, In my next article I will tell how Miss DeVry, Who has start- ed her career as a star at the crawl stroke with a new world record for women, attained pro- ficiency in the art. 1 Piim.Co, - ! (Copyright, 1028, by the Bell Eyndicate, Tney - .* e i o e e Ky e e s e s e e ¥ X e Cool and correctly cut In hot weather clothes, the cut makes all the differ- ence between the fashionable and the ordinary. In summer clothes, the ordinary is very ordinary indeed. Society Brand cool fabrics are fashionably cut, beau- tifully tailored; they’re smart and comfortable. A great variety at $45 and $50 The Hecht Co 7th at F Member of the Better Busincss Burcau Fri the time n]m( tI;equxeBMl‘v- (h"lnrworvn-: e -&('lll;'ulvtf:llnl._"“i' A‘v""el —_— e | Wiockburn (Golf Club and Kirkside ‘McDor)l(lld!hnnd :;Q‘rnxhuzham failed | would only add an International flavor gridge, southpaw. aml Bullet Joe Bush, row o rd's grounder _thel R Golf- Club all will hold miniature |to make the grade in the preliminary | to the event, as they wouid have P Hea S ¢ e ba < hit well 1 of a SOUTHER; E ) a2 oy e TG LT € st tsisiion igurin, oyl v b el bk of| CHISOX, 45 BROWNS, 3 TR, | urmmmenie 1o i the exivactn | TR SLEATIS, .o ns e P0IBT summarily ended proceedings by hit- and his long heave just beat Aar (AT ST. LOUIS.) Now Orloan: will qualify in flights of eight at nine | qualified each day for the champlon- | as his two scores of 70, made 1ast ting into the right field bleachers mzu'l'mmron, Acn. R. H. PO. A. E.|to the sack. 0A. St. L. ABH.0.A. | Atlanta h“l”n mald{l play am.ir w;nne!c at | ship, which is to be plaved over the Saturday, attest. He hus fot been of the Yanike lium the first piteh { Packinpaugh, sa. 20 0 8 2 8 wegriawe bavely excapen serious 210 Tob 8727176 Mattison match play rounds of nine holes|72 hole route July 12 and 13 | putting exceptionally well, but doubt- made by Mogridge in the fifteenth | Goglin, 1. o € 0 1 3 0 ol injursy In the thirfeenth inning when s L E g = R s - a6 £ the. Washt | Seventy-two players will thus be the | less will find the keen Inwood greens ing. The game was filled \with | Gharrity, 15 D8 1 120 0 0 Ruthecrashed a liner through t x 3081 431 0|, Loog and St A e lub . has peon |minimum to qualify. The number | better to his liking than those i i S8 0 1 6 1 &'The vall was traveling so fast that 31560 41 1 2| bil'and Robertson: E R O has 12°6n | probably will be nearer 90. as there are | Columbia, which now are siow. If Pitching Is HIgh Cl Emn, ol -3 0 2 5 0 0ithe hurler could not dodge it, but b 4 1 1 4 Gerberss.. 3 2 3 3| Memphis ... . el Lt il possible to|always several ties for last place | the course remains fast, as it now is, itching Is =] nes. Harris, 2b. -8 0 8 3 8 0lgorrunately it passed between his y204 1 2 2 Severeide. 4 1 8 2| Little Rook . 9:)' ‘;’l‘; "“1"- ol sl X each day. McLeod has a chance to win, as he Probably no other game in theBluege, 3b e ey A 4 .. 2833 3 110 0| Mitchell and Tat o ‘} rty-six f g*‘ by ]‘ Play| Diegel js at Bar Harbor, where he|is hitting his shots beautifully Amert League this son has | Mogridge. p -8 0 0 0 8 's|*™ E Thuritonp. 3 1 1 1 2 00 1jan and Nelderkorn, 1andicap event i8 being held at the | hag gone with his emplover, but will | lent as was that in the stadium yes- ' Q 9. 2 | 1 Drak B to prepare for the championship, for ter Hits were not infrequent.| <Nons out when winning run was scored. TYGERS, 12; TRIBE, 8 s DEEELC LR e e Y e i against | ¥hich he was runner-up three vears | HORSE SHOT ON TRACK. but oily in three innings were as| NEW YomK. AB. R. H. PO. A. E. (AT CLEVELAND.) Totals...30 627 14 Totals. iz e Par event TuLMaReaTIed:. Sille ot ago. :\:l’lv::‘;'& :’fl':: I saw 4l e uf)nl‘;“ NEW YORIC, July 4.—While crowds as two safeties clustered and | Witt, . g TR i el *Batted f ilder in AP . . e, leav or Inwood | ked in th ! rand stund a attors were unabisito do mmich |Dugka’ b S 2 15} A e BRoA cemimsdnmas|. il fe Newite s s PALACHIAN LEAGUE. bers of ‘the Town and Countey Clubfisnight'ito: got in two days practice| Aqusqust rase trasi sostesday. Boat: 3 damage until after the hurlers had |RButh, . (41 a3 s a1 pTmmRLlN 02 11 0|cw © 1170 0 0 0 3—4| Jobusen Clty, &; Kingsport, 4. Handicap Peignteen ot crenul PIaY|before the east-west team matches|fer, a chestnut gelding. owned by J. gone through seven sessions. Mo- | Bipp. 1b.. 6 0 213 0 o f...5 82 6 0 1 10 0}8t. 000O0OTOG O 2 1—3!| Bristol, 5; flmnvflf' 4 & to be played on Saturday. McLeod | Shaughnessy, a favorite in one of the gridge was hit for more wallops than | Meusel, it -8 0 04 0 ol f..5 2 2 0 Speakercf. b5 2 0 0f p, " Shesley, Faik, Thurston, To.| MOTFStowS, 2; Kaoxville, o, e will captain the eastern team against cvents, was put to death by a bullet. Bush, but all of the Yankee biows|grard. 2b. -8 0 1 23 3 Olpimannsf 6 3 3 0 Sewellss.. 3 1 2 2| pin Gerber fobuss. Eiroe-ahrichner. — SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE., |& team led by Emmet French. | He_broke down in the running Scott, e VI went for naught. except the homers | Hofmann s Pl 8 2 7 0 Stepwngh. b 2 3 2| Hwobass Jits—Thursion. Robertson. ™ Three: RGINIA LEAGUE. Aty e bgf‘?’t:afi williiriclnde fn fts mem. | S e Now Yo hite! and el . igney.s: utzke. 1 t—Schliebner. me -Falk, Tobin. 3 v ), er | of the Now York pltcher and the|Bum 3500 5 1.3 0 6 “'!:“s;hc! $ 142 Bowern. s 212 113 hate—ian :sfic’,‘fi’,‘;_‘ém,{';:_ " Mamon, Ta: ugusta, 3. | and "Bobby Jones, to represent the | e <h' - 212 & 15 olfillettep. .1 0 0 0 O'Neil Double plays—Gerber and 1 parta, 3 i | east_and Chick Evans and Rudolph I_ikcv rur.'v.h - hor:rer_ Bu.“}:lsg mas Totals --=40 8 13 4 15 (0i5isen, 000 0 Co 2713 . Happeny and_Sheely: Mc- 4 IDGE |E. Knepper to represent the west. |4 made at the start of an inning, Wash. L000000001000000~1{Wellsp... 1 0 0 1 Bedgoodp. 1 0 0 0 nd " Sheely: Sever EASTERN SHO BLUE RIDGE LEAGUE. | “Grandfather” John Black is expected FOR WINDSHIELDS OR_BODIES. Mogridge had a count of two And M. ¥ ...000080010000001—3|}ncits. 1@ ¢ 0 Gurderil 0 0 § 0|Serber. Left on bases Ohicage. T RE LEAGUE. P = |to be the star of the western team, Installed While You Wats. gne on Bullet Joe in the eIEDUL Ve | Fug.pbuce bit—Pinp. Three-base hit—-Evans, | BOOYSYD 1 0 0 0 Myatiili. e e DAL O Thretee 8 i Vax Parksley, 2. | e e | which also numbers among its per- Taranto & Wasman the Vank slammed the ball OVer | omo runs—Bush, * Ruth. . Seolen basere | peichoi 4 0 0 0 1§ out—By Thurston, 1 by Vangilder, sobeduled. Hazover, 3; Chambersburg, 2. nnel Jock Hutchiso: flifam 1017 NEW YORK AVE. N.W. Goslin's head in left. Goose turned | Evans, Harris. Sacrifices—Dugan, Witt (2), | Fotie:s! — — — — by Pruett, 1." Hits—Off Thurston. 8 in 71.3 | to run for the sphere, but it bounded | Harris, e glavs—Dugsn, ‘Ward aad | AT T 37 12 20 15 | in # T. Blankezship, 3 in 12-3 innings; |, into the open stand. Pipp: Harris and Ghareity. Left on b IE L 4 S | for. b in 8 inni%gs: off Prustt, n The Nationals deadlocked the match | New York. 13; Washington, 11, Base on bails | ;Bitted for Olsen in ffth. g._Passed ball—Sotalk. Winning i by missed ending the affair |—Of Bush. 6: off Mogridge, 5. Struck out— | 1 ed for Wells in eighth. Blankenship. Losing _pitcher— i 4 By Mogridge, 5; by Bush. 3. Passed ball—, gBatted for Lutzke in tenth Umpires—Messrs. Hoimes, Nallin and ’r”!”" l"‘\\.'?';:fjf'l!“° AL or ';:2 been | Hotmann. ' Umpires—Metsrs, Dinoen apd | §Batted for Bedgood in teuth 4_1p | Moriarty. Time of game—1 Nour and 45 min- etired H SRS ¥+ | Hildebrand. Ti me—; Detre . .0 000002860 utes. Gharrity singled past Scott, Ruel i ol il R i e s ¢ ted to Ruth. but Evans hit far Runs—Haney (3), Cutshaw, Cobb, Manush . b er Wites head fn center. Gharrity —_— | Hetlminn, (@) prath, Higney Basnies, Yother' | INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. ed home and Evans easi reached mieson, Summa (2), Speaker, Sewell, third. Jocy did not hesitate at the| AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Brower! Covsleside, Ertor—Brow. | 1.0y iy . e BEE far corner, although Witt had thrown 2 ey N Ny, Wowary 0T 1 20 1 the ball fo Ruth for a relay to the 4 0| Brasiier. * Homn tunm Browet Y gy eamii®: | Barnhardt. Tecarr, Lynch and Freitag, Mer plate, but dashed for home. Ruth's 3 2| Prate, Cutshaw. Lutzks, Coveleskio. .Doubls | Crea: Ellis and Devine, Greense. heave was just a bit ahead of Evana Tincup and Mey play—Rigney, Cutshaw and Pratt. Left on | Reading = , & but Hofmann juggled the catch anu |8t Paul .......... 5 10 o] basse—Detrait, evoland. ases on | Baitimore Ao S it appeared that the National had | Minneapolis . ] e 1] O Walls; | £ Tamop and/Clarka; ‘Themasand Oeb. slid around the Yankee receiver for | o Holthauser, Rogers, "Hall "and Gonzales; | 25 of Francis, 1: off Holloway, 1: of Bed- | Toronte : i 2 9 2 a second score. Umpire Dineen ruled | Bobuer aad Grabowski. £2°8y ollowny. 1; by Coveloskie, 3" Mizers | Rochester i < i3 9 2 otherwise, however, and the athletes | Toledo Off Fillotte, 6 in 223 innings: off Ol e hnc B} Eokmastwes sod Inks had to postpone their supper engage- | Columb: 11.3 innis 1 in 3 innirgs; Syrrcuse (first game)... 0 Society Brand Hot-Weather Clothes The Lonsdale Trop » An ever popular model, most men wear it very well. A two button, single breasted lounge suit, skeleton lined; slightly fitted, but an easy coat; two piece suit. In all the cool fab- rics. One of several fashion- able Society Brand styles for hot weather. Society Brand fi‘fifihz?fl e T e

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