Harper Loses to Browns After Pitching Great Ball.Hank Gowdy Back HURLS FINE BALL

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Harper Loses to Browns After Pitching Great Ball.Hank Gowdy Back HURLS FINE BALL Harper Loses to Browns After Pitching Great Ball.Hank Gowdy Back HURLS FINE BALL. GOLFERS EXPECTED TO BATTLE FOR NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS. GOWDY,WAReg. : BUILOSESGAME HELPSBRAVESffil Harper Holds Browns Until Cheered by 15,000 Persons Ninth, When Griffs Are and Is Given Gold Watc.- Beaten, 2 to 1. and Liberty Bonds. SOUTHPAW NOT HIT HARD REDS DEFEATED. 4 TO 1 BOSTOX. May 24.. Boston c. iH.r r, THOMPSON. eil Cowdy day by defeating <V.4m- BY DENMAN nati. 4 to 1. hold¬ today. Timely V.ttlnjc FT. LOl'IS, Mx. May 2 i-r-After in the first two innings account 'o» to three scattered hits ing the Browns Boston's runs. / and frustrating their every effort to Former Sertft. "Hank" Clow \\ «i . a runner around the circuit for g'et had been greeted with cheers by * r. c innings Harry Harper went eight 13,000 persons at the game and n to defeat in the final frame down presents, hit the first ball .:i When the combination ""of an error pit«-h««l the second inning to riehi « r and four bases on balls grave St. Louis right a single. It was his first time at the verdict by a count of 2 to 1 in bat in a game sin« «- i:*f what was about the most exciting major league the Nationals have participated Gowdy served with the Kaini»oJV same Division. (n this season and before an as- that numbered more than The players of both clubs ca' semhlage about Gowdy as Mayor Pet« v J 9.000 sented him with a gold w;i; v. t"l What a sterling exhibition of pitch¬ 5S00 in Victory bonds. "liuck'* I !..«*: ing Harper gave may be gleaned from then presented him with a sien-.n r the fact lhat the only occasions when trunk from his teammates. Gov solve his iy rhe home guard were able to '.fm was proclaimed as the first ».ia.'«»r to the extent of getting the delivery in the league player to enter the Army. ba!! into safe territory were Two sensational catches by Kit; ert first, fifth and eighth rounds, and that and llolke's all-round play fe:n.r.»d. the enemy's two tallies p'nould be Score: Compiled without the semblance of a Kit following an unfortunate accident Cinci. AB.U. O.A. Boston AII.I! «».\. to Foster goes to prove that Harper Uatli.i'h.... 4 12 2 Iliugert.ef. I 1 is to give Johnson a close Wale. If 4 o 1 o Herzog.2l>. < 1 4 qualifying hard- 'roh.Sh.... 4 0 2 2 Powell.rf.. t J race for the title of champion Rousch.cf. 4 2 10 ('raise.If.1. t . .« tuck pitcher of the team. Kopf.5H.... .i o o 4 KloVkeji. l .1 «S .1 Oauliert.lli. 3 1 13 » Smith.Sh «.ii t t Weilman Hit Bather Freely. rueto.rf... 3 o 2 O llar'v'lr.s . «. 2 Kariden.o.. 4 0 3 2 (towd.v.r... 2 ^ (i Opposed to the Jerseyite was Carl Fisher.p. 110 3 Nthf.f 3 o H Weilman. another southpaw who this Allen* 10 0 0 year is engaged in accomplishing ^a Bressler.p. 1 o o o comeback after more than it year's INTEREST IN TITLE GOLF WILL absence from the diamond, due to an Totals.. ?:l 24 13 Total*.. I*. > Ulness that necessitated two opera¬ .Hatted for Fisher in seventh. tions. Weilman was batted rather BE RAMPANT AGAIN THIS YEAR Cincinnati o o 0 o 0 o 1 <i o 1 freely. the Nationals amassing three Boston 2 2 0 0 0 O »i .. *.4 times as many blows off his delivery Runs.Daubert. Rippert, H»iiz c. P«»nrP. as but was favored Nehf. Error.Daubert. Two ki-" Iri- Harper permitted, Fisher, Rifjjrert. Stolon hate.P«w !l. by fortune in that on only one of the flc*e k*:»»ri- three occasions that safeties were of Will hit.Gowdy. Left on ltase-% :.. 8; Boston. 4. Base* on was the scor- Resumption Championship Play imlls.Off .mm-.. '. hunched at his expense off Nehf. 3. .' for Hits.Off Fisher, ft in i.- ::r ilig station reached, and then but pff Bresslrr, 1 in 2 inninsr*. Hit l»v pit#*: -r :» lone tally. All told the Grtffmen Find Four" of Game and Other .By Nehf <Kopf). Struck out.By ii*;. nad five opportunities to get an Faber's Streak Three Wins to Two "Big Better in Sprints and Field Ithacan Varsity -and Fresh¬ by Bra.leg, 1; i»y Nehf. 4. U4ag Pihlete over the counting block and Winning Registers Fisher. Sam Rice had to produce a third man straight hit to accomplish the feat Broken, and Thormahlen for Chase.Rain StarsAvailablefor Events Enabled Crimson to Crews Not Hard ;jfter Shanks had blazed the trail in Chevy Competition. BKOOKLYN BUNCHES EIT3. vhe eighth with a single and was 65 1-2.51 1-2. Pressed in Events. .oosted to within counting distance Lands Fourth Straight. Halts Play. BY W. R. McCALLl'M. fact that golf will have a big year Win, Drives From Box and De¬ by Foster's intentional death. In 1919, but that the following year, Mayer After being extricated from a tight When the .German legions, in their when world problems have been set¬ feats Pirates, 6 to 4. hole in the eighth, when the Browns CHICAGO. May 23..New York con¬ dash south and west through Belgium tled to the satisfaction of every one, CAMBRIDGE. Mass.. May 24..Har¬ ITHACA, N\ Y.. May 24..Cornell worked a runner around to the far Rain broke up the Washington As¬ to BROOKLYN. N. Y.. May 24.-- centrated its attack in one inning and northern France, reache;! the town golfers may look forward more vard track athletes defeated Prince¬ crews defeated the Princeton eights ' Oiyier with two down, by some quick sociation tennis match between Dum¬ than a renewed interest in the game Brooklyn staged another b g inning on the of today and defeated Chicago, 2 to 1. of Mons, in lower Belgium, they found ton to 51 in both the and freshmen thinking part Shanks. barton Club and the Chevy Chase which helped steady the nerves of today, 65^ points. varsity today and beat .> to i. had to retire three men a small a in Pittsburgh. .Harper only thereby breaking: Faber's winning teams on the latter's courts their progress opposed by the fighters and had large part Strength in the sprints and field races on Cayuga lake this afternoon. the he so de¬ yesterday that in- after the Pirates had gained a id*" gain victory richly streak. It was Faber's first defeat band of intrepid sportsmen, Britain's ! building sportsmanship in events enabled the Crimson contest¬ The Ithacans were not hard served. He set the Nationals bench and left the visitors leavling three band of Britons which stop- pressed three-run lead. was vtrcnc that miniature Brit¬ trepid ants Mayer up :»-»Tiiver l>y passing Tobln. the first in five games and Thormahlen's fourth contests to two. "contemptible8," ped the German rush at Mons. to win. C. G. Krogness of Har¬ in either event. to the fourth, when he muffeu .r.t er s Krjownie to face him, and the stroke consecutive victory. Chicago's lone Dumbarton won three of the four ish army of less than 100,000 men, who Golf in Great Britain has suffered vard was the individual star, winning Although the Tigers caught the wa¬ throw at first base, and then t i«* oC ill-fortune that led to his down- a from which It will not bunched sin - run was the result of a single, an that were two halted the onrush of the field-gray shock the high and broad and ter first in the varsity race, starting Superbas three *e.<. tail followed when Foster, in dashing singles completed, recover for years. Golf in the jump jump, triple by Olson and a sarrui fly fell error, a wild pitch and an out. Store: and forfeited the clad minions and died where they third in the hurdles and with a thirty-four stroke, Cornell in* for Sisler's bunt, slipped and being unfinished, United States has suffered a scoring high her at the half-mile for five runs. Adams relieved .iay. r He had clutched the X. Y. AR.H. O.A. AR.H. O.A. stood rather than to the Hun- an lesser passed opponent and held t(j*the ground. Chi'go. No. 1 doubles. This latter clash, with yield shock, but in infinitely shot-put. a Brooklyn hitless. llrn.i !.»iii, but in his hurry to ferry it over Vick.rf.... 4 10 1 J.Collins.rf 4 O 0 0 degree, therefore should have a mark, rowing powerful thirty-eight pitched erratic ball and recciv it poor 112 W«aver.3b. 4 o O 3 Cedric Major and Albert Gore play- nish legionaires. stroke. From then on the Ithacans to' Judge shot it high of the mark. Peck'gh.ss. 4 immortals, reaction from the tragedy. support, but he was effective th t- ripp.lb.... 4 2 » 0 K.C'lins,2b 4 2 1 3 ing for Dumbarton, and Ballard That small band of repre¬ quicker The Summaries. never were headed. t!}£ ball rolling to the right field 4 0 6 0 senting ail that is best in British and Many of the minor tournaments, held pinches. The score: to score Baker.3b.
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