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ATHLETICS TARE PAIR
OFF SENATORS, DYKES
BATTING ANOTHER RUN
Running Catch by Matthews and
Brilliant Stop by Miller
Are Features
PHILADELPHIA. April 19.—Phila
delphia made it two straights from
Washington today, winning 4' to 2.
.rimmy Dykes hit his second home run
in two days, again winning the game
lor the Athletics. A running catch by
Matthews and a brilliant one-hand stop
by Miller were features.
Score by innings.
Washington .110 000 000 2 9 -
Philadelphia .011 000 11 1 10 -
Mogridge and Gharrity; Hasty and
Perkins.
TIGERS LICK THE BROWNS ^
IX ANOTHER GAME, 8 TO 3
ST LOUIS, April 19.—-Pruett’s fade
away failed to rattle Detroit and the
Browns today lost their second stral5"f
game to the Tigers. The score was
8 to 3. Thurston relieved Pruett after
the seventh. Williams got four hits
out of five visits to the plgte, and
IIeilmann three out of his five.
D^r.by.!nn^ 000 .01 ^ 12 2
St Louis .000 000 102—3 “ 1
HoUoway and Woodall; ‘ Pruett.
Thurston and Severied.
INDIANS MAKE 8 E?*1®*8’ „v WI3S
BUT AT THAT THM wijh
CLEVELAND, April 19-—Although
Cleveland made eight errors this after
noon, it won from Chicago again, 6 t>5.
the game going 11 'nnings- A smgle
l,v Myatt and doubles by Pinch. Hitter
Hardner and Jamieson sent in tne
winning runs. Leverette, of Chi^^
was hit much harder than the Indian
pitchers. _ p
Score by innings: r a o
Chicago .010 002 100 01—5 9 -
Cleveland .200 100 010 02—6 14 8
Leverette and Schalk; Edwards. Mor
ton and Myatt.
YANKEES TAKE THE SECOND
GAME FROM BOSTON RED SOX
NEW YORK, April 19.—The Yankees
made it two straight from Boston, win
ning the second game of the series
8 to 2, today. Ferguson, a former
Yankee pitcher, went to pieces m the
sixth and New York scored seven runs
before Murray could retire the side
Ruth tripled and drew a base on balls
in this inning. Ruth has reached base
seven times out of nine times up in the
last two games.
BOS ^ inningS000 000 110-2" 6 3
New York.107 000, 00*—8 10 0
Ferguson. Murray, ODoul and' JJe
vernier; bush and Schange.
Standing of the Clubs
Club.
New York .
/Detroit ....
Philadelphia
Cleveland ..
Washington
St. Louis ..
Poston ....
Chicago
AMERICAS
Won.
. 2
NATIONAL
C^ub. Won.
New York . *
Chicago .v • ■ 2
3t. Louis . 2
Brooklyn . 1
Philadelphia . 1
Cincinnati .'1
Pittsburgh . 1
Boston . 0
Lost.
0
Lost.
0
Pet.
1.000
1.000
1.000
1.000
1.000
.000
.000
.000
Pet.
1.000
.667
.667
.500
.500
.333
.333
.000
WILMINGTONIAN’S BROTHER
DIES IN PA I.MERTOS,
PA.
The many friends of C. A. Werk
heiser, of this city, will deeply sympa
thize with him in the death of his
brother, which occurred at the latter’s
home in Palmerton, Pa.. Monday.
Mr. C. A. Werkheiser, who is em
ployed at the Wilmington Cigar store,
was at his brother’s bedside when the
end came.
Georgetown Defeats Penney
WASHINGTON, April 19.—George
town university defeated the Univer
sity of Pittsburgh in a track and field
meet here today, 83 to 43. Jimmie
Connolly, in winning the mile run
clipped two-fifths of a second oft the
South Atlantic record for tha.t distance.
His time was 4:23 2-5.
YESTERDAY’S RESULTS
AMERICAS LEAGUE
At St. Louis 3; Detroit 8.
At New York 8; Boston 2.
At Philadelphia 4; Washington 2.
• NATIONAL LEAGUE
At Boston 3-3; New York 4-4.
At Brooklyn 3; Philadelphia 5.
At’cincinnati 8; St Louis 11.
At Chicago 10; Pittsburgh B.
SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE
At Charlotte 4; Charleston 1.
| At Spartanburg 2; Greenville 1.
j . At Augusta 11; Columbia 5.
INTERNATIONAL
At Jersey City 8; Toronto 2.
At Newark 3; Rochester 13.
At Reading 6; Buffalo 8.
At Baltimore 8; Syracuse 1.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
At Toledo 2; Columbus 3.
At Indianapolis 0; Louisville 4.
At Milwaukee 2; Minneapolis 10.
At Kansas City 5; St. Paul 8.
SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION
At Atlanta; Chattanooga 8; At
lanta 11. „ . ..
At Mobile: New Orleans 8; Mobile
S. (11 innings, darkness).
LITTLE ROCK. April 19.—Memphis
1-8-1. Little Rock 1-9-3. (12 innings
darkness). Nemitz and Lynn; McCall
and Smith.
VIRGINIA LEAGUE
At Richmond 12; Petersburg 11.
At Rocky Mount 10; Wilson 3.
At Portsmouth 3; Norfolk 5.
| COLLEGE BASEBALL
At Morganton: West Virginia 15;
Bethany 9.
At Philadelphia: University of Penn
sylvania 9; Lehigh 3.
At Worcester, Mass.: Holv Cross 9;
Dartmouth 1.
At Charlottesville: Richmond Uni
versity 19? University of Virginia 6.
At Washington: Howard 7; Catholic
university 13.
At Starkville, Miss.: Georgia 5-3;
Mississippi A. and M. 4-1. (Double
header).
At Bufrod, Ga.: Oglethorpe 12; Flor
ida 4.
At Guilford college 1; Lynchburg col
lege 5.
M.V. MOORE WINS FROM
TROUTMAN FR WAYNE
Results of Golf Tounrmant
Shows Asheville Man the
Winner of the Play
ASHEVILLE, April 19.—In the first of
the flight rounds of the spring golf
tournament at the Biltmore Forest
country club today the best golf was
found in the second and third flights,
few of these matches ending on less
than the 16th and two of them going
on to 19.
The biggest upset in the first flight
was the defeat of S. A. Trentman of
Fort Wayne. Ind., by M. V. Moore, of
Asheville. Trentman was looked upon
as a semi-final contender but his de
feat today puts him down to consola
tion.
George Morse, of Rutland. Vt., had a
comparatively easy task with Paul
> Harddock, ofgCharlotte by winning
with a six up and five to go. Haddock
was away off his game as the result
of a severe cold but refused to forfeit.
John Cushman, of Greenville, S. C.,
was not up on his game with Harold
Wether, of Toledo and the former Ohio
champion walked away with five up
and four to go.
Other winners in the first flight were
Dr. Gardner, of Providence, R. I.. F. G.
Bostock, of Grand Rapids; East Ware
of Asheville; James H. Martin, of Chi
cago and Henry Westall, of Asheville.
The second round of all flights and
the first round of consolations will be
played tomorrow morning with the
semi-finals being set for afternoon. The
weather today wat of the mid-summer
variety with some fast golf displayed.
Dr. Gardner had a 3-4-2 on the first
three, going out in 87, with war time
ship.
MALONE-WELLS MATCH.
CHICAGO, Aprii 19.—Jock Malone,
St. Paul middleweight and Billy Wells,
British welterweight champion, today
were matched to box 10 rounds in St.
Paul May 4. The fighters are to meet
at 160 pounds, the same weight at
which they fought recently when Wells
was credited with outpointing the St.
Paul battler.
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GIANTS TAKE DOUBLE
HEADER FROM THE RED
SOX BY 4-3 SCORES
Cardinals Make It a Double Off
the Reds—Cubs Clean; Up
the pirates 10 to 5
BOSTON, April 19.—New York won
morning: anci afternoon Patriots day
games from Boston today bv the same
score In each case, 4 to 3. The cham
pions came from behind'each time and
won In the ninth. jingles by Earl
Smith, Bancroft and Fisch helped score
,the tying and winning runs in the last
inning of the first game.
Cunningham’s single, an infield out,
Mclnnis’ error and Bancroft’s short
sacrifice fly to Southworth gave the
visitors the winnlns run In the ninth
off Marquard in the afternoon game.
Meusel's triple off Benton in the
morning game resulted in two runs,
and he hit a homer off Marquard in the
afternoon with Frisch on base.
Score by innings: i
» R. H. E.
New York . 000 003 001—4 7 2
Boston . 020 010 000—3 6 2
J. Barnes. Blunge and Snyder: Mar
quard and Gowdy.
ST. LORIS TAKES TWO
; FROM THE CINCINNATI REDS
CINCINNATI, April 19.—St. Louis
made it two straight from Cincinnati
today by winning a ragged and hard
hitting game. 11 to 8. Keck was
knocked out o fthe box in the third in
ning. Couch was taken out for a pinch
hitter in the eighth and the Cardinals
scored four jnore off two recruit hurl
ers in the ninth. Haines was steady
until the ninth.
Score by innings:
R. H. E.
St. Louis . 006 100 004—11 14 2
Cincinnati . 000 200 024— 8 10 1
Haines and Ainsmith; Keck, Couch !
and Mingo. I
CUBS TAKE A DOUBLER FROM
THE CHICAGO CUB TEAM
CHICAGO. April 19.—Chicago made
it two straight from Pittsburgh today j
by winning a slugging match, punctu
ated • with four home runs. 10 to 5.
Hack Miller’s homer with two men on
bases gave the locals the winning mar
gin in the fourth inning and forced
Babe Adams from the mound. Kelle
her got his second homer in two days.
Score by innings: i
R. H. R.
Pittsburgh . 000 101 020— 5 11 1
Chicago . 011 410 21x—10 13 1
Adams. Kunz, Carlson and Schmidt;
Aldridge and O’Farrell.
PHILLIES HIT WELL AXD
BEAT DODGERS BL 5 TO 3
BROOKLYN, April 19—Philadelphia
hit opportunely behind Ring today and
defeated Brooklyn. 6 to 3. The Dodg
ers had a chance to repeat their thrill
ing ninth inning rally of Tuesday, but
failed, although they had the bases
twice filled with one out. Vance was
taken out for a pinch hitter in the sev
enth and Mamaux finished the game.
Walker male four hits, two of them
doubles, in as many trips to the hat.
Score bv innings.
R. H E.
Philadelphia 103 000 mo—5 9 4
Brooklyn . 000 001 002—3 6 1
Ring and Henline; Vance. Mamaux
and Deberry.
GRAINGER HIGH MAN
IN GOLF SEMI-FINALS
Was Given a Hard Run for His
Money by W. A. French
on Country Club Greens
The second round of the men’s pre
liminary spring tournament at the
Cape Fear Country club ended yester
dajr, narrowing the field to four semi
finalists in each flight. All the matches
were hard fought.
I. B. Grainger, who was picked at
the start to wo.rk his way to the finals,
came near getting put out by W. A.
French. French started out by taking
the first two holes, and this kept Grain
ger pressing throughout the first nine,
which each negotiated in 44. However,
on the incoming nine Grainger let
loose an exhibition of the brand of
golf that he has been displaying all
spring, and proceeded to set a merry
pace for French. The match came to
a close on the 17th green, two and
one. Grainger registered an 81, while
French scored an 89.
Nelson MacRae had no difficulty in
disposing of J. F. Roache for he had
one of his good. days. Metts took T. B.
Willard’s measure, while Hines de
feated J B. Rice. •
The se’ml-flanls, first flight: Nelson
MacRae vs. E. A. Metts; H. V. Hines
vs. I. B. Grainger.
Second flight: J. E. MacLaren vs.
H. L- O'Neill; Isaac Wright vs. J. C.
McEachin. '
Consolation, first flight: B. H. Brid
gers vs E. C. Hines; Robert Strange
vs. W- D. MacMillan. Jr., or'.C. L,
Meister.
Second flight: George K. Patterson
vs. W. A. Townes; W. Taylor, Jr., vs.
F. B. Gault.
Local High School to
Play Jacksonville Nine
. . —— /
Cross Bats at Robert Strange
Playgrounds This Afternoon
This afternoon at S:S0 o’clock at the
Robert Strange playgrounds, the New
Hanover county high school nine will
lock horns with the crack Jacksonville,
N C., high school baseball team. Fred
Graham has been chosen to twirl for
the locals and he is expected to give
the visitors a hard run for their money.
The high school boys ire not ex
pecting any easy battle with the Jack
sonville boys because the latter team
has tucked away in their belts a vic
tory over the crack Atlantic Coast Line
team o fthis city, which has more vic
tories to its credit than it has defeats.
The probable line-up of the locals
will be: Kerr, lb; Stack. 2b; Tiencken,
Sb • Mcinniss. s.s.; Platt, l.f.; Leftwlch,
rf ■ White. c.f.; Graham, p.; Lennon, e.
Jeanne La Mar, champion woman
featherweight boxer of the_ world, is
matched to fight Miss Ida Schnall, of
Brooklyn. N. T.. for the feminine
featherweight title of th^ world
SMITH OUTPOINTS
MILLER IN EIGHT
ROUNDS AT ACADEMf
Kid Fales and Burriss, of Dry
Pond, Win in Prelims; Big
Crowd See Fights
Rooky Smith, of Madison Square
Garden, New York, was given the
newspaper decision over Cole Miller,
of Hamlet, N. C., in the eight round,
main match, before about 10(1 fight
fans at the Academy of Music last
night. The preliminaries, two four
round. two-minute goes, between Kid
Fales and Kid Taylor, both of local
fame, and between Liston Burriss, o?
Dry Pond, and “Sinbad, the Sailor,*’
In social circles as the “pummelling,
poupdlng proof-reader,” ended in vic
tory of Kid Fales and Dry Pond’s war
rior. Liston Burriss.
In the main bout Rocky Smith, of
the Garden fame, tore a few leaves
from the weaths that crowned the
puglistic head of Cole Miller. Smith
was just too much for him, and it
took considerable ring geareralship on
the part of Miller to save himself in
the last eight rounds. This ring gen
eralship consisted almost entirely of
masterful clinching on the part of
Miller. Although Miller succeeded in
landing several terrifflc punches to
Smith’s solar plexus. However, he
missed more swings with his right
than he landed.
Smith’s side of the battle consisted
of raining a tattoo of blows on Miller's
stomach, and it was these blows, that
came with trip-hammer precision, that
got Miller’s goat and came mighty
near knocking him out in the seventh
round, when Miller’s art in clinching
and. the good fortune of the bell ring
ing saved him. The rounds on points
went six to Miller and two draws.
In the prelims Kid Fales, brother
oi Marry rajes, won irom jvia xayior, ,
more by the fall down route than by (
the knockout, although, officially he j
was given credit for a knockout, ]
which came in the third round after,
appearently Taylor had picked him out j
a right nice soft place to fall. The j
fight between Burriss and Sinbad the |
"Sailor, w'ent the full number of i
rounds, four. Sinbad proved a sponge
for punishment, which Burriss freely
gave, although following the fight
Sinbad declared that it was the most
fun he had had in six months..
Immediately some wise guy wanted
to know how he got that way.
TAR HEEL FRESHMEN BEATEN
(Special to The Star)
CHAPEL HILL, April 19—Oak Ridge
institute defeated the University of
North Carolina freshmen in baseball
here this afternoon by a score of '9
to 0. Five Carolina errors and sev
eral bone head plays helped to swell
the count.
St. John’s Lodge No. 1, A. F. & A. SI.
Emergent communica
tion this Friday even
ing at 7:45 o’clock, for
ft.he purpose of conferr
ing the degree of
FELLOW CRAFT
All members and visit
ing Master Masons will
joy viuci
! be cordially welcomed,
i the Master.
A. S. HOLDEN, Secretary.
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