Newspaper Page Text
2 C
IIEAR.ST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN- EASEBALL AND OTHER SPORTS SUNDAY. .TUNE 1. 1013.
REDS BEAT CARDS TWICE
ST. LOUIS, May 31.—Outhlt and
outflelded, the crippled Cardinals
dropped both ends of a double-header
to Cincinnati this afternoon the first
game by the score of 6 to 2. and 1h«
second by the score of 3 to 0 With
all their catchers on the «ick lift.
Wlngo gamely stuck to the g ime until
the seventh inning of the second on
test, when he fetired and the veteran
Heine Peitz, who twenty years ago
was a star, did the receiving. Two
errors in rapid succession for Peitz
let in one of the visitors' rum. but
when he sacrificed neatly in )»L only
time at bat, he got one of the great
est receptions accorded any player
this season.
In the first game Grin* r went all
the way against Johnson, but was hi
hard. In the second game Suggs had
the Cards at his mercy, while Per-
ritt, who started for St. Louis, lasted
1 2-3 innings The score:
First Game.
Cincinnati. ab. r. h. po. a. e.
Devore, cf. . . 6 2 2 2 0 0
Bates, rf. . . . 4 2 2 0 0 0
Bescher. If. .3 1 3 # 4 0 0
Bergham'r, as. . 4 0 1 2 6 1
Marsans, lb.. .3 0 0 11 1 0
Almeida. 3b. .4 1 2 0 5 1
OrolT, 2b. . 3 0 1 5 3 0
Kllng, c. . . 4 ft 1 3 0 0
Johnson, p. . 4 0 0 0 2 0
Hue
1 1
Score by Inning-:
Brooklyn 000 000 210 0—3
Boston 000 300 DOO 0—3
Summary Two-barn hits Stengel,
. Smith. Three-base lilt Mann. Stolen
tui:- Stengel. Devlin. Left on buses
Boston (5. Brooklyn 7 ibises on
balls- off Hess 7, off Rucker 2. Struck
I out- Bv Hess 2 by Rucker 4. Sac-I
! riflee hits Smith, Moran, Cutshaw. |
Double plays -Whaling to Devlin. '
Hess to Marnnville to Myers, Smith
to Dauhert. empires—Brennan and j
Eason. Time—1:48.
.. - -
PIRATES 4; CUBS 0.
PITTSBURG, May 31.—Babe Ad
ams wnltewaahod the Cubs to-day,
1 4 to 0, in a rapid-fire combat. S' j
! ond base was as close as any Cub
i came to scoring until the eighth, when
l Brldwell got n« far as third. Charley)
J Smith gave Adams the battle of hisi
j life for seven innings and still wan]
i going strong when lifted for a pinch •
i hitter in the eighth. Smith muzzled
I the Pi rites with six hits in seven
1 rounds, and the first run was put
! across in the sixth on two singles
and a pair of sacrifices. lavender,
1 who entered the game in the eighth,
. was bumped for three runs and three
I hits. The box score:
Young American Blood Expected to Beat Australasians at Tennis
•!*•*!• *!••*!• »!*•+ •*•••!• +•+ +•+ +•+ -J• •(***!*
McLoughlin and Williams Unbeatable in Singles Matches at Net
HITCH TELLS
T WO formidable members of the American Davis Cup team and scene during court tennis match between Hackett and Little, who have been nominated to play
for America in the international doubles, and Touchard and Cell. The members of the selection committee were severely criticised for giving Ilackett and
Little the preference over Touchard and Pell, as the latter pair were considered a stronger combination. In action below: Maurice E. McLoughlin, the national
Singh s champion, is shown at the right : Harold II. Hackett, former doubles title holder with Alexander, is portrayed at the left.
Totals .
St. Louis.
34
5 12 27 15
ab. r. h. po. a. e.
Huggins, 2b. . 3 0 1 4 2 0
Oaken, cf. . . 4 0 1 3 0 0
8heckard, rf. 8 0 1 1 1 ft
Mowrey, 3b ..4 0 0 0 1 0
Konetchy, lb. .4 0 0 10 0 0
Magee. If. ... 4 1 2 3 0 0
O’Leary, ss. . . 3 1 0 1 5 0
Wlngo, c. . . . 3 0 1 5 1 0
Griner, p. . . 8 0 0 0 2 0
Totals . . .31 2 6 27 12 0
Score by innings:
Cincinnati 400 020 000 5
St. Louis 010 010 000—2
Summary: Two-base hits Beseher,
2; Devore, Oakes, Magee. Three-base
hit—Devore Home run Almeida.
Sacrifice hit —Groh. Sacrifice fly—
Marsans. Stolen base Sheckard.
Double plays- Bergharnmer and Mar
sans; Sheckard and Huggins;
O’Leary, Huggins and Konetchy; Al
meida, Groh and Marsans. Bases on
balls—Off Johnson, 4; off Griner, 1.
Struck out—By Griner, 5; by John
son, 2. Left on bases St. Louis, 6;
Cincinnati, 4. Time of game 1:55.
Umpires—Rigor and Byron.
Second Game.
St. Louis. ab. r. h. po. a. e.
Magee. 2b. .4 0 1 2 5 0
Oakes, cf. .4 0 0 3 0 0
Sheckard. If. . 3 0 0 3 0 0
Mow rev. 8b . 3 0 0 0 1 0
Koney. lb.. . . 3 0 0 13 0 0
Evans, rf. . . . 3 0 1 2 1 0
O’Leary, ss. . . 8 0 0 2 3 0
Wlngo, c. . . 1 0 1 2 1 1
Peitz, c. . . . 1 0 0 ft 0 2
Perritt, p. . . 0 0 0 o 0 0
Burke, p. . . . 3 0 0 ft 3 0
•Gathers .... 1 0 0 0 0 0
Totals .29 0 3 27 14 3
•Batted for Wingo in sixth.
Cincinnati. ab. r. h. po. a. e.
Devore, of.. . . 4 1 1 3 0 0
Bates, rf. . . 5 1 3 2 0 0
Beecher, If.. .2 0 0 1 ft 0
Bergharnmer,F9. 5 1112ft
Marsans, lb.. .4 1 110 1 1
Almeida. 3b. . . 4 2 2 2 2 0
Groh. 2b 3 0 1 4 5 0
Clarke, c.. . . 3 1 1 3 0 ft
Suggs, p. . . . 4 1 1 1 2 0
Totals ... .34 8 11 27 12 1
Score by innings:
Cincinnati 050 000 210—8
St. Louis 000 000 000—0
Summary: Two-bu,«e hits—Bates,
Almeida. Sacrifice hits -Devore,
Groh. Stolen bases—Almeida. De
vore, Groh, Beecher. Double play*—
Almeida, Groh and Marsans; Berg-
hammer and Marsuu* Bases on balls
-Off Burke, 4; off Suggs. 1. Struck
out—By Suggs. 3; by Burke, 1. Pitch
ing record—Off Perritt. 7 hits and 5
runs in 12-3 innings. Left on bases
—St. Louis. 8; Cincinnati. 5. Time—
1:50. Umpires—Rigler and Byron.
Chicago.
Miller, If. . . .
Evers, 2b. . . .
| Schulte, cf. . .
Zimmerman, 3b.
Safer, lb. . . .
ciymer, cf. . .
I Brldwell, ss.. .
j Archer, c. . . .
Smith, p.. . .
| * Phelan. . . .
; ••Leach . . .
Bresnahan, c. .
I Lavender, P-- •
ab.
4
4
4
4
4
3
3
3
2
0
1
0
0
h.
0
1
1
0
ft
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
po.
8
2
4
0
6
2
4
3
ft
0
0
0
0
Totals ... .32 0 5 24 8 1
•Kan for Archer in eighth.
••Batted for Smith In eighth.
Pittsburg. ab. r. h. po. a. e.
I Booe, cf. . . . 3 1 2 4 0 0
Carey, If. ... 3 1 1 5 0 1
; Viox, 2b. ... 3 1 1 4 ft 0
i Wagner, ss. . . 4 0 1 2 2 0
|C. Miller, lb. . 4 0 2 4 1 1
Wilson, rf.. . . 4 0 1 0 0 0
j Byrne. 3b. ... 4 0 0 1 1 0
! Simon, c.. . . 3 ft 0 ft 1 0
i Adams, p. . . . 3 1 1 ft ft 0
Totals ... .27 4 9 *26 5 2
•••Phelan out, hit by batted ball.
Score by Innings:
Chicago 00ft ftOft 000—0
Pittsburg 000 001 03*—4
Summary: Two-base hit—-Carr,
j Three-base hit- Booe. Hits— Off
j Smith, ft in 7 Innings; off Lavender,
j 3 in 1 inning. Sacrifice hit—Carr.
Sacrifice flics- Viox, Wagner. Stolen
bases -Schulte, Miller. Viox. Left on
I liases -Chicago, 4; Pittsburg, ft. Base
(in balls—-Off Lavender, 1. Hit by
I pitched ball—Phelan. Struck out—-
] By Smith. 2; by Adams, 5. Time—
1:3ft. Umpires—Klem and Orth.
GIANTS, 3; PHILLIES, 2.
NEW YORK, Mity 31.—The Giants
made it four straights over the
Phillies by capturing to-day's game
before a crowd of 26,000. The tlmd
score was 3 to 2. Mathewson held
the leaders runless up to the ninth
i inning, while the Giants got some
i long lilts off Rixey. The Giants
started scoring in the second inning.
After Doyle fanned, Merkle walked
and scored on Murray's double to
right and a single by Meyers, the
latter hit counting Murray. They got
j another In the sixth on Shafer's
single and Merkle’s triple. The box
DODGERS BEAT BRAVES.
BOSTON, May 31 -With a score of
3 to 3, the second game of to-day’s
double-header between Brooklyn and
Boston was called at the end of the
tenth inning on account of darkness.
It was a cleanly played game, and
both pitchers twirled good ball, with
the exception of one inning each. The
first game was also a pitchers’ battle
between Stack and Dickson, the lat
ter weakening in the eighth, when
four singles scored the two runs of
the entire game. Sweeney’s hitting
and fielding featured both contests.
The box score
First Game.
Brooklyn. ab. r. h. po. a. e.
Moran, rf .4 1 1 2 0 0
Cutshaw, 2b. 4 ft 1 3 4 ft
Sengel. cf. .3 0 1 2 0 0
Wheat. If. ... 4 0 0 2 1 0
Daubert lb.. . 4 0 2 11 1 ft
Smith. 3b. ... 4 ft 1 5 2 ft
Fisher, ss. . . 4 0 1 0 4 0
Miller, c. .. .. 4 1 1 1 ft 0
Stack, p. . . . 3 ft 1 1 1 0
Totals ... .34 2 9 27 13 0
Boston. ab. r. h. po. a. e.
Maranville, ss.. 4 ft 0 3 4 1
Myers, lb. ... 4 0 2 12 0 0
Connelly. If. . . 2 0 0 2 ft ft
Sweeney. 2b . . 4 0 3 4 4 0
Titus, rf 4 0 ft 3 ft ft
Mann. cf. . . . 3 0 1 1 0 1
Devlin, 3b. . . 3 0 0 0 3 ft
Whaling, c . . 3 ft 1 2 1 ft
Dickson, p. . . 3 ft 0 ft 1 1
‘McDonald .1 0 1 0 ft
••Seymour
1 0
Totals .32 0 8 27 13 3
•Batted for Mann in the ninth.
••Batted for Devlin in the ninth.
Score by innings,
Brooklyn ftOo 000 020 2
Boston ... 000 000 000—0
Summary: S,a riflee It—Ccnnelly.
Stolen base—Wheat. Double i lays-
Meyers. 2; Maranville ant Myers.
T eft on bases— Brooklyn 6. Boston 8
First base on balls—(Off Stack 2, off
Dickson 1. First bas^ on errors—
Brooklyn 2. Struck out -By Stack 1,
by Dickson 1. Time—1:38. Umpires
—Brennan and Eason
Second Game.
Boston ab. r. h. po. a. e
Maranville. ss .5 ft 1 2 : 0
Myers, lb. . .5 1 1 12 1 •'
Lord. If. ... 5 l 0 4 o r
Sweeney. 2b. . . 3 ft ft 1 2 "
Titus, rf. . . . 3 1 2 3 ft ft
Mann. cf. . . 4 0 1 3 ft ft
Devlin, 3b. ... 4 0 ft 2 2 ft
Whaling, c. . . 4 ft ft 2 1 1
Hess, p 4 0 2 1 4 1
Totals ... .37 3 7 30 15 2
Brooklyn. ab. r. h. po. a. c.
Moran, rf. . . 3 1 1 1 ft 0
Cutshaw. 2b. . 4 0 0 1 3
Stengel, cf. . . 4 1 1 4 0 ft
Wheat. If. ... 0 0 1 4 ft ft
Daubert, lb. . . 3 1 • y ft
Smith, 3b. ... 3 u 1 1 3 ft
Fisher, ss. . . . S 0 2 4
Miller, c. . . . 3 0 o 7 10
score:
New York.
Burns, If . .
Shafer. 3b. .
Fletcher, ss. .
Doyle. 21). . .
Merkle. lb. .
Murray, rf. .
Meyers, c. .
Snodgrass, cf.
Mathewson, p.
ab.
4
1
3
4
2
3
3
8
3
Totals . .
Phila.
Miller, rf . ,
Knabe, 2b. .
Lobert, 8b. .
Magee, If. .
Cravath, cf.
Luderus. lb.
Doolan, ss..
Killifer. c. .
Rixey, p. . .
Mayer, p. . ,
•Dolan . . .
••Walsh . .
.29 3
ab.
. 4
. 4
. 4
. 4
. 4
. 4
. 4
. 3
o
! o
. i
• i
h.
1
1
1
0
1
1
1
1
0
po.
1
3
0
12
4
3
U
27 9 2
po. a.
Totals .35 2 6 24 9 0
•Dolan batted for Rixey in ninth.
••Walsh batted for Killifer in ninth.
Score by innings:
Philadelphia 000 000 002—2
New York 020 001 00*—3
Summary: Two-base hits—Mur
ray, Fletcher. Three-base hits Mer
kle. Luderus. Sacrifice hit—Shafer.
Stolen base - Magoe. Base on balls—
Off Rixey.. 1. Left on bases- New
York. 4; Philadelphia, ft. Struck out
By Rixey, 2; by Mayer. 1; by
Mathewson, 1. Time of game 1:40.
Umpires O’Day and Ernslle. At
tendance—26.000.
ENGLISH SNUBBED BY NEW
BOXING ORGANIZATION
PARIS, May 31.—Reference to the
National Sporting Club of London
that causes surprise to every Eng
lishman interested in boxing was
madejn a notice appearing in n local
paper, which stated that the new Na-
0 q 0 tional Boxing Union, just organized,
with headquarters in Paris, will pre
pare .definite and final rules for all
WHITE SOX, 3; TIGERS, 2.
CHICAGO, May 31.—The White Sox
won an eleven-inning contest from
the Tigers here this afternoon 3 to 2.
Tyros Cobb, as usual, made good,
not only on the bases, but in the field.
In the sixth, the “peach” singled and
went all the way to third on Veach’s
littl«‘ single to left. Cobb robbed
the Sox of victory in the tenth when
with Selder on second and Rath on
first, both of whom had singled after
two were out, he raced back into deep
right close to the foul line and speared
Fournier’s drive that looked to be a
sure triple. Collins opened the
eleventh for the Sox by doubling and
was sacrificed to third by Shaller.
Mattick popped a fly to Bush and
Collins scored the winning run on
Weaver's ch an single through short.
Zamhoch, who pitched for Detroit,
granted eleven hits, and White, his
opponent, nine. The box score:
Chicago. ab. r. h. po. a. e.
Zieder, 3b. . . 4 1 3 1 5 ft
Rath, 2b.. ..502142
Fournier, lb. .5 0 ft 16 0 0
Collins, rf. ..4 1 2 0 0 0
Bodie. cf. . . . 1 0 0 ft 0 0
Shaller, if. . . 3 0 l 2 o 0
Mattick. 5 0 1 4 2 ft
Weaver, ss. . . 5 0 2 3 4 2
Sc ha lk, c, . . 3 1 ft 7 2 0
White, p. . . . 3 0 0 0 4 1
Totals . , . .38 3 11 33 21 3
Detroit. ab. r. h. po. a. e.
Bush, rs. . . . 6 1 2 8 5 1
Vitt. 2b. ... 3 ft ft 2 4 0
Crawford, lb. .5 0 013 1 1
Cobb, rf 3 0 2 1 ft 0
Veach, If. ... 4 0 2 3 0 0
*+Dubuc ...100000
High, cf. ... 1 0 0 1 0 0
Louden, cf. . . 2 2 ft 2 0 0
Morlarty, 3b. .5 0 1 3 2 0
Bondeau. c. . . 4 0 1 1 6 0
Zamboch, p. . . 5 1 1 1 1 0
Totals . . .39 2 9 *32 19 2
'-Dubuc batted for High In sixth.
‘Two out when winning run scored.
Score by innings:
Tigers 001 000 100 00—2
Sox 100 010 000 01—3
Summary: Two-base hits—Collins,
2. Sacrifice hits -Veach, Shaller.
Sacrifice fly- Collins. Stolen bases—
Zieder, Schalk. Double plays—
Mattick to Fournier: Bush to Craw
ford. Left on bases—Chicago, 5; De
troit, 8. Bases on balls—Off White,
5; off Zamboch. 1 Hit by pitched
ball Vitt. Struck out—By White,
Bush. Zamboch, High, Dubuc; by
Zamboch. Weave!. Schalk. Umpires
—Hildebrandt and Connolly.
ATHLETICS, 12; YANKS, 2.
PHILADELPHIA, May 31.—In win
ning the fourth straight from New
York, the Athletics to-day handed the
visitors their worst defeat of their
viffit here. The score was 12 to 2. In
terest ceased as early as the second
Inning when the home forces scored
seven runs. Klepfer, who succeeded
Clark, failed to silence the Mack bats.
Both Mclnnis and Baker swatted
homers. Bender blanked his rivals
for six innings, and then retired,
Taft' finishing the game. The box
score:
Athletics. ab. r. h.6po. a. e.
E. Murphy, rf. 4 0 2 0 0 0
Oldring, if. . . 8 0 1 0 0 0
Welsh, if. ... 2 0 1 1 0 0
Collins, 2b. . . 4 2 3 2 4 0
Baker, 3b. ... 4 2 2 2 2 0
Orr, 3b. ... 0 0 0 0 0 0
Mclnnis, lb. . . 6 2 2 10 2 0
Strunk, cf, . . 6 1 2 2 0 0
Barry, ss. . . . 6 I 1 4 0 1
Schang, c. . . . 4 1 1 5 1 0
Bender, p. . . , 3 2 1 I 0 0
Taff, p 1 1 1 0 3 0
Totals ... 40 12 17 27 12 1
ride all
sport.
lisputed cast
s arising in the
New York.
ab.
r.
h.
po
The B
ox in a
Union
will consist of
1
rf. .
. 5
0
0
1
iepresentatives
of the
New Y
(irk State
Wolter,
cf. .
. 4
0
-
1
Athletic
Comm
■ i
and th
o French
Chase. 1
b. . .
. 3
0
1
12
B< ing
Fedor.
ition.
The
Nat ion a 7
Cree, If.
. 4
ft
0
1
Sporting
Club,
the
statement savs.
Sweenej
. c. .
• 2
0
1
1
does not
figure
in a b
ox ing
mion be-
Gossett,
c, .
. 1
ft
0
3
cause it
is not
const
lered s
ufficlent-
Midkiff,
3b. .
. 4
1
1
o
Iv Important to take part In any such
international organisation.
CHARLIE WHITE STOPS
MEYERS IN TWO ROUNDS
\URORA. ILLI., Juno 2. Charlie
White, of Chicago, mad- good on ills
promise to finish Georg' Meyers by the
• kn--oknut route in their fight here last
right. There were two other good mills,
one of them ending with the sleep punch.
The shew drew 8*0. mostly Chicagoans.
White put George Meyers away in the
second round of their fight before the
session was a minute old The knock
out punch was a right lo the stomach
whl- r. Meyers’ seconds - .aimed was low
h-r.d the referee refused to listen to the
protest. Meyers was floored three times
M ?i ,; >i iirk;: round, taking the count of
JOCKEY YORK INJURED.
BEI M< >NT PARK. U J.. June 2.—
Roth Wei I York. ^ jockey, was fatally In
jure i while exercising a horse on the
track here Falling from the saddle,
his loot caught in the stirrup and he
was dragged 40 yards
0 0
0 ft
Peckinbaugh, ss 4
McKcchnie, 2b. 4
Clark, p. . . . 0
Klepfer, p. . .. 3
1 1
0
'Sterrett . .
1 0
Totals ... 35 2 9 24 15 1
•Batted for Klepfer in the ninth.
Score by innings:
New York 000 000 200— 2
Athletics 071 200 llx—12
Summary: Stolen bases—Collins
(2), Baker. Mclnnis, Strunk. Left on
bases--Athletics, 8; New Y T ork. 8.
Earned runs—Athletics, 11; New
! York, 2. Two-base hit—Strunk.
I Throe-base hit—Peckinbaugh. Home
I runs Mclnnis, Baker. Pitching rec
ord -Hits off Bender, 5 in six in
nings; off Taff, 4 in three innings;
off Clark, 5 in one and two-thirds in-
| rungs: off Klepfer. 12 in six and one-
third innings. Struck out—By Ben-
I dor, 3: by Taff, 1; by Clark. 1; by
Klepfer, 1. Bases on balls—Off Ben
der, 1; off Taff, 1, off Clark. 1. Passed
i balls Sweeney. Hit by pitcher—By
Clark, 2; by Klepfer, 1.
game—1: 56.
Time of
NAPS, 5; BROWNS, 4.
CLEVELAND, OHIO, May 31.—
Bunts threw the St. Louis Browns in
the air in the ninth inning of to-day’s
game and they lost 5 to 4. O’Neil
scratched a hit through Wallace and
Bates ran for him. Hlanding's bunt
escaped Austin and no one tried to
field Doc Johnston’s bunt. With the
bases full, the Browns went in the air,
and Chapman’s fly, which should have
been an out, fell between Shotten,
Pratt and Wallace, scoring Bates with
the tying run. Shotten could not hold
Olson’s fly and Blanding scored the
winning run. The box score:
St. Louis.
Shotton. cf. .
J. Johnston, If
Williams, rf. .
Pratt, 2b. . .
Stovall, lb.
Austin. 3b. .
Wallace, ss. .
Agnew, c. . . . 4
Levering, p. . . 3
Hamilton, p. .. 1
ab.
3
4
4
4
4
3
3
po.
4
1
1
1
11
1
ft
4
1
0
Totals ... .33 4 12 24 12 0
Cleveland. ab. r. h. po. a. e.
D. Johnston, lb. 5 0 1 13 0 0
Chapman, ss. . 3 0 1 2 2 0
Olson, 3b. ... 6 0 1 1 3 0
Turner, 2b. . . 4 1 2 1 3 0
Ryan, cf 3 1 2 1 1 ft
Loibold, cf. . . 4£ 1 1 1 0 0
Graney, If. . . 4 0 1 3 1 0
O’Neil, c. . . . 3 0 2 4 2 ft
Steen, p. . . . 0 0 ft 0 2 0
Blanding, p. . . 0 0 0 0 2 ft
•Lajoie .... 0 ft 0 0 0 ft
••Bates .... 0 1 0 0 0 0
Totals ... .33 5 12 27 14 0
•Ba{t^d for Ryan in eighth.
••Ran for O’Neil in ninth.
Score by innings:
Cleveland 000 000 302^-5
St. Louis 000 130 000—4
Summary: Hits—Off Steen 10, in 5
innings; off Blanding 2. in 4 innings*;
off Levering 5, in 6 innings; off Hamil
ton 7, in 3 innings. Two-base hits—
Pratt. Jackson. Three-base hits—
Pratt, Turner. Sacrifice hits*—Steen.
Wallace. Stolen bases—Austin, Shot-
ton, Leibold. Bases on balls—Off
Steen 1. off Blanding 1, off Levering 2.
off Hamilton 2. Double plays—Sto
vall. unassisted. Umpires—Ferguson
and Dineen. Time—2:15.
SENATORS, 5; RED SOX, 4.
WASHINGTON. May 31 Wash
ington defeated Boston to-day in a
hard eleven-inning battle 5 to 4.
Henry’s batting was a feature, his
singles tying the score in the ninth
and winning in the eleventh. Griffith
used four pitchers and Boston two.
President Wilson and daughter were
interested spectators. The box score:
Boston. ab. r. h. po. a. e.
Hooper, if. .4 1 2 1 0 0
Y'erkes. 2b . . 4 0 0 2 3 1
Speaker, cf .
Lewis, If .
Engle, lb .
Wagner, ss .
Janvrian, 3b
Carrigan, c .
Bedient, p .
Total*? ... 37
Washington, ab.
Moeller, rf . . 3
Schaefer, 2b . . 5
Milan, cf . . . 5
Gandil. lb ... 4
Ainsmith, c . . 1
Shanks, If . . 5
McBride, ss . . 5
Gedeon, 3b . . 3
Laporte, 3b . . 1
Henry, c, If . .5
Hughes, p . . 1
Altrock, p . . .0
Engel, p . . . 0
Boehling, p . . 0
xxjohnson . . .1
xxx Will lams . . 1
xxxxMullin . . 1
4 10 x32 18
h.
0
1
2
1
0
2
1
0
ft
o
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
po.
Totals ... .41 5 10 33 18 1
xTwo out when winning run was
made.
xxjohnson batted for Hughes in the
fifth inning.
xxxtVilliams batted for Altrock in
the eighth.
xxxxMullin batted for Engel in the
ninth.
Score by innings:
Boston . . . .020 020 000 00—4
Wash’ton ... 000 200 002 01—5
Summary: Two-base hits—Engle,
Echaefer, Shanks, Milan. Home run
—Speaker. Hits—Off Hughes. 8 in 5
innings; Altrock, 5 in 3 innings; none
off Engel in one inning; 1 off Boeh
ling in 2 innings. Sacrifice hit—Yer-
kes. Stolen basts—Janvrian, Moel
ler. Double plays—Hughes, McBride
and Gandil; McBride unassisted. Left
on bases—Boston, 7; Washington, 8.
First base on balls—Off Bedient,
2: off Hughes, 3; off Altrock, 1;
off O’Brien, 1. First base on errors—
Boston. 0: Washington. 2. Struck
out—By Bedient, 5; by Hughes, 1; by
Engel, 1; by Boehling, 2. Time—•
2; 05. Umpires—Egan and O’Loughlin.
Attendance, 7,200.
VIRGIL GARVIN TAUGHT
FALKENBERG FADEAWAY
CLEVELAND, O., May 31.—There
, is no doubt of Falkenberg owning
the best fadeaway delivery in ;he
American League. In fact’there is a
; question of Mathewson having th-.
fadeaway mastered better than Falk-
j t-nberg. There are no others in a
class with these two when it comes to
this particular brand of deceivers.
{ Fred was taught the famous fadeaway
j by a rival pitcher—Virgil Garvin, the
famous “Navasota Tarantula." who
was once a member of the Brookl n
club at the time Falkenberg was with
| the Pirates.
Griffith Declares
War on Ban Johnson
National’s Manager Says He Wants
No More to Do With
“That Fellow.”
WASHINGTON, May 31.—‘Tm
through with Ban Johnson. He may
know how to run the league, but he
will never cut in on the Washington
club as long as I am manager. If
there is any more correspondence be
tween Chicago and Washington it will
have to come from some one else, for
I will have nothing more to do with
that fellow.”
With these words Clark Griffith last
night gave notice of an open breach
between himself and the president of
the American LeagCe. It has been
known for some time that the rela
tions between Johnson and the man
ager were none too pleasant, but
when word was received in Boston
from Washington that Johnson
had notified President Ben Minor, of
the Nationals, of the reinstatement of
Nick Altrock, Griffith went on record
in regard to an absolute rupture with
Johnson.
Three times the chief of the Na
tionals asked Johnson to explain on
what grounds Altrock was barred,
and the manager expected that he
would receive a direct answer from
the executive.
“He has tried to butt in on us be
fore. but from now on you can take
it from me he can go his way and we
will go ours,” continued Griffith. “1
am trying to give Washington a win
ning ball club, and if Johnson thinks
that such petty stuff as he has been
pulling can humiliate me he is away
off his base. 1 have stood for quite
a little of this small stuff before,
but from now on he and I are not
going to have any relations whatso
ever. That’s all, and it’s final.”
CINCINNATI TO ENTER
BALLOON IN BIG RACE
KANSAS CITY. MO.. May 31 —
George M. Meyers. President of the
Kansas City Aero Club, announced
yesterday that the Cincinnati Aero
• Club, recently organized, would enter
i a balloon for the national elimination
1 race which will start from here July
Dr. E. L. Custer, of Dayton. Ohio,
1 will be one of the contesting pilots,
j and Captain G. L. Bumbaugh. of In-
j dian&polis will bring one or two bags
• here to be entered in the race.
Youthful Due and Hackett and
Little in Play in Cup Chal
lenge Games.
N EW YORK, May 31.—Another
thrilling and interesting chap
ter will doubtless be added to
the history of American lawn tennis
when America mets Australasia in
the preliminary tie for the Davis Cup
within a few days.. The clash of
racquets will take place on the courts
of the West Side Tennis Club, and,
regardless of the outcome, there will
be some rare exhibitions of the game.
Those who are hypercritically in
clined have figured out that we will
win the singles and that the Austra
lasians will be consoled with a brack
et in the doubles. It is within the
bounds of possibility that tho whole
thing may result the other way
around.
America will be represented by
Maurice E. McLoughlin, Richard Nor
ris Williams, Harold H. Hackett and
Raymond D. Little, while the hopes
of the Southern Cross will rest on
Stanley Norwood Douet, Horace O.
Rice and A. B. Jones.
Evidently it will be young America
against Australasia, for Mcloughlin is
a year younger. Last year the pair
were Nos. 1 and 2 in the singles
rating, a piece of calculation which
nobody questioned.
McLoughlin Old in Game.
Though young in years. McLoughlin
is old enough in the battle for tho
Davis cup. Already he has been twice
to Australia in quest of the mug. The
last time the titian-haired Californian
figured in the fray was at Christ
Church, New Zealand, and the match
he played in singles against Norman
E. Brooks, regarded as the greatest
of tennis players, will stand out for
all time in the annals of the Davis
cup.
At one stage of the game McLough-
Iin had the left-handed wonder in the
rear by two sets to one, and when it
wap sets all, the American boy led for
the deciding game, but he lacked the
steadiness at the crucial moment, and
Brooks Just scatched out a victory.
As he squares off on the court the
California boy is a quiet, unassuming
fellow, and Immediately the audience
is with him. A pleasant player to
look at, but it Is the case of a lion
working in the fleecy skin of a lamb.
With hip terrific smash overhead, his
wonderful twist service, his chop
strokes and his fierce aggressiveness
in volleying close to the net, the boy
from the Pacific coast to-day is the
embodiment of what might be regard
ed as the newest science of tennis.
McLoughlin is the present American
National champion, and it is note
worthy that he is the youngest man
who ever granted hrdlupulifUtoiswa
Williams 1912 Sensation.
Williams was the sensation of the
1912 season, and ran McLoughlin hard
for first place. He was born at Gene
va, Switzerland, and for a time there
was some question about his eligi
bility as an American. But the United
State? National Lawn Tennis Asso
ciation decided that as long as he
was the son of an American parent
he was entitled to take part in the
Davis cup battle. Williams is a Har
vard University man.
Williams learned tennis at the Cha
teau D’Oeux and other Swiss resorts.
During the seasons of 1906 and 1909
he visited California and saw a lot
of the tennis methods used by the
men from the Pacific coast. There
he learned his screw service and the
chop stroke, of which he is not a
very bright exponent. Williams is
a survivor from the ill-fated Titanic.
Hackett and Little are old cam
paigners in the tennis world, and they
are expected to be more or less of I
a joke in the doubles. Paired with j
F. B. Alexander. Hackett did great j
work in the national double of the
past, and when Little had Touchard
a« a partner he became a champion
for the first time in his long career.
Of the Australians, Doust seems to
be worth the highest rating. He is
most effective as a doubles player,
and it is understood that he has come
specially to double up with either
Rice or Jones. Dust ip a champion
sprinter and a stayer.
Willie Ritchie, world's lightweight
champion, will defend his title on
July In the following article, writ
ten especially for the Sunday Ameri
can, hr tells just what he will do be
tween now and the time of the fight.
By Willie Ritchie.
T RAINING for a contest is a very
important matter. I have learn,
ed that condition is half a bat
tle. Therefore, one cannot give this
subject any too much consideration.
For a championship contest, at least
six weeks is needed to perfect one’s
wind.
July 4 will be the date of my
next contest. Beginning in Seattle. T
will take my road runs regularly
every .morning. In the afternoons and
evenings, at the theater, I will get
all the gymnastic work necessary in
doing my turn on the stage, which
consists of boxing and other gymna
sium work.
Keeping regular hours, doing your
routine work regularly, is one of th^>
•strictest rules of my manager. Billy
Nolan, who is a past master in the
conditioning of athletes. Never can
I forget the superb condition he land
ed me in the ring when Wolgast lost
his title on Thanksgiving Day.
• • *
N 'OLAN is a crank on training, and
watches and times every move
you matte from the time you get up
until bedtime. Regularity is his mot
to.
Food is an important element in
a training camp. No greasy or high
ly seasoned foods are permitted.
Cakes, pastry or fried meats and
fresh bread or biscuits are barred
during training periods. So from
now on my next three weeks on the
road will be in strict training.
After my week in Portland, or
which ends June 2, I will lose no
time getting to California, where w'e
will go up in the mountains of Lake
County, to my manager’s ranch. My
sleeping is done out in the open air;
my companions are the saddle horse
and hunting dog. This is the one
pl^ce to rest, and for two weeks it
will be rest, while 1 will have plenty
of exercise, it will be so different
from the kind I have had to go
through for the last seven months.
Everything is different—the foods of
the coarsest variety. Practically
everything that is eaten comes off
the 1,200-acre ranch.
* * •
TOURING my stay all of the meat
and fish that I eat will be of the
game variety, as it is no particular
effort for me to catch a mess of trout
any time or shoot game or birds on
the ranch, where Nolan maintains a
preserve.
My greatest benefits are derived
from being in the open air at all
times. Think of it—sleeping, eating
and being in the open air all hours
of the day.
If necessity demands weight re
ducing, the greatest weight-reducing
exercise and appliances in the world
are on the farm. A large hay barn,
capable of holding several tons of
loose hay, and a couple of good forks
comprise the paraphernalia necessa
ry in this rural gymnasium. Once
you take your stand in the center of
the hay that is being forked to you.
perspiration will come from every
pour of your body. I have tried it,
and no Turkish bath produces quick- -
er or better reults, June is the
month that the stock barns must be
filled. If you want the sweat, you
know the place to get it.
I am counting the days that will
land me in Lake County. This is
where my heavy and actual training
took place for my championship bat
tle with Wolgast. Just a few weeks
there will enable me to be in the
best possible shape for my next bat
tle, on July 4.
BOSTON MAY BUILD YACHT
TO DEFEND AMERICA’S CUP
BOSTON, May 81.—Hear Commo
dore Charles H. W. Foster, of the
Eastern Yacht Club, suggested to the
three leading yacht clubs of Boston
to-day that a Boston cup defender,
built by a syndicate of leading naval
architects of this city and backed by
the three clubs or by popular sub
scription. be put into the race for
the America’s cup as a defender.
12-MILE MARATHON TO
BE STAGED IN CHICAGO
CHICAGO, ILL., May 31.—A mo(
fied marathon of twelve miles »
be held by the Illinois Athletic Cl
on June 21. The runners will st£
at the club house and finish at Nort
western Field, where the Central
A. U. outdoor field and track chai
pionships will be held under t
auspices of the same club.
A TIP FOR BATTERS.
Inflelder Heine Zimmerman, of t
Cubs, attributes his batting ability
golf—the baseball looks so huge afl
whanging at the golf ball. There’s
tip for batters in this, if they c
see It. If they’ll practice swinging
peas they’ll bat at a percentage of
million.
MOTOR RACES
Grand opening -Tune
6. Ten races. Start
8:30 p. m. Admission
25c. Grandstand 25c
extra.
Old Circus Grounds
‘MATHEWSON IS KING OF
ALL PITCHERS’—JENNINGS
DETROIT. MICH., May 31.— |
Hughey Jennings was asked yester
day which he preferred, Mathewson. |
of the Giants, or Johnson, of the Sen
ators. He hurriedly answered:
"Mathewson! Mathewson! He has j
absolute control of the ball at all
times. It is useless for a player to
wait him out unless he wants to give
a free pass. Mattv’s control from j
the time he broke into the National !
Leapue has been almost uncanny. In |
picking the star of the Giants T do i
r.oc think the less of Johnson. He is \
the best pitcher in the American i
T eague, but if a choice had to be j
made—well, Pig Six for me.”
O N E ¥
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