{ title: 'Geneva daily times. (Geneva, N.Y.) 1911-1955, June 21, 1920, Page 3, Image 3', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074668/1920-06-21/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074668/1920-06-21/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074668/1920-06-21/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074668/1920-06-21/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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*>w and all the^ as attractive a as it did with int your house itify it Bath you use . LOWED\ PATHE NEWS \tite Hard Fought <&rie .to Bergen by a '£\-~ of 5 to 2 •I r H(W would this 40 as a Movie SC f^°l (IB-Geneva. mgh's dressing S f befoie the game),; Coach: .'Top ., ^Iflers must stop those bounding I ?£: You gotta! Tou're death <>n fly t'Sfrw Veak oa grpwfer^tc£'etc. ; 'ft.-*--- Bergen diamondV Third: inn- r There Is a Bergen man \on second •* m,Arti. filler hits a pop fly to i-SflPld The Geneva rooters xo S2M with joy. Brettfteld just to\ show Mm \e done once, K-OMW gcores, « Uf'ene 3. Same place. -Fourth Inn- >, .There are Bergen men on second £5\ third. Two out Third man hits fflVto Red Rogers. The Geneva root- Itrs wild with joy. Sogers Just to show I » In be done twice drops the ball I ''J!,., scores t-wfce. Glooms and 'IS Many of them, and ; r mix a llttle tragedy* in with • IhA cemedv witness the Sixth, innllng f'SV \Geneva at bat, tw&*-on bases, S9 UPT Jones fans! or the eighth!.! J choked full, Beals up. B.eals Or the ninth! 1 [Two men- drops the ball. Glooms and curses. 10 THE simm mm Ten Eyck-Coached Crew, Piloted by Boil-AffHcted R4mmi t Jains Gaff Into Cornell Blades in Gruelling Fini»b^- Ithaca Oarsmen Win Frchman «nd Junior Race* JS S^SlaSrS 4 ^' 8 *l° ranee ' f«w\u P .slightly on the Ithacans-who* ever cayuga lake on the dog-flghting, however, were retaining the lead, neart-bjeaking, bistory-mak|ng finish' A** the ..two boats passed the last or. the first intercollegiate regatta ever 1 Quarter mile mark, Stroke Rammi and <W.K*I.-I JL a-—*** *^fe«in.a, over IS? tt J e J e r' w . on by the -§wacuse Var- r sity eight, stroked to victory over .S or »ell by the .indomitable August •SammJu. the demigod of the day. Cornell had carried the two earlier races of the program and promised to sweep the lake, but its new broom,, called the heavy varsity,\ cracked in the sweeping. » Ithaca, June 21—With more re- serve power in the shell than Cornell could produce, Syracuse swept to the front in the Varsity race of Saturday's regatta and defeated the Ithacans by a length, with Columbia and Pennsyl- vania trailing four lengths in the reay. The time was much slower than in eitherrthe Freshmen or Junlolr Var- sity race. Cornell won the freshmen and Junior Varsity race in easy style, tak- ing the former by four arid a half * ^Harding up. Harding .pops up! J lengths and the junior event by two 1 AM the moral is \when you, brag If .bout jour outfield touch on Wood l%ir times and don't count your runs liiriore they are on the score hoard\ I? Bergen by such comedy and' tragedy li»'tf outlined above as enacted by Dean Pxewell and Co. who lately made such Hi hit with \Fl-Fi (now to be spelt JiAHsi-JiLilL woa its,...'twenty-fifth K^aTOcmivc-T-\^ame^^l»aSg^-~7Be«rf Iftfjjoluteiy undefeated for two Ivaars and- . claiming with no J|*So one disputing the title Of I- jjjgjj .fiohool -Champions of Western i New fork The scotfe was 6-2.; Previ- ftrtSJirtn-ey'TiaT beaten Geneva High tW • \Wept Jiigh - 12-0 East *Hlgh 10-O etc etc. And the ,8i»ctators (and by the way Bergen had a bigger crowd out with one twen- •iKth tlft population than Geneva has) I CM and all agseed that it was the- \tot fought battle they had seen in j .two years. Certainly the game was I;\sot lost till the last ball had been i-pitched, It was cram full of the old ight and GenevA played a fine game 'outside of the two costly and unex- 1 .jactcd fizzles by Breitfteld and Rogers, 1 and the unusual weakness of Geneva's i 'batting at the right time It was the bejt game of Geneva's season being. 'fought out well and fairly all through. .Bergen is to be congratulated on a ' splendid team. The boys there have J-mitde the team what i t is by hard work agd without the help of a regular coach. They all agrefed that Geneva had gH t-n thf m the hardest run for their immty. Allen JXJlo. .pitched for •Bergen only all^% In'fTiWO \clean hits .ani striking out twelve men confessed 'Ihjtt he was absolutely all in at the ': erfd that his arm was ready for the asfe-heap. He pitched wonderful bail ; and got himself out of several\ bad ' places. As did Red Benedict when. on his own errors he allowed Bergen mftt on sttoiid and third in tp.6. first Jnatowith none done and'help them *TOmt score and doing equally heroic •wwk lafer m the game Klube who came into the team late in the season ; \pttyed errorU ss ball getting 1 put out and 2 assists t'ertainly the team play- •dagame to be proud of all through and while there i s natural disappoint- ment over the result there is great . Wlstactlon in the heady game that ittB plajtd In all the tight places the teCm took th«'lr time, held their heads and playe,i bko veterans. The game: GENEVA. AB. R. H. P.O. A. E. lenjgths. But it was in the big race of the day that the great crowd,—jammed along the shore, saw the Cornellians bow to a spurt by the Syracusans. in the last quarter of a mile after the Ithacans had led all ihe way down the course. —Syracuse.had-p]£nty_of reserve pow- •tff-tOV--th^\nTaaT-sTffuH;'^nn6\d6rneir was unable to meet the test. Courtney's light crew, which was shifted from the Varsity to the Junior Varsity fpr today's regatta, rowea -a beautiful -race, never being headed, and the Cornell Freshmen also held the lead the entire two miles. Weather conditions were ideal for •the regatta. There was scarcely -a breeze at 6 o'clock, the time set for the races, but they were heloTtop until after 7 o'clock. , ^ _„, . Froth Race * The first race, the Freshman event, got started at a quarter after the hour. In this race Syfacusl toolTthV lead for' the first few .hundred yards. Columbia was rowing a 38 stroke, while the other crews were rowing U 40. At the half mile the. crews „bad settlfid down to about a 36 and at \this point Cornell was. leading by ha» * length. At the mile the Ithacanslnad increased it to a length atfd a 'Ball rowing a 34 stroke. Prom then^,,6p, the lead was gradually, increased to the finish. Syraouse was second with Pennsylvania two lengths behind^he OrsCnge, and the* Colunibfa Ixeshman eight lengths behind the.Ithacans^w » Junior Event The Junior Varsity race was very near a duplicate of-the-Freshman race; except that the Cornellians were only two lengths ahead as the line 'was crossed. All the crews held relatively Harding, lb .. •Breitfietd. If. . Newell, 3b Jones, c,\ Rogers, rf. Keebler, 2b ... [™J^luhe...ss,.* Benedict p. .., Van Tuyle, rf Btolp 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 -0 0 0 H. 0 0 0 0' 1 0 1 •0 0 0 0 his men responded-to a call for a spurt with .all kinds of reserve power, while the Cprnellians were unable to make the supreme effort. Rowing experts Saturday were dis- cussing the question of why Coaph Courtney did not use his proved light crew in the big race, but the races are a past Btory and though this unproved eight rowed a good race, it failed to produce the jtower that had been ap- parent in'the light eight. The official times: Freshman race—Cornell,- 10 min- utes 45 2-5 seconds; Syracuse, 11 min- utes 3 i 4-6 seconds; Pennsylvania, 11 minutes 10 3-5 seconds; Columbia, 11 minutes IB 4-5 seconds. Junior Varsity — Cornell 10 min- utes 45 3-5 seconds; Syracuse, 10 minutes, 53 3-5 seconds; Pennsyl- vania, 11 minutes, 14\ 4-5 seconds; Columbia, 11 minutes 17 4-5 seconds. Varsity—Syracuse, II minutes 2 3-5 se'coiids; Cornell, 11 minutes, 8 1-5 seconds; Columbia, 11 minutes, 21 1-5 seconds; Pennsylvania, 11 minutfs 30 seconds. • «•• + +* + * + **+* + •AMERICAN L; , .. . . . . , two more that counted in the fifth the same positions as in the first bat^ ana tom . that aid not ln the Blxth . 7 0 0 10 0 0 6 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 1 1 2 3 0 0 •Batted fui Klube in the ninth BERGEN \\' r AB. R. H. P.O. A. tie. The Big Race The sun had neared the horizon as the Varsity crews drew up to«*th* starting point. It was setting orange, and Syracuse adherents\ took this! a* a favorable sign. _ Though a much slower race than the others, it was much closer and offered more thrills-.- As the crews got away,. Cornell took the lead but was splashing'badly ana this continued all the way down the course. At the mile there was a half a length between the Cornellians and Syracuse, with Columbia- and penn trailing In the order named. At the mile and a half, Syracuse far/. B»w .,..,. Bous.el ...; IBllcr AJ]en •lOughry ... fcwr «ewes Hdrwell . feille ....\ ' Summary: \Stolen Uasos-^GealsT Keebler, Hard- fr-Rogers. Hits oft Benedict 5, off Al- unJ- Slru< ' k out bjuBenedict 7, by Sffi i • 1:;lso s on balls—Benedict 2, wi«i 6. rmpires Hendrick, Mans- •Time 1J45. 0100*01000—2 •••-.• 00120020X—5 4 e 4 5 -4 4 4 1 3 •3 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 'it 4 7 4 0 12 0. 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 5 3 0 0 0 0 0 • + ••*+•••.•*•*•>* + •• * HOW THEY STAND + • + * E + ™.„j§V, 4++ + 4* + + *++<t.** + + 4. St Louis, Mo., June 21—Bodie's home run in the second, with Babe Ruth on first gave the Yankees a 4 -to 3 victory over the Browns yesterday. Twenty-seven thousand fans saw Ruth passed twice and single to right once. Hannah's' double helped New Tork to two more runs In the sixth inning, and the Browns solved Quinn's offer- ings for three runs in the eighth. New Tork ..02.0 00200 0—4 8 0 St. Louis ....00000003 0—4 12 2 Qulnn and Hannah; Shocker, .Davis and Severeid.. Summaries. • \ Tiger Hurlers Sloughed. Detroit, June 21—Even the he^avy downpour which flooded Navin Field after five and a half innings had been played could not save the Tigers from a severe trouncing at the hands of Clark Griffith's Nationals, who won on the bit, 9 to 4, and had four more runs over in their half of the sixth, which did not count because the inning could not be finished. Leonard, Oldham and Okrie were the victims of the Washington club's at- tack. Leonard allowed the first —two runs and turned his ankle and was forced to retire. Oldham was found for five in the third and Okrie. yielded weneva •Wgen l° M « TolLead — Team Next Season Annual Banquet of 'T«am Will Be. \eid on Wednesday Evertinfl. - J~ter the Bergen game Jones the •taJJ?\* 0 \ 1 etcher Wag unanimously Sol *-° cap ^ ,n of * ne iai2t fi 1 *?* INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE, Y«iterday's Reiult*. Reading 15, Rochester 9. Akron 14, Syracuse 9 (first * game), Akron 15, Syracuse A, - *• • Jersey City .... 23 38 .411 + + game), Jersey City 5, Buffalo 4. *\ + Toronto-3, Baltimore 4. } 4 ~ Games Toiday • 4 Rochester at Jersey City. * 4 Buffalo at Reading. • 4 Akron at Baltimore. ' 4 4 Standing of the Clubs 4- 4 Won Lost P. C. 4 4 Buffalo 37 18 .673* 4 Baltimore ..... 35 ,/20 .636.4, 4 Toronto 36 22 .6214 4 Akron 31 22 .6.85 44 4 Reading 26 30 .464* Jersey City 23 33 .411 * 4 Rochester 21 37 .362 * s 4 Syracuse H « .255 4 tahTti, d nat ural. Jones has not th7n,„ aFfec tlon of the men being to ~l ost , Popular man oh the team, •eWJa so tnelr respect as a player, Mtfi£?i exe ?te»fc catcher and batter Wen«.. n t B n, haa 4 eood deal of ex- toe arm J the B ame - Jone s nerved in feadv * y durln £ the war and is now Khool T. hl8 . sophomore year at large ;,,J, here ^^ : be v 'afr unusually S \ ™ be « of the ° ld meft available both h« i' , Bei »edict and Rowley will ttod ,L bao V° P Jt ch and therl is a Wtchel %F£ of Cayward who nae ~m ew/r L h ^ season^ for Canandai- Ba^ i s Geneva Hltfh. fcr lit I! w111 b e a candidate again WovetlVS* witH tne Phenomenat ^We\'k& a *r\*> b^.his own. »ier. Klube,- will be out for infield NATIONAL LEAGUE Yesterday's Results. New' \Sork 8, Pittsburg 0. Chicago 4, Brooklyn 2. Game's Today Pittsburg at Brooklyn, Cincinnati at Philadelphia. Chicago at New Tork. St Louis at Boston. ; Standing of the Clubs |, Won Lost 4 Cincinnati 30 21 4 Brooklyn 2? . H 4 Chicago 29 25 4 St Louis 30 26 4 Pittsburg 24 24 4 Boston 21 26 4 New Tork 23 .31 •^Philadelphia ... 22 31 * AMERICAN LEAGUE. Yesterday's Results. New Tork 4, St. Louis 3. Boston 10, Cleveland 9. Washington 9, Detroit 4. Chicago 7, Philadelphia 5. • Games Today. New Tork at St. Louis. Boston at Cleveland. Philadelphia at Chicago. Washington at Detroit. Standing of tho Uubs !g, Won Lost *. 4 4= 4 4 4 4 * 4 4 p.e, •> .688.4 .5**9* .537* .636 * .500* .417* Roth and Rice hit home runs. Shan hon and Milan made triples, while Judge, Rath and Veach accounted for doubles. Detroit got two runs off Shaw in the first, one in the third and another in the fifth, Washington 2 0 5 0 2—9 11 1 Detroit 2 0 10 1—4 9 2 Called—Rain. Shaw and Gharrlty; Leonard, Old- ham; Okrie and Stanage. '., • -^.— Indians*Lose Long Game. Cleveland, June -21—In a game that lasted more than fhree hours, Boston defeated Cleveland yesterday, 10 to 9. It was a free hitting contest, with Boston driving Bagby and Myers from the box under a bombardment of eigh- teen hits and Cleveland making fif- teen hits and sending Pennock and Karr to keep Bagby and Myers com- pany, Karr not only stopped Cleveland for four innings, but made two clean hits and drew a pass, scoring three runs. The game was started late because of a rain which drizzled throughout the afternoon. Score; . Boston 10003231 0—10 18 3 Cleveland . .10500003 0— 9 15 0 Batteries—Jennock, JCarr, Russell and Walters; Bagby. Myers, Morton and Nunamaker, O'Neill.- —«T . -V Macks Field Miserably. Chicago, June 21--Southpaws are born lucky. Claude 'Williams proved as much yesterday. The left-handed ace of the White Sox staff hjgaved to the Mackmen in the first of the series and was frisked for fourteen safe clouts, yet won with ease. The score was 7 to 5. It was one of those games entirely devoid of thrills. The day was cold, the crowd mighty slim, and the brand of baseball was too ordinary to arouse as much as a faint cheer. Only the fact that the Athletics reared up in the ninth_and acted as though they meant to tle^Ehe \score sent the bugs home satisfied tii&t they hadn't squan dered some good coin. The principal reason for the wheezy exhibition was some miserable defensive work\ by the Mackmen. Most of this was per- the second sackei 1 . movi© $» i WATCHED «*uy« • •• • IN, A movie show* RIDE JHE samo plu& , • •*• NINE THOUSAND mileO* • • • AND FIRE his BiXdhooteiv ALL AFTERNOON. WITHOUT RELOADING, AND. THEN, in a close-up. HE ROLLED a emoko, WITH JUST una hand, AND I tried lt'myeelf, FIRST WITH one hand. THEN WITH toro, THEN WITH w mouth, AND THE forty-thlrd. trial, STAYED PUT. loos paoutiu FOR ME to light it, • • • AND I thought I had It. AND THEN it spilled, • • « LIKE A Roman candle, • • • AND BURNED my. clothes, -~ AND EVERYTHING, • •' • SO I'M convinced, I'LL NEVER get. THAT ACTOR'S Job, • • • AND I know now. • • • .' - — ' THAT, THE only thing* • • • I CAN roll with one hand. ARE ROLLICKING dominoes, AND I'M going to stick,' , • • • 1 TO MY regular smoke** f 1 FOR THEY satisfy. • • • ;'** 1? VER see a \close-np\ of roaJ cigarette- 1 XJ contentment? Get next to any Ches- terfield smoker, and watch him register •'•they satutfy!\ It's all in the blend of those choice Turkish and Domestic tobac- cos—and. that's a secret thatlnqbodj » can imitate. •^i GENEVA WINS FAST GAME Defeat Rochester Aggrega- tion at Gutvin Park Yes- terday Afternoon The Chamber of Commerce baseball team put up a brand of ball yesterday that kept the fans on edge throughout the ehtire nine innings and won from the Hawk Eye team of Rochester by a 4 to 2 score. Fryer was on the firing line for* the locals and allowed the visitors but five scattered hits not one being for an extra base, and compelled ten of them to whiff the air. Marcelli who worked for the visitors pitched good ball ex- cept ln the fourth inning when he was found for four hits. Visner first man up doubled and attempted to score on Petersen single but was caught at the plate, Duff us then droxeLjme..to deep left to score' Peterson and landed on third before the ball had been re- turned. Laing hit to right for two bases and Duffus scored. Laing scored on Millspaugh poor throw to catch him at third. Geneva scored their otlt= ed tally i n the fifth When \BUI\ Mc- Donald hit for three bases and scored on Topels grounder to Prentiss. Roch- ester scored their first run in the third \•hen with two out and Lavlne on first illspaugh hit to center Peterson was petrated by Dykes, He could have fielded better had be ( gsiow in fielding the ball and made a -r^, ,—-*.^ *...^ poor yg-jyjj! t 0 visner to catch Lavine * * * * * * * * • * * * * worn boxing gloves. He booted two easy grounders and made a wild throw on another play, two of the blunders aiding the Sox scoring. Thomas, the ,426 •; third sacker, also made the run get- ,415 * ting a bit easy for the home talent. Score; • • Philadelphia. .0110 0010 2—5 14 i Chicago .... 0' * 4 0 0 0 1 0 *—7 10 1 Batteries—Perry, Keefe and Per- kins; Williams and Schalk. * Cleveland . ,?. H1 sn ifl the fall will contend for * Chicago C1^_ M S ^elch will* all he out f |[ a8 £ u g°V JL Places on the team. *«•»www !?»*»*'•<*. the baseball * getroit tCwS! «V e , held » n Wednesday of * £hfladelphia will weeit at l-pi'tii. • •444 * I V. C. * .656* 2 J ¥*•* ***** •'•* 36 38 31 28 26 27 19 16 19 21 15 24 2« 28 86 42 Seneca FalJ.s Wins. Seneca Fails, June 21—The Douglas Giants of Rochester lost to the locals here yesterday In a fast game by a score of 6 to 3. The game was tied up •to the \eighth when the local team pushed across one run and sewed it up in the next with two more. r I.—-—•— '- *- Macedon Defeats Lyons. Macedon, June 2Ir T <Lyons was easy for Macedon here yesterday, the locals winning by a score of 11 t o 6, HaU had the game well in hand at all stage*, while Gatehell who hurled for Lyons was touched up freely. Nearly BOO fans •KltV-\.* foa am*. ' • ' enabeling him to score. Kennedy scorel their final tally-in the seventh •HOTtefe Tp CREDITORS. Pursuant to an~6rder of the Surrogate's Court of the County of Ontario, notice is hereby given to all persons having claims against Michael J. Keilty, late of the City of Geneva, Ontario County, State of New Tork, deceased, to present the same with the vouchers thereof, to the undersigned executor at No. 60, Sen- eca street* • Geneva, N. T., on or before the tenth day of September, 1920. ,W. SMITH O'BRIEN, » . Executor. Dated, March 8, 1920. . McDonald put up a strong game in right for the locals yesterday accept- ing two hard chances in the field and got to Marcelli for a trfpple in the fifth. Lineup and summary. Hawk Eyes, AB R A PO A B Kennedy, If. 4 1 0 2 0 0 Prentis, 2b 2 0 1 2 3 0 La Vine, of.-*-,. 5 Millsapugh r c. .. 4 Philips, 3b,,, ,' T . 3 Ingelby, ss. .. Preleskie, lb. Bohm, rf. ,.,. Marcelli, p. ., , 4 , 4 3 PO 2 2 0 6 1 1 10 2 0 Totals 33 2 5 24 13 Chamber of Commerce *• AB R H PO 4 A 0 1 McDonald, rf. ~ 4 1 1 2 Topel, lb 3 0 0 8 Visner, 3b 4 0' 2 0 Peterson, at. ... i 1 2 2 1 Duffus, ss. ,. .. 2 1 1 1 3 Laing, If 4 1 1 0 0 Sparrow, 2b. ... 2 0 0 1 1 Koopman, c. ... 2 0 0 13 2 Fryer, p. 2 0 O 0-5 Totals 27 ~l 1 27 13 3 Score by innings: Hawk Eye 09100010 0—2 C. of C 00081000 *—4 Two base hits, Visner, Laing; three base hits, McDonald, Duffus; stolen base, Peterson; sacrifice hita, Koop- man, Topel; base on balls of Fryer B; off Marcelli 4; struck out by. Fryer 10, by Marcelli 6; hit by Pitched ball by Fryer (Kennedy;) passed ball, Mills- paugh; Umpire Mc'Cormlck, time 1:50. 44*444 444**4 44** • INTERNAT'i. LEAGUE J 4444*4*4444444**4 Reading, Pa., June 21—Beading led in extra base hits in a great swatfest with Rochester here yesterday and took the last game of the series from the Colts, 15-9. Konnick sent out two more home run wallops and brought his record to that of Frank Brower who had been leading the Interna- tional League with ten. . Rochester 05000002 2— 9 Reading * 2034O41L*—15 Batteries—Burfeind and Mannihg, Bareiss ana Konhlck. * Stars Loose ty)o. -.. Syracuse, June 21-r-Akroh collected Sff'runs .and- 32 hits front Syracuse in yesterday's double-header and set the Star* off tftetr-JCeet. talcing both ends of.the twin-bill. The scores were %K to S and .15 -*»'«*, \Whfl« •*•* \ooais we^re being annihiltttea the tost three of •tfielr players, Pitcher Harscher, 1 Catcher Niebergall and Infieldcr Carl- Strom, all dropping out of the en • NOTICE TO CREDITORS. *•' . Pursuant to an order <jf the Surrogate's Court of the,Couftty of Ontario, notice is herelty given/to all persona having claims, against JamSs McLarens latet of the City of Geneva, OntaHo Couttty, State of New Toilff deceased, to •present tfiet same with- the Vouchers thereof, to tae uhderilghed, executrix of the estate of said deceased, at the law office of C. Wi Bice. 4* Seneca street, Geneva, N, •%. on or before th# tenth das' Of November, 1920. 'i-*-.— .n j Mnn < M ~ -,.* ANNIE 3MHTCHBLL McLARRN, «tro«n> *1» dropping out Bxeeutrk. I counter* because of injuriesv JM»K V*t I s . l»% Cobfc Aawn shorhstoa^ m««sjc«a t» / make, four errors in the first tussle, but in that game he made a four-bag- ger and he also turned the trick ln the second scrap, when his fielding was perfect. Syracuse last night released Pitch- er Arthur Johnson. During his two- day career with the Stars, pitching to twenty barters, he walked ten and hit one. The scoros: First Game. Akron,, 712020101—14 Syracuse v- 01 Cf3 03101— 9 Batteries—Finlan_and Walker, Enz- man and Mi den. ^ \\\ Second Game. Akron , 6010 430 01—15 Syracuse 00200002 0—4 Batteries—Moseley and Smith, John- Bisons Lose Twice. Jersey City, June 21—Jersey City grabbed both games of yesterday's header with Buffalo by scores of 6 to 2 and 5 to 4. The Skeeters butbatted their rivals in each, game finding Thomas in the opening session for 11 hits and getting the range of Gord- Inier's curves • in the wind up for ton. Ferguson held Buffalo to six blows in the first and Gill let them down with seven in the finish. Scores: First Game, — Buffalo 10010000 0—2 Jersey City ,10040010 x—6 . Batteries—Thomas and Bengough, Ferguson and Freltag Second Game. Buffalo :. 10020001 0—4 Jersey 1 City 00100002 2—5 Batteries—Gill and Vederbk, Gard- ner and Bruggy.- _. Leafs Turn Tables. ° * Baltimore, June 21—Toronto grabbed the last of the series from BaTtimore yesterday afternoon, 3-2. Sullivan's wildness was his. undoing as usual Letter's home run In the fourth round featured. 1 The .score: »Baltimore 00010010 0—2 Toronto 01001000 1—3 Batteries—Sullivan and Bgan and Sandberg. ***************4* • NATIONAL LEAGUE J 444******4**4*444 New Tork, June -21—The Giants reared like a mustang in at tantrum and overthrew the Pirates before 23, 000 fans yesterday afternoon. Score was 8 to 6. Phil Douglas was in mel low\ form and was effective in the pinches.. He restricted-the foe to six hits. Carlson was soft prey for the Giants in the first inning, when New Tork *et off a blast that netted' five runs. Hamilton, who sifeaeeded him, fared somewhat better. The Giants appeared With Eddie .Sicking at sec ond base and Larry Doyle on the bench, Doyle and McGraw had a talk. ' i a tit* club-house, atte* yesterday's VULCANIZING We Fix Your Tires To Last Bring or send them in. All work absolutely guaranteed B. G. Vanderhoof 19 E. Castle St., Geneva, N. Y. Phme 2117 KWOOSJKSOSSCfcSOC CSS30S3S3S3KX3630SS30C City TruckOne Pc O'Malley & Son, • Props. Teams rented by day, week for any kind of hauling. Special facilities for handl- ing coal, stone, sand,, etc., from cars. Office N.Y.C. Fj*ight Hc-trae oocxxssxsxsoas ac^qoMMaoCT^ataM game and it was agreed the, veteran i\ should be replaced at least for the | time being. Doyle ha's been a weak!) link In the infield however,. aM. the J move was' made to* strengthen both the attack and defense.* -Kelly got a triple and single.in three official trips and Earl Smith 'got* a'double aifd single in three chances.. Score 1 Pittsburg 00 0 000 000—0 6 B New York .... 5020000 1 •—8 9 X Batteries, Hamilton and Schmidt^, Douglas and Smith. —:?— ' h Vaughn Bests Grimes, Brooklyn, June 21—The Cubs gavw an other drubbing to the Dodgers at j Ebbets Field yesterday ln the presence./ of *{21,0OO fang. . Jim Vaughn and BUIMJ lelgh Grimes both were hit freely, but j the big Cblcagoan prevented hits when j runs would have followed. Vaughn had but one bad inning, the fifth/When he became unsteady and gave passes to Grimes and Olson. These, with Kllduff's double and Johnston's single, gave the Dodgers their two runs. The Dodgers had three on in the seventh, but not a man reached the plate. The score: Chicago 1001200 0 0—4 8 0 Brooklyn ... 00 00-2 0 0 0 0—2 9 *t .• • •- # American Association. - Minneapolis 4, Kansas City 1. Louisville 8, Toledo 4 (first game)', Louisville 5, Toledo * (second game,i Columbus-Indianapolis <raih,) St Paul 4, Milwaukee 1* ,, —. ami *> i r •\•M** * $$&&&&&&& m \\ <><•*