The evening world. Newspaper, March 25, 1904, Page 12

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There was not much doing In the way] Britt, has this to aay about the Call i a 3 t dy when you look and try on; fitted, ft baseball practice by McGraw’s ball] fornian’s chances in his fight with Everything semi-ready . ‘ ‘players sinin morning Invitations to] "Young Corbett” to-night finished to your order and delivered in a felo hours, Uptown Gorner 127th St. and 3d ne 7 » 12 EVENING WORLD | MPGRAW KEEPS MEN BUSY AT STICK WORK Little Manager Is Troubled a Bit by. Their Weakness, but Declares They Soon Will Be in Shape to Meet All Comers. | BASEBAL Memon nna nna Ld... THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING, ‘PUGILIS BALL _— EDITED = MARCH 25, 1904 Ps IK oP PLAY. (Special to The Evening World.) NORTHFIELD, N. J., March %.—All of the for'-elght contestants In yester- day's qualifying round of the Spring @ jgolf tournament of the Atlantic City Country Club were éligible to start in the first and second rourfds of match jPlay for the Governors’, President's and |apecial cuns here to-day, ‘The conditions were again admirable. The pairings for to-day’s play found W. C. Fownes, jr. of Oakmont, the winner of the qualification medal, pitted against STARTING WASHINGTON, March: 25,—The starting of horses is always'an inter- esting subject. It is.more interest- ing just at present than ever before, since the Jockey Club has decided to hold the two best starters in the country always in readiness to han- dle the riders at the starting post. Whether Mr. Cassidy and Mr. Fitz- gerald will use their own methods of starting or work on the same lines AT BENNINGS TRACK. FEATURE : mente soi not neceshary. ‘There 1s no nea! for horses to go further back: of the jar- rer than is necessary for them to wheel and break. When horses are sent back a hundred yards andthe jockeys are instructed to Walk thelr horse® up, “thy line 1s sure to break before the barrier is reached, Some of the boys will be lagging behind, others will be trying to sneak a length or two on the buneh. Shorter Distance Plan. If they are sent back only, a distance then there is leas “hhsce ot ot (Special to The Evening World.) practice is the thing they most need. | W. 3. Edey, of Westchester; Harry the line breaking and a better chance BIRMINGHAM, Ala. March 5.—) MeGraw put his strongest twirlers Mackay ugainst W. Seargeant, and R. J. is problematical, Whether the start-|of securing quick and godd starts. Mugssy"” McGraw's baseball ilanae ayainat them. He showed no mercy on Baldwin against J. Earnest.- In the| ¢Ts Will alternate from week to week Reeders pee poet the ving (a Mghts from Gotham have natistied their| thelr exalted reputations us siugites Preaident cup contest the more interest- hor meeting to m _|break time and again aj ly be- Joader that while they are in fine Mght-| Of all the Giants’ pitching staff Me- ing palringa were C, W. Hunt) Rioh-| matical > tard {s also proble-| «a iise the distance to be covered before Ing! trim, so far as fielding marks the|Ginnity, Mathewson and Mulligan Monel Osunty ivan NiiBuctoughel ot , Since the Jockey Club has|reaching the barrier {s too great. The “efforts, they are still decidedly back-| have shown the best ‘orm, the Philadelphia Cricket Club; EK. a.|/88Ued no orders to either as to the| writer concedes that Mr. Cusstdy and ward in hitting. Two practice games| were the slab artis Darby, of Atlantic City, ‘¥s. his club | COUree they shall pursue. Mr. Fitzgerald are both men of great jwere played between the Regulars and| the butting food i mate H, W. Leeds, and H. W. Brown,| Mr. Cassidy tically revolutton- | 2Pertence end ability in their Une, yet regular team. ‘The Yan Wanigans yesterday and the real-thing | Woy young Minahan Philadelphia, va, A. Hart, Apawamis. {zed starting methods last season they must admit that the racegoer of to-day is a sharp and critical observer, Glemert suffered a double vhut out. | fhurnine seumion, puts The « While rt in true that they were up who changed. places with (Ca ut low: Sul Su Fowne when he taught Jockeys to walk their| nd as such nine out of ten rapegoers ae nade the hat brought in that ont, . Earnest, Wilmington, jonely tally. the afternoon engage 2 to gO; F. 6, Sherman, At: ler an egaifist almost perfect pennant Rees ve tones va the ac paninont Hevea lst horses up to the barri d brealc| “7° kod Be ee paar Leahey bd pitehing, It is time Zor better stick Work! ment Bangow WAY BACK Ih it Tem ult taste City, beat R. J. Baldwi while in motion. ‘The crii horses too far back of barrier is not to whow itself. The clever little man-| place, but against euch pitehing as Haven, 2 up and 1 to Ww. critical race|conducive to good starting. MecGinnity and } as weak with the stick ws ine oli Beer says the weati has been so ex- Milligan put up he kes Oakmont, beat EB. Shacktetord, Atlantic City, 3 up and 1 to go; W. Bear- crowds at once applauded the new Herman B, Duryea and @ ‘party of friends en route from Aiken, &. G;,to ly favorable for atnletic| reetars, 10 Kei ts, “beat 41 | Method, and without hesitation :pro- Grtindng that the twirling atatt has 94°) /"ACet tho wee you sting ones” suid Me- geet, Ralladelpney or up in is holes:| nounced it an f ‘Pro-|New York had thetr private oar side« , es | Mackay, n {mprovement over the| tracked at Bennings yesterday, and san wwariced more rapidly than the players'|Graw to Dahlen in tue jatter pu A.W. Tillinghast, Phliadelphia Cricket, | | apie eRe iahaieap, hey, vie eyes have developed. the afternoon tussle, and “Had Bil'e’ beat F. C. Sie Ce aeale ee old method of a flat-footed break, {ted the extensive J, B. Mad Mant effort tell inte nes att 0 » Remington, i and wer Deeb leaty laces: “In a tow days,” said Mugsey this | oe ee nack and, Mathewson. met wi breed igs pot ‘bet Yr Bear, Fox Till, The Moving Break. ie tare semrccldn: Wish wai Aner nee ing, “we will strike our natural) iene injuries. The pitcher was hit o! W. C. Fownes, one While the moving break is unques-| pecially admired a ‘two-year-old of the walt and then there vill b8/the pitching wrist with a sharp liner at D. onion fakin tlonably an improvement, it is stili|gint name of Sioux, named after a jeverything in che way of a pitcher that fs\cailed upon to face wu second base on a purloining expedition. ON FIGHT HERE 3 to Ko . President's Cup—C. W. ate Rich; send their horges too far back of the Une, The Idea'of the walking start ia Mr. Dui uryen sald bat he poteres. chat in the string he lensed President rush was an interested ? Rich ty, beat H. N. Burro Wh t _ | Werk With the stick. spectator In the rand stand at both mond, County. bes ws Brown, # uJ-| to get horses away In motion and well ura enlace” there ware rome, Pee oy © Just to prove to his stars that batting |wesnions of the practic Adeiphia Cricket | “lub.” peat A, 1-| together. This can be accomplished by | the division” are to be’ found’ tn the (a) aa ~ = = Hart, Apaw OMe uP Sountry, beat | ending the horses twenty or thirty |Hamburgs and Lissaks. H I E R So f Ingle bet has bee 5 B. Bradley. Spring Haven, yards back of the barrier instead of FIG leardegiin Mele cig unin tearapuelcermces | taal ids I hentia voun-|Afty or sixty or even a H@indred, as is Utten Gets Johnson. corded js city on the cera 7 \“Youhg Corbett” and. Jimmy. Britt, | {Y'athedits WB, Conk yn Me Airy, Sine a tiyesesn tay A Utica has secured Second Baseman which takes place in Woodward's Pa-| beat R. R. Perkins, New orks 2 up rt. Cassidy says he can teach horses| Johnson, a former New England Vilion, in San Francisco, under the|a@md1to wo. 8 to walk in line an elghth of a mile if] Leaguer, and for several seasons with FOR THE BATTLE (Continued from First Page.) was when he met Terry McGovern at a weight that was unnaturally Nght “< Blnce this morning the betting odds in Harry Corbett's have changed from 10 to 6 to 2 to 1, in Corbett's favor. There has not been a great deal of money wagered, but rumor says that a lot of Corbett money Is to be, snapped up in big lots early in the evening, when Eastern confidence has forced,the odds down to the lowest possible price. Two to one, when born | men are good fighters, are false odds. Britt certainly Js the best fighter on / the coast of his weight, and without a doubt he will give Combett all the! fighting he can take care of. Every one! |ausplces of the Hayes Valley Athletic | Club, to-night. | At the different hotels where sport- ink men gather there was considerable Corbett money In evidence, but not a dollar of Britt's, All seemed to be eager to wager on the little chumpton’s ohances and the amount they are pre- red to bet has scared off the sd- rs of the California fighter. The men who announced their Inten- tion to-day of backing Corbett were Johnny and George Considine, Eddie | Burke, Honest John Kelly, Sam Ber- nard, Tom O'Rourke, Jimmy Wakeley, | Matt’ Clune and a host of others, that 18, lif they can get money covered. MELLODY WON, BEATING SWEENY PORTLAND, Me, March 2.—In one of the hardest fought ring battlesfaeen In this city for many years, Billy Mel- lody, of Charlestown, Mass., forced Paisy Sweeny, of Manchester. N. to take the count in the ninth round. of what was to have been uw ten-round It 1s Impossible to buy a seat for the fight this afternoon. ' i fa | Du Wot wae ts nave baenses ten Toure has been sold. Frisco is fight mad, and if the speculators still held out) Caen bY the way. the petting lite | syecay fought under distressing coud! Woodward's Pavilion, where the udmirers of Corbett offer odds of 10 to| tions from the first round, when he tickets they could get their own price. fight will be held, will be packed to the doors. A special police detail will guard the building to prevent those who cannot get tickets from climbing to the roof and windows, making possible another such terrible disaster as occurred four years ago, when twenty “deadhend” spectators of the poet | collegiate football game were killed by the collapse of a root. The managers announce that the sale of tickets has reached $40,000, | Not even Jeffries and Corbett drew Ena amount In their heavwelght cham- pionship Ddout last August. HANGING STOPS. |ERNE THINKS BALL PRACTICE) WELL OF BRITT Frank Erne, former lghtwoight enam. pion, who,was knocked’ out by Jimmy (Special to The Evening World.) BLRMINGHAM, Ala, March “Britt Is not suoh Corbett, bur he aptend a negro hanging ut the county hand hitter as Jail hwe proved so much of an at- ) ie it ie f; 2 pint Sor 2 to 1 on his chayces of winning. We SPECIALIZE tailorin, results, Made in quantity an much less price. Worsted Trouserings, positibe Special for this week—10 assorted styles of imported broke his thumb. How We Do It Semi-Ready is a short cut to “ finished to Code ‘We make hundreds of suits to the “try on" stage. Import cloth in thou snd piece lote—that controls manyof OULD these cloths with the “Stay” every part so thoroughly that the We have a corps of expert tailors, specialists in the making sleeves, &c., and in basting, pr The most perfect custom tailor we could find at any Price keeps this corps up to the standard. Our systera gives you a better suit than a custom tailor at a ing,and finishing. $7.00 $10.00 balues, - necessary, This may be so, but it Is the Montreal Club. EASTER LI IN FULL Growing i eer, one visiting‘our store from t will be given:to every vePu ’ chasingéor not, by The Guarantee Clothing Co. LY PLANTS. BLOOM, in Pots, whether pure ‘o-morrow until add incinding Satur- cay April 2, Will be presented with 4 magnificent growing plant of East Lilles in fall bloom as.an Faster Sonvenir. ‘Ve have made aman sion, so that every one will receive one of tgs heautifuniam reat EASTER SOUVENIRS: ABSOLUTELY FREE, We are ready to show you the largest eiteten of 3 Men's s_ and Boys’ Spring Clothing ever offered in Upper New Yorks Not only j but in quality as well does it>autclass the showings, It is well known.that the. Clothing’ Co,” sells only. the.,most-rela stylish glothing and at PRICES. ‘Wl il} pull xer. He in w traction ‘nat most of the regulars took fenalve. @ look at the swinging act before re- porting at the ball grounds. The shock had «a demoralizing effect on them. They had no eye for the bail and thelr knees were k morning's tri aring some a result he was i i. rr Ss i aurnrised if Corbett. knocks him out inms eh! Tosent him. to hiv corner in th ao. Thad thaet ocking together | thee fh 1 shan way 8 strong ax ey near Fulton We as ene | “'" (SCORBETT'S’ BEST FIGHTS. wih A BRITT’S BEST FIGHTS. them hanging every day and seat to forget It them into Breen, thelr hotels Perea teaien. Mt Slertin nh ra | pra ea ver tt | Knget out Eddie Santry in two Beat “Kid” Lavigne in five rounds. THOSE ‘of ANY other'sfore. ie i Corbett ] | rounds. Knocked out Frank Erne in seven J} SPORTSMEN’S GOODs. t it apne - - |] Knocked out osear.Gardner tn-six || rounds Sopaenstnanananaasancaaayeaned THAT REMINDS ME MEN'S SPRING "OVERCOATS, AY ans, bce wa ye | pearl BENNINGS ENTRIES: rounds, Beat Charley Sieger in twenty }|/OUT TODAY, ~~ OUT TODAY. MEN'S SPRING OVERCOATS, in the very latest axecution. oper en manatees, |] Beat Kid Broad twice dn ten rounds. | frou @ models and stylish materials, ions suid gopd-by/ to every/one and | RACH TRACK, BENNINGS, Marchi] pe cut Terry MeGovern Beat Willie Fitzgerald in. twenty |} $5.00, $6.00, $7.50, $10, $12, $15, $18, $20, “ wice in two and eleven rounds. vunds, . 4 urolds and upward Knocked out Eddie Hanlon in six- Beat Martin Canole in twenty-tive MEN'S SUITS. ; teen rounds. MEN'S SUITS in fine Cassimeres, Cheviots, Serges, HORSES GALLOP AT |e Worsteds, Diagonals, Thibets, Undressed Wors, 4 ite] teds, and, in fact, al! of the latest faljrics and » twosearoMm tur /MIGILANT CYCLE CLUB'S stow. | Athletien Route the Hutly. | stylish makes, at ¥ . mae | settee thin ineatl Abram to (roth the Westminnter Gaaatie) | 8.00, 10.00, 12.00, 15.00, 18.00, hampton 342 | maa prove of the |) 00, 22.00. & birt BOYS’ LONG AND SHORT PANTS SUITS in every is At vtiitet © taking the v GRAVESEND TRACK ed_by Henry Chadwick, Base Ball U PAS eater tives SUS SM a peut Maen aNd The Father of conceivable shade and’ fabric, ND, March re Thartipr ed PUGH er CEU SAC eet Contains the 5.00, 6.00, 7.00; 5:00, 10.00," 12.00, m e in the weather pil aa mnd-aeale | time hullving and heres) | 15.00, NEW isons FOR the horses out on the course in num- i SA AL \CHILDREN'S 2-PIECE and BUSTER BROWN SUITS, p bers to-day. The Burleigh, Gaynor, Cor- | ata ree of the Ne 1,98, 2-25, 2.48, 2.98, 3.48, 4.98 & 6.00 mell and \ set of two-year-old fro carols and | aie) ail the! In Our Regist Ta Te HUI" Daly's barn were aunt to Brigh- i ae of Gia pane peated laste each| eit ee ce Our New Spring Catalogue Mailed Free. ton Beach tra Veainer Tom Welsh sent se k for thelr work oreanization special chapters se ball ‘on the erolatoaict and can asd Wad Eneave hate Interesting! youre 10) * 1 VARANTEE CLOTHING .CO., ALL DEALERS, | Roun | *Habunta — BROKAW BROTHERS | 3 ajong at good speed. Hut Chase Steeplechase: | | Up owe Major Dungerted Sherod, Kah fr ite Sih | gia al hw HB KIRK &CO Hae ARTI St, and 94 Ave. Rargecighingsin nets tis te Wegitne | indy teaaie GeeoP taste and quality at at~ ezot deal of ther valuta . D, m ey e been show! o y- riling steeplechase out two 10! thine ike tps dana they” acted ‘nam ue tractive prices: That is the | mcwarsor ALL THE ARENAS Sole Bottlers, N. Y. . mie 1a) Boney Boye. ak PROMINENT MINOR LEACH ring were shown nt | ceaporenties aitowance Me™ 7771:188) whole story of Brokaw Brothers’ | price ten cents Per ‘COPY SPORTING. OLD DR. GRINDLE, Jur Reser fe SOUnKSLEDS 2 BHbD A sled Oe Ni IN si ¢ Under DreGrindle’s sclen' diseases pecullar to men cured more csi The CHICATO THANDICARPER xy tips seitetions, falta, Boling? full ‘wi ee fire's" Dien? Si weak” June’pe and wee ‘best. 230 Broadwi continued success for the last half century. A cordial invitation to . é ; ics | Rare examine our speind stock 18 ex= Specials are” the a eee Gath ene ay. Nervous, sia es i From, S| per ae Baader, tended toall who appreciate qua eri Wy Beras lity and variety. awe HORSES, CARRIAGES, AC. ries 3 Our complete line of spring overcoats in all the hstiand, pony, ‘aitire ountit y XGdrees Jas, newest textures and latest patterns is worthy the attention of the most fastidious customer) ASTOR: “PLACE-AND-FOURTH- ‘AVENUE ES Alto Hood, Black Cat, blatite and Dance Musi quarter down the backstt onds, - Austin Allin, fing anid ‘Two Step reeled distance at a two-minute galt ‘The Hampton Stable’s two-year-olds | were out in two sets. Renault gnd “ormean went. together and Cherival Reynard hooked up. the four res-eighths in 0.3. | Th the, se G a nt free on re Catalogue of Spring peo! FOR THE CONNOISSEUR PALL MALL LONDON CIGARETTES ebir t mu Uy yy aa WANTBD—Sefe, ‘noun ress cart and must be at modergs w. LIE jr. ae A most rare and delicious blend | of Eastern Tobaccos, er Booker allowed the import Hon Royal and Galaina three fur- iin 4M seconds. George Mechan al- alt mile in Judge Bhiitipn ler and Gasgar Spatloping a mere |

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