New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 14, 1916, Page 12

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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14. 1916 raves and Reds Baitle Into Darkness Without a Score--Cubs Again Hammer Giant Twirlers; Big Ed” Walsh Fails in Try at Comeback--Yanks Finally Win From Tigers--Harvard Downs Tufts — —————————————————— — 4 5 ® bad a shade the better of the argu- | ti:e fast-going Tigers yesterday, en- IN [ Intercollegiate Rowing Regatia at Poughkeepsie bad a shads tne bettr of the aruu: | he tustgoing Tigers sesirenr, phatic and consistent. Against his | game of the series hy a score of 4 to offering the Springfield sluggers pro- | and incidentally shatter the home NG TIE BATTLE| Is An Open Affair This Year, Say Experts @iy e i i i, e tiveness. The score: Although Cullop’s excellent twirl- r. h. e. | ing was largely responsible for the Lowell ........ 200000001—3 7 victory, awkey de- Teflm IS Ab]e tO Tally ll] : : e e / - ‘ : R 7 ~ i e e I = = Springfield . 000000002—2 4 5 | a shs of the credit for his Batteries—Zieser and Kilhullen; ; impres exhibition of pitching Powers, Justin and Stephengus nerve in the ninth, when Nick - e e e — 25 WALSH'S COMEBACK " v i £33 . i i ' i | | New York .... 000010030—4 , June 14-—After a suction : - e e . e i : : | Detroft .... 000001010—2 4 ad been used to aid in drain- ; ! o0 : ; . - - e B oy, - . | ~ Batteries—Cullop, Shaw diamend, following a_heavy e : o : o L L . ; o, | Walters: Hamilton and Stanage. hr of rain yesterday at Boston, 2 S 2 : e i - T . % | hti and Baston played for 16 | neither team being able m; Red Sox Defeat Browns, Louis, June 14.—Boston de- ic 3. Ruth, who on Monday tied the score for Boston by driving one over the right field fence with two an | bases, contributed another in the same place yesterday. He also drove in a run with a single in the fourth The score: pr held the Braves to three ncinnati’s hits were numerous were, vell scattered and the | were strong defensively. | ; A . 1% % 4 g three on bases and two out ini i ¢ o - : G L i o % Chicago, June 14.—Ed Walsh at fth, Clarke, batting for Toney, | g ¢ B . _ . " . i . 5 tempted a 1916 come-back’ yester- which Rudo[n‘h’ : . T 2 . v § o Y. : ; day at Chicago, but Washington re hand and re- | G i y : - L ; 3 v 5 J arove him from the slab in the third! The Braves made a | : . - i : 3 : - it inning and made enough runs off | in their half of the | 3 B . : o : s A ) | him to win from Chicazo, 3 to 2. With Fitagerald on | : e : > : ) | The big pitcher made a gallant start, | j Compton hit in front of the 5 : i | 3 : " ; 3 ‘lfl""‘“VgI Judge and ‘M“a" i(;‘ ”1;9 ‘t‘ t | d “Fitz” tri > . : 4 - s ¢ : - ? ut Morgan's walk an oster’s e while wfilfi"&fi"&ffiffl; 8 : 3 i 2 £ : E 1% 3 double gave Washington a run in the dlind;rl{!?:im::mltl"an?;cfi:d v - = =2 : = ; = e - = = o e “Blg Ed” ASCGHdS MOlllld Agalflst i feated St. Lauis here yesterday by 5 | | i | White Sox, Derricked in Second r. h. Boston ........ 102100100—5 11 St, Louis ...... 000001200—3 7 1 Batteries — Ruth Shore and Thom: Davenport, Koob, Fincher Paumgardner and Hartley o Groh for a doub ay s . o » L 2 : 5 two singles and a wild throw by Ness €. The score: f > B R ; : < 3 ¢ . > gave the Senaters two more in the 2 2 - 5 5 3 % ; third, whereupon Russell succeeded hti 0001000000000000—0 3 ik : e : . : : i . Walsh, 0000000000000000—0 3 3| 3 5 o - f . : i o 5 Harper, except in the fifth, when a ies—Rudalph, Hughes, Tra- | S i e 4 . fieiits - o : pass, a single and Terry's double gave| burn One of Causes. b d Gowdy; Toney, Schneider Chicago two runs, was invincible New London, June 14—Both Yale's hgo. i | He held the Sox to three hits, two of | and Harvard's varsity crews are .till St | Poughkeepsie, N. Y., June 14—Four | Although there will be fewer crews |calls them—win the lion’s share of | Smooth rowing, hard pulling crew |them made by Terry, and struck out| unsettled in their final makeup, al- obins Take One More. fine crews, ranking as high as those | in the ;éag; U;‘is yeii‘r tlhan at any time | the glory that co;neis o}[[ vdictol‘y on | from Syracus?, ;Lbfinisllzd, x‘:esourceful i sm-:m. I\\[‘nnor‘ J‘:hm;on. “\-\rgn ;‘\:as‘mi- thought the date of the annual aquati¢ % e i since , nevertheless the regatta | the heaving tide of the Hudson. Al- | crew from Columbia and a fairly good | vertised to pite or ashington, | struggle on the Thames river, June 23 tyn, June 14.—Crushed - he- | of years gone by, Will jump away from | 150 guiee as fixedly the attention of | though Courtney is to give up e e b ety Tot Tt e s e TR T i e bert on the. other, the St. = the sport loving world as it ever has. reln,_v n()‘\\‘ after his 1ong_ years of | crews spell trouble for Cornell in the | ness of a.lv{ombox- of his family, who R i LT o ConiEIBomimer HiBatuzdavia b Srnoon [T her ety Bl to e of Sromanda ot § [soxvice Bt im dly Bbefithat fhisfila s frace bl siracel nowgicssathanfafvesiclatay il icatoe ol G L8 £ORD attend the repub- Tbbets Fleld vestm‘rdav than | June 17, in the big race of the in- | too, _in the fact Fhat it marks the | will be one of the fiercest fought of | and it will take all the magic and |lican convention. The score: R ledempidan ¥ passing from active duty of Charles | his long career. Opposed to the Cor- | wizardry of the ‘“old man” to bring rahite, Wwhich had not turned and | tercollegiate regatta on the Hudson, [ pA®C08 o FERL careor; B o e Yy el e R e e | e e of American row- | nell crew, which, although developed | victory once more to the banners of | Washington ... 200 7 bnd time In ‘this series iy o 5 : * | ing coaches, who fOrfl!hll"(_\ years was | from a poor and unpromising eight, | the Ithacans. Layout shows the four | Chicago ... . 000020000—2 3 1 g The four—Columbia, Cornell, Penn-|at the helm of the Cornell navy. To |is fast becoming one of the most pow- | varsity crews. No. 1, Cornell; No. 2, Batteries—Harper and Henry; A 5 > BOOTe h. o |fYlvanis end Syracuse—have put on | Courtney has been granted the boon | erful rowing units Courtney has ever | Syracuse; No. 3, Columbia; No. 4, | Walsh, Russell, Wolfgang and Sc halk. e hAe hom b e e 5 | the final touches for the big struggle. | of seeing his crews—his boys, he | brought to the Hudson, there are a | Penn. s ) vas t in condition to do much row- ans Swi Athletic: NibmilE S ...... 000000001—1 2 3 g i = HOATSRE | A . e D i eland | InE: Both yaxsity. cvewa Hud | IgH} es—Pfeffer and Meyers; i 4 i ‘m Phil | work, paddling only as far as the fwo & p str adel- . B e hoder. made it four straight from Phi B U ol phia, knocking Myers from the box s Trim Giants Again, | again yesterday and winning 11 to 2.| The freshmen had a new man fin aseba ews in a Nutshe |asain vesterasy angiwhatng 1l to 2| The TS ISE 08 Son maderk York, June 14—Diminutive Changes' of Temporary sort Made in Crews of Both Universities—Sun- is only ten days off. Yale's varsity crew had another shift last evening. John Fitzpatrick, row- ing No. 6 in the second boat, swapped seats with Ralph Kositsky, who was looked upon as a regular fixture the first crew. Coach Nickalls ined the change by saying Kositsky eff Pfeffer om one side and |the starting line in the shadows of rthy, who decorates red thirt run for subs took 5 land Page's ored thirty-one runs to six for & substitute, took pt. Ro! Carthy, who decorates second = the Chicago Cub A Philadelphia. The score: | seat at No. 6. A L ;\I\(l(‘n.xr!h _\h)v;l i C s, made a 2id Page is temporarily indisposed the fourth inning of yester- 3 ! NATIONA LLEAGUE. , Buffalo 7, Rochester 0. Clivetana - apBbbEbe Ty i n e ol el bkae Sarsmat i gme at the Polo, Grounds 1 ) 2 e floron toRt nlontreal §5 T'hiladelphia .. 200000000— 2 2' the boat and probably will be rowing ras of such glaring audaclty . | Yesterdays Results. Providence at Newark o letel; bal d th < ) (wet Batteries—Bagby and O'Neil and again tomorrow. Clanta pd | blada ih - ’ EZoRRdY s; Myers, Nabors a Sche Yale's second varsity crew has iost Giants and blazed the way 4 PRillings; Myers, Nabors and Schang ale S Boston 0, Cincinnati 0 (16 innings, —_— T e fhF this. seas \nd thi . 7 E 1 phy. Atkins, No. 8, for this eason ar ther defeat, ‘this time by a @flnl‘/(]])d Rrce | aarkness) Standing of the Teams. ‘ P e e e 5 to 2. The score: % - ‘I;hi“;fl“’ 5, N:"-‘]"Ol'k 12' Won Lost P.C. Yanks Break Streak. injured the cartilages of his chest r. h. e. rooklyn 3, Louis 1. Providence .. . 25 14 .641 | Detroit, June 14.—Charley Mullen and was ordered by his doctor to quit . 101100200—5 16 0 Steve Yerkes, {man to overthrow that he has ever| Philadelphia 5, Pittsburgh 2. Newark o il 19 525 ) X = ! and Nick Cullop put the skids under a PRk . . 000110000—2 8 1 |rhere is one law for any game; | faced. | S et e o 20 12 . the boat pries—<Vaughn ~ and Archer; | wor each, who knows his day of fame, | Cobb started the present week bat- Standing of the Teams. Montreal . o 20 500 Stroud, Schupp-and Rariden. | The dusk shall come to quench the | ting .322. But Speaker had moved un“ Lost P.C. | Richmond .. . 20 20 .500 e flame. tc .380, having run up eight hits in | Brooklyn ........ ! .619 | Buffalo ...... 18 19 486 firates’ Oraft Scuttled. : two games for a healthy average | Philadelphia ..... 9 .568 | Toronto .....- 14 19 424 delphia, June 14.—The Phil-|For I remember well the day beost. This margin would not be ! New SneaieS 2 5 | Rochester ...... 15 23 .395 i | in sdefeated Pittsburg yester- | That I first saw Steve Yerkes play \hard to cut down with almost any one | Chicago | | i i | e. score being 5 to 3. Miller | And hold a minor leaguer's sway. else in the lead. But Speaker is an- | Boston (Etrere) e bocked off the rubber by the j other matter. The Cleveland star is| Cincinnati ....... ’ 4 i b eam in four innings and |I saw the welcome that he got more determined to lead the ficld this| Pittsburgh ...... 2 5 Providence at Newark. did good work until the eighth | For driving hits across the lot | season than he has been before. He | St. Louis ....... : Baltimore at Richmond. Viehdff's double, Stock’s bunt, | Or blocking bounders that were hot. | Is fighting harder, hustling harder | Rochester at Buffalo. Adams threw to third too late j than he ever did-in his career. And e Montreal at Toronto. h Ni¢hoff, Cravath’s out, and |I saw him shift without a skid, { it is not at all unlikely that to heat R i | { f's * sacrifice scored two runs|I saw him make his daily bid the Texan out Cobb will have to| Cincinnati at Boston. n the game. The score: | And thought “Well, here’s a likely | finish the rest of the season around| Chicago at New York. r. h. Kkid.” .400, and even thig clip might not be| Littsburgh at Philadelphia. lphia ... 01200002*—5 9 1 fast enaugh, St. Louis at Brooklyn. rgh .... 100002000—3 10 2 | Time moved along, unti] at last —_— = pries—Demaree, Bender and |I saw him in.the Red Sox cast, AMERICAN LEAGUE. E Miller;, Adams and Wilson. {Then sweeping upward in a blast. Once Before. L Three or four years ago Cobb Yesterdays Results. EARNARDGRTS GIFT | 17oiched Mo then ooon e don | fommd bimeeit tate i sugust sbout Hewr ) P 2 Boston 5, And others of the Stellar Mob. 20 Doints BEIOW Joa Jackson, who waslll | Giucland 11, Philadeiphia 2. P()]‘[lfl,[]d flnd WO]‘GCSte]' Ba[[le IOI' - - . then batting over .400. Jackson| washington 3, Chicago 2. er’s Four Passes in & ROW | I gaw him as he bounded through finished the vear above .400, but the New York 4, Detroit 2. Sxt I 'H q Away Tuft's Hopes—Many | The drifts of fame that seck the few | Georgla Ghost beat him out. for all | & 1Xteen inni g esMissed. Who see World Series dreams come | that. ) =2 b ' P oy true. For about a month Tyrus the o :tdéf;frilm "e;{;;rf«:tir H:r - rible averaged something like mnq;f.rs “";“ If;‘- Pfi‘;_; Portland, Me., June 14—Portland 2L 2Y- |1 heard the cheering call once mote |a day until he was well in the jeng | Cleveland ... 31 s 620 | defeated Worcester, 3 to 2, in a 16- That I had heard gray years before, |again. 2 | New York ....... -;’(; ;; L’i ;nnmgh game _\'edst:rday, After Port- As Steve whaled in'the winning score.| o sition | Washington .. 542 | jand had scored two runs on errors bns. Tufts zot a 2 to 0 lead in % e s s e, e | B e O B I i ot ER i st inning, Marvard tying the |1 caw him in his glory when find in Speaker a hurdle that can nnn"t‘: Detroit 5 e 2b] 24 511 ! ninth on three hits in succession, one fnidway through; 'the game. | He held his own—I turned—and then | Le jumped. For the job of s};ntring: Chicago ... 02! 24 478 | 4 scratch, when Sweatt slipped in the he”visitors bunched three hits | I found he’d drifted back again. Speaker over 50 points is no feathery | St Louis .. -2l 27 -438 | soft ground going after a grounder. Mahan_for a run. in the elev- undertaking. ~ | Philadelphia 30 333 | A double by Brown and single by fnd everything seemed over ex- | The circle moves in endless flight— The soggy statistics show that so —_— Dowell scored the winning run. The Be shouting when the first two | First down—then up—and then|far Speaker is the leading hitter, the | Today score: d batters went out in their half Good Night— leading long distance slugger and the Sase s il r. hoe feleventh. | A gray ghost fading from the fight. |leading run getter of the game. So| Doston at St Louls. Tortland 0002000000000001—3 9 0 through work — Crimson, which had passed up Tris now holds three jobs that once| vashington at Chicago. Worcester— chances to win the game by a | There is one law for any game; belonged to Ty and it will be interest- | ~ew York at Detroit. 0000000020000000—2 12 2 argin, then had the victory pre- | For each, who knows his day of fame, | ing to see how fast the Tiger can| Cleveland-Philadelphia, not sched-| patteries—Dunning and Gaston; to it. Westcott, the Tuft’s cen- | The dusk shall come to quench the| move, once he starts forth to collect| Z1ed: Herring and Tyler. Her, lost his chance to end the flame. his own. S by misjudging Percy’s long fly, —— | —_— EASTERN LEAGUE. Nothing Tastes So Good as a jarvard runner rushing to third | 1t isn’t the manager; it is the ma- vz : T T S T Lite: Lawrence, June 14.—Five bunched l f h' R l L Whittaker, th]e_ best of Tufts | ferial that counts.” Contemporary. i ;:lfe‘r“:::gir:heth()flm:h(e;;w.da Yesterdays Results, T A e & e A glass or two ot this Rea ager; s, who had relieved left hand- | Then how do you account for Mo-| ° e o o e o e o lding error gave Lawrence five runs ara in the eighth inning, then | Graw with five pennants; then a tail | from an 18 hole club match, wear- = a t i v p. wierd' exhibition.' He lost Portland 3, Worcester 2 (16 in- the first inning of the game with | | ender when the material failed; and |ing a dejected look. nings,) Lynn yesterday. The visitors were s ot the home plate. completely, | then back up the next year battling | «pow were. you going?” a friend | Low . 1 defeated, 7 ta 1. The score: g Bothfeld, Coolidge, Nash and | tor the top again? & Sllencedn, vl i h B e T oadeiaatit : t ¢ asked. “Ratten,” said the duffer.| New London 2, New Haven 0. SRR in’ & row. hese tickets forced e “Tough luck,” said the friend, “I'm Bridgeport-Hartford, rain. TLawrence . . 50002000*—7 9 0 drvard men across the plate and | And there is Cannie Maclk, winner S Lynn . . 010000000—1 8 1 sorry you lost.” E up the game. of six pennants. Poor material now, “I didn’t lose,” said the duffer, “I Standing of the Teams. Batteries—Pennington and Mur- (] 1 pitched great ball and |and last. Quite so. But does any | wag 17 up” 3 " Won Lost P.C.|Phyi Tuero and Harris. > had a shutout over the |one imagine that Connie will be last S New London 23 9 718 R hr nine inning distance. In the | along around August, 19172 | Portiana e ) 1T In Pitching Duel. nning Knowles fell' down on a St There’s a guy who knows when the, Springfield ...... 20 12 1623 New London, June 14.—Fortune of 1, and Leland of Tufts got a Good material has helped make world will end; Lawrencce ... 19 14 . New London beat Bressler in a pitch- h Hit.” A sacrifice flys and many a manager. a But men such as : i Worcester 17 e ing duel today, shutting out New throw to center fleld iby Harte | McGraw and Mack either develop or | DUt T know an umpire with a friend. 7 S7Reer 17 17 ; Haven, 2 to 0. Both pitchers allowed two runs to the visitors, these | 80 out and get the material. They “Don’t forget,” writes the West- Lowell ... . 15 17 3 | but two hits but Fortune struck out s 9, g ' all they got until the eléventh in- | May sink for a spell, but they’re . L el R G T oent Tne Soore D K H w h l Fack aronnq the iy agaln : betere|| ermer, “that while the baseball cham- | Fartfor : on’t eep ouse ithout It! : 3 tonship is in the east, the boxing, New Haven ...... 10 LR 2 o r. h, e, |a0Y one knows exactly what: has|giIPRER 8 NG SR e stt; | Bridgeport ...... 11 2 New London ... 00002000%—2 2 ze--:.. 20000000001—3 12 1 | taken place. remain in the regular country.” Con- | —_— New Haven ... 000000000—0 2 3 s Order today — ef your dealer or us. rd . .. 00000110002—4 11 2 | a slder the memorandum duly entered. | Games Today. Batteriecs—Fortune and Russell; eries—O’Mara, Whittaker an The Shadow Above the Throne. i Springfield at Lawrencce (double- | Bressler and Devine, plif Mahan and Harte. For nine years, as recorded herein | | header.) AT, = = | before, Ty Cobb has ruled the game, | New Haven at Hartford. Both_ Stage Rallies. i | Standing of the Teams. tven innings by a score of 4 to e game was full of all kinds of | when you are all fagged out— tired. g8 Score Five in First. L as emperor of swat. HEADS HARVARD TEAM. ! pijggeport at New London. Lowell, June 14.—Nine full innings SMOKE Today there is a shadow across the | Cambridge, Mass. June 14—G. C.| Lowell at Lynn. deveibneciinve tunmltin B cnterds s throne—a, shadow cast:by the bulky | Caner of Philadelphia, was elected 1:uwel|-SI>X‘i"Kfi‘('I<l game, and as bas | formiof Tristam’ Speaker, the 1eading | oapta e INTERNATIONAL LEAGU ball fortunes decreed, three of the MOOR | Apache of the Cleveland - Indians. Polielitne P detnl Toem ) | tallies were recorded in the Lowell SN0 Cobb has } to face be- | esterday. He succeeds R. Norris Wil- | ‘esterdays Results. column. It was largely a pitchers’ had keen'rivalry to s fore, but if he is to lead his league | 112Ms,2d, who is expected to return to | P pattle, with “Iron Man" Powers and ON TAP AT LOUTS W. FODT, HOTE L. BELOIN, KEEVERS & CO.,, HER m‘gm 5c CIGAB i ten vears in a row he has the hardest | ©°3ch the Crimson team next 'year. Richmond 3, Baltimore 0. Matty Zieser the exponents, Zieser MANN SCHMARR, W. J. McCARTHY. S

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