The evening world. Newspaper, September 14, 1911, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

HILTON DEFEATS TRAVERS IN GOLF MATCH LL LLLLLLLLLLLLLS SERPPLLP PRL LDL PPLE ALAA AN A PRA RARAAARRAR AD AAD ARATE RAD \ APA RAR RAAR ARAL DDL DD DLA AALS SARL E DAD, 100 DOGS AT SOCIETY GIRL’S DOG FUNERAL Tbe “ Circulation Books Open to All. bd __PRICE ONE CENT. ee ka NEW YORK, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, HILTON WINS FROM TRAVER BY 3 UP IN NIP AND TUCK | ROUND FOR THE GOLF TITL American Put Up Strong De- fense, but His Brace Came Too Late. HERRESHOFF WINS, TOO Englishman Was Off His Game in First Round and Gallery Was Disappointed. APAWAMIS, RYE, Sept. 14—Harold Hilton, the English champion, defeated Jerome D. Travers at the end of 36 holes by 3 up. The Englishman's strong finish overcame an early afternoon gain by the American. Travers started out on the second half with a remarkable impro ent over his morning play, At the twenty- reventh hole he reduced Hilton's morn- ing advantage of 3 up to 1 up, but from the twenty-elghth hole to the finish, the Fingttsh champion recovered and fintsh- @ with a lead of 3 up. Resuming » Apawamts Links, Jerome D, Travers dl played a wonderful reversal of f over his play In the morning when Hil- ton, the I on, led him 4 up at the end of 18 holes. Travers brought the time and 4 by his brilliant driv twenty-sev uced the Englishman's ip with 9 to go. Hilton r led Travers t Travers play nearly on 6 weeks, but It was ost \ by @ up and 2 to play at 38 off beat Kirkby 6 up and 2 10 Ko, 6 s Travers took (he first three holes in par 4 to o's for his rival, lost the fourth | fth in a fine hole, ike in 6 to # and halved the % The sixth was Hilton's the fourth, in par 4 to 5, while the seventh was a poor half, Travers on the eighth (175 yards) s A then out ecored a 2 par a stroke on the ninth, which gave him that bi 1 left Travers only 1 at the Cards half— cow 64846 8 60 "Veavers— ” 46446235 5 2 &8 One heat Wittemore 1 up, 23 holes, With Jerry only 1 down, things began to look inte «. The tenth, eleventh, twelfth @ re all halved in 4 the allowa except on the twelfth, which ts strokes, Travers lost the fourteenth and fifteenth, Hil- ton cutting 1 thirteenth w ‘Travers another chance by Hilton ga to pull Hilton back, and he holed out for @ 4 which left the Englishman 2 up. ton's game seemed to be sucpriss the afternoon, and gly uncertain in pecially his short tron shots eo hole Hilton's se ers laid ‘i . o lasses contained about 2% pe i Hiiton | ash to the gall faa ~ nd hole—Travers topred | [mentssecond note Travers n°) WOMAN INJURED IN AUTO. i rs was unable to rec es nd Hilton won the hole 4 to Trolley Strikes Li ine in Wh H Mra. Repelow In itlding. rwenty-th yn's fron to the a5 : Ni short hole w he wreen. Trays |p palntu ers lald bis on the sloping surface and), (,) anys Go) people shouted Whoa’ when It bes | . Hd ; gun to roll aw om the hole, THE | ous oa v ar hole was halved in three on 2 40 | Broad shook of the , At 3 P. M, Horreshof was six Up and] cae ot we rake HL § eight to play Whitenore was one upand in “yhe automobile and Mrs low seven to play; Evans was one up and] was ghowered with the broken p fourteen to play, and Hilton was one UP) Numerous cuts were attended to by a and nine to neighboring physi that the Amer The amat sulting tof i were , ally increased when Harold B. File first half of his mateh ite will ¢ ton finished th irge gallery to its feet] vund; Hilton | ar a full stroke on the 1 the green Into the BOY FIREBUG GRINS ASHE CONFESSES Father Asks That Eleven-Year- Old Tony Scalla Be Locked Up So He'll Be Good. Fleven-year-old Tony Scalla, son of a Manhattan Jeweller, stood up in the Children’s Court in Brooklyn this after- noon, charged wigh arson. He didn't geem to care. He was even indifferent when his father told the justice that there was no possible excuse for Tony and his parents would ‘be pleased to have him locked up somewhere until he was of age. Tony slipped out of bed at his home, No, S81 Pine street, East New York, at midnight last night and went on a y this afternoon on thé! prowl. Later people across the street from No. 88 Crescent avenue, looking out of their windows, saw the curtains in the window of the house blaze up. }In the light they saw Tony running away. He dived Into the be ent en- trance of a flat house at No. 561 Cres- cent avenue The neighbors sent hurry calls to Po- lice Headquarters and Sergt. Henker was sent over from the Miller avenue When he arrived the curtains in pulle pwn and the fire out. Tony was coming up th Ing ahead of him three ts hitched tandem | Benker arrested him. A moment later hout of fire from > 1 |ony had » a blaze in the coa Ding of the apartment-house after re moving the go-carts. Fire Marshal Kelly met Benker and his small prisoner at the station, To | Kelly youngster confessed setting both fire r do anything like that before?" asked Kelly. re,’ grinned ‘Tony, “when we lived in New York at No. 3 West fitth street { set a lot of fires, but t never got on to me. IT like to s engines. But they caught some stuff and pop had them put me tn the Catholle Protectory," -_—— MOLASSES NOW KILLS FISH AT NEW ORLEANS. Sweet Flood That Swept City’s Streets Ran Into Lake and Finny Tribe Feasted. NEW ORLEAN Dead shrimp by the mill nousands of shes are floating on th surface of ake Pontchartrain a8 a result of thet found Its way into the ity bursting of a stamped |street p Lables’ x there was a s > ewera when 600,000 gallons were re ue tank he mo and Mrs, Repelow The automobile haw, I nu Monroe avenue to-day with Jerome D. Travers of Up- by ‘Train, per Montclair with @ load of 4 up, ne| James Havens of No, 162 Morty-first Other three matches at the 18th green |street, Brooklyn, to-day Identifted the fn third round of the tournament stood: |vody of the you! ho was killed Pp. W, Whittemore of Bo: and ©, [ist night by @ ain at Graves- a. Insleo of New even up; F. pend avenue, ser aa Mirremnofe of Bwanok, Vtw 4 up on {that of his son, Charles E. Havens, of Englewood; Albert Oswald Bir \ @ontinued on Page Thirteen.) twenty-one years of 4 lang auan. It is believed that young man stepped from & southbound tratr Girectly in the path of one northbound, KINDLING BLAZES ‘| lose or draw NOTED SURGEON GETS BLOOD POISON FROM AN ANOTHER Jobe: A Bie A. Bodine Infected While Operating Upon Dr. E. H. Quinn. BOTH IN GRAVE DANGER. Dr. Quinn’s Trouble a Result of Scratch Received While Attending Charity Patient. Blood poisoning, contracted by a sur- geon from a charity patient In a hoa- pital during an operation by the first surgeon, and passed to the second sur- geon in the course of an operation in the first, Ia the remarkable cause of the serious condition of Dr. H Quinn of No. 108 West Seventy-first street, and Dr. John A. Bodine of No. 161 West Seventy-second street, one of the most noted surgeons in the United States. The lives of both surgeons hung in the balance yesterday, but they are better to-day and the medical men in attendance hope for the recovery of both. Dr. Quinn is one of the visiting sur- geons of St. John’s Hospital in Long Island City, About ten days ago he performed an amputation in the op. ating room of the hospital on «a charity patient. A trifling scratch on Dr. Quinn's hand, unnoticed at the time of the operation, served to admit to his blood a virulent germ from the blood of the patient. As soon as he realized that he had cted poison Dr, Quinn took steps ‘e for himself. But he was unable spread of the aflment, and experience what the con- sequence might be unless heroic meas- ures were taken, called in Dr. Bodine. who is Professor of Surgery at the Poly nic Hospital w#uilta tion, The great speciailst and the suffer- ng sur a speedy op- eration was The operation was performed In a priva spital a few doors away from Dr. Quinn's resi- hyglente precaution was taken. Dr, Bodine, experienced In such cases and warned by the condition of Dr. Quinn of the virulence of the potson he nove, neglected no neless, he, too, con- » very tiret poison had affected eminent that the todine pted, For a ume tt was feared 1 Dr. Bodine and Dr. Quinn would succumb. ————— 36 MINISTERS TO {+E JACK JOHNSON FIGHT BRITON. That Many Have Already Obtained Tickets for the London Battle. pt, W—The Bart's Court LONDON, Metala ed, following — thetr neeting, that It is imp fe for them ance! thelr contr Johnson Vells Nght p they say ave ar 1 and to vio ate It would expose them to an action or heavy damages yicants for seats at the n sport- of the clalming badie at best would be no ma Champion dohason—th: i Pry led a ah « re hon-con nes denounced fight from t tand ey ked Home Secretary to stop it i" to receive $80,000 and Wells $,0u, NEW YORKER KER KILLED. 0. D, F. Lyneh Crushea by F tor in Hot LO8 ANGE F. Lynch, a gues! York City, was caught t second from the riers 08 ast Pulice (World). tn ak & Faster 4000, en” ‘GAYNOR RETURNS SAYING HE WON'T BOY WHOELOPED DEFIES PLEAS 10 QUITMRS SUYDAM. Pair Are “Happy” in Furnished Flat on West a Street, —_——.>— Mayor Declares He Will Not SCORES TO TO- DAY ti rid Mise Crocker grea: Kone Wile SU PARE Stand on Any Technicality in the Matter. POOR WIDOW SUES. RICH JOHN GERKEN, CHARGING FRAUD Wrongly Invested Savings Entrusted to Him, Mayor Gaynor returned to his desk at *, whose young son, Fred, eloped from the City Hall to mRtaihES Mue Point with Mra, Walter Lispenard Jared this af- ned from his 1d the eloping wife of the naire were ver he made @ speech to th n Interview on ed the prize porkors. a> Mayor : FIRST GAMP. Ninerdl Avene ane a vat | CHICAGO— of the remaining hun- t being the firet vacation he taken in two years, happy and that tt with tremendous ardor that he does not Intend “through his bre to ck subways so far ag alr Oh, yes, I want to se y, and he knowe it But I know where Jin @ furnished flat on street, and thtat Mrs. the Public nmission was holding hear subject of changes In con tracts for Sections 7 and 9 on Lexington! pPITTSBURGH— avenue, and that the hearings cot a reduction of th ‘That's why he Suydam is with “While I can't very well boy, I realize that he was more or less It ian’t diMeult for died of a Iife's savings by John Gere |; » banker and clubman, Transit |and ¢ led into the thing. SON ATEE DEEN a@ boy to fall and talented young wor ted in and Ured of her husvand She led him on, and In love so deep iy if he was standing on his Jact requires plans 4|‘rhey cannot afterward be o brought |out hi me Court for tn detall have approved by the 3 ext from October, SMALL HOPE OF PARTING FATUATED PAIR, HE SAYS. neon doing odd TOURIST TIDE’S Low EBB, lewen Negligence and Asks §5,000, if : "i no her forty La Savole Salles WIth Basinerss Vox={nro tn 6 . t. flied [she gave @ ball at San Mateo which atnat ed a Weather—Fatr To-nlght; Friday Cloudy; Warmer FI EDITION. 18 rect ‘PRICE ONE CENT. WiThi 100 OTHERS IN FUNERAL PROCESSION Miss Jennie Crocker Puts Crepe Bows on Their Collars and Makes Attending Valets Wear | Mourning Bands. ISOCIETY, PRESENT IN FORCE, NEVER CRACKED A SMILE Harry Lehr’s Freak Monkey Dinner and C. K. G. Billings’s Famous Horse Dinner Eclipsed. SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 14.—The latest freak stunt of Miss Jennie Crocker has made the jaded sensation inventors of Fifth avenue and Newport—to whom Miss Crocker is by no means a stranger—shudder and moan with envy, Miss Crocker pulled off a double dog funeral at San Mateo, the great Crocker ranch, yesterday that made a mockery of Mae monkey edt el CG, Ky G. Bulla horse dinner and all The an ased done were Boston ter- nels. They were blue ribbon winners and were belleved to be as near the Perfect Bost 7 urpe NATIONAL ONAL LEAGUE. the world Has aver Matere eT They died. A mysterious disease to aT ‘BOSTON. vhich only dogs of the bluest bl GIANTS—— subject, known as “ttle ieiay oat 0205000 0 — {sot into thetr aristocratic ayatems and BBETOIES | they couldn t be cured. pea 00100102 — 100 DOGS WITH CREPE BOWS IN grant.| Batterles—-Wiltse and Meyers; Mute | FUNERAL PROCESSION, tern and Raride: | Miss Crocker had two Egyptian sar- op —— ai modelled out ar RanO halt. (Degne m ut of cement. She in deepest mourning. For the 001001 0— 2loue. ae Mined Anahi of his box and decorated with a PITTSBURGH ylarge crepe bow in the loop of his col- ,) 00102 — air The uniformed mentale who help Batteries—Brown and Archer; Cam. | MlM8 Crocker attend her charges each Papal pe ip | had wide mourning bands on the sleeves RE SGND GAC of their brown liveries, and solemniy 164 CHICAGO— he dogs in py 0000000 . [burial ‘There were dogs worth $100,066 in the sad procession All the Burlingame Club millionaires: 0101011 — [and many from San Fra Battertes—-Richle and Archer; 1 the affecting spectacle. There was ceremonies, @ smile during th : persons *ven wept. For the AT ST, LOUIS. Crockers are ‘ FIRST GAME. aan very rich. cl a . t does | RANGINDST 02010 Jennie Crocker, who came into 0 2 ~ some yeare ago variously en ST. LOUIS dat between $4,000,000 and $7,000,- 01°0202 _ has long anges tu plana] Battertes ges and McLon Har- |} « wom name has tre a0 1 Appeared in con: — t stunte’’ whl pertormed or ag- ago she created 2 sensa- Country Survivor of Triangle Disaster Ale ¢ try place and was ~ My oldest boy, of the most note shows held at KEENE HORSE WINS STAKE, + Won by James (Continued en Heoond Page.) Ove oturiera, a Savole with no pasnen in ur tot abroad, and even such a Howey La Su yooked a ron wistwa an ) have been ¥ A bridal couple on hi Denys Crapon who were married a The © was Klean Saughter. of th t Muther o of the F Army and Lawyer Ident. John V. Irwin, counsel of the Amert |!ng an Savings Bank, No. 15 Weat Forty ‘ ent of ner meeting of eld to-day, FOR BASEBALL AND RACING Muss she gardens, REPORTS SRE PAGE 13, ad next day. te #18 cost $100,000 to con- For several years she has fed with fee rocker {s a niece of Mra, Jack- jouraud, Who gave a snake dance ted on three Wies, plat Killed himaelt with Carlo Polis\'s Hotel at New Lots Vest avenue, Past New York, face an angry Ul and unaue- ame to this coun- sending back to stories of his pros. ° day his wife wre that sho was starting for this coun te share bis wealth with bum,

Other pages from this issue: