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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, U E OPPORTUNITY TO GAIN ON RED SOX, WHO LOSE TO DETROIT—STARTLING TENNIS FEATURE OF "er@Es CHAMPIONSHIP EOURT—HAL CHASE SUES CINCik NNATI FOR BACK SALARY—RED CROSS WEEK USHERED IN AT READVILLE—OTHER SPORTS J A NUTSHELL| Sets New Record 'RECORD DUELIN Tl e L T L LEAGUE % tion, for while Murray was not Sy : Lotto Watts (Stout 3 R R meteor of 1917 he w 11" too exper- ] i o I e T esterday. $ E ! QSSI{; ienced, powerful and sressive for | W 0 Oy e . Touis 0-1 { Wi fileiilcy B o 0, 6—o0, | na oot Rl sie e s . wet grounds 3 : B training cam 1 Monte Volo (B1 burgh, wet “ 7 2 T - Murray showed very plainly that | fit of which th 1 t [} Benz 3 ) ¢ L : he was not within a mile of his real [ held. The weat v 1 e ety Donald) B 1 f (8 o head He showed unusual timidity o §1,000 ; ; ‘ hard and free- READVILLYE RESULTS brought off one of his old overhead } Favorites Cross Wire in Lead Kill Opeing of Meet. New York, Aug. 27.—With the red Alexander came through with el i A ongest match in the 3§ years' history | flying colors, but his doubles partner . S8 FRe FEER A of the tournament featuring the play | and former national champion, Beals 5 of the national championship tennis ' . Wright, had to sit around idle d Cross week on the Grand sinzles w rted vesterday on the Robert L. James was to have oppos cuit at the Readville track yesterd { turr courts of the West Side Tennis | Wright, bhut the stater failed to avorites won. and some excellent | Clun, Forest Hi The new en- make his appearance Mexanden e Showedytnatithentraci ey yiich durance record was sct hy Corporal | played impressive tennis in eliminau- | has not had a Grand Circuit meeting \ (White) vold A. Throckmorton of the Coast |ing George Wagner of Buffalo at 6—o, | for SIX v IR SRR D Artillery and Harold Wwlo the s R RE Lu Princeton, after t ing ) 1 e opening t of the 2:05 trot Y ey Brooklyn youth. Throckmorton won, King with precision. Mis angles, | in the opening I Stout (Stout L the run; ily. Cox put the Atlantic Cily horse ime . 3 md §1 eames to advance, with the the openings kept Wagner or : oL oLy 80 Sterday Sooms S ¢ s and got the Buffalo man very little [ over the second heat in 2:03%, the 3 3 B 3 : nourishment He allowed himself to | fastest mile of the afternoon The LEVINSKY BEATEN. hiladelphia S 3 ¥ 3 i i . be trickea out of pogition time and | summaries WL [f¥ork 0. g : 2 : bloy v of Boston, | again, and it was easy for Alexander »:05 trot; the Blue Hill; purse $ thicago 2 § ¥ PR ‘ Yor many vears S England 1o whip the ball down the unprotected | 100 = delegate on the exec Gohiitt scetor Lu Princeton (Cox) 1reer e the Clubs § of ithe Nationnl Assacintion Wiehen 2 — . | tma Jav (Ernest) > . Atm W. L. 5 5 { Presbrey and T. Suffern Tailer playe Another Japanese Wins Royal Mack (Murphy) 2 He was whipped e 70 48 8 X 80 games in thé national tournament E Kashlo of Japar ulz nacelli (Lee) most stopped by Clay Turner. Turr s oo by (0t : i g W Newiortin 1558 the e ioed ot | mum d at t nse of | Al Mack (Warman) sevinsky and battered him al 68 54 = ot s they had set a mark that would stand | F'red Anderson, the lanky I Time, 2:06%, 2 . ing 56 58 [ A new woman's record for swim- | the test of ages. However. Presl rom the Kings County club, a may console himself with the knowl- &9 It was their 1 meet edge that while Throckmorton ana D& this and eact earned Taylor exceeded the old mark by one ' (ecision his previous encounters Anderson hit hard enough and at | 63 ming across San ITrancisco Bay was made recently by Miss Katherire 51 66 . IFlaherty of San Francisco. She swam 49 408 | across five and one-half m in two | Bame they did not come within threc | - hours of ihe 1888 marathon in tho i times he was a tower of strength at —— hours, 26 minutes and seconds. but he played a rather head- = L matter of time ' Games Today game and was a vietim of the i Harry Mansfield of Boston, whose | at Washington. 10¢ ross-court driving of the ) is at New York. connection as referee with national | SrO3S-court driving of the Jap. J. W o iffonrnaments dates Baclito the tinieiof i o=tsonyalio Shade SELcRTouEn A SNt Bland at Philadelphia. Richand Scarskand hisizst titiey said (ieoi=u 15 conaueron beinstlicutiil T M. Kelleher of Seatte, at 0—6, 6 % several years ago that Presbrey anc I | 4 e sl Rl i D L i The third of the Ander e N LEGUE o ol ; 3 S 2 son clan, young Fr: kK, won from I1. R Sueni =0l anvillaupsionh <ol in} tnclin SRR S SNSRI G {Reditts Yostorday. AN {ermissions Throckmorton and Keresey at 6-—3, 6-—2, 2—6, Ralph Burdick, Hayes' teammatc Morontd 10-1. Binghamton 4-5 Taylor had it out for a little more than | . S50 . 0 P 0 A ETt et Buffalo 3, Baltimore 2 2 h was no tea tossing tussle either (il Tl e Boalcr wash fant Tt was a contest replete with scintil- | 0 : ARLES = d accurate nd co dent, but - Standing of the Clubs LeaVGS Fleld Behlflfl lating rallies and flashing attacks and | ‘L4 accurat nadenfosbptiing ot At ol et ! | clined to be carcless. His one weak- counter attacks, yet repleteiwith poor fiho e was' his' baekhand, off “which 53 | tennis, teo. Taylor's stand was a re- evormore; | Toronto ........ 92 o z e - Bowman scored quite consistently in Binghamton Saratoga, N. Y., Aug. 27.—Ques- | velation. It had been anticipated that | o™ 000 SO0 € 0o tC (0 € tionnaire, the brown colt owned by |he would give a g0od account of him- 2 | Baltimore 2 0 5 = N " . | Edward Arlington, ran like a cham- | gelf, but not even his own father, who Lone Canadian Wins, St. Louis 2, New York 0. | Rochester pion in the Troy Selling Stakes, the New ,York, Aug. 27.—The Yankees | Newark ARG o 0 meT S o e i were reduced to their skeleton line- | Buffalo el e el :':\r:‘x‘a'\\,'v}:“::v{fi‘l, 1‘5?2’3{“1?13:"‘11\:;..1]::;“(“ | 'T"'"lf'.“zfi.\ from the barrier in the seventh posi- | who is just 17. However, Taylor can | 0'Boyle of the Pelham Bay training B Gutles 4f Adet brse. Dven bl tion, ‘ran around a big fleld of juve- | thank Throckmorton's lack of practice | gtation, at 6—1, 6—3, 6—d4. Henry S : : niles and then won eased up by three (.for his ability to drive the Corporal |B. O'Boyle came through at the ex- ing John Hammel at first Huggins | Games Today 18 . 5 < . engths. Joseph E.Widener's Peter fin- | 5o fa o et 2 e ldn’t have enough infielders and out- | Newark at Rochester, o \'pqr\yul‘fny'} e L pense of E. I'. Thomas, another sea- fielders to piece out a team and had | Jersey City at Hamilton. s e Bad Tn Spots man, in a five-set match, but Alex Tler ylace Al Walters, the catc | Taltimore 2 Juffalo SRttt Ll b S R e oina | from Pelham Bay had to bow to Rus- to pla 1 Wa catcher, in Jaltimore at Buffal e T e e Throckmorton’s work in the service right fleld Jinghamton at Toronto Vi = SRl S ery little opportunity | el N. Dana, the Providence veteran TR T This aggregation did not have much declared he would give a good ac- Jeslven i vty ltle | e ‘,‘:\‘\,’:,\1 The aviation section of the draw Of course Old Man Time is going to count ten on you some day BU' suc in fath g the shoots of blg oAl sliccossrui s tiernoon T et one of the best ways to stand him off is to give him a good right hand e e Ll e NATIONAL LEAGUE ful Stakes on Saturday that very plainly all through the | had ¢ el L men punch by eating that war garden crop says the National War Garden Com- SRS S e e | LEAGUE. | ful Stak : e oL S nnl el o) 0| Craig Biddle won from J. D. Ewing Ahash bt blanked the Yanks by 2 to 0 and held | St Frank Herold, trainer for Mr. Ar- | matc ‘\Y‘ Ty now andthen he came f s 1ght sets, while Cadet S. How- mission of Washington. What you can’t eat can and thus have a healthy them to four hits | Giants Corral Two. lington, had the colt in top form. | forwa with a sensational rally, only [ o4 Voshell eliminated Royal Richey, | diet all the year round. Write for the Commission’s free canning book, Ray ting gave Davenport quite St. Louis, Aug. 2 After being.| Questionnaire’s recent trials were so | to sing back into a series of innocuous | ;" “¢ejjaw Brooklynite in regulation | and ask your county fair if it is awarding the National Capitol Prizy n tussle’ and 'pitched ! his best game | knocked!out of the pennant race, tie| 125 thatihe as mads ithe favorite, jInovements Siof ithe tiro (ype Iis 'time. Nat Niles had no trouble in Certificate ngen by the Commission for canning. ince the Yankees brought him back | Giants braced and close dtheir disas- | DUt there were so many other “tips” Judgment of distance was bad, but he | \vinning from H. Hane with the loss to the big city. He turned the Browns | trous third western trip by taking a |l the race that the good odds of 2 | made up for that with periodical ral- | o¢ only three games. Walter Merrill 1 o S o e | 5% i western tlp b aling 5115 LU Ginea on Wi ar post | Hew at the el that rensinded the oh | Fai walken whr Seom Cach Dansii- USE THE CLASSIFIED Ray fell o victim to the former |enders, The Glant pitchers suddeniy | HMe: ; lookers of the Throckmorton of last | son 3 fiy chasers—Ray Demmitt and | pecame unhittable and the Cardinals Different Eyes went to the front ! year, | *w»p Winchester feud between George Betwee them Demmitt and !qg New York won the first| Pace to the head of the stretch. At :sort of a gam He put up a remark- | with another success for King. wha is thinks that Harold, Jr. is the eight The lone entrant from Canada, A. S wonder, hoped for so brilliant an ex- | Cassils of Montreal, advanced into the hibition by the Brooklyn voungster, |third round by defeating James S — count of himself in the $30,000 Hope- | to tune up his strokes an T Db G v oo ‘;:m‘! e 16 0 and the second by 4 to | that point he quit and Peter took | ably pretty exhibition for three or four | the county champion. The Columbian hits Timothy whacked a |1 On this trip the Giants won only command. At the ftinal eighth pole ames and then slid back into the doubl nd two sing and Ray hit | four games and lost seven Peter looked like the winner, but by .| novice ¢ In spite of the on und yuble, a single and a sacrifice In the first game the Giants clubbed | that time Georgie Walls, who gradu- { off tendencic of the players, One of the best that coutl ally had worked Questionnaire into a | mateh w Leon Ames for a dozen hits. Jay s a highly interesting one to be said in favor ime was th® | Kirke contributed a double and two | contending position, gave his mount | watch and it held a big gallery all the It wa ., n an. hour and Sineles| However, Awnea was pretty | @ crack ofl the whip. Wi Arlington's | way. haif. Even this time wauld have been | wood in the pinches. In the meantime | €Olt sprang to the front and the race Taylor on several reduced had not Keating slammed | perritt blanked I old teammates | Was over. Georgic had a tard time Davenport on his left crazy bone with to keep from winning by too big a a fourth ! occaslons vas | within an ace or two of the match, but with five hits. A | each time he was outgeneraled by the 1l in the ecighth inning.| In the fourth inning Fletcher singled | marsin. more experienced youth on the other Dave made all kinds of grimaces while | ana scored on Zimmerman's double, The track was dull from the recent | giqe of the barrier. Time and again Jimmy Burke rubbed and caressed the and in the seventh Burns doubled and | rains and Questionnaire’s time of | thoy stood at the net, only a few feet | elbow, and finally agreed with Jimmy | scored on singles by Young and Kauff, | 1:08 was exceptionally good. apart, and slammed away for all *hey hat he wasn’t hurt enou o take In the second game Toney, who has| Questionnaire was entered 10 be | ware worth, This sort of a match he rest of the afternoon off developed into New York's most de- [ £0ld for $2,000, and when he galloped | 100 much for even the stamina . of score vouth and when the fifth set was near- ing its finish both were so tired that they could barely lift their racquec Throckmorton had just a mite more endurance, and he can thank his serv- ice training for that Kumagae Deffats Pate, The long match was a welcome fea- { pendable pitcher. defeated Packard, | home a victor Joe Vendig dashed 3 the left hander, who usually gives the ; from his position on the lawn and St. Loui 000000101—2 Giants & 1ot of trouble when the colt was offered for sale New Yorl 000000000—0 4 1 The Giants scored their first run in i bid $2,500. Mr. Arlington bid an the fourth inning. With two out Sick-; tsa $5 and led his colt back to the ine heat out a bunt and scored on | barn. i Rariden's double St. Louis tied the airy Wood, the chestnut filly own- ;| BAN JOHNSON WILLING. score for a few moments in the fifth | ed by Gifford A. Cochran, ran off with v with a hitless run. Sicking muffed | the Watervliet Handicap. With little | But Wants Frazee to Arrange For | Fisher's casy fly and Toney picked it | Willie Midgley in the saddle she dart- | (Ure of an otherwise lack sensation in- & augural, which saw the first round Batteries: Davenport and Severeid iting and Hannah Train Schedule, up and heaved wildly to fi Fisher | ed to the front as soon as the barrier ki ) going to third. He scored on McHen- | rose and was never headed. At the | COMpleted and most of the second Chicago, Aug. 27.—There will he no round finished too. Ichiya Kumagac change in the schedule for the world’s s unless Harry Frazee, president | L 4 i S it e o Boston oln whe ' oresit®nt ] the sixth inning. Zimmerman singled | A. K. Macomber's Star Master. lieblieea it a splendid exhipition B2 B APAUME AR T e e : with one out : veached third on a It was IFairy Wand’s third race in | #gainst Walter Pate, player with he mensentior thelwas oriaeuiatnsllild pitcht BSICRinE wilked) and Rayi-lilcss fthan ) ieek, ibut Swien ishel re=ifieonsideriblsiitous it experience, SoRSg : A e den came throuzh with another hit in | turned to the paddock, she was far panese v t . 6—4, 6—0 X to 'H'T:lr\h»f’.\:”‘fl‘“]‘ H-\vw Ban John- | 7o pinch, his single sending in Zimm. | from fatigued. In the first start last Pate tried every which way to offset BERTINCOURT O T e f the American league | poney alsa singled and drove in Sick- | week Frankie Robinson punished her | the accuracy, hard driving and ap- | "; .,':,fl'r,,“”: id 1 I ing. Tuero then replaced P: 1iso much with the whip that she re- = barently limitless stamina of the Jap. Johns A ¢ he chedule was < the Cardinal pitcher and ur fused to do her bhest and was compel L grected the Cuban with a single, send- | led to accept third honors. She came | €Very stage. He played far better and ry's sacrifice fly end of the one mile and a furlong The Giants won with three runs in! journey she was a length ahead of | WS the cynosure of all eves and he Kumagac was absolute master at drafted with the object of conforming : 2 E'\‘y]vhvvr‘n\r-Munl U's transportation | ine in Raride The scores back to the track t ©diisonndanstennispiian fonth efloctasion PIODIST S I - First Gam with the Junior Mic h 1 of his flvst try: for the national title | However, T wired Mr. Frazee that and no whip to hu hrn | anginine el e s lover Bite) Was i the commission might consider rea New York 000100100 race and finished up second. | Willing to concede that in spite of N ] 5 ¢ . - P 1 . p 3 icou” ranging it if he got the permission of | gt Louls 000000000- Fairy Wiaind . retived from the | Kumagae's defeat by Walter Hayes at [ A e A the War Department to run trains a Batterles: Perritt and ¢ . “ho sent to | Southampton the little brown man 5 h"..;;“" Sl A GL oo Ames and Gonzales > : iy I oh | was very much in the hunt for the 20eo 1 ncourt L.eums»' "Pfiy 8 1 was our idea to conserve tra Scecnd Game 5 - S | e mhip portation in every way Doskible s Nolt of teante Gollowers wan- decided to abolish the special t for the clubs this year and <0 posed special trains for the usu crowd of rooters We are even dis Yorl 000103000 & dered about the courts looking for | QCAL[ Loui 100015000 : : he match between William T. Tilden Camey Batterics de - | 2a and Paul Gibhons. They sought rekard and Gonz he is one of ti this | in vain, for Tilden won hy = default couraging Chicagoans from making i t I w the trip to Boston A RED CROSS JERSEY cight 1o ) « gh class | Cumming of Harvard saw a swift NEEpon Rl e el i e aiben dleen \ 1ills Handican | moving, hard hitting machine, Hayes ommission that players don 10 Vs o cticut 1 ssocl the imported t ¢ nal style, | won at 6—2, 62 2 and his Teh NS s 1ed second | game wa even as his score. At no per cent. of their share of the series ol . 3 n W he \ Caturalist | time did he extend himself, and Cum- > prompt action with members of the p < | g I . 1 wii rides himsell on being a fa . o ooty Thicago club, champions of t N K 3 J ! irly " - =] Domperre, 0 Flauco 1 drive = tional League, who n sted o ; \f Jerse 11 B B < ' ’ \ Gy . z Bar?ay‘ RN 5 ¢ the Relleview | behind the : cxpeetation Sergeant of . Betioy ; D - HAL CHASE SUES REDS Neriinfvo The first race, a claiming t | intercollegiate champion, who had on exhi- | one mile, was won by Mr. Arlinston’s | been conceded @ chance to travel far Clims Cincinnati Club Owes $1,690 For Back Salavy. oot A Cincinnati Aug. 27.—Hal E 1 old at public auc- | ers met with bed racing luck. While | Mahan : the latter m at 6 suspended an of sa s i e SR ko of work t that He appends a copy of his contr in the high cost of lix ¥ | wa which stipulates a salary of $7,800. |ing an tmported cow that is now | 1t was Trickson® sccond mount s Murray Wins Without Efropr payable $650 each two weeks during | and with ealf by Majesty's Oxford | his losed dairy | old Tay gelding Brother Jonathan. He | i the tournament. Gravem ran S won because severnl of the contend- | afoul of long arms of Lyl grandstand | rounding the first turn several of the i 10 see vhen the §10.000 7 horses collided and Trickson on 1 4 ind that he 1 | he al e e ol ved himself to bo tricked out of po . ROSIERES "%, return fo the saddle after a s The early gallery saw R. TLindlev | { the shaded area i reached the Hin- | of Crofsi the playing season I King 93,27 Lrious fall at the Jamaica meeting. Murray tune up his strokes against ' The British advanced vesterday over | denburg line at Bullecourt, southeast | the fur