The evening world. Newspaper, September 17, 1904, Page 7

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i Transactions, Bystematic betting Is the keynote of! financial success on the turf, A man} Who conducts his business in town in! the most systematic manner will go to the race-course and bet in the :nost| Daphasard fashion imaginable. If he conducted his betng in the t frm manner in which he conducted his | Dusinesshis turf speculations would probably be succeesful, Most people want to be Yaegers or “Pittsburg Phils.” Few people know, however, | that “Pittsburg Phil’ is one of the! most systematic of players, When What seems a real good bet comes alqng y che puts down a sweller, When) the races do not look easy he either! does not bet ot all or ontent with ® moderate wager, meter to be inter- ested. “Pittsburg Phil" once sald: “It 1 could bo certain of one bet a day I ‘would break every bookmaker on the rack.” And that 1s probably true if *@ man could be content with that one bet. The public, however, wants to eat six races. Some days they may eat five out of six races, Other days they may win four bets or three bets, | ‘These are rare occasions, however, Very | often a man will not win a bet all day, and very often he will win one oF two bets. | (| A Fortune for some, | Fortune awaits the man who Is a fair judge of form who will say to Bimself: “I am going to look the cate over over — " WEIGHTS FOR THE “HITCHCOCK RAC ; » The weights for the Hitchcock Steer’ le. @hase, to be run Monday next at Graves | ‘end, were announced yesterday, with Poxhuntor leading the list at 1 pounds. Lavator and Caller come next with 362 pounds es followed by Good and ee Plenty, a stable companion of Fox- t hunter, with 160, There Is abe ag o choose between Good and Plenty Bt. Jude in the estimation of the rane @apper, as they are even weights. Bt. Jude was the four-year-old star of | Wthe early season, winning the Grand | National, Good and Plenty was un- known at that time, but has since de- veloped into a jumper of the highest cless, There is much anxiety to see the pair tried out together, and the pros-| ts are bright that the running ot the Pircheor, will bring them together. Xhunter’s presence In the Chantiily field to-day indicates that Good and) }Plenty Las been re for Monda / face, Toe race,may also see the reap- rance ai thé metropolitan tracks af t estern champion, who y kroeked cut by @ fall he had become | HORSE § WORKED AT THE BAY TRACK: (Special to The Evening World.) GHEEPSHEAD BAY, Sept. 11.—The fay broke fair and bright at the Bay course this morning and the track was | as fast as lightning. There were many. Renee shown to exercise and the gal- } hours were Inter g ones to a Macernet. The princ workouls noted were the follow!n; “SYSTEMATIC BETTING AETNOTE OF BEATING BOOKS Turf Speculation Con Gall Only Be Success- ful When Methods Are Employed. that Are in Use in Ordinary Business| bid ot haere furion; in 117 1-2, lames Rowe, trainer, , won aM Bix furlongs in Lit 1+ | Ls handily; James Rowe, trainer, 5, VETO—Six furlongs in in, with Von Tromp. going | handily; Rowe, trainer, Mile and a furlong in 201, W. Rogers, trainer, RTENSIA—Five furlongs in’ 1.13, breesing; J. W, Rogers, trainer, ascort, BELLE— furiongs in ih 1-2, breeaing; R. Tucker, trainer. | TH thd ‘THIRD—Four furlongs in 0.5), | aity R. Tucker, train ‘Br. tin ANE—Four furlongs tn 0.55, | . trainer, REGAL—Six furlongs in 1.17 James RDER—Five furlongs in 1.08, eesing; A. J, Joyner, trainer, RAPID WATER—Four furlongs in 0.51, breezing, Enoch Wishard, trainer. in 0.51, han- | ANGEST ‘OR—Four furlon, dily; Barry Wood, trainer, ar A DALE—Seven furlongs In 1.4, | UF C. T. McDowell, Trainee, | in 0.85, + Matt Byrne, tral ner. RIGHT—Mile and .a (ur- % handily; 4. J. Joyner, DOLLY SPANKER-One mile and a | fprees in 2.02 1-2, handily; T. J. trainer. nt BOT-Five furlongs in 1.08 a4, wenandly, J. EB. Madden, trainer, PALM BFARE! ven furlongs in 1.38, nail J. H. McAvoy, trainer. wal i) LASS—Four furlongs in 55. breezing; R. Tucker, trainer. DObsAW ie furlongs in 1061-5, with Tongorder. aka A—Quarter in 0.24 handily; J, Rogers, trainer, CAT GOR ats furlongs In 1161-4, ndily; A, J. Joyner, trainer, gongui — Five furlongs in 10% 1-2 handily; A. J, Joyner, trainer, Athletes Declared Professionals, J The Registration Committee of the Metro | “politan Assoatatieg yesterday declared ay professiona| ee pee = Sept, woe wr oe | ewirlin Royert Todd, py the New West) since, ag the Islips are tho only team Ite" pratesionl that they failed to score against this carefully each day, I will thoroughty | scrutinize every race. In one of the tix races I shall probably find @ horse that stands ow as a pretty certain | winner, On that horse 1 will bet, and that will be my only bet. If it loses T will pick the best bet on the follow- ing, day, and continue that one bet @ day, betting on a gradual scale, If T win two bets a week I can make each week a winner.” Fortune awaits the man who can do this; but the men who have the neces- sary will power to follow out @ method of proceduro such as this are very few. A man may start out with the firm resolve to do this sort of thing. He may win five or aix bets right off the reel, and will pat himself on the | back as to the softness of the game. Then he may lose two or three in sauce cestion, “And on the days that he loses these bets other horses that he has fancied may win, That will eour him. Ym “Ts wasting time and money, Back to Old Way. Then back he goes to the old system of trying to beat every race, and his bankroll soon melts away, There are men, however, who atick to systems tenaciously, and who make a hand- some income every year, There ° all sorts of systems, almost as many as there are horses racing, but the best system of all is common sense, and abetted by good judgment | telf-control, A system that ping a man down to his minimum wager when, for instance, his judgment dictates the placing of & good bet, Is a bad system, for the reason that it dissatisfes the player. Such systema are for the men of no judgment, who must be bound fast by ironclad restrictions. Golden as is common sense on a race- track and precious as Is self-control, | | not one man in one hundred possesses these qualities when in the switl and excitement of the betting ring. and STAR BATTER SHOWS UP IN GAME WITH GIANTS Mr. Batch, of the Brooklyns, Got a Home Run from Both Mathewsoi nm and McGinnity and Narrowly Missed Another. Hear ye! Hear ye! All ye managers in search of batting talent, And what manager ts not? There is Batch, Batch, the Biffer. He is playing third base for the Brooklyns, He arrived recently, unheralded and unsung. But he can make the ball sing. He made it sing a song of two offictal home runs on the Polo Grounds yester- day, and claimed he was robbed of a third by the umpire, No one knew Batch when he took his stand at the plate in the second inning of the first game, He had been with the Holyoke team up in Massachusetts, where ho had been farmed by Hanlon. After two strikes were called on him the unknown caught one of Matty's shoots plumb on the seam. Tt started over Dahlen's attle, flying low, Ike a wild duck in heavy weather. Mertes backed down the outfield for It. Bift its wings were atill doing busines and it kept on past Mertes toward the SUNDAY BASEBALL GAMES: ropes, Outside of which registers a home run, Batch meanwhile was doing time, Bay time, around the corners, and was dig- ging for the plate when Sandow re- layed the ball to Dahlen, who threw to Bowerman. Out at the Plate. ‘The catcher caught the ball as the tunner dashed serose the pan, Frank swung his arm wide to touch Batch, And Bmatie called it out. Batch felt a bit aggrieved, as well he might, and muttered: “T'll make it gure next time.” And he sure did. In the seventh inning he smashed one so far away from Bresnahan that Roger saw the folly of throwing it in, In the second game Batch repeated the performance. And there was a0 question about this third homer. It does indeed seem that this lad ca hit some, particularly when the fa ti taken Into spaaiceration Naat ie lo: its Nawab ea suc! ers as ind MeGinnlty. The Murray Hills will have for thelr | opponents at Olymple Field, One Hun- | dred and Thirty-sixth street and Fitth avenue, to-morrow, the Poughkeepsie | team, which Im one of the strongest | semi-professional teams in this country. ‘The tatter team will have four National | League playere to help them beat the} | Murray Hills, The game should be | ‘one of the most exciting and Interest: | ing of the season, as both teame are! evenly matched. The Poughkeepstes have won more games e season than they have In previous Years, Johnny McGraw's Giants, champions | ot the National League, will journey | over to the Bt, George Cricket Grounds, | in Hoboken, to-morrow, where they will play the strong Hoboken team. | McGraw will have out his regular team, with either Elliott or Wiltse to do the while Warner will act as back. ‘The Hobokens have been play> {hg’'a great article of ball this season, a result a close and excitii can be looked for, The Hobok the champion Bostons twice, Cincinnati, Boston and Brooklyn teams, his seaso National Leaguer tn all probabil ft “umpire the au, - With Eiberteld, of the Highlanders, |at short the Ridgewoods will tackle the New London team, of the Connecti. cut League, at Ridgewood to-morrow im the aecond half of @ big double. ogee Pritchard will be In the box for ¢ nd Islanders, In the early set-to fne Elk F, C. and the Magnolias Will be the contestants. At the Protectory Grounds, Van Nest, to-morrow, the Philadelphia Giants, colored champions of 194, wi cross bats with the Emeralds in the last game of thetr series. The latter team defeated the colored cracks at their t meeting and expect to repeat the “Dummy” Deegan will twirl for the Emeralds and Taylor, the deat- mute pitcher of the New York Na- ticnala, will officiate as umpire leet cemmemned OR. KNIPE BARRED. Dr. Knipe, of this city, who was the The Central Islips and the Royal Giants will be the attraction at Equita- | the amateur bouts for the Olymple | ° ble Park to-morrow. The Giants and Islips met several weeks ago end the! colored team was shut out. They! have been after a return date ever amateur champion boxer of the United States, has been declared ineligible for championship, which will begin in the Knipe for several years has been an | Instructor of bo: and physical cul- ture in thts city, and for receiving pay season. Williams and Hope, the unde- in| feated battery of the Islips and the one > such tuition became & profes- = tea S See | stadium at St, Louls on Monday. Dr.| bi a AGE WORLD IATURDAY &VBNING: BI | OF DIAMOND, RING RALPH ROSE AND T ly. eut of college, ‘NO FRICTION AT AL, WS MAO LEXINGTON, Ky.,, Sept, 17.—Major P. P. Ichnaton, President of the National | Trotting Association, who has tendered his resignation as a member of the/ board of directors of the Kentucky Trotting Horse Breeders’ Association, | denies that his resignation was the re- ult of any friction in the board He says he resigned once, three years 860, While he was president of the as-|only for one game with the Wasning-| games, sociation, and that the resienation was| tone. and not accepted. He was elected a director the season. while he was absent in Florida, he sayy, and his private business made it Necessary for him to resign J. D. Grever, vice-president of the} Kentucky association, who has re- signed, says he could not conveniently residing in tha city. No. 1 Ar. Dy bw, The Highlanders are home. to-day. Its just a short Nvitiy 35,000 persons, a record crowd| Alar tor Boston, saw the champions and the lew York Highlanders spilt up 4 double: | ader yesierda The Highiand by 6 mins to 4 attend the meetings of the board. not| second dy 4 to %. ‘Thus the situation precisely the AMBER 17° 1904. NO END TO THE GIANTS’ WINNING. New York,, ~ T have never” made any statement to any one that I would fight Jef- fries, md T have never had any desire to. enter the prize ring, Such a thought has never entered my head, 1 an not going to give up amateur athletics for the professional side in any branch. All sta‘ementy thet T have a desire to fight Jeffries or any other man are fakes absolutes I am sorry that I have been put in such a false light before the public, This is the second time a fake has appeared concerning nyself in athletics. What the animus ic, J cannot see,-but {t has evidently emanalc | from some one who is unfriendly, eitht. to the wmiversity I represent in sawe branch of athletics, or who 18 determined to drive m “RALPH ROS, HERMIS WON'T RACE AGAIN THIS YEAR Special to The Bvening World.) GRAVESEND, N. Y., Sept, 17.—Clear bright weath | | | | Suburban Handicap was to-day ship farm, outside und | A, and there turned out for Th | Kiee Herm al Shyelg nt to workouts were as fol- GOLD MONEY—One .and an ei miles, in 2.00, handily; W. Jenn’ trainer, ono; GUn~tyree. fy furlongs in 1%, 0) nnings, trainer, | DA FTE and uarter miles, tn | pROPER~D ‘gh 9 ennings, tn R. “Cam ell, trainer, 1OWD ne mile in 1. r 51, Mandiiy: wh, Hurley, raine te PATNE-Three futenes In 0.99, BOR alt tale ino In 0.61, Willtam fad le m0 haodity; bl ag furlongs in 0.65, Preming: 2: STAMPING GROUND—Five furlongs in LETOLAn Sty furlongs tek Wahine FenregeP aint Mami: BOW MOOSBO M. a" nait mile ee Vie Hollart, train: STILLICHO-One mile in 1.4, William Jennings, DAZZLE—Five forongs 1 104, driving; T, Welsh, trainer. MERRY LARK—Five furlongs in 1,08 1-2, handily; T. Welsh, trainer, FLYING SWOBE—A half mile in 0.54, breesing; J. Goldsborough, trainer, MISS BESSIE—Six furlongs in 1.2. handily Weir, trainer, bait gy GORDON—A_ half mile in Hoping; F. iriew, trainer. 7A, nal if mi in 0.63, galloping | rreat’ MASON Myour furlongs in 08, StL: S Rowe, trainer. TU aan ™ AIGHLANDERS AT HOME FOR A VERY SHORT STAY ~: Manager Griffith and His Team Back from | MPMoitiehc als’ nim Hard Games with the Champions tor One Briet Struggle with the Tailenders Here. ¢ me ag it was when the Hightanders) pr, by ae long envugs! arrived at Boston, Each team won two easily: H . Mason trainer. . then off again for the rest of} drawn. The fans are guessing as io RAc bY stay turle ong in 2.0, haw the great race Is going to end. aasily; *, McLaughlin, trainer, now think New York hag A” ——[— | good chance to win the champlonshiy, | great work being done by Cheabro. ‘The 4% got the first game) fighianders now go against Washing For best estimate of the Roosevelt- nd the champions the |}, While Boston, alter hay iK dilaues | Parker vote. For details of distribu- who have never been easy for them, “s tion #9 Sunday's World. for ary one else for that matter ile in’ 1.46, driving; B. Campbell, trainer REVEILLE—One mile im 1.48, all out; T. Welsh, trainer, | OXFORD—Three furiongs tn 0.38, hand- | lly: J. MeLaughiin, trainer anFix Five-eighths in 1 Ir galloping: ing; J Neumeyer, trainer, rental ne mile in 1.48, handily, sw. het AL tc J. Neumeyer, trainer. in 1.18, eas- CHAMPLAD me amt an eighth mice In 189, handfly: velr, trainer. MARJORAM—Pive furiongs in 1.04, handily; E. Graves, trainer. StTAL GIRL—One mile in 14, BE. Rowe, trainer. furlongs in 0.51, FALL GAMES OF ThE NEW YORK AC. ‘The New York Athletic Club sent out) number Meial entry bianks yesterday for “i home plate. baseball Tt wis a game note veventy-third games at Travers | on Saturday, Oct. 1. The features beat le relay race for clubs a colleges With teams of four men each; a one-mile relay race, Invitation Inter- scholastic, with teams of live 3; 10. ‘Ard rus, M-yard run, Ovyatt run. yard rus, le vault for height, running high’ jump, standing broad ind) ie runal road jump, wing | mer, putting sixteen | 14 't, wee pice Titec i ‘eet poe a d-yard bu ie with \ eee Monday will be anothe in New York, #) at eltner park. z It's 1 doubie-he day. Glants va A motion has been ‘made and seconded | any that the name be changed from Han-| see Jon's Superbas to Hanlon's Phantasmas. | (requent!y How the crowd giggled when poor le Emsile got soaked on the an| knee with a pitched b ball, With the veterad a Cy” Young on the the dusmetile, yard luck they Major Doyle, witnessed yesterday's game wearing a knot on hia skull as big as a dumpling He bumped his forehead passing under NEWS OF THE. DIAMONDS. possieniies | the midget comed ce a li will be glad to Griffith at work on the slab arore BANKING AND FINANCIAL, | |OF PROFIT oft day In, Sospital list the Boston Americans are | ¢hrough matinm of fn Wall St, concisely thing doing get‘irg in bad. The whirlwind is | em/timad, together wah bal methods of tredies. a thr <1 with pneumonia, which is | 4¢sve et requlty alee, complete infermetion vs!s~ it S| bie to every dealt in upom the Buebae, espoclally severe In its treatment of | all comtamed ia our cow page, clotbbound, illastrated orthy for th®/aii large men | “Guide to Investors,” ved al the — | ' If Orih’s strained tendon proves very | whieh, we pubtcd, for free distriduivon. Owe | leerious ft will mean the cegular ap: | “Dally Market Letter.” eadee yok! pearance of “Grif” In the box. ratis every afters so + the to ad W 4 oklyn to aed pred tp oon mi ered a, ag enemies 8 Hanlon's team, | Althovgh the don’t wish Orth ates the terse of tp “HllgiT ¢ Freese 00, ae acne Sie it Setame MY. (Hera . (dlcoart es. Brookiya, N.Y, ‘eapRiates ae, hela eh a AND RACE TRAC ELEGRAM WHICH TELLS A STORY fonm No. 1812. THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH Co. INCORPORATED ~-———— SPECIAL. Colkeet N, P, RSheét Dated a ARBOR, Mioh., Sept, 17, 1904, To Sporting Editor Byening Worlé, and @ fast track were) oY the cond tions thie morning during wel | Excursion Resort 5 a ee RAILROADS, Pennsylvania. RAILROAD. | send ¥ e.hemk and Deowiussie’ and ith pear . a seat Coan sii en een a that elved ‘below tor Tanai seed Nm 18.95 re oe Viv EST ERM RAILWATw 2th ay ice tations dt) Rot vi BELLEW OOD New Mountain BAND CONCERT. i cae . | OLD FASHIONED COUNTRY "| LEHIGH Broncos tt } by List SUNDAY *FACURSIONS OF THE SEASON, $4.00 ERIE RAILROAD,. Sept. 18 and 25 to | SHOHOLA GLEN © pine Bive, Mountains, 107 miles the beaut! or Sept. ont. 18 Banday ee a er = oe Dally Oulings (except Tron Day, Line Steamers “New 4 “albany from Desbrosses Bt. at £ Myy Wont 22d St. 9A. Mad West Pinetan Bxonreion Ot 2 and & STEAM BOATS. . PATTEN [1 Sa Aiiat BAS AND Base Aare mh SS AL is. ara ti va Pe) Leave Rioomtiels Leave Pe “FOR SALE. BICYCLES IR & =| Hemovel clearance sacrifices; new and i vale 6 ond-hand highest arade Bicy to 873. 1.50, 140, $12.90. $15 817.50, bear ieee tik ore eae The Park place itt Fe Save tomes fron 78 Pack: Rom mag $1.90 rk uae | pRESS WEL cee aS made Cloth: tablished dregs Rage 3 HELP WANTED—MAL&, Pfaquires an aL imine ba requires an nine nen ia ae eas wanted ce, au! si JLWAY.—a28, 498 pw, ‘ pT LINE.~0.95 A br ‘i

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