Dodgers Defeat Giants in First of Two-Game Series.Yankees Make Sweep With Indians Wild Tosies Fred of Toney There Are Times When Murder Seems Justifiable : : : By briggs Speaker Fans, 7 Cost Manhattan Boys Runs With Tying Run First Skirmish in Battle of the Boroughs Is On Second Base Fought in Rain on Soggy Field and Is Marked Tense on Part of Rival Rooters Mays Refuses to Pass Cleve¬ by Feeliflg land Leader and New . By W. O. McGeehan Yorkers Make It 4 in Row The first skirmish in the Battle of the in a moist Boroughs staged From a Special Correspondent cool and acrimonious atmosphere at the Polo Grounds yesterday went to the CLEVELAND, Aug. 13.- The Yankees (N)ice clothes be- Brooklyn Dodgers by the score of 4 to 2. Fi*ed Toney threw the soggy move another full game closer to the fore you melt away for the pill wild twice in the fourth inning and let in three runs during a shower lead this afternoon by scoring their week-end ! fourth consdcutiv'e over that washed the.steerage customers right out of the bleachors. The Giants triumph the Open until 12. j made one rally in the eighth, but the tracks were too muddy and they Indians. The score was 4 to 3 and Cleve¬ ooze. land had tho tying run on second base Rogers Peet perished miserably in the in the ninth inning with Company Fan« from the other side of thev at bat. No one could have questioned Broadway Broadww Bridge crossed in great numbers and Carl Mays's courage if he had passed at 13th St. "Four at 34th wore full of truculence. In fact, there The Score the Indian leader, but he elected to S«; pitch to him instead, and with the Convenient vas a Cleveland aspect to the game, BKOOKLYN (N. U) NBW TOUK (N. I..) game, and the Broadway Corners" Fifth at> r h po a o ab r li po a o possibly pennant, hang¬ at Warren Ave, Cleveland being the place where the Olson. 5s_5 0 0 1 4 n Hums. If_411 1 in ing in the balance, he fanned the at 4ist St, to Johnston, 3!>.3 0 1 0 1 0; llancroft S8..4 0 3 4 2 0 American most hitter. "Voball fan goes to tho ball park Griflln, rf. ..4 11 I 0 0 Yenng, rf_40 0 1 0 0 League's prolific Suffer mental and does. Wheat. If...3 11 i OOFrtaca, 8b. ..4 0 0 S J« Aproximateiy 18,000 customers were great anguish Myers, cf. .3 2 1 2 0 0; Kelly, l!i. ...40114 00 present when hostilities started, with If you think that the bird from Man¬ Kolnttchy, 1»>.2 0 1 1.% 1 0 Spencer, i:f...4 0 0 1 10 Slim KIMuff. 3b.. 3 0 1 4 4 0'[>ovl<\ Sb....4 0 2 I 2 0 lîay Caldwell on the rnound for hattan is a blood brother of the bird Miller c. ...4 0 1 1 0 O! HmltU, C....4 0 0 2 SO the Indians. The entire 18,000 groaned UrlmiM, p...4 0 1 1 3 0]Ton«*, p.JJfli) 0 3 0 in unison when Ruth and Pratt both on the other side of tho long plank 'King .Ill 0 00 0 singled after two were out in the first, go to th«; Polo Grounds during this Nellf, P.0 0 0 2 0 hut calmed down again when Lewis The Score serios r.nJ get it out of your mind. Total* ...91 i B 37 13 OJ Totals .. ...15 2 S 27 17 0 fanned for the third out. KEjW YOt;;< (A. T, «'l.KVKI.A.YD .Batted for Toney in eighth inning. (A, ti) Brotherly Feeling Absent Jamieson W,ir«l. .4 0 Brooklyn. 0 0 ft 3 0 0 0 1 0.4 Opens Fire 9b.. n, if. S (I . \\ Time Was when the fan Now York. 00000002 0.2 started V ..'¦ 5 1 IS 2 0 Chipm«». «.sol j «Ï Brooklyn Iluju'gins Battling Bob Shawkey rtuili. rf...3 1 i 5 0 o'8dm*ct rf...4 00»i» and the (liant fan could watch ttois Two-base hits.-Johnston, Grimes, Wheat, in opposition to th« Salamanca Sliver. Pratt, 21....4 1 -i 2 rf I 1, ¦¦ If. ..4 S> J. »11 fl fratricidal strife and go somewhere Doyle, Bancroft. Sacrifie.« hit.Kilduff. Jamieson opened lire on the J-, 2 '.: |0«t 1 li to Now Double play.Spencer ami Bancroft. Deft "Jimmy" niT. lb_80 1 !» 9 0|W»m«r««. 2b 3 1 l afterward get something cool. on ex-gob with an infield single, which Bod -, at. .4 'i 0 1 ¡j. in to be is tit bases.Brooklyn, 6; New York, 6. 0 401 » j» ther«*¡ h nothing gotten that Bases on balls -Off Toney, ;"«. Hits.Off Derrill Pratt scooped up too late for Rue), 0.4 1 4 1 0!O'Neill, c ...4 0 0 T «. for turnan and the two 8 8 fihawkey, j>.J!! 1 0 2 r«..JM!> consumption Toney. in innings; off Nehf. none In a play at first. Chapman sacrificed and Mava. p_HO 0 0 0 o }. wouldn't lean on the same mahogany one inning. Struck out.Hy Nehf, 1; by Speaker walked. 0j*Ur*Iiey .090 0 I» if títere was one. That shows how Grimes, 1. Wild pitches.Toney (.1). Dos¬ Totals ..83 4 10 27 10 they ing pitcher--Toney. Umpires.-Klein, and Both runners moved up while Shaw- 0] Total» ....3037371»» fe"f about it. Emslio. Time.1:48. > was Smith's to key to33ing tap Tipp, 'Batted for Evidently Big Fred Toney, despite and with runners on second and third Caldwell is? ninth inr.in*. his waddle,' is no member of the duck and two New York....O o 1 n 2 n 0 l out, Shawkey purposely passed Cleveland ....0 0 0 0 «j-j family. The rain started init he. fourth Larry Cardner to an accompaniment of 0 0 1 2 0_| and tho stsirt of the rain was Fred- Phillies Trounce with Two-base hit*.Pratt (2), I^wl«, Chap. crick's raspberries, freely interspersed m.nn, Wambiganss Three hap«, finish. Griffith nicked him for the larger and more reverberating Inpaugh. Sacrifice«.Ward, hit.-Pwfc. a to center and Zack Wheat, «nun Mays, Chap. single Braves 8 to 2 loganberry. This bit of pitching strat¬ (2), VVambsKanag. Double play. drove ;» single to left. Myers drew a by egy brought Billy Wambsgans to bat, Chapman, Wanibsganss «nd Jornnton. base or balls and bases. t.. i« on bas« y..-.v y,irk. 7: filled the and tho official goat of the series end¬ Bases on balle Clevelaad % The this was !ff Shawkey, 6; oft Mat« pill by time rain-soaked After 5-2 ed the inning by grounding out to 1, («rr Caldwell, 2 Off and difficult for Frederick to Losing, in 7 1-3 «.iff h-hawkey, ? manipu¬ Pratt. innlogs: Mays, none in ' i \'\ la: e, as he demonstrated by hurling a Again in the second the Yankees Innings. Hl< by pitcher.By CaldWtti wild one to BOSTON, Aug. 13..The Braves and Struck h i. Konetchy. Before our Mr. the Phillies divided a threatened and a«.;ain they were turned Maya, .1: 6. wkey, ¡>» "Oil" Smith could retrieve it Griffith double-header to¬ hack by Cal>tvell, Wirning pitcher scored. day, Boston winning the first «game, 5 runless. Wally Pipp opened the Rhawkey. Umpires.Ndilsn and Connolly Ho tossed the pill b¿ck to to Inning with a line to right, and Tim« re,¡crick :\ 2, and Philadelphia taking tho sec¬ single with larger accumulation 8 to lingered on first while Ping Bodies of moisture and this time Frederick ond, 2. Charley Pick's right leg Aaron Ward dashed the was injured in the first inning of the fannsY"*. Chapman grabbed Ruel's frisky the Cleveland hurled ball into the r>rooklyn dug- second grounder in back of second and heaved hopes for a big rally out. The heave was so wild the game while he was sliding into by snatching and third and he was it lo Wamby for a force out on .Speaker's high bounder arid pill so moist that both Wheat and base, carried from the Pipp, it to first throwing (¡eld. It is believed a small bone is and a moment later Chappy backed for the third out. Myers scored. out into short left, to The local were All of the fans in the scurried broken near the ankle. snag Bob Shaw- hopes da?hed some open The scores: key's liner with one clutching paw. more in the eighth. After Ruth's to cover, but Umpire Bill Klcm bade mise at d«- the FIRST «AME A fine drizzle was falling at the first Del Pratt unleashed his slaughter continue. The ground hó¬ but the. threatened storm third hit of the this one ceme a riTn,AT)EM,niA boston time, had ap¬ gam«-«, a dou¬ bog and the pitchers and the (rf. l.)| (N. l.) over ble to center. batters ab r h J» a el ab r h po a e parently passed when Ruth came Duffy Lewis spun t worked in the mire. raut'tte. lb.3 1 H «i OOITowull, rf...4 0 1 4 0 0 to bat with two out in the third single over In l|, I'.o-ir'u. lf.4 1 and second, scoring Pratt, and the eighth Inning tho Dodgers 1 1 lOlPick, 2I>.3 1 1 4 '.' 1 vus more or less made second on another run [ itnwl'gs. 2b.40 2 2 4 liMsinn. lf,...J«0 1 1 00 intentionally passed, Smith's uncalled-for dragged through the mud. WlU'ina, i-I.JiO 0 i OOJSUl'van. rf.J) 0 14 00 Pitches Caldwell making no apparent effort to throw to the plate. There the Myers rapped one down to the box and Mousei, i-r...-,o t 2 ooiHolke, ii>...si i a in Schupp McDonald Suits rally the over after the count petered out. beat it to the Flol'hor. BH.4 0 1 5 2 0 lb. 10 0 4 00 gel ball had however. Pspp fannir.gand bag. while Toney strug¬ 0 Whalon, re iched three and two. Pratt came Bodie to gled like a W'stono, 3b.3 0 -1 8 0|noeck61, Sb..4 2 2 3 10 Cards to grounding Gardner. bogged hippo to after c. ..4 1 it. get Wheat, 0 4 SOIFortl, ss_3 0 1 1 0 0 Victory Johnson as Head through with a double to the right Elmer Smith led off the Indians' Then once more 1 0 3 ft Frederick let the Itixcy, p....40 0 (¡«wily. c.SO 3 ll field and scored all half with a moist and McQull'u. p. 3 12 13 0 wall, Ruth the sin^el to center. Ruth soggy pill slip through his from first. Lewis's to made a l'or a wild Over 4-2 way long fly spectacular catch of Larry digits pitch. Konetchy got Totals ..34 2 10 24 10 t| Teals .. .20 5 10 27 14 Z Pirates, Of Commission Jamieson ended the Gardner's his base on balls inning. long foul and with ß fine and little Peterkin Philadelphia. 1 o 0 0 1 o o 0 0.2 The Indians inado a determined, bid throw to second a Cant Boston. 0 3 ft 1 1 0 0 0 X.5 held Smith at first Kilduff, discard, slapped his PITTSBURGH, Aug. 13..The Ce.rdi- <5? GmntíandRice for a run in their half but fell short. old the Two-base Wamby then poled a double to left pals right in face with a single hit.Ford. Throe-base hits. nais defeated the Pirates 4 to CHICAGO, Aug. 13..Discussion of With one out a and to left that scored Myers, McQuillan, Powell, Boeckol, Stolen base. to-day, 2, (Copyright, 1020, Nero York Tribune Inc.) tho banged with runrsers on second and third Mann. seven of their hits off possible successor to August Herr¬ vicious liner down the third base line, Doc Johnston Giants in Belated Sacrifices.DoBourveau, Willis ms, bunching Cooper mann for tho Na¬ scored both runs with Rally Hawiings, Sullivan, Ford. Double plays. in the seventh and After AU chairmanship of the -which caromed off Aaron Ward's ankle a single to center. With the tyinç Tho Giants started a belated It!x«y and Wrlghtstone. Fletcher, Wrlght- eighth innings, tional Baseball Commission sprung up for a double. lie advanced to third on run on rally Btohe and Fletcher. Left on basis.Phila¬ when scored all.¦ anew ¡irst, Shawkey gave way to Carl in their half of the a real they nil their runs. Caton's I After here to-day With the mention of long to Ruth and w-;is eighth, old- delphia, 12; BostAn, f«. Bases on balls-. Court Speaker's fly Mays. fashioned (iiunt rally that might have Off Rlxey, 3; oft' McQuillan, 4. Struck out error was costly in tho seventh inning Just playing out the game, Superior Judge Charles A. Mc¬ left stranded there when Elmer Smith. The underelung slabster wasvrildat gotten somewhere if the lads liad been .By Rixey, 3; by McQuillan«, 2. Wild and tho visitors' Donald, of Chicago, as a likely candi¬ Shawkey's pet aversion, likewise the start and non-skid pitch.McQuillan. Umpires.'Kigler and helped scoring. Schupp Getting your share of both the rise and fall, date. hoisted io the Babe. pitched two consecutive wearing chains. With "Oil' Muran. Time of Rame.1:43. w» strong in the and wide oner, to O'Neil. Then he settled Smith out on an inlield fly Lee King pinches might Getting your portion of the praise and blame, "1 think Judge McDonald would make Makes Strenuous Kick for SECOND GAME have had a shut-out for Dil- a good man for the said Speaker down, however, and fanned the Indian batting Toney, who was «Irodgecl (NY except With both the and the position," walked in catcher after the count out for the a PHIDABELTHU I,.)i BOSTON (V. h.) hoefer's error. jeering cheering rife, President Johnson of the American Larry Cardner the Indians' j had reached inning, rapped single tc ub r h i>o u «il al« r h a o three and center. lb. .5 11» po score: But not too much cither on one half of the fourth and moved around two. Johnston tried to George Burns singled to left Paiil'e, 1 0 cf_411 4 0 0 T)he of spin, League, but refused to say whether ' L If.."« 1 2 3 1 OlPowoU, to third on successive infield outs. steal as O'Neil and was this time Burleigh (¿rimes wa; Bour'u. 0IIM«*, 2b.101 0 0 0 ST. LOUIS (N. L.) PITTSBÜIK3H (N. I.) Is in this McDonald's selection was likely. John¬ swung doubled By Rawl'ga, 21).r, 1 3 1 3 U; Mann, rf_300 2 0 1 ah r h a ci r ii e something little whirl called O'Neil was a up at second on having his own difficulties with cf.S 2 2 po al) li ]xi life, son said he was to Shawkey's first pitch to Ruel's tiae p«?g to the Wllrttts, 3 OOlKnvrs, If.40 1 2 0 0 Janvrln, lb.fi 0 2 10 0 0 Bigbee, If_411 ,1 10 ready choose the as Peck. and to Mruscl, rf..4 2 Ü 1 0 rf. 20.4 0 1 3 4SI o 1 Before at last the darhiess in. chairman perfect strike, and he wound up for sloppery pill signaled the bend ss.4 1 :l OlCJll'la'y, Ptfhultz, rf.4 2 0 0 Carey, cf_2 0 1 3 no gathers any time and wjas only wait¬ for a towel. Kiot'her, 2 5 1 Hotke, lb_4 0 0 13 0 0 Stuck, 31>..." 0 3 1 3 0 Houlhw'th if.4 o 1 1 on on his next delivery the batter stepped batted for Caldwell in the Ho mopped tho ball ant W'Moite, 311.4 0 3 1 2 lIHoeekcl. 3b...4 0 0 0 ing President Heydler of the Na¬ also his o.4 21 fîbrnsby. äli.4 1 2 1 2 0 «'bitted, 3U..4 0 0 2 2 1 out of the box. Shawkey checked his Indians' half of the ninth anddrcwa streaming brow. Burns hac Trag's-r, 0 0 5 1 0 Ford, ¿3.4 1 B 2 40 Mcllcnry. lf.4 1 1 3 0 0 Ctitsltaw, 2b.3el 3 2 0 After all. tional League to state his preference. take.'i second on the throw and Hubbell. p. .10 1 0 2 0 O'Ncil, c.3ftl 1 SO Lavan. Ht...3 0 0 1 2 0! (')rlmni. 0 10 motion and Speaker came bouncing pass. Jamieson tried to sacrifie but King 0 lb. ..301 / wonder now end then Judge McDonald said to-day he could was on third. r'Uliijgliu, p..2 0 0 10 Hcathc'e, if 4 1 1 3 0 0 »Nicholson ..loo o o o not discuss the that his; selec¬ out of the Cleveland du^-out to claim failed and ultimately fanned. Chop- »'hoofer, 0.4 1 1 « l i! Catón, es_4 00 1 4 1 report a balk. He and fussed and man then Beauty Bancroft came andAlas Totals .40 8 15 27 14 2] Toals _33 2 7 27 13 2 Behupp D. .4 0 1 0 2 If one' can't go too far without a tion was under nor argued grounded out to Pratt, up 0|Haeffnoí, C..4 0 1 4 10 fall, discussion, would for more tered the spo/igy pellet p.gainst the Philadelphia, ft 1 2 ft 0 2 0 3 0.S i.Srhnil.lt ...0 0 0 0 0 0 Or rise too ho whether he would the held up the game than two bringing Speaker to bat with the Boston. 1 0 0 0 0 ft p_sí 1 3 0 3 0 quickly from the ranks of men say accept minutes. After the ha«l sub¬ run right-field wall for a two-bagger, scor¬ 1 0 0.2 Cooper, were it offered him. He is an rumpus tying on second. It looked like TWo-base I tliarbaro _1 o 1 0 0 0 And. miss the position sided O'Neil fined to Peck for the a ing King a«-«l Burns. It looked verj hits.f,e Bourveau, Bawling«, thereby beauty of the game ardent baseball fan. He was elected go««d place to pass the league's lead- much a.s the Fletcher. Three-base hit.Wrightatono. Totals ,.3Í 4 12 27 10 ToL&ls ....332927142 third out. but though old-fashioned rallj .ct«'J«;) bases -Meusel, Double l| Which rests on struggle, heart ache and to the Superior Court bench in l'.UO ing hitter, .Mays pitched to him might pull the Giants out of th«. TrttgPosSel'. defeat, and Shawkey led off for the Yanks in and struck him out. play-.Hubbell, Tragrcsser and Paulette, ?Batted for Grimm in ninth Inning. As well as success or reëlected in 1916. fifth and a lino go. But Young rapped one down tc Left on bases.Philadelphia, 5; Boston, f«. tl-tnn for Maeffner in ninth Inning. victory, fame, tho slapped long single and tho Base ¦««« balls.Off Hubbell, 1. Struck out tBatl^d for in the into left. lie advanced to second on Konetchy soggy pill seemec -*¦ Cooper ninth inning. Before, mixture ever to stick the with Ry Hubbell, 4; by Filllngim, i. Umpires St. stands complete. "It's Too to Ward's sacrifice and scored on Peckin- Murphy Out for Six Weekl against bag the tenac¬ --Moran and Rigler-. Time.1:42. LoUls. 00000022 0 4 Hol Fight," ity of a stenographer's wad of gum. Pittsburgh... 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0--2 all. 'paügh's triple to center. Ruth waa CLEVELAND, Aug. 13. Tommy Mur- After , With great presence of mind the Pol« Two-baso hits.Stuck, Janvrin. Three- 0 Reich's Latest Excuse purposely passed, but Caldwell pitched phy, of N. extracted it from the sack bus'' hitji.Janvrln, Hornsby. Stolon baso Don't you admiro the wight to Pratt and struck him out. This" Poughkeepsie, Y., prominent am Skeeters Lose Third .«Bigbee. Sacrifices.McHenry, Lavan, harness horseman, who was plastered it back again for the out (2), Bigbee, Carey. Double And his over all "It's too hot to brought Lewis to bat, and the old fox injured play.Bigbee, often sing praises fight!" cracked a double to Peck yesterday at North be Frisch rapped one in the same di In Row to 4.2 Wnllted, Cutshaw ami «¡rimni. Loft on Who Paraphrasing a popular slogan before right, chasing Randall, may r«. Toronto, bases.St. LouIr, 11: Pittsburgh. 8. Bases fought his way through hell to the across. Ruth again tried to score from able to resumo it son. Konetchy splashed after i on find light- America's into the World charge of his stable balls- Off Schupp, 2; off Cooper, 2. entry War, first but he was at the within six with the grace of a water buffalo an« Toronto turned two of Biemiller's Si ruck out.By Schupp, 3; by Cooper, 3. Who had to fight each yard beyond the gate Al Reich offered this novel excuse yes¬ caught plate weeks if no unexpoctfd in- was Winning on Johnston's fine relay of Elmer ternal set the rally drowned right then am passes into runs :«n«l defeated the pltbher Sot'unp: losing pttchor, That opened zvido upon a terday for his refusal to ko through complications in, Dr. Frank there. Skooters at Oooper. Umpires-.Quigley and O'Day, greater rôle, with his scheduled twelve-round bout Smith's throw. i'. Corrigan, attending physiela?, an- Jersey City yesterday af¬ Timo of saino.1 :40. whatever With one down in the seventh in¬ Art Nohf relieved Toney in th« ternoon a score 4 Facing future might await with Frank the blond Pitts- i nounced to-day after a thorough «xam- by of to 2. It made Moran, Caldwell drew a Jamieson ninth and dispos «1 of the si three consecutive victories In the lie had at tho A. ning, pass. ¡nation. Mr. Murphy's con- Dodgers for the full knowledge proved his soul? burgher, Armory A., Jersey followed With a to send¬ sist of injuries quickly as they swji.'si up to the platr Maulo Leafs over Donovan's men. Athletics and Red Sox City, Monday single center, three broken ribs ¡md a fracture " night. " Caldwell to whence he scored óf Despite the prayers and the few im The scorn: Reich's run-out necessitated a ing third, the sttcroiliac (posterior) wall of the Those who saw on Chapman's sacrifice iiy to Bodie. pelvis. procations of the fans of Manhattan TORONTO (I. I,) JEttSEY CITY (f. L.) Divide Double-Header Ted Ray battle in the open championship in 1913 Change in the program, and three ten- Kelly and Spencer failed to get th ab r h po a e¡ ab ri« po a e were sure he had tho same tho samo round bouts were promptly arranged. out of tho n-Ttmirkí!, ss.,4 12 1 2 O'McCnjin "...41 2 1 0 0 13..C. Walk¬ stance, swing and the same mighty Jack the latest .Spalding sponge inficlc: Kauff. of....4 0 2 1 0 0 Moncrs, 2b.. .4 0 0 3 31 PHILADELPHIA, Aug. mold. Yet there was Burke, heavyweight Lawrence Doyle, limping from a twiste Blackburn. 3b.2 1 ft 2 10« Kane, rf.40 1 2 2 0 er's in the eighth inning something strangely unfamiliar which baffled them sensation, will meet Frankie Jordan, of Onslow, lb. ..4 11 fl 1 01 Do NoVle lb.3 0 0 10 0 0 the Athletics the Staten Jack the New ankle, got a hit past second but Oi 0 0 gave victory in the for some-time, until the secret at last came out. Ho had Island; Pollack, Illlpy. rf.40 3 4 Wlqolsw'th, lf.4 0 0 3 00 first game of switched pipes Orleans will tackle "Red" Smith made the last out when Burleig Onnzalp«, ?b..3 0 0 2 1 01 Zltmiui, 3b. ..413 3 0 0 to-day's double-header for a change. heavyweight, Grimes stopped his smash, skidded an Whlteinmi. If..4 0 0 4 0 0 »CÏI11 .000 0 00 with the Boston Red Sox, 3 to 1, but Lynch, of Jersey City, and Dave Rosen¬ to rinrlrie, 0....811 3 1 o| Zlm'man, cf..4 0 0 1 0 0 Myers held the locals to five scattered former amateur recovered in time make the thro« Beam, p_3 00 1 1 01 Freit««. O...3 0 1 3 0 0 Coming From Behind berg, welterweight to the Blondi 1 1 hits in the second game and the visi¬ champion, will take on "Red" Allen, plate. 1er, p.3 0 3 0 Great praise has always been given the who comes There were no overt act9 on tors won, 7 to 0. Perry allowed entry from behind, of Brooklyn. th Tntnla ....31 4 S 27 T 0! Total«« ....332827141 only but we still insist stes part of the visiting Brooklyn f;in two hits in the first game, but one of that the front runner carries the greater burden. ?Ban for Zltman in ninth them was a home run by Scott, which It is for this reason u'td neither*Klem nor Emslio need th inning. tied that Giant chances to win the National League Tesreau's Bears to Meet shrapnel helmets which were ordere Toronto .1 ft 0 ft l ft ft 2 0.4 tho score in the first half of the Jersey ft ft 0 1 0 ft pennant became good when McGraw at last his l'or them. The clammy air was fa City..o 1 ft.2 eighth. got machine under way Bronx Giants of Two-base hit.Kauff. Three-base hits - The scores: and the team scrambled, out of the To-day belligerency, however, and the aftei Onslow, Kan«, stolen Gon- quicksand. noon must have been more or less cor zsiKp. bases.-Riley, FIRST GAMU Sacrifices.Blackburn, Beam. Double Brooklyn and Cincinnati, battling for the lead since a lot Tesreau's Bears are genial to directing th plays.Wlgelsworth and Freitag; BOSTON (A. 1.1 1'I!1I,A1>I0IJ'IIIA (A. L.) April, had Jeff planning to Johnny Evers, and Be McCann, ah r li po a el ah r h pu a 0 taken out of them When three games in two To¬ Giants. It was tho sort of atmos¬ Mooers NoVille; O'Rourke, Gon¬ VIH. ab.300 3 ,3 rf....3 11 J! "by August. two entries are hooked over the play days. zales ;« ml Onslow. Left on OlWolcll, 0 0 morrow afternoon will mix at in which the little use bases.Jersey .Karr '.10 0 0 0 0 Oykaè. 2b_200 1 3 0 long route in a they phere Trojan City, i"; Toronto, (I. liases on bulls.-Off ftrailY, 21).. 3 0 0 4 3 olí.'. lf.4 2 2 n no heartbreaking scrap it is with no cheerful soul that near the to thrive. lil'inlller. 4; uff llenrn. 1. Struck Walltcr, Dyekman Oval, Dyckman Storeet out. tSeliatlR ....100 0 OOP1, WnlliiT.rf.301 3 00 either observes a stranger in with a station, wit!, the Final The game puts the Giants three b< By Biemlller, 2; by Hearn, 3. Wild pitch Mi-nnsky. lf.,4 0 0 8 0 OlDiiirnn. 3b. ..3 0 1 1 10 suddenly horning chance to pass subway Philadelphia Redaction.Our low -ilieniiiier. Umpire»-.Corooran and Stock- Hopper, rf. .3 0 1 3 i OlFliaimon, sa. ..401 o f« o both. The effect at times is Giants. In the first game of the doubla the leaders, with the battlin dale. Time.1:3ft. Mcfnnis, lb..2 0 0 0 2 OlPerkllis, p_300 6 o o extremely depressing. bill to-morrow the Bears will meet the Entire Stock of Straw Dodgers only a few points behind th Scott, as_311 3 4 OiOrlffln, lh...Jl0 112 0 0 On the other side of it, the that first nine. Beds. AT BADTIMOltB l'.alley. cf.. .3 00 0 0 Oí Puny, P.30 1 0 2 0 entry figures he is whipped to Guaranty Wallers. <-...:« 0 n 2 1 i«i a froth and This afternoon the Bears will Hais, Panamas and R. II. K. ,1<>«iPc>. 0 0 0 creamy then suddenly discovers he has a chance after attempt Akron .2 ft 2 0 1 ft 3 ft p_2 1 0Í good to their on Heinie 2.10 16 1 »Foster .OH o o 0! all is spurred on with a sharpen claws Zim¬ to Baltimore ....0 0 1 0 0 0 0 o 0.« I 0 7 winning determination that is hard to batter down. merman's Bronx Giants in a battle that Bangkoks Rain Fails Interfere 1 Included, batteries.Hill ami Walker; Newton and Totals .2S 2 24 15 0| Totals .. .27 3 8 27 12 0 When the Braves hit that spurt in 1914 a double wired trench manned will be for blood. The contest is tho Bgarr. .Batted for Vltt In ninth Inning. second in a series of cham¬ at Half With Records in Trot AT READ1NO t Untied for .loiir-H In ninth with machine guns and semi-pro Original Price inning. protected by shrapnel couldn't drive them back and a B. If. E. íHattisd for Brady in ninlh inning. into the pionship games there is stake of NORTH Rochester .o 2 o 2 i o ft 3 2.in it r, old life of shame. I $1,000 for the winner. Zim's boys won BÄNDALL,Cleveland, Ohi Reading .ft 7 3 0 3 4 Boston .o o o o o n o 1 0.1 Aug. 18. Rain, which came up late t 0 1 x.~Is 26 3 Philadelphia.. 0 0 0 o 0 1 0 2 *.3 the first s«et-to by a score of 2.0. Batteries.BofegWlck and Ross; How Many? day, caused a postponement of tl Carpenter and öodder. Den-, Homo riirir«.Scotl. C. Walker. Stolen A number of Grand Circuit racing here after thl'i bases.Shannon, Dykes. Sacrifice hits wagers were made back in March and April that "Babe" Colonels RlükttGood Weber anèHèiîbroner races bad been and Juno Môlnnjs, Dykes (2). Double plays Vitt Ruth wouldn't make runs. 13.- Clothiers, Haberdashers and decided, hi and .Iones, Scott anil forty home LOUISVILLE, Aug. After the Halters.Eleven btorcs won two of the three heats m Ex-Ball Player Leaves Mctnnis; Mclnnlp. Tl $50,000 Loft on bases.Boston, 2; Philadelphia, 7. A number of others were mado that he regular g»me of July 24 between Leader, purse $3,000, for 2:OK pace« Greenwich, conn., aur. 13..An Bases on balls.Off .Iones, 4; off 1. wouldn't turn in fifty. The Toledo and Louisvill«; the two teams 'Y'241 1 185 estate of Bit Perry, first batch Broadway Broadway '58 Nassau The. third heat is to be raced to-mo ,$60,000 was left by the late by I'ltchrr.liy .Jones (Mugnn). Strui-k have already paid up, or have been requested to do the same. finished out «the protested (rame <;ï row to decide the money division. Frank Frtscott baseball out By Perry, 7. Umpires.Chill ami June 345 Broadway *44tli & 1 50 of the Norton, star Owens. Time.1:18. The second batch who bet against are in a 23, Which President Mickey or¬ Broadway* Nassau The rain came just after Favonia early '(10s. Mr. Norton was a fifty highly nervous state. dered resumed from the sixth *775 1 catcher time hear a inning Broadway 363 Broadway *20 Cortiandt odds-on favorite, had won the secoi for the old Athletics. Later he SECOND fiAMR Every they loud noise you can see them flinch. seem to on. Louisville confirmed its right to entered tho They *30 Broad & . nml deciding heat of The News swoe real estate business. The BOSTON (A. L.) PHILADELPHIA (A. I.) Lear a baseball the gam« by adding one run to its total, *42nd 5th Avc. ,laU at ^^ stor,§ bulk of the estate ah r h im a si ab r h po a e crashing against something large and round. Stakes, purso of $2,360 for two-yea was left to his widow. Vltt, 31». ...5 1 1 0 4 lit Welch while Toledo got none, the final score .-.«.- rf_40 1 3 0 0 The "Babe" is now on his* old trotters. liiadv, 2b. ..4 2 3 I 2 1 Pykd." 2b....400 1 31 way back to the Polo Grounds where his thus being 3 to 1. Another record went bv the boar Show MtmoaKy, If.5 1 1 1 o ol c. Walker, lf.4 0 0 O 0 0 greatest damage has occurred. With seven ;-«- when in Ho«? Labor Day Hooper, rf 4 1 2 0 OOP. Walter er.4 0 1 0 0 0 weeks left in which to lean to-day Juno, stepping; tho fir With in Melnsila, lh.3 0 113 1 i>: linean, 31). ..401 0 !ï 0 Two Recalled nulo of $3,000 money prizes tho inau¬ »s against right and left handed it is a Dodger» tho 2:0S pace in 2:02%, s gural show of Peon, .,10 1 2 2 0 Kliannon, B3..4 0Í S 2 0 pitching, almost certainty that he The club has a record for tho stake. Juno dog the Fairfleld County Me.Natly. Ha.0 0 0 1 1 0 PorKllU, O...10 0 4 10 will move on the Brooklyn recalled Out¬ car Kennel e. .20 past fifty total. What his final mark will from behind in both heats. Club will be held September 6 firlifuig. 1 [I 8 0 8i)"l«Js, C.10 0 2 10 be is interesting fielder Wallace P. Hood from the Salt on the grounds of the Wee »alley, cf.,41 1 0 0 0 (Mitin, lb...30014 Oil more people than the number of electoral Lake City club of th« Pacific Coast Bum Golf Myers, p..,4 1 1 0 3 0 Naylor, p_10 0 0 80 votes Harding or Cox will get. tiinoi* v». ¡trtmklyti To-ility, J« \y m Pc Club, Stamford, Conn., with an amateur Moose, p.2 0 1 0 2 0 League, and Outfielder Horace T. Al¬ ai-e;in<]8. Adm. 7i)C & $1.10 Incl. To circus and un open air «port carnival len, of the New Orleans club of the The .A.lM. Totals ..35 7 11 27 10 Totala Force and flower show as added Attractions. l! ....320527171 Any number of duffers follow an open golf Southern Association. Driving to see Dynamic Boston. 012 4 0000 0.7 championship just Philadelphia, oooooooo the stars pop into a bunker. It is an o.o extremely soothing sight to those Rain Hails White Sox That impetus within us that drives us on to do better to-day Two-base hit.Schang. Sacrifiée hit. who spend four-fifths of their time in the Record of Mclnnis. Left on bases.Boston, 0; Phila¬ jousting sand-filled troughs. DETROIT, Aug. 13..A heavy rain¬ than yesterday, and still better to-morrow than to-day, is truly Major League Clubs delphia, 0. Bases on balls.Off Myers, 1; storm caused the calling of to-day's the off 4. exemplified by progressive Moor«, Hits.Oft Naylor, 0 In 3 1-3 "Do game, between Chicago and Detroit at Tribune reader.tho only kind Innings; off Moore, 2 in 5 2-3 innings. you consider Roush a star outfielder?" writes L. K. F. A the The Tribune has. NATIONAL Si ruck out.By Myers, 9: by Naylor, 3; by good beginning of the sixth inning, with LEAGUE AMERICAN Moore, 3. Wild outfielder, but not to be classed with the score a 3-3 tire. Two LEAGUE pitcher.Naylor. pitch.Moore. Losing Speaker, Cobb, Sheckard, Lange, be games will GAMES TO-DAY GAMES TO-DAY Chili. Umpires Owens and Keeler, Fred Clarke or many others for all around value. played to-morrow. at New Time.1:30. For example, The Brooklyn York. New York nt no keen judge of play would ever him Among Tribune readers are employees who are th» Cincinnati at Chicago. St. Washington. pick for any all-star outfield of the St. Louis Louis at Cleveland. Eastern League present day. wideawake, ambitious persons, willing and glad to work bar« nt Pittsburgh (two). Chicago at Detroit (two). Worcester, 9¡ Albany, 1. Five Leading Batters in order to better themselves. Philadelphia at Boston (two). Do.-!«>n at Hartford, 4: Wftterbury, 3 (1st). Philadelphia. Watefbúry, 3; Hartford. 1 (2d). ¡ It is the hi Two YESTEIÏ DAY'S II ES V I.TS YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Springfield, 4; Bridgeport, 0 (1st). intentional pass rule.not the pitcher.who comes in for Big Leagues .Brooklyn. 4; New York. 2. New Bridgeport, 8; Springfield. 1 (2d). condemnation. If Were a If need these York, 4; Cleveland, 3. PiUefleld, 0; New Haven. 5 (1st). you pitcher with the possibility of $5,000 world you types of employees in your office for an St.'Louis, 1; Pittsburgh, 2. Chicago, 3; Plttsfleld. 3; Now- 1 series NATIONAL LEAGUE Detroit, 3 (5 Ins., rain). Haven, (2d). money headed your way and Ruth was up with runners on executive position, such as secretary, Boston, 5; Philadelphia, 2 (1st). Philadelphia, 3; Boston, I second Player, Club (¡. VU. K. II. PC. bookkeeper, stenographer, Philadelphia, 8; Boston. 2 (2d). (1st). and third, would you pass him or him a chance? Horimby. St. Louis. 105 110 «¡7 151 .37*1 office clerk or any duties along theso reach Boston. 7; 0 (2d). Southern Association give Figuring it out! Rovisli, Cincinnati. 87!) 551 12« lines, them through Other teams not scheduled. Other teamsPhiladelphia, Atlanta, 4; Nashville, 3. from the other fellow's .100 .as1} a Tribune Wanted Ad. not scheduled. New Orleans, 7; angle frequently ends the argument. The main Ô. Smith. St. I,ou!it. 71 3í¡5 46 81 .S»!) Help STANDING OF New Memphis, 4 (1st game). trouble is that WUtiini», PMbt. .103 tit (13 13* .3'iil TEAMS STANDING OF TEAMS Orleans, 10; Memphis, 0 (2d game). only an odd soul here and there in class Uonctcliy, Brkljrn.. 1)5 304 43 117 ;m Birmingham. 12; Little Rock, 10. ether any believes the W.fc.Pct.1 W. L. Pet. W. L. Pct.l W. L. Chattanooga-Mobile (rain). fellow has a viewpoint even worth AMERICAN LEAGUE Cin'nati. 59 IÍ »373 Chicago. 54 «r>7 .486 Clevel'd. 69 39 Pet. considering. Phone your Help Wanted Ad to The Tribune's Want Ad f 7 .6391Boston.. 48 58.453 Player. Club. (¡. AB. B. IL PC. B'klyn.. G2 .569 St. Louis 49 57 .462 Chicago. 70 American ftÎHler, 8t. Loni*.. .lOfl ISO f)l 178 Department, Beekman 3000, or go to of W*nt N. York. 57 48 .5 Kl 45 41.631jWash... 46 58 .442 Association If Tris Speaker, ClevelantMOft ,404 any The Tribune's Boston... 55 .450 N.York. 7142.628¡Detroit.. 40 6SUJ81 Minneapolis, tl Indianapolis, 2. I Speaker wins a pennant and leads his league in at one 101 90 103 .4»»3 Agents.Over 500 in Greater Pittsb'». 53 50.515 Phila,... 42 63.409 St. Louis 52 Columbus. 8; Milwaukee. 1. and the same batting Juek*on, CUieitiro. .100 41'i 00 lfiO .3,1* New York.or come to Thd 53.495|PhIla.... 35 7P&18 Louisville. 0; Pt. time, future athletes will have a to shoot Ruth. New York.. 107 340 133 131 .3*5 Tribune Paul, 2. target at just a E. ColUn», rhic.iKO.110 420 80 134 office, 154 Nassau St. Wneas City. 8; Toledo, 7. trifle beyond tiw. ««diuary affair. Just a trifle. .350