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JACK GLEASON 10 BID FOR DEMPSEY-WILLS BOUT ——++ Friars’ Club Member, Who Helped Tex Rickard Promote John- son-Jeffries Battle at Reno, Has Backing of a Millionaire Contractor—Jim Buckley Also in the Field. D big boxing matches than anybody in tae history of the ring, ls going to be the sole bidder for the Dempsey-Wills match for watch articles of agreement were signed yesterday. Hardly had word been received that articles had been signed for the two big fighters to battle for the world’s championship before hte club that makes the best bid than several men announced locally that they were prepared to promote the fight if their offer were accepted. It is learned that Jack Gleason, former Californian, who was Tex Rickard’s partner in the promotion of the Johnson-Jeffries fight at Renu, is going to make a big bid for the privilege of staging the battle. It seems strange that after all these years, twelve, he should return to the pugilistic Hmelight in a desire to promote just such a match as was the Johnson-Jeffries fight, a battle between a big strong Negro and the cham- pion white boxer. By Alex Sullivan. "T think for a moment taat Tex Rickard, who has promoted more meee TT Ta THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JULY Pi 7 THINK THE BROWNS HAVE BEEN GETTING More MILES TO THE GALLON- THE BATTLE OF SKOKIE GREEN FOR THe OPEL) Copyright, 1922 (New York Evening World), by Press Pu MAYBE Ste NEEDS HIGHER PROOF GAS MAN HEAVEN WE LISTEN IN ON FROM ENGLAND MUG LENGLEN'S re so men nomena ccnnenti 12, 1922. By Thornton Fisher|pBBY'S STAFF OF PITCHERS IN WRETNED FOR Even Dutch Reuther, Who Had Beaten Reds Twice This Year, Beaten. biishing Company. (Special to The Evening World.) CINCINNATI, July 12.—The pitch- ets for the Brooklyn Robins are losing with such facility and unanimity that Uncle Robbie ts almost ready to shake dice to see which one shall next ha’ a chance to lose a game by having a home run belted off him tn a pinch, That way of picking would be as good as any other, apparently, after seeing the Reds take the opening game of the series here yesterday from Dutch Ruether by 6 to 4 Ruether was chosen to win the opening game of the four with the Reds and give the Robins a fresh start in the West. He had lost to the Car- dinals last Thursday and had four days of rest. He had beaten the Reds NOT FORGETTING THE DESPERATE GaTTUE HOW BEING WAGED IN BOTH LEAGUES BY BOSTON AND PHILLY FOR. POSSESSION OF LAST Place Have MERCY ON Gleason hasn't done anything in the# CUP 1S ON way of promoting all these years He has devoted most of his time to arrenging big affairs of the Friars’ Club. In fact he has taken little In- terest in boxing, having gone to few of the big bouts promoted .in these parts. In the old days he was such a fan that'he went thousands of miles to attend a bout, But Gleason has often said since the Dempsey-Carpen- tier bout that a Dempsey-Wills bout was the one fistic event that would Interest him enough to lure him back into the game. Gleason has a big millionaire butld- er, It is understood, who owns a big tract of land near the city, on which he would be willing to build a con- crete amphitheatre to seat 100,000 people, and he says he can build It as quickly as a wooden velodrome. If this stadium were constructed for the fight it is his intention to maintain It ‘as an outdoor skating rink during the winter months. Gleason gained a lot of experience helping Tex handle the Johnson-Jeft- ries fight and if there is one sports- of Tex in the effort to land fistic plum ft Is Jack. Another promoter who says he has the backing to promote the bout Is Jim Buckley, who for years conducted the Sharkey Club tn ‘his city and who is now the matchmaker at the Queensboro Club. He was Gunboat Smith's manager when the latter lost on a foul to Georges Carpentier in London “I have five men who will put up a million if necessary to guarantee this AT CHICAGO YOUR “UWE” going through with the big fight In first-class style,’ said Buckley to-day “It is the biggest thing in the History of fistiana and 1 would like to pro- mote it."* It is reported thut several theatrical men are going to make bids for the big fight and before the end of the week It looks like a cinch that the first bid will be put In for the match —and maybe after all the fans would have to wait till next year to see it, which would be necessary if Rickard promoted it, as he has gone on record as saying he won't be able to handly CARMEN WINS MOTORPACED. BICCLE RACE man who should prove a keen rival’ it till the spring of 1928. Dempsey- Wills Articles Give Jack Chance to Meet Willard By Ed Van Every. York Jz DEMPSEY and Harry Wills oni from signing ‘‘the papers’ Saturday. Mullins wanted the clause that called for meeting sixty days after accept anoe of bids changed to read thirty days. Mullins failed to get what he was after then and he failed to get it yesterday. “Kearns and McKettrick are de- termined to force me into signing up to an agreement that will enable them to put off meeting my man until they are ready, which I suppose is time were signed to an agreement yes- terday through their manage! Jack Kearns and Paddy — ullini whereby the champion and bis colored challenger will meet for the title Apparently the heavyweight cham- pion has complied with the demands of the New York State Athletic Com- mission, which insisted that Dempsey must agree to take on some real op- ponent instead of first meeting set- fleld. yards, Carmen the American Georges and his countryn third, ups whom he had defeated before pest sbepleaeped pulling to the writer eensth ne Frank Corry, the Aus- By John Pollock. eee 23, Geneva at Washington; 30, and was confident he could defeat yesterday after he had argue for = ‘estminster at Washington. again. ‘Then he was accused of capt-|more than an hour with McKettrick, | The former record for ane hous i pes TE he coe. aauie rash at Aran neaTat Wane tallzing his title, now he ts suspected | Who was representing the champion| Way made by Victor Linart of Belgium. |reatherweleht, of. Cleveland ; Virginia, Wea beep ality Wert of capitalizing his match with Wills, [and his manager. -'But what can 1] Carmen assumed command right at ids oe a evelandy and) Nov. 4, Lafayette at New-York City; If Jack Kearns !magines that he] do," he said helplessly, So he signed.|the start. Miguel and s made sey- |Johnny Dundee, junior lightweight] 11, Wabash at Washington; 18, Univer- has put something over on the local] Mfullina seemed to be under the im.|era! attempts to catch the winner, but }champion, The men were signed yes-| sity of Pitishureh at’ Pittsburgh; 25, Nkaiy 45 Tene unsucces: Miguel | ; Iniversity of De: ; find grey Fearne Le TEaRy AL He ould he hissed G SA picked up half a lap at one period of |temday to meet tn a bout at Ebbets Wout virginia Prarie eth * tak Bo ft Jack Demi is ¥ the} ihe race, but Carmen, gazing behind,| Field tn Brooklyn on the night of en. far as Ja ipaey '8] Boxing Commission as well as the|auw the Frenchmaf coming and in-| aug. 14, Ag matchmaker Dave Dri obligated by the signing of yester-| public, McKettrick strengthened this| creased his speed, The result ie fea Meee eve re | TENNIS STARS ON WAY EAST Gay's agreement, it is merely 4tipu- | impression by flashing the agreement| Miguel finally lost his pace 2oll-made these fighters the best offer . lated that he will meet Wills at some future date, and a clause is very care- fully attached that permits both con- testants to take part in other bouts, Dempsey's other bout, of course, be- ing the one that Tex Rickard insists on promoting between the champion and Jess Willard. “The Dempsey-Wills match,” point- ed out Harry Burchell, Secretary of the Boxing Commission, late yester- day, “is just where it was before the commission took a hand in the bus! ness, The agreement signed yester- day means practically nothing. No date for the closing of bids from the promoters has been stipulated for one thing. This point I understand Wills's manager held out for, and rightfully so. “As the prospective Dempsey-Wills match now stands, the champion is signed to meet the colored heavy~ weight sixty days after the accept- ance of the successful bid for the con- test. Just when that particular date and boldly pointing out that the cham. |!*p*- pion had signed and the rest was up to Mullins, “What is more,"’ pointed out Me- Kettrick, “we have even made a further concession to our original greement,” and he pointed out the ddition permitting Dempsey and Wills to take part In other bouts be fore the big meeting. It strikes one as strange that since Kearns was so generous in adding to the aforementioned agreement why he was so strongly against walving a point and making the sixty-day clause read thirty days. This was the point in question, Mullins did not ask for permiasion to take part in any other bouts before meeting Dempsey. This ts another point that has im- Pressed the Boxing Commission, Kearns and McKettrick when ques- tloned on the argument put forth by Mullins that the bout should not be put off until sixty days after accept- Fddle Madd Australlans, Fred Grenda, race familiarly French point Alfred Goulet, bacher. cap amateur Beckman. In may be nobody knows. Probably ‘t|ance of the successful bid explained] Grimm, tl scratch men. Rudolph | ,¢A* ihe fare Woe ee ante Banton of | annual polo tournament of the Rumaon will be a long time off if Kearns has| something about a thirty-day proviso] Zimmerman, another amateur, won the | forn Than a gitn tou] Country Club, which will begin Satur- his way, but If he thinks this com- mission will look on while a meeting with Wills is put off to the distant future, then Mr, Kearns has a wrong impression.” Considerable censure was aimed putting them at the mercy of the Promoters, who might suddenly con- spire and force the fighters to accept lower terms than the match was really worth “Sixty days after acceptance of * assured Kearns in one breath, “does not mean that the bout will not be fought this year, While we have as ye. no actual bid under consideration, it fs likely to be only a matter of a couple of weeks before we close on LOS ANG JOE LYNCH’S REPORTED GUARANTEEING OF BUFF 1S BEING INVESTIGATED. n have done some great fighting in that olty | £° pene fie sinitted tnat | f2FMAE, Heavyweikbt “champion from ihe tom iz moins, = '® M7} College by making a atrong bid for the ete ecimisnte je Inter Kearns admitted that| an Vv. Luckey, an Oklahoma Gite — Intercollegiate title In the national tour- One ot me a se he was negotiating for a Willard and] promoter. oma CY), Abe, Golgate, who, fiesta, Johar Grey | nament at Garden City a week ago. It rules ts that no club shall guar- | possibly a Brennun match for Demp-|~ +J¢ none of these opponents suit} {ay munt at the Burt Avenue A. A., Coney the final appearance of the Fursle antee the boxers in a star event |sey, and he still had hopes of some- 3 1d < yr | iaiand” wants to get a battle with, Joe} captain on the links for his college, as I h you, whom would you consider?" | {uane ight title. Gold-|he@ was a member of the graduating any money at all, and that 50 per |! ea Oey eat in Pittsburgh that) Lackey inquired. stein foele that on he te not chat | class this year. Secor has been a mem: i aa behaesearihdigy sy . _ pion eto, of til" Wack, ;. cont. is as great a percentage of | WOUl! leld to the prone a Ee — Bight ‘he fought "butt a sn eltecadins| ber of the Williams team throughout a atch. so dropp, TERN 4 i hee had Butt practically knocked out when course, serving as captal the gate receipts as tiey umy di- |comment that ihe tickele for thet ENTERNATIONAL LEAGUE, nny domed wid-one that stopped Gold | Ygqe J gia) vide between them. No private agreements to pay guarantees on the part of clubs or the boxers themselves is legal. Consequently, the report that Joe Lynch had to pay Johnny Buff $10,000 out of his own pocket Monday night, when he won the world's bantam- weight title, in order to make up the $30,000 Lynch is alleged to have guaranteed Buff, is being in- vestigated, and the finding will champlonship bout couldn't be printed in sixty days. Of course the Demp- sey-Wills bout was referred to. In the case of a Dempsey-Willard title bout it would quite likely be possible to take care of the ticket printing within sixty days. It is conceded that a Dempsey-Wills match is 4 big affair and somethng that cannot be so easily handled. At the same time it is pretty plain to those on the inside that Tex Rickard Jersey City, Roc! 1-Hour International Derby at Velodrome Won by New Yorker. Velodrome last night at Whirling around or track at the Paddy Mullins's way when he held off|sreat si «l, Clarence Carmen of New m the one-hour International Motor-Paced Derby from a formidable In winning Carmen set a new record on a_ board forty-one miles, four laps and seventy was From the crack of the starter’s pistol, set Anally lapped his feld. a es of France n, Jules Miquel, was Paul Verkyn of Belgium finished In the match race for professionals of Newark and Harry Kniser of New York Reggie The Amerteans won the in two straight heats, won the first for his team and in the second Harry Kaiser managed to push his wheel over the finish mark a whvel's length in front of Grenda, In the alternating match contest, « new feature of American bike racing in Europe as the race, Ray gesco Verri took port. Spencer won the race on points, whieh was run in four heats, on: four being omitted from each heat. Spencer had 26 points, Eaton 23, Goul- let 13 and Verri 11, The half-mile national championship for amateurs was won by Elmer Bunat was known E. B, Bendi, third. race this seventy ridera started, seventy-yard han¢ The two-mile handi- | The, first, open boxing show of the} sixth with 159 points, Were cate handl- | columbus Sporting Club of Yonkers, N.Y . nthony Jon July 20 will bring together in the main shoe hipbe event: more than] bout of twelve rounds Jack Bernstein and one-mile lap race, — OFFER WILLARD BOUT WITH FRED FULTON ES, offer of a match at Oklahoma City, Okla,, on Labor Day Fred Fulton, Bob Martin, Capt. Bob Roper, or Tommy ceived here to-day We de Balti're 63 19 .7 Roch’er 51 33 .607) Rea J. City. 46 38 .548! Syr, Buffalo 44 41 .518! Newa GAMES YESTERDAY, } Buffalo, 2. Newark, 8; Toronto, 5, Syracuse, 12; Baltimore, GAMES TO,DAY. Jersey City at Buffalo, HERE’S HOW THEY STAND NATIONAL LEAGUE, WwW. kL. PC.) WwW. iL. PC. N.York 48 26 .649/ Br’klyn 40 39 .505 St.Lo'ie 48 32 .600| Pitts'h. 36 42 .462 Chic'go 41 37 .626| Phila... 27 45 .375 Cin'ati. 41 39 613! Boston. 27 48 .360 GAMES YESTERDAY. New York, 4; Chicago, 0. *Cincinnati, 6; Brooklyn, 4. Philadelphia—St. Louis (1st game— rain). St. Louie, 3; Philadelphia, 0 (2d). Boston, 10; Pittsburgh, 4. GAMES TO-DAY. New York at Chicago. Brooklyn at Cincinnati. Philadelphia at St. Louis. joston at Pittsburgh. AMERICAN LEAGUE, W. L. re. W. L PC, St.Lo'is 48 34 .585|Wash'n 38 47 .481 N.York 48 35 .578|Cleve'd 37 44 .457 Chic'go 41 39 .513| Boston. 35 45 .437 Detroit. 42 41 .506| Phila... 33 43 .*34 GAMES YESTERDAY. New York, 2; St. Louis, 1. Cleveland, 2; soston, 0. Washington, 3; Chicago, 2. Philadelphia, 4; Detroit, 2 (first). Philadelphia, 9; Detroit, 8 (second). GAMES TO-DAY. St. Louis at New York. vleveland at Boston. Chicago at Washington. Detroit at Philadelphia. Dundee and Frush to Meet At Ebbets Field on Aug. 14 o W. & J. SCHEDULE ANNOUNCED. WASHINGTON, Pa., July 12.—Grad- uate Manager R. M. Murphy to-day announced the following complete foot- ball schedule of the ington and Jefferson team for next son, com: prising ten games, six of them at home: the pine saucer track, covering never headed. Johnny Calls Off Bout Sched- uled With Kid Wagner in Philadelphia, July 21. dizzy pace and was second for their services, their managers lost no time in signing up their battlers for a fight at that club. Dundee has called off his fight with Kid Wagner of Philadelphia which was to have been fought in that city on July 21. Ten four-round bouts, In which three champions will compete ‘against contenders for thelr titles, will be staged at the mon- ster boxing show of the National Sports ueensboro A. C. in Long night. These champions are Joe Lynch, Harry Greb and Benny Leonard. sha game flehter of st. Paul, elser of St. L LOS ANGELES, Cal., July 12.—Inva- sion of the Bast by women tennis stars of Southern Califo,nia began yesterday when the Misses Jessie Grieve and Grace Mungen of Los Angeles started for Forest Hills, N. Y., the scene of the national championship tournament and of the premier East vs. West matches for women, defeated the two McNamara and Madden EQUITABLE TEAM VICTOR. BAYSIDE, L. I., July 12.—The annual bankers’ championship golf team match was held yesterday over the course of the Oakland Golf Club, the Equitable team winning by a wid’ margin with a total of 364 points. It was the third successive victory of the Equitable golf- ers. The Central Trust was second with a score of 244 points. Third came the City Bank with 221 points; the Guar- anty Trust was fourth with 212: Bankers fifth with 199, and the Roy Moore, and Pee Wei together In a mM air show to be staged at Cinci next Monday ni Willie Spencer, saton and Fran- rider of the A match was arranged to-day between Gene Tunney, the Greenwich Vilinge light heavywelght, ‘and Jack Hermant the Italtan heavyweight’ of .N. J. They will come together in the main Ko of twelve rounds at the Oakland A. A. of Joreey City on Monday evening, July 24 1 Nam- cond and FIVE TEAMS IN POLO MEET. Five teams have made entries for the Beckman hal ‘ap on Spencer and Freddie Jacks, the English fighte middlewelgbt, w. h, the crack middleweight of Brid Dox port, Conn., In the feature contest of rounds to # decision. day at Rumson, N. J., and continue through July 29, {t was announced yes- terday at the offices of the Polo Asso- ciation, ‘There will be two events on the programme. Bryn Mawr, Rumson, Whippany River, Eatontown and the Eatontown Rovers are the teams en- tered. colored champion, st form at present by his manay L Flynn, to meet Gordon McKay, a ‘wi fighter of Angeles, Cal., in a four-round decision bout at the Vernon A. C, of Low Angeles on the night of July 19, That sturdy battle Perry, day to ve Sha ten-round ectaion bout at the Armory A. A. of Boston on next Tuesday night. Both men Panama Joe Gan who is fighting in his was matched to- Cal., July 12.—An with Billy Miske, f Pittsburgh, Jack] GOLFER LOST TO WILLIAMS, WILLIAMSTOWN, July 12.—George B. Secor of Toledo, O., rounded out his four years’ record in golf at Willa Gibbons was re- by Jess Willard, ®. i year, Tor'nto 39 43 'g 35 49 CIRCUIT RACES POSTPONED, a paiponed tl next Men-| PoLEDO, July 12.—Yesterday's Grand a ett Me] circuit races were called off at noon, heres Fut 0 box BAIl bel here. Fulton box 'BIly| (he Fort Miam! track being ankle deep in mud In places as & result of yester- day's downpour, which caused a post- The Mickey Walke r-Jock Malone mate! id off which has been on eral times ponement after two of the four races on now acheduled to take place at the Aren® ci o ced. now scheduled te take place at the the card had been raced. The card er, 9; Reading, 4, scheduled for to-day, including the un. finished 2.18 trot and 2.05 pace of yea. terday’s card, will be raced to-morrow, Tony Capon! of Rock 1 M., .and Frankie Munroe of California ‘have, been be read at the New York State |! will promote the big bout and that jowark at Torente (2 gam Rooned te 8 ——— Boxing Commission's weekly Rickard is determined to have the altimore at Syracu of 30 BASEBALL TO-DAY, 3.99 P.M. Po} meeting to- champion first meet Jess Willag, Reading at Roche bals"turet east WaoiseaP eo al Letioaete ? ne Y ’ Ls, 1 / ‘ go pple ~— twice this year and seemed to have their goat. Any cricket player or tiddledewinks expert would have picked Ruether for yesterday as eastl: as the wise guys of baseball pick him. All the wise guys got was the sorrow of seeing Adolfo Luque, the Cuban right-hander, outpitch Ruether and win pulled up. GIANTS ARE HITTING | Babe Ruth’s Freak Fly SOHARDTHEYLEAD) ee rom Browns N CLUB BATT World’s Champions Have an Average of .333 to the Cardinals’ .303. SMES TRTY acRES- P.D.Q- Home Run Champion Gets to Third by Batting Ball So High Out- fielder Tobin Couldn't Hold It as It Dropped With Terrific Force. By Bozeman Bulger. HERE ts a rule in baseball that when a ball {s hit too hot or too slow to handle It is recorded a basehit. Babe Ruth, though, has blazed a new trail. The Bambino with one stroke has put it up to the scorers to decide whether or not the old pill has been hit too HIGH to handle. In the opening tussle with the Browns tho Babe scored first blood HOME RUN LEADERS NATIONAL LEAGUE, Hornsby, St. Louis... Williams, Philadelphia, Wheat, Brooklyn . Kelly, New York Meusel, New York... Ainsmith, St. Louis. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Walker, Philadelphia Williams, St. Lout Ruth, New York.. Miller, Philadelphia . By Robert Boyd. CHICAGO, July 12.—The Giants continue to hit the ball hard and to- day stand at the top of tne National League in club batting, with an aver- age of .813. They have supplanted the St. Louts Cardinals, who rank second in the Heydler circuit with an average of .303. Pittsburgh, despite the apparently weak team they have, to-day are i r by hitting a ball high enough—if| Hellmann, Detroit 13 Wenn ae the Dodgers are} stretched out—to make two home aS In several games this season the|runs; so high that when it came|.5,009 crowd as well as the St, World’s Champions have broken loose on wild batting rampages, giving fan- dom in general some conception of Louls Browns. They are chattering that it was a tough game for Shocker to lose, _ down Right Flelder Tobin was se- curely handcuffed and missed it; so high that when it fell the Bambino game of the double-header there, the|TobIn made an inaccurate thr “have lost. After one run had been third. That odd blow was not scored a home run, but it could have been— with just a little stretch of the im- agination. When a batter hits a ball so high that he can run to third before it even reaches the fielder's hands you may understand it was SOME high. Babe was not credited with a hit Instead ‘Tobin was given two errors —one for missing the catch and one for making a bad throw. If the Press box had been closer to the play the chances are it would have been declared too high to handle—a hit. T happened, by accldent, to be In a right fleld box within forty feet of the play when Tobin attempted the catch. He set himself for it and waited. The ball came down with such yelocity that his hands were actually twisted apart. His expe- rience was almost exactly like the Glants scored twenty-elght hits off Pitchers Hamiiton, Glazner and Hol- lingsworth, This is @ season's record for a nine-inning game. As the season progresses the World's Champions grow better. Each game sees them increasing in strength both on the offense and defense. Ross Young is eligible for consid- erable praise. The stocky Texan has figured conspicuously in ull the New York's victories. He is batting .822. He leads the Giants in the number of stolen bases, being tied with Rogers Hornsby, the demon Cardinal second baseman. Each have twelve to their credit, “Pep” has won many a game with his wonderful throwing from the out- field to the plate. His fielding has also been on a par with any outer- gardener in the National League. Young perhaps lacks the color of many another ball player of less abil- scored by the Browns tn the first in- ning the league leaders coudn't touch Bush with a forty-foot pole. * One thing that endeared Shocker to the fans—enemy though he was—was his gameness in pitching to Babe Ruth, Not once did the St. Louis ace give the Bambino a base on balls. On his first trip Babe was fanned as cleanly as you please. The only thing of note he did all day was that high fily—the highest fly in the world—that fell so fast as to win the ball game. When It became known that Shocker was to pitch the Browns were favor- ites in the betting down town. This was based on a bellef that Shocker was always able to beat New York, ‘That is not borne out by the records, however. During his whole careew Shocker has pitched against the Yanks \ty. His valué has never been brought|jymerous players who have at-|28 times. Of these games he has won out as tt should, yet there is no mem-[ tempted to catch a baseball thrown|17 and lost 11, Bush, who won yes= ber of the New York Club that stands} for) the. Washington monument.|terday, has pitched against the in the good graces of Manager Me-| Gabby street and Billy Sullivan were| Browns 34 times, winning 31 an@ Graw as does Young. His worth ts better appreciated in the other Na- tional League towns throughout the cireult. In playing balls that bound off some of the right field walls, such as the short walls of the Polo Grounds, the Philadelphia Park, the Cubs Field and the only ones to succeed. losing 18. And this odd hit had another feature just as odd as the wallop itself, It won the ball game. eae VICK GOES TO WHITE 80x. 8T, LOUIS, July 12.—Henry Vict, catcher for the St. Louls Cardinal has been claimed by the Chicago White Sox for the waiver price, I¢ was announced to-day. Vick came ta The Yanks and Browns were tied hard and fast when Shocker threw a low curve inside the plate to the ; nee Hone baa ne cous Bas Bambino. The lofty hoist followed. oe Coinns trom Siohinen| Uieey listless tacrner ta which Bob Meusel| Luckily tne Pabe didn't stop running}, . all-American football team last year, LT TAYLOR AND HERD DUE TO ARRIVE TO-DAY FOR EXHIBITION GOLF TOUR. Another pair of English golf and scored on Tobin's bad throw Lo third. Just two blows were of note In the entire game. In the second inninw Frin Ward whipped a long drive t left field that hit squarely on top of the protecting rail and bounced into the stand for a home run The Browns are hollering—and rightly s0 of the Yankees plays the balls that bounce off the short right field walls, the importance of having ® man of Young's calibre, who is adept in this phase of the game, cannot Le stressed too strongly. CASEY STENGEL SUFFERS —thi v tri by two] stare will arrive to-day. They, MORE FROM SHOCK THAN |;,.2e¢ Wey, "°"r co two blows! are J. H. Taylor and Alex. Herd. FROM BLOW ON CHEEK] counted. All. others were merely) ‘They will go on an exhibition wasted effort. tour of the U. 8. A. and Canada, They are expected to play at the Knollwood Country Club at White Plaine this afternoon, ' Of the two, Taylor is the better known golfer, and no man has won the B open champio: ship more often. Five times Tay- lor has carried off the honors in the great event recently won by CHICAGO, MIl., July 12.—After Casey Stengel was hit on the side of the face with a pitched ball de- livered by Virgil Cheeves he was removed to the American Hospi- tal here. There he was placed under the care of Dr. Max Tho- When forced to the wall Murderers’ Row proved that it really did know things other than a tendency to plas- ter the ball. The Yanks played a magnificent defensive game. Shot after shot was gobbled up by Ward, Scott and McNally and whipped to first with deadly accuracy. Both teama played as if they were start- rek, Surgeon im Chief, X-Ray pire ie rst game of tho Worid's ler Hagen, and thie year the | photos taken at the hospital |cores. This series promises to be show, as Trainer George Davis one of the classic meetings of the] fight against ine younger profes- mination of the | year. He finished in. sixth Be Oe ee bee | z only four strokes behind Plager (s (Ge. Sub new When Urban Shocker was an- merican winner. there had been no bone fracture. The ball struck Casey on the right cheek bone, He suffered from shock more than anything else and Dr. Thorek advised leav- ing him in the hospital over mish Alex. Herd’s sole victory In the open was at Hoylake in 1902, when he scored 307. In this year's event at Sandwich Herd finished in twenty-first position, just be- | hind W. |. Hunter, former Britlel amateur shamplens d nounced for the Browns it was ex- pected that Huggins would counter with Waite Hoyt. But Huggins crossed everybody. He trotted out Bullet Joe Bush. In less than an hour everybody agreed that Huggins J had She dope, He had oulgusessd the ae . een