The evening world. Newspaper, May 24, 1922, 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)

' THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 24, 1922. GETS $150,000 HOW GREB GRABBED THE TITLE OFFER TO COME HERE AND FIGHT GREB By Thornton Fisher|]W0§, GOLFERS sa | ADVANCE IN PLAY. FOR BRITSH TLE —_———— ~ TUNNEY LOSES HIS TITLE TO GREB WN 15 ROUNDS Tireless Pittsburgher Slashes and Cuts Mew Yorker Through Bout Crowded With Action—Greenwich: Village Boy Befud- STEAM ROLLER. are THE SAME died From Start to Finish. i By Vincent Treanor. Over in dear Paree to-day Georges Carpentier, light heavywelght cham- pion of the world, ts considering a oablegram sent by Tex Rickard offer- ing him $160,000 to come over here and fight Harry Greb. Looks like easy money at first glance, but if : Georges has any regard for his Greek profile and generai g00d looks he will turn it down at once, He might ri knock Greb out, but we feel almost gafe in sure dim @ real mussy time before he id turm the trick. After last night's fight at the Gar- gen, during which Gene Tunney shed his American rights to the light heavyweight title, and was cut and almost quartered In fifteen rounds, this chap Greb is more of a fighting freak than ever. They call him the Pittsburgh Bear Cat. He's worse than that, He’s a wild-cat, the kind that can’t be tamed, apparently, Per- petnal motion personified and tireless, with the action of the little wooden fighters on a string, he lg no ring company for anybody, He has no idea’ of boxing ethics, if there are any such things. He has no form or style. He's got nothing only a pair % of flailing arms, which shoot some- times straight from the shoulder, then from his kneecaps, then from be- -t hind his back, and again in lasso fashion from over his head. Where the gloved fists at the ends of these arms are going to land he doesn’t know, it seems, but then neither does the other fellow. They drop here, there and all over. At least they did on Gene Tunney last night. Gene, though he tried hard to avoid them, and Inatll fear nd respect for himself in Greb's react with well meant drives to the body, found himself too busy at vital times trying to brush aside the puz- rling attack that wounded his pride end feelings, not to mention his classic features. He was anburt put completely befuddled. TUNNEY DID WELL IN SECOND AN® THIRD, From the very first round to the fifteenth Tunney failed to cope with the battering Greb. He heid his own, ‘haps, in second and third. He it the Pittshurgher hard on the + body in the gecond, and in the third ' appeared to have Greb slowed up and to hold in clinches, In 5 the fitth, tog, the body blows of , ‘Tunney appeared to have Greb burt, but just as the Greenwich Village “boy's admirers saw a gleaming hope the wild-cat got busier than ever be- fore. From the sixth on Gene was a $ gerry sight. Blood streamed from or) each eyebrow, his rose shed more and his mouth was a red smear. Greb's beer became spotted 4 : ” Referee McPartland looked like ® bugy butcher after unloading a truck of fresh beef. Greb kept on top of Tunney ail the time, and in 80 pulled many & » trick not strictly according to rules. Whenever he could he wound his lett arm Tunney's neck and pum- melled with his tree right. At 4 other instances he'd get his head un- der Tunney’s chin and buck upward, while he flaiied Gene on the the shoulder upon the wounded eyes with and lefts too fast end numerous to be detatied. ‘There was very Mttle differnce to the rounds, As a rule Greb i plunging in, bd So, hands could reach, Pines around the waist one second as if seeking safety and they letting go and driving in with a fresh colleo- tion of punches. Handicapped from blood streaked eyes, Tunney tried to offset these tactics with inelde punches to the hbody, but always potas Dinan lackit room oF pinio) Lid that ef leas ponent was got absolutely no opportunity to aim a \for @ telling blow. Instead, he had to content himself with Uttle clublike wits at the back of Greb’s neck while iocked. Once for @ fleeting second in the third Gene Jooked good. He upper- out Greb with a right and then put a right apd left to bis nibs, but the next second Greb had spun him wround on the ropes, Undismayed, Gene got free end tore in with o right and left to the jaw which un- balanced Greb. At this particular stage it didn't look possible for Greb to continue at such a speedy clip, but in the next round he wae bobbing in and out and around Gene as if ho had just started. As the fight progressed Geno be- came pardonably less ambitious and his arms pecame heavy. Now and then he would attempt to obey the commands from his corner to ‘'keep punching, both hands,"’ only to find it elther impossible or Pr He was too busy defending himself. GREB'S WORK ISN'T CLEAN CUT. It must be said that few of Greb's punches were clean, while most of Tunney's were. Stil} it was apparent that the Pittesburgher’s blows were doing all the ripping and tearing, landing bephasardly oes they did threughout. If Greb could punch hard the fight wouldn't have gone the limit. Once in the tenth he hit Géne a left hook on the chops that for precision at least had the K. O. attachment. In the thirteenth Tunney got in what probably was his best blow. It was a curving Inside right to the chin. Greb's head snapped back as it landed but the next second Harry was inside again lambasting Gene's body. ‘The bout was a severe test all through for Tunney’s courage and gameness and it must be said that he came through gallantly enough, even though a loser. He probably never had @ busier time in his life before, and though he lost his title he gained a lot in experience. The semi-final was a real good fight. It showed Pjet Hobin to be the makings of @ man, although he may have something to learn about injecting snap into his punches. He is willing to learn and has some style. He beat Moe Herscoyvitch technically by a knockout in the fifteenth round. Piet has a good inside right and left hook and knows enough to vary his attack. In the fourth he landed @ left hook, turning Mge around. Then right to jaw and the next sec- ond was whaling body with rights and lefts, Moe had to fight up hill from the fifth. Moe took a gold tooth out between rounds. In the sixth Moe was the receiver-general. Piet mussged up his body and shot hard straight right to chin. Looked as if Hobin had him scared. Piet kept on top of Moe in the seyenth so much that Moe couldn't find time to fight back. Moe got up reluctantly for the eighth and Piet promptly slammed him on the nose, Toward the end of the round Hobin crashed over a right to Moe's jaw and the end Ipoked near. Moe went to his knees after this and before the hell sounded he was down against the ropes with another right ray to the jaw. He looked well a at this stage. Moe was tough, however. Two rights tn succession to the jaw and a long left hook to the other side of the face. In the ninth Piet had Moe wobbly but he kept his feet under him. The crowd began to suspect that Hobin couldn't punch. He had landed plenty of everything with nothing approach- ing a clean knockdown, Moe evidently needed @ rest, for without any help from Piet he sat down in the latter's corner in the middle of the’ eleventh round. Hobin very generously helped him up and then slammed him on the kisser. Moe Was so tired in the fourteenth he couldn't see straight and in the fifteenth he sat down heayily from a right to the chin. Munson eight and after that Piet rocked him with rigits and lefts to chin. When he became defenseless, Referee Porky Haley put his arms around Hersco- vitch's waist and drew him to his own corner, Two minutes and elght sec- onds of the last round had elapsed and Hobin won technically on a knockout. a ee Wennls Veterans Prove Their Class. Class flaunted Its colors in no uncer- tain way as William A. Larned with his partner, Harold H. Hackett, moved 8 the semi-final round of the veteran's tan fawn tennis championship of the West Side Hills, yesterday. Mi doubles on courts Tennis Club, at Forest Phe famous pair Were not alone thelr glory, In the opposite half Sam- uel Hardy, captain of the team that turned the Davis in 1920, Wiliams A. Campbell, er national veteran champion, scored. ‘ $15 Tickets Prevent Greb- Tunney Receipts Reaching $75,000 Mark By John Pollock, Harry Greb, the new lightweight champion of America, winning the decigion-from Gene Tunney in their fifteen-round battle at Madison Square Garden last night, drew down $8,394.20 for his victory, while . and left $66,968.42, Greb received 40 per cent, Tunpey, the defeated champion, got $22,887.20 for his end, The gross receipts, without the Government tax, amounted to $58,914.12, per cent. of this sum had been deducted, which gave the State $2,945.70 After 5 fifteen per cent. while Tunney got The managers of both fighters made a mistake in forcing Match- maker Flourngy te charge $18 for the best seats, as this price Fas too high for the fight fans, Had the prices been from §2 to $10 it ts likely that the gross receipts would have Over 10,000 persons saw the fights, tickets, without the Government tax, sold reached between $70,000 and of which 9,215 paid for tickets, as follows: IT LOOKED AS THO' TUNNEY WAS IN Ay VERY FIRST BELL GENE THOUGHT THAT” THE WHOLE GREB FAMILY WAS THROWING THINGS AT Hime @; were ONE MINUTES NOoVIES RD PAIN-WaLLoPS- SOCKS -GLOVES -WaR BATTLE~ HADES- Reliet for Yank Team To Have Senators Here Instead of Those Browns accmeeeceuies Although Champions Broke Even Against St. Louis They Were Badly Used Up. B@RQ ACTION - HISERY CATASTROPHE - SOCKS Witoears 4H RD. FIRE-WORKS BLOW-OUTS = SLAMS — AD INFINITUM LIVE WIRES By Neal R, O'Hara. New York B Publishing © Wallace Reid entered 500-mile race ut Indianapolis and afterward with- drew. Press agents are now working on the following cases: 8 Douglas Fairbanks will run for Governor of New York and withdraw day before the primaries . © © Copyright, 1922 by’ Pri KEN WILLIAMS’S HOMERUN STOCK—12—NOW EQUALS BABE RUTH’S 1921 RECORD Charley Chaplin W. L. Douglas for a 7 8 has challenged shave. . Tom Miz 1s dickering for Saloon League franchise. ee While Babe Ruth spent a quiet afternoon yesterday in the home- run market, the circuit-clouting stocks of Kenneth Williams climbed up a goodly number of points and as a result of his twelfth four-ply blow the St Louis fly chaser is now right up to Ruth's mark of a year ago. The Bambino's four turns at bat yes- By Bozeman Bulger. ITH the Washington Senators here, Waiter Johnson not- withstanding, Murderers’ Row has a chance of getting together again and launching a real attack. Of late this reputed slam-bang outfit has been made to scatter its blows. It is in need of replacements. Antl- Mary Pickford has challenged Galli- Curei for a duet, but plans on bron- chitis In case challenge is accepted. ee é Harold Lloyd challenges Jack ‘The Yanks—our noble Champa—fee| teTday saw him reach first but to-day Just like @ man who hee come| once, and that time on a base on Dempssy to Fwasiy-reuad, bout” lh through a eyolone and !s able to sit] Pe a a aactiaaiale hale cor on the front poreh for the first time ; Fatty Arbuckle files entry to ride sneaking up on the homerun stars, crashed out his tenth yesterday, and Rogers Hornsby accounted for his ninth homer. Ruth's record in the four games played since his return from exile is as follows: and think it over. If ever a ball club got manhandled, mauled, blasted and dragged through the mire it was our Yanks. They broke even on theseries, It is tras, but there was never a moment waun a single champ was to look sideways Shetland pony in Brooklyn handicap. ee Gish sisters challenge Hay Fever League for heavy weep title. esa i DEMPSEY-WILLS MATCH without fear of belng hit in the back} » Singl -0 of the bean with the old sock. Double: A HASN’T BEEN MADE YET The Browns may not win the pen- Tripl -0 ——. nant, but they are the all-firedest, Homeruns . | Reports that terms had been agreed fightingest outfit that has come out Base on ball: 3 upon for a world’s heavyweight cham- of the West since Chis Von der Ahe Strike outs 0 8 plonship bent betwesn Jack Mempscy used to wear a plug hat and fine Arlie Batting average—Two hite in | 44, nle Negro rival, Harry Wills, were dented to-day by several persons in- volved in the proposed match, Tex Rickard and Frank Flournoy, who are pushing the negotiations for the mateh, both depied the truth of the reports, as did Jack Kearns, manager of Dempsey. Paddy Mullins, manager of Wills, de- clared that, while he was ready to sign immediately for Wills, he had not yet been Informed that Dempsey had signed and had not himself been requested to affix his signature to a contract for the sixt, 125. ae Latham fifty bucks for getting fresh. They never know when they have enough or when they are licked, Take the last game, for Mstance. Woe apparently had ‘em licked to a standstill, and Carl Mays was in there shoving that underhand ball up to therh and grinning as if he thought the whole West a big laugh. With George Sisler hitting a home in times at bat. Percentage, to introduce to us none other than Lefty O'Doul, pitcher. Lefty has been surreptitiouslya a member of the Yanks for a long time, but, up to the present writing, had been kept abso- lutely incignito, Constant bench wear had made the seat of his pant bout, run, McManus busting a two-bagger pants worse | Severeit poking a single here|than that. So, Miller trotted him out SS se and there, the Browns did manage to} '? take the place of the fallen Mays. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE, tle our three runs before the sixth}O'Doul is a hero in California, but w. inning had passed. But nobody|th® reputation some times travels] Bal 23 thought much of that—especially [Slower than the man, Roch'r. 20 14 588 Ri 1 New Yorkers. Lefty was mighty wild—left handed-| Tor’nto 19 14 .676 Jer.City 15 20 429 In the next tnalng Carl Mays was |!¥ Wild. He waiked the two first men.| Buffalo. 17 17 800 Newirk 11 28 324 ugh to let’ Shocker, a|/® bad been told to keep his eye on : ee eS ‘A few minutes later|*he Plate, and that is just what he GAMES YESTERDAY. Baltimore, 5; Jersey Gity, 0 did—so close that he hit tt nearly i Reading, every time and made tho ball bounce away from Wallie Schang. Finally, though, Leity got his sights adjusted and managed to lay the ball in the groove. Thereupon the Browns went after him hell bent for election. O'Doul would havo escaped serious consequences, at that, but for Frank Gerber poked a Single into right centre. It Igoked dangerous with Sisler coming up, but the greatest hitter of them all lifted a liner to Ruth and the gang leaned back for a rest. Kenneth Willlams, official Western representative of the home run clique, came up. But what of it? 4; Newark, 3. 9} Toronto, 6. Rochester, 1; B © (tet game). Buffalo, 6; Rochester, 1 (2d game), GAMES TO-DAY. Jersey City at Baltimore. Newark at R Rochester at Buffalo. Baker making a bad bobble at third Up to this moment the St, Loule | Maer waking & bad bobble at third Syracuse at Taranto: (A.M P.M.) clouter had been to bat fiften times}iwe out in the war-like series and had got just one puny little hit But you are not going to blame the thereafter is All that happened worth relating, but it is the drive as it scraped the boards. distinctly got but two hits. Ruth, our own hero, also got his circuit poke, but he also was sixteen times up with but two hits, tying © gone away from here loaded up with respect and ad- miration of the New York fans, Carl Mays and Sam Jones hope they will times and helped bimseif to one lone single. Hugwins decided won all three matches aj apolis, Pittsburgh and the Third Army Corps Headquarters at Baltimore, Md. Boxers from Philadelphia, Boston, Albany and St. Louls are expected not germain to the Issue Some blamed Miller Hi ne Aactay, If Toney held the ball, insteaa|the fourth inning. Ic the ninti whea @ fellow is licked he doesn't | sticking O'Doul in at a pert eee i nae Spe day BIG ENTRY IN SCHOOL MEET of tying the score in thé ninth ine frame Jimmy Johnaton drove a bhaj care much about the details ment like that, but why not? Our ; 2 sk and feta] YH!d have won the game when|!nto the left fleld bleachers ’ — only criticism ts that Huggins ought Entry lists for the elghteenth annual Interscholastic, track and Aes Cunningham singled, scoring Meusel. eaten “aking it all in all the home to have put him in lone qo, hog | meet at the University of Chicago, May 27, closed yesterday and officials] in icy was maced hard by the Cin. {JERSEY BOXING BOARD hittere—the real herolc swatsmiths--lought to know by this time whether| Predict more than 1,090 athletes, representing 200 high schools and twenty-onnati batters. So were Cauupy and BARS TWO BIG BOUTS had a bad week end. Kenneth Will-]O'Doul js a good pitcher or not, The] two academies, will have heen entered fram throughout the country Eke. ‘This tiny been enclitt teens we ime jams fonlly. poled his home re but only wi fo fad out le to try him. MEADOW BROOKS IN POLO FINAL. ip the Giants’ recent slump—poor| phe New Jersey Boxing Commission in sixteen tries a enemy he had , the nts all over and ‘The Bryn Mawr Freebooters were defeated by the Meadow Brook Kam- | pitehin, Nehf, Dougias, Barnes through {ts Chairman, Louis J. Miss rs of New York, the latter thereby riding into the final event for the second Wootton Polo Challenge Cup, The score was 11 goals to 7. Meadow Vrook will meet the Bryn Mawr Foxhunters in the last event for the cup by the score of 2-6, 6—3, 6—1, 6—1, . Frederick C. Anderson, one of the fteen, Johnson was once challenger for the court tennis championship. Atl the score, and giving the champions ica 4 ought to give a lot of the top] fitter ae on the tal of meeting between Willy Coat ee etnone 270 hitters ho bo. | ranking lawn tennis stars, Herbert L.fone time he was considered almost as good a player as George F. Covex,}a chance to win. But they were not|and Dempeey was that there seemed {0 moan their weakness with the willow,| Bowman and Ralph M. De Mott won| the world’s professional champion, who last week successfully defended bis] equal to the task, and faded ay in|be no reat demand for the rateed = “| their places in the round before the| title against Kinsella, tenth hike a crowd weak | bout After °K. Willlams's home run|**™l-Anala of the North Bide Cham RUTGERS LOSES AT TENNIS. s 7 Me onship Singles on the courts of the thera California doveryibing tor Maye trom| University Hulghts Tennis Chie feet Phe winning tennis team from the University of Souther ty .nst the Ruty Anderson and Van Vleck Sur- vive Second Round on Links Abroad. PRESTWICK, Scotland, Muy % (Associated Press).—John G. Ander son, American golfer, won from ( C. Whigham of Prestwick in to-day's play in the British amateur cham pionship tournament. The score wae three up and two to play. The feature of Anderson's gamefy was his approaching and putting. He was not so sure with the wooden: clubs, visiting several bunkers on the Journey. At the sixteenth Whigham was bunkered beyond the green, losing the hole and giving Anderson the matcl) Whigham picked up his ball on the fourth hole, where Anderson prob- ably would have had a six. Ander- son's approximate score was 40 going out and 80 for the seven holes played coming hom The other American survivor, Ka ward Van Vieck of the Garden City Club, also came through successfully, winning from Reginald Foster of Por ters Park, four and two, Vieck, after losing the first hole in his match with Foster, squared matters wiht a good putt at th second, halved the next three hole: and won the sixth. Foster squi the match at the seventh with a putt of more than six yards. Van Vleck won the eighth, but was bunkered at the ninth, which Foster won, the players making the turn ail even. Van Vieck became two up at the eieventh, but lost the twelfth. Then he won the thirteenth and fourteenth with good runs up the bank, The fifteenth was halved, and Van Vieck, by holeing a four yard putt at the eiz- teenth took the match. @ ‘Van Vieck's score going out was 8%, and for the seven holes coming in 29. DODGERS ON WAY TO PHILLY FOR Kg IF TUNNEY HAD AIMED AT WHERE HARRY WASNT INSTEAD OF WHERE HE was HE HIGHT HAVE Won PooR GENE WON HIS TITLE IN JANUARY FRIDAY, 13TH i922 ( Ebuen--- HNGSIDE Bowny Overconfidence Cause Ot Wretched Showing By Giants in the West World's Champions, With Five Defeats in a Row, End Their Tour To-Day OW THEY STAND x & NATIONAL LEAGUE, W. L. PC. W. L, B.C. By Robert Boyd. N.York 20 13 1625 Chic'go 18 16 .500 CINCINNATL May 24—With no] Pittsb. 18 12 .600 Bklyn.. 15 18 .455 apparent Indication of emerging | St-Lotis 19 15 559 Phila. 11 18 .379 from their present playing slump, the Cincin. 18 18 500 Boston. 11 19 .367 Jd World's Champions dropped their GAMES YESTERDAY. fifth straight game since they set| Cincinnati, 6; New York, § (10 in'gs). ~ out to conquer the Western clubs. Brooklyn, 6; Chicago, 2. . The club has oné more game te Pittsburgh, 10; Philadelphia, 3. Good Fini Play before they conclude | their Boston, 8; St. Louis, 6. oe Make Finish swing over the Western wheel of Jest- the circuit, and that is with the GAMES TO-DAY. Ater Boor stirtion West Reds here to-day. Whether they |New York at Cincinnati. ern Tour, win or lose the champions will re- Boston at St. Lo turn to the Polo Grounds next Fr Philadelphia at Pittsburgh. is (Spectal to The Evening World.) CHICAGO, Ill,, May 24.—The Rob- ins are on their way to Philadelphig where they play a six-game series jn three days with the Phillies. The series will get under way to-morrow, and on Sunday Uncle Robbie will haye his team back at Ebbetts Field for « single game with the Braves. The Robins’ first Western trip of the season was not a successful ong, but was topped off by a strong finish In Chicago, the last city visited by the Flatbush outfit, they flashed form reversal and won three straight from the Cubs. During the Western in vasion the Robins played fourteen games and won five. They lost three straight to the Pirates, which was the first team met on the journey, and ip Cincinnati they dropped three out ef four, St. Louis was next on the list and the Cards won three and lost ong When the team left Flatbush it war In fourth place, but as a result of thy three succeasive setbacks suffered |p day much the wor! paign through the ru the Glants win to-day it wi games they have won have lost out of thirteen lose it will be their sixth straight defeat, and they will return to the metropolis with four games won and nine lost. Either way, it's a shame- ful record for a club that won the World's Championship last fali and had such an easy time with the Eastern clubs earlier tn the season. The Giants are not only losing games, but they are losing valuable ground in the National League race. ground that will tell in the final reckoning next fall. Those slow starting clubs in the West, such as the Pirates, Rede and Cardinals, are speeding up as the race progresses and closing in on the club that was supposed to have the pennant cinched. Pittsburgh, St. Louis, the Reds and the Cubs loom up as dangerous r their cam- - AMERICAN LEAGUE. w. N.Yerk 24°13 .649 St.Lo'is 21 14 .600 Phila.. 16 16 500 Boston, 13 17 .483 Cleve'd 17 18 .486 Chic'go 13 21 382 GAMES YESTERDAY. St. Louis, 11; New York, 3. Detroit, 6; Philadelphia, 5. Cleveland, 5; Boston, 3. Washington, 3; Chicago, 2. GAMES TO-DAY. Washington at New York Cleveland at Boston. Detroit at Philadeiphia. W. £. WG. Detroit. 16 17 .485 Wash'n 16 20 444 = imag they will do in the future is prob- lematical, Yesterday's game gave them their seventh straight. cGraw is not alarmed at the * recent showing. It will in- je the interest manifested in the e for the 192 2 pennant honors, he contenders for pennant honors. thinks, Manager McGraw Informed the] Overconfidence after their early |i itpurem: jt Gropped tate the secont! newspaper men of Cincinnati, fol-| triumphs in the Bast has been at- [ayer and while in St. Louls it ali lowing their three straight defeats | tributed to the Giants’ downfall, and| Brooklyn players, however, hope 4 at the hands of Pat Moran's team,|this is a fact. Overconfidence ,has : . retura to the first division during their stay in Philadelphia. Burleigh Grimes lost more gamer than any other member of the stuff while in The spitbal that the Reds are playing the class jest ball in the Heydler circuit. What wrecked the foundation pillars of just as great a club as the present World's Champions, and to-day it has transformed the champions of old farmer from Trappe. No, indeed. yesterday into a band of Clase 4 | hurler was defeated in Pittsburgh, any Mays lajd one in the groove Just prior to that old Frank had NS ball players lea by a baseball strate-|in St. Louts the Cards took his meus The. next thing the big crowd did}maced Mr. Shocker for a home run, gic genius who cannot drive the ego-|ure in the first and last games, {y was—gasp, With a vicious smackla three-bagger'and a single, On ane tism and overconfidence out of his|the games he started ‘against (, Mr. Willlama planted the pill/gther attempt he had poled one into twenty-five players who are e: Cards Burleigh failed to last mop. squarely in the upper section of the/deep right centre that would haye AMATEUR BOXERS HERE FOR TOURNEY. downed With intellectual limitations. | than four innings. right field grandstand for a free ride|been a homer for a fast guy, But Amateur boxers from outlying points began gathering here yesterday] If Fred Toney had held onto Kel-| In yesterday's game against 1 around the bags. Shocker and Ger-|not for Baker. No, ‘Tobin had|for the national amateur junior championship tournament which will be]ly's perfect throw to get Hargrave in] Cubs Al Mamauz allowed ning bit ber, already aboard, rode in with him.|/backed himself right against the} held under the auspices of the Metropolitan A. A. U. at Madison Square]}the fifth inning yesterday the Giants}and kept the blows well scattered That was the ball game. fence and waited. He pulled down|Gurden to-night and to-morrow night. Arrivals were reported from indlan-| would have come through and won| When the Cubs hall runners on ty bases Al. tightened up. The Dodgepy chased Percy Jones off the slab |) ¢ in the ninth. Hargrave later on Couch's single sored and Ryan ‘are not displaying the ef- fectiveness they did eariler Eas sano, announced yesterday that neithe the proposed Dempsey and Wille nor thy Dompsey and Willard boute would by in the Bill Cunningham was the bright, | permitted tn that Sta Williams for the next to the lowest|not return, to-day. shining Hight of the Giants’ third Brendin the Willard and Dempse; rage. The lowest wag held| Both sides were pretty lucky to get KINSELLA 18 BEATEN AGAIN. straight defeat by the Reds. He hit} bout as a purely commercial propost by Bob M the other here, Bob ]an even brea! In an exhibition court tennis match at the Prince's Club, London, Wal-}. gouple and two singles in four] tion. with no element af sport, the Com walked up to the pan sixteen oficial ter A. Kinsella of New York was defeated by EB. Johnson, three sets to one| times up, his last single, In the} mission holds that it fs positively out the question, ‘The reason given for putting the bay) Kinsella conceded Johnson half of} y,iniy, sending Meusel home, tying ‘# net men at New Brunswick Rrwaogion tele

Other pages from this issue: