The evening world. Newspaper, April 15, 1921, Page 31

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THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, APRIL(15, eS Athletics’ Fledglings Surprise » Fans by Winning Out in Ninth Inning. By Robert Boyd. “TER observance of Athletics in their second game | of the present series with the Yankees, there is some truth in the} ‘Btatement emanating from Connte| "Mack that he has the best ball clup “fepresenting the sleeping city in the | ‘Kmerican League since 1916. “\{n the first game of the series the Peppery bunch of youngsters in thetr "#ull blue uniforms did not have an sepportunity to show just what brana | hipall they are capable of playing, ey were Amothered from the outset under the heavy barrage of hitting by-the Hugimen | z4 The second game at the Polo Grounds offered a different situation | for the Mack fle@#Mings, They fought the heavy-hittin@&¥ankees ali through tHe eight inning id entered into the last inning witBithe score 3 to 2 -against them. In a fighting Perkins tripled td melt eeingled between first ponding Perkins across at tied the score. Galloway, the following batter, sacrificed, Quinn to moving Welch to second. Rom- fel took three wild swings at the air. ie burned a hard single down the close the \ish in the ninth | field. Welch and second, vith the run itr base foul line, scoring Welch ith the winning run. was a sensational fighting finish | jad the Mackmen are deserving al! | he credit that may come their way for their defeat of the Yankees -1* Rommel, Connie Mack's young " yiwirled against the New York team held the heavy hitting Hugmet myn to eight hits and they were ,gcastered in such a manner that they gnly realized 3 runs from the eight Kite. He achieved the distinction of faaning Babe Ruth in the fourth in- and sending “Bambino” back to} dugout in each of his five times tmt, hitless = Waite Hoyt. erstwhile Red Sox and {mer Brooklyn high school boy, “Made his debut in a Yankee uniform pitching the first seven innings. y touched him up for seven hits made two runs. Hoyt was taken | in the seventh inning, Hawkes ting for him. At this juncture the ees was trailing the Mackmen by run, Meuse! and Bodie were both | stired in this inning. Ward doubled against the right field fence. Wally | Schang walked. Hawkes walloped one of Rommel's benders out to left centr for a single, scoring Ward and Schang. | The Yankees gathered their o:her ‘run in the fourth, after Babe Ruth had fanned. Wally Pipp walloped the ball to deep centre for a homer, in the fourth inning the Athletica | scored their other two runs. Bruzil tripled to left. Ruth played the ball badly. Dugan was out on an| fold fly. Perkins fouled to Ppp, inst the stands. Just as Hoyt| ted to wind up Brazil made a dash | the plate. Hoyt threw wide in an i@ittempt to cut down the opposing first | agSman and Schang dropped the bal) ag an excellent piece of base run- igg. Welch tripled to left and tal- on Galloway's single over short ck Quinn pitched the last two In- > Sie Bespectacled Lee Meadows & ‘of the Phillies Driven From the Mound. HILADELPHIA, April 15.—It took Giants eleven long innings and ¢ solid hours of playing to defeat 41d Bill” Donovan's Phillies on the ening day of the season, but yes- apaay afternoon they won the second gle of the series before a dozen is had been pitched by Lee Mead- ®ows, who started the game for the @Philadelphia team. ‘¢ Glants drove Meadows out of the before he could retire a single bat- and before the inning was over the ww York players had chased no less han six runs over the plate. Mor Hens were scored during the progress of the game, the New York team winning cond. victory by a score of 10 to 2. % While Meadows. Loy ge oreo SOEs Xin, who. replaced the. bespecta Bicher auring the bombardment In the Bret inning, were being hit hard, Dono- pun's young men were finding It a prob- | lem to str yi out the rves of one Arthur Neh curvaike last season, Nehf pitched a at me his first start, and It not until the eighth inning that the | i Hies produced their first run. ‘Th. sie allowed only elght hits, and ome more or less invincible in the ‘early q rt of the fray. wil left hanged in ee STANDING OF THE CLUBS NATIONAL LEAGUE, ‘ =: me nay W.L. PO.) Clubs, W.L. PO. «20 1,000 | Pittsburgh... 1 1 500 TID @ 11000 cincinnati... 1 1.500 a," [1b 800! St. Lous... 0 4.000 CS 4t 1300 | Phinaaetonia,. 0 2.000 GAMES YESTERDAY. Eke York, 10; Philadelphia, 2 . Bosto New York at Philadelphia Lswniyn at Boston, | Pittepurgh at Cincinnati, At Philadelphia | RH. E. New York... 600100300-1015 1 Philadelphia 000000011—2 8 1 Batteries—Nehf and Snyder; Meadows, smith, Weinert and Wheat. Al Thos | | Brooklyn 90100100—4 9 2 Bowtoi 150010113 —1116 6 Batteries—Reuther, Miljus, Mitchell and Miller; McQuillan and O'Neil. At Cincinnatt |Pittaburgh .. 100103020—710 0 | and Ainsmith. 1921, SS I BIG LEAGUE RESULTS | _TOLD BY INNINGS. | NATIONAL LEAGUE | Cin 000011000— 63 per and Schmidt; Mar- quard and Hargraves, St. Louis-Chicago game at Chicago postponed; rain, AMERICAN LEAGUE. At New York— Philadelphia... 0.00 2 w York... 0001 Batteries—Rommelt Quinn and Schang, At Washington— Boston .......010010000-2 7 4 Washington 10130111 —812 y Batteries—Pennock and Ruel; Schacht and Gharrity, AUT Chicago . 2021000-5 8 2 Detroit . 0010401610 1 Batteries—Kerr and Schalck; Leonard St. Louis Batterie | nings for the Yankees and the Mack- | men touched him for five hits and/ nosed the Yanks out in the ninth by | sending two runs across the rubber, Rommel had "them" breaking at all angles around the plate. Ruth tock three healthy wallops at the ball and missed ch swing by a foot Brazil, who is holding down first for ‘he Athletics, is one of Connie Mack's favorite players’ Mack looks for th's youngster develop into another Sisler in the fourth, to His steal home after he had hit a hard triple to left, and his all around play): ng on the defense substantiated some of the| nice things Mack has said about him. The four players constituting the Mackmen's infleld look to be a real fighting set of younsters. Edd Dugan on third, Galloway at shor: and Dykes at second. They will make it interesting for many of the other teams in the American League this summer. Hawkes, the Yankee recruit who batted for Hoyt in the seventh, got a rousing reception when he brought | Both runners on the bases home with i le. Ping Bodie Je a great running catch of Brazil's hard wallop in the fifth, Ping ran away into deep right centre and speared the ball, that looked like a homer Walker, the hard hitting left flelder of the Mackmen, contributed another sensational catch of Schang’s hard hit to deep left centre The Athletics hit twirlers for twelve played super Ex-Red Southpaw Driven to Cover in Second Inning by Braves. the Yankee safe hits and ull in the field. BOSTON, April 15. Ruether, southpaw, “Walter “Dutch” lately of the Cin- cinnat! Reds, made an tnausplclous start in his first game ax a member of the Brooklyn Club at Braves Field, The southpaw was driven from the mound as early as the sec- ond inning, Fred Mitchell's Braves winning their first game of the new season by a score of 11 to 4, Ruether pitched good ball in the ex- hibition series against the slugging Yankees and Robbie was confident that his new portsider would tame the Braves. But Robbie soon discovered he had selected the wrong pitcher in Ruether to win the second ame for his National League champions, fyers failed to insert a hit his felding was the beat In the first inning be the third base run by a wonderful pcentre, Hy grabbed tne bali with his gloved hand, did a somer sault and came up smiling. He threw out Holke at the plate in the sixth by man, catch @ great throw. Fred Nicholson played his first game for the Braves and made four hits, triple, a double and two singles, Billy Southworth, who came to the Braves with Nicholson for Rabbit Maranville, hammered out three solid pok wy juvenate bet $45 to i Mm Philadelphia QAMES TO-DAY, Botton at Washington, | Cleveland at Bt, Louis, St Loule at Clon, 5 1 PAGU . AMERICAN LEAGUE, Clubs. WL, PO.) Clubs, W.L. PO, Lad cose § 01,000) Washington... 1 1 500 Detroit | "Bow York... t 1.800 | Cleventnd ... 1 1.800 H Bost + Fb 800) Bt, Low! 11 500 MMiladedohia.. 1 1.800] Chicago ..... 0 1 600 GAMES YESTERDAY, ie Mrlladelpnia, 4; Now York, 3 Detroit, 6; Chicago, 5. Washington, Boston, 2 bo Cleveland, 12; Bt. Louie, 8, =| FOUNDED 1856 EAR as good as they look —look good as they wear. Firm texture finely spun pure worsted pin check sack suits —re- longer—ideal for business wear. Seventy dollars. Spring Suits and Overcoats BROKAW BROTHERS 1457-1463 BROADWAY AT FORTY-SECOND STREET ND MAY BAR ENTRIES FROM JOCKEY CLUB MEMBERS - IT’S NOTHING TO LAUGH ABOUT - By Bud Counihan| Relmont’s Letter to Copyright, 1921, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), TouéH Luck OLE KID —THAT Oust SUCKS You FoR THE DINNERS ! Je ey HN) WIHEN PNT AAR eee ) ere) wis) “a SoU MISS A “Wwo Fool PUTT ON THE DECIDING STROKE .... From a reliable source the writer] ‘st #de. and Harry London vy, Joey Leon in the 2 i g.| double wind-up: in Ue alx-round bouts Murray was informed to-day that Frank Bag: Sehwwarts will meet Chick Wilson, Wille Coanors ley, the well-known manager of Willic Jackson, Augie Ratner, Gene Tunney, By William E. Summons. HIGH WATER of Greenwich, Conn. while In the open’ will clash with Joe Paul bout of the evening Matty Jack Wolfe and other good battlers, | Brooks of Panama will box Vic Clifford dy Mook, Holt Gate. will be appointed the matchmaker of| few maymond, matchmaker of ihe Hunts Point | itt i} ‘My ‘ted t y cl - ich will open next lopday tw 3s Oe the Armory A, A. which is the larg-|A. A. which will open nest Mopday wlaht wiih « | et ie: fo au bis ge bout between Jimmy Kelly and Andy O'Hoyle for tho welterweight championship of the Bronx as the feature attraction, saya that after next woek sho will be staged every Tuesday and Saturday at his lub, est open-air club in Jersey City. By selecting Bagley for this important position John Jennings and the other persons connected with the club are surely picking the right man. Bagley inows the game thoroughly and he would put on fighters at the shows which would pack the are! to its doors and make the club a big suc cess, The opening show will pro! bly be staged the second week in May. Word was received yesterday from the Esopus and the Neversink that the water is improving and trout ris- ing to the fy, so good fishing Is ex- pected by the end of the week. Johnny Gill, the eugod welterweisht of Har- risking hae teen matoted to mest K. U. Lough. the Pennsylvania battler, in a Cen-round fou at Harrisburg, Pa, on April 0, Gill baw een clamoring for a ghance to meet Longhlio for vome time, ay he is mure be can outpoint him, 1K. 0. tought Penns ivania, “The Coid Spring hatchery on the North Shore of Long Island, is at- tracting a great many visitors jn au- tomobiles, and Cold Spring Harbor has come to be a favorite resort for the welterwulght champion of 1 alged up for three fihts, On - {the 19th he boxes Malph Schappert in Allentown, 5 P Rattling Levinaky will meet Dan O'Dowd the | ca the 26th Johnny Gill at Matrlebure and on me} Ounder fishermen, Hundreds of New Hogland hearyweight, in the feature Led Paul Doyle at Boston them were there last Sunday The of fi tthe Byracuse A. A, of panic ra e Syme Ne tonieht, ie Lavisnky “am | Frankie awards cae cas side feattermetens, aaa f8h are running good size io qs 2 it- | Dern matched for two tore important bouts by hi a geod alupe he ought to hare no trawble in ont To sar =e 5 Pointing O'Dowd, Tho latter han low many de- | MAnaker. Lew Merete On next Thurday oaht a: | The New Werk Casting Club will | Gisiona in texte not only in thia vicwity but at | tbe Beiehion Beach A. C. be stacks up against |hold its anim tournament on the Ys | Duteh Brand: of Brooklyn, while on April 29 hi el y P many out-of-town claim, 20 te] parade ground, Pelham Bay Park, on Dan Morgan, who in abrays doing something the Meacon A. C. of Newbure peecey, OH! ilibe seven ievantar | fer com soldier hae jnt booked two twelte- | 4 toring carnival will be stag! at the Ooi. [9 P- M- There will be seven ¢ a round bonta to be fought at the Woodhaven | eeu tm Newark tonight at which many of the| both fresh and salt water, with $1 Sporting Clim of Brooklyn on next Wedneeday | good tocal dover will appeat in exhibition boute, are worth of prizes. Participants night.’ Harvey Bright will mect Eddie Barly Of |'mho rant is a wun obit boat Made A Hert ital Hrookyn aré Moe Ginsberg will take on Dutch | ‘te cnt" Dany: Sullivan the wall tence agctat | pected. from ail along the coast as Brant of Brokiyn. There will bo two other |\,".tirman of the committee of amrgearnn, jf south as Philadelphia, ‘The public atresia (fewtes, The meaty aes Be Pe | Sultvan mua\atready gut the consent oF aetem | ia Invited, ether as spectators or con- will be tunes orer to about one bundrat die | ooen to apy : able} soldiers in thie vicinity who are in need [Ox f° SPPEAr testants of money. Matchmake McArdle baa secured Mickey —— ; - Malloy to meet Joo Florio of Greenwich Vile] “The Professor” writes that he has Geomgie Rune, ‘ghting newmboy of Rrook- [ago in the semi-final of ten munda to the| Missed some of the fishing stories in lyn Bridge, who made a qd showing in his|twelveround main go between Frankie Jerome] tie kivening World, The column has mt pro’ fight at the Star SC. on April > |of Harlem and Eddie Fletcher at the Common-| been run every Gay, but it was in- by sending Mattling Chip to the canvam alter | wealth Sporting Clab to-morrow night. Malloy | advertently left out of the Final Edi- 1 minute and 22 secomls of fighting in the firmt 4 for Willie Fontour, who] tion on one or two evenings. Cheer round, will fight Mickey Kelly at the same ub on April 27, Once more Dark Row ia gumipiax of thie coming fight, , et Flori up, Professor. If you don‘t find ‘The opening of the baschall season at Polo Grounds on Wednesday had a ecriua cife on the attendance at the boxing show of the Central Manhattan Sorting Club of Harlem on the same evening, aa mate receipta of the Augie Ratner-Ted “Kit Lewis bout there were $5,108, including the war tax of 10 per AN NOUN CIN G cAutomobile Exhibition AT ICELAND 1680-2-4 Broadway, Bet. 52d and 53d Sts. ERMAN _N. KARP, Inc. of New York and London, Est. 1902 invites the Public to the World's Largest Used Motor Car Salon where an exhibition of motor cars of distinction compris- ing the best of the foreign and domestic makes are on display. Exhibit includes: Tom Gibbons, who fightn Dan ‘Porky’! Flynn. eran light earywoight in a twelve-round nmtringer, tin thie go well be Hugh Walker, Night heavyweight of Kansas City. will come together in a ten-ruund bout at ‘Terre Haute, Ind, oo April 29. Frankio Burns, the popular Jersey City frath weight, wito retinal from the ring two weeks a fo into business, has just taken a fichter under hia management, wham Hume thinks is @ xaning bes, This led is Bart Garrigan of Jor ey OXY, @ lightwergtt, who bas been fighting for @ year amt a balf with much siccom, He won tin leet three fighta with knockouts, Eddie MoMahen, the matchmaker of the Star Sporting Club, anounced last nlckt thet the follow tne boxers would amar at the regular weekly show of the Star Sporting Club on Mayday night Tt f Yorkville wa Artie O'Leary of the TOWN CARS - TOURING - ROADSTERS LANDAULETS - SEDANS - LIMOUSINES CABRIOLETS - COUPES - SPORT CARS SPEEDSTERS ~- And Many Others Come and see this wonderful display of motor cars. Every one of them in splendid mechanical condi- tion, thoroughly reconditioned by our corps of automobile engineers and every one of them carrying our guarantee, ter, hold the press Rolls Royce Cadillac Daniels Hudson Pierce Arrow Crane Simplex Franklin Marmon Packards Cunningham Holmes Jordan Locomobiles Stutz Chandler Revere Lancia Renault Cole National $80 Mercer Lafayette Buick and many others HERMAN N. KARP Telephones Circle 0065+ 5252-5253 INC, Gen Téhen on BOT. 1902 OPEN Consignment ayment Plans Arranged EVENINGS Partial Over Guy Canadian Horseman to Issue a Statement Soon in Regard to Threat to Keep Him From Racing His Horses on Metro- politan Tracks. (Myrcial to The Brening World ) BALTIMORE, Md, April 16.—-Mary- land is sho’ all het up ovah Mistah Belmont’s letter to Mistah Com- mandah Ross, The very audacity of attempting to tell one what ser- vants he must employ; by gad, sah, there is only one way to retaliate: Let us defend ovah State's honor and dignity and retort in kind; let us ignore the Stewards of this Yunkee autocracy that calls itself the Jockey Club, and refuse them permission to cross ouah fair State's bohdahs until they have acknowledged the suprem- acy of ouah sovereign law. We defy Mistah Belmont and his brother au- tocrats to dictate the conduct of ovah deah visitor from across the bohdah of Canada, Let him hace his hosses heah, employ whom he will, and we will shower him with all the bless- ings of ouah hospitality—(whisper)— as long as he has the money to en- gage some of cuah flowery-tongued orators to defend his cause, be it righteous or otherwise. ‘This {9 a sample of the propaganda that has been turned loose since the publication of t letter addressed to Commander Ross by August Belmont, President of the Westchester Racing Association, calling his attention to rule 71 of the Jockey Club, which reads: "At the discretion of the Stewards of the Jockey Club, or of the Stewards, and without notice, the entries of any person or the transfer any person may be refused.” The letter to Commander Roes reads: “We desire to call your at- tention herewith to Inform you that, in the Hinai look for it in the Latest} under rule 71, the entries of your Joxtra, or some other edition, It will] stable will not be acceptable to this be in some of th every day, | association if ex-Jockey Carroll Shil ling or H. G, Bedwell are in any way The Ocean City Fishing Clup of | Connected, dirwctly or indirectly with Ocean City, N. J. one of the livest | Mt Mee wiewetly oF in clubs in the country a da bunch of rectly” that the plea of persecution Ross Increases Bitterness’ Bedwell Case one of the leading politicians of the State, are making all sorts of dire threats of retaliation, If Commander Ross cannot employ Bedwell, who has lately become a citizen of Maryland, and be permitted to race on the New York Tracks, there is but one thing to be done, and that is to bar New Yorkers who are members of the Jockey Club from racing their horses on Maryland tracks. He would have them give an “Uncle Tom's Cabin™ show t the bloodhounds or the using such notables am i on jr, Harry Payne Whit~ ney, John Sanford, Samuel Ross, Ral Purr, the Rancocas Stable or the Greentree Stable permission to race in Maryland, This is just a sample of the see@ of bitterness that is being sown im the minds of Marylanders #0 they wiN demand ridiculous action thelr State Racing Commission im Bedwell’s favor. The harassed com- mission has had no evidence nor great desire to be forced into the affair, but are compelled to by the politicians; but that is sense @ very seasonable part of life where even the Mayor of Baltimore complains that he is being bhampet by politicians In his effort to admin- ister the affairs of the oity. Commander Ross remains silent, beyond promising a statement wi two or three days, His stable was shipped to Havre de Grace yesterday afternoon, It will be seen In action to-morrow, Bedwell protests that the Jockey Club has not accused him of anything, but that the whole affair Is a high-handed attempt to drive him off the turf because he tried to ret a license for Shilling, Auto Business" Big Demand Now For Trained Men 10 million automoblies in Wnlied States to be pained. Spring work now opening, This te Me year in the automobile business. - Largest School — In The East « ad ihe aw fae fellows, is negotiating for a per- | rectly” that the plea of pers: Y or the we of aroUMing tt manent up to date casting Held in the | [ATh® Tor The, BUC pOne ot ett wil HTM YEAR—8,000 GRADUATES. heart of the city, with a guod chanee | 5" nits ATL acanee atau he city, with @ good chanee | demand that the State Commiasion | Avs Ove Of getting it. ‘The club has hitherto} take up the issuing of licenses of | munive, Uehting Oxy acetylene Welding held its tournaments on thi in the northeastern town. “Switch Reel,” on several thiigs thinks the prog down to procure gratory fish law enactn is likely Ge TRilman Bilmont a Til ton en Rilhurst Uptown 1494 Broad: outskirts of the who is an authority besides: mme of action laid] home, nt of a m to fail Stiff Collar :< 6 fo Expressly made for us by Troy’s best collar maker. All the latest and most popular styles, Buy your supply to- day. This offer will not be repeated. 1407 Broadway (28th-89th St.) (4id-44th St.) 1943 Broadway (at 66th St.) Newark: fishing, 1 | jockeys and trainers, Bedwell'’s cam- paign agents are industriously try- ing to create the impression that the “indirectly” means that Bedwell can- not be employed by Rosas even at his Maryland farm, or atyhis Canadian They prefer td overlook the fact that the letter was written by the Westchester Racing Association, ry Machine Shop FIRST LEBNON FRER, Send for Booklet and Pasa, BEDFORD BRANCH Yo MC" A Automobile AND Engineering Institute 1119 BEDFORD AV., BROOKLYN. rents the reason that it run-|and refers to the Belmont Park | fou! of the thmemanored doctrine of| track | Sates cophte Redw/l‘s advisers, one of whom Is ‘CHAIN 4 SHIRT SHOPS 2 ‘Collars 334% Lower! G uaranteed Regular 25c Grade Highest Quality TROY MADE ALL SIZES CHAIN SHIRT SHOPS Town 14 mee cuert 2d Avenue (cor. 8th Street) 62 Finst 14th § 200 Fifth Aven Hreslin Hotel ( Uptown—West Side Mth & roadway (Na. Cor.) 8487 Broadway (at IStth St.) 1898 Bt. Nicholas Avenue (Cor, 180th Street) 204 Went 126th Stroet Prudential Building (769 Broad Street) Pennsylvania Hot (id St, wide) Bd St.) Hote! Commodore (424 St.) 17 Market Street Mail Orders proveptl fet pee! Main Office, 5 Union Square, New York wit S Rilbrook , Ri Icrest AN FRilson 2588 Third Ave ve, (149th St.) Pe t Ave. Wii Southern Boulevard Brooklyn 867 Fulton Street 431 Fulton Street 482 Fifth Avenue #79 Manhattan Avenue (Greenpoint) 1723 Pitkin Avenue

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