The evening world. Newspaper, July 15, 1920, Page 22

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ined Gaal TING PAG!) AMERICA ON THE DEFENSIVE TO-DAY Copyright, 1920, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World), Se eat rm - But His: Team Mates Play Listless Baseball Homer King. Of course, be was try-' | | ing to keep him from hitting it, And |” hence the passes. But they were not craven, intentional . Next Sanyny Vick got rapped right on the top Of the head with the ball’ Sammy was knocked flat. But hd jumped up @ second later, shook him self together, and, to the astonish- ment of the Browns, who all started toward him, and his own team-mates, ambled steadily to firat and @s: sured the anxious Majah Huggins ho was all right. Signor Bodie offered @ fine socking sing.e to right, scoring |the Babe, When, however, Dol Pratt | went out, Davis to Sisler, WE had cracked for the day Pathetic Memory. By Thornton Fisher WW ;Browns Win Easily as the Locals Put Up Their Worst Game of Season, Glory Note. He did it—the Babe. Knocked an- other homer. His twenty-eighth. Very first time up yesterday, which was in the second inning, the great ,Pil Plasterer sent the very first hot slam that Dixey Davis offered him | By Charles Somerville. WELL, JAWN So, Far irS ABouT FIFTY-Fitry Aint i? In etriking contrast is the mpeotacie ‘of the American Olympic Committee ‘That fairly has to beg for alms that Uncle Sam, who swept the bdards at Stockholm in 1912 and Athens in 1908, May retain his athjetic supremacy t: ‘the forthcoming games.. About two- thirds of the world’s gold is now in this country, but there's ‘been very Itie placed at the disposal of our Olympic team. The Washington Gov- ernment, conscience etricken, did Joosen up to the extent of assigning to bring the team ret DAVEGA I. Announces ring uc, but this was about could be done. when asked to do something more in the way of finan- clal support. That England, Austra- Canada and nations ‘Were jen aid to thelr representa- tives fafied to have any effect on our Government. As though taking the inistratios whack. Memory of Chewsday's five c |plomped flatly into the mitt of Smith ie Added Glory Note. Hoots and Hisses, ot glory for Li'l Aaron, Biffed out a miraculously knooked down by Jack ‘The Yanks treated thé 11,000 and Tooked like a certain hit, he threw his’ been known to put wp on the home Hildebrand promptly called much animation as a group of oldj%® Then and thereafter. as the defeat—Saltva John Quinn, |Ploomin’ game. Miller ever chucked him out of the —well, you could search me for the The Shameful Seventh, jthe lead in the second. And it had old kit bag for the day until—doctor, cue from the National Adm| into the lower tier of the right grand ‘ stand. ‘The regulation ringing Ruth] We had the bases filled in the . but Muddy Ruel's hard ot ft ‘burt ala sibs led deep under the/ie third. Smith had only to etick « 1 a ’ ‘hoof on the bag, forcing Ping Bodi at the bag with Ruth two-thirds of 11 Aaron Ward socked out a|tt® Way home. It was the third out. homer too, Into left bleachers. Mofe| | ma The crowd handed thege to Gedeop. : triple too. 7 In the sixth Ged’s fierte liner was! Not 60 Good. Quinn with gloved mitt, Gedeon was so annoyed to be cheated of what, more fans present to the wast ex= hibition of baseball they have ever| Mm oveg” Jhek “ow the: hevinpoee! Gedeon grounds this season, They displayed out for interference. I could repeats’ about as much kick and ginger, as Clarence, what the crowd called Gedy maids at a tabby cat's funeral. All Grouch Memorandum, sj the gent who gets the biame of| The bdiawsted Indians won théi’ There was nothing the matter with John'a work at all, and what Majah game for to be succeeded by Shore, Q who was biffed freely by the Browns | FH }Majah's reason and never find it It certainly isn't hidden under my hate, The Babe's beeycotiful twenty- eighth home-run wallop put us in begun to look as if it would be all in ‘the way of runs we need pack in our I've had another chilli—the seventh. Gisler, the Brown's most celebrated CHAMPION GEORGE DUNCAN Tells How to Cure All Kinds of Golf Ailments In a New Series. GOOD MEDICINE FOR BAD GOLFERS. Valuable Tonic for Both Champion and Duffer. First Article Starts on These Pages MONDAY, JULY 19. Nehf. Pitches Giants to Easy Win Over Cards |'s« »: his hands and jed ST. LOUIS, July 18.—Pounding three cobson safe on the first station. Hore of Branch Rickey's pitchers for an even | He dozen hits, the Giants won the third iiams, filling the bases. game of the series from the Cardinals Smith dropped a single into short game— fer ie ke bad ocnnetabees Gers te ‘would have nailed it. But he dashed 80 far under it the bulb nearly repped him on the.bean. He stepped > back and grabbed blindly. It went be| Juvenile Crop This Season by No Means Run Out Yet—Leonardo II. Latest. of Prospective Champions. fen going to the Polo Grounde this siaply to see Ruth “bust ‘em mile” 7 INGLAND and America ciash to-day in a preliminary round for the Davis Cup As Johnson won he London title and Tilden the Eng championship, there is not for the British racquet @hee dominated the like Britannia rules ‘Unless all dope goes Bolshev: t ic up is coming ee ae season. Brookes and ‘will do the heavy de- Australia, have both Latest Training ‘Gallops of Horses At Local Tracks A heavy fog hung over the Yonkers ‘ poral a tage trials weren't 4 at the other tracks, ving ot et track. olds is far from run out it peeme. Just when we have about made up our minds that we havé seen the best of them, a new one ig. trotted out from an unexpected quarter and all previous caloulations are consigned to the discard. The latest: mewoomer among the juvenile aspirants for championship honors vas sprung on racegoers at Yonkers yesterday dy Kimball Patterson, trainer of the McClelland stable. He ig Leonardo II., an impressive leok- ing colt by Sweep and Dthel Pace, and judged on his victory at the first asking, in the maiden race last on the card, he must be ranked among the top notchers, Beating those opposed to him seemed like play to Leonardo II. He went right to the front at the bar- rier’s rise and galloped Guv'nor and others who tried to follow him dizsy. He swung into the last sixteenth ma- festically with a ten length lead and won almost eased up. It waa just such @ victory as that scored by Inch. cape in last Saturday's Tremont, al- most identically the same kind of a/ © performanee. Running well within himself and with nothing to extend him at any stage of the race, he cov- ered the five furlongs in a minute flat. He had worked for the race in 1.00 2- Of course, there are no means of knowing what Leonardo Il. would have done if something had been able to go along with him, Neither are there any means of knowing what Jack Dempsey would do in a fight if aqme one would go along with him. It's @ good sign in both cases if oppo- sition can be eliminated early and thoroughly. ' Not in years ha two-year-olds been time to time proclaimed champions, only to be overshadowed by a “now one.” First it was Careful, The Sal- mon filly swept all before her in Maryland and coming North, held her own until she met Prudery. The latter beat her so easily from a bad start that Careful lost caste and Pru- a was immediately placed among the invincibles. She may be entitled ition even now. Tryster 'rudery and he too earned e top notch ranking from which he has not been displaced since. In turn came Knight of the Heather and Dimmesdale from the R. T. Wil- son barn, with striking performances which won them a place well forward in the juventle spotlight. ‘Thq Bo- hemian loomed up too as a prospec: tive champion at Jamaica, and 6 did General J. M. Gomes after win ning two races in commanding fash- Berapis, after disappointing in tempt, came out @ second came Inchcape, His YONKERS SELECTIONS, First Race—Knight of the Heather, Fourth Race—Lady Lillian, Superb, Alcatraz. b Fifth Race—Chasseur, Himendort, Albert A. Rodgers, Vv. T. Sixth Race—Carline 8, Fibbertygibbet. Man O° War that only on Tuesday last Sam Hildreth paid something Mike $160,000 for him. There ig no tellli what is yet to come to cémplicate the two-year-old Jimmy Powe, the Whitney ‘» he will beat the $160,000 colt at Saratoga; Jim Fitzsimmons, the Quincy Stable trainer, believes he has one or two which measure up to and there you are. Sara- 8 rich in promise of stirring before the two-year-old crown goes to where it belongs. Don't for- get that Rowe's pair, Prudery and Tryster, have done everything asked of them and are stil! unbeaten. ‘The Yonkers meeting had a very fine opening. A big crowd turned ouf and the new surroundings proved joyable, Favorites came into their own after twelve straight had fallen by the trackside at Aqueduct. Five out of six won for the players, the single one to fail being Audacious. Naturalist, the winner of this race, 5 wu LIVI WIRI S at Sportsman's Park by a score of 7 to{left- Peck—fully back in the 1 Arthur-Nehf, the $40,000 southpaw, @id the pitching for ‘the visitors barring be eighth inning, was avin: Neht held the Cardi 3 jel a Inals to seven scat: eighth inning that inniinj sight ig that By Neal R. O’ Hara. ‘Coportght, 189. by The Pras Pubitshing Oa (The Now York Rvening Wort) GARRY HERMANN GETS READY. With the Reds inside the smelling sone of the World's Series, Garry lusting out his strong box again. But Garry ts facing trouble this year, The Cinci fans aren't golng to pay $5.50 a ticket for the big Herrmann thing the Reds. he'd turn ‘em away. tribul possible. And Garry will do the rest. was well played, however. The Em- pire track has been extensively im- Proved since last fall, There are better accommodations for automobile racegoers now. Nine entrances make getting In and out of the course com- paratively easy, A new entrance to the paddock, in front of the club- house, is a pleasing innovation, and there is a new judges’ stand. The clubhouse has been renovated and the inclosure railed off attractively. Naturalist surely is a do and a don't horse, but it Is always a matter sswork when is gol) to do. ‘rainer Tom Welsh has long since given up trying to guess him. Yesterday Naturalist won the Empire City Handicap like a Man O' War, after leading practically all the way. He appeared to sulk just before turn- ing for home, but probably decided thing near He ran the mile and an eighth, further than he likes to 0, as if it were seven furlongs. Larry Reinhelmer makes fow mis- takes. He sent Jim Daisy to the post ready and ¢it and the colt won from end to end. This makes two in @ row for Larry and Jim. Lion 4'Or looks the Roseben of the present. He can pick up a« regular package and sprint with the best of thought they got & lot. of money for t they & lot of money for the horse when they took §20,- 000 Guy Bedwell for him. As horse prices go nowadays he was cheap at that price. Hasten On was regarded as having a good chance of beating Lion d'Or if he got off. Shuttinger broke straggling with him, then made up ae cg effort ited in an easy victory, remained for his Tremont race so much ground in the run to the far turn that the colt was through © at the head of the stretch. ssnotlias eT oN etc ce da und Maks fda not to, as long as there wasn't any-|. is after. for that. With 60 cents off for cash” And if th again this year there's going to be more squealing at the Cinci ball park than there ie in the Cinci pork foundries, 4 The howls of the fais have got Garry thinking, which in itself is some achievement. But Garry is against cutting the price. He hasn't cut any- Third system of applying for tickets requires fans to fill out a ae tionnaire. /Fan has to prove he’s a resident of Cincinnati, dead or alive. Also has to give reason. Fan that has no reason is the kind that Garry It’s the kind that's supported the Reds for the last fifty years. ‘When the questionnaires are in, Garry will be a ome@ian draft board. Biggest suckers will be placed in Class 1-A and given $5.50 seats, tariff stands at $5.50 ince his teeth, with the exception of his coupons. As he dopes it,; ham F' the purpose of the World's Serios is to give the loyal fans a ghance to see Fans that qan't afford $5.50 tickets will be given a chance to buy box seats at $6.60 apiece. The loyal fans have upheld Garry for twenty years. Now Garry is going to hold up the loyal fans. Last year Garry figured so many fans would want to see the games And he turned thousands of 'em away—for good! ‘The Cinct fans that went insane when the Reds won the pennant went in- solvent when they played the World's Series. The only way for Garry to square himself with the bugs is to have a recount for his price list, Red- fand fans favor the Billy Sunday system for seeing the serieg. They want to see the games free. When the last game is pleyed the fans will con- | neid. what they think the éeries was if the crowd figures Billy has done ‘em good, they cough up as much as But Garry will have it softer than Billy. that Garry has done ‘em good, Fans claim it's against that kind of Sunday baseball. Another plans to give the steady customers first cholo. Home patrons will be invited to send in their old rain checks and beer checks.| finished the game A fan that shows 60 beer checks proves he's worth. In Billy Sundays league, The fans already know grand idea, but Garry's always willing to get soaked. % the! hei On receipt of certified check, second class suckers will get $3.30 seats and be put in Class B, Guys that want to see the games for 50 cents will be exempted. Dodgers Increase Lead By Double Brooklyn Playing Great All- Around Brand of Baseball in the Windy City. ( CHICAGO, July 15. HAT wonderful baseball are those Dodgers playing! The National League leaders, and it seems strange to be thug desig- nating a Brooklyn team at this time of the year, defeated the Cubs twice yesterday afternoon, thereby gaining on the ‘Reds, world’s champions, who were busy winning only one game from the Phils. No faster all-around agg jon. bas been seen here than Wilbur Rob- inson’s men are showing. themgelves to be in the current series. As they say in ri parlance, “they have everything. Everything else being equal, that ‘whale of a pitching staff that the Dodgers have is enough to bring them the championshi Al Mamaux worked the opener and held the locals to ix hits, the final score being 8 to 2, In the second , set-to Jeff Pfeffer only permitted the Cubs to garner five ‘hits, the Dodgers winning the good night “pastime 4 to uA hubba ae Win Over Cubs cals being restrained to eleven hits in two games in these days of heavy clouting! The Dodgers have now won twenty out of their last twenty-three starts, most of their wins coming on the road, where it is always so hard for a club to make headway. They say you need to have Inck to be @ pennant winner, and the Dodgers sure had plenty of it in the opening pastime, as-it was a ball that sion Austin McHenry crashed a n Bur Perched himself on third. base and when Jack Bobults hit foately te [Jacobson and Williams. The Majah drive Scored right. Geor era 90 contributed @ pair of singl three-bagger to the victory. came in the seventh inning when Giants manufactured drove aie May off the their first’ run in The third bi econd on beat out a bunt line, fillin; After Do; fly to McHenry = cut loose with all his speed and right plate, In the seventh the Giants scored four runs and put the reach of the Cardinals, win replaced May in this inning, and the Giants scored their last run in the eighth inning off the spitbatier, North | Were honest passes that came to hin, The behind Rul eupy the mound for His’ opponent will be Willie Doak, .} spibballer. TY hits, it was not until the luced their “lone run. In this se: between ‘se Burns, the outneld the st, Louls pitchei His tripl und. mor he speed of Frank Frisc! enabled the G! e bases. fanned, Snyder lifted in’ short left fi t McHenr: scored again in the fifti it was Bancroft wh. r t, the and Bancroft raced across thi e far beyond t¢ for the Cardinals, Glants ir last five es, ‘They are nog fa the Ci for fifth place, Giants will play their final gam: to-day. ‘Benton will y fotae, the New York ‘TROY TAILORED Soft COLLARS Fit well —wash easily Cluett, Peabody & Ca ine Troy NY. the home athletes four runs and h, the Ford- nts to score fourth inning. walked and went to je to left. King down the third base |They stuck two more to their credit iY in the un over the plate. With hortstop doubled to left Foung, fotlowed with a single to Marvin Good- now won four out of ‘was playmg far forward to cut off any bunt or infield smack in- tended to acore Sis. Smith lifted a short fly over his head. From ordinary position it would have been a cinch for Peck. But Ruth had ito try for it.” It was a hopeless ‘chance, Sisler scored. Then Gerber put out the first honest smash of tho Inning—a single to right. It scored immediately experienced frapped led the feet. He bounced Jack and sent for Burns Shore, Seemed to me the Majah was in a mighty hurry about tt. And a lot f good it did. For Severeld imm: ately smacked a double off Shore— jyeh, for about 800 feet off Shore—and ‘scored Smith. Davis went out, Peck \to Pipp. But Tobin clouted ‘out a long sacrifice fly, scoring Gerber. Gid- leon ended the agony by fiyihg out. eighth when Jacobson slapped one against Ward's glove that bounced away for twenty fect. A a d throw to the plate by jHttle afterward Smith drove a single to right that got past Vick and went hlto the fence, and, Smith skidded all © ‘the way, home on-the pass, Jacobson in front’ of him. Our Finish, ‘There came in our eighth li'l ‘Aaron's home run, It was after Peck had gtruck out. Pipp passed away, Ged- eon to Sisler. Then Babe Ruth got his third pase of the day. But they I'n say that, Dixey Davis in each itched plucky ball to the r Bathing eutts of pure wor * sted—two in one style, tights and slipover; veguiar $15 value. pecial $9.95 DAVEGA FOUR SroRT sHory bate st oS den Bveniuge) RTLANDT 18 MOP Uitcawars BROAD W 681 ur feu Bes © prise you. the finest ci; —is the on! Prettiest. use stantial convenient bounded freakishly past Davy Rob- ertson and fled through the ket wate leading to the left field bleach- ers that secured all three runs for them. Olsen was the lad who hit the ball and Kreuger and -Koneteby scored ahead of him. , The Cubs came back with in their half, but this sess! nished all the ‘tallying of the game. M: x did well for the best part of the struggle, but in the ninth the Cubs got Paskert tq third and Bur- leigh Grimes was rushed in by Rob- by to save the day. Leity Tyler twirled for the home talent ang was effective except in the sixth. In the second game Jeff Pfeffer and Zach Wheat were the big stars, the former only being scored gn once in the second, while the great o1 flelder, connected with a two-bagi and a triple, whieh firured in most ah lacy a hahaa ait ee PORE NESE BE OIE STARS AE, ARNE RACING Empire City Track (YONKERS & MT. VERNON) The price? 25¢e for EGYP the price you pay—are all sure to sur Ripe and mellow Turkish tobacco— tte tobacco in the world kind we use in Egyptian “You'd Be Surprised!” PRETTIEST _ CIGARETTES "You'd. Be‘! Surprised!” Sorprised!” Surprised 1? Surprised 111° Egyptian Prettiest C: tity you get, the box igarettes, the quan- they come in and EE eS ~ BRET 3 the quality is well worth protecting, we pack the twenty Egyptian Prettiest Cigarettes in rae sub- Tuocinty TIAN

Other pages from this issue: