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BUY W. S. S. UNTIL IT HURTS, CAUSE IT WON’T HURT. - BAKER'S HOMER IN TENTH | the sccenamniitlp First Game of Double-Head as Though They’d Drop Se By Hugh S. Fullerton. iat Woe Nir’ shades of night were falling were engaged in putting our) Yankees on the pan and frying them. first game of a double header to and seemed to be| busy losing the} score was 2 to 0,/ and = Murdere: nocent ven of assault and bat- lo was w ding | & major league! ‘The crowd was hammering away at the Yanks mercilessly and charging) compared with them, when donly they rallied, broke loose with a riot Bodie, who had, with Huggina, been particular target of the fickle sent home the tylng run. In the tenth Walters, Gilhooley and that was needed still was lacking, unul Baker strode to the plate with into the right fleld stands—a home run which goes down in the records Polo Grounds Fans Were Bus Through With a Great Rall CoM SUE, HoT Bits WEEP fast, and about 12,000 fans) They had lost the the Detrott Tigers second, as the; Row had been in- . tery because Kal- | f [arid curve. that a glass crash was an earthquake of long drives that tied the score, fans, banging out a long double that Caldwell ripped off hits, but the rua his big biudgeon and hit a home run ea a single AE Yanks were playiing as good, and possibly better ball in those games than they played while they wore winning, but because they could not hit when hits would have meant victory the crowd concelved the idea that they were rotten, whereas they wero trying, fgbting hard, and hust- ling to their limit, with a new and improved line-up. The fact that they were too anxious to hit and kept fail- ng again and again when a hit or two would have meant an easy vic- tory was translated to mean that they have blown and are done as & pennant factor, HE Yanks lost the first game be- cause they could not hit James when a hit would have mado them look good, Let us give James the credit. He had a world of speed, & faat ball that was almost unbittable and absolutely unbuntable, Yet the) Yanks fought him all the way, piled | the bases full of runners, and kept at | ft all the way to the seventh whon Walker hit a home run to right cen-) |nice plays at first base NLY AS SINGLE y Roasting Yankees for Losing er With Tigers, and It Looked cond, Too, When They Came y. has spurred and ridden his men and for the most part has been able to keep them hustling so that they are dangerous at any time nt “ELAINE ROSENTHAL g, National Women’s Champion, and | Perry Adair Will Pair Up Against Elaine Rosenthal I do not think it 1s a team that resourceful in attack or in any Ww mobile. It is a one style team whic sive methods of opponents, but must depend upon sheer strength to batter out victories, and when stopped by feeble. | But there are signs of hope, and ono of the biggest signs was given yes-| ‘To my way of thinking, Koating 1s an excellent pitcher and always has been. He had faults ay a kid, and he and with more settled ideas. He fin- | ished the first game yesterday, pitcn- | ing two Innings in excellent style. He | style, and when it breaks it is one of the best spitters in the country. Ile also has a slow curve with a puzzlinis He came back and finished the se ond game after Finneran had been relieved in the eighth to allow pinch | to lower their batting averages. He did not show as much in the ad game as he did in the first, excepting der of his position by making two a i and bo had enough to hold the Tigers. make amends for the loss of i" M, who ran out on pay day and went to a shipyard upon the luck of those E ton | Red Sox. The White Sox beat the Yanks, and in so doing damaged Ray annot adapt its attack to the defen sood pitching it naturally looks| terday afternoon by Ray Keating. has returned with more Berenice | has his spitball cracking in wonderful twist, and he showed # lot of s hitters, who appear to lack pinchers t he showed that he is a corhing The return of Keating promises to INS let us discourse a moment Alexa Stirlin Schalk, the principal asset of the team, so that they were crippied when they | | tackled the Red Sox. Yesterday oa and Bobby Jones. |the four, and not one of them Cobb took @ swing at a ball, with th | reached twenty-one e Miss Stirling, Bobby Jones and pases filled, in the first game. H ra I pat ! r missed, swung around and tore loose By William Abbott. SER ha eth URLs a otas a ligament in his shoulder, which was VER the Wykagyl course to-) steward Maiden, who certainly made hurt in his Attort to Ake 8 le morrow afternoon there's go-/a good job instructing his youthful Tuesday's double-header. apt ‘a ing be ol ¢ ’ pupils how to make lf ball be- der wae badly bruised and sprained | hig to be a golf match very | Puplle h a 6 worth while seeing. ‘The contestants at collision, and yesterday | the ‘veaken Will be four of the most noted young weakened muscles gave way aud Cobb had to retire from the contest. | 1 stars ever seen on an American|ton, then came North and Also it was the Mera es yi. course. Miss Alexa Stirling and|the national title two years Ty Heroutfielder of the ‘Txeés | Perry Adair will pair up againat Ming} Unueually sliiful Heilman played his last games as A ne Rosenthal and Bobby Jones.|Ike an old-! Tiger yesterday, and iast nizht lo(t) coring will be on the point| Miss Rosenthal tor aan Pedro to Ba Reena in the 1, a point for the best ball at oF atina BtiNlinate ohlad Liss ‘American League, a capable first bax Je and @ point for the best! Sonent. Ability to hit a lon iit man and # corking outfielder D the core tance and an even tempe Tigers went to Boston last night minus If history in the near future will| Most men golfers wou »b, the services of Heilmau and C have cracks, nh Indeed, mu say about these four the records already ILL DONOVAN managed the Tig-| at ers yesterday, as Hughie Jon- >w many remarkable exploits from! nings was called to Scranton, and af- ter the first game Bill was jocular, declaring that the Tigers won boca he was manager. He lad nothing to say after the tenth ‘naing of the se ond contest. T HERE were two plays in the games which merit criticism. Mias Stirling won about thing there was in the land of cot ine jualifications stand out play Bobby Jo: in rs, make Miss I the big army now just six Semi-Finals Reached In State Tennis Tourney every vorrailed ago. LO8e of fen teen, has THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1918. SPORT WORLD NEWS OF ALL KIND Four of Most Noted Young Stars In Match at Wykagyl To-Morrow i} t the | pes ashi or with two on bases and pu eriticlan peep on ice for the Tigers. In the firstr game just after ( urt | : a | none the worse for her strenuous work SThormanien pitched erratic but ef-| himself the bases tai tull, James| Edith Handy Gains the Final) ,me'untouctout hee match with Mion y 6 time! being on thint and Bush on seoond, . cep | Holden, although, on. the whole fective ball all the way to th ne | bs ’ ‘ Round in Women’s East New | contest’ was devoid of thrill. 8h Walker caught that ball on the nose.) Coby insisted upon batting in spite Besa veld tenant and the chances of winning Sens of bis sufferings, and he hit a slow York Championships. |fke"Gorer of i cna praced bor abuts equal. Both pitchers were Wir Rimes |foller down to first and James was R meyers teas f detail tor ing from three to five and abit forced at the plate, Walters foolishly : : wtiss “Mario Waaner HH ans xix bails to each Yatter. My, which | threw to first trying to double Cobb, UTICA, Ni Yoduly 1h [Poe wae Me tay eet, were on the paw’ iow, but neither and Bush tore around third and raced the annual New York State} Donald hk The rte ta een the’ pinches and, /for the plate, Pipp slumbered until championship lawn tennis singles | Wining pair were more thin effectivs barring some Till Hasmer baseball 1 ee Lo ine wecond ahead of the| the semi-tinalists are Fred An-/a'game. Allan Beheland Mra Yo e} poked rign ie be i peers ee ry ~|eno scored | thr t mate! by the Yonks, Tae ont ee ® throw to the plate. Pipp's negligence |derson jr. Seiichito Kashio of Ja-| go acord in a throw set matgh wilt Far the Must be explained that changed the batting order, gave De-| pan, Harold L. Taylor, Fred Ander-| score was 26. 6-—3, &—6 ation ir baseball” Is the af trolt @ run and probably the game. |gon sr, Ward Dawson of Ca ornia, | ——.—— nd to eateh fly balls on, Later, Jan hi 0 T. C. Fulton of S . L. James atyle, Bill used to cod making er- (straight at Peckinpaugh. He started | 7: C. Fulton of RL d | the first bound Je ky showed gome | trotting toward first, bis head down, |@nd Frank 7. Anderson, ; sore, #n° sala a The ball t 1 out of Peck’s hands,| Dawson and Kashio loomed up as symptoms of this, ‘rolled a do feet, and Peck, recov-| formidable, contenders for the final ‘ it, w astounded to see that| brackets because of their brilliant 5 LS REAIH t HE second game was a pitchers’) ring It. Was Sale work. Dawson went through his| Honors in the opening : duel all the way, although Fin-| him out by ten match with Cecil Donaldson, run- annual harry sa rac ne meeting 0 uel all o » ner up for the junior metropolitan] Junior Lea » mat r 1s ordered to conserve | angry fan stood 4 wctacular man: | C) sae ea cowed neran, who was order ang! P : tle last week. in a spectacular 7 Clubs a arkwa “ n nd stopped | or fight, Jam Work or fight. ner, Winning in straight sets of 6—1, | jyn were shared by the fats in the early innings aed a it ———— | 6-1, while. Kashio” tamed Gerald) Ginh of Minevia, the Me from using his tallow ball, was Bit) a. ping tidings from the West| Lmerson, the Hast Orange schoolboy, | tng Club of Boston and t much harder than way Kallio, Indeod,| wert that the Giants won and that| bY, a score of 61, 63. | Association on 8 ¥ n was lucky to escape alive.) over part of the route Schupp looked | terrific smashing and fast volleying | Pomings, |i anh of e Bush's wild attempt to tak food, Evidently he is coming slowly! that brought him quick victory, white | competed the | on a base hit in the first inning pr back to form. Cashio curbed Emerson's hard | hit-| 8, Ae ably prevented Detroit from scoring| Rotter than that, the Brooklyn team | ting by the crafilest of line cutting | Lean an easy victory, as only one run re! ratied and beat the Cubs in sixteen | drives down the court and soft yet : bay mare gulted from four hits. The Tigers also} innings, giving the Glants a clear| ““purtie Voleyinw, Bin nd Juntos | Jessie, V > eatu hit into dout plays, and aithor gain of one gam The Cubs Played | Metropolitan and North st r,| the 2.15 trot for ' ’ they threatened to score in alr twenty-one innings Wednesday and| nad a narrow escape from defeat in his} |. as theyy inning, only two men suc sixteen yesterday, probably extablish-| match with Paul W. Giboons of Phila-| UNIONTOWN, Pa., July 19, — Al reaching the plat Meantime | ing a re It may bo that the| de winn finally by @ score of |though forced to stop long enough to Kallio looked like r hy Cubs will tire themselves out and lose | }- 7, S—1. in the Arey Part of|make two tire changes, Louis Chey . e had a remarkably fast he Match the schoolboy was utterly out | oie 4 fg 4 Frontenac car he Johnson. He had o reich held the| stter all. of stroke, and Gibbons, by playing to/folet, driving a Fror fintshed and sharp curve ball we. but in the| ————eee | Frank's Weak bankhand and by Judiclous | first 1 Pemilo Auto Tm t Yank sluggers ple Bec ey lobbing to deep court, made a runawa cul 8 ie finishe , ninth he wea d and ie anke| TODAY'S ENTRIES FOR J match of it. Twi i fourth of a lap ahead of Omar Tot phowed themselves still full o ne Vv no was forced to ma ‘ammered out a tie and then a E RACE | q 4 do change tres, ‘and hammered | EMPIRE TRACK won finally, wteadied do vietory. WAM ioe ee colds and ep. | confitence resto d away’ Win! The tims 5 fickleness of the New York| wart: veiling: one mile and seventy sarda . of th y a oe better sh | alk, gee ¥ in Winghiey a | Curtis Field, Staten Is!ar tha public never was better shown. | TO Mag HR ig fitze bate Miss Edith Hanuy of Staten Island mA tecining’ ahip. sure PRR ety The crowd, which has been making} Dan ns hed the Anal round of the women's! ioiow but her jolly ball team fell befor ba 4 *Drandreas fs Pant aster 2 Bt NOW FOr State tennis cham: eo § ra by ore of 16 to 0. herces of Huggins's men, turned upon | 418 {iundmary «1 Li a tournament on the court of tha | Me Sweeper by w score of 16 ty 0 y, ridiculed them and} CX of three yearoldy aad wp | Mount Pleasant Club at Pleasantville Fred Fulton arrived in New York yes- them viciously, F ‘and orients sone “| Bho eliminated Miss Bessie Holden in|,2 7% ; i SOE oe had the little manager raging @ 310 Par eet see rhe score Was 6-3, bz, |terday and immediately went to fighting back at the unjust abuse t i Saturday Slee Handy will meet the win: | Billy Grupp's kymnaatuin to tn 5 {ng heaped upon him and his men. = rn: per of the maten between Miss Maric | tapering procesa in antic £ thon, when they startod hitting, the 1 anc Washer and Mrs, iV, Lyach, who’ will [{he meeting with tha mar srowd went wild and applauded them Ponrot 113 play this afternoon. Pate en Re | a! - again, empeckally after the | | THIRD" RAGE-—Vor threyearcide ant uo-| ) While Mies Handy, was disposing of [the adn lot and huyi md showed that the Red Sox | 919" fy 190 (208) “Jack Suart..10T | Were got under Way, and some spirited | ora In over 40) apara ho abou were beaten 288 Currency’. .° 9 808 WT |action. was in order eo women's | (0 walk up Cherry Hill and There really isn’t anything the mat-| 4+ [Miguve 11,109) 899 0.115) doubles will be started to-day and will | Vatlon pUMmaAg ¢ u yy i ul be wound up to-morrow =r ter with the Yanks. It is @ team) PouRTH RAOE—Sor three-yearolda: bandi. | found up to-marroy | which Is strong only in one depart-| a Janout ax turing” | TOM! ooh Beghio nets playing to the top| NEW INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE ment, hitting, and which never pre-| 0ce Enfils 1 THT Bart 108) from Mrs, David C. le that placed ——. tended to be anything else. It !8 | 'gi75 gtar Soanged 116) her in the semi-finals, The score wa, Cied. Ww. Po! Wok PC. sh has no other successful | "FIFTH RACK —For threyearoidg and up-|3-5 6-2, §-6 The two took the court | Binghamton.43' 24 Aa at ‘dnd team whicli sail | " | ‘Toronto 44 80 a3 87 4 ck, although Huggins, Dy | ward: conditions mile, fat noontime, and for two hours waged um style of attack, afford 18 Gex tio/@ nip and tuck battle. When the last | Rosbeter gt BO) Byracuse ....28 48.348 using Caldwell and shaking vie Bate aH Joma'an Rout By $Ba" Hank’ O'Day point was scored, Mrs. Mills collapsed |Baltmore ..43 90.580 Jermey City..15 98 724 . has managed to injec jamecook ‘e Jai + fequiied iv He, Sante pe, BIXTH IACE-—For two-year-olds; claiming, | hor, ae eared ‘The one thing that it must be given| 4 ‘y 2 Pcinca 188) 814 Nan Keowny,..jo0|. When the match was over Mrs, Lynch that it keeps trying, al- Bo. ny -s1G8| ove, Hinaty Eady: don | WAS Completely used up by the pitiless 1 t ‘ii! Dabinda >.) 105 was on the vei aia st the Boche. 1 pure by our troops.” reported the Amer Bu the Boche and see him run! Ust Bust him once and he is de Pick your target—let ‘er go! Bust the Boehe and lay him low! Through the dust of No Man's Land He will ron beat the band Bust him though be weighs a ton! Bust the Boche run! ne Step right up without restraint! Bust the Boche and see him faint! Swing a wallop from your thighs Bust the Boche right in the eyes! He won't wait to swing at you Bust him once and he is through! You won't need a bomb or gun Bust the Boche and see him run! Boche stand a fighting face Bust the Boche most any place! Bust him with an uppercut You may miss your supper, but will be a toothsome meal Just to hear the fat Boche squeal. Bust him and the battle’s won! Bust the Boche and see him run! an't It PROM AN ATHLETIC POINT OF VIEW IT IS ue SO MANY »D CROSS COUNTRY RECORDS BROKEN BY THE Gil MAN LOS’ IN THE COUNTER ATTACK, In 4 cf all bin fa the German has a lone claim to distinetion, in that he can show a good pair of heels and keep them in sight while tne seeing is good Wren it comes to saving his skin, the German can fight faster with his feet than his hands. The Boehe can cover a lot of ground, but it ia apparent that he doca moat The Kaiver is ! to be suffering from the grip, although Mrs, Victory a eae partcular with whom she shakes hands, PHOTO PACK THOME NO? | : traditions of the HERE AND THERE. mainly that Ife The Yanks are hitting over there— c. Osler's age me They've got the Boches on the jump; Pet good. : But over here the Yanks are rare— Py won the Hou tis They're hitting in an awful slump. Mi and threw @ big For such good news we raise our thanks are into Chick Evans, Bob Gart That rome are Yanks and some are Yanks. her and other stars in the national) een aa \ mm. Merion in 1916, whe ne OVER THERE THE YANKS AREN'T HIEDPT PANY MORE THAT throuwa to the third round. | WOULD BE PRACTICALLY IMPOSSIBLE, nae ny you r than} ia - ah ae Rrie Td novolutaly| After joyfully perusing the front pages yesterday afternoon, we were ound, no flaws of any k iim | convinced that the German shock troops proved to be faulty absorber sou 1 lad will some day land at — : the head of all amateurs or else From the decisions of various draft boards in work-or-fight cases y folks have badly miscued on | affecting 1! players, we suggest that the boards get tog © for morning rely predictions, practic Adair halla right fre | neighborhoud down in At rn Russell, lately of the Yanks, displayed rare judgment before jump i Wa aad to the Shipbuilding League, He drew his biemonthly stipend before he leaped. then Mr. Aduir winning streak EXASPERATING. player f ave par urnaments Their 4 for the ite A slonder young southpaw named Russell, Who used to make other teams hustle, Has made quite a bug Out of old Miller Hug, Who was heard to remark with the cuss, “L.” y t Middle West atch to-morrow, | NW AMES SATARS SOUTER HIE CORNELL bi a Ws Teds Mn CO ec se gel En Ser ws ANNUALSUMMER SALE Men’s & Young Men’s Two-Piece SUITS TO MEASURE (Coat and Trousers) Regular 18.75 to 22.50 Woolens! These woolens were bought long ago—if we had to buy them today the Suits couldn't be made for less than double our sale price Perfect Satisfaction Guaranteed Open Evenings Until 8 Saturdays Until 10 P. M. carre: NEW YORK CHy sroneN 1387 Broadway, Bet. 37th and 38th Sts. 1514 Third Avenue, Neer 85th Street. 251 Eighth Ave., Near 23d Street. 691 Eighth Ave., Bet. 43d and 44th Sts. 2331 Eighth Ave., 1 door above 125th St. it 20th Street. Headquarters BRONK STORE: St., Near 3d Ave STOKES IN BROOKLYN: | 104 Flatbush Ave, i's fot from sate ‘ ait ey Bee Near G venu 5106 Fifth A ushing Ave. GOLFING IS MEREL¥ ONE WAY OF SPOILING AN AFTERNOON. Diamond Dust) ST. LOUIS, July 19.—Fred Ant « left the nts to go to wai pitbull pitcher was ordered, to mil duty on July 26, Irst intended to remain with the el ntil it returned to New York, But anged his mind and nates af tl train for thi The losa of An= squad down below so that Bob Steele «ned to a contract. hat his affidavit he would not no Perritt was ana, but now the present. Sy eee Td. Marine EWott’s 2. 0° it wa Mate Wer & EYESOF YOUT CASINO §. vot have to for a Sat, A liway, Rvenings 8.20. SetePmOH, LADY! LADY! oC B1.50 & #2, Byes, 6.30, 2, ASTOR yun. 45) 4 Matinews Wed. & Bat Rock:A Bye Baby 2. J 9 Charles Thomas ROOF CENTURY THEATIE AT 11.30, CENTURY GROVE “iN KEVE Nenutitul Giri an’ Everything, i m!° MOLLIE KING SHUBERT $i." gf ey hg Jianche BATES: Holbrook BLINN in GETTING TOGETHER Ww Wit. of Eye, y BOOTH ‘its: ih ay. ghee 8-20) (re Seen Bot Bway, Them & Bal 48th ST. “is i way Mate, We Tel GAIETY Kinw & Bet Bie Music! Comedy Hi LYCEUM {5 | TIGER LIBERTY | “GOING U Ms GLOBE # Mr. RAY MON ‘ Ninel IN HITCHY-KOO 1918 With LEON ERKOLRIRENE RORDONE ELTINGE S502 ino ew i rr Ant 3 COHAN HARRIS * A TAILOR-MADE AM fi USEM ENTS, Greatest Sea Water Surf Bathing Pool on Eur’ on Earth, {Aamission, tickets to pool carrying tpe dally except Sunday). POF (0 12" agen, OPEN AIR ENTERTAINMEN te 10 tag GONCERTS Oe N. bg Internatio: nal Renee} ° nal 77th St. Bron Sy Exposi PLECHASE # STEE PEN Now F-FPROCIOR’S 200 SL es Se sh. 1240 Sls. DMN AYE, {isin Feit wk | “BANNA PAvn'ce ain, Dally Ma: ~ Slee’ Fradkin @ Jean Tell, PHOTO PL | Al Siar Gas [We CaN ae, ) Oo evekY tae TALTO, Times Square, | Rivotl Os be fal, 20, 0, \ Tht SE “JACK PICK | WAY eT aD oS NEY, CHARITY. “oth i eBMtaar OPEN Al ra rminr’ Lae kyynalen 3 weuie ate. tg atp at M te ane