Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
P-TO-DATE AND NEWSY Tommy Ryan Got a Good Laugh ak By playing the weakest sort of tennis, _ ¢ JON. , THOUGHT, ! Thor 3, ce EL - at the National Sporting Club at | mn Nag EER | , is On= THose ihe been selected to represent the by Seeing the Sloppy Exhibi- ‘eveceue Bo Be : Pavenina’ GRIZZLY_HUGS | gt (Oni Davis Cop metcnen, wary detuats tion of Fighting by the “Un- , Geubion ty tonsil Fincke "and — rederick W on yr, after three set cyclonic” Thompson and n R Fi A ° nnd G4. The det fF US. OV eLoughl was t Frank Klaus. irst Grand Circuit Meet sell d gain to the wets, of tHe game, Copyright, 1911, by The Preas Publishing Co, (The New York World). OMMY RYAN in a balcony box last night and looked down ; ine tees anita merit or the cours wil & at the Kiaus-Thompson fight. The liberal entry received for the four Be Nemesis of Cleveland’s | ‘Tne Mintops are of the opinion that | !%.,'N¢) Previous recanted jou Tommy laughed and laughed and| Example of Late Husband | 4a: Promramme, which opens Tues- thew American League penasit F8°° | nh wa laughed. To a man who could fight ows that Goshen’ wi vermin with the Athletics high | bas x by “eiher the way Ryan used to the bout must Making Sport Possible. Mel ee ite ae Star Slabman. nd dry tn fret place, "Nina Baay ae profess beeen looked funnier than a circus. one that will warm the cockles Hou cxcu ° ae a = not think that ae Detroit Ca lh With two potbal eval oar wat NS, re (Bpecial to Evening World). e*, Wits Johany fi benet s 9| (-ROSHEN, the home of the trotter, hye Bx Rc Cleveland, Aug. wh | iit that the have ting. | Gomparative, Sometimes he is fat, po and whose place in the harn USSELL FORD appears to be the | Decne apd hase Funning, but say they Sometimes he is fatter. But«to be per- fectly fair Johnny did show signs of Daving trained. Klaus looked like an ideal athle' on | Two Lap Goshen Track Mrs. E. i Vlora Harriman Follows racing world stands pre-eminent, will be the scene nex: week of the first grand circuit meeting ever held on a@ half-mile track. Trotting cracks who have been nsationalising with | THE EVENING WUKLD, FRIDAY, BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK ~ AUGUS meetings during the past three years have shown that trotting races on a half-mile track can be made profitable with the absence of betting. and Major Brino, while Aileen Wilson, | uphold the hon with her two-minute speed, is there to rs of the United States, {f Billy Rhodes falls with Red Bow. Walter Mal, who has shown ability to IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN BOXING, BUT IT LOOKED LIKE WRESTLING Copyright, 1911, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World). 18, Highlander Twirer Twirler Appears to R the sensations of the major leagues. Ford has taken the measure of Gress 1911. EDITED BY ROBERT EDGREN |DEFEAT OF BUNDY AND WPLOUGHLIN AGREAT SURPRISE Men Who'll Represent Us in Doubles for Davis Cup Lose at Southampton. Tomax RYAN , . THE OLD. MIDOLEWEIGHT it was the g Players had g tournament comp: njon that both _Takes Gregg’s Measure three singles and a triple. The Yanks were jubilant over thelr victory as they figure that with Gregg out of the way they bid fair to make a clean sweep of ttion, the off time halt John M. Ward, Poland ‘Sprivgy, record are very weak in the box, Donovan be- ing their only dependable twirler at the Present time. Chase's men are of the opinion that Conle Mack's boys wil! repeat their tri of one V Gregg, the ps’ great southpaw and one of heen decided * Young Mayo and Kildare eans, ih 1 match between Kilkenny aad 1 this season, once |Umph of @ year ago In the world’s series sinewy equal his 2.04% on a half-mile track, Is on two occasions They can't see how the Cubs, Giants muscled. He had all the speed that) thelr Leora treat arae rege Be Jalso in this race, and with Major Mal- ae eeu tl Ame lor Pirates, one of which teams appears! Georg, 1 Pres ‘Thompson lacked. His punch was a real rolt and Cleveland are to conten }low makes a field that will? provide here. Ford beat Gress to be destined to win the National | has bern t th sore of tate the rich purses offered for races over | great sport. here, the big offsider Ue Ulieg Lad League flag, can hope to cope with the Micha a Ween Gling starting in th h tin the two-lap course. ong Shot" Walter Cox, Fred Proo- retirement at the end of the sixth| champs. Ruse Ford continues to work | #ith cham TE course avery cody exrsctan to eeo| The trotting world is viewing this) the breeder and maker of Uhlan, ‘ round. Tho score when Easterly went| his jinx on Nap. Lajole, one of the | sh @ terrific, walloping battle, That was| Meeting with considerable interest, for| Carpenter, Fred Clarke, Billy Some HAK-GottH STUFF . to bat for Gregg and cracked out al|king pin bitters of the American evidently the kind Kiaus wanted, but |Siready the cry has gone up in har- ei ces w. Le eee triple, was 3 to 0 against the Naps. | League. I. Snow are trlow” Chester, W. Lassell of Moston Gl ANTS BURY REDS AND ALSO AMES JINX n racing circles that the of the sport in the East rests in the half-mile tacks, and if thie one proves the success it Is expected the track# at Readville and Hartford will be cut in Bate, the bout was more of a wrestling match vation Cyclone had his own notion of ee His one desire throughout the rounds was to get into a clinch and wrestle, putting in short punches now If Ford had not been with the High- ders last season there never would have been much about the outcome of | § the race between Cobb and Larry for | high batting honors. Ford had Larry at his mercy practically all season while the Tiger star fattened his aver- ‘The game ended 6 to 2 in favor of the Highlanders. Ford was master of the situation throughout, although the box score would lead one to believe that he was lucky to . Joe Jackson managed to ne As aes lean a 2 and J. L. Dodge of this city, the million- alres who drive their horses in races just for the sport of the thing, will also be seon in action. George H. East- brook, the Denver millionaire who paid rmination of Mrs, BE. H. Har- conngct with his offerings on three oc- | age at the expense of the great pitcher. ine ta Fanny Lawson to win, the ing out two doubles and|For to-day's game Krapp and Fisher than anything else until the last couple ie to foow hed ge ony Morag late & M. at Detroit, hag nominated her Pann Mitr 5 Ai Daniels ‘also shone | will probably oppose each other on the| « of rounds, when Kiaus mgmt vie hing ort Gieca’ Guvae. “Whee he fie who has been their bugaboo all|like @ beacon light garnering ' firing line. Thompson away and ni cae few solid punches. Klaus had the best of it at the end, bye long way. He landed all of the really effective blows and Thompson's punching bag in @ apectalty seema to be the taking of punishment. Frank's hardest wallops didn't tilt his head ly after being punched he always bored In for more. The last couple of rounds were the worst for Thompson. In tho last min- ute of the ninth he was groggy enough to flounder into the ropes. Just when 1 seemed that he would surely be . Mmooked down he rallied and nearly Mfted Frank's head off with a herd right hand punch—the one really dam- @ging wallop landed by Thompson dur- tug the entire ten rounds. Kiaus, near the end, found a way to rive his fists through the small opens inge left by Thompson's protecting el- bows. Then it was that most of the Gamage was done. The Pittsburg cham- lon was so anxious to put over a real Ketche) wallop that he shifted often. He let the blows go with a world of epeed, and might have done something with them if he hadn't been wild. The ‘Dest swings went a foot over Thomp- @on's hei Altogether it was a sloppy exhibition, owing to the Cyclone's very uncycloatc style of fighting. N the middle of the bout Tommy Ryan leaned down from his box and imquired, solicitously: “Why don't, they feint once in a while?” Boxing bas changed since Ryan's time—if last might’s ‘‘go" is a fair sample. FEW ro sat one Chicago, back from the ring Knockout Browa” of a middiewelght who ts this city decided it year’s costly experiment of having a Grand Circuit meeting at Empire City, it left a in the Grand Ciroult that spelled ruin for the meet- ings at Readville, Hartford and the State Fair at Syracuse, for the flyers would not lay up for a week. E. H. Harriman wi the foremost admirer of the trotter in this country and when the anti-betting laws put the kibosh on thoroughbred racing he came to the rescue with a meeting at Goshen. Mi Marrimi followed her husband’ example in this respect, and Goshen’ GIANTS IN SEGOND PLACE, 14 POINTS BEHIND CUBS. It was a big day for the National League fans in this city, for the Giants, by winning two games from the Reds while the Pirates were losing to the Dodgers and the Cubs were being beaten by the Ruatlers, jumped into escond place. The New Yorkers are now only fourteen points behind the Chicagos. The McGrawites have been playing great ball this week. They have won five games, including two double-headers. This is a great showing against clubs of the Phillies’ and Reds’ calibre, The Quakers and Cardinals are apparent- ly out of the running. It will take the biggest kind of a spurt for either of them to get back into the race for the pennant. opening day programme. Nat Ray, the famous former steeplechase rider, Is also there with a string of pacers and tre ters, and in driving he Is as sensational and as daring az he was ‘n going over the jumps. Three races are down for each day, and on Wednesday the English bred trotter Willie, owned by W. D. Winans, the American millionaire, who first saw his own country last fall, will try to lower his record of 2.054 over a halt- mile track, The following day K. G. Billings will wend the greatest trotter ever bred, Uhlan, 1.68%, over the route in an effort to wrest Willy's laurels from hin. Another sien tle Chased When New Yorks Bat Keefe Out of Box. BY BOZEMAN BULGER. HE firing of thirty-one safe shots through the of the op- posing box artists and the merry patter of twenty-five tallies on the pan in one afternoon of the national pastime naturally appeals to our aesthetic tastes as wo sit here in second pi 4 calm- ly look down upon the struggling mass beneath us. But that isn’t the main idea. Did it ever occur to the feverish fan that the smashing of one well es- tablished hoodoo and the intercepting of another in the limited time of four houre is the kind of stuff that really makes the pennant—or gonfalon, if you will—look like money from home? Whether the fan has thought of it or not, that 1# the one thing that hes brought the flush of happiness te the face of the Giant this bright young moming in August. They can forget their terrific} bombardment of the Red Leg pitchers, and maybe they'll forget to count their | jhits—maybe, I said—but that slaughter! game with a $0 bank-roll in hi of the hoodoo will live, Not only did they tear into the hoodoo of Bobby — Bronx Boy Taken Out of CHANCE DIAMOND'S GREATEST DISCIPLINARIAN ; ZIMMERMAN SUSPENDED FOR WRETCHED FIELDING —_>—. Heinie Has Been With the but they turned right around and buried the Jinx that has hung over Leon Ames like a pall for, lo, these many moons, When Leon realized that | his team mates had really made nine; runs behind him he became @9 excited that he actually struck out with men on| dases ..nd laughed about it. Ames Jinks Croaks. ‘The Ames Jinx was a stubborn brute, however, and did not give up without a struggle, but after the opening round h one despairing cry and croaked, the start a runner was allowed to score on Ames through Chief Meyers dropping a ball, and that proved the death struggle of the Jinx. Soon there. after Leon rubbed @ luck piece that he wore around his neck and all was over. With a boom and a crash the broadside began to knock holes through Robert Keefe and the hereto! lucky Red Le; began to wobble. When he had been punctured for a total of nine runs he was led from the mound a mere shadow of his former self. Once they had Bobby Keefe on the run the ravenous Giants tore after everything in sight and noth- ing could have stopped the fury of their onslaught. They could hit anything from a green pea to a pool ball, and by the time the four hours of warfare were over the fielders were a tired and farmer looked Ing out the first three red-legged bat- ters that faced him. Ere he had gone! to the bench and had finished counting his money, the Giants had piled up six Brown and Baldwin They'll Fight Twelve Rounds to a Decision at the Armory FTER trying for some time to A and’ Matty Baldwin, the crack fighter of Boston, . romoter, peal meet in @ twelve-round bout at 183 pounds at the Armory Boston on Tuesday evening, Sept. 12 Pnis bout should attract @ bis crowd A club, as the fight fans 7 meaty Jot, They had played bait het the glu are anious to eee Brown STH AVE., | WILL OPEN game with thelr backs to the stand To-morrow. N Which 1s to say they were contizuany| in action again. et, Boston and Johar Prarne, ihe Cottirnia| BOWERY, | Gry § chasing long smashes to the fence. — CER ea ane, Fines wk Lal | BRONX. i with Otle Crandall wi into the second| Mackey Mefartand wh, eee Fg Wednesday tight but és Baldwin ek 2) AMATEUR NIGH TS_AND and while { pick, et set thee tev round bout ta. Milwmahes | €tra to days to finkeh up his training, t_was only $80, the Towa Miata fat cere tera from | Coes wan granted, Comptroiier under e New ork Caleta an Club ee hietes: ait compere at. thelr fi at nington Park, Newtown, Le Ie Will Clash in Boston BOXING STAGS TO-NIGHT. At the Twentieth Century A. C. Wille Lewis of this city and Georze “Knockout” Brown of Chicago will meet in the main bout of ten rounds, At the Atlantic A. A., Hammel's Station, Rockaway, Chariey Law- rence and Paddy SulMvan will come together tn the star bout of ten A. A, September 12. mots, create wn poront 05 ech tre BY JOHN POLLOCK. HAMMERSTEING and Suffrage Ream, a0 ia some” Farinoret ast Week to. bee pings a, clinch a match between Knook- out Brown, the local lightweight, Rose for ten rounds at the National Sporting Club stag on next ‘Thurs- day night. Tommy Matoney of this city and “One-Round" Hogan have been se- cured to battle for ten rounds at the National Sporting Club on Sept, RUTH ST. yd Miah Murray, the well- fe at last successtul. A. A. of MINER'S “fat enough to laugh to meet Leo Kelly, the tei 5 % at the mint, He was presented the $0 sah ta viata 1S deroand, ‘nocection | 4% Denning. the Sew derver fighter. ett | ail hh for hitting the bull in Philadelphia on | (et. ene 'n' mt of Bept. 4, Labor Day, Mo | ne iil mest Jett Sinith for ten soania, erie | Baseball & E & Fourth of July, and as Otle is some- | Farland ts Aa $1,000 for his end. foe's ced ght be will go agsicat that 9 BIGGEST what careful of his change, he took no ‘*, Jett smti th. "Both chances of being knocked. from the box | The Rnickertosker A.C. ot Alvear, Bs aa eee ‘Mace’ toed cia, bent SHOW ON and losing it In the suuffie, In other | of wilh tes be iagued a bond by the Btate aatinat one sons ct the topnctchers la “he EARTH. words, he opened the hostilities by strike | te first i fase 0 bse te ee Pre wari i " ight at wi fish tn @ tem If it's Fun oe It's at Luna, a: STEEPLECHASE ‘a show on next Mon Metis wil meet Larry E vout, Harry Lewis, the Quaker City fighter, must be gird se Brck Crone he Bassin Lora Be turyed, down am oer fy flooded jruns, and with that margin to work| In abont two weeks this city iil be fed a A trelce raua E to fight Willie Lewis to-night at St. R m0, on Otfe breezed through to the finis! with fighters, all Cage LW sa Mage) Aig os wesday nigit le will proba) ir be matebed to ly Funny Place, Milsas Rik Tn hoe ce iet| Game in Boston and Cubs Since the Spring dl cont Lite Ch Etta bin, Ca Mer oem | et Yily Urns Si iS" Pong abs on Greek) looks like a fighter. He is sup- Giants Loo e Champs, ne) i mai tee bone Shean Substituted. bt, Dummy Maxson and’ many others wal arrive thie State pow ted to here within the next few be: re that ich Once he acted Men 8 sparring partner for Packey McFar- of 1908. With the team full of pepper and everybody hitting the ball hard, the Sis ga Pri lnde his New PALISADES #'s'#'K | | | | | “Why,"" rn _ bie ny of 7 e1 rhuredey. grey Wh f ; |Glants bear a striking resemblance to Brown, rman No ng tageaar,of th a | Opposite W. 10th St. Kerry, Fireworks hi bol wah Feekey vores De Lm jie champions right now. They have the | pil Brow. manstes tO rounre,. Jess Tree, Pat, Reset eee, Reeds | aa —nally Mat TELLA MAYHEW cg 7 anged his stal BY AVECK SULLIVAN. the result that he was purchased, and | youngest of the leading te: nd Shay Haaie.” nave already forwarded thelr toma “a here, and on nt a a ka Lert ‘anted to live a little longer. HAT Manager Frank Chance of the following season saw him @ mem. |Undeuationably have the greatest speed | Bit, tong ‘late Boxing ‘Commission for ® ily ond Benton, Lao Packey says that “Brown” managed to the Cubs, champte ber of the Cubs. Little did Evers think | of any team that h License a8 Commissioners wee Brights beset Arild swing o wild one that put McFarland’ : the Polo Grounds since the fi fine Te is almost & certainty thet Doth at put McFarland’s weet ieee at the time that this boy would later frat mee teense, e ivi eye in mourning, and on the next rush floated there in 1 Their one and | ics clubs will be granted © een ACADEMY ry rel ey th baseball disciplinartan * the game is Ai hie shoe only need has been effective and con- — WEW AMSTERDAM if,.0 HEL Taosed, him entirely jand drove his fist | evidenced by his action in indefinitely zimmie" didn't have much of an op-| sistent pitching. Now they have that! ‘tne twenty-round bout between Matty Baldwin |} (1) Uy) ‘Somety. a 10-20 & 30_ throw haa suspending Heinle Zimmerman, the portunity to make good until the Pi V' Jack Johnson engaged “Brown” for @| pronx hoy, for his poor playing tn yous World's series last fail, He often went | Bs iN} K LAI DY AURTIG & SEAMON'S.5 While too, Johnson told me that he was] terday's game at Boston, Word tg this in to hit tn the pinch, and usually WONTON A HOONE AND THE MERRY Wai the toughest thing he ever saw wald Jack, @ kept a-tearin’ an’ a-tear- in’, and he didn’t scom to feel it when I punched him. I got sort of curious to Bee how rough he was, so I measu: him and walloped him on the Jaw a hard as I could hit, and he didn’t even go down, What |s Wille up against? *WONDER if Tommy Ryan has coms I to New York with the idea of mak- ing a “‘come-back” appearance. Not with any intention of knocking—but It & long time since Tommy left the ring. He was a wonder in his day—greatest of the middleweights that followed Fitz simmons, It would be @ shock to his old-time followers if the great Tommy Ryan came out again and boxed lke Kid McCoy against Stewart, or Jack O’Brien the other night against Lang- tora. OB CLARK says that Sallor Burke B is going to knock vut Papke, To make the Sailor feel really at heme in the ring this time, Bob ts going to hire a couple of tars to stand outsi and throw buckets of Up against the wall of the building. They say Burke could fight like a champion when effect reached this city to-day. This makes the second player that the “Peerless Leader” has ejected from the Mneup this season for indifferent field ing. 1 Tt 1s said that there ts dissension tn the ranks of the “Bears,” and that that is the reason the men are not all the time putting up the best exhibition they are capable of. It was only recently, after the Cubs had lost three straight to the Dodgers and only beat the latter by one run in the opening contest of ten inn it was announced that Joe Tinker, the wonderful little shortstop, was charged by Chance with “laying down” and sus- pended. However, gloom overspread the Giants’ camp when they visited the Windy City, right after the Brooklyns left, when it was reported that Tinker was rein- stated. He proved his value to the club by banging out four hits off the great Matty in the opening battle of the series, beating the McGrawites al- most single handed. ‘That Chance won't stand for his men Chance “hit the ceiling.” Heinle had four chances and two of them he made &@ mess of, so he was pulled right out of the game and Dave Shean, who used to play with the Rustlers, was put in hie place. Zimmerman has been playing a utility role for the Cubs for the greater part of four seasona He is a New York boy and first attracted attention by his great wx for the Cedars of the Bronx, In 197 he played with the Wilkes-Barre not keeping In good condition ts tur- |ther exemplified by his move im Zim- | merman's case, be 41d his boxing on the raging main. phere Fes Somat teNaretet Zimmerman Fielded Poorly. In yesterday's contest Zimmerman team of the New York State League and el by his wonderful covering of second base, Johnny Evers, the mighty Cub second ctrifled the fans in that clreuit | made good, but he seldom got in the lineup for an entire game. Heinle Makes Good at Second. It was Just before the Cubs met the Athletics that Evers broke his ankle, and the Chicago fans were alarmed | cause they didn't think there was an one who could do anywhere n well as Johnny around the keystone rick, However, Helnte went tn and| batted and fielded as well as any mem- ber of the club, and his work was been playing second nearly all this season, as Evers has been suffering from a nervous break- down, largely brought on by the death of a friend early in the spring while ; they were out on an auto run, Johnny luckily aped injury, but he worrled to such an ext over his narrow e: cape that he obliged to leave the innatt at New York, bar Broly. Eat ae Pitiadetphta STANDING OF THE CLUBS. GAMES SCHEDULED ioe TO. Dat. AMERICAN LBAGUR, ONAL. LEAGUE, w, IRVING? "eves Meth aah Te gt Toute. ait os asi Pa haa Tt Si erelaod, ‘ GRE sree us OEDIPUS EL 4 au wick a ¢ oH (actnnati ABR] trate 08 48 Ei wana 8B | mt ay ge feet BE 2, ys piile'tifa 80 47 :tot| Hoxton. shall ee "Tore BT Bt ‘bial Bt Lowe, 83 Te “3s Pareles SexCU EME Til & ay rw RESULTS OF YESTERDAY'S GAMES. OF FARCE Co 5th AVE 2.2 iNitton" ¥, bind 5 at. Das | Mat nef Mats Wed, & tape lee ES ‘Pabaelpnte, 0. Br Si Ea a PoP” CONCERTS) Solouts, Refreshm'ts team, This {s not the first time that Zim- merman has been disciplined, as in April of last year he and Pitcher Kroh were jeach fined $100 for “hitting hd high ace: Zimmerman is generally regarded ac one of the best all-around players in the game. Not only ts he proficient tn the national pastim: so @ golf A ble to defeat other player in the major league an ranks. basoman, saw Henry—for that is his wont, $0 the bet onme sad dat & Bi |real Ses Rameswors, fad he resem | Be mended bim bus bio Gelding was so wretched that to President Murphy, with ' Bs’ thess Pepa ter materials. $25.00. IF —, WANT big value look at the stock of fine imported materials of L. L. Schwartz & Co., 198 Broad- way, comprising the late Spring and last Win- Their price for suit or overcoat to measure was $75.00 and upward. Our price, Sale on Second Floor. Store closes one o’clock Saturd ARNHEI1 EMPIRE AL *____BOX OFFICE Now v_ OPEN. Hae iinet tus Th of hb, et, Broadway & 9 Ninth St. es AND tty tat x Ly ah RG, Bee