The evening world. Newspaper, October 28, 1914, Page 14

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UP-TO-DATE AND NEWSY 1 Just AR Pree Farrer. OFFuRED Tue Yanks To MR WARD FOR 4 GHANS oF STocre THe FeDs a That Boxing Commission Should | "© Approve All Matohes Is Proved by the One-Sided Gibbons- Maxwell Bout. — PF epenent, 1014. by THe Frew Penneiing On, (The New Yor World) HB result of the Gibbons-Max- well bout Inst night, In which Gibbons chased his opponent for ten rounda with about a» much Epposition as n farmer'a wife gets from the chicken fieeing from the PT peed te another good argument for Oy Sapervision of boxing matches, A reat many matches made in thie fewes are known, to the promo @nd the “wine” poopie generally, to be one-sided, But ns long an there’ “e@ Gar to draw good money at the ate the one-sided affaira go on Uf all matches had to be approved by the Boxing Commision bef a Vertised and heid, better match making fateroming bouts, Of course, the novices have to make @ Beginning some ume, but the: @xcure for pulting one t He Say “You Wwanta Buy?" WHATA You Teen o pat? Heinie Zimmerman Doubts Chicago Will Trade Him To John McGraw’s Team -t- “If | Lived in Oskaloosa. There Might Be a Chance, But | Don't Believe It Will Ever Be Possible for a Fellow Who Was Born | and Raised Around New York to Get on One of the Home | Teams,” Says Bronx Swatter. | oh nore | week. Ballin is also out ‘| — HILE Ad Wolmast has been! reating up from a hard bout & couple of nights ago in the ‘West, Freddy Weish bas been busy ewtpeinting Matty Baidwi but he into the men. king thre varsity’s lone tally. and Glick carried the ball down the field, whore Glick teok it and \ skinned through tackle from the cighteen-yard line for a score. By Bozeman Bulger. [Just awakened ty the fact that not - i . ca |More than one porson out of a hun EINIE ZIMMELMAN —doubin) ared knows any ttn Out baseball that be will be traded te the) the seeonhne part of it. te had pre New York Giants because | bared interesting staf on how doonn't believe there ta any such guod plays are worked oul, but he told It to a theatrteas that they did not compre Che war talking: about I talks to clubs ays: “and t in a theatre in the same way. | k, Why, do you “they tell that of the people in York go to Diseball game and wlghty =A of the ville a Ap of hand childr Now [under 1 couldn't get a rive out with that inside stuf about 6. tuck, “If 1 ved in Oskaloona of any one of those far away towne there might be @ chance,” seid our Hronx hero, “but 1 don't believe it wilt ever 6 ponsivie for « fellow who wax born und raised around New York to get on one of the home teams, 1 don't 1 attest petimate fate) mean by that that, Johnny McGraw at last ‘through increasing! docan't want boys who are brought oF physical disability, up here, but It seoms that the other HERE clubs won't let it come off. If the Meed Ohanawe tn the roles ey; Cubs wanted to trade me to Mt. Low the A. AU. For yeare the! 't Would be Just my luck to have the body bas ruled athictes with | ‘en! so throuah. ae hand, pot even taking the| "At that.” sald Heine, “I'm not to put on the traditional vel. | Kicking about playing on the Cubs, They are paying me good money, out at the same time if | am to be traded 4 would certainly like to be sent to New York. But don't you bet on it! he en only | wom name on their Unsettled Conditions in won stand why ort the xa Dick Rudolph delarea that he ii going to sell his present hous and buy a bigger one in the coun- try, so that he will have room enough for hiacuns, Tonight tv fa to be presented with the seve enth one since the closing of the World's Series, HE war being waged now wt Germany | to prove a big boost for thay coming winter tt is we bring the best players of ¢ “Profeasyonal contests and exhibi- It to @ poouliar twiat In the workin — thin city. ‘The exodus his Snall be gllowed at gamos, mest- | ou of baseball affairs that a hon On account of the sudden con | siretdy and within the next oF entertainments beld under the of the ALA. U. A regularly instructor may take part weather In the Went voy rarely ever gets on & home team, Right here in the Greater City wo have aix or neven stars, and yet not We maid the All- the world will have ty of the four New unless Bancroft: o: pt the players! whe Ao bapetl te aan at H2me) one of them has ever landed on the to Southern California in a hurry, | ar Wil battle SHBInE — Gignte or the Yanks, Among these) So far the trip has not been al big Amateur Hockey League. by Oldring, ¥iu nancial success, | ' « all amateur evente must je the professional event» rhe, Jack Keddie Collinge and Coffey, Rudolph came close to being fas- tened to the Giants, but at the | minute Waa shunted away to @ pio where the Braves coud grab him, dack Warner, iw old cateher, now out of the game, Waa tho only player that can be recalled who Kol ® berth on a New York club despite the fact that he was born here He reured ten yeart ago. | me ineet! preced ce versa.’ 4 little bit hide-bound, like other amateur laws, but # step right direction, le nothing short of ridiculous jualify an amateur for eom- ‘with a }rofeasional, as long an tour does uot accept any ‘of Viluable equivalent, He for competition is the or real ¢ professional, The man competes for his own pleasure @ health or physical benefit, and "t compete either directly or iy for profit, te an amateur he competes with other ama- or with professionals, This nob be a matter of A. A. U. Dut it's plain common sense. A. U, has become so cluttered with rules that the original and ine Soon amateuriam @as be- y t joat. And of man: rufeanional of the rules are in spirit on the part of those who make them, f the athletes. Thoy are control of amateur sports to those who hold the ie of power in the A. A. U. these are the ones who profit th hie van chope my hand an account of Comiipios Johuny brid by yu tat t the i i Te im well known among ballplayern | Mmm ets that Motiraw has tried for two or | 6 three years to capture Zinn 5 fond that he ts willing to give up a Jot to get him, but itt fut Ie the |, Cubs will ture bum Manager O'Day didn't Ke beat in the world, can be sold of Evers, Mot perronally, ant they could work In harmony | MALean, It will be remomq to ha 1 Biy Maxwea | Tw lube un wt F400 oe the Atur Waiting sever, worms, the Momoer A, «Dy the tate Mtusletie of Hines ha ‘roa 4 andl Nation eu roumuler are noted for thelr eer The one player with we allure was the late At that, TRACK tricit ‘he met f After hearing Georar Btattings’ | tAYNOn monologue a sporting friend of mine remarked that he ts m @onerineed than ever George ts ‘ great baseball manager. HARLIM RRICKLEY will be in @ Harvard uniform again @aturday, He won't play, of cveree, but he'll be with the squau at Michigan game, and he hi Rein the lineup against “Yale "s shows that no can keep off the ground. “ nite of the «renter seating gnpacities at the new Yale and Princeton stadiums it is reported Seen soit ot applied for, Fost or t » Foot- vellous sport for the most the raight and narrow ling the Giants eiguteen gam x George Stallings ways that he his WILLIAMS SAYS BEECHER FOULED HIM IN BOUT. Andy Wiltame wee wround early to- day in bandages denying that he was! j stopped fairly and equarely by Willie | Yen & bot- Heecher at the Pole A. A. lust night. i foot- | tystead, Wiliama instetes that he wns | badly fouled by Beecher in the third, that f 6 at) te wilt ig . 2 West One ens {le a ninth rest eta that he treated | | a t lust it for injuries 1p to Williams saya) Match Pace Race Called KALAMAZOO, Mich., Oct. realty game, im ae ‘chanplon, ras to the strenuous | spectacular in noon between Directum 1. and because of a ta have been fee's puree ate Here - H PuLLed OuT A RoLLor Bius TIGER SCRUBS bEAT VARSITY FOR €.RST TIME 71.18 SEASON. PRINCETON, N. J., Oct. 28.—Some of the Princeton players are not yet in condition to practice or take part e id. Sh in football clothes, and hie bruises are healing satisfactorily. ith slight bruises and the coaches are going to spare him. He was down at the field running around yesterday, but took no part in the scrimmage. Canadian Recruits Will Strengthen Local Teams In Hockey ada Due to War Have Re- sulted in Abandonme! Ice Game’s Competitions. daya the most expert hockeylsts of ne members Kk teams that this LAUREL ENTRIES. " ‘ Lat REL, Mit 6 wea ay oF Koval More Maavo, 102, | Hagen. ate tae te, Je@s Tintar Path, | ch race scheduled here thi the pacing anyon on William, of A weathe: was POPULAR PASTIMES---SELLING THE YANKS Copyright 1914 by The Press Pubiiahing Co. (The New York Evening World.) 1 vust Gor a STRAIGHT TP FROM Tue JanTor Thay Te YaNK> ARE ALL HIRING APARTMENTS IN Brooxuyts MR FARRELL Fast AS Thur AS A STove pire TiprPeD ME #208 He MUST A Been Dow Some Business | ‘Fordham Ele not play until yesterday, but w not dressed Capt. Ames was not allowed to scrimmage, d hil scrimmage for the end runs and line playe by F. Trenkman i Big Shortage of Material i By William Abbott. PUOTBALL team that's willing to scrap for every inch of ground {s generally successful. Fordham, having that trait, hasnt lost a game this season and boasts of the best defensive record of any eleven in the East. When teams, big and small, are having their goa crossed frequently Fordham has been scored on but once, a feat that testl- fles to the grit of those boys in the Bronx, It bas been their pluck more than ahything else that made possible this League Race th tho Dominion of Canada, Many players have enlisted and are now on their way to the front. And because of unsettled condition up north the leading competitions will Can- be abuan- doned for this season. record. They have been compelled to nt of face many disadvantagee. The grid- Mi this and the entrance into the | ion aport at ine ip-town university fight this winter of the Boston A. A.lis just being revived. It Was abol- will give New Yorkers the best hockey | scason ever at the St. Nicholas Kink where all but four of the ehampion- kames will be pla Four 8 will be decided in Hoston when h of the local teams visit the home of the Bi C in 1yyv by the faculty. for two te game Was not played, Then brought back, but ¢ ths xraduaily without t enthusiasm, Vols y there was a decided} change. A “get-together” spirit bas accomplished wonders, In pest agi sons the Law and Medic because of long hours in the rovdis, Never supplied many footbi players. Now missionaries are golng by the ss going hockey ring to ada to started ship js the nursery for hockey hey never will be able tu develop the right Kind of material around New York because thirty [OF natural. facilities. tlenty ae ice [into these departments pleading the door rinks would help, but because of thall cause—and many studenta | the t cost of urin of the col! a it. are coming out for the eleven, Even! with this improvement thore ts a big | shortage of material, Many times Coach “Skip" Wymard has been forced to do away with scrimmage, to a@ lack of players, ‘ ‘esterday afternoon the big coach, | a former Georgetown star and All-| southern tackle In 1911, rounded up: a squad of fifteen. From this number! ne formed an eleven and ran through i. The final Fordham lineup LATONIA RESULTS. FIRST RACE,—One mite and sev- enty yards Beasle Latimer, 105 (Obert), first; Billows, 105 (Rice), sec- artiticla, v lege ba have plonship lit thew begin the develop: pnt of a hockey player. from the the boy starts his academic urde, The long winters means plenty of good ice outdoors, By th time he enters college he's a gon er, Hockey ts such a strenuous e that a hockey player coawen to ar aft about six years fight, It's the wear and kame that slows up the This has been proved right here In New York. ‘The Canadien stura who made the Crocent AC New York A. C. and 8t, Nicks famow U8 ORO are tion. They. may pee eee ice in @ great while, but last more than a’ few olfgtbilty rule ad tear of the i,” said) Player, , 1453-5, Nastast Broom’s ige, Banjo Jim, Transitory, - lan, Bonnles Buck and Brickley also he Amateur League here| ran. Two-dollar mutuels pald—Bes- for all the stars who have | sie Latimer, atralght $5.80; place $3.50, the border, Up to this sea. | show $2.80; Billows, place $19.80, show a player was not eligible to a} $7.20; High Class, show $7.60. local club unless he was a reside: THIRD RACE--One mile and sey- Jopted re Now York six months before the moa, | onty yards: year-olds. Trans: son opens, Which is about Jan, 1, TI act, 109 (Gross), first; A Her, Wt limit hae been reduced to sixty days, | (Collins), second; Black pm, Wt ot fand a player must attitiate himaett| (Metcalf, third. Time, 15 4-5. “] with @ club at least thirty days betore lily, ‘Pebeto, Toynbee, Gallant , the frst championship game, , Lady Colonist, Transmiller, The This rule opens the way for guch| Gander also ran. mutug@s paid— players as Jim Cree, the Indian who | Transact, straight $28.00, place $14.50, jhails from Syracuse, He waa de- | show 62.80; Ask Her, place $3.50, show Oct) clared Ineligible last year, but he will | $350: lack Broom, show $7.40 ve on the Irish-American A, C. a ke Abrama'wi’| go — LATONIA ENTRIES. this year, as will George Abr: ‘s 4 member of the Montreal Anan was considered last year one of the kreatest forwards tn Canada, Hobey Haker, late of Princeton, and stamped as the best American-born | player, will be with the St. Nicholas team, Charley Mitchell, Billy Payto: Charley Smith and Bud Clary some of the Canadians who have ready located here. — Claffy will be with the LA. A.C. ‘The others have | i not yet cast their lot. The Crescenta are trying to land two of these men ax they will lone Eddie Hill, The lat. ter has entered Cornell and wil wield the stick for the Ithacans this winter. The Wonderers, who will not be in tho fight, will alao feed the four clubs F Wanderers, while they » had severa good men, LATONIA, Ky,, Oct, 28.—-The entrivs for to-morrow's races are as follows: Selling; two-year-olds: makiew ‘and it furkong: Mex, 108;) Oemon Rainwo, 112: Bence Atbert 112! ‘Charioote, 112° Lang Beach, ive Mis Lausas, 1 aw, fur jade LL 1 ; ae TL Iglu, stax | Winb Rabe 104, | as. *Canuona: t rT ‘| Anished tb 4 . Neb, Oct, 2%.—A parade led by a band was the welcome given Leslie Mann, outfielder of the cham- Boeri ja ti nubile rena on, 28.—The after. | lines | | ' Beat orr'e FOR Two | ven Owes | Great Success This Year | To Its Remarkable Pluck: Fo | Because of the Aggressiveness of Its Players the Bronx Colle- gians Not Only Have Not Been Beaten Up to Date, But Tney Have the Best Defensive Record of Any Eleven in the East— the Maroon Ranks. huen’t been devided on yet aad Wy- mard tried the trick of playing toi fes at the guard positions and making other changes. The weather, with an arctic fifty-mlie gale blowing, wax right or snappy work and the h insisted on a full portion, The entire list of plays was run off, with Wymard in the It’ play did until “it did. wo it was triéd over Forward passing was a factor tn the practice. Also the ering of kicky by the ends, The workout was unusu because of next week's si wine with Gettysburg on ay and one with the Navy urday, A great deal of Fordham's success has been due to team worl: There are eral stars, Yule, Dave Brown, Cap Bud" Wymard, a brother to the coach, and Jerry Regan, a youth who has been sipping things up. by sensational backfleld work, but they all play together. Capt. Wymard’s feat of kicking eleven goals in us many trials is a feat thet causes favorable comment at Fordham., Prob- ably no other player thie season could equal this performanc; Coach Wymard, in order to gain the best results, has two or more players try for one position. ‘The stiff com- petition brings out the strongest talent. The various candidates are: Ends, Kane, Keller, Mahaff and Corriden; tackles, Reardon, May and Mulk guards, Conklin brothers and Fi centre, Capt, "Bud" Wymard; quar- ter, Morcaldi; backs, Yule, Regan, Dunn and Robin, ‘This is Fordham's record this sea- son: Georgetown, 0 to 0; beat Galiau- det, 7 to 6; University of Rochester, 21 to 0; Mount St. Mary's, 21 to 0, and Rhode Island State, 24 to 0. DE ORO PLAYS TO-NIGHT. co on Sat- Alfredo De Oro, the holder of the three-cuahion billiard championship, will attempt to gain permanent pos- session of the Lambert trophy when he meets George M. Moore at Doyle's to-morrow and Academy to-night, Friday nights. / BeiooUt 2 nope pe which proclaims at a glance its superlative smartness. midat of everything. . BEN QUINCE WINS _ AFTERCONTENDER | ' | | { j { Harry Lauder Makes Circuit of Track Three Times on Way to Post. RACE TRACK, LAUREL, Oct. 28. —A five and a half furlong dash for all ages was the card's feature hero this afternoon. As a contest it did not promise much, Ben Quince finally |went over at a fancy price in the \third after Harry Lauder, one of the contenders, had run around the track |three times after starting on his way |to the post. t FIRST RACE. Malden two-year-olds; six furlongs.- Minstrel, 110 (Karrick), first; Mise 110 (BurlirBame), second; 110 (Alex), third. Time, 1.15. nn, Andromeda, Kila Jennings, Pied Piper, Shorthand, Ali Lady Butterfly and Tamer- Iso ran, $2 mutuels paid: Minstrel, straight, $8.10; place, $3.20: show, $1. Miss Frances, place, $9.80: show, $6.20. Volant, show, $7.70. The race proved a rattling good con- from start to finish. Mise nees and Vaza raced head and Uuntil the turn into the stretch, where the latter quit. Miss Frances }looked all over a winner at the fur bole, but tired rapidly from there a and Minstrel closing with a rush |aot up to win going away by @ length and a half, while Miss ces stole it out long erough to get the place {position by a neck from Volant SECOND RACE. Selling; three-year-olds and up; one nd one-sixteenth miles. — Bugx | Around, 1 (Shilling), first; Huda's | Brother, (Ambiose), second; Net- maker, 10% (MeAtee), (hind, ‘Time, 148, CoB Tay Pay, Rum- mage, Spell Lady Rankin, Elec Frog, The Urehin, nt Royal also ran Paid--Buzz $2.5" Around, show place, 34.96 show, $4.20. After the fi fa mile | « yl to be a contest, for Buax Around was )azing along in front such easy manner and by so big martin that the race was a proce sion, She finally won by six len: from Huda’s Brother, while the ter was two lengths in’ front of > maker, third, THIAD RACE. Nelling; three-year-olds and up ward one mile and a sixteenth Ben Quince, 105 (Troxier), fret; » 10 (Shilling), second: ), third Over the ‘Sands, Fifty Five, Vin Stell@tor, Harry Lauder, Aviatress. Two-dollar mw bold: Ben Quince, straight. f Patty Noble AY and crashe! through the fence at the first turn while Harry Lauder got the best of his Jockey and made the. cireult of the course ihreo times. When the start was effected Ben Quince shot nd us far as the others 1 it was all off, for | no time during the running of the race was he in trouble, winning by a th and 4 half, while Patty Regan dropped into the place, a length tn front of Noble Grand,’ third. FOURTH RACE. FOURTH RACE.—Handlecap; for all ages; tive and a half furlonge—Fiit- tergold, 106 (Butwell), first; House. male 14 (Tu rT), secon Hester 14 (McCahey), third. 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