LOCAL AGAIN PRANCE Four Hits All Kingston Could '@rab From Heckman's De= livery--Final Score 4-0. "Al" Heckman let the Ponies down 4-0 In last night's game at the Fair 'Grounds and during hie shutting out . ptocess they garnered fofir scattered ~ hits from the Peterboro ace. While all goes tb show that no matter how much the Ponies may prance around ' they aren't worth a hoot unless they "Knotty" Lee was installed on the 'bench in all his glory but either he 'bad not started coaching or his play- "ers were afraid he was watching thelr styles at the bat, Anyway the erowd was much too busy listening to *"Jakie" Solomon to watch the new man, ' A walk, a sacrifice and a single sent Heckman over the bag for Pet- ' ~ erborp in the second. In the third two-base hits and a bad throw to first by Batstone accounted for three more runs and then the scoring stop- "ped. It almost started again when _ Gallagher drove out a three-base hit that should have been an easy homer in the seventh. Cherry was the only Kingston player who knew anything about Heckman. He collected two safe- ties in three appearances and only Holyman's nerve saved him from a clear sheet. Batstone, after his usual procedure of letting the first go by, struck out three times and fouled off to Collins the fourth. It was rather a listless game in spite of the fact that there was "egcoring in only two innings. The box score tells the rest of the tale: ho Qo HOMMMOMDWD Holyman, 8s Legon, If ..... 4_ ~ Bwanston, ¢ ... _ Harrison, 1b .. Herkman, p ... Johnston, 2b .. Collins, 3b .... Hall, of «.ccv.o Turner, rf .... pt OHHOONMWHON HRN DD commoocool a Batstone, 3b ... merville, 2b . ! her, It .. 'Cherry, cf ....¢ 'Purvis, 1b .... an, ¢ .,. IY, P veces ~oomHoOO OH SuaHrnene NRO HOwRNOD leomossrcon Summary---Three-base hit, Galla- er; two-base hits, Legon, Swan- _Ston, Harrison; sacrifice hit, John- "ston; stolen bases, Cherry, Holyman, 'Hall; base on balls, off Heckman 1, "off Kelly 2; hit by pitcher, Holyman by Kelly; struck out, by Kelly 7, by Heckman 11; double play, Collins to Johnston to Harrison in the fifth; 'passed ball, Rickman; left on bases, Peterboro 5, Kingston 4; umpires, 'Allen at the plate and Nurse on the bases. | i Leonard-Walker. New York, July 31.--It was an- 'nounced yesterday afternoon by Tex 'Rickard that "Mickey" Walker will defend his welterweight title against "Benny" Leonard, veteran light- weight champion, on August 21st, the fight to take place here. We fear Ruth will never be a suc- 008s as a detective... He only wears +a size 14 shoe. NOTICE] Have your Closed Car. cleancd by VACUUM at \ 272 Bagot Street ' We are prepared to Savex Car- pets. and Furuiture and save | them from mothd. GEORGE (KNOTTY) LEE. Recently Appointed Coach of the Kingston C.0.B.L, Team. BELLEVILLE WON OUT IN A SNAPPY GAME Defeated Oshawa by Score of 3 to 2 in Match on Wednesday. Belleville, July 30.--Breaking the two-all score in the last hail of the cinth inning to-day, Grand Trunks defeated Oshawa three to two in one of the season's snappiest encounters before six hundred fans in cloudy weather, Oshawa tied the score in the eighth but falled to break through in their -half of the ninth. Rowden, who fumbled Casey's easy roller gave the Trunks a lifer. Ouel- let flied out to Walt Fair, but Weir sacrificed Casey to the pivot sack. Ross then lifted a two-bagger to cen- fre and_ Casey galloped home<with the bacon. All other thirteen hits netted by both squads were singles. Trunks got their fitst pair in the first frame when Murray fumbled Weir and Ross's bounders in a row. Bill Mills singled to centre and scor- ed Weir, and Harry Mills' clout be- tween first and 'second sent Ross, who had stelen third, home for num- ber two. Ouellet had an edge on Dainty with six strike outs to Dainty's five. Ouellet walked three Dainty a pair. But Ouellet held the hits down much lower, The line-up: . Belleville--Weir, ss; Ross, cf; W. Mills, ¢;' H. Mills, 1b; Hagerman, If; Williams, 3b; Meagher, 2b; Casey, rf; Ouellet, p. Oshawa--Rowden, 2b; W. Fair, rf; Murray, 8b; Tyson, ¢; Dainty, p; Roddick, If; Wilson, 1b; R. Falr, ef; Morrison, ss, Score by innings: R. H. E. Oshawa 000100010--2 5 4 Belleville ....200000001--3 9 3 Umpires--@G. Sullivan and F. Hal- linan. 3 ¥ ¥ CITY LEAGUE | The city league bills are clear for this evening, but for Friday éven- ing the Mercantilers will hold forth once more and the Printers, stilt smarting from their defeat by Plumbers, will go into batile with the Bankers. Printers are determined to win and Bankers, with their team strengthened and working together longer, should make them stretch to do it. The Imperial Tobacco Company is donating several bill boards to the City Baseball League which. wiil be used at prominent places (0 an- nounce games. ° Having renounced lions and tigers as playmates, Battling Siki has taken unto himself gnother wife, by way of proving how utterly fearless he is. Carpentier"s handlers fed him whiskey between rounds....Maybe that's why the fight lasted so long. Auto Tops and Seats Recovered , Side Curtains, All Kinds of Bevelled Glass Lights od ee --------------_ SPOR THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG ar i G OUT OUR WAY v . \ f ibe " Mot sm «Mim "7 [BAZERA"L WEDNESDAY'S SCORES National League. Pittsburgh 6, New York 3. Brooklyn 6, Chicago 0. Boston 3, Cincinnati '0. Boston 6, Cincinnati 3. St. Louis 9, Philadelphia 8. American League. 'Washington 7, Detroit 4. Chicago 7, Boston 6. Cleveland 5, Philadelphia 4. International League. Toronto 15, Jersey City 2. Jersey City 9, Toronto 1. Baltimore 6, Newark 5. Baltimore 8, Newark 3. THE STANDING. National League. Won! Lost. P.C. 61 33 649 bd 40 .574 61 41 .554 51 45 .531 50 50 .500 40 656 .417 38 56 .404 36 60 .375 Pittsburgh . Brooklyn .. Cincinnati ... St. Louis :.. Philadelphia .. Boston. ... ... American League. Won. Lost. P.C. 67 41 .582 656 42 .567 55 43 .561 47 47 500 46 51 .474 45 52 .464 43 53 .443 39 58 .402 New York .. Detroit ses tee Washington ... St Louis ... Chicago ... Cleveland ... Boston ... . Philadelphia ... se ere oe "se ua -- International League. Won. Lost. P.C. 71 29 710 61 41 .598 63 49 on Baltimore ... .... Toronto ... Newark ... ss: ov. Rochester .. .. .. Buffalo .. Syracuse ... Reading ... ... .. Jersey City ... ... "es ses 63 52 61 51 45 56 40 58 32 70 " see ees i sfss : g E § E; ag § g i E E ¢ i § £ i Eg i Es 1; ; 3 i i i il EE EERE ¢ TEE ¥ £ £ 5g : g §% Bl Bz ge bi § ll i} fies i i ks ! {i fu } jis i : [ 'he has the ability. Once he tied for .| off the following day by Walter Ha- ment plays on the part of the um- pire. If the umpire was of the opin- ion that the batsman had made it im- possible for the rumner to be retir- ed at the plate, he wae correct in ruling out the runmer who came in from third. With less than two out, and the batsman interferes with a play at the plate, the runner from third ds called out. 2. When the umpire rules a balk, all base runners are entitled to ad- vance a base. Such a happening with the bases filled would, of course, force a run over the plate. . By Joe Williams. Mike Brady has moved up among | the season's winners. The black- haired Irish home-bred out shot a stiff fleld in the recent Metropolitan open and won with a total of 292. His score was five strokes better than the winning card of Cyril Walker in the American open at Oakland Hlils. What's more, it was made on a harder course. Inwood, because of its narrow fairways and three or four cut-of-bounds holes, is more treach- erods than the Michigan layout. Had Brady displayed the form at Oakland Hills--his old home course, by the way---that he had on tap at Inwood, the big championship would have fallen into his bag. He was one under'd4s for the last three rounds and that is rather neat golf, if any member of the. royal suite should happen to ask you. The Irishman was at his best dur- ing the final stages of the fight, when the pressure was tightest, getting six pars and two birds on the last nine. | In short, he was enjoying one of his rare scoring orgies and it is doubt. ful .it Hagen, Whiker, Sarazen or anyone else could have stopped him. Why Brady has never won the national open is a mystery that pas- geth "all understanding. Certainly the title but was beaten in the play- gen. : % i Brady seemed to have the cham- plonship - cinched. It was back in 1919. Finishing the morning round on the day of the finals, he led the fleld by five strokes. His total up to this point was 221. Hagen, clos- est to him, had 226. It didn't seemi humanly possible for any player to overtake Brady. A handicap of five strokes is not easy to shake off when you have but 18 holes to do it in. Brady helped matters somewhat himself, if helped is the word. He took an 80 for the final round. Hagen took 75 and tied it up. Brady had found it harder to stay cyt in front than Hagen had to come up from the rear. This was Hagen's introduction to the golfing world as a never-say-quit fighter. = The next day he added luster to his new repu- tation by winning the playoff in de- cisive style. The primitive Mr. Firpo no longer sleeps on the floor, except when he runs afoul of an American fist, and that's different, THURSDAY, JULY 81, 194. 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