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NO Ad di ONE CENT. ~ Sort ee a NEW. YORK, SATURDAY, JUNE 13, Piree—Rigler and Hert. Minute and a Half of Play— |” wis Total Score End of Fifth Period—Englishmen 5%, Amerle |3 AMERICANS— [e) pe [o) 1 rumored, around the stands, were delaying as much as possible, desiring] 0O- O 3° O O Umpiree—Brennan and But it wasn’t very hot, although the clouds had gone and the sun was And now at last the American ont © | Pick Mage at telde iota i aa BRITISH TAKE LEAD | «== ——— INTHE FIRST PERIOD |c2 ooh? 1 = Ot THE POLO GAME we BR-COKLYNS LOSE ee peel 000000 0 0 0- ST. LOUIS \Wisitors Capture Two Goals in First|° ,..°,._} 6005 0 0— Batteries—Aitchison, Schmite and McCarty; Griner and Snyder. Um- Byron, Americans Score in Second. AMERICAN 1 LEAGUE POLO SCORE oe “" HIGHLANDERS cman tr ° st. 7 LOUIS 0 ‘ 1 —% 1 . 0 aes mice repairs j moeuee Mitchell and Geary, Umpiree— . ENGLISHMEN— . ——— oe 2 —% M4 2 1 aaa! FEDERAL UL! LEAGUE As the Pretoria’s bow loomed tles, indicating that his vessel he Lee “pry team was rae Eoapiieet pomitl Fo ae sat oe See in the shcond perie vat KANSAS omrr— as serene ' BY-ROBERT EDGREN. ~~~ cetahain F MEADOWBROOK POLO FIELD, June 13.—At 4 o'clock, the 0-0 BROORLYNS Lose $d fixed for the first of the championship polo games between the crack teams of America and Great Britain, the English players, it was KANSAS CIT Y to: wait until the cool of the eventhg, being unaccustomed to hot weather. Battériee—Houck, Lreagsgesl rand Me Owens; Cullop and Easterly. ig en rece mira etn oe EVENING WORLD RACE CHART still invisible. The American ponies, with thirty or forty grooms, were BELMONT PARK, SATURDAY, JUNE 13, 1914, standing waiting near the stables, crekittognth Day of Westchester Jockey Club Meeting. CHICAGO CUBS --we-co--o* Cew-ce-seean @Se-cowne--o? wen-cee--- ° pscceeon eae loo-ncocoo--co=3 leo-cuwences-5 sleo--noeco--—> el conoo---co-m 0 8 7 Robérteon batted for Merkle in 7th. on--ccoccoo” eS Se ecco--c oem oF ecocoemen-evoes encoccece--coP? eco-cce-c-c0o00o” 4 wins batted for Zabel in sth, n Raile—Oft Dei Phares % oy aaa 1 Asters is the 1) was driven out of bounds more to aston Pe ~ yhte Kenyorthy to avail, wi f? (Special to The Bening World,) Doy! FOOLD, ah Hy hy | Pitoher--By ha tree (fipeaia! te Tee Evening World,) POLO GROUNDS, NEW YORK, Notwithstanding the oeun- ter attractions, the ba the baseball bugs (Continped on Srerina Peas) POAMES SEE SPORT ina PAGE. paca tg span ay @arted on the customary parndo fie ge @reund the field. Boys carried extra BROOKFEDS x a mallets and distributed them at ‘nter- I, vale along the side Hues. Larry Water- bury galloped down the field. The Ens- Met ee paraded, all—both Amer- Pury OME team and Eaglish—were numbered. Ss. “At 490 La Montagne. Larry Water- R. H.PO. A, B. bury and Milburn warmed up. Capt.| Anderson, cf...... 1140 0 Cheap, not bandaged, after being | Owens, c. wet 2 04 0 hard hit by « ball a fow days ago, | Myers, 1b tt 0 3 00 and- looking fit, drove » ball down the 0 0 0 0 Oo of the field in a few strokes, 101 0 0 Tomkineon made a long goal 01300 Bh cove end the crowd applauded. All 01000 ra were out now. At the end 611s 6 =e : the field a gong clanged, It was y i re time to play. The Americans re { , : 3 HS easter Se 0% 3 12.65. | Shar pond, Won ride tdoked larger then their rivals, They ee On oe ere jn white, The English in dark o 24°10 ve apeearerenery ass” y bind blouses and white helmets with 0 0 0 0 0 G@ark bive bands. Lord Wimborne 00 0 60 0 And. John Traill,*English substitutes, on ‘ A 6000 a . took eeata in the clubhouse stand, 000 a Greased for the game, evidently not 1@ 000 si fe sil h ag Mclgge banal 19.000" adied; ir furouga, tala expecting tage called upon. 00000 prea PR ey ‘rime Aig | dig: place same, Winer, bri-f. by Disguise— THE ENGLISHMEN BEGIN TO 0 0 0 0 ok Tartare, ma mae i aca PLAYATONCER | 2 —~—— — — : i 1) Rie Sabon tine up as follows: Totals 709% 8 1 f ay : AMERICA. ~ Bradley batted for Houck tn th, H i le; freno La Montagne. Evans batted for Anderson in th, 6 4 Me 3 Waterbury. lolt ran for Evané in 7th, Derond: .. |! » x Miibura. Cooper ran for Land in 1th, Soe eee ‘aig, Onl wo Wasilla Wiahle ein Penmaes acto — KANSAS CITY. i ; st werent reat ia ead at furlene pole, “pesuann. R. H.PO. A. EL Sher boing. cutrus Ti_early stages. ~ ‘Torkinson. Chadburne,ttae...c0 roy Ay 5] Tapge vivian Mice terreria lian Sma cada fs; Satator Barrett Gilmore 228 1 8) yl ye Hn 8 Se x a tring Waar, et Saleen ckh—Capt. Lockett, Kenworthy, 2b..... 2. 2 3 § 0| index. Atartors, feree—Louls E. Stoddard, Stovall, 1b.......02 2 13 0 0/1? Bitewe ires—Améerica, Joshua Crane; | perring 3b.. o1o041 o| . ed Britain, K. B. Maraham. Bs = and Br osha Frank For- | Kruger, cf o 21 0 ¥| oa i y- Routhor: Great Britain, Goodwin, 220241 ‘At 4.40 Baar estes god ihe euler: 4 ‘ 1 0 began. Before thirty seconds Ps P : 3.0 sed Capt. Cheape drove the | Harris, p 00010 PAM out and, following with a clear | Packard -0 0 0 0 0 field, scored the first goal for Eng- | Coles.... 00000 fang, Play started again immedi- Derringer 0000 jon and Cheape | 000 re meme |, etmeatne ball down to. within a ToWla...-..-, 0 6 a 4 ee tes Theape sent It between the posts| > see Ta Pe aes eee, : BOY RUN DOWN BY AUTO, | metiatety, stopped again. Timo of second roal, one min= | of Cution, a1 off Harria #1 off Lestitty, Wp the Hemet oy ute twenty seconds. Again the Eng- ‘ Struck out-—By Houck, 4; by Cul- | Little wove of His Recovery, Dov- sree that | Op, 1; o Math team worked AemD ne 10 me Brookfeds, 6; Kansas City, 6, Home tor: Rane oo encountering any bane nite krurg 4, Bovell, Two- While crossing Central Park Weat at hemp, papel PR rr, more. ‘acri ie ArGheape tried for another goal and| hite—Murphy. Stolen on aeieey, sete Hr ngaghh na SAILING TO-DAY, missed by barely four foot. | First | worthy, ng Wesiterae gible play West Fortieth street, was struck by an LEEenenl Stovall, Gil =o ches oye men q Bessole: 94 pene . —_ A Ae Marz tae! Niegera, HOVEP.ucasssarcaes onl “10 PAGES PRICE ‘ONE CENT. -INEW YORK c RAMMED BY PRETORIA . IN DENSE FOG OFF NANTUCKET 655 on the New York Run in Alarm to “ Decks—Hole 32 Feet by 12 Torn in the Liner—Pretoria Stands by After Collision and Then Resumes Voyage. BY GEORGE CARTERET Special Staff Correspondent of The Evening World on Board the New York. Wireless Despatch via Siasconset. $ Copyright, 1914, dy the Presse Publishing Company (The New York World), At 3.26 o’clock this morning, in a dense fog, 400 miles east of Ambrose iChannel Light, the American liner New York was struck by the Hamburg- A hole 32 feet long and 12 feet deep was smashed in the New York's port eide about 5@ feet aft of the bow. No damage was done below the water. line. : ‘The Néw York had heard the signals of the Pretoria and Capt. Roberts, who was 6@ the bridge, ordered the engines stopped. ieut of). the fog Capt. Roberts: ‘sounded “Tn no way. Hie then rang “Full speed astern.” The engineer started the dhgines with ajerk, and: the New York fairly leaped, backward. ’ As the Pretoria appeared down directly on the New York Capt. Roberts shouted through a megaphone: to. the commander of the Pretoria, asking him: to go to'port. Apparently the order was misunderstood. At any rate, the German vessel altered her course only slightly, if at all. -QUNTSEFNED OES ETE S| EASY W FAL INTHIRD NA, WITH CARDINALS The New York was under way aft when the Pretoria struck her. The vessels were in the position of the letter V at the moment of the impact. Although the New York was moving away from the Pretoria, the bow of the latter vessel dug in for fifteen feet, smashing the heavy plates above the water line. The New York wrenched herself free, but the Pretoria wag still coming on and her bow, towering high above the New York’s promenade deok, scraped along the side of the ship for 100 feet. As the Pretoria slid along she dropped her starboard anchor and a part of a hawse pipe, which had been loosened by the collision, on the New York's deck. The New York keeled over to starboard. Passengers whe had been aroused by the shock of the collision and the sudden heeling of the vessel rushed on deck in all stages of undress. Women were pale and nervous, but there was no panic of any moment. The officers and stewards ran from end to end of the vessel advising all that there was no danger. In the mean time the boat drill alarm had been sounded, and everything was in. readiness for departure from the vessel should it prove that ane was badly damaged. The preter bs backed away after the collision and stood by for half an hour. She was invisible, but occasionally sounded a signal from her whistle, At 4 o’clock Capt. Roberts notified | Capt. Dugge of the Pretoria that he was not in need of assist- anoe, and the Hamburg-American liner drew away presumably to resume her voyage to Hamburg. We have heard nothing from her since. All bulkheads In the New York had been closed since 12.50 o’clook this morning, when the fog first settled down about the vessel, Capt. Roberts went below and made a personal ex- amination of the hole in the hull. He found that no water had entered, There are 266 cabin passengers, including 25 children, oa 4 iby the New York, and the crew numbers 390, making a total of rck:!on board. All the passengers were asleep at the time of the hits collision, The assurance of Capt. Roberts after his personal. x; onere, | amination that the vessel was not leaking and was In condition to continue on her way to New York relleved an Intense nervous ,| strain, Most of the passongers had put on life belts. The offi- maree | June 18-—-With ideal weather for tho final and last game of their pres- (Continued on Sporting Page.) OAEa OF OTHE! cers and crew showed admirablo discipline and self-control,’ . In the reaction that followed the conviciion tnat a great danger had been oscaped, men laughsd hysiovically and men patted each other on the baok.and shcok hands, The whistles of the Pretoria could still be heard, but long before she had started on her way eastward the passcngers of the New Yori were Igughing and joking over their. experjence, epaned the basinal room set, _