The evening world. Newspaper, May 21, 1914, Page 16

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ht developed since Ketoh- ype Ae BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK customary picking,” “alied the best to prove a jon, and FOR “MET” GOLF TITLE IS EASY FOR LEADERS Kirkby, Tiffany, White and joGoorty a battle. the mid- weeks ago by Chip, who had Frank Klaus. hifty, although fact eas nek unc! ieCoy suddenly left up- and out. lanned Partridge Among Winners in Early Scores, The first championship round for the sixteenth metropolitan golf title at the Eriglewood, N. J. Country Club to-day resulted in many one sided matches. Early scores for the On- wald Kirkby, the home club favorite, bad @ anap with B. F. Reidmund of Englewood, winning 5 up and 4 to go. Kirkby played consistent golf and was never in danger. Gilman Tiffany of Powelton, C. E. Van Vieck of Baltusrol, Gardiner White, Flushing, and T. D. Conroy, could | Fox Hills, were other leaders who won : thelr first round by « comfortable mar- o' a 3 ? z rE pa-| the afternoon for the President’ ®, pn commenting upon the new it, say that hae are being attracted by lari heres pinost marona Batlet® ere RS play in the might be an opening for the League in ‘Australian are trying to brie d a : weight thrower for the nest ymplo games. ries,” according to the A\ “have the stre im and the poundage of h of a Ralp! @ the next Army-Navy football game We Maeva! Academy athletic authorities @ecided upon Washington and are negotiating with the owners of the (remo CIGAR “Many of these| fy ustralian Dwight Partridge, the former Yale ‘er, who did so well in the qualify- round yesterday, continued hte good playing to-day, easily disposing of R. C. Carroll of Knollwood by 3 and 2. To-day’s competition was all match pla: 18 holes, The thirty-two low- eat qualifying scores entered the championship proper, while the re- maining thirty-two formed sixteens for special prises. The defeated six- teen in the first thirty-two were echeduled to start @ competition tn cup, the victorious sixteen continuing to ne the second championship round. Morning round, championship re- sults: Oswald Kirkby, Englewood, defeat- ed B. F, Reldmund, Englewood, 5 and 4, C, E. Van Vieck jr., Baltuarol, beet H. K. Kerr, ih, & a Tiffany, Powelton, defeated C. v Benton, Saegkill, 3 and 1; R. T. Mun- dy, Ardsley, beat Harold Downey, Apawamis, 4 and 3; L. D, Conroy, Fox Hilla, defeated Chisholm Beach, 2 up; Dwight Partridge, . C, Carroll, Knoll q up from A. E mi L. M. Richmond, Oakland, defeated William Fellows Morgan, Baltusrol, 1 up, 19 holes, C. Hitchcock, Foxhills, beat A. M. Robbins, den City, 6 and4 E. M. Barn nglewood, beat C. A. Dunning, Nassau, 2 hag adenine | Platt, New York, G. C. ae Grantland Rice, Englewood, br Max Marston, Baltusrol, beat C. Fs Brown, St, Andrew's, 1 up. Perrin, Broke National, 4 and 3. Garden City, won on & Richmond, 2 tond 1, G. W. beat T. R. Hyd South Shore, 2 up. TEE EVENING WORLD, rR URsDAY, ‘MAT’ 21, The Champion Te Tells McKet-|teea tick Not to Mind Way Pitts- burgher Is Treating Him. By John Pollock. HAT Jack Johnson is not worry- ing in the least over the danger of losing his title to Frank Mo- ran in their twenty-round battle in Paria on June 27 is shown in a letter which Danny McKetrick, manager Of | ago, Moran, sent to Danny Morgan. Lit Danny writes that Johnson ithfully for the contest @ told him not to pay the treatment Moran is handing bim for he intends to knock him out in three or four rounds at the outside, Billy Gibson has decided to hold a show at the Stadium A. C. on next pelt hnpad niet ate og Cg 4 signed up good ‘ters to appear two ten round bouts. In the first Jack Denning boxes Young Mike Donovan, while in the main go Ballor Fritts of Brooklyn will ewap punches with Al rte who recently ecored two kaock- outs, Battling Lav isaky, accompanied by his manager, will leave for Tndianapo- Ne on Sunday night, where Levinsky will meet Jack Dillon, the crack In- dianapolis fighter for ten rounds awed 29, Levinaky is to receive a guarantes of $2,000, with a privilege of accepting 30 per cent. of the receipts. Johnny Dundee, who fights Freddie 1014, IN THE SPOTLIGHT. Copyright, 1914, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). aazs"tearer'st|MATCH PLAY ROUND [Johnson Says He’\l Stop Moran i in Four Rounds Weish at the Twyford Park, oa br May 29, is guaran- Hes with the privilege of 30 the gross receipts. Wi it ‘soe sald, ls guaranteed , with the same percentage. will box at 135 pownas at 3 P. fighter hae posted a forfeit of §250, A. C. in Ulmer Joe Jeanette has received a from his manager, Danny McKetrion, who ie in Paris, stating that Burse of London is willing to give Jeanette $8,000 to fight Colin Bell, the Australian heavyweight, next month. Danny a he is holding out for 95,000. J tte got the decision over Bell in a bout in London a few weeks Jack Davies, the California hea weight who stopped Al Benedict in two rounds on y, nigat at the Olympic A. C. of Harlem, was matched to-day to fight Battling Le- vinsky ten rounds at the Fairmont C, show on Saturday evening, June Otto Kobler also boxes at the same cae John Reisler, manager of Willie Beecher, has arene TA Res for him. His Halsband, the English “Tighewetant at the le ge A.C. on May on " ey Four heavyweights have been signed up by Jack McCarthy, mana- ger of Brown's Gymnasium A. A to appear in ten-round bouts a club's show on next sda} Bartly Madden will me nors and Al Benedict of Hoboken will take on Bunt Kenney. STANDING OF THE Seuee. Se f Shien: 1 “AgsUCTS OF YESTERDAY'S GAMES. 2 versity second crew has for the Henley Regatta on the Thames, in Bngiand, July 1-4, it was announced pee Ol Sec crew defeated Yale, Peres iM 8.) at aaa Douglass, Apawamis, Sataaied OI Oliver gee coroner. will ele escond_erew os te sine ls ond wall for next day. —_——___ Broekted@s Get New Pitch MpRICAN LEAGUE, x aL yan, PIMLICO ENTRIES. RACE TRACK, PIMLICO, Md., May 21,—The entries for to-morrow's races are as follows: , | >y Edward Blackwell, another prom- | .| of the United States; Jerome D. Trav- WHAT CHANCE THINKS OF CATCHER NUNAMAKER There le ene ot the, few catehere that | ha: would beg said the noite manager. id you netice ho ‘ man thet Officers of the Brooklyn Federal League Baseball Club announced this afternoon that they had signed Byron 8. Houck of the Philadelphia Athletics NO YANKEES LEFT NOW IN ENGLAND'S GOLF TOURNAMENT | Last American Hope Goes} With Defeat of Evans | and Weber. SANDWICH, May 21.—Charles W. ‘Evans jr. of Chicago and Harold Weber of Toledo, the only two Ameri- can players who had fought their way | to the fourth round of the British amateur golf championship, met de- feat to-day at the hands of two Scotamen, C. B. MacFarlane and Capt. Cecil K. Hutchison, respect- ively. | Harold H. Hilton, t! title, shared their holder of the , being beaten inent Scottish player. In the match between Evans and MacFarlane the cards handed in wore as follows: zs —M 65 ~33 MacFarlane had virtually won at the turn, where he had secured a commanding lead of five up with a the wonderful card of 81 for the nine holes. His play was uncannily per- fect throughout. Evans was laid half etymie on the ninth and was twice bunkered on the homeward journey. Except for ooca- sional hooked drives he played good enough golf, but few players could **Oulmet a Ureat Disappointment To Me r Deciares Edward Ray. BY EDWARD RAY. (Engiand’s Famous Professi: al Golfer.) Sandwich, Eng., May 21. Ouimet, who was defeated by a practically unknown man in H. Tubbs, by two up, was a great disappointment to me. One hardly recognized him as the same golfer who beat Vardon and me at Brookline. He had the same grand confidence, but appeared to be playing his shots under unusual restraint, and not hitting hard enough. He was forced to go out for long carries at the thirteenth and fifteenth holes, At each one he played great shots with his brassie and at the same time suggested that he would have been more successful !f he had shown a more daring spirit. As it was he almost pulled the game out of the fire, but the fact that he took the match to the Inst green after being dormie was, I fear, due to bis opponent's mistakes rather than to any brilliancy on his own part. Ouimet has won the admiration of every British golfer by his boyish generousness, and when he was beaten the gallery cheered him as if he were the victor, Perhaps the young American was a little disappointed, but his glad smile, which made such a strong appeal to the ladies in the big crowd, who at every hole flanked the fairway from almost tee to green, hid any trace of regret he may have felt. “Oh yes, I have been well beaten,” Oulmet said as he walked off the green. “Now I shall have plenty of time to watch the others play better golf than I am capable of. I thought I was running onto my game at the start of the championship, but yesterday— well you saw what happened. Shots were never easy to me.” ward 8. Knapp, Henry J. Topping and Harold Weber. ‘The easy defeat of Travers cast the first Semis on the Fosse of the Americans. io was in bi first elimination round by Palmer, aa Irieh player. ‘Oulmne ger was then the hope of the Fu went down to defeat yeuterday e hands of H. Tubbs, 3u r to pl He was not up to hem in any Pot his play. Herreshoff, who also was looked to as an American b was olimin- ated by the Hon. Michael Scott. Lock- ‘wood was defeated by Hayward. The others Deatonns went out early in In othe earth round this afternoon Cc. B, MacFarlane, the victor over Charles W. Evans jr., failed to main- ‘tain the high level of bis morning | game and he was defeated 2 up by KB. Martin Smith of the Royal St. € ‘a Club, ieaward Blackwell, similarly float his grip and was beaten at the nine- teenth hole by L. Phillips and Cecil K. Hutchinson, the conqueror of have lived against the machine-like Precision of MacFarlane, who drove well, kept a good line and sent the ball down with ten, fifteen and twen- ty-yard putte with remarkable certi- tude, On the homeward journey Evans started by winning the tenth, but he lost the following two, Then the American pulled himself together and scored hole after hole until he had brought MacFarlane's iead down to three, with three aetill to go, The CRicagoan, howeve! one the match by ar defeat of Weber was equally conclusive. Hutchison made the turn 8 up, and the match ended at the fourteenth hole, with the American player 6 down. ‘The fall of Hilton added immensely to Edward Blackwell's reputation. They were all square the eleventh and again at the fifteenth. Blackwell took the sixtenth, and at the seven- teenth Hilton, taking three putts, gave up the hole and the match, H. 8. B. Tubbs of Littlestone-on- Bea, who yesterday defeated Francis Ouimet, was beaten to-day in the fourth round by H, Ellis of the Royal and Ancient Club by 2 up. ‘The Americans who started were Francis Oulmet, open golf champion mateur golf champion of the Frederick Mereenor, Arthur G. Harold Weber of Toledo, lost by a hole to N. Hunter. K, 0, Sweeney Gets Draw. PROVIDENCE, R. I, May 31.— Frank Loughrey of Philadelphia and K. O. Sweeney of New York fought a fifteen-round draw at the Marie- ville A, C. Many were of the opinion that Loughrey had won, but Referee Sheehan didn’t see, it that way. NTRODUCING ‘‘Change.” A new sunken crown straw that is quite out of the ordinary. Won't you step in one of my stores and try it on?—Thank you, Listed on the ‘change at $2. fee Feskion, Show in tay windows, bry Gunboat Smith Twice Floors Jack Blackburn' PHILADELPHIA, May 21.—Jac! Blackburn, the colored boxer, neve: had a chunce to win at the Nations A. C. against Gunboat Smith. Black burn did fast work in the second. A the start both men fiddled wher Smith suddenly turched forward with a left swing that Blackburn ducked. Jack started to get in close, | but before he could land be was caught on the face with a right up- | percut that sent him roiling over on hia back. Blackburn got up on one knee with biood trickling from his nose He took the count of nine and thei. resumed operations. It was an aw- ful smash. In the fifth round Smith rushed wildly around, swinging with right and left, and Blackburn was kept Dusy dodging one way and then another. Finally Smith's left caught him and down he went again and another little trickle of blood ran down over the colored man’s lip. was Smith's bout beyond a doubt. EDITED BY ROBERT EDGREN ROCK VIEW TOP WEIGHT IN THE METROPOLITAM, Rock View, the four-year-old colt ty Rock Sand—Golden View, belonging August Belmont, will be top weight im - Many stores make 100 Ber cont profit. All I mak Xe save the difference. only clothing store oper i such @ — margin of profit in "New | ee York. We give you the valu you give us your support? s20 Suits & Overcoats For Good Dressers $12.50 Look them over. 100 styles of smart checks, plaids? pencil stripes, mixtures, etc. Also Di No More— $18. cal ion. $9 Cort Dorie otShop 171 _ 45th St. Opposite Matel Aster. LITTLE CIGARS “FWBNY dealer will sell you f 100 Telonettes (10 packages) for $1.20. ‘ut a package in or pocket hen you go out for lunch or or any short trip. | Telonettes are even bet- er than little cigars made of {ff mported tobacco, Refuse substitutes. Remem-' er tle name, {. LEWIS CIGAR MPG. CO. NEWARK, N. J. Independent Manufacturers, Truly Warner Straws are better, because they cost more to produce. They're $2. At my stores everywhere. Cousin JACK has just a» rived, It's thenameof og new pegtop straw. It fairly bristles with ind My, but you will like Jack! It's the usual dollar quality at 2, See Fashion Show

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