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eH Ritchie Based Upon a Thor- | @ugh English View of Boxing. (The New York World), MB later reports trom London | confirm the first impression that Freddy Welsh won a de- over Ritchie based upon a fly English view of boxing. ‘Welsh made a runaway fight of it, Ritonie rushed him aggressively start to finish. Ritchie was red of in distress; Welsh wi shaken on several occasions by heavier blows, and each either ran around the ring or and held tight until he re- When Weish tried to meet with blow for blow, near the the crowd promptly advised to stop fighting and bex, and Wisely took the advice. At the gite the fight Ritchie was atill eager; Wemh was urm and his legs were shaking. ‘Welsh had landed many He had done nearly all « with a swift, Mickering left, scored points. He had male miss often, and in Nn opponent miss, either by ducking or running away, ‘to the point acore. It is regarid- | ae an important part of “self de- " In America we regard a suc attack as the beat defense, a alinoat invariably is. Our of judging the result of fights that used in England. In rican ring @ boxer fignting f F Ritchie fought would be returned ' ‘over another boxer who fought we yanaway Welsh bas ~ no alibi for Willie He met Welsh under ing- e@enditions, depending entirciy Tele to knock Weish out IREAFTER I shall be the dtc ~ tator,” declared Welsh, a few hours after the fight. Th looks like an “out” for ly. Before the London bout and Ritchie signed articles “return match” in California. ae “the dictator” Welsh will be | to’ name such impossible condi- that there'll be no way to hold second bout. Signing articles im advance ts one thing—but & new champion into a ring his freshly won title is an- » As we've often seen before. SCOTTY MONTIETH, manager of | Johnny Dundee, informs mo by ‘wire that he now claims the nghip of America’ fp “wiice Ritchie is beaten Seog rg of America still fe to Willie Ritchie, and much may he get out of it. Just Gefeat scored against Ri Should affect the Dundee p is a purzie I am unable to + Dundee's alot clalm to tame In ‘breaks al! standing and run- Jumping records in every 08 part in. M'FARLAND may be will- to “come back” after his Fetiroment just to fight an he make the weight? wil Welsh mest Packey under Many ill-tempered and en- unfounded tales about McFar- had beaten him in this coun- ‘Welsh was busy knocking quietly went to England, ce there being the mont it Surprise Welsh ever expe- ih rtamen, who had to Welsh, were amazed McFarland was a very cs Wwail bred fellow, inrtead of whneck.” ‘The public, it tearfully sym- with Welsh when he told brutal treatment by the foul- McFarland and the unfair- American referees, reminded that he had been challenging , and suggested that he'd . McFarland sald | ; come to England just to meet on his own soll and let the public see whether Wels! m Pachey were justified felsh wriggied out of the on every pretext, until the lightweight ro prants. he forced Mc- 133, Packey com- ish, for McFar- | 4 is the moat finished boxer in the combining aggressiveness with fled skill. The English ref- the fight a “draw,” and men and critics agreed d had been given much i and that he had won. writer sald: “The most thing I'can say is that Mr. | & serious mistake.” back at Welsh’s reluctance bt al nd then I'm of the | team of elephants in’ ane him into a maten ‘a Shoot Index Hyer Va Phanae’ fonht it vat pacnely wi 5 yen Qe THIRD = Bin, Ler 118 Rutwel ran cut aa In the streth, Gee! I'm wan AWFUL HURRY - T'm Goweé To Tee Ritcug “ow HE Can BEAT WeisH IN NOVEMBER EVENING WORLD RACE CHART AQUEDUCT, L. |, THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1914. x gt Queens County Jockey C1 Post 2.04, 0 Helle of Starter. Fielder sola Change Rosa! Mve He ate ed Vads ** THE EVENING “woRLD, “THURSDAY, wv BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK HELPFUL HARVEY — LY 9, 1914. -HE ALMOST SLIPS RITCHIE AN EARFUL , 1914, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World.) . OF. WILUE Dow't Bower ue! I Gor TD TRaw UP SPEED INMAN TO PLAY HOPPE HERE FOR WORLD'S BILLIARD HONORS. $.-Another In- world’s championship contest between Great Britain and finally has been elbourne Inman, mplonship, will rd; G0) added: ait f sane, Winn the United Stat ¥ We Hoppe for the international oufident tintsh on Soallye ¥ Mrlaunted, « contender a HIND, HACE Tye pear olde: selling, 8400) added Sta 7 waa in tight ce! in the Brew, = an the American game,” ea man, “At the ordinary utters’ Winner, b. a. by Star Trodate,_ Owreer, Wu. Vent: let all the way im final sixteenth to tall Mt yan gor ‘race umder’ the ‘conditions: H "too Venctra® ail eh Alaiden Urge. searalda and a Start er Won daving: vince same, Winer, b, hie Cae we itgatel \oonter at the wd. Palsfol tion, Nig. Lavy closed some groin Fight Drew Only $21,000 and tured eleven points. A.D, 8, motor ¢ teas oe BilGiocre. 8 88 ‘Bini a SULTS OF rOMMY BURNS fe In Australia, | taking off many pounds of fat ana preparing to fight Sam Bobby Walthour Breaks Record In10-Mile Race Robby Walthour of Atlanta, Ga., es- tablished a new record In the ten- motor-paced race Brighton Beach Motordrome, He cap- the third heat in the unpre- cedented time of 12m, 42-5. Walthour's victory wave him the race with a total of The event was decided according to the French point system. Clarence Carman of Jamaica earned | 9 second prize with ten points and Leon Didier, the French champion, third, with seven points, dell of Lynbrook, L. 1,, was fourth five points. Marty Kessler was the victor in the | Je handicap at three miles, He gave Paul Ohne and Bert Sayre one lap each and won by about three feet, Daylight racing will be started Sun- day afternoon. On Saturday night all the profes- in a five-mile @ one-third {ri dicap and # one mile handi- Joe Fogler will meet Caesar Morretti, champion of match race, — ENGLISH TENNIS PLAYERS DEFEAT BELGIANS AGAIN. FOLKESTONE, July %—The English team to-day completed the rout of the gians in the first preliminary round of the Dwight F. Daw Lawn Tennis Trophy competition, Mavrogordato in will compete won In, three atr ty at Briton Had Agreed to Split What Was Left After Amey- ican Got $25,000. WINNERS AT FORT ERIE. —Purae $500; three-year-olds and upward; selling; 20 to 1, 8 to 1, 109 (Shilling), 12 to 1, 4 to 1, + Richwood, 106 (Claver), . 2 to 6 third, Time— Aprisa, Trap, 1, Oakand Lad and Imen By John Pollock. HILE Freddie Welsh, the Eng- world’s lightweight champlon- Willie Ritchie in a! twenty round battle at the Olympia, Tuesday night, not receive a dollar he was out of pocket about | $500, spent for training expenses. Welsh lost money on the fight be- cause he agreed to aplit even with Fight Promoter Charlies Cochran on the money left after Willie Ritchie, the American champion, was paid bis , of which $16,000 w. guarantee and tne rest for his rights in the moving pictures. ah receipts amounted to! $21,000, which was far below the sum both Welsh and Promoter Cochran figured would be taken in at the box had expected that th receipts would surely r $35,000. Promoter Cochran has probably lost | over $10,000 o} ship title from ‘OND RACE four-year-olds and Purse $600; steaple- (Dupee), ® to 5, 1 to 6 and out, 143 (Boyle), 11 t ut, seoond; Orderly Nat, 139 , 2 to Land 1 to 2 a FORT ERIE ENTRIES. FORT ERIE RACE ‘TRACK, ont, | July 9—The entries for to-morrow’s races are as follows: 0, dovtin i 1 Utahns, ‘Tos: Mie held at the same arena on J when Bombardier Wells, the heavyweight ¥ Bell of Australia, and Harry Btone, | 10 Mack's Phi the American Johnny Summer championship, | severa! thousand dollars to the good. ‘The gross receipts o round fight the world’s heavyweight and Frank Moran fought in Paris on June 27, were $36,200. ‘Thin fight proved a money maker for all concerned, for after 10 per cent. of the receipts were taken out for which figured up $3,620, ceived 60 per cent which made while Moran and his manager, Mcketrick, and ‘Th promoter of the battle, divided’ the| remaining $16,290 y- | the ree: year aide, ond "Ce. International fetling for incomes the poor of the singles beat A. gt neta, 6—1, . C. Parke defeated P: iso in three straight sets, of the remaining nfore Vienne, the Joe the crack | lightweight of Jersey City, who won! his first fight in Australia by knock- ing out Herb McCoy, the Australian jampion, lost a battle at defeated in a twenty-round bout on points by Kid Lewis, featherweight champion of England, who ts fighting in great form ther Bernard 1s now champion of France 8 by knockin cel Moreau, another F the legitimate the middleweight round contest held at the Cirque ¢ Bernard won al! the way Billy Bennett, of Dublin, fought many battles in this country matched to fight Fred Yelle, the Box- ton lightweight, for twenty rounds at a show to be brought off at a theatre in Helfaat, Ireland, on July bo. he poe ana Disqualify Loretta Dwyer for Not Cartying Weight After She Had Won. By Vincent Treanor. HE disqualification of Loretta Dwyer after ahe had won the first race at Aqu@luct yester- | Gay caused quite a lot of talk for and against the ruling of the stewards and a mixture of joy and gloom. ‘Those who wagered on Mary Warren Welsh Didn’t Get a Cent For Beating Willie Ritchie! and Johnny Marto, the rugged ‘west | side fighter, have been secured by Tom McArdle to meet in one of the three- ten-round bouts to be staged at the | Stadium A. C. on Saturday evening, | July 23. As Marto has had a good reat he ought to give Brown @ great fight A match has just been consum- mated between Harry Thomas, the English lightweight, and Benny Leon- ard, the east side fighter, They will come together in a ten-round go at | j the Stadium A.C. show on Saturday evening, July 18 ith, the Australian mid- ampton, who has lost sev- eral battles since he returned there from America and England, managed to win a fight at Sydney, Australia, on June His victim’ was Jules Duborg, the French middleweight, whom he knocked out in the eleventh round, Owing to the fact that Hattling Levinsky is too ill to get into con- dition for his ten-round bout with Dan “Porky” Flynn of Boston at the Broadway Sporting Club of Brooklyn Saturday night, Matchmaker Weissmantel has called off the bout nd substituted Knockout Brown and Patsey Callahan, Ja SCHRECKENGOST, NOTED BASEBALL CATCHER, DEAD. PHILADELPHIA, | the latter waa the star pitcher of Con- plication of dise forty years old, He was released by the Philadelphia club Ave years ago and quit ngost outlived his famous partner LONDON, July 9 the main hope of Great ful over being suc by the pressure of private business, > Derrick Tri CINCINNATI, Ohto, July 9.—Claude by the tonal League Club from Derrick, the inflelder purchased Cinefnatt Baltimore, waa yesterday traded to Chi- Ine been consummate purehass Derrick will be here this morning, her with “Twombly, the new 01 Hed ‘in to- be sent immediately Chicago. TKERLIN, July 9.—Germany will ni man Ja", oe [Racing Stewards © Mix [p ~|PUANT Joy and Gloom in Ruling CANCE MEN MN | to win were naturally pleased with j the decision, but to those who had | bet on Loretta Dwyer the changing; of the result was a shock to say the | least. Viewed from any old angle, | the stewards couldn't have done otherwise if racing is to be conducted according to rules and regulations. Rule 97 distinctly says that a horse must carry his or her weight from the mare did not do. When Lo- retta Dwyer, unruly ae ehe usually is, unseated her jockey Hamner and ran’ away, ehe should have been brought back to that spot for the rider to remount. Instead the boy | chased after her, got into the saddle! again on the back stretch, only to and follow the starter’ foot to the post. Here the stewards might have de- |clared her out of the race, for al- recdy the rule about carrying the weight to the post had been violated. Instead she was permitted to start and run away with the race. assistant on had made up their minds previo of the second horse, Mary Warren, nical things which arise now an everybody's satisfaction, ty John W. Schorr, made a good im- plied the bat Ed Crump responded like @ bulldog until the bad to “chu it. at Aqueduct these days in their orig- inal form, but whe teen scratch of the program shipping to Saratoga. Three horses, July 9.—Osate 8 he Schreckengost, who won fame as the % battery partner of Rube Waddell when deiphia Athletic, died in & hospital here to-day from a com- He was about ye shortly afterward, Schreck- 1s « fow months, Waddell dying in Texns ; {lust March. a |BARRETT OF ENGLAND OUT OF TENNIS CUP TOURNEY.| ¥ 1. Roper Barrett, ritain's team for the Dwight F. Davis International |Lawn Tennis Trophy, announced deft- | nitety to-day that he would be unable to to take part in the in the event of England vance in the next jround, His decision was brought about cago in exhange for first baseman Fre a | Moliwitz and outflelder Cy Williams, It | Was for this purpore that Derrick was purchased for a bik um, the trade hay before Derrick's * will left feld for the Aaa day" rete’ Derricn, will any Won't Send Tennis Team, | pe Cup, the International tennis trophy, represented in the matches for the Davia Broadway e@ = = Saeatina: ‘ Erlerine te iicatiaiaesmress| Oth St. ru MOTOR RACES wats ati 3 Aasoclation to-day statement fb saving Ger- Young Brown, the local Mghtweight, me wouls pot participa have scored a triple victory. Owner Johnson of the Quincy stable told Simon Heally he would rely beat ‘rial by Jury with his jouble Fagle, While the field was parading to the post in the Tremont, Mr. Johnson evidently didn't give td Crump and Lady Barbary a look” further from the In, ‘i return, This in the | Aqueduct. To hot as-—well, you know, old chap, See BARERA ane FERN Foto’ ‘ Ndvt f ‘eo. mou Beat ‘Just WHAT L WAS _GOING TO Tew Him! | was easily the star of the winning combination, Kobert Wrenn and George Adee, members of the Davia Cup committes, closely — watched the paddock to the start. And this dismount, at some one's suggestion, | It isn't known whether the stewards to disqualify the mare in case she won, but when Andrew Miller, owner ! wl-ccoocco-o-™ Slecomw--nawe SlocwmocnowcH protested the result and quoted the jtule, there was litt necessary. It was one of those tech- EF ~| eo--ce--on= FT ~lececconn-no deliberation 5] 4 jthen, which cannot be decided to! Turner, 3b. .. Ed Crump, the Western colt, owned | pression on his first start in the East by winning the $2,600 Tremont, If be! Kirke, 1b.. | Wasn't @ real good one and game to! the core, Lady Barbary would have| beaten him home after collaring him | Liebold, cg at the eighth pole. When Butwell ap-| Q:Neill,c. with courage and fought every stride Grege.p .. n filly | | Morton, Pp. SLWcce-n-no-= lou-nononcooP | ‘The flelda have been smal enough Powiloscc ceo. om 21 Ssesent a6 leococo-cocco-™ te reduced by thir. | 2) ued in the Weatchester tournam as was the case yea- | terday, a lot of interest is taken out Olsen batted for Morton in ninth, » balls—Off Pieht The Beverwyck atable had a auc- cessful farewell at Aqueduct before! 4 Manson, Hoenir and Col. Halloway, started in the Nolan colors, ‘The latter two were winners and Maxson ran second, If J. J, Lillis had started | in the first race the stable would Sacrifice hits: Stolen bases—Kirke, climbed Any Port simply had to win the ast race or be put down as the worst specimen of a thoroughbred in ning. A lot of money has been 7 burnt up by Any Port's connections backing him to beat good horaes, sterday they had to take % to 6 bali from Maisel’'s! — Foil ‘his Package tin three runs, y At dusty old /offense Graney was fined $2 norrow is an orf day and on Saturday the Yonkers meet- ing starts, Rheumatics will find the Empire track a good place to get baked out, for when the sun's on the fol. there the public's lawn is as port cirentated on tiie Nap bench, pitch for New York, but was knocked out of the box and had to be relieved and | amos; frat |Chariey man, led in the heavy hitting. To Measure, Now $18 Formerly $30 to $50 All remnants—suit ends—are included. will tell you at just what price the gonds were { formerly marked. Suit, $18. Coat and trousers, $16. OPEN SATURDAY UNTIL 1 O'CLOCK. [KARL BERR IS SURE OF PLACE ON TEAM "FOR DANS CUP GANES | His Playing in Final in Final Round of Doubles Most Convincing Seen at Westchester. | EW candidates for the Davia N Cup tennis team are popping | up every Now lia Kart | Rehr who stands a fine chance of | being picked to help defend tho hire | toric bow! from Europe's best tennis | players next month. Hehr, with Pell, defeated | Chureh Mathey in the final | round of doubles in tha Westchester tournament, which has been desige iT Jas tryouts for the Davis Cup | team, Behr and Pei won 64, 6-2 jmainiy on Hehrs sensational work, His playing against the Chureh. | Mathey combination was the most | convineing exhibition of tennis seen | in the meet Behr had complete commant of hin | strokes yesterday. Many of them, ! expecially his returns from the back court, had the speed that McLoughlin yputs in his drives, Playtng with a | bandage around his head Behr was j all over the court getting-back many hard shots over the nm If there was any kind of @ shot he couldn't consistentiy return) Church and Mathey failed to show It. fi played a strong game with Behr, but the little racquet wielder Behr's work and were greatly pleased with his remarkable showing. The | committeemen regarded Bebr as @ $ Triple in Second Inning | "rand Rew discovery. Started Highlanders on Road to Victory. FIRST GAME. HIGHLANDERS. R. H.PO. A, Chureh and bare a were feated by the Pell-Bebr team, the satisfaction of eliminating Mure ray and Williams before tasting de» feat themselves. ‘The failure of Murray and to come through to the finals was & big disappointment to the large gale Jery. The committes had paired the two young stars with a view of bulide ing up a new doubles combination, but the showing Murray and jams made yesterday kills alt along this line, Murray was in bred form. nore his playing alone that forced Chi and Mathey to go three sets for in 4—#, 6—4, 64, ar-old California yout! great speed and bis shots were placed, but he received little assiste ance from his partner. Williams ap« peared stale, He started out strong< ly, but toward the ond be tired per- ceptibly, and most of his returns land, ed in the net. He also was guilty of many double faults when serving. At his best Willlams has little trouble wetting the two balla over, and with terrific speed, too, but yesterday he repeatedly drove the balls out of cours or in the net. Williams explained his poor shows ing to the fact that he hed only | jsut been graduated from Harvard | after cramming a four-year course | three years. He said that a couple | of weeks of continuous tennjs would bring him back to his top game. After the doubles were completed the singles competitions were start- ed. In the preliminary round Touch. jard defeated Washburn 6—4, 75 | Willam A. Larned, who after holding the national title seven times, is try ing to come back this season, sim “4 toyed with George Wrenn, giving younger opponent but two games ia the two sets. | ‘The singles matches will be conth to-day and to-morrow, with the finals | being played on Saturday, Morton ; Gregs, on_ bases—High- Three-base | ook, Peckin= Maisel, balls—O'Neil Hit by pitcher lance In The New NO FASTENERS REQUIRED. Triangle Collars 27%er25¢ NY. Van Zandt Jacobs &CoTro piitadiam: Motordrome, shel taht, °i! ed, Ladies’ NI