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MAHA WINS FIRST AND DROPS SEGOND HONORS OF THE DAY SPORTS SECTION o - 203 1916 Brrv Earer 2044 bythe EARL m::l’ vin Childs up BRADEN DIRECT 204 Egan up .o, E Smith, 1 4 0 0 B il Keug, 2b 4 & 0 3§ ES gh 3 3 3 Tho! of Prince Gaskell Wins Hurling §hinen « O e ¢ Pittsburgh Takes First and s Rrueger, «© rebol o Duel From Williams on | ,‘n\(h.-‘r 3o 0] iy h Brooklyn the Second of S Naure, ‘s el e 2 Miller's Home Run. { Rurg, b SR 0ol Double- Houdcr KA | Gaskell, p 20108 g0 o] s | et e NORTH HAMMERED IN NO. 2| Totah 5 ";1:“_'.|‘| (IR ONE RUN IN SECOND GAME S . A : AB. R, 1. 0. A, K After marking up a 1 to 0 victory “::f.lf" Gk : 8 A 8 ittsburgh, Aug. 19 Brooklyn in a nifty hurling duel between Prince vlluunlvm. m i 0 1 9 o o was defeated by Puttsburgh, 2 to 1, Gaskell and Honolulu John Williams St ot T SR SR ) i i 1” Sulimal it -4 SNSRI L MeClelliomd, 3h 3 0 1 3 g o loday's double header, but the Pirates i the first game, the Rourkes aviated Heating, ~s 4 0 1 8 1 0 lost the second game to Brooklyn in the second contest and split the Juser. e SR TS SR Williams, p Gl (e S p L i) bargain matinee with the Josies by *Sommers R0 0 S 0 O ) In the first game Pittshugh | ATt (o R 2 63 0. Al et TG e T L A I g ke o sl T dmes' Omahn— wscher’s donble and Bawd's triple AT A QTINTHA Y ININCG AT TV s e Delii 0 1 00 000 0 s—t Brooklvn tied the seore in the fourth | OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUSI Hak “‘n‘u_ BllnaaRdilcdd 0% 012010 *—8on Myers' triple and Wheat's sac & game on us. ome scored ‘ vent was a corker. Gaskell and Will Home run: Miller. Sacrifice hits: Gaskell, |,y \‘|,|,1x. and 1,“1“, coup Sled: \\,,1, qulne Onarc s a C e ln reat ace ] Jam staged one swell pitchers’ battle MeCleland. Double playa: Kilduff to Miller: \ ‘ Rl scas enlivenen iy chcubl thoila to Jourdan. Buxes on balls: off L utshaw’s wild throw ‘ which \\.I~ e ned by enough thrills W illiws, 2. et o hasex: Omahw, 6 st Inthe second game the only run O H lf M I "' k O h S ‘ 1o provide excitement for the most Joxeph, 8. Struck out: By Guakell, hy e t ? ,‘.m‘“l B e e Willin s, Time: 1:30. Umplres: Colgate | SC0T€d Was by Drooklyn in the tourth Uer a l e raC a nla a pee way ’ gt i Ry nd iU inning on two bases on balls, Myers' Ray Miller won the game for| Second game: % Gaskell. " Ray poled a home run drive Bz hit and Cutshiaw's sacrifice fly. “The | Froe.for-All Pace Brings To- over the right field wall in the second | wrignt, of T RROOKLYN PITTSHURGH. gether Fastest of the Class “tanza and the prince made that lone MeCube, 3 AT ABILY A . . tally a sufficiency by refusing to per- Kirram. Tt 00 in America. mit any of the encmy to scramble St Shn e () 50 ate dh Lid 0 - 5 over the plate, > u 1 0| The free-for-all pace at the Great Pass Up Chances. v 3 0] Western Circuit races i Omalia this Tuwice the Rourkes bad additional Sommers. p i advifiecke il gt atIedotichanigis chances to score, but passed them | pogare v L 0] Besides bringmg wogether the both up. Onee they had three on with 0 [Rreatest galaxy of Gancs racimg one out, but Smith and Krug weren't e 9 0|stars ever asscinbled ona halimile equal to the occasion and once they Smith, 1f when winning run scored track in this country Qraval ada, the had a man on sccond and third with Moy Kith [Alamo Engine purse classic 1o be two out, but Smith flanked again, et Sindtent I con tendettilon S s AV gt Ton g ‘ The Drummers tried to start a DO1LNNO0000] way toward determmmg what horse | rally in the ninth, but the prince it ¥ Three-base hit: | horse is the unquestionable fiee for checke it. Hits by Kirkham and Mc- f A bl ey e all champion of the American turf Clelland and Kildufi's crror put three North, p Maowor Mecarey; | today ! [ & men on the runway with one down, Krause, p Cooper to Balrd, Ha Off Smith, Ot tiie thirteen famons liorses en but Fusner flied to Forsythe and qogare R Sl R e “'\"'JH‘;‘”“‘; tered in the free-torall, the pacer Kirkham tarried on the bag, fearing St. doseph— By Uaoper; Leapld Harrison and | With the fastest aceredited mark s ‘ to take a chance on Forsvthe's throw e I e D e R G s S R e e | Rraden Direct, that sensational hay which proved perfect. Then Sniper omihn— 4 Sses =l L N e L i e (a1 G Rt s o D SO BB Sommers rolled toKrug Runy Lo A e S Direct is the world's diampion Gaskell's shutout ma Home run: Fon SRER D e AR R v ed ool dipa g Bk il |t ning consccutive innings for t i e it 30 3 0 ot hanrt 3 1 3 o olthe 2:00 at the Detrow Grand et without a score. Thur I\m-«r Kruoger. 8. L OWknerss 2 10 4 0 meeting this year in the remarhable Clark shut them out at Sioux City, U S e FH 53 WA 1 bl e ) time of 2:02!, Friday Cecil Thompson blanked them pluses Krug to Miller: McClelland to MeCabe 3SR wltz2h 2 Lz 1 0) He was second in the free-for-all o dourdun. Hits: O 5 00 g 1oz here and yesterday Gaskell turned the | und one-thira Innings, off '..r.';.r\..:..l 1'“ Schmid 13k pacing class at Kalamazoo. Mich., trick. Thev also failed to score dur- RN, {un‘ l\m 1\ 8 in five innings, 42711 0K'ehner.p 2 0 0 3 olbeing beaten by the Grand Circuit ing the eighth or ninth at Sioux City by Sartn h?"{‘fltfl‘xm o o ' O star, Single G won the fast \\udnewl.n Crauie,d ""fifl‘n Off Rohrer, Totals o est heat in 2 s Fred Lpan of off Nor d Sommers. 1. wed. for Toliecilo in = ; Solthel [osieia e was | Lmpires: \Illhruml(uh.nlo 1 DI e oo 000 0 o o—of The champion 4-year-old pacing neGehl Al AN '.“"I't‘ |m, Lise hit: Wagner. tSolen bases: Jo | filly of 1915 was Sayde Densmore, y ) inston, Sacritice hits: Myers, Olson ) » ( i ok " o them to start the second game yester- | loe fly: Cu Double play: Cuts 5 ||’7‘ uH~'|~Hm, vi' i DRI, day, they landed. And what they »\m wrty. | Hs: o Kantlenner, [ <0254, who s alsoentered i the didn't o N Bl e ea v Struck out: By ) urd, 6; by Kant- | free-for-all classic to be staged the ing. Eventually they drove him to| st Tilsh Cinpires: O'Day and” Orth | closing day of the Omaha Driving ng. I hey | club’s meeting cover. Gardner Can't Be in' Errors Enable th S | Wright started the festivities by ; Touched in Fyrors hinable the ”'\"“|I‘ {l‘(”““”“ s aecoud e smacking a single to left and McCabe Pinches by the Men 5 )““‘I) .' n: e Il” purse race at put on 1o center. An error on Jours| N Cubs to Win Game!the Derroit Grand Circuit meeting dan’s sacrifice filled the sacks and Kid | o opeta this ’\"”\' 5 m|u ”M”\' ”mvl‘\ o Kirkham swept all before him with a SCOR e Chitano A 19 New Yorkier :[""',"":I\, ‘]'T‘ H[‘””\ [ "'( y\“'” double to center. | E CARO,. LIUE: ok R R GREY e 0 i " ENDS TWO0-NOUGHT rors allowed the Cubs to make it ha hov and son of Al Thomas, the hat started it, Tt gave the Josies h cs B + nree out ol our today m cvelen - we nown enson lorseman, 18 heart and they kept up the attack ! : : s L el (L el W 1 ! i through the rest of the game. North Lincoln, Neb, Aug. 19—Gardner nings, 3 to 2 game, and ofiset some | driving faded from view in the fifth. “le]lln'( be touched in the pinches l‘““'-“!'\\[ I‘”‘\]””}l by ll(\“‘ aRagren Ben Earl, owned by Edward De- NEW YORK HICAGO. | terson, president of the Omaha Driv- A rookie named Rohrer was on the |and Lincoln took sccond game of | ,\nnu\J ABILOATR SAYDE 'DENSMORE - 2:02 - Thomas up. ne " 0 ing club, has heen doing some phe- mound for the Drummers. How Mr. | thes eries from 'Inpvlun by a shumm Do 1 00 W:)H'H.ll racing this \‘i-.n'I on ! llln' Rohrer got away is a mystery. He is Ak > 0 0w 2 b core, winning, 2 to 0. Hall's walks | ken et big time one of these kids who curves every- | y 2 a "\“l'll“ll~ | T hie raveling hic selding, by thing and tries to throw them by, Tie | Started the Lincoln scores. Score: | 5 0 0l ,“;,—, |I.n|< L if\” “.kmk' )"! Rourkes made fifteen hits, one miore | TOPEKA i 1 i“' HJ‘:’ Ivllllx a I"”l‘ it ”I'“ rf;qm than the opposition, but for some rea- | p. SO RA L i s 061 f ,'I{'" \f") L ‘[ “1‘" ! o K (3 4 0 0 [ & ) s ve B son or other, they couldn’t score runs. | Ag 3 D e et N e i ut ¢ is ¢ starts thus Cy Hits H « s T UG o 6432 16 4 *Moll'it o 0 v o far this year Ben [Zarl has won four y Hits Homer. I&thropaian & v 0 ot a0 i o s races. He won the Edward Stake In the fourth inning Cy Forsythe | Iefate, = TR0 B 0N ) A o winning i at Cleveland and the 2:12 pacing skied one over the right field fence i‘,’v‘:‘\mr AR SRS d for Packard classes at I'coria, Galesburg and for a home run and in the seventh hits | sonror, T e Wl | Burlington, finishing four in the by Krausc and Thompson followed by | Hall, 1 G e e e ) hit K joard of Commerce cvent at Detroit. Miller's double scored two more. That o sl SuBlat s Rbs | Ben Earl is entered in the 2:12 pac- wasialltuntiltthe ninth. e b i [0 8 efe s Sgees SN0 rd, 1. Hits and 1ing class as well as the frec-for-all hen the Rourkes tried to rally. HRO WA G ) | here. But it's a tough job to rally six runs.:"“”"}’"“ . 03 1 0] cght innin ts. o runs in [ Another sensational performer in together in one spasm. The Rourkes tl.',""",,":l_m‘,; o '\ 4 IS8 L e Sl faut “‘l R the turf world that should prove one fell short two markers, Lober, b, 0 1 0 o Migler and Eason, il “"|of the strongest factors in the free- rl Smith started the doings by | Morse, b g0 e e for-all pace is Lillian T. 2:021;, by ~ smacking a double down the first base | !funter. 1b 0 5 R0 Al d B k Roy Patchen. This lowa pacer is one < Moo 2h, 0 h E i ‘3 1}1\1\.\ Zarl’s only hit of the day. Marty | Ronrer, -« T RS €Xalder breaks of Ben Earl's old rivals and has rug poled one through = second. | Gardner, ), AT (R S P't 1' R ,d‘ariucvcd much fame on the Grand Hm'npaon combed one into right, | . - — - 1 O HHg 6001 rand Great Western circuits, scoring Smith and sending Marty 1o qora® i O Then there will be Hal McKin third from which sack he scored on | Lincoin 10 *—2 Cincinnati, O., Aug. 19 ccording "% by Hal B., Tom Dennison’s fa- i /i : Miller's sacrifice fly. Krueger's dou-| Thres-bise hits. Agler s hits: 1 records in the hands of the National | Mous pacing stallion. whose mark of %@«W« o ble sent Thompson to third and | Doubl plays: car o Latthnges by, oo Lo ol V 2:06%y makes him a dangerous horse A - Rolirer sentiont the S, 045, for holo, | Loirer to: Lattimors; Lautinors to Hunter | Base [Ball commission, the shutout | S5l St Mr. S or help. | stolen bases Morse, Lattimor game pitched by Alexander of the St Hi > 043t by Dacto) B ommers came to the rescue and | hits: Lober, Agier. Struck out vdner, Philadelpl N 1s here vesterda Columbia Fire, 2:0434, by Pactolus, . adelphia Nationals here yesterday : ) Forsythe hit a safety over second on | % b¥ hall 4. Dases cn b | R e 3 7 lowned by E. G. Bohannon of Lin- S, 5 ner, 3;.oft Hall, 4. Left on b neoln, | ©5tablishes a new record for no-run : o ommers. The hit scored Thompson | 5 Tpareftf Hall, & Left o Car: ! games pitched | Dicchertanting (ogiisslia M cRinneyisiiurcal st and sent Krueger to third. Ernie | ney and Mullen. i % 2 major |‘:‘,,‘“’ son. Up to ],}; val; both pacers are stars of the then scored on a wild pitch. But the e vear u‘ruv‘:)}:: g 1o these records, | Prightest hue on the middlc west turf rally ended @ moment later when Den ’ Fichtl N UE o @lics *The other horses nominated for Al Mathewson, pitching for New York ‘ - E\“‘r‘k""‘\hznl"l"”( 1’“1)‘“!d up and Joe 5 d the honor, with twelve shutout g0 :n_“ S e G Surg ed on a had one I Rally Fai sy Nl el ares S ) L&, games during a scason. Alexander |7 Coee Ge ).08! - i The Rourkes and Drummers will nning na y A8 festerday pirched his thirteenth shut. |, Goric8e Gents 208k, by Ken- : g continue hostilities this afternoon out game of this season UeR 3 . Shipmaster, 2 Seneca Stu- with another double-header. The first To End in a Win e P mihtgaiis atimere B2 G Rbylidr game will start at 2 o'clock. welth Knight Sir Lain, 2:09%. by Earlain. IIIS HOME RUN WINS COM- x];u.,.vn g 2:04!4, by Major Gantz. The Ghost, 2:08%5, by Manager Sioux City, ]uA Aug. Boosters Get Early Lead and Keep on Slugging Wiches 9to8. Score: 19—Denver rallied in the eighth and scored six | runs, tied it up with one in the ninth, and lost to the Indians in the eleventh, | _____ H. 0. A E . LA Miller, 1f A . Des Moines, Aug. 19.—Fox's error Kelicher, ss T A in the sixth inning gave Des Moines e ¥ 0 0 ! cher, 1 i ] n-nr_vmvgh runs in today's game with | pyer 1’ 5 ([ Wichita, hut the locals made \iUnr\ Shivlds, 15 IRUSE doubly sure in the cighth hy scoring | Lot & R four carned runs. The final count was 4ard, p 0 mh A 8 to 2, Score: (S S R ) WICHTITA *Stevens 1 N 1 S BRI Ot A Irion, p. 000 RS (O A R T i e Andrews, p G 4 ) Fox SO = = = LAt hi sx-b. (G S T Totals R 23 Britton, o1 R i s ITY oy DL 0 0 ABI RO AT Gr AL Lo Y R N S ) Grittiny B g s (O O T Ry B AT e T I8 R tirdffin 3 [ 0 [ 3 0 4 1 & 1 9 it 1 T e ol aLe Sl 0 0 A PR 0 Totals Shurean 7 M 12 e e DES MOINES he G Bhi A AR, R. H. 0. A, E. T 0 | ) " LR G L O SRS TR0 o | Huntes, o Sl e SRR A I 1 iriford, es TRt e s i R T Melaan, 2b.. 0 s ol ol for Ford in clgnth | for h b At ted for Irion fn ninth Rrven, I 2 0 ol ) out when winning run was scored t B0 4] siony Cits 2100000 10 o Ll 1 1 2 [d Sioux City s 8 il d for Griffin In ninth | e | i 0l A 0 0 i g e | el * hlts: Griffith, Spahr. Sacrifice | Gee (Grover, 11 Spahr. Stolen bases: Litschl, Hahn, | ofp poed. & hi RLellion o Wichita, 7; Des|oft frion, no hits. no runs in ons nmm. 6. Struck o Griffin by houble: plays A to Shields to Kelleh 5. Bares on balls: Off r( oft leammnoly EtadCo to/ Bletzt Atrick oht 1. Hit by pltched hall: By : 7 2, by Clark, 2; by Hahn, Jones: by Baker, Rapps. Balk T Off 6 “Time: 2:02. Umpir off And Toomis \:uln MR Lommis, Looinis made r. "four ani of e ford Friday afternoon casily o Lightning Destroys Barn. Stamford 0 2| Crawford, Neb., Aug. 19 (Special Loomis 210 3| Telegram.)--Last night lightning s -j“;j“f*“j‘;‘ vt | struck a barn belonging to Jerry \schwager residing < nftevy nnles southeast of Crawford, d h.mv several hundred | small grain and a largc | agricultural implements ance. ke 1A1)— 8 to h. Th pitching of F| orles IHaqu\ut de b and Elloss ridge, Imgrangand and Krainger. estroying thic bushels of quantity of No insur BAT FOR ROURKES. | D th n W [ te | at ne pr Mlier - Frst fla.se | Italian, average of L.ewis RESTA WINS AUTO' DERBY AT GHICAGO Who Won Omaha Classic, Leads Ficeld in Grand Prix Field. AVE LEWIS RUNS SECOND Chicago, 1 .‘\txp 10. Dario Resta, driving his Pengeot, won the | Grand I'rix autoniobi this after taking of fifty miles 1 seconds. Resta’s average speed was 100 miles an hou Dave Lewis was second in 29 min utes, 30.77 seconds orge Buzane was third, Frank 6 fourth, and Wilbur D'Alenc fifth I'he race was run twenty mile heats, with a final Winners of first p! i cach 1 took part in the nhna for a of §10.000, so distributed that driver in the finals received a sl Resta's share was $5,000. Resta won the hirst of twenty- nile heats i 11 minutes, 4261 sec Ul\rl\ an average of 102 |.‘m s an hour Frank Galvin won t sceond heat minutes, 37.72 seconds, ar 103 miles an hour. Dave won tl third heat at an crage of ninety-nine miles an hour, 1d George Buzane won the fourth it at 96.5 miles an hour. Wilbur \lene was the only driver leit for e last twenty-mile heat, so Wilbur one lap was declared the e ade and inner divers but last cting rdo actice spin In the nrst heat Ralph De Palma Nine red, the were ginally en- Louis Chevrolet withdrew moment because a con- was broken during a or Gireat Western Race Program On Omaha Track The following five days’ meeting TUESDAY. 2:14 trotting closs, Grain Exchange purse of X$1,000; thirty -two entries. 2:12 pucing clasw, Lusus purse of $1,000; twenty-alx entries 4 year-old trotting class, 300 added; ten entrien. WEDNESDAY. 00 puelng class, Onialin Printing com- v purse of S500; ten entrie ) trotting eluss, Commercial club purse the program for the Bingen Silk of 3005 nine entries 218 pacing cliss, Hal McKinney purse of S2,000; twenty-five entries THURSDAY. 11 trotting class, Elks’ club sixn entries. 5 pacing class, Stoek Yards elghteen entriex. trotting clans, Ak-Sar-len purse of thirty-flve entries. FRIDAY, purse of purse of 2,000; Three-ye pany purse of $500 fifteen entries | purse of ¥300, clise yet to be named, s | enrded for this day 2:24 trotting claxs, South Omaha Horse | nnd Mule company purse of $1,000; twenty- £500; thirteen entries Three-yenr-old pace, of 8500 Burgess-Nash purse was forced to fall out because of a hroken and Tommy Milton broke up after the fourth heat i Eitls Defeats Stamford Neb. Aug 1 Spretal r:-lrxrum! Acfeated Stamford in ari re taday RHE A1 00000001 & 6 200000000-2 4 3 rles. Hintman, Morton, Justus and Kuxtis has won five out of six games played this werk Crawford Wins From Mitchell. Crawtord, Neb, Aug. 19.-—(Speclal Tele- gram.)—Mitchell lost to Crawford this aft ernoon, ® to b. Batteries: Mitchell, Wiison and Weymouth; Crawford, Moody and Fita- gerald. -old trotting class, Byrne-Ham- | | eight entriew, SATURDAY, Free-for-nll pacing class, Alamo Engine | purse of KLU0, thirteen entries 2:19 trofting cluss, Rotary club purse of (Manager is the horse killed by a bolt 'at the end of the race. f lig last weck tning mjured.) ~ REYNOLDS SETS UP Hal McKinney w at Mount Pleasant, a s slight- NEW CLUB RECORD Shoots Eighteen-Hole Course in 8 eventy-Two. MATCH PLAY AGAINSI‘ BOGY Sam W pron, hroke Omaha Fiel noon, shoot ma 72 Mike Shearman, | An eighteen against boge | club yesterda | for the i | the largest out to are as 1 re Ball out of his genial ar 1s handling club. the to Success, Clark, the course record for dciub yesterday ing the eighteen Sioux City pro K me t! ter, ot the v was staged at the 1 with sixteen to qua went's trophy of the fields scason ntarg s Carter S the Field city and Sta 1d expert you the golf affairs of One Those who qualif: ' Reynolds, state golf cham- the | after- f\-s-! d club course | T third hole | E so the Rey- for the Brandels stores | nolds nark stands as a new record ole match play event “ield el of Persistent Advertising Is the Road CLASSIG MEETING OPENS TUESDAY Harness Horse Fans on Edge for Races on Great Western Circuit. FAMOUS TURF STARS HERE BY RUSSELL PHELPS. “lheyine aff!™ When the thousar the grand stande, b s atad bicachers voice this exclamation and send 1t reverberating across the track, Tuesday, horse rac me e Omaha on the Great Western Cireat - will - have been formally opened Looked forward to for months hy Onaha and Nebraska horsemen, well as lovers of the harness racing game thronghout the nnddle west, the apening of the Omalia Driving club’s mutfl R on the histo turf loop, sec ond only e imporance i North America to the Grand Circuit, has at tached 1o 1t Horse Racing Center. «a particular stenificance. Tt demonstiates vividly irrey ocably that the matropohs of Ne Lrasha bas come e her own as THE Live wire hotse racmg city of the mid e w it also conclusively shows that there are laree cabber sportsmen here who lave the mitative I con fidence enougli i Omaha as the wdeal point for the staging ot high-class | S raciiR meetings to step out ! back tiie game mn true metropoli e Marking, as it does, the mital Great W v Crirenrt weeting m the state history, claborate aud careful prepa ragions have been made to insure a clean cut speed program of unusual merit -4 program, in fact, the equal of which has vet to be seen on a half mile track anywhere Pick of Country's Stables. i Included in the entry list of the quarter of a thousand horses speerd merchants whose track earnig pow worth represent the are the names and most fa breeding of a Croesus, of the fastest turf sars in the United States inada. Horses that are « pick of the country’s stahle been nominated in the fifteen the stakes and purses which aggregate $12300 and include {two $2.000 prizes, the largest cver I 'lumg up on a Cornhusker track. | The five days’ meeting will be held jat the Iast Omaha Speedway trac! acknowledged by the leading lights "of horsedom 1o be the fastest and best conditioned hali-mile oval be the coasts. This track, ex- v well cared for by experts from carly last spring till the present is at its best now. Track in Ideal Condition. Truly, the fates have been kind tu Omaha in the matter of a track for |its Great Western Circuit premie: | The oval is absolutely free from bad | spots of any kind, 15 as smooth as the ||'nverhva\ billiard table and has | just that proper amount of “step” [ s essential to the track of record | breaking propensities. It ig the sort lof a track that makes the veteran | reinman’s eyes light up with pleas ure, and the “railbirds” to whisper to | their clocks a little softer as the step pers near the wire on their “down th home. 4 | “The greatest year in the history of | the sport,” is the horse world’s unani | mous verdict of the racing season I thus far. On the Grand and Grea: Western Circuits records came clat | t¢ring down at the different meetings Expect Records to Go. Last weck at Davenport, Ia, for instance, Great Western Circuit fol- lowers saw some of the speediest and most spectacular harness racing that has ever heen staged on a half-mile | course. With @ faster track, a great many more entries, and Iargrr purses, | the lowa meeting will be ec hps‘d b | far. or the conservative “handler” | this column will miss a guess by a long, long way. The meeting, of course, will be con- ducted under the rules of the Ameri- can Trotting association. The three- | heat system, every heat a race, will | be followed. In the $2,000 purses, $600 will be lnm;z up for each heat, with $200 to tlie horse standing best in the sum- mary, under the old placing system, i In the $1,000 races, $300 for each heat, and $100 to the horse standing best in the sum- (Continued on Page Four—Column Four.) St. Louis Overcomes The Lead and Wins St. Louis, Aug. 19.—St. Louis over- | came a 3 to 0 lead in the fiith inning ers ar 1 ( the | events, of tweer coption |t Omaha Field Club's today. drove Tyler irom the box after mixing bases on balls with four timely hits for five runs and won from Boston, 7 to 4. Snodgrass and Evers weree put off the field in the ninth for disputing Umpire Browns' decision at second when Snodgrass interferred with a thrown ball. Score: BUSTON ST. LOUIS. ABHOAE ABHOAE Mrnvemd 23 2 OLongrt 4 10 £5 1 4 0 0Corhanss 2 20 §L32 der.1b 1 20 4001 01 518 30 b4 20 00 4173 T NS 20 1N § 0 18181 180 | e Y 90 Hughssp 0 0 0 6 0 *Balley 11 0 — Barnewp 1 0 0 3 1 d for B arn 14 for Hughes in sixt h 0 0 11 0 0 0—4 00 0 5 0 0 3 o7 Boscher, Hornsby. Stolen ». Snodgress. Double han to Miller. Rases . off Barnes, 2; off Off and carned runs: four and two-thirds ! hit, no runs in one- off Barnes. 3 hits, 2 runs in | thr off Meadows. § hits. 1 run in tve inning f Ames. 7 hits, 1 run tn four | tnnings by pitched ball: By Tyler, Corhan. b tile. Struck out: K by Meadows, 1; - Quiginy and Byron. Johnston Beaten by Japanese Champion [, Aug. 19—William M. Johnston, the nati®nal titleholder, was defeated by 1. Kumagae, the gf:p- anese champion, today in the 1 match of the singles’ tournament for the Casino cup. The score of Kum- agae's victory was &=l 9, -7, 2-6, Newport, R