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THE EVENING WORLD FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1920 TING PAGE IN NEW YORK PORTING HORIZON ~ .- - - - By Thornton Fisher Conyriaht, 1920, hy The Presa Publishin ¢ Co (The New York Evening’ World). ONCE UPON & TIME A BIG BAo BATTaR NAMED RUTH _ are UP AuL THE MIT TLE CRUNCH - CRUNCH PITCHERS « CO EVERN NIGHT Baseball Series Be- __.. tween New York and Chicago __} High Schools Is Planned. BA “wr tne cansts esa noe by the Chicago Tribune, jook- ing to a series of baseball between the high echool teams the Windy City and those of New York Already, twenty te of Chicago have an- ® willingness to stand the of the trip here or the run ing: WE TRIED - ve TRI THING time ago there was con- talk of an intercity athletic it between the sahootbors of the cities, but the competition was uy delayed to give the mid a chance to organize ry pe Ines of our Public = . YANIES Thae eNockinG THe“ AcCtbti, Bart ALL OVER. HARLEM 4 is -planning a social campaign Ruth Takes a Day Off © ¢, J From Homerun Hitting; «y Ping Proves Good ‘‘Sub’’ Bodie Blasts Athletics’ Hopes by Slamming Out a Four-Base Smash With Bases Filled, Enabling Yankees to Win Interest- ing Battle by One Run, By Charles Somerville. JOOGAN’S BLUFF continues to reverberate with homers, Babe Ruth C took a day off, merely offering a two-bagger in the general assault whfch rung up five runs against the four that Connie Mack's juve- nile jolters were able to aggregate. Child Walker and Child Dykes of the Connie Mack Cradle Champs chopped out wallops for the full distance. Signor Bodje hit the high note of the afternoon for the Ruppert-Huston troubadours. His clarion crack did not come until the sixth inning, and was needed very much for the Mack Brats had piled up four to Our one in the first five innings and We had all begun to wonder whether the Baby Elephants were going to lose ns in the jungle, But, nay! They were fot! hed Lefty Moore was lambasted into® the discard ih this sixth inning bY/eyneq in the first inning when Lefty the combined brutality, of the Babe|gave Peck a permit and Witt wab- With the two-bagger ahd Ping with| bled, warped and‘ wandered In the the big punch. And also because Lett|handling of Meusel’s long fly, gave aidéd and abetted his own undoing |us plenty enough for the day's de- by @ feverish attack of generosity. |light. . He walked Midget Meusel one, two,| ‘The happler the occasion in that three, four. Pipp forced the little one| We beheld Bob Shawkey back with at second, Moore to Dykes. ‘Then the| US. There must have been some red Babe furnished the two-bagger. {t| paint slung by the Boston descriptive was to right. Next Lefty awarded | writer’ as to the terrible character of Del Pratt the amble. And with the| the riot which occurred between Bob ©. bases choked in this happy manner,| and Ump Hildebrand. For here was Ping put over his palpitant poke into} Robert back in good standing after a the grand stand. And even yet Lefty| brief suspension, and here, b'jinks, wus ‘disposed to scatter favors.| also and yet again was Mr. Hilde- Thomas threw Lewis out but Lefty | brand working with his blue jacket, lulled Truck Hannah to first on four| Mask and chest protector in com- four-flushers and bestowed the same | pany with Mr. Evans. | didn't notice consideration on Bob Shawkey. After] Bob shaking hands with Hildebrand, that streak %f brilliancy we saw|Nor was either to be observed glower- Lefty no Moore. (Honest, that|i"% and doubling fists at the other. slipped over unintentionally.) Connie | It's fine business that the Yanks im Mack had sent for Hasty in a hurry,| their scrappy climb are not to lose Peck ffied to Strunk. But Destiny | Shawkey’s services, He.was cracked did not require that more runs be| for six hits yesterday, and as already made. This four added to one we| indicated, pretty stiff ones. But he ~~ which promises to’ bring all its bers together in good fellowship A thira supper is now planned following that of old night when the ring stars of rad ago gathered and exhibited Was lef of their ski " tothrill 00a Of ather days” Tila wil be made the occasion to the club's appreciation of Will- A. Gavin's services in bringing | Bernes-Hagen In Big Match Next Thursday it, 1920, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York ,Erening World.) LONDON, June 4.—Arrange- ments were completed to-day for ® professional international golf match to be played next Thursday at Addington, near Croyden, Scot- land, where the United States will be represented by Walter Hagen and Big Jim Barnes, and the players for Great Britain will be George Duncan and Abe Mitchell, In the morning Mitchell will op- pose Hagen and Duncan will meet Barnes. Partners will be changed in the afternoon. A full round will be played in each match and the winning side will be that whiclf wins the great- est number of holes in the ag- gregate. The Americans practiced at Walton Heath yesterday merely for the exercise, They are leaving for Scotland to-day. i Jerry Travers College Regatta Is Transferred Bring Control to ta'preent'»o-| LO Lake Cayuga Gavin hae-worked with ani en- * m almost superhuman in be-| ITHACA, June 4,.—The intercol- of boxing, and the International | jegiate regatta, Detter known as the on Bae et fntited 0] Poughkeepsie rogatta, will not be Years ago Mr. Gavin came to this | "Wed over.the Hudson River course from England and famous it} at Poughkeepsie this year on July 1, ioaarnet th before the National | Vince Richards Meets Kumagae In Tennis Final 22 463) Vincent Richards is to have an op- portunity to demonstrate whether or not he can repeat against Ichiya Kumagae, The boy marvel of the courts and the Japanese lawn tennis wizard won their places in the final round of the Eastern New York State championship singles on the courts of the Amackagsin Club, Yonkers, yesterday. When the American lad and the Oriental met last autumn in Canada Richards overwhelmed Ku- a9 maga, and he now has the chance AMERICAN LEAQUE, to prove whcther or not it was ‘a fuke. W. LPO.) Clubs, 675) Washington, STANDING OF THE CLUBS NATIONAL LEAGUE. ‘Clubs. Famous Star Only Two Strokes Behind Medalist in Jersey Tourney. By William Abbott. PRRY TRAVERS, who for years was the peer of American ama- teur golfers, apparently has ¢ome al the way back on the links. [ft there’s anything terribly wrong with the former star's game it couldn't be spotted with a magnifying glaes by ny keen critics’ who watched Jerry perform in the opening rounds | of the Jersey State golf champion- ship yesterday at Arcola. Travers, never a deadly medal shooter, covered the 18-hole qualify- ing Journey in 80, only two strokes behind the winner, William Reekle, In the first match play encounter the veteran dispoeed of Charley Eddy, one of Arcola’s urightest young stars, by three and two. Jerry, who ap- peared to be’ holding something in reserve, continually outdrove young Eddy ahd was more accurate with his irons. , Some of Jerry’s recoveries were quite remarkable. Om’the fourth j hole from the rough and against a Miss Georgiana Bishop of the Brook-| stiff wind he plugged a mashie wal- lawn Club, Bridgeport, won the an-/ jon fully 140 yards, Again on the nua} championship tournament of the| sixth hole, with its uphill green, Connecticut Women's Golf Association | Travers, hitting with too much force, on the Shuttle Meadow Club course. | lnded his second shot hole high but Hed grad anore was 34. in the rough to the left. The next pa eal ee attempt was a lame recovery, but while still in the heavy grass Jerry neatly holed out his mashie shot, the ball travelling fully twenty feet on the green before it trickled in the ole. Against this sort of golf Eddy really had no chance. At the outset of the match he was visibly nervous and hit without much direction, Toward the end he steadied some- —_—_———— sal 19 $00] Phitadeiphia..18 26.366 GAMES YESTERDAY. brough ters of | as originally scheduled. Instead, it will be rowed on Cayuga Lake, Ithaca, on Saturday, June 19. This announcement was made here to-day by Charles E. Treman, the Cornell member of the Board. of ‘Stewards of the Intercollegiate Row- ing Association, The reasons for the change were the rofusal of the West Shore Railroad to provide an observation train. for the Poughkeepsie course and because the faculty of the University of .| Pennsylvania declined to permit its crews to row as late as July 1. On account of the tidal donditions pre- valling on the Hudson River at Pough- keepsie, the races-had to be rowed there Pitteburgh-Cinclanat! (wet grounds), Other teams not scheduled, Games Yo-pay. ught on the level, ided contests which will in the memories of those wh peste abt SESS y nets Mark £! ‘Women at Montelatr. Reversals gnlivened the competitions in which women lawn tennis players reached the semi-final round of the GAMES YESTERDAY, Now York, 5; Phitadotphia, 4, ‘Weshington, 2; Beeten, 1. Detroit, 6; Cleveland, 3, Chicage, 6: St. Loole, 4, GAWES TO-DAY, Philadelphia at New York, Boston at Washington, pn ae A 4, | latter a Junior, c pbb Stas NEW INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE ; whine ‘ A T the Bayonne A. A. to-night four leading contenders for Jack Dempsey's title wilt be ¢ geen in action ‘in the . bouts, K. tournament on the courts of the Mont- clair Athletic Club, Montclair, N. J., terday, Miss Florence Ballin and . Robert Le Roy of the West side Tenni Club won in the top hi It was in the lower division that Mrs. James H. Mo-+ Millen and Miss Martha throi midst of the tinal tern n, ¢ Cornell, whe Cornell University, Athiotle, Aaso- ; Mada elation ex fan invitation e 1 ae fo’ ston | Board of Stowards to hold t rots on Caypas Lake on June 1 da} the invitation was accepted to- re. ‘reman of Cornell, ‘ H. Mapes of Columbia and Jona * ; the ri hur Brown of Pennsylvania, compris- bs the Beard ‘of Stewards of coflegia Colum! Syracuse ii cmecsan NEW BRITAIN, Conn. June 4.— jayard, the umn ie National Olympic Trials Dates Set. The American Olympic Committee has arranged national tryouts for track and field athletes in four cities on Sat- urday, June 26. On; that day the Eastern athletes willgtake part in a programme of nineteen events, at Franklin Field, Philadelphia; the Southern aspirants vill meet at the Tulane Stadium, New Stagg Field, Chicago, will be ing ground for the Central the Inter- owing Association, Pennsylvania and ’ Cornell, Tie tor Medal at Westchester. walt i Finishing with a lead of six strokes over their nearest rivals, John G. An-| derson of Siwanoy and C. H. Paul of Gedney Farms tied for the medal in the qualifying round of the Westchester County Golf Association championship tournament over the Dunwoodle Coun- try Club Inks yesterday. Both had card: had knocked out Jim ‘a. product of the tly defeated Ole An- off Fred Fulton. is credited with having |, iven Dempsey the hardest fight of ‘scareer. Norfolk is con- PD for the varsity rave Games To-Day. the new’ City Stadium at ughktepale, ——— trahetecret from Peughirepaten tt eay | Heating at Jerner ty mas Cal, will attord ample op- | of 73, although their rounds were made rowed on Saratoga ‘ake in HaAki> In every contest, in an entirely different manner. nearly fi t Poughk Aoi nae ‘at Baltimore, rat race at Poughkee} g ‘Was won by Columbia, ~~ * — ntier-Levinsky Contest mont out Al Reich. Bobby Cole Enters Army Boxing Tourney. ‘One of the classiest little boxers among the twenty-four stars who will compete in the Olympic eliminations of the Dast- Siittiesdi didi. Like a Champion at’ Arcola Likely to Be Fought at Boston ack Rourtey Has Talk “with | frst, tye et catne ot ce ctrmeas ate Beantown Promoters ahd Wille Mochan, the pudey hearrielght of Call: fornia, afew days, Jack Curley signed up the men, has had a ern Department of the United States Army in’ tl th Regiment Armory next Tuesday and Wednesday nights, ts Bobby Cole, ‘a good Iittle two-handed mitt wellder from Camp Meade, Md. He only weighs 110 pounds and many ex- BELMONT PARK leave Penna. Station, 3: Ave. igo from Flatbush Av., Brooklyn, 2.80 and at intervals » ‘eserved mowiike bale 4 NN phy ECORI —<SZ25 va addsddddddddddadddddddddda |iarciuen fume aa SAG ANA AAT No. 2 Main St, Getty Square, Yoghers —. e VVVVVEVVV VV VV "You'd Be Surprised!” Everybody is surprised, when Price? — You'd be surprised! 25e for’ Twenty EGYPTIAN PRETTIEST - CIGARETTES Increase of over 100,000,000 in New York in one year ddddddd : . 4 ‘ 4 [4 WV VM VV OV VN SN * 1 rts \who have seen him perform say he ‘ ~ Favors that City. same) ged tery sooo lh Al CS they find that they can oer * a star as Jimmy Wilde if cared to i | By John Pollock, | Eman Si ih i ara ter rane, teh now cies i] QQ poe i ggg pe ers ‘white there arg many “boxing pro- |” ba -*- . " eather— desi to it the d “ Sectors anxious to stage the interna-| ,Qevtmaby Tom Mcarde na un atria cara | BAA, RO desire, to enter the moneyed < Tis Cha Bavetian Preece blows with the wind—but men ‘ contest between Battling Lev- yuo have tried to get him to take up proves- iN 8 the Egyptian Prettiest sun ihe wind to bide than where , the American light heavy- flonal boxing, when, he retires fram 4 \—full-bodied—full-flavor- they will, it champion, and Georges Car- ‘East Department champlun- chat : Th w the Branch heavyweight ari, seinen ry | ay ed—mellow—delightful! net scurried before “he “High a eltabla, boards that the: bowt e And it comes with its quality waren ‘epite of the blast abe most likely be fought at the has steered the straight course can League baseball grounds y preserved and protected in a of Moderate Prices into the port Boston on July $4. My informant h staunch reinforced cardboard of Many Friends. — ~ that as the boxi) wil ¥ i hi: ee ng pag Fe AE 44/ box. - Par-amouynt Shirts at $2.00 and $2.50 make’ friends for us—not excessive profits. We'd rather do busin that way. Satistaction guaranteed or money back, Cordially, PAR-AMOUNT SHIRT, SHOPS INC: A 160 Nassau Stroet, Tribune Building 986 Third “Avenu> at 69th Strect ‘at 125th St, Harlem ue at 86th Street and his own‘team by the coagulation of only five hits were able to present him with the necessary cluster of tallies. And all that is necessary te as much as anybody needs: Tam too fair to put this epigram up. to Shakespeare. I think the refer- | ence books will be found to credit the _{ sage stuffsto the quthor of “It never. 7 rains but it pours.” Well, just let it rain home runs on \ € was able to dessicate the c!outing, ‘Comes Back’ what, but the meet was mostly a lesson for the Arcola youth how the our behalf and TI don’t care whether old Scotch game should be played. the precious oolong is poured by the Rabe, Pine, Peck, Grandpa Meusel, Duffy Lewis or whoever can give it the grand hist. William Reekie of Montclair, who plays consistent golluf, took the qual- ifying medal with a 78. Travers, F. Turrell and Maurice bunghed at 80. Several (we won't mention names), who should have been in the low seven- ties, were up near the middle cight- ies. The Arcola course was difficult to score on. .The rough was very ROUGH, and any re who hit olf the line was heavily penalized. New York papers are pleased to copy a double funeral notice yester- fay from Roston./Mr. McGraw an@ assot s officiating, Risley ‘were topnotchers And I'd say it was kind of cheer ful stuff that Brooklyn on going to Philadelphia apnears to have re= Mmained wide awake. (Diamond Dust) PHILADDLPHIA. June 4.--The se cret of the terrific hitting and the heavy ron, scoring In major league baseball games during the present - -ason is out, Officials of the A. J. Reach Company, of this city, which makes the official . American league ball, which is in vite The first round of match ‘play ful-| tually all. v ‘a counterpart of the lowed the dope closely. All favorites | Nat! pall produced by A. J. There were 120 starters. “Babe” Ruth, who expects to cop a golf cup some day, telephoned af 8 o'clock, asking if he could play in the big party. The steering committee told the Yankee star he waa too late, and, anyway, he better remain back in New York and increase his homerun recom, came through.with the single excep- | Spaidin on. aid. to-day “that . 7 ‘ ed materials’ have made the 1% ton, of C. L. Maxwell, who lost to | ball the liveliest and most resilient they Gordon Cooke after a’ nineteén-hole | ev: pattle, These were the results of the championship division: Gorden Cooke beat C. L. Maxwell 1 up (nineteen j hetes), W. M. Reekie beat H. B. Fenn bare [ryt Kammer beat H. Bu- chana 4nd 3, F. F. Turrell beat Ellis | the covers and the as e Adams 4 and 3, F. Dyer beat W.|of Australian wool rhs fay wine ° | pcg hig ene 1 a Pe raveny bees about the centres. Charles y 3 and 2, Maurice siey ae. beat R. C. Currier 3 and 2, C. E. Van|, WASHINGTON, June 4.—The Sena» Vieck beat 8. Van Vechten 3 and 2, | tors dofested the Red Sox yesterday by have produced. They denied, how= that the addition of more rubber, or the use of livelier rubber, bad any: thing to do with the Imfrovement In the ball. The increased resiliency {s due to two things. they contend. ‘They are the ise of a better grade of horsehice for ST. LOUIS, Mo, June 4, made it three out of four from St. oe winning by a score of 6 to 4, In conjunction with the qualifying round there was 4 club match, four jmen to a team. Baltusrol, with Kam- |mer, Van Vleck, Van Vechiss and R. L. Gwaltney, won with a total of 335 strokes. Arcola was second with 341, uy # CLEVELAND, 0, June 4,—Leonard gut a end cee Cleveland ae \ ueging a won by @ score 6 to 3. Cleveland pitchers were wild. Tailoring Prestige ; OR forty-three yedrs the Arn- heim Institution has literally hand-tailored its way to Per- fection, Popularity and Success. . . So when you mention “Arnheim 7 Tailoring” you say all there is to say of Quality, Style, Service and Satisfaction. ( Special Custom- Tailored-to-Measure : Two-Piece Summer Suits Coat and Trousers—from, fine quality Pure Virgin Woolens in a large selection. Exacting Arnheim fit and tailoring—a dozen style-correct models - $49.50 Come to the Arnheim Store Nearest You. Broadway and Sist St 30 East 42d St. Broadway and 9th St, 19 East dlet St, M \ Lf CUA yom)