atlantic city-league and baseball€¦ · golf at atlantic city-league and college baseball games...

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GOLF AT ATLANTIC CITY-LEAGUE AND COLLEGE BASEBALL GAMES J. S. DEAN SCORES DOUBLE VICTORY ON LAKEWOOD LINKS .Annexes Medal and Match Way Honors in Country Club's Spring* Meeting. u. M'MAHOX'S GOOD GOLF Frounces Three Experienced I'layers in Messrs. Proal Dixon and Vates. By K EllB JV. PETUIK. ffecial Despatch to Tun New York Herald. Dakbwood, N. J., May 7.-J. Simpson Dean, the Princeton golf team captain, has taken a flying start in the golf tournament of the metropolitan dis¬ trict. A week ago he won the modal in the Trenton Country Club's first in¬ vitation event. And this he has fol¬ lowed up by annexing both medal and match play honors in the spring meet¬ ing of the I-iakewood Country Club. To-day Dean went into the last bracket by eliminatinr P S. P. Ran¬ dolph, Jr., of Laktwood, by 3 and 1, and in the afternoon to win the chief . .up took the measure of Joseph G. McMahon, Jr.. the Sleepy Hollow "V\ estchester junior champion, by 3 and 2. At one time it looked as though Dean would score an even more decisive vic¬ tory than this, for he was 5 up at the eighth. Beginning with the ninth, how¬ ever, -McMahon took three holes straight, and thus encouraged he made an inter¬ esting battle of it thereafter. .McMahon's trouble appeared to be largely mental, for it seemed that he allowed Dean's mammoth swipes to In¬ fluence his own game and to be forever Pressing to get up with his opponent, a physical Impossibility. The result was a huge crop of topped and foundered drives, braesle and iron shots. Fortunately McMahon was putting and playing his short approaches well. But for this he never would have won the ninth hole, as. like his opponent, he topped his second shot into the rough, rlie Westchester Junior champion needed only one putt, taking the hole in 5 to 6 and turning 4 down. Driving for the tenth Dean sliced Into rough and his second ovcishot the green. Tills third still was short and McMahon won in 4 to 5. On the next a par 5 beat Dean. The Princetonlan now had lost i.iree of his five hole lead, but he won the twelfth und thirteenth and became dormle 4 with a half at the fourteenth. McMahon prolonged the match by holing trom off the green for a 2. but a half in & settled it at the next. The card: SCt? "ut 4 4 0 4 3 4 4 4 *1. .19. McMahon out..5 4 0 .-> 4 0 4 0 3. 4', Dean in 8 0 4 r. r> 3 5 McMahon In...4 5 5 7 15 2 5 MeMiihon's Fine Work. McMahon comes out of the tourney with much credit, as to reach the final he trounced three experienced players in Pierre A. Proal of Deal, George A. Dixon. Jr.. National, and Arthur Vates of Oak Hill. Yates was the Sleepy Hol¬ low lad s victim In the semi-final, the result In his favor being 2 up. Mc¬ Mahon was out In 10 and home in 43. i/.vatUre of his ,oun<J w'as a 5 at the twelfth, where he lost two strokes on a ball out of bounds. \ Dean made the first nine of his semi- ninth matCl' in 39 Respite a 7 A the aS this score was u 'eft the SfflSSV'nJi' J-5.TKK the same hazard and rb/. v. . ca,I> halved In 7. ho hole Randolph had put Dean on his met hou, ; back at him Immediately, taking three in a row and therefore turning 1 up I he tenth went to Dean with . feet 3. bur he had to hole Hoot nun to halve the eleventh. Randolph s sec¬ ond shot on this 537 vnrd ,v!». I lopped into a bunker. Dean tried to fhih»ll0in,e aUh "" ,r0tl Mec°t»d He dubbed and followed with .. mas hie shot. His fourth hit the p?n when It really should have overrun tie ll«"d0'Ph ha,, played a perfect short approach, but even with one putt be got only n half. v The twelfth went to Dean and the h rteenth to Randolph. A bad 5 put h< Lakewood man 3 down at the fif- eenth. and although he won the next be was in trouble again at th»- seven toenth. Dean having the hole with two strokes to Fpare. The Summary. First Sixteen.Semi-final.J. Simpson Denn, Princeton. beat I*. S. P. Ilandolnh, Jr., I.nkewoort. S and I: J, (5. JlcMnhnn, Jr., Sleepy Hollow, beet A. Yates, Oakhlll, 2 up. Final.Dean beat MrMehon, 3 and Beaten Ktgh' of First Sixteen, Semi-final. C. L. Maxwell, Trenton, won from N. riiilllpa, Atlantic City, by default; T. L. Trown, Hudson ftlver, beat T. Puff, Newman School, 1 up (2(1 bolca). Final.Maxwell beat Proal. I and 3. Second Sixteen.Semi-final.F. X. Sadler, T.akewood, beat F. B. I'nrter, Lakewood, 2 and 1; It. C. ftlcc. Deal, beat F. F. Kimball, Lakewood. 8 and 2. Final.Itloe beat Sndller, and 4. Beaten Fight of Second Sixteen.Semi¬ final.fir, H. V. Oarrlty, tibtiry Park, beat F. T. Keating, Spring I.ake, I and 2. Final.t'.arrlv belt Brown. 3 up. Third Sljttefn.Semi-final.Klnndon flould, I.akewood, beai O. TV. Oott, t'nnoebrook. .'I end 2; Joaeph Sherman, I.akewood, beat I>r. P. Rlckette, Point Pteaaaiit, I up. FINAL.Sherman hi at flould. 3 up. Beaten Fight of Third Sixteen.B«ml-final. r. 8. Mr.cLnuithlln, Sceradnlo, 5 nod 3; 8am- nel Allison, St. Alhana, won from Park Parker, Upper Motltclalr, hy d< fault. Final.Allison lient MarLaughlttl. f> and 4. Fourth Sixteen- Semi-final.fl. Rowland, Newman gejaat b*at r. s. iminv, Point "! /..mil, 'J and 2: P. Stevenson. Piping 1-toek, beat H. Franolecu, Oak Hill, :: and 2. Final.Stevenson oft from How land hy di fault. Medal Play Hand leap.Low groas, Frank TV. ffyer. Upper Montclalr, 44. Lot. net, T. F. Weaver, Point Ph neant, PB.2.V."J. "^>avy Wins at Lacrosse. Special Despatch to This Nbtv York 11 num. A NNArotts, May 1..In the last gnine of lacrosse to be played this season at. Annapolis the Naval Academy beat Penn State by 211 to 3. The visitors were otit- playcil In every department of tlia gume. The midshipmen piled up fourteen goals In the first half and then tried out many r'w combinations In the reconfl. The f itttre of the gnnie wn th- ?pb ndl'l sllek work and team play of the mid¬ shipmen. Byerly, Walters and Shaw particularly excelled in tills line, Plate'? defence was weak. Ruth and Kelly Opposite Types of Heavy Hitters By WILLIAM B. KANNi. THEseason's home run monarchs to date.Babe Ruth of the Yankees and George Kelly of the Giants.are distinctly opposite types of hitters. All they have in common Is the ability to land with ex¬ traordinary power, the ability to drag a bat up to the plate and a great yearning to slam the ball to realms beyond. Both get the leverage of height and a long roach, but in different ways. Ruth is a left handed slugger; Kelly hits from the other side of the platter. Kelly inclines more to left field hitting and Ruth to right field hitting. Kelly is a freer hitter than Ruth, in the sense that he will hit to all fields much oftener than Ruth. He makes some home runs to right, but it is seldom, indeed, that Ruth hits to left for a homer or otherwise. He jolts 'em to centre-right often, however. Ruth is a freer hitter than Kelly, in the sense that he will hit all kinds, high, low, slow, fast curves oftener than Kelly. Kelly is a wrist hitter, Ruth a long, powerful swinger with the arms and applied with such intuitive use of the principles of applying power that he gets the benefit of every ounce of his weight.more than any slugger the game has known he does this. Kelly leans well forward and Ruth does not, and Kelly's feet are further apart. He has an awkward knee action, but has an advantage over Ruth in that he can wait until the ball is nearer before starting his swing He doesn't bring the bat forward from as far back, but whips In savagely with the wrist, and thereby, plus excellent timing, gets enormous power. Ruth's feet are closer together than Kelly's, much closer, with the left foot in advance of the right. Ills position at the bat is the easier of the two. He holds the bat well, his arms back, with the bat vertical. Kelly has the bat pointing out backward, bat and arms lower. With his wider stance, ho doesn't get as long a step forward when about to swing. He is better than Ruth in picking out balls at which to hit. He is more of a "flatfooted" hitter than Ruth. The latter is lighter on his feet. BIG CROWD SEES GIANTS WIN, 3 TO 1 Continued from First Page. Then followed a dazzling play and the best of the game. Snath's hard hit ball wan scooped by Bancroft, whose flip to Frisch forced Miller at second. Frisch threw to Kelly for a double play, which didn't come off. and Nells meanwhile was heading home, He'a fast, but Kelly thrn whim out with something to spare. Griffith doubled King at the plate In the seventh nfter taking Burns's fly. It was a splendid throw. The Giants bunched two hits for a run in the eighth and with two out Young dropped a fly Into the left field fore¬ ground, moved up on a passed ball and ran in when Kelly lined a single to right. The score! BROOKLYN <N.) NEW YORK (N.) ah r h o a e| ab r h o a e Olson,ss.. -1 0 0 1 4 01 Burns.If.. 4 0 1 7 0 0 J'ston,3h. 401 1 1 OIBVroft.ss. 410 0 3d O'flth.rf. 401 2 1 0 Frisch.2h. 412 3 10 Wheat,If. 4 00 3 0 OlYoung.rf.. 412 1 On Kon'y.lb. 3 1 3 0 0 HKHIy.lb.. 4 02 42 0 M'r»,ef,2h 3 0 0 3 1 OIKlng.cf... 3 00 1 0 0 K'>l«rf.21> 201 1 1 1IRapp,.3b.. 2 00 1 00 Neis.cf.. 1 00 2 0 OlSnyder.c.. 200 3 0 0 Miller, c.. 1 00 2 0 I'Toney.p.. 3 0 1 0 2 0 Krueger.c 1 0 O 0 0 0| Smith,p.. 3 00 0 3 01 Totals.. .30 38 27 80 Total*. .30 1 0 21 11 31 . . _ . . Brooklyn 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0.1 Now York 2 000000 1 x.2 Runs batted In.By Koney. I: by Young. I: by Frisch, 1: by Kelly, 1. Earned runs.off Smith. 2: off Tonoy. 1. Two base hit. Kilduff. Throe ha«e hit.Frisch. Home run .Koneteliy. Sacrifice hit.Ranp- Double plays.Bancroft and Kelly; Kilduff. Olson and Konetehy; Bancroft. Frl-eh. Kelly nnd Snyder: Orlfflth and Miller. I,eft on bases. New York. 0; Brooklyn. 3. Bases on balls. Off Toney, 1; off Smith. 2. Struck out.By Smith, 1. Passed ball.Krueger. Wtld plteh .Smith. First base on error.New York. Umpires.Brennan and Emslle. Time of game .1 hour and 40 minutes. Red Sox Down Athletics. FHtf.AnEi.PHiA, Kny 7 (Amerlcan).- Boston batted Hicrls hard to-day nnd secured an even break for the two game seriea by winning 6 to 2. Hurl and Pratt hit home runs Into the left field bleachers and a two base wild throw by Onllow contributed to Harris's down¬ fall. Hasty pitched superb relief ball. Pen- nook was Invincible, misjudgmonts by Collins In the seventh and ninth Inning' giving Philadelphia Its runs. The score: BOSTON (A.) PHILADF.LPHIA (A.l ab r h o a e Iferb . Vltt.Sb. .. 1 1 2 0 2 01 Dvkes.2h. 3 00 t 2 0 M'skv.lf. 3 03 3 0 0'Wltt.rf... 4 0 3 I 0 0 lT.att.2h. 412 2 1 0IDugan.3b. 4 00 3 2 0 in.'kd.rf 3 00 2 0 0 C.W'cr.lf. 4 0 3 1 10 McFs.lb. 22 0 P 1 0 Wdct,,cf. 3 00 3 00' Scott,as.. 411 1 4 0: Perkins,c. 4 0 1 3 4 0 Collins, cf 4 0 3 3 0 (U .Orlffln. . 0 1 000 0 Ruel.c 4 11 3 1 0|.T W'er.lb. 4 1 1 11 0(1 P'nock.p. 4 00 0 3 OlO'way.sa. 3 0 1 2 2 1 Harris,p.. 2 00 0 4 0; Totals.38 0 12 27 12 0 Hasty.p.. 1 00 0 3 0 |tJohnson. 1 00 000 ( Totals.. .33 2 fl 27 18 1 .Ran for Perkins In the ninth Inning. sBntted for Hnsty In the ninth Inning. Boston 0 0 2 2 0 2 0 0 0.8 Philadelphia 0 0 0 0 0 0 I tl 1.2 Two base bits.Vltt. Witt 2. Galloway. Three bn«r hi'.J. Walker. Home runs. Pratt. Ruel. Sacrifice hits.Pratt. Welch, Galloway. I."ft on bases.Boston. 7; Phila¬ delphia, 7. Bases on halls.Off Pennock, 1; off Harris. 2; off Hasty. 1. Hits.Off Har¬ ris. !) In 0 Innings; off Hasty, 3 In 3 Innings. Struck out.By Pennoek, ."; by Harris. 2. Losing pitcher.Harris. Umpires.Connolly and Morlarty. Time of game.1 hour and 32 minutes. Southern Association. At Atlanta (first game). U. H. K. Atlanta 4 8 Birmingham 3 7 Batteries.Markle and IJuhrman. Gallagher and Btanilon. Second Game. Tt. H. E. Atlanta 2 3| Birmingham 2 8 Batteries.Bcdgood and Fuhrman; Bates and Gooch. Called sixth Inning: darkness. At Chattanooga (first game). B. H. E. Chattanooga 8 8 7 Nashville 7 8 3 1 Batteries.Mels nnd Nelderkorn; Waile and Tonnernan. Second Game. P.. H. E. Chattanooga 2 8 2 Nashville 7 12 Si Batteries.Boone and Graham; Payne and) Tonn-man. Called seventh Inning: darkneas. At Mobile- R H g Mobile 3 3 11 Little Rock 2 4 0 Batteries.Roberts and Srhulte; Fields and Land. At New Orleans. R. H. E. New Orleans 8 13 0| Memphis I 3 3 Batteries.James and Deherry, Fowlkee anil Hungllng. Plainfield C. C. Tourney. Special OtspatrH fa Trig Nrvv Tim Hgani.n- PLALVFIBLD. JN. J.. May 7.-William Barlow, Jr.. and E. W. Freeman, with s 73, were tie for the best net score prize |n the qualifying round of the three ball tournament at the Plahi.'Ieid Country Club to-day. Those players qualified l.i the first division: William Barlow. Jr.. V>. 18.73; E. W. Freeman. 87. 14.73; L. 11. Gates. f>2. 18.74: F. r. Ard. 00, 1(1-74; M II. Long. 80. 13.74: A. W. Drake. 87. 1.'.73; .*. N. Claybrook. 00, 18.78; A. L. flelilu r, 88. 18.78; George C. Scott. 08 23.7.3; Henry D. Ttlbbnrd. HO. 13.70: B. C. Campbell. 33. 10-70; C. A. Campbell, 01. 14.77. William Barlow, Jr.. won the ball sweep, stakes with a net stmi of 78. YANKEES COME FROM THE REAR AND WIN Continued from First Pane. Harris, but Plpp dropped a double In short right centre and Meusel drove a triple to the left flekl bleachers, scoring' Hotli and Plpp and breaking up the game. The score: NEW YORK (A.) | WASHINGTON (A.) ah r h o a e; ab r h Roth.ef.. *12 3 1 OlJurtge.lb.. 4 0.2 P'augh.ss .7 0 1 A .2 OlMllan.lf.. 30 1 Ruth.If.. 411 2 0 OIRIce.cf.,. 312 Plpp.1' 42 1 8 1 0 Rrower.rf ">0 1 Meus. 3 2 44 0 1 Harris.2h. 100 linker.. 4 00 1 1 0tHhnnks,3b 4 22 Ward.2 4 0 3 1 1 WO'R'rke.ss 4 1 3 Hof'n.c.. 2 00 2 1 OlPlclnlch.c, 411 Schang.c. 1 00 1 0 0'Johnson,p 40 1 Qulnn.p.. 1 00 0 0 0' o a e T 00 3 00 3 oc 2 1 0 2 2 0 2 1 0 2 1 0 n 1 0 0 2 0 Hoyt.p... 3 0 1 0 4 0| Totals.. .30 3 14 2" 8 0 Mays,p.. 0 00 0 0 01 Totals.38 0 13 27 12 ti New York 00 2 0 0 0 0 2 2.0 Washington 0 3 1 0 0 00 1 0-3 Two base hits.Rice 2. Ward 2. Milan. Meusel. Three base hit.Meusel. Home runs .Meusel, Ruth. Stolen base.Judge. Sacri¬ fices.Harris, Judge. Double plays.reckln- pnugh and Plpp: Roth. Peelclnpnugh and Ward: Rrower and P'Rourke; Johnson. Plcl- nleli and Judge. Left on hoses.New York, 9: Washington, 8, Rases on halls.Off John¬ son, 4. Hits.Off Oulnn. 0 In 1 1-3 innings; off Hoyt, 8 In 0 2-3 Innings. Hit by pitcher. Ry Hoyt, 2 (Harris 21. fifruck out.Ry Oulnn, t: by Johnson. 4: by Hoyt, 2. Wild pitch.Johnson. Winning pitcher.Hoyt. Um¬ pires.Dlnneen, Nallln and Wilson. Time of game.2 hours and 1(1 minutes. Cubs' Timely Hitting Gives Them Victory OveV Reds Chicago, May 7 (National)..Timely hitting by Twombly, Klllefer and Mar¬ tin cn«bled Chicago to defeat Cincinnati by 4 to 1 In the final game of their series to-day. Bohne's double, a sacri¬ fice and See's single saved the Reds from a shutout. Larry Kopf made his first appear¬ ance of the season for Cincinnati when he acted as pinch hitter. The score; CINCINNATI (N.) CHICAGO (N.) ab r h o a c1 ah r h o a e Rohne.Sb 3 1 2 3 3 0 Flack.rf.. 4 00 1 0 0 D'bcrt.lh 3 00 13 1 0 H'cher.ss. 3 00 0 .3 1 Sec.of 301 0 1 OITerry.Sb.. 3 0 1 3 3 0 D'can.lf. 4 00 2 0 O'ftrlmcs.lb 4 0 1 12 0 0 F rees.2b 4 0 0 0 4 OMatset.cf. 412 t 00 P'kert.rf 4 02 2 0 0|Twoni'y,lf 3 2 3 1 0 0 Crane, ss. 4 0 1 2 3 OlDcal.Sb... 4 00 2 2 0 H'rave.e. 401 2 1 OIKllltfer.c. 4 1 33 00 R'nton.p. 2 00 0 1 OlMartln.p. 4 03 0 0 0 .Kopf 1 00 00 0| Luqur.p. 000 0 0 ft' Totals. .33 4 13 2" Cincinnati 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.1 Chicago 000 2 0 0 0 2 x.4 Two base hit.Rohnc. Three base hit. Martin. Stolen ha.es.Sec, Rohne. Sacri¬ fices.Panbert, Terry. Double plays.Rohnc nnd Pnubert. 2: Hollocher. Terry and Grimes; Peal and Terry. Left on base-. Cincinnati, 7; Chicago. V. Rases on halls. Off Rrcnton. 2: off Martin. 2; off Clique. 1. Illtr.Off Rrcnton, 11 In 7 Innlnrs; off Clique. 2 In 1 Inning. Struck out.Hy Martin, ft; by Rrcnton. 2. Passed hull.Kllllfer. Los¬ ing pitcher.Rrcnton. Umpires.Moran and Rlgler. Time of game.1 hour and .32 min¬ utes. Browns Win Over Tigers. St. Lous. May 7 (American)..De¬ troit was helpless before Hayno to-day and St. Louis won. 6 to 3. Bnyne's wlld- ness marred his performance. Hell- mann made his second home run In two days anil Williams also circled the bases. The aeorc: DETROIT (A.) ST. LOUIS (A.i «brli o i«i ah r h o a e Young,2b 3 0 0 2 1 OITobin.rf.. 3 0 1 3 10 Riiah.ss.. 3 11 3 S 0 Gerber.ss. 30 1 4 3 Cobb.ef.. 3 00 0 1 OIHlsbir.lb.. >3 4 4 7 2 0 Reach.If. 211 3 OOW'Ums.lf 3 2 4 3 Of. Hcll'n.rf. »11 3 0 OJa'hson.lf 302 I 00 Jones, 3h. 30 1 1 2 0!Olessn.2b 4 00 1 2 0 Sarr t.3b 00 q0 1 O'M'Ma's.Sb 4 ft 1 2 0 0 Rlue.lb... 100 10 1 0|RllHngs.c. 4 0 1 3 2 0 Alns'tii.c. 3 00 2 0 OlDayne.p... 40 1 1 2 0 7>auaa,p.. 2 00 0 3 0 .Woodsll 1 00 0 00; Totals..37 « 15 27 12 1 fFlagsCd 1 0 0 0 0 0! Totals..31 3 4 24 12 Oi .Ratted for Jones In eighth Inning, flint ted for Pauss In ninth inning Detroit 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0-3 St. Louts 001 02201 x-fl Two base hits.Jaeobson, Klsler. Homo runs.Hellmnnn, Williams Stolen bases. Rush, Tohlri. Staler. Sacrifice.Jaeobson. Double plnvs.Staler to Gerber to Slaler; Tohln to Rilling* to Gerber to MeManus. Left on bases.Detroit, 8; St. Louis, 12. Rasa* on balls.Off Dauss, 3; off Rnyne, 7. Hit by pitcher.By Dauss fOleason). Struck out.Ry Dauss. 1 by Rayne, 3. Umpires. Mtldehrand nnd Evans. Time of gnme-2 hour*. Casting Club Tournament. Disciples of Iznak Walton will throw out casting lines to-day during the fifth annual tournament of the Ix>ng Island Casting Club, which starts at 9 A. M. and ends at 3 P M., and will bo held at Pelt^m Bay Park. Six events, open to all. make up the programme. Columbia Triumphs at Nets. Sprctnl Prrpotrh to Tiib N«w Yiisk lifts*!.!*. Wiujambtow.v, Mass.. May 7..Co¬ lumbia defeated Williams four matches to three to-day by winning both doubles matches after Williams had gained a lead of one match In the singles. PITTSBURGH STREAK | STRETCHED TO NINE Bigbee's Batting; Feature of Victory Over Cardinals by 2 to 1. Pittsburgh, May 7 (National)..Tho Pirate* scored their ninth straight vic¬ tory to-day by defeating St. Louis, 2 to 1. The Cardinals registered their only1 run in the second inning, when Fournler sent the ball into the right field bleach¬ ers. Pittsburgh scored in the third on Higbec's hit, his steal of second and Maranville's single. Tn the seventh Glazner tripled to right. At this stage a heavy rain stopped play. The game was resumed in thirty min¬ utes. Blgbee, the first batter, registered his third hit, sending Glazncr home. The score: ST. LOUIS (N.) ! PITTSBURGH (N.) ab r li oa el ab r h o a a Smith.rf. 1 0 0 2 0 0! Utgbee.lf. 4 1 3 4 0 0 Mann.cf. 200 4 0 OlCarey.cf.. 4 02 1 0 0 Sliott'n.cf 2 0 0 t 0 01 M'vllle.as. 3 0 1 3 3 0 Htock.Sb. 3 00 2 1 0;C"shaw,2b 4 00 2 2 0 H'sby.2b. 40 1 0 OOlMokan.rf. 3 00 2 00 F'nlar.lb 3 1 2 7 0 0;Tlerney,3b 4 0 t 1 10 McH'ry.lf 3 00 2 0 OIGrlmm.lb. 4 0 1 »J 10 Lavan.as. 30 1 1 1 OlBchmldt.c. 4 00 7 1 0 Pll'fer.c. 30 0 4 1 OIGlazner.p. 311 1 0 1 Hherdel.p 3 00 1 4 0! Totals.. .33 2 0 27 *1 Totals. .30 1 4 24 T Ol St. Louis 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.1 Pittsburgh 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 x.2 Two base lilt.Carey. Three base hits. Tierney, Glat'.ner. Home run.Fournler. Stolen base.Higher. Left on bases.St. Louie. 3: Pittsburgh. 0. Bases on balls. Off Slierdol, 2: off Glazner, 1. Struck out. By Rherdel, 2: by Glazner, (1. Wild pitch. Slierdel. Umpires.Qttlgley and O'Day. Time of jiiiine.2 hours and 10 minutes. Braves Defeat Phillies in Eleventh Inning Rally Boston, May 7 (National)..Barbare's single. Southworth's sacrifice and Boeck- ol's single to centre with two out In the last of the eleventh sent over the run which won, 2 to 1, for Boston over Phll- adelphia to-day. McQuillan had the better of Ttlng In a pitching duel, the Phillies getting only two hits in their last five innings. Mc- Qulllan's hitting and fielding also were features. The score: PHILADKLI'HIAfN.)! BOSTON <N.) abrhoael abrhoae Neale.rf. 3 0 1 0 0 0; Powell,cf. 401 3 10 R'tngs,2b 4 0 O 1 0 OIB'bnre.ss. 3 11 1 4 0 W'ma.cf. 4iin 3 0 O.S'worth.rf 40 1 2 oo Meusel.lf. 3 1 2 3 0 OiCruisc.lf.: 3 0 1 2 0 0 Wtnne,3b 3 0 0 1 3 0IB"ckel,3b. 4 0 1 3 2 0 R.M'er.ss 30 1 i 3 llHolkc.lh. . 4 0 0 t2 2 0 J.M'er.lb. 4 0 2 11 3 1lFord.2h.. 4 0 1 2 4 0 Wheat.c.. 4 0 1 0 4 0|O,Neil.c.. 3 10 (1 0 0 Rlng.p... 4 00 1 7 OjMcQ'lan.p 4 0 2 2 3 1 Totals. .38 1 7*32 20 21 Totals.. .37 28 33 18 1 .Two out In eleventh when winning run was scored. Philadelphia. 0100000000 0.1 Boston 001 000 0 000 1.2 Two base hits.Wheal. McQuillan. Stolen base.Southworth. Sacrifices . Wrlghtslone. Southworth. Double plays.Wheat and R. Miller: Powell and Holke: Barbara, Ford nnd Holke. Left on bases.Philadelphia, 8: Boston. 7. Bases on balls.Off Ring. 3; off McQuillan, 3. Struck out.By Ring, 3; by McQuillan. 4. Umpires.McCormick and Hart. Time of game.2 hours and 13 min¬ utes. International League. RESULTS OF YKSTERDAY"8 games. Jersey City, 8: Buffalo, 3. Newark, 8; Syracuse, 4. ReaiRng, 8; Rochester, 3. Baltimore, 8: Toronto, 3. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. W. L. PC.I W. L. PC. Newark... 11 3 .088! Buffalo 8 0 .471 Baltimore. 10 3 .0C,7:Syracuse 7 0 .437 Jersey City. !> 7 .303'Rochester... fl 0 .400 Toronto.... 0 7 .363iP.eadlnc 4 13 .235 GAMES SCHEDULED FOR TO-DAY. Jersey City In Syracuse. Newark In Buffalo. Baltimore In Rochester. At Buffalo. R. H. E. Jersey City. 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 3 3.8 14 2 Buffalo 2 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0.3 7 0 Batteries.Tecarr, Metevier and Frettag: Gordonler, Reddy and Tragresser. At Syracuse. R. H. E. Newark 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 4.8 12 0 Syracuse 0 1 1 0 110 0 0.I 10 2 Batteries.rcrryman and Wlthrou Schultz and Niebergnll. At Rochester. P.. H. B. Heading 4 0 10 110 1 ry_s 13 I Rochester.... 0 0 0 0 O 3 1 O 1.3 10 3 Retteries.Brown and Cotter: Morgan, Brown and Maddox. At Toronto. R. H. R. Baltimore... 0 0 0 3 1 10 1 0.8 8 . Torono 0 1 O O O (1 0 I) 2.3 8 3 Batteries.Rpntly and Egan; Winters, Boehllng, Thompson and Snndherg Cornell's Freshman Nine Wins Over N. Y. U.'s Team Cornell's freshman baseball team de¬ feated New Vork University's first year nine at Ohio Field yesterday afternoon by a rcore of 8 to 2. MoConnPlI, pitching for the Tthiean yearlings, allowed the Violet freshmen but six well scattered hits and was never In any danger. The Cornell batters reached Flunleavy In the second Inning for five hits, which, couplet' with two errors, were enough to yield five runs and the game. The score: CORNELL FnEflH. I N T. V. FRKFH. ab r h o a el ab r h n a s Capr'n.3h 3 2 1 2 2 l'Georgo.2b 2 00 2 2 1 Buek'y.lh 311 8 0 OtMcC'um.rf 4 0 1 2 0 0 Mare'r.ef 3 0 1 0 0 0 Co'*n,lb-p 3 0 I 1 30 Tone.e.... 2 I 0 11 1 0MItl»,8b.... 401 1 01 Davla.lf,. 4 2 2 00 O'Toorork.se 4 11 ' 0 n Aber.rf. 2 1 0 2 0 0'Walsh.cf 4 0 2 Aber.rf... 210 2 OOWnlsh.er.. -- » « M'Con'l.P 3111 2 0N..«rsse, 3 00 n Treu.ss.. 4 03 3 1 0 D'vy P-lb. 3 00 6 1 1 Faus*r.2b 3 00 0 2 1! Lapldes.lf 8 1 0 4 0 0 Totals.. 34 8 0 27 H 2) Totals .30 2 <1 27 10 4 Cornell Freshman. 0 0 0 0 0 1 1' N. V. U. Freshman 0 0 1 0 I 0 0 0 0-2 Sacrifice hit .Fausner. Capron. Abcr. Mc ronnoll. Double plays.George, Toorn.l< and Dunleavy: Fausner, Trett and But i.'U Struck out.By McConnell. 7: by Cohen. 3. Hit by pitcher.By McConnell, t tf.eoige). Umpire.Swonson. Time of game.. Iiours. "Victory for Erasmus Hall. Special Pc.patch to Tiie New Yiihk Hmaid. N'ltw Haven, May 7..The Krasmua Hall High School of Brooklyn shut out the Tale freshmen lacrosse tfn.ni here thl.s ofternoon In a well played same by the score of 3 to 0. The lineup: Erasmus High (3). Tale Freshmen (Oi. Htebela Goal A*hfMd Andrstv Point Morris Fnlk ...Cnr»r point Harlow llak'T First defence Bcynoidr Thomas. Second defence Moors Riley Third defence. ...Watts Caldwell Centre ..Chandler Fuller Third attack... .Conway Sumner Second attack Booth Fleltchner Flret attack Psogan Ingham Ontalde lioma... .Phlldi is Sheehey Inside homo DtwlBlif Goals.Chandler. Deegan nnri Pewallby. Substitutions.Yale: Westfall f1' Blley, Monro for Westfall. Pnnlels for Flelsehner. Erasmus: Brown for Aihfleltl, Beed for Conwar. Jones for Booth. Tlm«' of halves, 20 minutes. Boferee, Tom Hardin*. Eight Hits in Two Gaines for Meusel ASI D1C from poling out eight hits of every size anil description, Bob Meusel of the Yankees hasn't done a thing at bat In the last two games. On Friday the tall right fielder had three singles and one double as his day's work. Yes¬ terday there was more variety to hrs hitting, for he came through with a single, a double, a triple and a home run. (Not so bad at that, on second thought. V INDIANS CLUSTER RUNS ON WHITE SOX 31 ails Is Effective, While the Clevelands Hit Hard nnd Win by 8 to 0. Cleveland, May 7 (American).. Cleveland to-dRy defeated Chicago by the same score as yesterday, S to 0. "Duster" Mails was very effective, es¬ pecially with men on bases, the While Sox threatening only once, although they had nine men left on the bases. The champions drove Wilkinson from the box In three innings and also hit Hodge at will. The score: CHICAfJO (A.) 1 CLEVELAND (A.l abrhORC abrhoae J'son.ss.. 4 0 1 2 3 0 J'ieson.lf. 0 1 3 3 On M'gan.ati 4 00 2 3 0' J'aton.lb.. 4 0 1 7 0 0 Collins,2b 2 00 8 2 0|Speaker.cf 43 3 4 00 Hooper, rf 4 0 1 0 0 OlSrnltli.rf.. 2 22 4 0 0 Falk.lf... 3 00 0 0 0|f"dner,3b. 4 0 2 1 10 Monti!,cf. 4 0 1 4 0 OlScwoll.ss. 40 1 I 2 0 Sheely.lb 40 1 .1 I 0iS'nsoii,2b. 110 2 10 Selinlk.c. 2 00 1 2 OlO'Nelll.c.. 1 I 2 5 0 0 Yaryan.c. 2 00 1 1 OlMalls.p... 2 00 0 2 0 Wllk'n.l). 00 0 0 2 01 Hodge,p.. 20 1 1 »0| Totals.. .30 8 14 27 6 0 .Lees. ... 1 00 0 0 Of Totals. .32 0 .7 24 17 0, .Hatted for Hodge In the ninth Inning. Chicago 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 Cleveland 3 0 2 1 0 t 1 0 x.8 Two base liltn.Month. Jamienon, Speaker 2, Johnston. Three banc hit.Smith. Stolen base.Jamlenon. Snerlflres.Johnntop, Malls 2. Smith. Double play.Johnson nnd Hheely. Left on bases.Chicago, !>; Cleveland. 7. Bnses on halls.Off Wilkinson. 3. off Hodge, 2: off Malls, ). Hits.Off Wilkinson, 0 In 3 innings: off Hodge. 8 in 3 Innings. Struck out.Hy Wilkinson. J; by Hodge, 1; by Mails, 4. Losing pitcher.Wilkinson. empires. Owens and Chill. Time of game.I hour and 40 minutes. Fordham Nine Defeated by Boston College, 3 to 2 Maroon Fills Bases in Ninth, but Can't Push One Over. After lending up to the seventh inning the Fordham baseball team lost to the Boston College nine at Fordham Field yesterday afternoon. 0 to 2. Culloton, who was in the box for the Maroon, out- pitched his opponent, Fitzpatrick. who yielded ten hits to the formers eight, but the local players could not connect when hits were nc d<-d. Fordham jumped into the lead In the first inning. Buckley placed a double to left and crossed the plate when Marncll hit to left centre for a triple. Cousineau singled and scored Marncll. Colloton held the Huh batters hltless for the tlrst four innings. In the fifth, Wilson started for Boston with a double to left. He advanced to third on O'Regan's long fly to Buckley In right centre. Dowd followed with a single to left, Wilson scoring. The visitors tied the score in the seventh on a single to right by Wilson, an infield hit by O'Kegan and Dowd's blow to left. In the fallowing frame Culloton start- ed by walking Patten, who went to second when Phillips singled to centre. t'rban followed with another single to Buckley in center. Patten scoring. Fordham filled the bases In the ninth, but failed to tally. The score: FORI d I AM. BOSTON. ab r h oa e al> r h oa e Mel.'n.lb too t) 0Oiralmw.as too 1 2a tin 'rnn.lf 300 2 0 Ot Patten,ef. 31 0 1 10 TVkley.cf 111 '. 0 olrhirpps.lf .10 1 2 ta Marn'l.rf It2 0 0 Olfrban.Sb. 40 1 1 5 0 O'neau.c. 4 02 4 2 O Wilson, rf. 4 2 2 2 00 Fallon.3h 4 02 1 2 ojllal'g'n.lb 4 01 7 0 0 J'rdan,2h 2 o o .7 3 1 o'Bcgan.c 30 1 8 to Malley.ss 4 02 I 10 Pov.*d,21>.. 4 02 4 4 0 Cul'ton.p 3 00 1 2 O'F'itzp'ck.p 1100 1 12 .Kk«y.2b 1 00 0 001 tDon'van 1<il 00 0' Totals. 31 3 8 ST 13 2 Totals .34 210 27 > 1 'Batted for J«v tn eighth Inning. tBnttcd for Cub an in ninth Inning. Boston College.... ooo o 1 a 1 t 0.3 Fordham 2 0 o o 0 0 o 0 0.2 First base oil errors.Boston College. 1; Fordham. 2. Two base hits . Couslneau, Buckley, llslllgnn. Wilson. Three bsse lilt .Marnoll. Sacrifice hits.Palmer. Buckley. Sacrifice flv.O'Kegan. Stolen bases.Bc k- ley. Donovan. I,cft on baam- Fordlmm. 10; Boston College, 0, Double plays.Culloton, Mnlley ami Jordan; Dowd, Palmer nnd Hnl- liean. Bases on balls.Off Culloton, 2; off Fitzpatrick, 4. S'ruck out.By Culloton, 2; by FltrpatrlcK-, 5. I'ass>d hall.O'Regsn. l'mplre.Warner. Time of game.2 hours and 0 minutes. Tufts College Is Easy for Holy Cross Nine Sprrial Drspatrli tn Tiib N'bw Yo«k litUIJi. WoRrKsntr.. Mass., May 7. . Holy Cross, outplaying Tufts In every depart¬ ment, won a one sided contest here to¬ day, 12 to 1. Hornn, the purple twlrler, gave the visitors two hits, working In top form. Simondinger got a clr< ult drive In the fourth with the bases full and sent Keefe to the showers. The score lIOI,Y CROSS. TUFTS ab r h o a c ab r h o a e I.eoP'n.rf ft 1 1 2 0 OlFgllon.'Sb. 4 P (t t :i 0 UsnD'S.lf 4 2P 1 n.l Loud.2b. 400 2 2 2 (lagn'n.ss 5 12 4 1 0 all liar,'- 200 4 2 0 O'C'or.lh. 4 3 1 2 1 Waaler.rf 4 00 2 0 1 Hant'o,3b. 3 2 1 2 2 0 White, .is 30 1 1 3 1 S'd'ger.of ft 2 8 3 OOFIn'ssn.lf 80 0 ft 0 0 M'G'r«,2b 5 0 1 I 3 0Ktr'a'«,lb 210 7 to Murnliy.o .'111 ft 2 0 Roche,cf.. 800 2 00 Horan.p 4 00 0 3 0 Keefe,p... 1 00 0 2 0 Morrell.p, 2 0 1 0 10 Totals.30 12 10 27 10 1 Is 28 1 2 24 14 4 Holv Cross 0 1 2 N 0 0 0 *.12 Tufts 0 000 1 00 0 0.1 Two base lit' M Gulre. Three base hits. I.c« Duggnn, Gannon Home runs -O'Connor, Hlmondlnger. Stolon base- ''nllnhai facrl flco lilts.Santoro, Mc<lulr<". Passed ball Murphy. Umpire Dan Barry. Tims of game.I hour and 55 minute Peddie Nine Victor. HtORTsTOWN, X J.. May 7 The Pcd- die nine defeated the «Marquand School of Brooklyn this afternoon by 11 to 6 Tlie acoi .; it It K. Peddle ... 2 I 3 t 0 8 t 0 s-lt 11 8 Marquard 0 0 0 0 1 08 2 0.5 * fl Batteries.'Thropp. Philips and Butcher; Teague and Yen. Umpire .Fldler, Phllad'l plila Wall Street A. A.'s Baseball Schedule for 1921 J. P Ilnrhn A rnmp»nr ... Salomon Tiro." A Mutator I'alno. Wwilwr At Company Lngnn A llrvan Citrihln. Mplllck Ac Company. r.ty»lh<i-l.- A- Company Mpllicnrt.i'ii A Company l!:ir*«hnt*.tr A Rnttrili M lliir.tr St ("nmpinv DnCoppof A Dn-unt'" IVnrhon ft Company. Sprnror Traak A Company. Jarnunlln A IlaConiHit. Ji :.£.«. flwynno * C ompany. May 14 May 21 Juno 4 Juna 11 June IS Junn 25 July (1 .. V*. Htmti Carllnlr J A< . HAD. Traak II.A< 'o. r.W ACo ... v». I'ynrhon IcACo. Ooodhody I.AIWo. H.ACo. OnCAD. Carllalo L All vn. DoC AD. Traak J.O.ACo. JjADwCo. II AB J.ADaCo. Rarhr .. va. Traak H.ACo. I'ynrhon Carllaio H.AB Salomon .. vn. IW'AD. IJarho if.AB. Ifont.r. I'ynrhon 1. AB. Salomon Pvnrhon ...fin J.O.ACo. Salomon Dec.AD. J.ADaCo.', Traak Barhi If. ACo. va. P.W.ACo. I..AB. llonfz Salomon J.O.ACo. flood hodv vs. J.ADoCo. J.O.ACo. Carlisle Rnrhn r.w A«o. I..AR llrut.; vn. ltarhr Tr-.«k H.ACo. < 'arlMe I'ynrhon J.O.ACo. Pjrnrnoi If. All vn. Cartlalo IV W. ACo. cit>tv|i>ody Traak Salomon .1 O.ACo. va. Salomon I.ADoCo. I.AIl t londboiy limit i DoC.AI) ( nrllali . va. 1. All. Hon! it P.W.ACp. DoC'.AD. llarha flood bo-lv J.ADrt'a. vn. MAR. I'ynrhon Salomon I.AIl. (loodbody IVW.ACo. Traak .. vn. floodbody II.AR. Ilnrhn r.wACo. H.ACo. Ilral? DoCAD Julj 10 ) July2n Auttui 8 Oootibody Hunt* i arlNIn Min I'.ff ACn. Flarha J.ADoCo. Trial, Salomon ,*n. J.O.ACo. I ADnCo. TraaV I'ynrhon Il'onU J.O.ACo. H *n. OaC.AD. flood hod; T, AH H.ACo. .p.W.ACo. .Salomon II.AR Harhr iH.AC If'arllaln "ynrhon 'Salomon A tlRuat 1.1 Annual. 20 Pynchnn I.All W.M), J O Al'o. r.W ACo. II All. Ilrntz, Salomon illoodhody Ooodhody llirhn J.O.ACo. J.ADcCo. If ACo. :Traak I. All. Hon'* iP.WACo. Traak CarlL«lo jPynrhnn DrCAO l*ynrhon Snlomot r.W.ACo. ijoo'lliody iJ.A.DoCo II A R J.ADnOo. Marhf. Ilarhr H AB II ACo H.ACo J.O.ACo ( arll«ln Cnrlldr DfC.AP llo-tr. Tnuik l|, .AH. PENN NINE TENTH VICTIM OF TIGERS Four Runs on One Hit in Eighth Spoil Quakers'Straw Hat Game. Special Despatch to Tub Niw York Herald. Philadelphia. May 7..With an eighth Inning rush Princeton defeated Pennsylvania to-day 6 to 3, before one of the biggest crowds that has yet seen a Straw Hat Day baseball game on Franklin Field. It was the tenth straight victory for the Tigers. The Quakers handed the game to Princeton in one bleak inning, the eighth, when the Jcrseymen scored four runs on a single hit. After soaring along tile road to prosperity for seven innings without allowing any score Doug Sheffey suddenly lost his bearings in the eighth, and after the Tigers filled the bases with two out, one run was forced over the plate, and Bill Llewellyn was called upon. He was also wild and Princeton put three more over. Off Llewellyn, the Tigers earned two runs In the ninth when MacPhee, Berg and Ca.pt. Fisher doubled. To equalize these two tallies Penn culled on pinch hitters in its half of the ninth and got two runs, but the damage had been done in the previous round. Hugh Margetts, Princetons star pitcher, was found for seven hits. Mar¬ getts was in trouble any number of times in the early innings but righted himself. This was especially true in the fourth and fifth innings when Penn tried the squeeze play, but the Ttger pitcher outguessed the Quakers and the men were thrown out at the plate Tim score: PRINCETON. PENN. M'P'ce,2b ft 2 8 Borg.ss... Fisher,c.. McN'a.lf. oa ?> ab r h o a e 7 0 O'McX'oU'Jb 0 I .j 3 2 2 1 OIHarvey.cf O 0 3 0 0 1 OOlWirhlU.lb 2 1 0 it 0 0 0 1 OlM'rdlan.lf a (i 2 I 00 7 0 1 !Mn'ff*v,rf. 4 0 0 .j 0 0 2 OHMnhfr.c. 3 1 2 t] 3 1 0 2 OjSul'van,8b 1 0 0 M 1 0 0 1 OiShiiver.as 3 0 0 1 3 0 7 0 OfSheffey,p. 1! 0 00 o 1 4 Ojlslew'yn.p 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0| +MrM'll#»n 1 1 1 0 on; fMyers. .. 0 0 1 0 00 j Totals,. .82 3 7 27 If. Ratted for Keyes In seventh Inning. Tltatted for Khriver In ninth Inning. Jllntted for Llewellyn In ninth Inning. Princeton 0 0 000004 2.fi rJpnn 0001 0000 2.3 Karned runs.Princeton. 4; Penn, 3. Left on bases.Princeton, 8; Penn, 8. Two base hits.MacPhee, Rerg, Fisher. Three ti| so '¦"s.Mourdlan, McNamara, Myers. Sacri¬ fice hit.Onrmnn, Stolen ba«e-Rotting Lases on halis-Off Sheffey, 4: off Llewel¬ lyn. t; off Margetts, 4. Struck out.By Shoffey. 4; by Margetts. 4. Wild pitch. Margetts. Empires.Raetzel and McRride. Time of game.2 houra and ft! minutes. Colgate 7, Williams 1. Special Despatch to The New York Herald. Williamstown, Mass., May 7.."Will- lams ntct defeat at the hands of Colgate on the diamond here to-day, the score being 7 to 1. The I'urple could not hit Blume, the visiting pitcher, who let It down with five safe blows. Holmes twirled seven innings for the home team and then retired In favor of Gregory, who was touched up for four runs in the eighth. A home run by Blume, the Colgate pitcher, wan one of the features. The score : COLGATE. WILLIAM.' ab r h oa «i ab r h o a e tihhs.lf.. .1 1 1 0 0 liWard.Sb.. tit 2 2 0 Ram's,lb 4 0 1 13 0 <)|Hoyt.2b.4 00 ft 11 St'fens.cf 4 00 1 OOlRleh'nd.lb 30 1 0 0 0 IUsn>'., /. f*. 1 1 (I O /,|T» I. i A . .. Herm'n.c. ft 1 1 8 .3 OIRurk.ef... 40 1 .3 10 Seh'c'r.ss 412 1 2 1 lO'Brien.ss 4 00 0 1 1 e. i- i . i" i>i nai.oo i u v ti i| Harrls,3b 42 1 1 2 Ijl-Tmi.c. ... 4 00 7 to Kenn'y.rf 100 0 OOC, B'ton.rf 3 00 o 0 0 I.'nard.rf 31 t 1 0 O'MonJo.lf. ,3 0 0 4 0 0 F'ge'!d,2b 1 Oo 2 1 01 Holmes,p. 2 0 | o .3 0 O'f"or,2b .3 0 0 0 0 0 Gregory,p. 000 0 1 0 Blum<\p.. 4 1 3 0 4 UlMoIlon.p.. 101 0 0 0 Totals.30 7 10 27 12 3| Totals...32 I ft 27 10 2 Colgate 1 0 J 0 0 0 I 4 0.7 Williams 1 0 0 0 0 00 0 0.1 Two base hits.Ward, Hermann, Harris, Glhbs. Home run.Blume. Hits-. Off Holmes, 7 in 7 Innings; off Gregory, .3 in 2 Innings. Rases on balls.Off Holmes, 3; off Gregory, [1; off Rlumo. 1. Struck out.By Holmes, 4. by Gregory, 1; by Blume. t. Hit with pitched ball.Hermann (by Gregory). Wild pitch.Gregory. Swarthmore Is Defeated. Swarthmork, ra.. May 7..The Uni¬ versity of North Carolina, nine trimmed Swarthmore, 6 to 4, after staging a spectacular rally In the eighth inning. Swarthmore led the Southern boys, 4 to 2, at the close of the seventh, but the visiting team filled the bases on lOarn- shuw and made four runs to make their two point lead. The score: NORTH CAROLINA SWARTHMORE. r h i> a e! Those Sweet'n.rf. TO 0 0 0 Wiese,if. 2 1 0 00 Sprulll.lb.. 1 10 0 Oj Hoff'n.ss... 0 1 2 01 Norrls,3b.. t 1 1 '.Ml! White,2b... to 2 3 0 Lew'lyn.p.. 00 0 4 01 Yarnall.rf.. 0 0 0 Oo Hherley.cf.. 2 1 2 0 0l 'arter.cf. 01 ti 00 Lov.e.tf.. ., 0 1 3 0 o Larkln.lh. 00 15 00 Morris,c... 12 o 1 0'Ksrey.Sb... 0 2 0 3 0 Mi-n'ald.ss. 0 n o t OAVensel.c. 00 0 lo McLean,2b. 0 1 22 1 Earnshaw,p II 2 22 -(Clancy.p. 0 0 0 3 Totals. .6 7 18 10 RBchnelder.c. 0 0 0 0 0 I Totals 4 0 21 12 4 North Carolina... 0 0 0 0 1 0 ] 4 0 0 Swarthmore 20001 0 t 0 0.4 Earned runs.Wiese 2. White, Morris, Sher- ley 2, Rprulll, F. Morris. Earnsbsw. Two base ii|ts_F. Morris. R. Morris. Three base hits.Carter, R. Morris. Home runs. Sherley, E«m«!nA. Sacrifice hits.Hoffman Stolen tmses.White. Sprulll, Wiese Double play- Earnshaw and Carter. St nek out.Ry Levellyn, t); by Earnsliaw, ft by Clancy, 1. Rases on halls.Off Leweilyn 4 off Earnshaw, 2. Umpire.Rudolph Yale Loses at Lacrosse. spiv nl Dcxpat'h to Tiik Nbw Yum; Hwui.n. .Syracuse, May 7...Syracuse opened its league season In lacrosse by de- fenltng Yale, 2 to 1. The first half was scoreless, but In the second Herbert, Syracuse defence man, shot the winning goal. The lineup Syracuse. \ ale. MarAloney ..Coal. Wright Schmitt Point Shepherd Krobl»«er Cover point... t'lismhertaln Lewerjr (Cap.). .First defence... .Woodhouse tlerlx-rt Reroml defenr.' Knlduln I .!< t<(ton Third defence. Parsons (Cap.) Hmltlt Centre Kell l.eydwker Third attack Keller llertenshaw Second attack Houston Cory first attack Meyers I-rtmch Outside home Coillns Floss Inside home tsincs Duals.Cory. Herbert. James Subs.Yale, Manning for Shepherd; Hyraruse, Jenkins for French. Ileferea.Vleta, Harvard Hanover Bank Wins. The Hanover National Hank baseball leani. champions of the Bankers' League, won Its Initial game from the Guaranty Trust team at Wallace Oval. Brooklyn. yesterday by the score of 7 to fi- Conlfrey, rattan and Tlarquall did the twirling for the winners, each working three Innings. Harqualt got Into several bud holes, due to erratic work In the Infield, but managed to pull through a winner, leaving two men on the bass In the ninth by fanning Haloo and forcing Macintosh to pop up. Mac¬ intosh diil food work on the mound for Guaranty after relieving Carey In the fifth. The score: R.H.n lanovei .7 o 2 I 0 ft 0 o x.7 rt r Oparanty 002 0002 1 1.0 7 C Halt"! |,s.t'onlfrey. I'Sgan. HarqusM and W Blllffe,; Casey, Macintosh and Haloo Stevens Wins at Lacrosse. In an unusually fast game Btevrns Tcoli decisively defeated Johns Hopkins to-dsy In lacrosse hy the score of 6 to 1 .lohnp Hopkins was completely out¬ classed. and only the excellent work of Benedict at goal prevented Stevens from rolling up a much higher score. Poor Sort of Home Run Hero, This Man Kelly! RATHER a poor sort of home run hero, this man Kelly of the Giants. He never will be a Ruth, poor fellow! George saves his cast) against the day when legs will be slowed up and eyes will not be so keen, nor swing so timely and potent. He is a financial sklmper. a nickel nurser. If ever there was one on the Giants. Poor fellow I Kelly never has been arrested for Joy riding. He doesn't even own an automobile, if he were handed a drink of hard liquor he probably would use It for a rubdown. He wouldn't know what else to do with It. Long George is quiet, likable, un¬ obtrusive. a hard worker at all times, as game as they come, for how many players would have come through the "razzing" which unfair fans handed him early last season? He has Implicit faith in his manager, Kelly has. He obeys orders, never has been suspended, never Intends to be. His lone vice Is a tenor voice, and he can use it with effect. A poor sort of homo run here, this man Kelly of the Giants. We fear he never will be a Ruth. Poor fellow 1 COLUMBIA DEFEATS RUTGERS NINE, 8-7 Two Passes in Eleventh Lead to Setback for Jersey- men. Columbia and Rutgers battled for el'-ven innings on South Field yesterday afternoon before the F.lU" and White put over the run that won by 8 to 7. Thirteen errors and a round dozen hits, two of which were for extra bases, were productive of enough excitement to keep the rooters on their feet. Columbia won in the eleventh when Price singled to centre after both Smith and Moeschen had walked. Schnaars drove home the winning tally. The score COL MRI A. RUTGERS. ab r h o a e ab r h oa e Sch'rs.lb 11114 0 0|Dot-nan,** ">10 4 12 Dr'phy.rf 5 2 2 3 OOIVanO'n.2b -.11 1 0 0 Tedf'd,2b 5 00 2 2 t'Flvnn.p... C 02 0 5 1 Fr'man.lf 5 10 1 1 OlPlant.cf... 411 2 10 f'lark.o... 4 1 0 0 2 01 W'lock,lf. 5 00 2 01 Watt,3b.. 5 10 2 3 O'll house.rf 512 1 0 0 Smith,cf. .'11 1 2 0 01 J'nson,3b. 5 2 2 3 2 0 M'chen.ss 3 10 0 4 11 Durand.lb >1 2 8 0 1 I'rlce.p... 401 0 4 1'Winner.c. 5 0 1 0 0 2 Totals. 3B 8 5 33 10 CI Totals..44 7 llV.O 0 7 .None oilt when winning run was scored. Columbia 4 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-8 Rutgers 1 4 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0.7 Two base hlta.riant. Flynil. Stolen bases .Johnson. Krhnaars, Clark. Brophy, Ted- ford. Sacrifice lilts.Price, Clark. Sacrifice fly.Berlnghouse. Errors, Roman, 2: Tedforii 4, Flynn, Wlieelock, Durand. Winner 2, Moeschen, Price. Struck out.By Flynn, 8: off Price. 1. Left on bases.Rutgers, 0: Columbia, 7. 1'mnlre.Connelly. Tlmt of gome.2 hours and 15 minutes. C. C. N. Y. Scores Victory Over St. Franics Collegians The College of the City of New York nine registered f'rsl »hutout v'0,-or>r of the s«tson over St. Francis College i of Brooklyn at Lewlaohn otadlum >es- terdav The score was b to V. 1 Anderson, the C. C. N. Y twlrler waa reached for only two hits, both by Twoohy. He did the best stick work of the day. getting a triple and a single in four trips to the plate. <' C N Y. scored In the first ft ame. Kelly the first man up. drew a pass and come home on a single by Murray and an infield hit by Raskin. Four runs were scored in the seventh. Liittenberg singled to left field, followed bv a one bagger by Anderson. Both scored when Morgan heaved 1C.1I>- grounder over the catcher's head. Mur rav singled, scoring Kelly, and came home on a double to the right field fence ^St^Frarwis ph.yed poor boll, being charged with eleven errors. On y twenty-nine batters faced Anderson in the nine innings. The score c c N T. I ST. FRANCIS. Wellvhb *V"0 0 4 0|Twoohy.lfa4 0 2 8 OJ Kelly.an. .i - v Kfl ;;b 3 n ft 4 24 Totals. .34 ft 7H27 17 V T(jtR|.. .27 0 8 24 11 IP nnoooooo 0." at. Francis ..... , o 0 0 1 0 4 0 r-6 ' . /. <. v v 3 First base Earned runs-4 . n.'st Francis. 1 ?n"nRa»kin " rinses"!.'hYlla^-Off Anderson. 2i " in'l inning Hit bv pitcher.By Anderson. T mora"" Wild pitch Morgan. Passed ki.l.-0"irkn Hlt-W A^;rp7re.ifo°n" "nd Barry. 'Time of hours and 5 mtn- utew. Collegians Rap McGrath and Army Loses to C. U. Nine special Despatch Tits Nrw YoaK HMAt.o. Wkht Point. May 7..Cathollc Uni- ver-itv beat the Army at baseball to- 7 to 4 McGrath. the veteran Army pitcher, went along well until the seventh, when the collegians t.pH . smart!v. Wllhide's bad peg of D"na,f't * ground hit also figured In the two tsllt which broke the tie. Again in the eighth the visitors hit cleanly and. aidedI byr an ..rror gathered two more In the fifth the Army started a rally which came to grief through smart fielding. Drkieoll spearing with his left hand Bashers hard lilt far the fielding feature of the game. The score: ARMY 1 CATHOLIC UNTV. ah r 11 n a Pi r n o R " Smvlbe if < " o 1 0 O Oenault.M S 2 1 0 ; 1 rl t i ft ft *1 0 0 4 111a. * 1 f.?v"nn rl 4 0 1 0 oo'vln.lf ... *00 0 on Sis : 1 s ir«ssc-. $ ' ssiLnsi isaKs&siilsi m .Mc «00 0 0 0 bvmh.rf. 4 1 2 0 00 MTOr'th.p 4 0 8 0 1 IttollarO.P 3 1" VAZ» ?n0°O °0 jjf Totals .M 7 12 27 14 5 White 1 1 00 00 tl,»nc>r. 1 0 0 0 0 0 |8mith... 1 o0 OQQ. .Batted*or Pmytha In the ninth Inning .Ratted for French in the ninth t Ratted for Stevenson In the ninth Inning I Retted for WllUlde In the ninth Inning 020100001 0.4 i'athollc TJnlver.. 008000 22 01 a.. V t <> «<krrlflr<* fly.Drtllnrd. Tv;o 'g'tev^nson. rvnaulu Lynch. Wore*. Hit. I -f MrOtatb i" in * Innings: off Brag' .*""i i inr t ia Rases on halls.Off Pollard, i %. ruck out-. McGrath. 7.; by p. Hard to Hit by pitched ball.Bv MeOrath, I 1?; iJ.jIhi Wild pitch.Bollard. 1-eft on Ktmr »; <'lll»"c ttnlverally, 7 Vm- |7r"».Marshall and Tra.fr Tim. of game- C " fvf.rvthino for Billiards W^T Bowl ng Prices and Term* to Suit REPAIRS RY EXPERT MECHANICS The Brunswick Rnlke i ..Render . .. . «, west 37d Street. near Rroc*»- 1 REGAINS AMATEUR TITLE AT TRAPS 0. S. McCarthy of Philadelphia Wins Event With Recced Score. U. S. McCarthy of Philadelphia won the sixteenth annual amateur chajupion- f-hip of America at clay birds over the Travers Island traps of the New Vo*k Athletic Club yesterday. The Quaker City expert led a field that numbers.! 155 and which Included the Olympic champion, the winner of the last grand American handicap and many State champions, with a score of 198 out of a possible 200 targets. It was the best Fcore registered in the shoot since it first was established in 1905. It was the third time that McCarthy has won the championship. He took it first in 1907, and successfully defended hl« crown In the following year, in 1910 there was no competition, and in the following year he dropped the title to Harry Kalder, a. young Philadelphia shot, who was his pupil. No other gun¬ ner has been able to win the crown more *han once, with the exception of C. H Neweomb, who twice captured the cov- eted prize. J. R, Bonner of the New York Athleti . Club, although a comparative novice at the trftps, won second prize with a card of 195. Then came B. S. Donnelley, winner of the preliminary shoot on Fri¬ day ; H. W. Voorhles, the atar gunner of Brooklyn ; CJ. Osborn of the Boston Athletic Association, and R L. Spotte o' the New York Athletic Club. All tied with 194 out of a possible 200 targets. The winner in class B was <1. H. Martin and In class C the prize went to H G. Vogol. G. H. McCarthy also was the winner of the long run prize, j The scores: CHAMPIONSHIP SHOOT.20O T ABORTS 1st 2<1 Name. MT H*V Total G. S. McCarthy 99 99 IPS J. II. Bonner 98 97 19". B. 8. Donnelley 90 98 191 H. W. Vnprliles 9(i 99 194 G. Osborn 98 96 194 R. L Spotts 9.9 96 191 J. Clarke. Jr 96 97 IX: F E. Wntkins 97 94 18.7 C. H. Neweomb 96 97 19:: D. I. Bradley 9(1 97 19.". J. Thomson 97 95 192 (1. H. Martin 9(1 90 19: E. A. Staples 9(1 9(1 19.! T. H. Lewis 9tl 96 192 W. H. Lurkett 91 99 19. Fred Blum 99 91 19 Mayor Reed 97 94 19! J. H. Finch 92 98 191 I. O. Allyn 9ti 95 191 I). Anderson 94 97 191 " 94 97 191 P. Anderson Speer "5 Cooper q. ra> 191 H. Davis q2 ,,o mo H. Vance... ;lt jpp F. Sllkworth ipp i. C Gueiither '2 .' 190 V. L. Ivans ' , . L Ivans Other scores: A II. Trumbull. 163, L. b". age, 183; E. A. Guentlwr, 172. J. II rndrkksen, 191; L. F. Wing. 180 R. Sli air, 171: E. Wlliiken, 182; J H Want ing. "5; J. B. Sousa, 152; W G Alien. ISO. t. It. Ileiehanty, liki H. L. Gillespie. 18.2; W. Blake. 175. K. Von I-eng-rhe, 175. W - raJihm. 168; Dr. Barry, 177; 1". boliauffler. 14; H. H. Shannon, 170: E. I,. Klotz. 171. 1. S. Simile, lflh R. H. Frump1, 405; L. B Indlo, 184; W. Gross. 179; S. G. FrancDco. M. E. I'. Wright, 170. R. 1). MuCann, 171. W. Welstencroft. 181, C. L King. 181. B. Stephenson, 181 G. .1. Corbett. 182; V. W. Beabody, 179; A. B. Palmer, 185; . L. Englcrt, 185; E. E. Gardiner. 185, 1. B. Olln. 185; J. G. I. Dey. 185; .1. B, took, 420; D. A. Barclay. 184 B. 11. Dore- nus. 185; S. M. Hodklnson. 1(12; Mrs. Liv- ligston, 118; G. Pushec. 165; J. A. Snow, I7C; L. S. Adams. 104 W. Sltnonson. 168, H Munele, 160 W Beers. 173; R. Geratell. 183; W. A. Footer. 170, W. H. Mathews. 181; B. Englcr. 181. H. Klockner. Bit). R. 11. Sloan, 179; G. S. McCutoheon, 185. II. E. Eld red, 174; II. Kell, 175; R P. Smith. 182; J. Nlda, 179; C. A. Brown. 174. F. Ham, Jr.. 183; N. Web, 1.57. H. V Knights, 180; A. A. Knights, 166; A J. Knlglita, 182; J. A Traver.s. 175; H. J. Thlelman. 189; I>. I Braddock. 189: J. F. Bets 3d. 188; H. F. L. Funke. 198; G. Severs. 198. D. Wadsworth, 188; F. A. Sle- bert, W7. H. <!. Vogel, 187; A. E. At.herton, 187. B. 1. William", 188; M MrVoy, Jr.. 18(1; H. B Knight. 1>9( H. E. DW'kerman. 186, Ted Morse. 188; J. F. A Phillips. Id; TV. 11. Wolstencroft, 188; .1. II. Fountain, 180, A. E Rannev. 189. T. H. Lawrence, 187; F A. Baker, lso C. Waldron. 18U; E Doerkln. 189; F. 1.. Sldithotham. 187. W. H Evans. 171. It. It.. Debaeher. 10.8, [>. F Mi Mahon. 182 W II Dennis, 179. 1- A. Herlng. Jr.. 105: C. E. Bonner, 184. J. F. Bonner, 149; A. L. Burns, 188, O. C. Grinnell, 185. K. O. F. Gratiaio. 172: J. S Lewis. 189; 1,. Dlk-. 173; A. E Vogllt, 178; G. M Heroe\. 100. J. 11. Den. 182 E. 11 Woodruff. 187; W. O'Brien. 182; B. Von Boeekman. 180; J-'. Hall, lei; 14. Guggenheim. 109; G. TV. Derrick, 150. G. Gilchrist. 157 J. I. D. Brl'tol. 174 H. Cui- tIs. 180; T. J. McCahill, 187. R. F. Rice. 180; J B. Donovan. 179; W. B. Ogden. 185 J. TV. Tlnunnns, 100, K. 1,. Salomon. 180 L. G. Salomon. 145; E. M. L ask. 109; G. Connelly. 105. F. W. Finch, 168; A. D. Walk. I, 171 J. A. Silbennan. 1.T3; C. A James, 179. F. fi Hyatt, 173. Tome Golfers Win. Trkston. N. J.. May 7..Tome de¬ feated Lawrenceville at golf this after¬ noon. fi to 3. The visitors won three of the four matches played, l-awrencevllls retaliated by defeating Tome In tennis, five single and two double matches w. 14 played, all of which were won by the home tenni Illinois Nine Victorious. 1'nnANA, III., May 7..Overcoming Oho State's four run lead, the University of Illinois made five runs on four singles and an error and won a Western Con¬ ference baseball game by a final score of 7 to 4 The score: ^ m. m. u.\ Hindis 0 0 1 0 5 0 6 1 ihlo O 2 2 O 0 0 0 o 0.4 a :. Batteries.(Barnes, Jackson and Daugiiei:y "U»k, Cotter and Huffman. iV. Raub, Jr., Has Top Score. Blainfikld. N. J.. May 7..William (latib. Jr., with s score of 94. won th* hlrd of a «erle.s of twelve registered trap ¦ hooting events at the Arrow Head Rpd ind Gun Club here to-day Otto Lang was second, with a soore of 93. Wja Buy Your New or Used from the Anthorl»r«l Mnlrk Kirhnn|f l>rnlrr« ^ 239 West 58th St., * U llrnnilnajr and turn your present car in as part payment r;

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Page 1: ATLANTIC CITY-LEAGUE AND BASEBALL€¦ · GOLF AT ATLANTIC CITY-LEAGUE AND COLLEGE BASEBALL GAMES J.S.DEANSCORES DOUBLEVICTORYON LAKEWOODLINKS.Annexes Medal and Match Way Honors in

GOLF AT ATLANTIC CITY-LEAGUE AND COLLEGE BASEBALL GAMESJ. S. DEAN SCORESDOUBLEVICTORYONLAKEWOOD LINKS

.Annexes Medal and MatchWay Honors in CountryClub's Spring* Meeting.u. M'MAHOX'S GOOD GOLF

Frounces Three ExperiencedI'layers in Messrs. Proal

Dixon and Vates.

By K EllB JV. PETUIK.ffecial Despatch to Tun New York Herald.

Dakbwood, N. J., May 7.-J. SimpsonDean, the Princeton golf team captain,has taken a flying start in the golftournament of the metropolitan dis¬trict. A week ago he won the modalin the Trenton Country Club's first in¬vitation event. And this he has fol¬lowed up by annexing both medal andmatch play honors in the spring meet¬ing of the I-iakewood Country Club.To-day Dean went into the last

bracket by eliminatinr P S. P. Ran¬dolph, Jr., of Laktwood, by 3 and 1,and in the afternoon to win the chief. .up took the measure of Joseph G.McMahon, Jr.. the Sleepy Hollow"V\ estchester junior champion, by 3and 2.At one time it looked as though Dean

would score an even more decisive vic¬tory than this, for he was 5 up at theeighth. Beginning with the ninth, how¬ever, -McMahon took three holes straight,and thus encouraged he made an inter¬esting battle of it thereafter.

.McMahon's trouble appeared to be

largely mental, for it seemed that heallowed Dean's mammoth swipes to In¬fluence his own game and to be foreverPressing to get up with his opponent, a

physical Impossibility. The result was a

huge crop of topped and foundereddrives, braesle and iron shots.

Fortunately McMahon was putting andplaying his short approaches well. Butfor this he never would have won theninth hole, as. like his opponent, hetopped his second shot into the rough,rlie Westchester Junior champion neededonly one putt, taking the hole in 5 to 6and turning 4 down.

Driving for the tenth Dean sliced Intorough and his second ovcishot the green.Tills third still was short and McMahonwon in 4 to 5. On the next a par 5 beatDean. The Princetonlan now had losti.iree of his five hole lead, but he wonthe twelfth und thirteenth and becamedormle 4 with a half at the fourteenth.McMahon prolonged the match by holingtrom off the green for a 2. but a half in& settled it at the next. The card:

SCt? "ut 4 4 0 4 3 4 4 4 *1. .19.McMahon out..5 4 0 .-> 4 0 4 0 3. 4',Dean in 8 0 4 r. r> 3 5McMahon In...4 5 5 7 15 2 5

MeMiihon's Fine Work.

McMahon comes out of the tourneywith much credit, as to reach the finalhe trounced three experienced playersin Pierre A. Proal of Deal, George A.Dixon. Jr.. National, and Arthur Vatesof Oak Hill. Yates was the Sleepy Hol¬low lad s victim In the semi-final, theresult In his favor being 2 up. Mc¬Mahon was out In 10 and home in 43.

i/.vatUre of his ,oun<J w'as a 5 at thetwelfth, where he lost two strokes ona ball out of bounds. \Dean made the first nine of his semi-

ninth matCl' in 39 Respite a 7 A the

aS this score was u 'eft the

SfflSSV'nJi'J-5.TKK

the same hazard and rb/. v. .ca,I>

halved In 7.ho hole

Randolph had put Dean on his met

hou, ;back at him Immediately, taking threein a row and therefore turning 1 up

I he tenth went to Dean with .

feet 3. bur he had to hole Hoot nunto halve the eleventh. Randolph s sec¬ond shot on this 537 vnrd ,v!». Ilopped into a bunker. Dean tried to

fhih»ll0in,e aUh "" ,r0tl Mec°t»d Hedubbed and followed with ..

mashie shot. His fourth hit the p?nwhen It really should have overrun tie

ll«"d0'Ph ha,, played a perfectshort approach, but even with one puttbe got only n half.

v

The twelfth went to Dean and theh rteenth to Randolph. A bad 5 puth< Lakewood man 3 down at the fif-eenth. and although he won the nextbe was in trouble again at th»- seventoenth. Dean having the hole with twostrokes to Fpare.

The Summary.First Sixteen.Semi-final.J. Simpson Denn,

Princeton. beat I*. S. P. Ilandolnh, Jr.,I.nkewoort. S and I: J, (5. JlcMnhnn, Jr.,Sleepy Hollow, beet A. Yates, Oakhlll, 2 up.Final.Dean beat MrMehon, 3 andBeaten Ktgh' of First Sixteen, Semi-final.

C. L. Maxwell, Trenton, won from N.riiilllpa, Atlantic City, by default; T. L.Trown, Hudson ftlver, beat T. Puff, NewmanSchool, 1 up (2(1 bolca).Final.Maxwell beat Proal. I and 3.Second Sixteen.Semi-final.F. X. Sadler,

T.akewood, beat F. B. I'nrter, Lakewood, 2and 1; It. C. ftlcc. Deal, beat F. F. Kimball,Lakewood. 8 and 2.Final.Itloe beat Sndller, and 4.Beaten Fight of Second Sixteen.Semi¬

final.fir, H. V. Oarrlty, tibtiry Park, beatF. T. Keating, Spring I.ake, I and 2.Final.t'.arrlv belt Brown. 3 up.Third Sljttefn.Semi-final.Klnndon flould,

I.akewood, beai O. TV. Oott, t'nnoebrook. .'Iend 2; Joaeph Sherman, I.akewood, beat I>r.P. Rlckette, Point Pteaaaiit, I up.FINAL.Sherman hi at flould. 3 up.Beaten Fight of Third Sixteen.B«ml-final.

r. 8. Mr.cLnuithlln, Sceradnlo, 5 nod 3; 8am-nel Allison, St. Alhana, won from ParkParker, Upper Motltclalr, hy d< fault.Final.Allison lient MarLaughlttl. f> and 4.Fourth Sixteen- Semi-final.fl. Rowland,

Newman gejaat b*at r. s. iminv, Point"! /..mil, 'J and 2: P. Stevenson. Piping1-toek, beat H. Franolecu, Oak Hill, :: and 2.Final.Stevenson oft from How land hy

di fault.Medal Play Handleap.Low groas, Frank

TV. ffyer. Upper Montclalr, 44. Lot. net, T.F. Weaver, Point Ph neant, PB.2.V."J.

"^>avy Wins at Lacrosse.Special Despatch to This Nbtv York 11num.

A NNArotts, May 1..In the last gnineof lacrosse to be played this season at.Annapolis the Naval Academy beat PennState by 211 to 3. The visitors were otit-playcil In every department of tlia gume.The midshipmen piled up fourteen goalsIn the first half and then tried out manyr'w combinations In the reconfl. Thef itttre of the gnnie wn th- ?pb ndl'lsllek work and team play of the mid¬shipmen. Byerly, Walters and Shawparticularly excelled in tills line, Plate'?defence was weak.

Ruth and Kelly OppositeTypes of Heavy Hitters

By WILLIAM B. KANNi.THEseason's home run monarchs to date.Babe Ruth of the Yankees

and George Kelly of the Giants.are distinctly opposite types ofhitters. All they have in common Is the ability to land with ex¬

traordinary power, the ability to drag a bat up to the plate and a greatyearning to slam the ball to realms beyond.

Both get the leverage of height and a long roach, but in differentways. Ruth is a left handed slugger; Kelly hits from the other side ofthe platter. Kelly inclines more to left field hitting and Ruth to right fieldhitting.

Kelly is a freer hitter than Ruth, in the sense that he will hit to allfields much oftener than Ruth. He makes some home runs to right, but itis seldom, indeed, that Ruth hits to left for a homer or otherwise. He jolts'em to centre-right often, however. Ruth is a freer hitter than Kelly, inthe sense that he will hit all kinds, high, low, slow, fast curves oftenerthan Kelly.

Kelly is a wrist hitter, Ruth a long, powerful swinger with the armsand applied with such intuitive use of the principles of applying power thathe gets the benefit of every ounce of his weight.more than any sluggerthe game has known he does this.

Kelly leans well forward and Ruth does not, and Kelly's feet arefurther apart. He has an awkward knee action, but has an advantage overRuth in that he can wait until the ball is nearer before starting his swingHe doesn't bring the bat forward from as far back, but whips In savagelywith the wrist, and thereby, plus excellent timing, gets enormous power.

Ruth's feet are closer together than Kelly's, much closer, with theleft foot in advance of the right. Ills position at the bat is the easier ofthe two. He holds the bat well, his arms back, with the bat vertical. Kellyhas the bat pointing out backward, bat and arms lower. With his widerstance, ho doesn't get as long a step forward when about to swing. He isbetter than Ruth in picking out balls at which to hit. He is more of a"flatfooted" hitter than Ruth. The latter is lighter on his feet.

BIG CROWD SEESGIANTS WIN, 3 TO 1

Continued from First Page.

Then followed a dazzling play and thebest of the game.

Snath's hard hit ball wan scooped byBancroft, whose flip to Frisch forcedMiller at second. Frisch threw to Kellyfor a double play, which didn't come off.and Nells meanwhile was heading home,He'a fast, but Kelly thrn whim out withsomething to spare. Griffith doubledKing at the plate In the seventh nftertaking Burns's fly. It was a splendidthrow.The Giants bunched two hits for a run

in the eighth and with two out Youngdropped a fly Into the left field fore¬ground, moved up on a passed ball andran in when Kelly lined a single toright. The score!BROOKLYN <N.) NEW YORK (N.)

ah r h o a e| ab r h o a e

Olson,ss.. -1 0 0 1 4 01 Burns.If.. 4 0 1 7 0 0J'ston,3h. 401 1 1 OIBVroft.ss. 410 0 3dO'flth.rf. 401 2 1 0 Frisch.2h. 412 3 10Wheat,If. 4 00 3 0 OlYoung.rf.. 412 1 OnKon'y.lb. 3 1 3 0 0 HKHIy.lb.. 4 02 4 2 0M'r»,ef,2h 3 0 0 3 1 OIKlng.cf... 3 00 1 0 0K'>l«rf.21> 201 1 1 1IRapp,.3b.. 2 00 1 00Neis.cf.. 1 00 2 0 OlSnyder.c.. 200 3 0 0Miller, c.. 1 00 2 0 I'Toney.p.. 3 0 1 0 2 0Krueger.c 1 0 O 0 0 0|Smith,p.. 3 00 0 3 01 Totals.. .30 3 8 27 8 0

Total*. .30 1 0 21 11 31 . . _ . .

Brooklyn 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0.1Now York 2 000000 1 x.2Runs batted In.By Koney. I: by Young. I:

by Frisch, 1: by Kelly, 1. Earned runs.offSmith. 2: off Tonoy. 1. Two base hit.Kilduff. Throe ha«e hit.Frisch. Home run.Koneteliy. Sacrifice hit.Ranp- Doubleplays.Bancroft and Kelly; Kilduff. Olsonand Konetehy; Bancroft. Frl-eh. Kelly nndSnyder: Orlfflth and Miller. I,eft on bases.New York. 0; Brooklyn. 3. Bases on balls.Off Toney, 1; off Smith. 2. Struck out.BySmith, 1. Passed ball.Krueger. Wtld plteh.Smith. First base on error.New York.Umpires.Brennan and Emslle. Time of game.1 hour and 40 minutes.

Red Sox Down Athletics.FHtf.AnEi.PHiA, Kny 7 (Amerlcan).-

Boston batted Hicrls hard to-day nndsecured an even break for the two gameseriea by winning 6 to 2. Hurl andPratt hit home runs Into the left fieldbleachers and a two base wild throw byOnllow contributed to Harris's down¬fall.Hasty pitched superb relief ball. Pen-

nook was Invincible, misjudgmonts byCollins In the seventh and ninth Inning'giving Philadelphia Its runs. The score:

BOSTON (A.) PHILADF.LPHIA (A.lab r h o a e Iferb . |»

Vltt.Sb. .. 1 1 2 0 2 01 Dvkes.2h. 3 00 t 2 0M'skv.lf. 3 03 3 0 0'Wltt.rf... 4 0 3 I 0 0lT.att.2h. 412 2 1 0IDugan.3b. 4 00 3 2 0in.'kd.rf 3 00 2 0 0 C.W'cr.lf. 4 0 3 1 10McFs.lb. 2 2 0 P 1 0 Wdct,,cf. 3 00 3 00'Scott,as.. 411 1 4 0: Perkins,c. 4 0 1 3 4 0Collins,cf 4 0 3 3 0 (U .Orlffln. . 0 1 0 0 0 0Ruel.c 4 11 3 1 0|.T W'er.lb. 4 1 1 11 0(1P'nock.p. 4 00 0 3 OlO'way.sa. 3 0 1 2 2 1

Harris,p.. 2 00 0 4 0;Totals.38 0 12 27 12 0 Hasty.p.. 1 00 0 3 0

|tJohnson. 1 00 0 0 0

( Totals.. .33 2 fl 27 18 1.Ran for Perkins In the ninth Inning.sBntted for Hnsty In the ninth Inning.

Boston 0 0 2 2 0 2 0 0 0.8Philadelphia 0 0 0 0 0 0 I tl 1.2Two base bits.Vltt. Witt 2. Galloway.

Three bn«r hi'.J. Walker. Home runs.Pratt. Ruel. Sacrifice hits.Pratt. Welch,Galloway. I."ft on bases.Boston. 7; Phila¬delphia, 7. Bases on halls.Off Pennock, 1;off Harris. 2; off Hasty. 1. Hits.Off Har¬ris. !) In 0 Innings; off Hasty, 3 In 3 Innings.Struck out.By Pennoek, ."; by Harris. 2.Losing pitcher.Harris. Umpires.Connollyand Morlarty. Time of game.1 hour and32 minutes.

Southern Association.At Atlanta (first game). U. H. K.

Atlanta 4 8Birmingham 3 7Batteries.Markle and IJuhrman. Gallagher

and Btanilon.Second Game. Tt. H. E.

Atlanta 2 3|Birmingham 2 8Batteries.Bcdgood and Fuhrman; Bates

and Gooch. Called sixth Inning: darkness.At Chattanooga (first game). B. H. E.

Chattanooga 8 8 7Nashville 7 8 3 1Batteries.Mels nnd Nelderkorn; Waile and

Tonnernan.Second Game. P.. H. E.

Chattanooga 2 8 2Nashville 7 12 SiBatteries.Boone and Graham; Payne and)

Tonn-man. Called seventh Inning: darkneas.At Mobile- R H g

Mobile 3 3 11Little Rock 2 4 0Batteries.Roberts and Srhulte; Fields and

Land.At New Orleans. R. H. E.

New Orleans 8 13 0|Memphis I 3 3Batteries.James and Deherry, Fowlkee

anil Hungllng.

Plainfield C. C. Tourney.Special OtspatrH fa Trig Nrvv Tim Hgani.n-PLALVFIBLD. JN. J.. May 7.-William

Barlow, Jr.. and E. W. Freeman, with s73, were tie for the best net score prize |nthe qualifying round of the three balltournament at the Plahi.'Ieid Country Clubto-day. Those players qualified l.i the firstdivision: William Barlow. Jr.. V>. 18.73;E. W. Freeman. 87. 14.73; L. 11. Gates.f>2. 18.74: F. r. Ard. 00, 1(1-74; M II.Long. 80. 13.74: A. W. Drake. 87. 1.'.73;.*. N. Claybrook. 00, 18.78; A. L. flelilu r,88. 18.78; George C. Scott. 08 23.7.3; HenryD. Ttlbbnrd. HO. 13.70: B. C. Campbell.33. 10-70; C. A. Campbell, 01. 14.77.William Barlow, Jr.. won the ball sweep,

stakes with a net stmi of 78.

YANKEES COME FROMTHE REAR AND WIN

Continued from First Pane.

Harris, but Plpp dropped a double Inshort right centre and Meusel drove a

triple to the left flekl bleachers, scoring'Hotli and Plpp and breaking up thegame. The score:

NEW YORK (A.) | WASHINGTON (A.)ah r h o a e; ab r h

Roth.ef.. *12 3 1 OlJurtge.lb.. 4 0.2P'augh.ss .7 0 1 A .2 OlMllan.lf.. 30 1Ruth.If.. 411 2 0 OIRIce.cf.,. 312Plpp.1' 42 1 8 1 0 Rrower.rf ">0 1Meus. 3 2 4 4 0 1 Harris.2h. 100linker.. 4 00 1 1 0tHhnnks,3b 4 22Ward.2 4 0 3 1 1 WO'R'rke.ss 4 1 3Hof'n.c.. 2 00 2 1 OlPlclnlch.c, 411Schang.c. 1 00 1 0 0'Johnson,p 40 1Qulnn.p.. 1 00 0 0 0'

o a eT 003 003 oc2 1 02 2 02 1 02 1 0n 1 00 2 0

Hoyt.p... 3 0 1 0 4 0| Totals.. .30 3 14 2" 8 0Mays,p.. 0 00 0 0 01

Totals.38 0 13 27 12 tiNew York 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 2.0Washington 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 1 0-3Two base hits.Rice 2. Ward 2. Milan.

Meusel. Three base hit.Meusel. Home runs.Meusel, Ruth. Stolen base.Judge. Sacri¬fices.Harris, Judge. Double plays.reckln-pnugh and Plpp: Roth. Peelclnpnugh andWard: Rrower and P'Rourke; Johnson. Plcl-nleli and Judge. Left on hoses.New York,9: Washington, 8, Rases on halls.Off John¬son, 4. Hits.Off Oulnn. 0 In 1 1-3 innings;off Hoyt, 8 In 0 2-3 Innings. Hit by pitcher.Ry Hoyt, 2 (Harris 21. fifruck out.RyOulnn, t: by Johnson. 4: by Hoyt, 2. Wildpitch.Johnson. Winning pitcher.Hoyt. Um¬pires.Dlnneen, Nallln and Wilson. Time ofgame.2 hours and 1(1 minutes.

Cubs' Timely Hitting GivesThem Victory OveV Reds

Chicago, May 7 (National)..Timelyhitting by Twombly, Klllefer and Mar¬tin cn«bled Chicago to defeat Cincinnatiby 4 to 1 In the final game of theirseries to-day. Bohne's double, a sacri¬fice and See's single saved the Redsfrom a shutout.Larry Kopf made his first appear¬

ance of the season for Cincinnati whenhe acted as pinch hitter. The score;

CINCINNATI (N.) CHICAGO (N.)ab r h o a c1 ah r h o a e

Rohne.Sb 3 1 2 3 3 0 Flack.rf.. 4 00 1 0 0D'bcrt.lh 3 00 13 1 0 H'cher.ss. 3 00 0 .3 1Sec.of 301 0 1 OITerry.Sb.. 3 0 1 3 3 0D'can.lf. 4 00 2 0 O'ftrlmcs.lb 4 0 1 12 0 0F rees.2b 4 0 0 0 4 OMatset.cf. 412 t 0 0P'kert.rf 4 02 2 0 0|Twoni'y,lf 3 2 3 1 0 0Crane, ss. 4 0 1 2 3 OlDcal.Sb... 4 00 2 2 0H'rave.e. 401 2 1 OIKllltfer.c. 4 1 3 3 00R'nton.p. 2 00 0 1 OlMartln.p. 4 03 0 0 0.Kopf 1 00 0 0 0|Luqur.p. 000 0 0 ft' Totals. .33 4 13 2"

Cincinnati 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.1Chicago 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 x.4Two base hit.Rohnc. Three base hit.

Martin. Stolen ha.es.Sec, Rohne. Sacri¬fices.Panbert, Terry. Double plays.Rohncnnd Pnubert. 2: Hollocher. Terry andGrimes; Peal and Terry. Left on base-.Cincinnati, 7; Chicago. V. Rases on halls.Off Rrcnton. 2: off Martin. 2; off Clique.1. Illtr.Off Rrcnton, 11 In 7 Innlnrs; offClique. 2 In 1 Inning. Struck out.Hy Martin,ft; by Rrcnton. 2. Passed hull.Kllllfer. Los¬ing pitcher.Rrcnton. Umpires.Moran andRlgler. Time of game.1 hour and .32 min¬utes.

Browns Win Over Tigers.St. Lous. May 7 (American)..De¬

troit was helpless before Hayno to-dayand St. Louis won. 6 to 3. Bnyne's wlld-ness marred his performance. Hell-mann made his second home run In twodays anil Williams also circled thebases. The aeorc:

DETROIT (A.) ST. LOUIS (A.i«brli o i«i ah r h o a e

Young,2b 3 0 0 2 1 OITobin.rf.. 3 0 1 3 10Riiah.ss.. 3 11 3 S 0 Gerber.ss. 30 1 4 3Cobb.ef.. 3 00 0 1 OIHlsbir.lb.. >3 4 4 7 2 0Reach.If. 211 3 OOW'Ums.lf 3 2 4 3 Of.Hcll'n.rf. »11 3 0 OJa'hson.lf 302 I 00Jones, 3h. 30 1 1 2 0!Olessn.2b 4 0 0 1 2 0Sarr t.3b 00 q 0 1 O'M'Ma's.Sb 4 ft 1 2 0 0Rlue.lb... 100 10 1 0|RllHngs.c. 4 0 1 3 2 0Alns'tii.c. 3 00 2 0 OlDayne.p... 40 1 1 2 07>auaa,p.. 2 00 0 3 0.Woodsll 1 00 0 00; Totals..37 « 15 27 12 1fFlagsCd 1 0 0 0 0 0!

Totals..31 3 4 24 12 Oi.Ratted for Jones In eighth Inning,flint ted for Pauss In ninth inning

Detroit 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0-3St. Louts 001 02201 x-flTwo base hits.Jaeobson, Klsler. Homo

runs.Hellmnnn, Williams Stolen bases.Rush, Tohlri. Staler. Sacrifice.Jaeobson.Double plnvs.Staler to Gerber to Slaler;Tohln to Rilling* to Gerber to MeManus.Left on bases.Detroit, 8; St. Louis, 12.Rasa* on balls.Off Dauss, 3; off Rnyne, 7.Hit by pitcher.By Dauss fOleason). Struckout.Ry Dauss. 1 by Rayne, 3. Umpires.Mtldehrand nnd Evans. Time of gnme-2hour*.

Casting Club Tournament.Disciples of Iznak Walton will throw

out casting lines to-day during the fifthannual tournament of the Ix>ng IslandCasting Club, which starts at 9 A. M.and ends at 3 P M., and will bo held atPelt^m Bay Park. Six events, open toall. make up the programme.

Columbia Triumphs at Nets.Sprctnl Prrpotrh to Tiib N«w Yiisk lifts*!.!*.Wiujambtow.v, Mass.. May 7..Co¬

lumbia defeated Williams four matchesto three to-day by winning both doublesmatches after Williams had gained a

lead of one match In the singles.

PITTSBURGH STREAK |STRETCHED TO NINE

Bigbee's Batting; Feature ofVictory Over Cardinals

by 2 to 1.

Pittsburgh, May 7 (National)..ThoPirate* scored their ninth straight vic¬tory to-day by defeating St. Louis, 2to 1.The Cardinals registered their only1

run in the second inning, when Fournlersent the ball into the right field bleach¬ers. Pittsburgh scored in the third on

Higbec's hit, his steal of second andMaranville's single.

Tn the seventh Glazner tripled to right.At this stage a heavy rain stopped play.The game was resumed in thirty min¬utes. Blgbee, the first batter, registeredhis third hit, sending Glazncr home. Thescore:

ST. LOUIS (N.) ! PITTSBURGH (N.)ab r li o a el ab r h o a a

Smith.rf. 1 0 0 2 0 0! Utgbee.lf. 4 1 3 4 0 0Mann.cf. 200 4 0 OlCarey.cf.. 4 02 1 0 0Sliott'n.cf 2 0 0 t 0 01 M'vllle.as. 3 0 1 3 3 0Htock.Sb. 3 00 2 1 0;C"shaw,2b 4 00 2 2 0H'sby.2b. 40 1 0 OOlMokan.rf. 3 00 2 0 0F'nlar.lb 3 1 2 7 0 0;Tlerney,3b 4 0 t 1 10McH'ry.lf 3 00 2 0 OIGrlmm.lb. 4 0 1 »J 10Lavan.as. 30 1 1 1 OlBchmldt.c. 4 00 7 1 0Pll'fer.c. 3 0 0 4 1 OIGlazner.p. 311 1 0 1Hherdel.p 3 00 1 4 0!

Totals.. .33 2 0 27 *1Totals. .30 1 4 24 T Ol

St. Louis 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.1Pittsburgh 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 x.2Two base lilt.Carey. Three base hits.

Tierney, Glat'.ner. Home run.Fournler.Stolen base.Higher. Left on bases.St.Louie. 3: Pittsburgh. 0. Bases on balls.Off Slierdol, 2: off Glazner, 1. Struck out.By Rherdel, 2: by Glazner, (1. Wild pitch.Slierdel. Umpires.Qttlgley and O'Day. Timeof jiiiine.2 hours and 10 minutes.

Braves Defeat Phillies inEleventh Inning Rally

Boston, May 7 (National)..Barbare'ssingle. Southworth's sacrifice and Boeck-ol's single to centre with two out In thelast of the eleventh sent over the runwhich won, 2 to 1, for Boston over Phll-adelphia to-day.

McQuillan had the better of Ttlng In a

pitching duel, the Phillies getting onlytwo hits in their last five innings. Mc-Qulllan's hitting and fielding also werefeatures. The score:PHILADKLI'HIAfN.)! BOSTON <N.)

abrhoael abrhoaeNeale.rf. 3 0 1 0 0 0; Powell,cf. 401 3 10R'tngs,2b 4 0 O 1 0 OIB'bnre.ss. 3 11 1 4 0W'ma.cf. 4iin 3 0 O.S'worth.rf 40 1 2 ooMeusel.lf. 3 1 2 3 0 OiCruisc.lf.: 3 0 1 2 0 0Wtnne,3b 3 0 0 1 3 0IB"ckel,3b. 4 0 1 3 2 0R.M'er.ss 30 1 i 3 llHolkc.lh. . 4 0 0 t2 2 0J.M'er.lb. 4 0 2 11 3 1lFord.2h.. 4 0 1 2 4 0Wheat.c.. 4 0 1 0 4 0|O,Neil.c.. 3 10 (1 0 0Rlng.p... 4 00 1 7 OjMcQ'lan.p 4 0 2 2 3 1

Totals. .38 1 7*32 20 21 Totals.. .37 2 8 33 18 1.Two out In eleventh when winning run

was scored.Philadelphia. 0100000000 0.1Boston 001 000 0 000 1.2Two base hits.Wheal. McQuillan. Stolen

base.Southworth. Sacrifices . Wrlghtslone.Southworth. Double plays.Wheat and R.Miller: Powell and Holke: Barbara, Fordnnd Holke. Left on bases.Philadelphia, 8:Boston. 7. Bases on balls.Off Ring. 3; offMcQuillan, 3. Struck out.By Ring, 3; byMcQuillan. 4. Umpires.McCormick andHart. Time of game.2 hours and 13 min¬utes.

International League.RESULTS OF YKSTERDAY"8 games.

Jersey City, 8: Buffalo, 3.Newark, 8; Syracuse, 4.

ReaiRng, 8; Rochester, 3.Baltimore, 8: Toronto, 3.

STANDING OF THE CLUBS.W. L. PC.I W. L. PC.

Newark... 11 3 .088! Buffalo 8 0 .471Baltimore. 10 3 .0C,7:Syracuse 7 0 .437Jersey City. !> 7 .303'Rochester... fl 0 .400Toronto.... 0 7 .363iP.eadlnc 4 13 .235

GAMES SCHEDULED FOR TO-DAY.Jersey City In Syracuse.

Newark In Buffalo.Baltimore In Rochester.

At Buffalo. R. H. E.Jersey City. 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 3 3.8 14 2Buffalo 2 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0.3 7 0Batteries.Tecarr, Metevier and Frettag:

Gordonler, Reddy and Tragresser.At Syracuse. R. H. E.

Newark 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 4.8 12 0Syracuse 0 1 1 0 110 0 0.I 10 2Batteries.rcrryman and Wlthrou Schultz

and Niebergnll.At Rochester. P.. H. B.

Heading 4 0 10 110 1 ry_s 13 IRochester.... 0 0 0 0 O 3 1 O 1.3 10 3Retteries.Brown and Cotter: Morgan,

Brown and Maddox.At Toronto. R. H. R.

Baltimore... 0 0 0 3 1 10 1 0.8 8 .

Torono 0 1 O O O (1 0 I) 2.3 8 3Batteries.Rpntly and Egan; Winters,

Boehllng, Thompson and Snndherg

Cornell's Freshman NineWins Over N. Y. U.'s Team

Cornell's freshman baseball team de¬feated New Vork University's first yearnine at Ohio Field yesterday afternoonby a rcore of 8 to 2.MoConnPlI, pitching for the Tthiean

yearlings, allowed the Violet freshmenbut six well scattered hits and wasnever In any danger.The Cornell batters reached Flunleavy

In the second Inning for five hits, which,couplet' with two errors, were enough toyield five runs and the game. Thescore:CORNELL FnEflH. I N T. V. FRKFH.

ab r h o a el ab r h n a s

Capr'n.3h 3 2 1 2 2 l'Georgo.2b 2 00 2 2 1Buek'y.lh 311 8 0 OtMcC'um.rf 4 0 1 2 0 0Mare'r.ef 3 0 1 0 0 0 Co'*n,lb-p 3 0 I 1 30Tone.e.... 2 I 0 11 1 0MItl»,8b.... 401 1 01Davla.lf,. 4 2 2 0 0 O'Toorork.se 4 11 ' 0 n

Aber.rf. 2 1 0 2 0 0'Walsh.cf 4 0 2Aber.rf... 210 2 OOWnlsh.er.. - - » «

M'Con'l.P 3111 2 0N..«rsse, 3 00 nTreu.ss.. 4 03 3 1 0 D'vy P-lb. 3 00 6 1 1Faus*r.2b 3 00 0 2 1! Lapldes.lf 8 1 0 4 0 0

Totals.. 34 8 0 27 H 2) Totals .30 2 <1 27 10 4Cornell Freshman. 0 0 0 0 0 1 1'N. V. U. Freshman 0 0 1 0 I 0 0 0 0-2Sacrifice hit.Fausner. Capron. Abcr. Mc

ronnoll. Double plays.George, Toorn.l< andDunleavy: Fausner, Trett and But i.'UStruck out.By McConnell. 7: by Cohen. 3.Hit by pitcher.By McConnell, t tf.eoige).Umpire.Swonson. Time of game.. Iiours.

"Victory for Erasmus Hall.Special Pc.patch to Tiie New Yiihk Hmaid.

N'ltw Haven, May 7..The KrasmuaHall High School of Brooklyn shut outthe Tale freshmen lacrosse tfn.ni herethl.s ofternoon In a well played same bythe score of 3 to 0. The lineup:Erasmus High (3). Tale Freshmen (Oi.Htebela Goal A*hfMdAndrstv Point MorrisFnlk ...Cnr»r point Harlowllak'T First defence BcynoidrThomas. Second defence MoorsRiley Third defence. ...WattsCaldwell Centre ..ChandlerFuller Third attack... .ConwaySumner Second attack BoothFleltchner Flret attack PsoganIngham Ontalde lioma... .Phlldi isSheehey Inside homo DtwlBlifGoals.Chandler. Deegan nnri Pewallby.

Substitutions.Yale: Westfall f1' Blley,Monro for Westfall. Pnnlels for Flelsehner.Erasmus: Brown for Aihfleltl, Beed forConwar. Jones for Booth. Tlm«' of halves,20 minutes. Boferee, Tom Hardin*.

Eight Hits in TwoGaines for Meusel

ASID1C from poling out eight hitsof every size anil description,Bob Meusel of the Yankees

hasn't done a thing at bat In thelast two games. On Friday the tallright fielder had three singles andone double as his day's work. Yes¬terday there was more variety to hrshitting, for he came through with a

single, a double, a triple and a homerun. (Not so bad at that, on secondthought.

V

INDIANS CLUSTERRUNS ON WHITE SOX

31 ails Is Effective, While theClevelands Hit Hard nnd

Win by 8 to 0.

Cleveland, May 7 (American)..Cleveland to-dRy defeated Chicago bythe same score as yesterday, S to 0."Duster" Mails was very effective, es¬

pecially with men on bases, the WhileSox threatening only once, although theyhad nine men left on the bases. Thechampions drove Wilkinson from thebox In three innings and also hit Hodgeat will. The score:

CHICAfJO (A.) 1 CLEVELAND (A.labrhORC abrhoae

J'son.ss.. 4 0 1 2 3 0 J'ieson.lf. 0 1 3 3 OnM'gan.ati 4 00 2 3 0' J'aton.lb.. 4 0 1 7 0 0Collins,2b 2 00 8 2 0|Speaker.cf 4 3 3 4 0 0Hooper, rf 4 0 1 0 0 OlSrnltli.rf.. 2 2 2 4 0 0Falk.lf... 3 00 0 0 0|f"dner,3b. 4 0 2 1 10Monti!,cf. 4 0 1 4 0 OlScwoll.ss. 40 1 I 2 0

Sheely.lb 40 1 .1 I 0iS'nsoii,2b. 110 2 10Selinlk.c. 2 00 1 2 OlO'Nelll.c.. 1 I 2 5 0 0Yaryan.c. 2 00 1 1 OlMalls.p... 2 00 0 2 0Wllk'n.l). 00 0 0 2 01Hodge,p.. 20 1 1 »0| Totals.. .30 8 14 27 6 0.Lees. ... 1 00 0 0 OfTotals. .32 0 .7 24 17 0,.Hatted for Hodge In the ninth Inning.

Chicago 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0Cleveland 3 0 2 1 0 t 1 0 x.8Two base liltn.Month. Jamienon, Speaker

2, Johnston. Three banc hit.Smith. Stolenbase.Jamlenon. Snerlflres.Johnntop, Malls2. Smith. Double play.Johnson nnd Hheely.Left on bases.Chicago, !>; Cleveland. 7.Bnses on halls.Off Wilkinson. 3. off Hodge,2: off Malls, ). Hits.Off Wilkinson, 0 In3 innings: off Hodge. 8 in 3 Innings. Struckout.Hy Wilkinson. J; by Hodge, 1; by Mails,4. Losing pitcher.Wilkinson. empires.Owens and Chill. Time of game.I hourand 40 minutes.

Fordham Nine Defeatedby Boston College, 3 to 2

Maroon Fills Bases in Ninth,but Can't Push One Over.After lending up to the seventh inning

the Fordham baseball team lost to theBoston College nine at Fordham Field

yesterday afternoon. 0 to 2. Culloton,who was in the box for the Maroon, out-

pitched his opponent, Fitzpatrick. who

yielded ten hits to the formers eight,but the local players could not connectwhen hits were nc d<-d.Fordham jumped into the lead In the

first inning. Buckley placed a double toleft and crossed the plate when Marncllhit to left centre for a triple. Cousineausingled and scored Marncll.

Colloton held the Huh batters hltlessfor the tlrst four innings. In the fifth,Wilson started for Boston with a doubleto left. He advanced to third on

O'Regan's long fly to Buckley In rightcentre. Dowd followed with a single toleft, Wilson scoring. The visitors tiedthe score in the seventh on a single toright by Wilson, an infield hit byO'Kegan and Dowd's blow to left.

In the fallowing frame Culloton start-ed by walking Patten, who went tosecond when Phillips singled to centre.t'rban followed with another single toBuckley in center. Patten scoring.Fordham filled the bases In the ninth,

but failed to tally. The score:

FORI d I AM. BOSTON.ab r h o a e al> r h o a e

Mel.'n.lb too t) 0Oiralmw.as too 1 2atin 'rnn.lf 300 2 0 Ot Patten,ef. 31 0 1 10TVkley.cf 111 '. 0 olrhirpps.lf .10 1 2 taMarn'l.rf It2 0 0 Olfrban.Sb. 40 1 1 5 0

O'neau.c. 4 02 4 2 O Wilson, rf. 4 2 2 2 0 0Fallon.3h 4 02 1 2 ojllal'g'n.lb 4 01 7 0 0J'rdan,2h 2 o o .7 3 1 o'Bcgan.c 30 1 8 toMalley.ss 4 02 I 10 Pov.*d,21>.. 4 02 4 4 0Cul'ton.p 3 00 1 2 O'F'itzp'ck.p 1100 1 12.Kk«y.2b 1 00 0 001tDon'van 1<il 0 0 0' Totals. 31 3 8 ST 13 2

Totals .34 210 27 > 1'Batted for J«v tn eighth Inning.tBnttcd for Cub an in ninth Inning.

Boston College.... o o o o 1 a 1 t 0.3Fordham 2 0 o o 0 0 o 0 0.2First base oil errors.Boston College. 1;

Fordham. 2. Two base hits . Couslneau,Buckley, llslllgnn. Wilson. Three bsse lilt.Marnoll. Sacrifice hits.Palmer. Buckley.Sacrifice flv.O'Kegan. Stolen bases.Bc k-ley. Donovan. I,cft on baam- Fordlmm. 10;Boston College, 0, Double plays.Culloton,Mnlley ami Jordan; Dowd, Palmer nnd Hnl-liean. Bases on balls.Off Culloton, 2; offFitzpatrick, 4. S'ruck out.By Culloton, 2;by FltrpatrlcK-, 5. I'ass>d hall.O'Regsn.l'mplre.Warner. Time of game.2 hoursand 0 minutes.

Tufts College Is Easyfor Holy Cross Nine

Sprrial Drspatrli tn Tiib N'bw Yo«k litUIJi.WoRrKsntr.. Mass., May 7. . Holy

Cross, outplaying Tufts In every depart¬ment, won a one sided contest here to¬day, 12 to 1. Hornn, the purple twlrler,gave the visitors two hits, working Intop form.Simondinger got a clr< ult drive In the

fourth with the bases full and sentKeefe to the showers. The score

lIOI,Y CROSS. TUFTSab r h o a c ab r h o a e

I.eoP'n.rf ft 1 1 2 0 OlFgllon.'Sb. 4 P (t t :i 0UsnD'S.lf 4 2P 1 n.l Loud.2b. 400 2 2 2(lagn'n.ss 5 12 4 1 0 all liar,'- 200 4 2 0O'C'or.lh. 4 3 1 t» 2 1 Waaler.rf 4 0 0 2 0 1Hant'o,3b. 3 2 1 2 2 0 White, .is 30 1 1 3 1S'd'ger.of ft 2 8 3 OOFIn'ssn.lf 80 0 ft 0 0M'G'r«,2b 5 0 1 I 3 0Ktr'a'«,lb 210 7 toMurnliy.o .'111 ft 2 0 Roche,cf.. 800 2 00Horan.p 4 00 0 3 0 Keefe,p... 1 00 0 2 0

Morrell.p, 2 0 1 0 10Totals.30 12 10 27 10 1

Is 28 1 2 24 14 4Holv Cross 0 1 2 N 0 0 0 *.12Tufts 0 000 1 0 0 0 0.1Two base lit' M Gulre. Three base hits.

I.c« Duggnn, Gannon Home runs -O'Connor,Hlmondlnger. Stolon base- ''nllnhai facrlflco lilts.Santoro, Mc<lulr<". Passed ballMurphy. Umpire Dan Barry. Tims ofgame.I hour and 55 minute

Peddie Nine Victor.HtORTsTOWN, X J.. May 7 The Pcd-

die nine defeated the «Marquand Schoolof Brooklyn this afternoon by 11 to 6Tlie acoi .;

it It K.Peddle ... 2 I 3 t 0 8 t 0 s-lt 11 8Marquard 0 0 0 0 1 0 8 2 0.5 * fl

Batteries.'Thropp. Philips and Butcher;Teague and Yen. Umpire .Fldler, Phllad'lplila

Wall Street A. A.'s Baseball Schedule for 1921J. P Ilnrhn A rnmp»nr ...

Salomon Tiro." A MutatorI'alno. Wwilwr At CompanyLngnn A llrvanCitrihln. Mplllck Ac Company.r.ty»lh<i-l.- A- CompanyMpllicnrt.i'ii A Companyl!:ir*«hnt*.tr A RnttriliM lliir.tr St ("nmpinvDnCoppof A Dn-unt'"IVnrhon ft Company.Sprnror Traak A Company.Jarnunlln A IlaConiHit.Ji :.£.«. flwynno * C ompany.

May 14 May 21 Juno 4 Juna 11 June IS Junn 25 July (1

. . V*. Htmti Carllnlr J A< . HAD. Traak II.A< 'o. r.W ACo

... v». I'ynrhonIcACo.

Ooodhody I.AIWo. H.ACo. OnCAD. Carllalo L Allvn. DoC AD. Traak J.O.ACo.

JjADwCo.II AB J.ADaCo. Rarhr

.. va. Traak H.ACo. I'ynrhon Carllaio H.AB Salomon

.. vn. IW'AD. IJarho if.AB. Ifont.r.I'ynrhon

1. AB. Salomon Pvnrhon...fin J.O.ACo. Salomon Dec.AD. J.ADaCo.', Traak

BarhiIf.ACo.

va. P.W.ACo. I..AB. llonfz Salomon J.O.ACo. floodhodvvs. J.ADoCo. J.O.ACo. Carlisle Rnrhn r.w A«o. I..AR llrut.;vn. ltarhr Tr-.«k H.ACo. < 'arlMe I'ynrhon J.O.ACo.

PjrnrnoiIf. All

vn. Cartlalo IV W. ACo. cit>tv|i>ody Traak Salomon .1 O.ACo.va. Salomon I.ADoCo. I.AIl t londboiy limit i DoC.AI) ( nrllali

. va. 1. All. Hon! it P.W.ACp. DoC'.AD. llarha floodbo-lv J.ADrt'a.vn. MAR. I'ynrhon Salomon I.AIl. (loodbody IVW.ACo. Traak

.. vn. floodbody II.AR. Ilnrhn r.wACo. H.ACo. Ilral? DoCAD

Julj 10 ) July2n Auttui 8

OootibodyHunt*i arlNInMinI'.ff ACn.FlarhaJ.ADoCo.Trial,Salomon,*n.

J.O.ACo.

I ADnCo.TraaVI'ynrhonIl'onUJ.O.ACo.H *n.OaC.AD.floodhod;T, AHH.ACo..p.W.ACo..Salomon II.ARHarhr iH.ACIf'arllaln "ynrhon 'Salomon

A tlRuat 1.1 Annual. 20

Pynchnn I.All W.M),J O Al'o. r.W ACo. II All.Ilrntz, Salomon illoodhodyOoodhody llirhn J.O.ACo.J.ADcCo. If ACo. :TraakI. All. Hon'* iP.WACo.Traak CarlL«lo jPynrhnnDrCAO l*ynrhon Snlomotr.W.ACo. ijoo'lliody iJ.A.DoCoII A R J.ADnOo. Marhf.Ilarhr H AB II ACoH.ACo J.O.ACo ( arll«lnCnrlldr DfC.AP llo-tr.

Tnuik l|,.AH.

PENN NINE TENTHVICTIM OF TIGERS

Four Runs on One Hit in

Eighth Spoil Quakers'StrawHat Game.

Special Despatch to Tub Niw York Herald.

Philadelphia. May 7..With an

eighth Inning rush Princeton defeatedPennsylvania to-day 6 to 3, before oneof the biggest crowds that has yetseen a Straw Hat Day baseball gameon Franklin Field. It was the tenthstraight victory for the Tigers.The Quakers handed the game to

Princeton in one bleak inning, theeighth, when the Jcrseymen scored fourruns on a single hit. After soaringalong tile road to prosperity for seven

innings without allowing any score DougSheffey suddenly lost his bearings in theeighth, and after the Tigers filled thebases with two out, one run was forcedover the plate, and Bill Llewellyn was

called upon. He was also wild andPrinceton put three more over.Off Llewellyn, the Tigers earned two

runs In the ninth when MacPhee, Bergand Ca.pt. Fisher doubled. To equalizethese two tallies Penn culled on pinchhitters in its half of the ninth and gottwo runs, but the damage had beendone in the previous round.Hugh Margetts, Princetons star

pitcher, was found for seven hits. Mar¬getts was in trouble any number oftimes in the early innings but rightedhimself. This was especially true inthe fourth and fifth innings when Penntried the squeeze play, but the Ttgerpitcher outguessed the Quakers andthe men were thrown out at the plateTim score:

PRINCETON. PENN.

M'P'ce,2b ft 2 8

Borg.ss...Fisher,c..McN'a.lf.

o a ?> ab r h o a e

7 0 O'McX'oU'Jb 0 I .j 3 22 1 OIHarvey.cf *» O 0 3 0 01 OOlWirhlU.lb 2 1 0 it 0 00 1 OlM'rdlan.lf a (i 2 I 0 07 0 1 !Mn'ff*v,rf. 4 0 0 .j 0 02 OHMnhfr.c. 3 1 2 t] 3 10 2 OjSul'van,8b 1 0 0 M 1 00 1 OiShiiver.as 3 0 0 1 3 07 0 OfSheffey,p. 1! 0 0 0 r» o1 4 Ojlslew'yn.p 0 0 0 0 1 00 0 0| +MrM'll#»n 1 1 1 0 on;

fMyers. .. 0 0 1 0 00

j Totals,. .82 3 7 27 If.Ratted for Keyes In seventh Inning.

Tltatted for Khriver In ninth Inning.Jllntted for Llewellyn In ninth Inning.

Princeton 0 0 000004 2.firJpnn 0001 0000 2.3Karned runs.Princeton. 4; Penn, 3. Left

on bases.Princeton, 8; Penn, 8. Two basehits.MacPhee, Rerg, Fisher. Three ti| so'¦"s.Mourdlan, McNamara, Myers. Sacri¬fice hit.Onrmnn, Stolen ba«e-RottingLases on halis-Off Sheffey, 4: off Llewel¬lyn. t; off Margetts, 4. Struck out.ByShoffey. 4; by Margetts. 4. Wild pitch.Margetts. Empires.Raetzel and McRride.Time of game.2 houra and ft! minutes.

Colgate 7, Williams 1.Special Despatch to The New York Herald.Williamstown, Mass., May 7.."Will-

lams ntct defeat at the hands of Colgateon the diamond here to-day, the score

being 7 to 1. The I'urple could not hitBlume, the visiting pitcher, who let Itdown with five safe blows.Holmes twirled seven innings for the

home team and then retired In favor ofGregory, who was touched up for fourruns in the eighth. A home run byBlume, the Colgate pitcher, wan one ofthe features. The score :

COLGATE. WILLIAM.'ab r h o a «i ab r h o a e

tihhs.lf.. .1 1 1 0 0 liWard.Sb.. tit 2 2 0Ram's,lb 4 0 1 13 0 <)|Hoyt.2b.4 00 ft 11St'fens.cf 4 00 1 OOlRleh'nd.lb 30 1 0 0 0IUsn>'., /. f*. 1 1 (I O /,|T» I. i A . ..

Herm'n.c. ft 1 1 8 .3 OIRurk.ef... 40 1 .3 10Seh'c'r.ss 412 1 2 1 lO'Brien.ss 4 00 0 1 1

e. i- i . i" i>i nai.oo i u v ti i|

Harrls,3b 42 1 1 2 Ijl-Tmi.c. ... 4 00 7 toKenn'y.rf 100 0 OOC, B'ton.rf 3 00 o 0 0

I.'nard.rf 31 t 1 0 O'MonJo.lf. ,3 0 0 4 0 0

F'ge'!d,2b 1 Oo 2 1 01 Holmes,p. 2 0 | o .3 0

O'f"or,2b .3 0 0 0 0 0 Gregory,p. 000 0 1 0Blum<\p.. 4 1 3 0 4 UlMoIlon.p.. 101 0 0 0

Totals.30 7 10 27 12 3| Totals...32 I ft 27 10 2

Colgate 1 0 J 0 0 0 I 4 0.7Williams 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.1Two base hits.Ward, Hermann, Harris,

Glhbs. Home run.Blume. Hits-. Off Holmes,7 in 7 Innings; off Gregory, .3 in 2 Innings.Rases on balls.Off Holmes, 3; off Gregory,

[1; off Rlumo. 1. Struck out.By Holmes, 4.by Gregory, 1; by Blume. t. Hit withpitched ball.Hermann (by Gregory). Wildpitch.Gregory.

Swarthmore Is Defeated.Swarthmork, ra.. May 7..The Uni¬

versity of North Carolina, nine trimmedSwarthmore, 6 to 4, after staging a

spectacular rally In the eighth inning.Swarthmore led the Southern boys, 4

to 2, at the close of the seventh, but thevisiting team filled the bases on lOarn-shuw and made four runs to make theirtwo point lead. The score:

NORTH CAROLINA SWARTHMORE.r h i> a e! Those

Sweet'n.rf. TO 0 0 0 Wiese,if. 2 1 0 00Sprulll.lb.. 1 10 0 Oj Hoff'n.ss... 0 1 2 01Norrls,3b.. t 1 1 '.Ml! White,2b... to 2 3 0Lew'lyn.p.. 00 0 4 01 Yarnall.rf.. 0 0 0 OoHherley.cf.. 2 1 2 0 0l 'arter.cf. 01 ti 00Lov.e.tf.. ., 0 1 3 0 o Larkln.lh. 00 15 00Morris,c... 12 o 1 0'Ksrey.Sb... 0 2 0 3 0Mi-n'ald.ss. 0 n o t OAVensel.c. 00 0 loMcLean,2b. 0 1 2 2 1 Earnshaw,p II 2 22

-(Clancy.p. 0 0 0 3Totals. .6 7 18 10 RBchnelder.c. 0 0 0 0 0

ITotals 4 0 21 12 4

North Carolina... 0 0 0 0 1 0 ] 4 0 0Swarthmore 20001 0 t 0 0.4Earned runs.Wiese 2. White, Morris, Sher-

ley 2, Rprulll, F. Morris. Earnsbsw. Twobase ii|ts_F. Morris. R. Morris. Threebase hits.Carter, R. Morris. Home runs.Sherley, E«m«!nA. Sacrifice hits.Hoffman

Stolen tmses.White. Sprulll, WieseDouble play- Earnshaw and Carter. Stnekout.Ry Levellyn, t); by Earnsliaw, ft byClancy, 1. Rases on halls.Off Leweilyn 4off Earnshaw, 2. Umpire.Rudolph

Yale Loses at Lacrosse.spiv nl Dcxpat'h to Tiik Nbw Yum; Hwui.n..Syracuse, May 7...Syracuse opened

its league season In lacrosse by de-fenltng Yale, 2 to 1. The first halfwas scoreless, but In the second Herbert,Syracuse defence man, shot the winninggoal. The lineup

Syracuse. \ ale.MarAloney ..Coal. WrightSchmitt Point ShepherdKrobl»«er Cover point... t'lismhertalnLewerjr (Cap.). .First defence... .Woodhousetlerlx-rt Reroml defenr.' KnldulnI .!< t<(ton Third defence. Parsons (Cap.)Hmltlt Centre Kelll.eydwker Third attack Kellerllertenshaw Second attack HoustonCory first attack MeyersI-rtmch Outside home CoillnsFloss Inside home tsincsDuals.Cory. Herbert. James Subs.Yale,

Manning for Shepherd; Hyraruse, Jenkinsfor French. Ileferea.Vleta, Harvard

Hanover Bank Wins.The Hanover National Hank baseball

leani. champions of the Bankers'League, won Its Initial game from theGuaranty Trust team at Wallace Oval.Brooklyn. yesterday by the score of 7to fi- Conlfrey, rattan and Tlarqualldid the twirling for the winners, eachworking three Innings. Harqualt gotInto several bud holes, due to erraticwork In the Infield, but managed to pullthrough a winner, leaving two men on

the bass In the ninth by fanning Halooand forcing Macintosh to pop up. Mac¬intosh diil food work on the mound forGuaranty after relieving Carey In thefifth. The score:

R.H.nlanovei .7 o 2 I 0 ft 0 o x.7 rt r

Oparanty 002 0002 1 1.0 7 CHalt"! |,s.t'onlfrey. I'Sgan. HarqusM andW Blllffe,; Casey, Macintosh and Haloo

Stevens Wins at Lacrosse.In an unusually fast game Btevrns

Tcoli decisively defeated Johns Hopkinsto-dsy In lacrosse hy the score of 6 to 1.lohnp Hopkins was completely out¬classed. and only the excellent work ofBenedict at goal prevented Stevensfrom rolling up a much higher score.

Poor Sort of Home RunHero, This Man Kelly!

RATHER a poor sort of homerun hero, this man Kelly ofthe Giants. He never will be

a Ruth, poor fellow! George saveshis cast) against the day when legswill be slowed up and eyes will notbe so keen, nor swing so timely andpotent. He is a financial sklmper. anickel nurser. If ever there was oneon the Giants. Poor fellow I

Kelly never has been arrested forJoy riding. He doesn't even own anautomobile, if he were handed adrink of hard liquor he probablywould use It for a rubdown. Hewouldn't know what else to dowith It.Long George is quiet, likable, un¬

obtrusive. a hard worker at alltimes, as game as they come, forhow many players would have comethrough the "razzing" which unfairfans handed him early last season?He has Implicit faith in his manager,Kelly has. He obeys orders, neverhas been suspended, never Intendsto be. His lone vice Is a tenorvoice, and he can use it with effect.A poor sort of homo run here, this

man Kelly of the Giants. We fearhe never will be a Ruth. Poorfellow 1

COLUMBIA DEFEATSRUTGERS NINE, 8-7

Two Passes in Eleventh Leadto Setback for Jersey-

men.

Columbia and Rutgers battled forel'-ven innings on South Field yesterdayafternoon before the F.lU" and White putover the run that won by 8 to 7.Thirteen errors and a round dozen hits,

two of which were for extra bases, were

productive of enough excitement to keepthe rooters on their feet.Columbia won in the eleventh when

Price singled to centre after both Smithand Moeschen had walked. Schnaarsdrove home the winning tally. Thescore

COL MRI A. RUTGERS.ab r h o a e ab r h o a e

Sch'rs.lb 11114 0 0|Dot-nan,** ">10 4 12Dr'phy.rf 5 2 2 3 OOIVanO'n.2b -.11 1 0 0Tedf'd,2b 5 00 2 2 t'Flvnn.p... C 02 0 5 1Fr'man.lf 5 10 1 1 OlPlant.cf... 411 2 10f'lark.o... 4 1 0 0 2 01 W'lock,lf. 5 00 2 01Watt,3b.. 5 10 2 3 O'll house.rf 512 1 0 0Smith,cf. .'11 1 2 0 01 J'nson,3b. 5 2 2 3 2 0M'chen.ss 3 10 0 4 11 Durand.lb >1 2 8 0 1I'rlce.p... 401 0 4 1'Winner.c. 5 0 1 0 0 2

Totals. 3B 8 5 33 10 CI Totals..44 7 llV.O 0 7.None oilt when winning run was scored.

Columbia 4 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-8Rutgers 1 4 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0.7Two base hlta.riant. Flynil. Stolen bases

.Johnson. Krhnaars, Clark. Brophy, Ted-ford. Sacrifice lilts.Price, Clark. Sacrificefly.Berlnghouse. Errors, Roman, 2: Tedforii4, Flynn, Wlieelock, Durand. Winner 2,Moeschen, Price. Struck out.By Flynn, 8:off Price. 1. Left on bases.Rutgers, 0:Columbia, 7. 1'mnlre.Connelly. Tlmt ofgome.2 hours and 15 minutes.

C. C. N. Y. Scores VictoryOver St. Franics CollegiansThe College of the City of New York

nine registered f'rsl »hutout v'0,-or>rof the s«tson over St. Francis College

i of Brooklyn at Lewlaohn otadlum >es-terdav The score was b to V.1 Anderson, the C. C. N. Y twlrler waareached for only two hits, both byTwoohy. He did the best stick work ofthe day. getting a triple and a single infour trips to the plate.

<' C N Y. scored In the first ft ame.Kelly the first man up. drew a passand come home on a single by Murrayand an infield hit by Raskin.

Four runs were scored in the seventh.Liittenberg singled to left field, followedbv a one bagger by Anderson. Bothscored when Morgan heaved 1C.1I>-grounder over the catcher's head. Murrav singled, scoring Kelly, and camehome on a double to the right field fence

^St^Frarwis ph.yed poor boll, beingcharged with eleven errors. On ytwenty-nine batters faced Anderson inthe nine innings. The score

c c N T. I ST. FRANCIS.Wellvhb *V"0 0 4 0|Twoohy.lfa4 0 2 8 OJKelly.an. .i - v

Kfl ;;b 3 n ft 4 24

Totals. .34 ft 7H27 17 VT(jtR|.. .27 0 8 24 11 IP

nnoooooo 0."at. Francis .....

, o 0 0 1 0 4 0 r-6'

. /. <. v v 3 First baseEarned runs-4 . n.'st Francis. 1

?n"nRa»kin " rinses"!.'hYlla^-Off Anderson.2i

" in'l inning Hit bv pitcher.By Anderson.T mora"" Wild pitch Morgan. Passedki.l.-0"irkn Hlt-W A^;rp7re.ifo°n" "ndBarry. 'Time of hours and 5 mtn-utew.

Collegians Rap McGrath andArmy Loses to C. U. Nine

special Despatch t» Tits Nrw YoaK HMAt.o.Wkht Point. May 7..Cathollc Uni-

ver-itv beat the Army at baseball to-7 to 4 McGrath. the veteran Army

pitcher, went along well until theseventh, when the collegians t.pH .smart!v. Wllhide's bad peg of D"na,f't *

ground hit also figured In the two tslltwhich broke the tie. Again in the eighththe visitors hit cleanly and. aidedI byr an..rror gathered two more In the fifththe Army started a rally which came togrief through smart fielding. Drkieollspearing with his left hand Bashershard lilt far the fielding feature of thegame. The score:

ARMY 1 CATHOLIC UNTV.ah r 11 n a Pi r n o R "

Smvlbe if < " o 1 0 O Oenault.M S 2 1 0 ; 1rl t i ft ft *1 0 0 4 111a. * 1f.?v"nn rl 4 0 1 0 oo'vln.lf ... *00 0 onSis : 1 s ir«ssc-. $ '

ssiLnsi isaKs&siilsim .Mc «00 0 0 0 bvmh.rf. 4 1 2 0 00MTOr'th.p 4 0 8 0 1 IttollarO.P 3 1"

VAZ» ?n0°O °0 jjf Totals .M 7 12 27 14 5White 1 1 0 0 0 0tl,»nc>r. 1 0 0 0 0 0|8mith... 1 o0 OQQ..Batted*or Pmytha In the ninth Inning.Ratted for French in the nintht Ratted for Stevenson In the ninth InningI Retted for WllUlde In the ninth Inning

020100001 0.4i'athollc TJnlver.. 008000 22 01 a..

V t <> «<krrlflr<* fly.Drtllnrd. Tv;o'g'tev^nson. rvnaulu Lynch. Wore*. Hit.I -f MrOtatb i" in * Innings: off Brag'.*""i i inr t ia Rases on halls.Off Pollard,i %. ruck out-. McGrath. 7.; by p. Hardto Hit by pitched ball.Bv MeOrath, I1?; iJ.jIhi Wild pitch.Bollard. 1-eft onKtmr »; <'lll»"c ttnlverally, 7 Vm-|7r"».Marshall and Tra.fr Tim. of game-C "

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REGAINS AMATEURTITLE AT TRAPS

0. S. McCarthy of PhiladelphiaWins Event With Recced

Score.

U. S. McCarthy of Philadelphia won

the sixteenth annual amateur chajupion-f-hip of America at clay birds over theTravers Island traps of the New Vo*kAthletic Club yesterday. The QuakerCity expert led a field that numbers.!155 and which Included the Olympicchampion, the winner of the last grandAmerican handicap and many Statechampions, with a score of 198 out of a

possible 200 targets. It was the bestFcore registered in the shoot since itfirst was established in 1905.

It was the third time that McCarthyhas won the championship. He took itfirst in 1907, and successfully defendedhl« crown In the following year, in 1910there was no competition, and in thefollowing year he dropped the title to

Harry Kalder, a. young Philadelphiashot, who was his pupil. No other gun¬ner has been able to win the crown more*han once, with the exception of C. HNeweomb, who twice captured the cov-

eted prize.J. R, Bonner of the New York Athleti .

Club, although a comparative novice at

the trftps, won second prize with a cardof 195. Then came B. S. Donnelley,winner of the preliminary shoot on Fri¬day ; H. W. Voorhles, the atar gunnerof Brooklyn ; CJ. Osborn of the BostonAthletic Association, and R L. Spotte o'the New York Athletic Club. All tiedwith 194 out of a possible 200 targets.The winner in class B was <1. H. Martinand In class C the prize went to H G.Vogol. G. H. McCarthy also was thewinner of the long run prize,

j The scores:CHAMPIONSHIP SHOOT.20O TABORTS

1st 2<1Name. MT H*V Total

G. S. McCarthy 99 99 IPSJ. II. Bonner 98 97 19".B. 8. Donnelley 90 98 191H. W. Vnprliles 9(i 99 194G. Osborn 98 96 194R. L Spotts 9.9 96 191J. Clarke. Jr 96 97 IX:F E. Wntkins 97 94 18.7C. H. Neweomb 96 97 19::D. I. Bradley 9(1 97 19.".J. Thomson 97 95 192(1. H. Martin 9(1 90 19:E. A. Staples 9(1 9(1 19.!T. H. Lewis 9tl 96 192W. H. Lurkett 91 99 19.Fred Blum 99 91 19Mayor Reed 97 94 19!J. H. Finch 92 98 191

I. O. Allyn 9ti 95 191I). Anderson 94 97 191

" 94 97 191P. AndersonSpeer "5Cooper

q. ra> 191H. Davis q2 ,,o moH. Vance... ;lt jppF. Sllkworthippi. C Gueiither '2 .'

190V. L. Ivans '

,. L IvansOther scores: A II. Trumbull. 163, L. b".age, 183; E. A. Guentlwr, 172. J. IIrndrkksen, 191; L. F. Wing. 180 R. Sliair, 171: E. Wlliiken, 182; J H Want ing."5; J. B. Sousa, 152; W G Alien. ISO.t. It. Ileiehanty, liki H. L. Gillespie. 18.2;W. Blake. 175. K. Von I-eng-rhe, 175. W -

raJihm. 168; Dr. Barry, 177; 1". boliauffler.14; H. H. Shannon, 170: E. I,. Klotz. 171.1. S. Simile, lflh R. H. Frump1, 405; L. BIndlo, 184; W. Gross. 179; S. G. FrancDco.M. E. I'. Wright, 170. R. 1). MuCann, 171.W. Welstencroft. 181, C. L King. 181.B. Stephenson, 181 G. .1. Corbett. 182;

V. W. Beabody, 179; A. B. Palmer, 185;. L. Englcrt, 185; E. E. Gardiner. 185,1. B. Olln. 185; J. G. I. Dey. 185; .1. B,took, 420; D. A. Barclay. 184 B. 11. Dore-nus. 185; S. M. Hodklnson. 1(12; Mrs. Liv-ligston, 118; G. Pushec. 165; J. A. Snow,I7C; L. S. Adams. 104 W. Sltnonson. 168,H Munele, 160 W Beers. 173; R. Geratell.183; W. A. Footer. 170, W. H. Mathews.181; B. Englcr. 181. H. Klockner. Bit). R. 11.Sloan, 179; G. S. McCutoheon, 185.

II. E. Eld red, 174; II. Kell, 175; R P.Smith. 182; J. Nlda, 179; C. A. Brown. 174.F. Ham, Jr.. 183; N. Web, 1.57. H. VKnights, 180; A. A. Knights, 166; A J.Knlglita, 182; J. A Traver.s. 175; H. J.Thlelman. 189; I>. I Braddock. 189: J. F.Bets 3d. 188; H. F. L. Funke. 198; G.Severs. 198. D. Wadsworth, 188; F. A. Sle-bert, W7. H. <!. Vogel, 187; A. E. At.herton,187. B. 1. William", 188; M MrVoy, Jr..18(1; H. B Knight. 1>9( H. E. DW'kerman.186, Ted Morse. 188; J. F. A Phillips. Id;TV. 11. Wolstencroft, 188; .1. II. Fountain,180, A. E Rannev. 189. T. H. Lawrence,187; F A. Baker, lsoC. Waldron. 18U; E Doerkln. 189; F. 1..

Sldithotham. 187. W. H Evans. 171. It. It..Debaeher. 10.8, [>. F Mi Mahon. 182 W IIDennis, 179. 1- A. Herlng. Jr.. 105: C. E.Bonner, 184. J. F. Bonner, 149; A. L. Burns,188, O. C. Grinnell, 185. K. O. F. Gratiaio.172: J. S Lewis. 189; 1,. Dlk-. 173; A. EVogllt, 178; G. M Heroe\. 100. J. 11. Den.182 E. 11 Woodruff. 187; W. O'Brien. 182;B. Von Boeekman. 180; J-'. Hall, lei; 14.Guggenheim. 109; G. TV. Derrick, 150. G.Gilchrist. 157 J. I. D. Brl'tol. 174 H. Cui-tIs. 180; T. J. McCahill, 187.R. F. Rice. 180; J B. Donovan. 179; W. B.

Ogden. 185 J. TV. Tlnunnns, 100, K. 1,.Salomon. 180 L. G. Salomon. 145; E. M.L ask. 109; G. Connelly. 105. F. W. Finch,168; A. D. Walk. I, 171 J. A. Silbennan.1.T3; C. A James, 179. F. fi Hyatt, 173.

Tome Golfers Win.Trkston. N. J.. May 7..Tome de¬

feated Lawrenceville at golf this after¬noon. fi to 3. The visitors won three ofthe four matches played, l-awrencevlllsretaliated by defeating Tome In tennis,five single and two double matches w. 14

played, all of which were won by thehome tenni

Illinois Nine Victorious.1'nnANA, III., May 7..Overcoming Oho

State's four run lead, the University ofIllinois made five runs on four singlesand an error and won a Western Con¬ference baseball game by a final scoreof 7 to 4 The score:

^ m. m. u.\Hindis 0 0 1 0 5 0 6 1ihlo O 2 2 O 0 0 0 o 0.4 a :.Batteries.(Barnes, Jackson and Daugiiei:y"U»k, Cotter and Huffman.

iV. Raub, Jr., Has Top Score.Blainfikld. N. J.. May 7..William

(latib. Jr., with s score of 94. won th*hlrd of a «erle.s of twelve registered trap

¦hooting events at the Arrow Head Rpdind Gun Club here to-day Otto Langwas second, with a soore of 93.

Wja

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