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Pe Conditions—Predicts HE wice of Anglo-American rv: erity from an exper Stat The kee open championsh: ously by the champion of the professionals are What are th Well, 1 never ko thing. When all ing It is at least _weeat, his ability. soi thé States. Ld a. MeDérmott was a very fine player ‘when, in 1913, he paid (ina, Yuet visit to Britain; he had im- proved’ almost out of recognition Winge the preceding yeat by~ chan ing hie ewing trom flat to upright. A véry vig stir he created, too, Hoytake. At. one period in the last round, he had « Chance of winnihg, aad alphough he fell away towards ‘Sena, he ,@nivhed fifth, ‘That deingso, it is clear that the “jomibaities of the ney race of » American professiénals are consider. able. ‘The tendency ‘s for ihe stand- ‘ema of American ‘golf ‘to improve every year. I have an idea that there pouty been a tery appreciable ad- Scare @even years. We are not the invasion in fear and ca but for the first time in im with, cn open champion: we foel that 11 of na Amer co) itched ins 1913, As most people know, 1 ickler for the perfect swing me as being a it wwing. Moreover, he hes a ah of shote—ags many ay 6 game—and that wiil a bi to him when he comes to Bey strange conditions in & country. um certain that MN not take him long to master.any ingw shots that may be necessary. im some respects) Son vintery wi} to change their met! as the shots that the Bnthob demand. ir principal alreratian will bh in the manner of executing In” America, where is Samah, harder than , it is ry to allow for pitch and run shot by placing the q ly #hort of the hole tebe "Vga avrun of, perhaps, To be sure, this is no‘ on every course in the! Je, but, heap just seeing that, on ‘hard turf, “ is virtually impos. to make the lively rubber-cored stop where it As aed ‘ jatumiiy, then, merican golfers the habit of playing the angi approach. Bupel am lagen can play the or none in shot. week brings the ball to a standst!ll almost where Ut rope, and’that directly he applies Practising !t, he wil be a: with it as he is with th form of approach. at Deal and many other in Britain, because here the fashion ia to make the Kanes ht the greens closely ahd little room for | run. has that incisive, upright which is so wall adapted. a0 Purpose of producing the back- a h. He is the right height Dua for a golfer—l. always that about 5 feet 9 inches la dest height from the point of jew of enabling the player to con- a I feel sure he will also compete, course English-born, been identified with ‘Bo long a. time and #0 much of hie gabe in if he were to win, it an American victor: immensely impressed by his moment I saw him play. It years ago on a course the which 1 forget, and-at. the was distant, I saciid i é . 5 Barnes I A i Hl 3 z 3 il g ni § it : ¥s i s = = , * & com: in this young fellow. . ) Mr. Tintiay 7 replied that, if I really \ was going to be- Barnes t player, he would take Fe for him @ professional the result—so, at ‘east, ey told me—was his appointment to ‘Whitemarsh, Pa. For some reason, he has not yet won the champion- 4 aie America proves him to be a yer of dag. ae has @qreal chance at Dealt per swing and 3 first with the their driving, but after a ly they will realize that * + game. Very often on a damp, op- morning you will hear a Y: aes air ig too heavy to- Always: is' it @ splendidly enjoyable and wporting influence. Us have since found our form, Per- | ¢ |sonally, Tam very: aatistied with my | And he will/c ‘You've | 4 are hitting the ball as far as else, Atmospheric ‘condi-j winds ‘ions have no ema!) effect on the long T IS GREATEST STAR ~—THISCOUNTRY EVER SENT. National Champion sic Sian Perfect Type of Golfer by Veteran British Title Holder, Who Says Hagen and Bar- nes Must Both Change Their Game to Meet New Foreign ngland’s Old Guard—Taylor, Braid, Vardon—Will Put Up Great Defense Against Invaders. By Harry Vardon. | British Open Champion into this season's golf. 1 say lence born of two lengthy tours in the in’ anticipations of the revived British ip, to be held at Deal, in the south-nas. ‘alry ia to enter of England, on June 30 and July J, are increased +n- fact that Walter Hagen, the present States, and other prominent American | going to compete, he chances of an American ew them to be better. victory? By that, I do| “not mean to indicate thet the visitors are in for a soft the best golfers in the world are play- 8 to 1 against anybody, no matter how But having had opportunities, during Visit in 1913, ‘af studying the methods of the Americans who are going an effort to capture our honors at Deal, I have no hesitation in ing that they’ are the beet professional golfers so far produced in 0 plenty of people ho contend that this ig mere tuncy, but { am that there je truth in it, ‘fhe ball will not fly #0 far. through « dull, heavy atmosphere as through light, ! clear Everybody drives farther | {in @merica than in Britain. Hagen and his compatriots may be troubled | more than a lite by a wet week a | Deal, but given fine weather, they | will not notice a very big difference | from home. “I have every faith that they | will adapt themselves quickly to the conditions—the slightly more holding nature of the turf which, militates THE WEEK END — (GO AWEAD THEN AURED- GET a JoB 4S \ HE EVENING WORLD MONDAY, TUNE 21, = BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK 1920 , by _ 8. CHANCES TO WIN BRITISH GOLF TITLE VERY GOOD, SAYS VARDON ‘ ee The Press Publishing e New York ening World) CAM LEARN SOME THING ABOUT HERE YaRe MR KELLY -HERE S a (om Fine! COME ALONG, \ ID - /WERE COMES ALFRED (wow! tt O10 HIM 6 WOoRLO OF GOOD TO (our LEARNING SOMETHING) -. By THORNTON FISHER against so long a run as one can ob- tain on the tee shot in the States, and which promotes the playing of regrets; it will make for the galety of golf as a world-wide game, just as did the victory of the Frenchman, | Arnaud Massy, in 1907, A year ago, I am not sure that we should have | stood a great chance against the best Americans; our joints were creaking ag the remult of a long lod of complete or partial detachment from the game and our muscles were painfully stiff. I think that most of | e. It many moons| Binco I felt. #0 pleased with my iron jots up’ to. tinh This, I fame ja a ovsedon trait among British golfers; we are beginning to be our- | selves again, ‘onsequently, we shall have no ex- cuses to offer ff an American cap- tures our championship. ‘Those who | are coming over will be up against some good young players—Abe Mitchell and Aieorge Duncan are young as British professionals go— And J have mot yet lost faith in the| “old. pane Braid, Taylor and my | humble self. “We shall have to wait and At any rate, if our cham- plonship cup goes across the Atlantic, Ray and I are going to have a good try at Toledo, O., in August, to bring pack one in place of it. (Copyrigt, 1020, by the Bell Byndicate, Ine.) Seventeen banks and trust compan- | ies of Greater New York will be ropre- sented by their golf teams this year in| the annual competition for the Charles Wf. Sabin cup, which will be held to- morrow on’ the links of the Greenwich Country Club at Greenwich, Conn, The prize whs offered last year by Charles! H.. Sabin, President of the Guaranty Trust Company of New York. The banks and trast companies whose teams re to compete are the American Ex- change Nationa! Bank, Bankers Trust » Central Union Trust Com lusts Trust Comp ci Kk, Empire trust’ Con ‘ompan: Exchange pany, ‘Trust Company, Faria ¢rs Loan and Trust Company, Federal serve Bank, Guaranty, Trost Con, py, Irving ‘National. Bank. ‘Liberty | ational Bank, Mercantile Trust Coa. | ni} jonal Bank of Commerce, | ity Bank, New York Trusi| Company, and the United States Mort- sage and Trust me Sreeen Cup Offered Winning Yacht NEWPORT, R. 1, June 21,—The Newport Yacht Racing Association last night offered a cup for the winner Of the most races this week, the last series of emination trials be- tween the sloops Resolute and Vani- tie for the hbnor of defending the meriea’s Cup. Roye! Phelps Carroll of wport and New York is Predident of night 1 to be brewing that still more postponements in U: trials might be necessary because tho weather, TOL, R I., June 21.—New sails ior canted than these Bl Present the sloop Resolu' teas Cup detens candidate, were t rom the Heres! hope. yest for possible use this week. ‘The sails ine cluded two new mainsail innaker and a number of smallei sail and: were placed. aboard” the Montauk, which ealled last night yi will be more sult. yf breezen that Present can whieh ie rated n ee use ih th fh vier wo new. topmnasts, Sopectally designed forthe Ty heer a were also sent to Newport, promises light to-d tg n - canvas will be fitted at once to the Resoliie for the trialy with the Vanitie this . SR ert game oe ‘of iit 5 now eipected the pitch which, stops where it drops. | It one of them wins, we shall have no | | now and | smash, In Trial Races’ John McGraw Shakes Up Bad Sag in Middl » Line-Up Has Been ide of hit is ear. Obliterated., By Charles Somerville. HE crown of Nap McGraw may have slipped a little to the left|Pep to second, and again \But—shush for Middle of ‘the Iivaly/aitensalee soonamueanin aces the dope that it is likely to fall off. Nap hit into, his stride yesterday. | Pardon a poor bloke whose paper pays him regularly only out of a pure sense of honor for reminding you that—sure—I said it four days ago that Mac would do it. five days ago, Mac would do And yesterday he did it. But it, Maybe it was it the Giants’ batting order. He didn’t disturb Georgie Burns as was a cinch) He recast | lead off. No reason for that. Nor Beauty Bancroft as second at the slab. No reason for that either, Beauty is not stop he always h: hitting’ above only any been but the great short- he is| season he ever; had, besides being dependable for a bunt and other headplays the like of it, he has been, line. terday, second. Sicking in the batting order, was after Burns. yesterda: Kelly atier Fristh Then An took Pep Young of course, stays where third of the skirmish Doyle was out of the game yes- his place at} But both disappeared as next Frankie Frisch id then? McGraw placed And Kid Wool- worth can get a big salary anywhere these days on stucco work as a pla terer of baseballs ijn the gene: marshalled Bennie After him Eddie Sicking. And Smith, who accounts for himself then with » Then the pitcher, who yes- sign Kauff. then Next Mac terday was Douglas. Now, keep your eye on the new an excell al di lent iffing combination. | think it will ring very loud if anybody com around trying to swipe its jewel The bad sag in the middle of the has been obliterated. batting 0 The schem| But condition may fall down, if Frankie Frisch's physical permits him to show up daily—even presuming it is only in the early innin, ro “a vastly improved Giant offensive is as clearly due as {8 July to follow Er-huh. ‘The new stuff offered overw Proof yesterday anyway In the very Also, June. © yep first yin inning. Geo ing ree Burns cracked {t~as he has so often before cracked it only to be left sing- Ing to the hoptoa ds gamboll ing around second as he stood by the bag marooned—for a fine, clean two- bagger to the left feld fence, bunted to Car) Carlson's pizgazza, thro: son, P, w of Pulled C, Beat uty of P. (hate to mention his name for nobody showed him 6 cents worth of mercy),*Beauty bunted, sending George to third and the bunt Grimm off was the first bag. Beaut safe. Young gave the bulb @ full and fair exit into left. Georgie scored, Frankie Frisch blew Giants’ Batting Order And ind Team Beats Pirates | hume or ever to become afflicted wita) | clephanteosis of the upper worka. Jer. Like Babe Ruth never strut. The heavier the lighter. Pardon the intermission—will now | #o on with the inning. Frank bunted. | Sent George home, Beaut to third, | rison | made a funny chuck to first, yanking) Soda Pop Grimm off the bag. Wrank nexpectedly safe. Kell pounded out, a thing that shot fire and stood Bar- bare on his’ear while it continued to left. Beaut and Pep scored. Kauff's rap to second forced Kell, but Bar- bare then pushed out the bulb to first, for a double play. That was his ‘dev, What happened was that a perfect lady in a right fleld box almost had her bonnet éarried away by the heave after it skied the first bag. And mare! believe Frankie Frisch didn't forget} his appendicitis and steam in all the way from second! I give you my, word the hospital case didn’t wait for a stretcher. B. Kauff kicked along to second on) the play. Edward Sicking went| down, second to first, but it sent} Ben to third. All-Exeitement {mith tried to find out if it wasn’t possible | to knock a couple of planks our of! the left fleld fence. B. Kauff kicked in with another run, Towhead Smith making it a doubte for his own young self, Douglas—the gods were to grant him,a shutout, but of course he didn't know it then—blamed nearly banged a homer. It was eighteen inches only shy of being fair when !t slopped into the left fleld bleachers, After that—| I can see those same gods laughing heartily, and hear ‘em, o—Doug. fanned, But to begin the afternoon with five runs! Just like being born the son of the bird who owns the Standard Oil Company, or the like As if you should worry! But by way of keeping the good work going in the second, Kell tore off a triple-a mighty smash to the fence at deep left centre—and King (replacing Kauff because the Pirates had replaced Carlson with a left handed, Hamilton), was walked, and Sicking ecored Kell on his bounder to third, Eddie being thrown out at first, and Smith rammed it to right and | scored King. Our third: was too easy After Lear, who went fn for Drisch in the seventh, had gone down, third to first in the eighth and Kell had also succumbed second to first, King walked and Sicking put over a Texas leaguer into left, sending King to third. Sick and King worked a double steal. Sick's jump off first for second under | Johnny Ever's tutelage nipped the Pirates into playing for lim for all Jof the gallety about thi Both Washburn | and Voshell Are Double Winners Voshell, title holder, 8. Howard through the = playing and Watson M.! Washburn, twice holder of the honors, always play a post-season es with the phd tals made their bow in the classic metropol- tan championship singles yesterday. Tho Still some doubt two top ranking stars held the interest; Babe Ruth: courts of th: F New York Tennls Club, 238th Street and eee yachti Broadway, while they were in action, | **?4SUS: Freely mixing his sharply dropping drives with fast volleys, Vosiell worked rapidly through two matches. In his | first engagement the left-handed cham- pion outplayed Harold Swain 6—1, 6— Then he took te court against L. Wa- terbury, winning at 6—?,,6—0 reaching the fourth round, Washburn had little to™do, so far as] apposftion was concerned, in moving through two rounds, His deep court strokes Were 45 accurate as gun. fir S . . Connie Mack might have tipped campaigns with ivory. ‘Thi ‘not the Cincis and the Mormen? Dempse: discharge mi patent medicines he's endorsed. ‘Take a slant at the A. When he tried his shortef fange volleya} there w crigpneas about his | shots wave opponents | trouble. in his firat maten outplayed A. Bachrach, at 6-2, 6-1, and | BR: F. Hobbs in the second at 6-1, 61 ‘The competition produced at least one y) pest In the early rounds, aa Percy L. . ng experts figure the Shamrock will . . cal! the Yankepa the Hugmen and the Senators the Griffinen H . | The black mark on Démpeey'e record has been grazed. jot the dollar mark on Wepentiens ose ° Gam ns almost as~ aie to Jack as it does to the | irs . 1. atanding.- How natural the ‘Adhleticb "look! . . «-€ LIVE WIRES — By Neal R. O'Hara Silay. se oc MEIGS woe Swi adh General . The Democrats could do worse than put Babe Ruth on thei 4 « . . as to which draws the crowds—the ‘Yankee Club or the second soon look like & trailing Wood that yeu can’t win) Way Now to viot! ticket. GOLY I8 HARDING'S FAVORITE EXERCISE, AND WALKING Is |" COOLIDGE’S. BRYAN’S FAVORITE EXERCISE IS RUNNING. ion, one of the younger stars, heat Allah 11. Behr in three desperate! fought re! Kynaston tamed Bent volleys by a vigorous net attack. At times he mamered his rival at driving to win at 46, 7—~<, | Jobnny Wilson, the new middleweigitt | | champion, iw to receive $7,500, with | ‘an option of 40 per cent. of the gross! receipts, to box Soldier Burtfleld of | Brooklyn in their twelve-round ipout jat the Sportsmen's Club .of Newark | on the night of July 1. Bartfield is/ to get 20 per cent. of the reccipts if the gate goes under $20,000 and 25 per cent, if it goes over $25,000, Bart- field is getting into coridition at Billy Mathey ,Wins ¥. State Tenvis Atle. 4 Displaying power, accdracy and brill- laney on his, volleying and overhead atrokes, Dean Mathey swept Robert 8S. Stoddart before him to” win the New York State championship title in the lawn tennjs singles yesterday. The former Princeton Captain’ lifted his game-to its topmost flights in the {final-matéh of the tournament on the turf courts of tne Orange Lawn Tennis Club, at Mountain Station, N. J. Stod-|Grupp's gymnasium, in Harlem, dart The score —_ wae Dan Morgan was bot wnder the collar today. | poly tt rue ren for hn ferog that may aac. 0] “Prot Battliog From the opening service Mathey set | count of Gene Tunney refusing to fight sail for the net. He reeled off eignt | Levins, the keitkmate ‘git hearrweight chew. games in a row before he seemed to | pica, in a twelre-round bout at the Armory A, A, pause for breath. It was during this | of Jomey City, Morgan says that Jennings offered perioy Sak he gage le San, Shet he Prank Begley, manager of Turney, the bout with was way to victory, From his preg iy ttaeve tide Stoldart did’ not appear ‘able "to | Zaria, wit vat Bag on ie check Mathey. When he tried to out- | finally declined it, volley him he got the worst of it, while the Princeton veteral turned his’ tosses into kilts. John Jenulngs offers another attractive card of | bouts to the fight fans of Jorery City and this riotulty for bis ree at the armory A Jobuny Murray STANDING OF THE CLUBS NATIONAL LEAGUE, Clubs. George Ward of ELizabeth, eight rounds; Freddie Reese va, Wilf™Ourry, elght rounds, and Hapog Howant me, Buddy Soregue, sgt rounde, Gone Tunney, the local Light bearyweight, de- clared today that altbough Sammy Kelly, his | former manager, intends to sce him in court for Dreaking hie contract with him, he claims he i» not worrying over the actlon to be taken by they were worth. And Eddie jockted | between the two bags until king had | scored, Then he allowed himseif to! be touched for the third out, Douglas was as impervious to Pirate | attack ole Babe Adams had been! to,Giant assault Saturday. They got six hits off him, but they proved | gum drops and not bombs. They damaged nothing. Only in the fourth* was Doug ina dithh. Cutshaw soaked | it through Sicking for a single to right, Grimm filed to centre and| Doug tanned Rarbare. But Schmidt | smedrod the pellet into centre for a! double and Hamilton was walked. | * ‘The bases were filled. » Bigbee? ; Oh, he just popped to Sicking. At! no other time was Doug's sais | mnet of a shutout seriously menaced, | up. bat in mitts. Great reception to | the Fordham kid. Gang likes ‘im, I| Trimmed the Reds, fell to St. Louts,| Uke ‘him, Excellent reason for muny | Punished (he Pirates aud self, Uniess I'm fixed so T can't| Good afternoon, Cu Cubs! tell a cruller from a battleship, @ay no pitcher by the Pie of of cone elt—will ever dean thi, pipet S240 Bie at Kelis, as he nerer had a pontrect with Kelly and thet Kelly agrond that he could go with any ether | manager at ang time be wished to do eo | 1537 | New York. ...23 31 30 26 36 | Philadetphia,.22 31 GAMES YESTERDAY. New York, 6; Pittsburgh, ¢. Chicago, 4: GAMES TO-DAY Chicago at New York, Pittsburgh at Brookiy St. Louie at . Louis, Al Roberts, thd“hearyweight, of Staten’ Jeland, eto reonire UO per cent, of the grom reoripts, | lem the State tax of 10 per oont., for boxing Chasley Weinert, the Newark hearrmeight, in & welve-round bout at the fimt open-air boxing show af the Colmoum A. C, of Newark, N. J.) on Jiine 8. As each man hes won a battle, they | oust to draw a big crowd to me this scrwp. Brockiyn, 2 ti at Philadelphia, rE AMERICAN LEAGUE, vi poe W. be PC.) Clube, WW, L. PG, | Johnny WDundee, the Ttaciaa Lighbweiaht and Cleveland ...36 18.655 | Washington, S09 | Willie Jaclaon, who fought a bg (ve-romand bol New York....38 8! 644) St, Lewis, 4m | a 8 Gow of the Fenway A, of Beton Gomes 1 88 -s6Pl Detroit "Ms | Week, ouch reoetred a guaruntee of $5,000, ‘The Boston 20-24 838 | Philed ry an | oo receizte figured up $15,700, which was & AMES YESTERDAY, good howe, as Che terrific beat on the might of wow Yar 4 nents iy the contest leat many fight fame amy. iphia, 5. Jack Haulon, who is pending over $15,000 tor oe the four eight-rovnd boots which be will stage in jpetroit « Cealted O04 | toe dig Yoe Bimting Palace in PUiladelpbla on Fiat Eigaal | Wedvenday vight, hues completed bie card of bouta GAMES TO-DAY, for the abow, 3 Charley Ledoux, the French olam- Bawea of Chicago, Carl Tromaine | mY yor, Whitey Fitagerald vs. Jimmy | eh, Magee, sod Jo edion Gao Crue ot! neat [New York at St Boston at Cleveland, Washington at Detroit. Phitndejabia at Shivneg,, Louis, | | berd Augie , Ratuer, Silent, Mastin, the deat mate middiew vids Si in The iar ais “ab ten touelld at tbe ir@ show to be held ty the Flower Oicy A. the big aadtorhrm at Rochester, W. ¥.. wae’; | As Ratner to give Ute Kid Willem, pion, who will not th City featherwetsh:, © bout between Williams and Bi Jersey City deiptla, mana, Jobo Jennings mays he bab Gend | up for three fights at bis open. Clty. Jeno! Anderson, bout, Al Roberts’ tn Larry Wut A match the | local middiegateet, bn will} {s im ged ‘stand be owwht (0 be ad. fame wilte w,stift battle, the “tormet fegibetwe ‘has receraed to the boxing lant Frankie Burns, the piptjar Jerey Yobn Jeticings tried to arrange mp for Bie Hud tn no Juky 12, Wit Pa!) Olessman of Phita- of Williams, pashed up the match, ey stamed annein Jere ings will try and have Tunmey box Ole the California betvswelstit, ta the fire 0 KecoHd contest aud probad!y Jame of Bridgeport in the third con! that has been “handing fire’ for more | How: than six mooths was consummated to-day by the Bayonne A. A. in which o pair cf rin! middie. ‘weights will endeavor to aettle an neue of supremacy that bas loug been debated By thelr reapective large followings, down in Jt weight champion of the Inte 29th Division, A. E will furnish one of the star bout A A. Bot (Ing youngster wo Next Thurday Dan Ysneb, the been mowing them jereey rings and Blily Hinoers, th oye bail from Basosi Zz. Bt SCHOOLBOY BASEBALL Under FOR WORLD MEDALS. the auspic of the Parks and Playgrounds Association of New York, the annual baseball tournament foster- ed by Th during J two classes—90 aid 110 pounds, je Sunday Worid, will be held uly and August. There will be Boys may pley in only one class and one team, and all must be from elementary or. Brn winhtoe for the champlo' Th ¢ Bundi medals teams ine wp £0 for rn aintsred. at uarters, No. 1138 tera Sha into seph P. h echeole. Al be four districts und the nine in each district will play pennant representing the city m1 World wilt provide ail for the members of the winn: each district and bronze med- the teams finishing second. lesiring to compete must the sssociatio: iB imation may be had trom Jo. ddresa, Cashin ios Ml aud Montgomery Box Fast Martie Draw. UTICA, N. ¥., June 1.—Jim Mont. womery and Silent Martin fought one of the fastest ten-round draws ever | wilnaneed in the Mohawk Vall tid Boys fought tor to toe alt the wa Danny ‘Humphreys, Irish ‘feaherweighi Lon ave uway ten pounds and a to Red Mack of alee YANKEES, THANKS “TO BODIE, BREAK ~ BROWNS STREA \St. Louis Had Won 1 Ten Games‘ in Row Before Meeling * New Yorkers. |. ST. LOUIS, Mo, June 21.—Before lite greatest crowd (hat ever gath- ered at Sporteman’s Park the fight- Ing New York Yankees checked the | to-night. winning streak of the St_ Louis | Browns that hae endgred through ten | straight games and beat them bya | hoore of 4 to 3. The game carried a.thrill in every jinning, and although the S-owna, | never fought thelr way to even terms, }they snarled and scrapped and | threatened in every inning except the second, and in the eighth inning scored three runs and drew all too {close for'comfort. The peril became dive in’ the minth when Severeld | doubled, thus putting the tying run on second base, but then the spirit of the Yanks and good old Jack Quinn flared ie and no Brown could cross the 1 i With Cleveland losing to the Bos ton Red Sox, the Yanks crept close to their Forest City rivals, and per- haps with an even break in the luck of the game may return to the Polo Grounds In first place. The boys turned on Urban Shocker and gave him a beating after many unguecessiul efforts. They made the, most of ,their’seven hits, and whap iwith Pifg Bodie the magnifice hold’ forth in a home run way for Yanks all was lovely. Quinn was on the mound for the Yanks and lasted through a tem- | pestuous voyage. Me was hard hit, . for extra bases, but he neve of letting down. Fout times .| the Hrowns started innings with dou } dies, but until the eighth did | they manage to score, and then two- | Daggers by Smith, Gedeon and Sisler, all of them favored by fortune, secred | three runs, but then and there it all ceased, oy a eee | Hy Myers Feile the, Robins and | Cabs Win Again, | It lw not often that Hy Myers fails wice in the pinch, but that is what ele at Ebbets Field yesterday afternoon, and that is why the Cubs wou and final game of tha series from the floundering Robins by a score of 4 to 2 ‘IWriee the hard-working out- Aelider had a chance to tie the score rae! [WEB & sinute and twice fulled. ag by the Ath inning the Tobin« telquted thé southpaw offerings of Tiny Jimmy Vaughn for two ru man on third cond whe; Blate, Cae quifelder, took « swing at at's ball, but his best w: Fr to central d which Dode Pi ert easily gobbled | binges by Otto Miller and Burietsh es und a ‘on balls to Simms fon filled the bases in the sevents ‘were out when Myers strolled ty There were long and loud t Hy to come through this tim gutflelder rammed @ grounder at ry a the second baseman , y and threw to Merkle for Cubs hitless durin However, in ty "a players pounde rather, freely, Fetting th ’be lene to plek up Davey Robertson's frst five the j the apitbalt Potheswany , he. knoshpat King of’ Harlem, meet in the star twelve-round bout at the Atmory A. A. of Jersey City Chaney,"by reason of two vic- | tories over, Chapion Jolinny Kifpane and the decisive whipping of ‘Tommy Nobie, has clinched hts right to a claim to mee: the title holder in,» contest for the ¢hampfonship. Murray, he the other hand, also daserts that he fe the logical men to, be elected, to Matte tone feathermelght crown, ith? Hlartemite & nOvdecision victo: Kilbane to his credit while he also has @ five-round knockout over Artie Rai, scored only two weeks agi Besides the stellar attraction Jimmy $ullvan boxes Georgie Ward, Happ: Buddy Willie Curry tacktes tes Freagy Nee NEW INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. je THE ‘$5,000 STUYVESANT THE FLIGHT HANDICAP AND 4 OTHER SUPERB CONTESTS FIRST RACE AT 2.50 P. M, SPECIAL RACE TRAINS teave Penn, se Atation Stand Rend pote. Jasin 81.45,