The evening world. Newspaper, August 9, 1904, Page 8

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Hod UMGRAW 10 GET DONLIN "READY FOR ACCIDENTS ! Not Put the New Man in the Game Just Yet, but Will Have Him Handy in Case Anything Happens, BY ROBERT EDGREN. “Manager Johy McGraw, standing in (he shado of the piayers’ bench, rep a keen eye on Mike Donlin, latest addition to the conquering Giants. im a new spick aad span Giant uniform, wit the sweat dripping hfs eyebrows under the rays of the copper-colored sun that overhung Polo Grounds, was working hard in the ruck of busy players. McGraw taken his turn and was cooling off. » “Doalin is « round-built ietlow,’ remarked MeGraw approvingly. re, big, loose muscles, and he Ja quick and powerful, fn a scrap. He's bigger than you would think. 190 at least, “Are you going to play him right away?” I asked. “No,” sald the manager; ‘he won't play juss now, McCormick {s all nd when a man is all right tn his place I don’t disturb him, That ¥ policy.” GOOD LINE OF DEFENSE, “J believe in havig a good second line of defense. When anything hap- Pens to one of my men I want another just as good to put right in his That is my policy, too. “Donlin is a great ballpinyer He will have to spend a few of these Gays locsening up and getting into the best of shape, and then he will We ready for anything that may happen. He ts as good as anybody in the “eld, and he's all right on first, If any accldent should happen in any ot * these positions he could jump right in. “Then he's a great hiiter—averages .350 or s0."" “Is he the best on the team?” x McGraw wrinkled his brow and thought for a moment. Swered diplomatically: “Well, none of them is any better.” NEW MAN’S ADVANTAGE. - “You see, Donlin is left-handed, and a left-handed batter has a big ad- Fi 7 lage. The swing of @ right-handed batter naturally throws him out of with bis start for first. He bas to hit and twist back before he can get The left-handed battep can get at any ball pitched better than a handed man, anyway, and he bas an advantage over the pitcher. Be- sides that, he gels another advantage in starting. The swing at the ball him what !s practically a flying start for frat, because his body ts in me 3 on and headed im the right direction as the bat lands on the ball. That - Only one reason why Donlin has a tiptop average. He has a natural bat- eye, What any teeam needs is men who can land on the ball, and he ‘the real thing when it comes to that.” be “How about the stories to the effect that you and Donlin carry scalping- Antves for each other?” "Oh, tudge:” said McGraw, . LUST ON EATRES FORTHE BOM J TOE) RARIEY GANS ty a 4 “He He'd be a good man He weighs 200 pounds—or a Then he an- "Jot Naw York, the committee in charge | 2 ‘Vina sack 0 FIST, ATHLETIC = AT WORLD'S FAI Athletic an@ aclentifie intere are] @ now centered on the Anthropologieal | Athletic Conteats which will be held in| % the World's Fair Stadium, Aug. 11 and 12, Dr, W. J, McGee, of the Department f Anthropology, Chiet James W. Sulll van, of the Department of Physical! « Culture. tnd Dr, Luther Halsey Guilek, | @ of the meeting, have completed all ar-| @ rangements, and the programme of events Is now in the hands of the men in charge of the differont tribes, Patago- SAGO HOODEDOLISEOOD O06 4401 190000000804. roare hians, Sioux, Cocopas, Cheyennes, nea and Maricopa Indians, Igorrotes, Moros, Visayans, Negritos, Pampan- sans, and other members of the Filipino tribes, African Pigmies, Halry Alnus and all tribes represented on the Pike, will compete for honors in the different events. Phe first day's programme will con- sist of contests within the different tribes to decide who will be the two represeniativer in each of the nal events, which wit! take place on the second day. First Day's Events The programme for the first iy ins It tan't“often that “Bad Bill" Dahlen Js caught napping, but he was asleop at the switeh when he allowed him- self to be doubled up by Brain on a caught fy from Warner's bat, The look of reproach that Jake Beck ley applied to Grady when he ae became mixed in the shui aft Mertes's high foul would have withered any other than a ball player. cludes the 10-yard dash, b> gh loaded run, 40-yard run, 12-yard hur- trying diea shot put, throwing the pound] analyse the meaning of Burke's “Oh! ump, emer] Abt” when that gentleman struck jane-| nothing and hit it the only time be ball and] was at bat. They couldn't agree as to whether it algnified pain, chagrin ae CF disappointarent or a comojnativn o Mt} the three, with perhaps a few other emotions Upown in ivr guad measu Dootn, of ‘Philadelphia, ts something of & dea, on his own hook just now weight, fun high tree climb, running broad Acer tl Ing stone for heceraoy, nrow!ng ball for fo had Indian foo! vey, ite yard loaded Pky carries r cent. 0 a fs y pack The Paint pi shinny alone bee 5 tis 4 few persons have ever had the opportunity of witnessin oc! Tn addition to the fi nals of the first The little backstop ‘was fined $25 for day's events, the programme of the} abusing an ump} He says he Mage y the fine, the rab Won't pa: ascond day will Include archery LR. Ing with the blow gun, throw annat play eeu (the money ng velin for accuracy, throwln, 4, Libition atone fignt. between | produced. i ot ~~ Manes dec t here will] Wonderful hitter in ¥ as ie untitc sremant that Mi Se ot] Manton knows @ atick artist w unlimited value to anthropologists. | # The phyaical ablitties of the different tribes will be compared, and a com-| What plete record of the results. of the! gun? ema to have been hoisted games will be kept and used for com-| into the icity of the uppermost no- ariaon with the performances of cly-| where by tts own petard. Need athletes. ‘The games will start at 1 o'clock each afternoon and con- Uinne until the day's programme Is fin- ished. *(CROSBY-WILSO WILSON BOUT A ORAW (Special to The Evening World.) s become of the pitching isa similarity of effectiveness pitchers, Take five of the lead In twenty of McGinnit game the average hits off him is ¢ be 9-27, 7 1 20, Twenty. fear for Wadde! Dahlen does not believe that he ts to become an evangelist. "There {s noth id “Rad BH” Some one fe putting up a joke on me.” joke Is not to be com Hill. would be following In the footsteps of BI Sunday, Wiltse is practi CHES Pa, Aug. %—Steve Croa-| © by, of lle, and Kid Wilson, of Orange, N. J., fought six hard rounds} | | at the open air show of the Lenox A the} I to The Bening Worlt) | _Fatries for the open games of the|C. and the reeult was ebout an e¥eti| Grim seems a soul name ter an um ety ON. OH Aug. 2=| Charice J. Harvey Association thing at the finish, Wilson rushed mat-| pire, and if Jack is related to the tn- Bi! McCluskey, of Philadelphia, | are to be held at Sulzer's Harlom Park,| ters at the tart and had Avantage} © atable Poiladeiohta fighter of that M the decision over ‘Jig’ Stone, of Aug. 12, will close t Ow. with J {im the frat round. Tn the agcond Cros-| name all the be ‘Wa & twenty-round bout at the| &, Sullivan, No. 15 Warren street, or C. by had the New Jersey bleeding at BA Grem riled tasedtn gi ebe saat Coliseum. It was h | J the auspices of the Queen Cit “ Club, and was one of the Mt and fercest witnessed here this Dieges, No, % John street The following & amateurs, A. A. U. rules to govern @yard dash, handicap; 1.000-yara rin. handicap, 90-yard run, handicap; run their first meetings here a AKO, Btone attempted to force the ie throughout, and while he (mena * 5 ers of the Po @iite u few blows, very few Police pine a affective, at’ he continually lett York which were taken advantage the winne iphian. But two of My Foun aight noviea, gave Stone's favor. a Ye. Sampson, Tew Goodman, the English feather ies, and | Welht wrestler, who is coming along Thai’ an ‘additional, the route defeating oi comers, has Ye juced a nore Matched to meet Young Sampson, in On hig feather-weight ‘edition a) the Tu Rus and all round the iion. This Ay Set fe e latter part of saat ies fe pies wh a to be open to all] Up in r A gold watch wil be awarded ue by probably soho r on so the mouth from a right-hand Jolt, and Ly! that on there was general mix- ery round, and the men re- peatedly clinched and fought clom The referee had his own tro breaking them apart and wi y Wilgon. The crowd was ( James F, Doug’ hounced that no more open ir would be attempted in the park, ' it had been @ losthy enterprise, METS’ SUNDAY SUNDAY GAMES, The Royal Giants, a fast aggregation ef colored ball-tossers, will be the op- ponents of the Mets at Equitable Park pext Sunday, ‘The Giants defeated the wants to even up his | [o stroagthened eam he “thinks “thie he om win. ae 12TH ST ee ie ke Sas Detrolt Americar League team pag § pwethased from W. ton, has beem warned over to Ma: er Watkins, @ the Minneapolis nerican Assoold®a team. In return OLD DR. GRINDLE, © Disttishs or dm, ‘nder Dr Crindie’® gelentifie treatment la to perinanetly 10 ore and on more mouderate pom Unan by any ‘other advertis- cured in from J to § months ¥ in from J to 2 months. Kid. pplainia in from 1 to 2 *, pore » Verievsola Im trom 1 eranea guatracted Gains cured in 3 te ‘pa GRINDLA ts still at t oy | divulge. NOTES OF THE DIAMOND for Greminger and a cash consideration role ve le to hava at che end of thia foason, Minneapolls's “best player,’ Waose name neither Manager Watking hoy the local management would CAKE DONLIN “TAKING IN A HOT | fights, GIANTS WIN CLOSE GAME, LATEST PLAYER T0 WEAR A GIANTS’ UNIFORM, AND WHO WILL BE SAVED FOR EMERGENCIES ) PE ETSTORHE FOOSE SS09O-990000000000004 eo peCree > PROTEP OTTO TIS T ESET ES DOS BOCOHe LINER FROM, FEuo BETWEEN M'GRAW 4 DONUN AND "Fe ¢ ) MS GRAW?, o Seow as O06 MURPAY HAD Th BEST OF BEEBE (Special to The Evening World.) PHILADELPHIA, Pa, Aug. 9.—Despite the fact that one of the best cards of | the season was on at the National A, Cy, only @ falt-sised crowd attended the The bouts Were red-hot affairs and full of ginger, especially the one oe- tween Tommy Murphy, of New York, and “Kid Beebe, of this city, These boys fought at‘a hurricane pace, and at the finish honors belonged to Murphy, although Beene put up & great uphill fight and compelled Tommy to fight his nardesl, “whieh is some.” Beebe tired verceplibly in the fnai round and wes holding on for dear jife at the bell, 2ago, und Jack CYCLISTS WILL MEET IN | CHAMPIONSHIP RACES ranged for the amateurs, und as Pa phases are to be offered for: Caf events In whieh they cumpete, thought that the entry list ‘wil te unusually lorge The Manhattan, Handi ja to i 4 the feature of the day's spo) 2 pune of $00 has been hung up, all of which Next Saturday afternoon all the pro- fessional star cyclists will ride at Man- hattan Beach, The ir will be @ grand cifeult meet for the champlon- ship, and every erack in the Bast will) the fi Kramer, McFarland, Kenn, Root, scheps, we Bedeiis, Kreos,' 18 {9 go to the winner, Cadwell, Sehrieber, Jacobson, Dorion, Collett, Fogler, Butler, Bardggtt, Arm- bruster, Glasson, Galvin and @ score of other feat ones are entered, Beverul raves have aso de been ar- “KID” PANTZ AND [CURE MEN’ i], of Brooklyn, were the principals main event and it resujted in @ nost terriic batte, abounding with furious slugging. Parmer py tried out like & hurricane round, and with a series ft hooks to one jaw had jack back hard, r] not le’ im set, Tho second round nad not progreswed Ned Hanton is ag in futures. He fe busy thinking up a team for Brook- lyn next year that will make Nationals take a fresh grip on and a double knot In their shoe Hulewitt, of Philadelphia, has injured his throwing hand so severely that he will be out of the game for some time. Donahue, the Phillies’ new infleider, will baty | short during th ular's retire- nent. Manager Nichols, of the Cardinals, ts opeful. ‘We're in race with any it them, barring New Yor he says. We will be @ very disappointed lot if ve fail to finish in the first degree. All the boys are confident, nd we are superior Chica Cineinnatt and ‘\ttsburg in the pi ng department.” During the month “ot July St and Pittsburg gained ot table. Phitadefpiiia bettered Ing 27 points, while the other were on the other side of the . Brooklyn lost 47, lcago 22, New York 12, Cincinnatl 9 and Bos- ton %, Louis five seconds when O'Neill dro, oe, Fi ‘ner with @ terrific right to the He dropped ithe log, ‘but gaunely ‘strug: to hia feet at nine O'Neill rushed to finish bim but nar er ae peel and landed ee pene to the ropes, Jacl woul not hk and again mer had by yh fie bas gems hus aul- ibrium and gav They were so Was & Question as 16 who the blow soporific. The terrible bv on shy shout of hig led ha OH ‘ain commenced to there, however tek 4 © any Neat of changes. Ran a "er dy wexoreation both h boy 1 iy other ands ana, aga the They seem and geen in to regal a crash went O'Neill's the act, Farmer right to law, only for Jack to repeat Lg bes 3 round found no let: as if nature would eres but neither bo mid fhting tha’ ‘er seen the none it's the UNITED CIGAR STORES CO. AN average of half a million customers daily visit our stores—yes, it is a good many; but we honestly believe we can make it a million before long. Cigars better by 30 to 50 per cent is a mighty compelling argument we find, and we are building along this line all the time. We suggest something NEW this week. We feel st that's been done so far in Domestic cigars—really a good 10c. cigar in quality. It is the Benefactor Cigar (SUPERIOR Su... cach, $2,500 box of 50, $5.00 per 100 Each cigar is filled with a fine, riche qualit Havana ba ye! carefully rolled by skill i a wrapped with a workmen, and Sumatra wrapper. Game prices by mall, Remit to Flat-iren Building, New Yor. DONARUE DRAW ( to The Bening World.) BOB’ , Aug. 0—"Kid" Pants and Young Donahue went ten rounds to a draw at the Cambridge Athletic Asso- ciation, The bout was one of the [Rat- eat seen in this club-—nouse this year, the fighting being remarkably clean. Up to the ffth k wae an even thing between the men, and after that Pants used hie right to great advantage, be- ing answered by Donahue's left, Pants was the fresher of the two at the end of the tenth. The decison was favora- bly recetved. In the siz-round preliminaries Laig | Conly so far outclassed Danny Snyder that the referee gave Conly the dect- sion In the third. Chartle Gartler got the decision over Gus Dumond in the second, the latter being on both knees when the referee concluded the count vt ten, Jack Sumner and Jack Mo- er went six row Ud ore, e nds, and McKeever VARICOCELE gz7e nat sbsorptive process, BLOOD Radica) cures TOL30N see LOSSES 74 orn DRALHS: t¢ trad “ae (ised anchuvely 2 sess free. make no woh Farid s Bey: Siriotent noe Paes ten ruarantes cure you eet your M Mor DRM Aaa a, 140 WEST ATH ST. SIZE)

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