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NLE AND THE NIGKALLS MORE TROUBLE FOR HARVARD “in Another Year the Foreign Coach Should Develop a Finished Crew to Represent the » Wearers of the Blue—Delay in Flashing Winner Was Due to Fact that there Was No Yale Flag Handy. t, 1914, by The Pross Publishing Co. (The New York Fvening World.) ALE grit won the great race against Harvard late yesterday after- noon. Yale grit—nothing else! Of course Coach Nickalls's remarkable work in whipping a green crew ony &o 4 into form in a single season was a 3 e (44 Great big factor. But when it comes na right down to it, form put Yale with- ‘CO. in striking distance—and Yale grit did the rent, Ka] T’'ve seen scores ui famous boat ~> races on the Thames, the Hudson and other waters, but nothing just like the finieh of yesterday. It was a finish that will be talked of as long as Blue and Crimson meet—perhaps even longer than that. Yale won a lost race in the last ten feet, with the last powerful é stroke of the oars. At the end of thet winning stroke—just to show how nearly Yale grit was Diayed to the ‘Maait—Stroke Appleton fell straight back in the boat as if he had been ‘Mmooked down with a club, and two others, Sheldon and Titus, crumpled in | their seats and bent double over the trailing oar butts. 2 But this is a story that should be told from the beginning. So here Re. ‘Harvard won the iittie reces that/ leaped and 5 "© few go to eee and won them all eas- | together Tike 6 oatacierenns at eal lly. ‘The Yale freshmen fought best, bar sere ee ee end Slowly being beaten only by three lengtha or | out a doubt, Yale was beeny, “hog (0 And as every one knew that Yale| Yale was beaten, so far as shill @eunted more upon making a fresh- orprmgay lage etrength and ay [| mas showing than anything else, that | and Harvard wae anit recente mt taken as conclusive evidence thet |atroke and gaining, | ensine the 4 would simply walk away yards from the fini Bilas (20 bs event, Srerrendy eqnees | Syae v's it bv Wen Set It was all People yawned and | Fifty in rvard of those things, Iva getting | led by oNittie Tome Whe. Andah Har tired of coming away up to New Lon- |, ”enty yards from the fiatsh Yale just to see Harvard take « little | Cutwater sheared iia And, Harvard's 4 eared ‘ooth Thames exercise.” Within my bearing| two perhaps, in front of Yale's. “expert” loudly chaffed another — ipccused him of baving said some ND then came the miracle! time within the past fow weeks that Nelther crew had faltered in SME would pecbably win. And the the least. But elght Yale backs (Ger “expert” flushed a beautitul| Dent Ike bows. One terrific drive tarteey red clear down to his gtlls and po Yale and Harvard were even, MaUy denied it; In fact, offered to bet | TUN one more. The Yale boat {he first “expert” five dollars he could Jeaped half out of the water and shot @ word of his malicious | *"e®4 like an arrow, over the line a ir. that was the feeling throughout foot, or possibly only inches, in ad- vance, Down went "rather allm crowd on the ob- Stroke Appleton tion trains when the race began. ke a dead man, at full length on hi ie back, face up to the sky. Sheldon and ‘Titus fell forward across their oars. Coxswain McLane frantically splashed water over the corpselike stroke. In went down, ying but not unned silence mM © the amazement of every one ‘ Barvard showed in front only for a few yards, and then the y beat crawled up and went y into the Jead. follows have their nerve all Bt.” croaked an “expert” near me./the men who had be: on’t like @ bone in Harvard's| crew seen on the Charles in seta ea but those fellows can row and by ye sod Hare t neppened. M sweep poor old Yale off tb©| some delay. for the mech eee irae Just wait a minute. 80 wonderfully close that no instant waited, Harvard, having hit| decision could be given. And wna Tips © stroke, dropped back to 9, | 8, o@cialy at {ast decided that Yale SPNRMA Tale raised ner own to 30 and |biuo Bag made tee gthere wae nO there, And to the astonish-| tho officinia that Harvard would win of everybody, “experts” and all, fetly ena ee pennant was al- began pulling slowly ahead. At] tobe run apie ee wena! Mines, ready the mile Yalo had nearly « boat |futtered there, half raised, Wee tt fing could be found, and s0 ‘some one ing with those hastily seized the darkest hu croaked the ute among signal fla, waved that by hand. the mile Yale led by three-| Ob, It was a glorious victory, A of a length, Then Harvard | Without a doubt all the “oxpor will agree that the Nickalle stroke and Yale grit are going to give Har- vard a very strenuous afternoon on the Thames a year from now. epee ea ard's pl you walt, ¥ you 80.’ mile and a half flags Yale y Bai 4 a half length and hadn't iM meet the crack Now sted ber thirty strokes to the min-| York Blue Sox 7 ¥ at Maroon Field, D: a Zale men Bere rowing, at man Btreet Subway Btation, to-morrow, Ay painted Gut that they’ were | ©: Reed and T. R. Grimier, the new vi a little more than Harvard io os Re the Maroons, have 1 Hl p eto break i ve Improvements on thi ; lary ‘here, while the Ver-| The seating capacity ts now as oer | t behind. & hill, Yato | (eam has been atrenkthened by’ the adds 3 teh 7 OD boats again hor load was a ittio bis- |and Williame, who playcd'a eur ea, wh : At two miles she had nearly a|for the Ploree Arrows /*? * feat game Yale wi unable to gain SaaS eiee cst water,” and no open water Fi between the boats from start it was as clone as that, Golf at Apawamis, Fine displaya of golf characterized the first and second rounds of match Play in the annual invitation tourna. ment of the Apawamin Club yester- day. In fact, two men, Max K. Mara- ton of Baltusrol and T. V. Berming- ham of Wykagyl, had chances to break records, but faltered on the in- ward journey. HE Crimson crawled up again, inch by inch, as before. Attwo and a half miles Yale bad half Jeugth and was losing slowly. At third mile Yale had a quarte: and was evidently struggling Ce y to hold that. And still) Lincoln Giants Meet Old Riv: crept slowly up toward the/ 4 pattie royal between the two crack In @ quarter mile she had taken | pitchers, “Cyclone” Joe Williams and “Yale was behind—two yards be- | Ernie Linderman, will be seen to-mor- and siowiy losing more. "Yale |{fr Ain late aarti a ete gave vent to agonizing shrieks the & barbers, ia the final comtes of a 4 oul 3 nine de- ae encouragement, prayed, pleaded, | feted the Lincolns three times inst sea: Yale to “bang on.” Harvard | son, sebters laughed and cheered. The aiementineenaan: 3) amirked and looked exceed- N. J, Champtons to PI ‘wise and complacent. The Lincoln Stare, wh ‘Al it here, when {t seemed |thirty-four out of thirty n van beaten, Yale’ this season, will face the stron, #rayed harder on their o Hosbarg, bine, ane al amplons ie Fale A jou- - je slowly up again to even |i Nader to be to-morrow after Paeec.=,| BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW THE FINISH OF THE SENSATIONAL YALE-HARVARD RACE Copyright, 1914, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) ‘YORK English Style Has Been Put to the Test and| U.S. A.TO CHALLENG FOR POLO CUP IN 191 Vere eT pa ne 194 & OP al eee Oust Giants This Trip. By Bozeman Bulger. OW that tt has been made cer- tain that the Keds will climb into first place over the of the Giants Garry Herrmann will his business of helping Gov. Tener and Ban Johnson wipe out the Fed- If “Herzie” should win the next two he would still be stuck in second place, Garry couldn't stand the pressure yesterday, and asked that the meet- | we YALE S ~_y Burns. TON FALLING SENSLESS ae CROSSED “~*~ the U = out. eral League, > Swen coo San Fans Here Are Beginning to Wonder Just How Reds Got Into Second Place —_—.>—— As Result of Beating Yester- day It Is Impossible for _ Manager Herzog’s Team tu toas one engineered’ by Herzog, and if Heinie Groh had not spoiled it with a bad throw it might have made quite a differ- ence in the result, With the bases full, one out and Meyers at the bat, a sharp grounder was shot at Herzog. He might have got Doyle at the plate, but, rs was a slow played for a double, shooting the ball to Groh for the first out. Unfortunately, Groh made a bad relay, and in stead of the side being retired a run counted, ‘Two of the prettiest catches of the year were made by Moran and The latter speared a drive from Bescher’s bat that bumped him against the right feld wall, but he held to the ball for a sensational put- Right on top of that Burns ran far back into left, picked off a fly from Niehof's bat and, though he turned a complete somersault, came up with the ball, Jack Dunn is in town with the rest of the moguls and ts mighty eteong for his ultimatum tnat the draft rule be changed or his club be sold to Richmond, Va. The Feds have played havoc with Jack down at Baltimore, and he refuses to see why hie elub should be offered up as a sacrifice. All of Jack's money is in the Orioles, and he has quite a holler coming, At an Informal meeting of the Na- tional League owners it was decided to put the entire matter of dealing with the Federal League in the of Gov, Tener and let him the league at the meeting of the Ma- tiomal Commiseton, Demon Dave Robertson was i there again with his birch rod frafl- ing out base hits. ‘The new outfewer helped himself to three singles and then struck out just to show ae little versatility. Red Ames, who is ati poputar hereabouts, started off like a house afire, but his oldtime hard luck. felt upon him in the second inning. With the exception of Doyle's long single the bases were filled on hits that not go fifteen feet from the plate. GOODMAN BREAKS HAND IN BOUT WITH HURLEY’ Referee Calls Halt in Bout, After the Sixth ‘Bring Back That Polo Cup,’ Slogan That Arouses Plans For Developing New Team ing be put over until to-day so t he could go up to the Polo Grounds, | i tsaeie"es| EVENING WORLD RACE CHAR | McGraw and have it over with. And it was so ordered. | the National Commission and Presi- dent of the Reds sat in a rain box all by himself, took his 1 fellow, und even after ho Is game enough to The Chairman of Jail that say Am....un Challengers Likely to Be Selected After Series of Tryouts as A. A. U. Picks Country's Olympic Representatives—Five Hundred Cavalrymen Are Playing the Game. pS HIS country will challenge Eng- land in 1915 for the Inter- Polo Cup with a thoroughly representative team—not one that will be gathered from the artetocratic Meadow Brook clubs. The East, South and West will meet in tryouts, the same system that gov- erns all A. A. U. contests and elim- {nations for the Davis Tennis Cup, and the strongest poloists will be sent to lift the cup at Hurlingham, ‘The last international matches saw the passing of the Big Four which ruled supreme for five yeara and it also witnessed an era of new polo In The Westchester Cup was donated tn 1886, and tt haa al- | ways beon a tradition that the inter- | Verily, the role of baseball mogul Is not a bed of roses! In the mean time Charlie Herzog will continue the war on the Giants, provided the rain doesn't beat him to As mudlarks the Reds shine, and the fans hereabout are be- inning to wonder just how that and of Dutchmen managed to crowd up into second place. “I've heard so much about this Cin- t. Til Huston, | By John Pollock. ‘ACK GOODMAN of the west side, who was regarded as one of this city’s leading lightweights a few years ago, tried to come back last night at the boxing show held by Brown's Far Rockaway Club, but met with an accident. While deliv- ering a left hook to Battling Hur- ley’s body in the second round he broke his hand an@ in spite of the painful injury he gamely continued to fight until the sixth round, when the referee called a halt to the bat- tle, That Jack is still popular with the fight fans was evidenced by the big crowd that turned out to see the bout, even though the night was a bad one for a boxing show at the likely be several weeks before Goodman is again able to don the gloves. 136 * team which would challenge the East in a set of games to be played at the San Francisco Exposition and the winner to challenge England. William A. Hazard, secretary of the Polo Association, gestion with the remark West “didn't have the class." Later Mr. Hagard had a change of mind and he announced his views as fol- “Say to the poloists West that it will not be necessary to challenge us to appear in the San T personally know teams—probably the Dick of the East—will be there, Then we shall see what the Western men If they have the goods that’s cinnat! Club,’ who used to li { up here just to see what it was all about, and I am still wondering. met this sug- Rube Marquard kicked some real pitching, had no chance to show us that flash of base running that is said to ha kept them up in fast company. ‘gix of them got to the base: man—Manager Herzog—t steal. Becond base was as far as they got, for in no Inning did they have more than one man on base at Marquard gave but one ll, and that to Heinle Groh, who was caught napping off the bag before be had got settled. and the Reds 137 Tuy ppace aggregation of Prettf Makin, Owner, dames tt Tod ~_W With Marsans absent from the out- field Herzog is hard put for three; thingy working #0 badly with the new combination that he benched Bates during the game and substituted a young fellow by the name of Lohr, mean much to us, German and There seems little hope of getting the Cuban back as he ts hardheaded and that he was mistreated. thia country, eck ehroanare ) . WILL SEARCH ALL OVER FOR NEW POLO TALENT. Mr. Hazard's declaration shows a willingness of the Polo Association Willie Beecher, the east side light- welght, will wind up his training to- day for his bout with Kid Donnelly of Philadelphia at the Olympic A. C, on He has been training from the exclusive Meadow Brook This arrangement produced the Big Four—Harry Payne Whitney, the Waterbury brothers ereux Milburn—which lifted the cup in 1909 and defended it successfully in 1911 and 1913. Meadow Brook clubs for new talent for the inter- national, something that’s never been done before, A search for new players would probably find some capable poloists a the Woatern clubs, around Phila- elphia and Boston and ey: United States bare ate about five hundred cavairy officers now playing the game, and most of them have thelr names in the na- onal handicap book. In preparing for 4 team next year there is only one man who Is abso- Monday night. up in Sullivan County. from Monday Beecher will take on Young Dyson of Providence, also at the Olympic, and four days later he Mohr at Brown's sincerely beltevs By the way Hughey McGuire, who has been pulling pretty hard for the on them when Um- | “Von Kolnitz| ‘To Hughey that t to the Irish that he could stand and he says Herzog rest of the} of the Polytechnic Ha to-day by Djebelia, a Frenchman time was 2 hours, 46 minutes, 504-5 den, was second and Grumer, another Swede, wae third will face Walter Far ‘Rockaway Beecher and his manager, John Rets- ler, will leave for bouts in the West. polo combination ever gathered. time began to weaken its members. Harry Payne Whitney, who did so 4 f i amo in this aR See aE nea ass als Mae |BahaE zee Nem Pon Unter county, waw the frat one to ratie ‘The last international championships showed that the Waterburys, in their day two of the greatest forwards who ever wielded mallets, had weakened and had probably seon their final in- tournament as Candidates for their places next time will be picked not alone from members of the blue-blooded Meadow Brook clubs, but from the entire country. GAME HAS MADE BIG STRIDES Reds, “ran ou onda. WV was the last aff The date for the world's lightweight between Willle Freddie Welsh at Olympia at London has been changed from July 4 to July 7, twenty rounds, The principals yester- day signed the final articles of agroe- ment and will immediately start hard training for the contest. championship Ritchie and season without his asi That Herzog may not know some things about basoball, but he knows a whole lot of things about how to make himself solid with a Cincinnati! Get this list of extra men: Von Kolnitz, and among Nethoff, Groh and Devereux Milburn, England agrees with polo experts here that he Is the four Milburns representing the Unt- tod States the historic cup wouldn't rest long on Hurlingham's shelf, Looking over the leading players there Is Louls Stoddard, who did so well in the first game last year after taking Monty Waterbury's place, Mr. Stoddard couldn't play this year be- cause of his wife's death, but he will be available in 1915. Malcolm Stevenson, who nearly got year; Charles Rum- Berghammer—y. regulars there a. featherweight, the Italian boxer, have been matched to box ten rounds at the Rroadway Sporting Club of Brooklyn next Tues- On the same card Eddie Wallace and Mel Coogan will hook up over the ten-round route as will Kid Sullivan and Young Marino. The prettiest play of the game Tho bring together Harry Condon hon there 1s and Johnny Gallagher. on the team thin America's hard- hitting heavyweight, and George Car- the French champlon, torday posted forfeits of §5,000 each to guarantee thelr appearance in tho ring at the Olympia in a twenty- round bout on big hit on the other side, and they consider him one of the most likely Polo has made wonderful strides tn the West, particularly in California, where tho game may be played nearly Malcolm Stevenson, substitute on the American team this wned out there and the Gold- Btate has produced first class players and ponies I-|qne entire We ‘The other boxing are as follows: Brown’ Catton vs, Bull Cassidy, and Johnny Daly of Jersey City va. Young Mc- Broadway Sporting Club of Brooklyn, Soldier Bartfleld and Tom- my Maloney, and Willle Jones vs. Walter Mohr; Bergen Beach Sporting Club, Young Dyson ows to-night quickly and my reach championship ‘nd ‘Johny form in 1915. ‘Then there is always Whitney may regain his physical strength and decide to again captain EVERY REGIMENT IN ENGLAND A TRAINING SCHOOL, The task of rounding up capable players is no less an undertaking than the formation of a string of first-class | Fighting Joe ran . of Brooklyn, THIRD RACK Fddie Cook vs. Kokoma Kid, Young | Steeplechase; fou O'Leary vs. Tickle Sanders, and Jim-| wird; about two mie ‘Taylor vs. Franiie Nelson. them from America in many years, is clamoring for a chance to do its share in the work A new club, the Stadium, will enter miles full course, Tho referee's at Lenox In the t - & mile to go the boats] Ie "Lotween theas two crack toame the in sing tae? Fie xs Tdoeins wou out inthe ninth touing. : 6 ” of regaining the cup. whistle had hardly closed the last international game when H. T. Mal- aby, out in Pasadena, Cal, suggested nad paneed, — Bree te UiaSeeant Thee”: ** > tant the Woet organize a pleked polo the Saturday night to-night when [’ackie Hommey an Bobby Reynolds meet in the main Ci ‘ ai semi-final als Keyes an ie Rosen w’ fiatic Greworks, The It was a rude shock indeed to see the English mounts outspeed the American pontes this yea hought that the ‘amerioan’ a were superior in spemt and vndi ‘Teddy Hubbs and Benny Leonard) matoh Kid Alboris BELMONT PARK, SATURDAY, JUNE 20, 1914. OFC 248. Blatt qood Owner, Montilier Bt ‘The Whit Gener, Amines vrlonas, Poe WAT Ott S43, 8 Two-yearolda; selling. on galley; Bl ‘Time, 1.08, house Handivay; ty ate Stakes; twieyearolda, 86,000 qnaran| Jed ak Monivalice Rtabie nil at the elglith te der of epred, Aigh t cheater Jockey Club Meeting, Weather 400 ated: five and 4 half furlongs, straight, aa easily, Winver, Br. @, tr Djen, Neh Owe Pw, 6513.10 big = S2 3 18 10 i 6 ri “year vida and upward, $500 same, Winner, b, @ by Knight conteniar from the break joined iseue with thy leaders al nh there on, winning wel in hand, Yanke Notima place same, Winner, Tookeys, Open, High Clos PL _ 6B, Noiter 4 27 27 —— — ned raced tenia "tas IN ENGLISH MARATHON. LONDON, June 2.--The annual thon race from Windsor Castle to t Chelsea football grounds for a trophy valued at $2,000, run under the auspices bury, of Sw WINNERS AT OTTAWA, FIRST RACE—Purse $400; three- year-olds; selilng handicap; six_fur- the| longs —Diamond Cluster, 104 (Caila~ han), 4 to 1, 7 to 6 and Bursar, 112 (Halsey), 8 to 1, 8 to 1 and sir Launcelot, 103 (Rowley), 5 to 1, 8 to 6 and 7 to 10, third. Time, 1191-5. Sati, Auster, Oakland, Lad, Boozer and Kelrose also ran. | SECOND RACE.—Purse $400; three-year-olds and upward; selling; | six furlongs—Mordecal, 99 (Smyth),| Admission, #1, Gra 18 to 5, 7 to 6 and 7 to 10, won; Mama Johnson, 95 (Shilll and & to (Murphy), 7 to 1, third. Time, 1.12 to 2, seco « Ruby, Jim L., Chanticleer, Tyro, Bioka, Constit- vent, Lord Ladas und Miss Jean also pee), 4 to 1, 8 to 2 and out, first; King Cash, 138 (Kermath), 13° to | will battle ten rounds to-night at the/10, 2 to 5 and out, second: Mystic A In another special| Light, 146 (Dayton), 6 to 1, 8 to 2 Frankle|and out, third. Time—4.294-5, Ra- use also ran. TV. showe first spin to-day since her rig wes changed from that of a sloop to that of |# cutter. ‘The challenger outpaced the Jolder Shamrock in a good breeze, The changes in her canvas and the reduc- tion of the amount of lead in her keel greatly dminished her stiffness and In- . was won His to 6, won; | 2 6 to 6 sieres, 91 nd 6 to 5, mekola, 143 (Du- CUTTER RIG INCREASES SPEED OF SHAMROCK. SOUTHAMPTON ne 2).—Shamrock fine turn of speed in her Forty-three competitors started from wed her pace. She sailed withou the grounds of Windsor Castle, where|a centerboard, but this can be repla: they were sent away by King George |in a few minutes if thought advisable, Queen Mary and other members of the aes Shs royal family were mS New Brookfed Pitcher, INDIANAPOLIS, June 20.—Louts Stetdel, a semi-pro pitcher of Terre Haute, Ind, Joined the Brooklyn Fed. eral League ‘club here toalay, wlgned a contract yesterd ary was not announced, hay . Hie SPORTING, _ RACING ‘BELMONT PARK | ReOEAY F AST PD. wm Field ped vole. ant To-Night. 6.000 wei USED CARS FOR SALE, FOR SALE AT A GREAT BARGAIN, 40 H. P. MERCEDES CAR, Application. aue-sas Set ith enon ek Sa,