The evening world. Newspaper, June 28, 1911, Page 12

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f f lil ee ee UP-TO-DATE AND NEWSY THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK 1911 EDITED BY ROBERT EDGREN CORNELL STANDS SUPREME IN AMERICAN ATHLETICS Ithacan’s Great viene in Spectacular Boat Race at Poughkeepsie as Clean Cut as Her Triumph a Little While Ago at Games in Harvard's Stadium. Copyright, 111, by the Press Publishing Co. (The New York World.) ta @reat intercollegiate boat race 1s over, and Cornell has established | | | } Low i ae iy veivt, 4 wit ‘i VAL TAD NM) ith her position as the greatest athletic college in America. Her su- periority on the river was as clean as it was a little while ago on | the cinder path in Harvard's stadium. | Today Cornell in not only winner | of the regatta, but champion of America. The individual race at) New London between Yale and Har vard will signify nothing, for Cor nell this year has already defeated Yale, Harvam’ and Princeton. Of all athletic contests held by our American collages this intercol- logiate race at Poughkeepsie is most marvellously spectacular. In the football matches everything 15/ massed around the gridiron. There | 1s noise, clamor, color; but there is 0 perspective. << The Hudson yesterday, rippled in a reese, overhung with a light gray mist, carrying a great fleet of pleas- ure craft extending as far as the eye could reach, was a spectacle never to be forgotten, The distant and historic hills were purple masses piled up against the aky time In all the foreground thousands of flags and pennants fiut- Ja ttecmar wes’ strane |( What Crew Coaches Courtney and Rice Said After Race. BY OHARLES 1, COURTNEY. Cornell, It was one of the finest races I have ever seen. The Columbia crew deserves all the credit in the world for the plucky race it rowed: I saw that the eoutheast wind was making the course above the bridge rough, #o before they went out I told the boye thet ff any crew rowed them hard to gave themeeives till the last half mile, when they would be in the lee of the yachts at the finish and @0 get smoother water. They did as I instructed them, with the result that Cornell put forth ite best effort where it counted most, because the water wag smooth. BY JAMES RICE. Columbia, ‘There is another year coming, and, although we didn't go quite far enough tiie year, you will Gnd us ready for them next June The boye rowed the best they knew how, and Sage should have only, theshigh- est praise. BOXING STAG TO-NIGHT. Ag Long Acre A. A., Eddie King anf Young Carlton wil meet in the ‘main bout of ten rounds. bright dresses of the women, the sheen of silken eunshades. Acreas the river the banks for mile after mite were dot- ted with white dresses. In ene place, where the crowd wae thick, the white ‘was a solid patoh against the green “hillside. In others there were little acattoring patches of white, Every spot Showed a distamt watoher, eo far away that only the merest gitmpse of tho @trugsling crews could be caught It Mivstrated the vast enthusiasm of the @rowd—the enthusiasm that didn't need to be cramped within the four walle of @ stadium to keep its life From 2 unt! G8 in the afternoon spectators kept thelr positions, and even the Gistai patches on the fitlisides didn't grow thin and vanish until Jong after the ending of the last race, the race! ki was something to } .. the @rowd. Of course the Fours rowed eplendidly, and Cornell won, just as he hae almost always won, with eome- thing in reserve, The Freshman Bight was a corking race; @ race to make the blood leap in the veins, Jim Rice's colts romped away with it, rowing like machines, with never @ tremor or & Matoh Arranged. Battling Mantell and Al. Ketohel wil meet for ten roum’- at the Fairmont A, C. stag on Saturiay Ad Wolgast Says He Will Retire From Ring if Moran Defeats Him on July Fourth nemipoeen Champion 10 to 8 Favorite, Although English Boxer Is Being Heavily Backed. ished Stadium. Miah Murray, manager of the Armory A, 2 Beaton, ke just @ fine star bout for ub on ‘Thunslay evening, ot home grounds this afternoon. tins “fuageted fate! Jimmy” ain Xtawa Uttle difference Then Cotumbia spurte egain—e magnifi- cent effort, Cornell tries hard to hold the lead, but drops slowly) back. Along the banks Columbia yells rise to @ roar In_@ letter recetved trom, Billy the groundwork of what 1s to b Ameria pow In Paris, Tilly greatest baseball stadium in Ami It Is not finished, but there will be [enough to tHat reverberates from the distant moun: tains across the river. And Colum BY JOHN POLLOCR. ready Mr. Brush, affair, a half, Now Cornell 1s rowing aa| cisco on the afternoon of July 4. Con- jeanly ag Columbia, siderable money has already been wi So the race goes until below the bridge | ered on the outcome of the battle. Cornell spurts again. Columbia an-| Moran, as a result of his conactentious | @né sure that she has Varsity material there for future races. who has directed the Playing at the Polo Grounds on UT after all these two are like sion. “It 1 Mereity Bight te the thing. the decisto the Ithacan crew, rowing all this time| pion and getting * At last they come, some from down two strokes a minute less than Col-| loge to Moran," satd Wolgast, “1 wil had his heart set on the Gta Rustlers Picked as Nail aa te ‘Goat” in Opening of Partly Fin- BY BOZEMAN BULGER. OR the first time since the dis- astrous fire on the third day of the season the Giants will enter- tain their fends and supporters on their The fact that the lowly Bostonians are to be the target at which we will shoot makes to the thousands of baseball folk who are anxious to see je the erita. seats accommodate 25,000 people, and It {s safe to say that will be suf- ficient to ha those who have a de- comes up. For a while they ha: D WOLGAST, the lightweight RCT Aa wr : J furry or © hitch—rowing easily and |there bow to bow-and Columble we champion, le now the favorite in’) renelioen Nee a Sos aire to ace the festivities, confidently from the first ‘jump’ to the|by. Columbia gains faster and faster the betting at odds of 10 to 8 Joe Jeanette's finger. For four weeks now the steel work- fest drive. The time, against the nead|until, at the two-mile mark, Cornell's! over Owen Moran, the English fighter, fared that it eof, iss fre i} ers, concrete lay metal workers wind, wasn't wonderful, but the work |Dow !s at her rudder post. There Cor-| (0° engle twenty-round championship : | and carpenters have labored day and of the crew was. Columbia can be/Mell hangs, refusing to be shaken off.) 1. wnton takes place in San Fran- night to get the new Polo Grounds greed of ber Dig stalwart Freshmen, {Cors!! hed splashed @ little at a mile before the end of the season. whole their it the long trip, a tha artaalnaicn ot a daa saat teeteaaitr wats arts nd ert Role] training and good condition, has many | Set aa ileal ‘hat Goasaee bet atistaleta teseme to otir taterenh and get |Cerncti tries, bur fe held of. ‘Then a| supporters Ladle cece J ppd Beery has not been erected at all, McGraw be proper tingle in the nerves. ‘The|mere quarter of a mile from the finish, | 07 his chances of outpointing ' and his men will play there just the th @ stick of wood in the new struoture. | Josh Devore intimates, incidentally, that there might be a little hard wood on| the team, and as these are from te: emptied out of the stands i: |five minutes. ine in the lower sta: th they are pitched downward at | st It 'Pennant-Hunting Giants to Hold House- Warming at P Polo Grounds To-day Tre dtanfona itself is in perfect condl- tion. work restoring that the next day ai the bij Groundkeeper Murphy went t ve-foot fence all the way around, The Polo Grounds, when c 1s absolutely fireproof. he hard wood in the chairs there is no’ but that is neithe: e. There are five concrete ing to different parts of the ten here no: et wide, a crowd of 30,000 Seating Capacity Increased. The seating capacity has been largely the rows 1 twenty-five feet fur. rd Coogan’s Bluff, an ner back tow theatre. be necessary to move the home plate a little further out. w ati The present wood Ddleachers will be used for the rest of the season and during the winter the entire circuit of concrete and st ‘This work will 1 will be completed. i then have adium in America for a hom umbla, shoots the speed up to thirty-| very promptly ennounce retirement eight In a desperate spurt. Columbia | trom the ring, e@ I know the English- strains, It ts useless, Cornell creeps UP.| on qweuld never give me @ return Fiver, some up. The preliminaries have been two-mile affairs. This is four. A Killiag Gistance. The spectatore look om ae they might look at a fight that fa gure to end in a knockout. This ts Serious business. No light and fippant Preliminary foolery here. It ts to a finish! Have the doctors ready at tho/ ether end. They'll be needed, Good end game, these boys, and trained to the minute, eo that they can stand the Giants All Alone in Lead ‘The only question now is whether or not Cornell can make up nearly @ boat | length before the line te reached. Cor- nell comes up, half a length, three- quarters—EVEN! A , Cheering trom the river bank, and just | Pawor ot decay Cy "Thee a heh on | jas Cornell’e bow shows an inch atiead | weight question, Walsh wanting the weight to te | Columbiag bow oar, Sage, gon of the |st Se Dare PA fests gue pag age who rowed in Engiand 78 a0, | eee inaside. ins | collapes in a huddled heap and falls trail, forward against 6, at number 2.) Jim Flynn, the Western hearrweight, bo tom racket over the four milem oF at near it |The rest “of the crew keep up thelr [orahle fetcr. "When the contest between them for the runner-up positon, bn Prager A spurt, but seven men are trying to|and Carl Morrie, th It will be hot, too! hold elght now. Every man seasoned Cornell swiftly goes ahead, gains a scheduled to take place had to be called off 0 of the Bate dec -o0k at them! wun turns each reeling brain into |taat, ne oe No { with @ weak splasi . Tet Chicago -- 38 24 Spay ne un, Penn. nearent te snore | gi ri ibe ong Year ts ough Who Says Umpires Have No Friends? Philadelphia .. 38 24 then Columbia, Syracuse, Cornell and, 1a beaten. Two boat lengths 9 ¢ ittsburg . Wirt al, ase ww brona foie ee erage [Pans to Pay Klem’s Fime}|sttous.2::: 34 23 RUT cece an tha ide ona tee sani | AES UD OW Cas ie a EE a eh Questions boom out through the mega-|conen and Syracuse come along in its New York twirling phot In the silent observation cars, wake, Syracuse far baek, and tha bane he will be given HO says that umpires havent any | cha» W friends? py t Ly rptrea tailed. to we can hear the i thirty-elght to creases the lead, The « siv great jerk and out its length and | umbla leads by nearly trikes and drawer of hatrline 4 s was fined fifty dollars by Pres ey | dent Lynch of the But, 0 and behold! hore 4 made ny hen a Jength >_> a troking thirty: s t Cincinnati fans who have Bae gtroking, thirty. nest ts INNON GOT ONLY DRAW. | itty dollars between them and they are| STANDING OF THE CLUBE. a few feet, Wi D> and Byra- K to send it to Klem so he can pay | Ue SUS Al be cuse a little more ota.) hie fine Wa 30 03) BL Leute. . 1 Sorne! STON, Jung B.—-Bill tinnon of! as Umpir le sto Red om s 7 Se Pita’ ph 5 Brookly furiously, Columbia holds” ber yteMahon in thelr twelve-round bout at| ‘This surely 1# & wonderful baseball | RESULTS OF YESTERDAY'S GAMES. beautiful, swinging, even stroke. the Armory A. A. but got only a draw. | season, What with the cork centre Sew Yor, 2. Pint game, New York, @: Hrvotira, 8, rnell creeps Up, comes even, pasnen| ‘Pho decision WAS A Kieat surprise, 4s | ball, oldtimera coming back and mak- York 8. Becoud game, oa A Hrookins, i, h by inch, Open water shows be-| McKinnon had the better of the entire ing good, and fans paying fines for! gy ‘ i Mhicago, 7, tween Columbia and Penn, between | bout, umpires, there {8 no telling what will \ Penn. and the other two. From come off next. : this) moment there are only two GAMES SCHEDULED ' 703 TO-DAY. e, Columbia and Cor- | ,, “luv Stare Waite, Princeton winning who tn New the main tector tr, baseball tog the ine BB 304 |e orked ont mera ‘asuble heater st 86 (87 lm yeater probably wat! get Pender ee thington, veland. Chicago Tis ‘at Beuott, Bt Toute at ch hi sisinore 4 Buffalo. “A mile more and Cornel! still tends, of Race Cues and Phillies Tied for Second The Giants are now showing the way fn the National League. Cubs or any other club to assist them in their role as gulde, 90 they have sent the Chicago boys to the rear. The Cubs are having thelr troubles these days and will have many more when they hit the Hastern Not only did the results yesterday remove the Cubs from the tie they maintained with the New Yorks at the head of the league, but they were obliged to allow the Phillies to get on even terms with They found out they didn’t need the The latest changes in the standing came about through the Giants winning a doublé-header from the Dodgers, the Cubs breaking even with the Cardinals and the Phillies again defeating the Bostons. Five games now separate the Cardinals 613 | ele re: in) innte Mon plainly, At leat: “Are | 13 over. To any one who daily atignds oe oe d inning of ame rea@y" runs down the line. "Pop!" * goos| © os se. el wen 89 ONY | tia elty, or any other elty for that | se: hie, Highasters, "hag® heat | a varsity team, hes been the pistol, * t held In @ pit-any finish fight h ks the astern League | sig Box and will report for duty Saath atiy’ ¢h held in a ring. To ait there and tear| Matter, It would appear If pho fans pad | yy sare ees hou to that: alte in | era tenk Instantly the bowed bodies straighten r heart out \v a furious four-m heir way all of the baxebagl adbitrators| thelr i fight ‘ back and the oar-blades churn t edie ah aide lcs en cs mae Manager mova of di Ted Box ie gulag to water. T voats star noad eo 1 ‘ 4 | wor pe shot at sunrise, The veri - riay's victory eo i ince’ won te a rd - ' 4 s. a test You remember reading the other day | a W Presa: nt son of, Hoan he frag a splassing, © wave of foam as ‘ "8 Colum an sit | that Manager Bresnahan of the Cardi: | v eet Oe ee Columbia shoots half a length to the! y ve had them of) SSX) nats and Umpire Klem had a dispute] the, ( fa, vary thelr Hardest tn | wan on (marie ty and hte Mm fielders kere front suddenly, and with her crew y ed the sw result of which the caller of balls) tes wih | v sirok r . } 20 Ng toughness of a h'ckory log, every] length. Open or shows, Sage 1s fat to jake mace ae a | The Piras helped their position a little by defeating the Reds. hide tanned to a seal brown, heads | sitting up again, but bent almost double, oe ge ould | T at 6 pennant hunt follows: bound with wet bandages to hold the| By pure instinct and gameness he Is ay en, oer Fae from theUlants, The standing of the teams tn the » fe | Dhreting veins when the strain ts al- | trying a row ts oar blade sweeps of his training expenses, feebly buck and forth—in the alr, He ieeaen moat beyond endurance and the not ey ee i ety the water, At New York.... 39 23 .629 pBgrebelt, Rolo, Grounds. To- Maer AMUSEMENTS, writing MeKenn. * PALISADES CENTURY f3y'23°2 de Op HAMMERSTEIN’S | risotto & Daily Mats. in is odin & Arthar, Arar and' ouvert. | Vive Prost Pussy Place, ayuouse; everybody a\ B'direct te Steeplecliase ‘Pare, AMUSEMENT PARK 20s St. Ferry. Fireworks Thursday. Anta anes lal hg wiGH i) Ten ell. Vaialiy, Sec « ley, She at i oy] Eilot Schenck “pop” Concerts BIJOU THEATRE i Re odd Pop. pe sian, BAXTER’S Bani | at Bae, ERT Ril AV. "i. ida ePaaNone ‘Daily Mat.,98 6 50s. ANNE ROOAMORA, fal bouls 6 ai Get-Rich-Quick Wallingtord firo, and there 1s not a bare) oF rough spot on the entire grounds. careful was he of the diamond that he forced the buiidera to protect it with a Bo mpleted, | will seat @ little more than 4,0 people. excepting unways to fifteen f seats an angle milar to the seats in the balcony of There are thirty-two rows | of seats In the middle sections and abou: twenty-nine on the sides. fm the number of seats has made the! atand closer to the diamond, and later) on it mey This increase | be finished before the Giants open their next season. They the greatest baseball An enjc old park and leagus. | ‘0 | r the Polo » iJare anx! and with before th were lost t | x To the pul bored so hai Ht to pugh a quainted with duced me he claim | body and stor | that time were | waist 38. }1 was in the distance, | once to Prot, York City. Blaw fe ir AKUN 2 FOLIES 4" BERGE Charles Dillingham's Giants Haven’t Won a Game This Season On the Pole Polo Grounds, ing of the to the pla they @ good chance. but two game oo 1 wade up was four months ago, waist 30 and my heigat 6 ft. % in n@w erect I stand, my chest thoroughly develo my atklomen in projer place, and it is only now @ questiva of boxing to reguiu my judgment o! which only comes through practice, | be @ better man than 1 was before, | My object in wsting this article t# to benet | those readers that hare been following the previous acticles written about me, to sow them bow eaci: and every man, woman and child, can obtala the tame benetia of tminorement by wearing thi { would suggest to auy one desi their physical condition that they cali or write at | 41 Nulife Bldg, Nos, 14:18 W. 34th 6t,, mear Oth Ave, New! 30TH STREET "! JOHN MASON A EVERY WOMAN (Her Pilgrimage nm Quast of Love) FANT, Wie TinArRe MinbLe OF WEW AMSTERDAM 3; “EXCUSE aif, GAIETY fet wa Ma ' JARDIN de PARIS * ; ZIEGFELD REAL FOLLIES GRAND © Len STM aneraas: Be ryable feat at the bottom come back le strange as {t may Grounds this s asON, to break thi Boston to fight The on the e fire, to Philadelphia, rat je natural result ¢ do justice to the tt bappy Prof, Height 5 ft, 11% in, prime of my career, doing throughout tt ne good revults. Chas, Munter, 1 etinian an east iii auger's_ Musics! ors INK. LADY WAK SHOWS IN ONE, ah bs, Hesiaumat 8D, MM RE 3° GLOBE §),: M. LA 10 ‘ERA HOURE Tie, Si PiWe diel and Moore in/ fm ding 5.15, sevuee to the Giants have not won a game on Not that they think {t a hoodoo, but they and both of those Kid MeCoy’ 8 Letter to the Public jo who have been reading with tn. stand | terest the articles of my past carecr it might be ef value to know that my reason for going out of can be) the ring was tat I was seeking pleasure and i less than comfort after the ma: cars of bant training | | put tn to keep th 1 was hoid | wy mind to retire from the 1 became ac | who us| my will to try a garment that | was nature’ By slmply wearing this garmeut called | NULIPE 1 have been replaced back to a h physical standard of perfection than I was to tmpros bora. at to M ‘Acta’ Oe. ORPHANS Beis iB yocking” LATEST PICTURE OF THE POLO GROUNDS’ NEW STAND Put It On, Pull the Belt NULIFE Does the Rest Why Everybody Should Wear a NULIFE Because it 18 Nature's greatest rival for produc- ing health. It wil) expand the chest and fill out the hollows of the 4 neck by compell- i) ing deep breath- ing. It will re duce your abdomen without diet- ing or massage, it will straighten round shoulders inmediately without any exercise, hold your spine erect and prevent fatigue and tired back, It develops the lungs, strengthens the heart and improves circulation. Prevents in- digestion. It creates a perfect con@ition on the inside of the body and makes every internal organ do its natural functions without ex- ercise, medicine, dieting or any ar- Uficial means. NULIFE is the garment that shapes people properly. Wearing t makes you look well, feel well nd remain well, Gives perfect gure, youth and health. Stot lim, tall and short people recon. structed to proper proportions. jives benefit alike to athlete and invalid, male and female, young and old. The price of NULIFE now direct to you for $2.00 instead of $3.00 as | formerly, to give you an oppor- tunity to enjoy permanent good health. A trial makes you a con- vert to good health, Call personally or send $2.00 with your height, weight, waist, chest meas- we ands and NULIFE will be sent to you prepaid and Suaranteed satisfac tory 5 Illustrated booklet free by writ- ing to Prof. Chas. Munter, No, 42 NULIFE Bldg., 13-15 West 34th New York City, N. Y. | COT Mom ry ae | Only two weeks training is nece: }you to become an Expert More he \Operator. The demand for Moving Pictur: Operators is so great that there are not enough men to go around. Apply daily and Mon. day, Wednesday and Friday evenings, Full course. $15.00; cash or instalments, Write for Catalogue, - Taylor, 40 West" 28th Street. Would you wash your hands in the same wate used by everybody Why then sacrifice you: face with everybody” blood - stained shavins brush? Ask your barber for the Seale.! Sterilized Cup, Brush and Soap. SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY. WONDERS,

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