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} THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1911. TRY (TON SOME OF GUYS “THAT LICKE RIGHT Away CO Se Lots of Southern Talent . Club Just Now In Dodgers’ Jud Daley Hits in Pinch Against Reds and Turns Tide in Brooklyn’s Favor. (Special to The Evening World.) Cincinnatl, Sept. ™, HE Brookiyn club Is pretty well * stocked up with Southern rein- torcer nk you. Among the haughty Southerners who have blown in and declared themselves true infants are Hubnothern, outfelder, left-handed thrower and hefty hitter, Jud Daley, outfielder and mighty slug: ger, Who as a pinch hitter turned the tide yesterday It isn’t often that a raw recruit {s «ent ‘up as the pinch hitter, and Daley's success mado him a popu- Dahlenites Imme- lar guy among diately. mitcher of Atlanta; late of Cleveland and more recent the Bouth, and Higgins, a good catcher, who has been up in the fast company before. These young men have formed a regular FFY. society, and the South- ern dialect 1s heard in steady flow from morn tffl eve. ‘ Ebbets thinks they are the greatest things that ever happened, and will have four more Southerners here before the series closes. ‘The Southern talent surely won yi terday’s game for Brook! Tin OM GE, woNT AVEL Be L NCKLED WHEN | TELL HIM agou" TUS”SLAMBANED | BoUeT | NESTEROAY HE'LL WANT To oP aed | Time had to be calle Jed on shaking hands. TAKE ONE OROP OF (T hits Killed off the Reds, and it was Daley who started the final rally that decided the verdiet. It was some ball game, too, full of war and uproar, ex- citement and fierce doings. Notable among the events of the day waa a two- bag ty seare Sona C In the elghth in ning about as huahua dog. is Don Armadilio Mersans was sent to bat for Johnny tes, The Den promptly punted, and k, galloping tn, acquired the’ ball, n possession, Mr. Stark appeared th to part with his treasure. He fed at first, a bi nd saw that the throw would be too late. He turned toward second, and Hummel wasn’t there, hav- ing run to first to take the chuck, wiille Daubert ran toward the plate. Don Armadillo sensed the absurd situa tion, turned first at full speed and beat Stark's frenzied rush for the second bag. Some performance that, and no ake about It. he ellmax came when, in the ninth, @ bug with @ jag climbed down Into the field and marched across the arei ed, and before they had walked up to Hoblitzel and insist- Hobby shook with him: then the myrmidous hurled him forth into outer darkness and from that Instant luck turned, and Brooklyn swam to victory. The game was a wild panorama of hits and a perpetual rogues’ march of pitchers. Brooklyn drove Compton off the slab; the Reds rectprocated on Steele, Who debutted and got butted for the invaders. Gaspar had his troubles, and Smith wound “up in the oaming by getting hit for wallops that ored the men Gaspar left on bases. Whale of a game, and a hard one to lose, dear brothers! Football Hospital Is Opened at Yale Already Read, Varsity Centre, Shows Up for Practice With Arm in Sling. (Special to The Fi New HEN the cand the fleld ¢ ‘ trailed along wi e street clothes ar Thus has come t s for the Yale d out on t their mem? his a first of the which add spice to every season of Yalo football, but which result, In- stead of a crippled team at the end, Ina hardened aggregation, The injured man !s N of Boston, the varsity ¢ familiarly known es Squa fell on the ball too heav atrating a tackle & ments of his tried to cover up his ir unl @X- amination by rut losed It Ketcham, who was on the freshman team last s taken | Rellly, right halfback; an H. Read | Read's place at centre temporarily. Ketcham {is heavier than Read, but does not know the game so well and is not so fast as the other player, He was 6 some good coaching by Brides and Bomelsler. Reilly and Baker have been doing some good punting, and will probably divide this work with Capt. Howe this Last year th quarterback had rf the punt nd; Paul, left tackle sard; Keteha t, right guard tackle; Gallauer, quarterback; —Phibi left halfback; Chureh, full- back, But the se the first age, fo: who won his * ter, al onsin. And Foss ls'no slouch as @ quarterback. s backs were Baker, The line of the second team was: E. | | nometsi Tomlinso: guard: Lore ; Warren, right end left half Anderson, Boxing Board To Hold Another Meeting To-Day Another meotir will be held to-< fy the two members of the State Box ing Commission to find out more de- fails from the officials of the Madison Square A. C. relative to the one y lease which the club is have on the Dixon and O'Net! will have P. Y. Pow- ers and Harry Pollok, manager of the elub, before them for the purpose of y Posed to trying whether or not the 4 bona-fide lease, Commissioner O'Nell paid a visit to the executive chamber at Albany yes- terday with the intention of conferring with Gov, Dix regarding tne Madison en controversy. He was unguecessful in getting an auc with the Governor, who sent him word that he couldn't see him until Thursday owing to the pressure W. L. DOUGLAS $3 $3.52 £84 SHOES For style, comfort and service Ww. L. Douglas, ahoes are just as good as other makes sold at higher prices. Sores in Greater Now York: asnan Strwet Square Ga business not work another start to-day sioners | zg Mr. Goodresser says ern Rest, Both the Eastern contestants in the} rested | coast-to-const aeroplane race yesterday after passing a strenuous day repairing thelr respective machines Jimmie Ward, with hi biplane, Is stal At 445 P.M, y flutter ‘orning, N, Y y he did try to , sofhe decided Calbraith Rod: has not had as many chances to make starts and stops as Jimmie Ward. He Is still hopeful of getting under way to- Bet a Truly Warner Fall Hat on It! ‘Count the hat of any smart up- Look AXEL = Look wHar. 1 Gor! A BOTTLE OF “SLAMBANGO’. IF You bY) = YOu'et DEVELOP ENOUGH HORSE POWER 51D CLEAN UP A DOZEN ORDINARY FIGHTERS - (T MAKES You FIGHT ! right end; Howe, | ond team could probably | 1 awful rub in’ the | lame Curtiss | but somehow they did} make | @ BRINGS GLOOM 10 THE FIRE FIGHTERS Men of No. 20 Company Like New Auto Trucks, but Miss Old Friends. The firemen of No. 2 Company, at No. 242 Lafayette street, are a glum lot. They like Tony, Fog, Jess, Bayonne and Almira. use for horses. More than two years ago the steamer and hosecart which occupied the quar- ters in Lafayette street were displaced by the trucks for the high pressure{the fire department on Jan. 1 last. Of that number 150 had been bought within hose. lop to fires with them, automobiles took the places of horses. It was said at Fire Headquarters to- day that from this time on the city would buy fewer and fewer horses for use in the Fire Department. The new apparatus in all to be made to run by electricity or gasoline. . Fire horses are very carefully bought under the supervision of Deputy Chiet Guerin, in cha pairs and Supplies, 1,200 pounds, measure sixteen Amsterdam avenue and Ninety-ninth street for several weeks, until thoy learn, first, not to be afraid of clanging! bells and hissing steam and men slid- ing half dressed down brass poles, and second, to trot from their stalls to their places under the tackle of thetr harnens, ready to have it dropped and buckled over them. After flve years in the busier sections of the city they begin to suffer from what baseball team inanager would time and taste insisted on Carstai: nothing else, It is a blend of the choice: It is aged in wood. Carstairs Rye is absolute! It is the oldest, purest, be: Phifhdeiphia But the horses were kept to gal- Yesterday tho| & Year. And Now Axel, Too, Believes in the Value of "Slambango.” he repair or fuel supply wagon: And then- peddler about. There have nN a numb and shelter. has ever been done. hospital at Bolivar a horse ts st that in Brooklyn. call forward in the traces with the same eagerness which they show after they first learn the game. Then they are transferred to quieter parts of the city, where not 80 much is required of them, and later yet—in ebout seven years from their initlation—they go to the suburbs, where the fire alarms do not ring more than once @ week, or aro assigned to ‘$1,000,000 CASH, |= $100,000 AYEAR, ‘They are sold at auction to hucksters, or junk dealers, who pay from $10 to $00 for big animaln for which the city was glad to pay $350 a few yoars BEAUMONT, Tex., Sept. 20.—John W.| executors without bond. before. And the rest isn’t nice to think Gates's will, March and modified by a codicil made | outright and an annual income of $i0,oe, | fell from the railing of his porch, six in May, was filed for probate here ye and thus r of pro- posals to establish pension farms for fire horses where they can spend thelr old age romping around, with plenty of food But nothing of the sort While the horsey are useful to the city they are well taken care of. The men spoil them like so many big babies. their two big automobile If a horse is sick or hurt he goes to trucks, but they miss their horses—sid, |the emergency hospits tached to the training school, or the and St. Edward The horses were transferred out of the streets, Brooklyn, where there ts one of district yesterday for no faults of their|the best horse ope: own, but just because progress in the| World, It Is Fire Department means less and less which 1s at- Ing taples in the arrangement by which pped into a rack-like stall and then lifted bodily to a slab where the veterinaries can work on him. Dr. Alphonse Dodin is in charge of the New York hospital and Dr. Wilfam Doyle of There were 1,508 horses in possession of e of the Bureau of Re- They must weigh hands high and be about three years old, They go to school at the training stables at ARSTAIRS Rye has stood the test of for over 122 years. The most conservative, the most dis. criminating users of whiskey have century and a quarter. « If any man who is unacquainted with Cars: now, will try it once, he will immediately join the coterie of particular and judicious whiskey users who will have Call for it atany club, cafe or hotel in the city. It is fully matured. Itis the mellowest, the most palatable whiskey distilled, STEWART DISTILLING CO. A consolidation of Cassteirs, McCall & Co. ond Carstairs Bros, New York in New York City rs Rye for nearly a s Rye st old whiskies. y uniform, at whiskey in America, Baltimore Downtown | Park Row and Chatham Square Store | \E YOu CANT “TAKE MY WORD FOR (T= TRY Url! $2,000,000, The trust ts to continue during of leaving the & it bulk his life, so that whatever happens in ¢ to his son, Charles G. Gates, | hI8 business transactions Charles G. as bad been reported widely, Gates | Gates cannot “go broke.” ba ‘The will provides for the payment of a balan of a donation which Mr, visible to the pubile. COOK STABS FIREMAN. made his widow, Mrs, Dollora R, Gates, residuary legatee. But It is declared! Gates made to the Methodist Ei e “le to t Episcopal that Mrs. Gates, pursuant to her hus-| Board of Kducation and bequeatis 00, Logan, cook on the band's wish expressed to her during his | 000 to the Mary G, Gates Hospital at last illness, will turn over to her son| Port Arthur, A bequest of $3,000,000 to of Tugboat Crevr. z thority for this statement has not been made pubite - —— Killed by Six-Foot Fall. O- v i t b] & portion of the estate bequeathed to| the Gates Old People's Home at West Ea sa” aie inno, teal ae tuficiently large to make thelr | CCAR, Ih, wag revoked by the codle| fr tutin, § te and ¢ shares approximately equal. The au-| °! — In the left breast with a carviag knife, —_ Danie! Logan, who lives somewhe: Kitson, forty, The vw! N. J, was found dead and are as nthe | caped. which as made last) ‘To Charles G. 3 18 willed $1,080,099 | Street, y yesterday. Apparently he }a critical condition, feet to the ground. H derived from a trust to be established | tronen, Alon eae al ‘as for the first time! for his beneflt which amounts to about! marry Miss Anna Noonan of Bayonne. | had no Idea of an a me at him with the IN BUSINESS ERTHWAL] & SONS — New Harlem Store ." 35rd Ave.@12Ist St. l-Ish 2212 to 2224 Third Ave. This Great Building Is Full of &# end “petted Everything for Housekeeping Acres of Floor Space The Kind of Treatment that makes new buyers be- come regular customers. Oak Dresser, 9.85 25¢ Weekly Of substantial oak, nicely fine ished, The draw- “ ” ebb at They do “come back. f xevtingnam 36, and the mir- We take car-loadlots of furniture Ro: Re Rea a from the great factories all over Tapestry Portleren, 43 Note the p y stanchions. the United States and can sell heavy quality, , 98 Crochet Bed Spreads; full size; Beds, ant hemmed. Bedding, to you at lower prices than can mere) Pay those retailers who pretend to Oriental Couch re to $ eras 60 in, w everybody. be manufacturers. big variety.. Great Sale of Pictures at 25 per cent. off. Decorated Table, a< ti The entire sample line of Mahogany fintsn. > 2 MMM a big manufacturer. Water- Top neatly dec ‘ OY) Need Pall i i i colors, Etchings, Prints, Car- Pye sm ill Lc cee a l HI i] i Paintings, Oleographs, ete, h ign. PTT UUW ULL LLL SRL Ce Palptingss, Se Floor Coberings in the Newest Fal: Styles Hendy > on edge a i ane Nothing brightens up a home so much as new Rugs and Carpets. Our ried e & y Pe ienae 44 big illuminated revolving racks show thousands of rugs, olleloths, lino- amp, f \ et alate: leums and matting. We have rolls of carpet by the hundred, and a fine 89c. Pig ere rae Nght space for matching with draperies, etc. All kinds. Reasonable ithe, toy 6u REE AT AHS prices. No Charge for Measuring, Sewing, Lining or Laying Many special bargains. all woods; all prices. Extension Table, Lots of others up to $100, $ $30 Worth for Ste a Week} Oak Bookcases, $19.50 Extension Table, 56.90 $100 “8 $1,506 6 $1.25 Monthly $200 “ “6 $2.50 « “ Very attractive Payable by the month if more convenient. (Juartered oak, 45 Collectors sent IF REQUESTED, inches wide, 37 We will open an account for any amount} high on proportionate terms. No limit, amall} Same Style Ma- hogany Discount if You finish Prefer to Pay Cash $. 22 42 Inches square; solid oak; well finished; Prices marked in Plain Figures--no extras. : extends to 6 ft. Note the fluted legs and orna- Salesmen to show the goods and give full Library | Furni- mented cross pleces, Sideboards, China Closets, Servers, Chars, @tc., in every style at every pri Cowperthwait Sons information, but the goods sell themselves, ture to sult every taste and purse. 193 to 205 Park Row din Battle Between Tws Carl Carlsen, fireman, and Willan Thomas of New York, quar‘eld eget, age resident of|sey (ity, Jumped off the boat and ee. Carlsen was taken to St. Vin of his home, No. 9 Linden | cent Hospital, Wost New Brighien, #9 He said ws die neck was|asreemnent with Logan was trivial end) is at = « ” @ a J wit we cS) “ a e ad soviet — _€”"~.— me