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. SLIP TN JUDGHENT G0STLY T0 DILLON Jack Tosses OIf—;he Fruits of Bight Years of Toil in a Single Day. LIKE CASE OF LEACH CROSS BY RINGSIDE. New York, July 29.—Some can never learn; others refuse to be taught. This aphorism—or whatever . you would call it—is best applied to «he boxing game. Many a prospec- tive champion has blighted his chances of becoming a big wage earn- f er in the ring by making one ill-ad- * vised match. The case of Jack Dillon is offered for consideration. For eight long years Dillon was | buffeted about on the rough sea of pugilistic adversity. His one aim was to work himself into a position to,de- mand a match with the world’s heavy- ~ weight champion. Finally he suc- . ceeded in attaining that eminence-- after eight long years. And it took just two weeks for him to be toppled *rom the apex of pugilistic promi nence. One ill-advised match is sufficient ! to destroy an entire career for a ! boxer. It is to be hoped that Dil- * lon's indiscretion will not ‘turn out i to be as detrimental as it appears at present. Also it is to be hoped that it doesn’t take him eight long years | | to re-establish the prestige he en- | | joyed only a month ago. i *or eight years Dillon has been " meeting all comers. Some of them he fought once, others he tackled as | many as nine times. The latter w: * the case of Dillon and Battling Levi sky, the Hebrew light huviywellht. rior to a fortnight ago Dillon and insky had met in the ring eight times. On nearly every occasion Dil- lon was returned the ropullr winner, or gained the favor of the referee. e Bantered Into Match. " That should have satisfied Dillon. Everyone else was satisfied that Dil- ¢ n was Levinsky's superior. At : st everyone but Levinsky was satis- on that score. When Dillon was i rst matched with Frank Moran, Le- g Ll_nky bantered the Hoosier Bearcat § into signing with him (Levinsky) for 3 fifteen-round bout, to be held two - weeks after the Moran affair, - No one ve this match any further thought. The Moran-Dillon [ | tilt was the match de resistance. It Y ation of Dillon as challenger of Je: i t the obliteration of Moran as a cham- ,icuohl&comender. This was the ‘match Dillon had spent eight years in _ring to secure. in hand illion won this mat Vl’i fashion, outweighed thirf pounds d, h' dvantage of D riug under a di ive inches in statute. melled Moran to within an inch ilistic .oblivion, Little Jack 0 nflicfid more punishment on Frank Moran than even the 's. champion heavyweight—one to be the best that ever had done three months Haye Been Happy. ) on should have been elated &t this happy outcome and rested on 1 urels. Before meeting Moran not considered seriously n ent for Willard, but since uling Moran, who ten with the champion, Dillon was s he next logical op- e ly reminded Dillon of enng‘u’unt with Battling Levins- . As Dillon’s word bond, he t to Bal and permitted n to- be decisively outpointed by the Battler. Flop! went Dillon's 0 Fortunately for Dillon, the juration of the bout was but from to ten rounds. If the battle e five more rounds Dillon have been more severely pun- a8 Levinsky was in aston ng good form, while Dillon fought ifferently. ‘Thus it is that an ill-advised match n cost, Dillon a chance for the orld’s ‘heavyweight championship. His manager made the serious mi of matching him with a danger- rival even before Dillon had over: big Moran. Quite likely Jack's tor not expgct him to do as he did aghinst. Moran, an ght he was protecting his inter- sts and that of Dillon by having a %00 match in sight. - Must Fight Way Bagk. Now Dillon must practicall. ay back to the top d do well to instruct m jer not to be as industrious in juring matches for him in which a ict means little gain for him, as a defeat undermines the en- other instance ofs poor match- 1 that resulted in greatly di- hing the earning powers of a “contender was that of Leach . For years the Ghotto's lead- m‘fllt was the best drawing Manhattan and environments. rach’s - brother-manager, Sam ch, snapped at an offer of some 500 to box young Saylor, a medio- e lightweight. Cross went west r this bout and was knocked out in rounds. Leachie hasn't fought Amateur Games Today ’ againat Cblet.’o Union Glants at jtts All-Stars against Anita, Ia, e Cae, 14 at Persia, In. Gas Co. at Plattsmouth, Neb. against ts Hi itenelle n‘:;.n:(“l:u :‘ m." ash against Luxus, Luxus park, " foundations of Dillon's reputa- p Hagen Wins Metropolitan Open Tournament; Hoffner Shows @ood |LER FOHL CARRIES A “DOC” WITH TEAM Dr. Moyer Travels With Olub and Repairs Maimed and Injured Athleteg. PUTS OCOVELESKIE RIGHT This pleture shows Walter of a triple tie. Charles Hoffner, a 20-year-old Philmon professional, who, with James Barnes, ti with Hagen for the title before the playoff. Hoffner finished third two strokes behind Barnes. WAGNER THE KING OF ALL KTHLETES Greatest Ball Player That Ever Lived is What William Chase Temple Says of Veteran. NEVER PULLED A “BONER” r—— By FRANK G. MENKE. New York, July 29.—“Honus Wag- ner is the greatest base ball player that ever lived,” is the assertion of William' Chase Temple, donor of the famous Temple cup and one of the best judges of ball players the game has ever known. For forty years—since the Nation- al league began—I have seen every star that ever flashed in the base ball firmament,” added Temple. “There were many brilliant ones in the p: there are scintillating performers to- day. But none can compare with him in all-around ability. “Wagner never was ranked among the ;graceful shortstops—but who can name a player of the grennt——or the ast—who really outshone the amaz- ing Honus as a ground coverer? Wag- ner may be clumsy and awkward in his movements, yet, today, at the age of 42, he covers more ground than 90 per cent of the short fielders in the game, Honus Led 1915 Shortstopss. “Who led the National league short- stops in 19157 The answer is Honus Wagner—the gray and grizzled Hon- us. Pitted against such rivals as the brainy, Herzog, the fast Maranville, Bancroft—called the greatest short. stop in the game by John Tener—and all the others, Wagner, then aged 41, outfielded each and every one. Wa won the fielding mpionship in his division. ‘Wagner takes rank amon atest batsthen in history. for seventeen successive seasons he hung up a record that may endure for all times. And now, in his forty-second year, a decade beyond the end of the average major leaguer’s life, Wagner is battling with the {o\mnlen for the leadership of ‘the eagues. Isn't that the absolute proof of his hitting prowess? X “Wagner, in the heydey of his ca- reer, had few equals b: Big and awkward, it seemed like folly for him to attempt the theft of a ba, ~it looked like sure death. Yet, 1 y ruse the base ball records, you will find that Wagner's base stealing average, covering all of years as a hig leaguer, sh thing like forty pilfers a season—a record superior to that turned in by played the game at one' time or an- other during the last forty years. “What can illustrate better the mar- velous base running . skill of the ‘Grand Old Man of Base Ball' than the 1915 records—the statistics which how that the veteran Wagner, with ty-two . stolen bases, ranked tf! in that class; that Wagner sl Hagen of Rochester (left), who recently won the met- ropolitan open championship in the playoff The other pleture Is of THE OMAH/ SUNDAY BEE: JULY 30, 1916. stole only fourteen less bases than Carey, the league champion. Never “Pulled” a “Boner.” “Wagner, in twenty years as a big leaguer never ‘pulled’ a_‘boner;’ he never has made a mental foozle. Wag- ner never was pressagented as being an exceptionally brainy player—but who is his superior in mentality? One hears much about the braininess of Cobb, of Evers, of Collins and of the others. But each and e\'erf( one has at some time or another, slipped a mental cable—made an error of the head. But Wagner's record as a thinker is unsmudged! “Wagner is the most gentlemanly player the diamond game has pro- duced. He has caused the umpires less trouble than any other performer. No man has ever worked harder or more conscientiously than this same Wagner. For twenty years he has been a star, for -a score of years praise and honors have been show- ered upon him. But they never have turned his head. Conceit is foreign to Wagner's makeup. “%he grand old German realizes that he is paid to play ball to the best of his ability; to play with all the power and skill that is his, And so has he played. Day after day, year after year, he has been out there on the diamond giving the best that is in him to his employers; faithful, harcll-working, wonderful Honus Wag- ner Played Every Position. “I have seen him play, every posi- tion on the diamond—and play each perfectly. He started as an outfielder and then was shifted to the infield. fn emergencies, he was moved from CALLS WAGNER GREATEST OF ALL PLAYERS. 95 per cent of the men who have TEMPLE. Vg | the hegira of horses to Omaha ———— one corner of the diamond to the other. On manfi occasions earlier in his career, he has gone behind the at, “Back in 1902 or 1903 when the Pirate pitching staff was shot to pieces by injuries and double headers the manager was in a quandry as to whom he should pitch in a certain game. Tl go in,” said Wegner. And he did. e won. He won that game, pitc}linf in superb fashion. A week or so later he pitched again — and once more he was the victor. “Oh, yes, Ty Cob is a wonderful layer; so are Collins, Daubert, aranville, Lajoie, Speaker and Evers; so were Anson, Delehanty, Lange, Pfeffer, Williamson and others. But—Wagner, the grand hit- ter, the amazing fielder, the startling base runner, the brainy, hardworking matchless Wagner—he is king of them all; the greatest player the diamond ame has produced; a player whose ike never will be seen again!” BIG FIELD 70 START IN GREAT WESTERN (Continued from Page One.) on the closing day of the meeting, will be by far the hottest race' ever run on a half-mile track. Of the races carded for the local harness racing classic, none is at- tracting more attention than- the 2:14 trot, scheduled for the first day of the meeting. This trotting class event will bring together a field of abso- lutely the highest class—a field the like of which has admittedly never appeared on a track from the Pacific to the Atlantic and from the Gulf of Mexico to Canada. Many Fast Contenders. Among the entries are Heir Reap- er, with a half-mile track record of 2:11)4; Miss Densmore, marked at 2:11}%4 over a half-mile oval; Dr. Wayo, who has gone the distance in 2:12%; Bessie Mac, who has trotted miles on half-mile tracks in around 2:10; General Francis, credited with time of 2:H14; Great Northerp, a consistent winner on Nebraska tracks and a horse that the others will have to go some to out-trot. The Great Western circuit meeting in Omaha will be held at a time when the racing season is at its height. Horsemen agree that the speed mer- chants are at their best along toward the middle of August, and with % half- mile track the peer of any in the country, records should go by the boards. Following the Wahoo (Neb.) meet- ing, which will be held Wednesday, Thursday and Friday of this week. will start in earnest. [t is expected that approximately 200 race horses will be quartered at the East. Omaha plant of the driving club_by the time the meeting gets under way Omaha Horses at Corning. Omaha horses did well at the Corning meeting last week, Hal Con- nors and Tena G., from the Dennison stables, showing the Jowars the kind of steppers they train here. That battle-scarred veteran, Jim O'Shea, whose feed is paid for by the jovial Fred Myers, (ol a fourth in the Corning races. Mr. Myers feels pretty ood‘about it, even if there were only our horses in the race. But a real victery—and, incidental- 1y, another one—for the Myers sta- bles was the performance of M. T, owned by Mr. Myers and Charles meeting on the Kansas and Oklaho- {ma circuit. M. T. who has been {cleaning up right this scason, wén the 2:11 pace in straight heats, cot- ting a fourth of a second off the « {horse’s mark—-2:10'4, Klinger, in the Council Grove (Kan.) [D: Indians has introduced eling with his club. istered practitioner and the As a firm believer in preparedness { Manager Lee Fohl of the Cleveland rather novel plan of carrying his own hos- pital corps with him on the road. That is to say, he has a doctor trav- On their recent trip through the east the Indians were accompanied by Dr. Charles Edward Moyer, a reg- osteopath, who was on hand to take care of the maimed and injured, give relief for the dreaded ‘charleyhorse” and to replace such muscles as got out of place on any of the athletes. “Doc” Once a Leaguer. Dr. Moyer was once a big league itcher himself. He was with Wash- igton in 1910, and it was trouble with his arm that he came to take up osteopathy, which has landed him in his present position In 1911 his arm became lame and he had to go out to the minors. He g the next three seasons and during that time was constantly passing out $2 bills to doctors for relief. He finally decided Lhe would take up osteopathy himself as the cheapest method of getting his was with arm in shape. pringfield for through So he studied and took the neces- sary examinations a year ago. Last season he was able to pitch better than he had for four years. Manager Fohl had known him in the days when he was manager of the Water- bury, Conn., club, when Moyer was wit] Springfield. This season, when Fohl had so much trouble with in- juries to arms and legs on his club, he got Dr. Moye Puts_“Covy” r to join the club. n Shape. Already Dr. Moyer has put Cove- leskie in shape. The pitcher was get- ting a lame arm from too constant work since Morton was injured. Co- veleskie was able to pitch last Satur- day and again on Monday. Morton has also come in for attention. The Cleveland star is reported to be get- tin_F along nicely. e rry Turner, who returned to the game after an absence of three weeks, was also another patient of the club’s doctor. He twisted his ankle in a game against the Yankees at Cleve- land, and until the series here has not been in a game. Dr. Moyer worked on the ankle and got him back into the batting order. Western League Averages CLUB BATTING, W. L. T. AB. R. H. Pct. Denver -42 46 1 3081 467 907 .294 Omaha . 6 31 2 3017 478 860 .2865 Stoux City 4 44 1 3065 447 865 .284 Lincoln 0 37 0 2922 418 810 .277 Wichita . 9 48 0 2819 394 758 .269 Des Moln 4 43 1 2014 379 771 .265 Topeka 9 48 2 2999 381 769 .256 8t. Jaseph 4 61 1 2814 279 710 .252 CLUB FIELDING. G.DP.TP.PB.PO. A. ‘Topeka .89 650 0 19 2354 1146 Bloux Cit; 9 57 0 3 2416 1137 8t. Joseph <86 48 0 5 2264 1121 Des Moines ..88 54 0 26 2353 1183 Lincoln 7 2377 1196 Omaha .80 2446 1199 188 Denver 9 2346 1208 15 Wichita . 2268 1166 159 . in fifteen or more games: Johnson, Lin. 189 35 Oakes, Den 29 360 60 Gilmore, 8. 70 286 53 Butcher, Den 87 320 62 Livingston, 8. 68 185 27 Coy, Wil 34 122 22 Kelliher, De; 29 355 72 Griffith, Wich. Carlisle, Lin, Stevenson, Lin. Connolly, 8. C. , O Marshall, Om Forsythe, Oma. Watson, 8. C Krug, Oma Mets, 8. C. Kirkham, St. Joe. Meloan, Des M Cochran, Top. Fox, Wich. Krause, O Hartford, Dyer, Den... Britton, Wich Thomason, Lin Sullivan, St. ‘Jo Fleharty, Wich C. Miller, Den. Bterser, Den, McCabe, 8t. Ji Halla, Li Hinchman, Rapps, Wich Callahan, S. C. Shields, Den. Jourdan, St. Joe. Grover, 8. C... 61 9 17 Goodwin, Top......86 340 33 94 J. Thompson, Oma.65 246 44 68 Hunter, Des M 8 93 Claire, Des M 8 Hahn, Des M 36 Jones, Des M 25 Gregory, Lin. 18 Crosby, 8. C. 4 Musser, Des M 16 Burg, Oma.. 34 310 43 82 Schweltzer, Top....86 316 43 83 Cole, Den... 18 Agler, Top 1] L 3 8 54 7 74 29 34 Morse, Lin.. 6 Sommers, St. Joe 20 Keating, St. Joe... 64 Killeen, Des M (] T. Smith, Lin. 47 Breen, Des M. 35 Ewoldt, " Allen, 23 C. Thompso 15 King, Dei 13 Monros, Top. 51 0. Willtams, St. 72 Fusner, St. Joe 47 Kruger, Top. 6 Ollligan, Des M. ] Cooney, 8. C " Manser, Den 12 Koestner, 17 Fast, Lin. 1% Schardt, 8. C 7 Henning, Top. o Stevens, Den 23 Gardner, Lin 10 Thomas, Des M 12 Rohrer, Lin. 82 3 Sake 10 Gasj s Me! 1 Clark, 8. C. L] Patterson, 8t. Joe s 0O'Toole, [ West, Den L) RDS, Player. B.8O. arshall, 5 [ 3 3 3 B4 36 4 4 50 ] 1] L1 66 128 e L SesuaAamAnEsOR RS r e Rn eI e ikl iin® INDIVIDUAL BATTING AVERAGES. Including players who have taken part B G. AB. R, H. SH.8B.Pet. 349 8 | Cinctnnatt I ARG 04 By FRED S. HUNTER SOME WEATHER. ‘We would like to be in Greenland, Or in Iceland or New Zealand, Where we now could live in perfect peace and bliss; We’d even cross the River Styx, Which they say is quite some fix, For it can’t be any hotter, bo, than this, There is no getting around it, we'll have to ask waivers on the weather man. Want Ad. LOST, STRAYED OR SWIPED— One cool breeze and rain. BRING ON THE SNOW We have often howled in winter, And sad "twas loo cold then; Bui since we've suffered summer, We will mever howl again. On the Public. Sam Marburger, Jack Dillon’s manager, says the Dillon-Levin- sky fight was a joke. Does Sammy figure he's giving out any news? In other words, Sammy admits a box fight is much like a wrest- ling match. BUT THEN WE HAVEN'T GOT ANY AUTOMOBILE We spy in the public prints that there has been a reduction of 10 cents a. barrel in crude oil, but ;)l;len crude oil won't run automo- iles. A story from Cincinnati says Buck Herzog offered Garry Herrmann $20,000 in cash for his unconditional release, and Herr- mann refused. Despite our some- what tender relations with Messrs. Carranza and Villa, Mexi- - can money seems to be finding its way into the United States, THAT ALIBI STUFF Whenever a manager down to defeat, He's always there MM excuses; , He claims that his hand is a hard one to beat, When all that he holds is deuces. Charley Ebbets has issued a Barnes of the Braves tried to bean his star batters. Mr, Eb- bets evidently overlooks the fact that Boston pitchers would, of course, throw a bean ball. Speaking of matches, we won- der if anybody will match Stecher and Lewis again? Chief Meyers, they say, has be- come a favorite in Brooklyn, showing anybody can become a favorite in Brooklyn. \ YES WE ARE. We are feelinq sad and blue, We really don’t know what to do; Frank Gotch has quit the wrestling game, Oh, mercy me, ain’t it a shame, And we are feeling sad and blue. Freddy Welsh and Charley ‘White have been matched again. Why won't those guys behave? The Minnesota boxing commis- sioners are the merry little cut-ups. Freddy Welsh refuses to fight in Minnesota, so the com- mish refuses to let him. It is the uncertainties of life that make existence interesting. And that is why, sometimes, Dario Resta loses a race and the Drummers win a game. The Little Son-of-a-Gun. Dear Mr. Hypo—If you're so darned good why don’t you write a “rime” about Ichlya Kumagae? The Drummers have the old fight and are bound to put up a battle for the first division, says Jack Holland. Working on this theory, we may some day expect ;o see a rabbit spit in a bulldog's ace. BY CHRISTY MATHEWSON. You may flay me and harass me, You may swear at me and curse, Say I haven’t got the punch, And I boss a rotten bunch, Brooklyn New Yorl Chicago Pittsbu 8t. Lou! Philadel Boston . G. DP.TP.PB.PO. Boston 80 67 0 7 2166 Philadel; 63 0 15 2194 Cincinnati 17 0 13 2491 Brooklyn 64 .0 13 2316 New York 63 0 6 2219 1068 123 963 Pittsbui 51 0 10 2276 982 132 .961 Bt. . Loul 79 0 15 2470 1286 159 .960 Chicago . 64 0 12 1499 1253 178 .955 INDIVIDUAL BATTING AVERAGES—ALL | PLAYERS BATTING ,300 PER CENT OR BETTER. G. AB.R. H.8H.8B.Pct. 64 9 25 4 3.301 L. McCarty, Brook. Robgrtson, N. Y Daubert, Brook Wagner, Chase, Cin.. Zimmerman, Hornsby, St. L Long, St. L. Hinchman, Wheat, Brook. Schulte, Chi. Whitted, Phila . PITCHING AVERAGES. Pte Prinderg’st, Barnes, Bol McConnell, Ragan, Cooper, Rixey, Phll Hughes, Bo \'lu‘hnétc i | Crowell, Phi kick because he says Pitcher |But I can’t make the Reds any worse. — Davis, 27 33 ¢ 3 Willett, Lin. 15 16 3 A L Koestner, W Do H merican League Baker, Des M 39 7413 all, Top... 62 9113 A Clark, 8. C. 28 76 8 verages East, Lin. 73 86 12 CLUB BATTING. Gardner, Lin 40 78 10 Sterzer, Den 72 62 10 1 Grover, Top. 52 93 11 3 Schardt, 8. C. 17 62 6 1 5 Krause, Oma...17119128 41 67 8§ 1 20164132 61 89 9 1 88 22148148 64 68 9 3 Patterson, St, J.24 180176 26 60 11 Washington 47 42 3 2050 813 708 .289 Thomas, Des M.28 186 199 §7 80 9 Philadelphfa 19 64 1 32698 228 610 .326 Gregory, Lin....25160170 40 45 7 CLUB_FIELDING. ;’eh'fi"yo' e 1; :2 :’ e Chlcag et uri%'u#i 113 5% ruck, . 1 9 lcago . R SRR R F et Boston 0 8 2410 1163 114 .970 Hotfinan, Lin.. 5. 40 55 9. 3.1 Detroit 013 2563 1278 136 .969 Pl s ie 3t New Yor] 0 6 2494 1183 126 .969 il A e s Cleveland 019 2526 1291 143 964 7 | Gllligan, D 22118136 41 63 4 St. Louls ...93 013 2634 1285 154 .962 gan, 136 41 & Washington 92 66 0 11 2491 1108 163 .960 g:lzill'l.}or;:v fil:;}:: ;; :; z Philadelphia 84 78 0 7 2198 1197 198 ,946 Sommers, sy Sgouiiio s 11 8 mmvmmLM:“A:-x;:;}‘;:lnmN L Hovlik, 8t. 24154137 94 97 8 . Manser, 27163179 61 62 8 R T T TR e 65 8 21 1 1.883 . ackson, 2 : H. Smith, 13 2 Muilen, N, Y. 64 7 18 2 3.333 6 Gainer, Bos. . 4 2 14 3,1.218 36 4 Bevereld, BSt. 166 16 47 3' 0 .303 Weat, Dén....| 64 Burns, 319 38 96 11 9 .301 een, Des Pate, Wich. 30 3 Lt 3 RECORDE, Liston, Wich ey E. C. Watson, 5. C. 3 24 2215 ° 9 1 G.W.L.IP. PG F. Thomas, St.J. 4 24 37 11 31 A _Rusgell, N. Y.15 T Grant, Des M... 4 23 2317 § 1 .. Russell,Chi. 39 1 11 Kaufman, Wich.12 73 92 9 38 2 Y017 Burwell, Top 313614 13 1 N. 1 Dashner, “To 43 4917 9 1 Leonard,” Bot Doyle, Top 63 76 35 23 1 )‘r:"."g-! Chi. il H- Coveleskie, et 27 1 . Morton, Cleve, 16 1 National League 3 Mogridg 4 Johnson, Wash. .31 17 1 Koob, St 5 vera,ges Faber, Chl. 5 C.Wilitam 3 CLUB BATTING. Ruth, 5 1 Gallla, Coumbe, Dumont, Wash. 8.C'v'I'kle, Cle: Gould, Cleve. Harper, Wash Chl, 8t. L..28 D P =t =P~ P D T DB D 0 R R D DB IR TN B B e I B0 0 I RS e R I B I Boehling, Wash. Hamliton, 8t. L. Park, Bt. L. Pennock, Bos. Dauss, Det. Caldwell, Shore, B Rice, Wi L'dermilk, Gregg, Bos. C'ningham, Det. 2 Fisher, N. 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