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‘and 6, 1889, in Which Dal Was Pat to Sieep in 91st Round. aa} 3 al i i [i | i I | I i! fi [i be ¢ | ht : 7 ii Hi i i itis Hi i i : ite it rf is i i ede E ii [i le 3 i j : i i; | Hi i 2 tive that time ] the take they ring it i- ii: Le ge e } i i e i : if i i f ili Fi at 3 i i i fF Ware ~y fi Ee i 5 ie ° ii F. gr i iey th i i 3 8 z 3 i c ( 3 “4 i i ie H z E z| Bit yFe aE i By 2 ie a | 4 ae rt ee at a i a iF rt oH i H 3 rH i re { i : f 5 2 3! 2 & - “ oh J 3 cae 7: &. i i _ ref $44 z ut 4 E EF iz tat bee tine i Athi g fi was a, Th both Jose, 4 nee ie £ inaitt ie \ = = i I ye 8 2 i § li ti Ss. THE TWO-DAY BATTLE BETWEEN BOGAN AND DAL HAWKINS ON Tue Copyright, 1916, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World). Second Dav OF The FIGHT Bogan DRopreD Boston Red Sox Classy Infield Outshines All in American League Retym of “Heinie” Wagner, Giving Carrigan Two Good Men | for Every Position, and Split Up of Athletics, Make Hub ‘Team First Choice of PennanjContenders This Season. By Bozeman Bulger. vy the preferred position for honors In up of the Athletics is largely re- A feeling that has spread over this related will best explain. A year President Lannin and Manager Car- noticed at the adjoining table the rather young man eating his dinner alowly, meat for him. His right few minutes I shook hands with him ? ieseehee Es! ever gamer ey were both were willing And all for the title of light- the Paci: fio Coast! zed him. At one timo he trained with gAtapult form that it suc! havoo with the Giants in the World’ beryl of 1912. If ey haas can at. firm be- te of Itt hey will win the at tl will wi nant. At any rate that alone would make it a good bet. ¥ WAGNER'S RETURN MEANS MUCH TO RED 80x. Without Heinie Wagner, who Mc- raw classea with the best shortetops at ever lived, the Red Box gave the Athletics quite a chase for the flag toward the end of last season, With him in the Lowy o and with the Atb- letlos wrecked by Connie Mack's bi up of that $100,000 infi they most certainl; Ggure as the ican ‘s one ‘dest bet. But the rejuvenation of Heinie Wagner is not all on which the Red Sox can Whether Wagner in Scott one cuit job for even Wagner to put bi on the bench now. Then to further bolster up the in- Geld the Red Sox quietly sent agent out to Chi a \d signed ey, mains that they didn’t. they had permitted the chance to slip by Joe Lannin signed Sweency to a con- tract without having to pay out one nickel of purchase price. At one time Sweeney was one of the most reliable hitters in the National League. Whether he Is ever able to do it again or not it {s well worth while to have a, painiayer Uke 7 ol for pinch purposes, especially comes free. Judging from the way he tore into the ball yesterday it ten’t much of a gamble, If Bweeney Harum of the diamond, was a woree playor for the Reds than was hae: 4 for the Cubs. And yet, Hoblitzell, the moment he received a transfer to the Red Sox last summer became the sensation of the Ameri- Son .heenve at the bat and in the feld. TEAM WELL FIXED FOR FIRST BASEMAN. Bo well fixed ts Carrigan in firet basemen that he is forced to choose Eat Ruppert position like that? Do would gladly pay $10,000 for either ot) them and send the money by tele ph to make sure. arrlgen says, wever, that he will start Hobiitsell in as the regular first sacker and hold 1a, are entitled to| si. HAWKINS For THe FINAL COUNT. .. DAL Cour NOT GET UP PHILADELPHIA, March 18.— |Packey Hommey won trom Tommy Houck here in a e@ix-round bou: be- leute the Quaker City A. A. Houck Vaid ttle but stall most of the route, \this being his first appearance in the ring for some time. Hommey tried to liven up matters, but Houck seemed content to play safe. |. CHICOPER, Mass., March 18.—Be- ‘fore the largest house of the season, , Grovei Hayes defeated Shamus’ O'Brien in the main bout before the Now Atlas A. C. Hayes was fotced ;to the limit and bad to stall in the jseventh to save himself from defeat. BIG LEAGUE PENNANT ‘HOPES AS SIZED UP BY BULGER ON TOUR. Boseman Bulger, The Evening World’s baseball expert, is on an extended tour of the training Camps of all the big league clubs. He will watch the various teams in practice and size up in a criti- cal, unprejudiced way t! nant hopes and chances, has reached the stage where in- terest extends to teams outside the home cities, so with ti jeaire to give the fans an expert's view of the entire baseball outlook, The Evening World originated the Novel series which proved so inter- esting last spring. The iger stories will give The Evening | World's readers the only real line on what may be expected in the pennant battle to come. The next story of this series will lished Monday, nae nds. Johnson made a poor showing. Wills forced the fight throughout, landing heavy body blows and straight lefts to the jaw. The Galveston colored ror | was in bad shape toward the end. + 2 ; ‘ Wille Jones, the ‘Brooklyn feath ‘weight, and Young Cohen of En land, who recently returned to t! country from England, fought a te: round draw at the One Hundred and Thirty-Afth Street Jones forced the fight! pitcher; Michael McNally, an infielder (give you one.guess as to why Carri- i ead go) picked teat boy—the are might, baseball these ‘daya), and @ catcher (you may also take on that nelection). MoNally has all the carmarks of a good shortatop as wellasa ye baae- man, and there is little doubt, Accord- ing to Carrigan, that he will be kept on the payroll. This retention of Mc- Nally, you will see, gives the Red Sox two men for every position in the infleld, and under the twenty-five layer tas, ale in the Am Jimmy Simmons, a local fighter, was substituted for Sammy = mond of Jersey City in a bout with Willie Astey at the New Polo A. A. last night and was stopped in the fourth round, the referee calling a halt to the contest to save Simmons from further punishment. Simmons was in no condition for the bout. they Willie Andrews, the east side This would be impossible in the | boxer, was awarded the verdict over National on account of the limit hav- | J ing been cut to twenty-one, ithe next story in thle series will be hed Mi 4 in which the itching staff and other points of the led Sox are oritically discussed.) _ With Deadly Effect}: ee ae Regulars and Yannigans Play Eight Full Innings to Seven- Run Tie, Making Nineteen Hi Between Them. 170, He is expected at the train- camp next Monday. MARLIN, Tex., March 13.—The three playere who have been prom- {nently mentioned to figure in the trade for “Polly” Perritt — Pitcher Schupp and Outfielders Robertson and Pies—mugt have got wind of the ru- mor that they might be transferred to the St. Louis Cardinals, for they all played great ball yesterday. Schupp pitched two innings for the regulars in the afternoon against the and retired the latter in order, besides striking out two batsmen. He Practice game. Ob, It was & great! cav6 4 fine exhibition of ad performance of baseball pyrotechnics! | and control. bibaidea as: Bela) made two pone. Such a one as surely would be ap-| Young Pies, preciated at the Polo Grounds after! runs in Dallas the boys return. Nineteen safeties, inctuding one homer, three three- Daggers and four doubles, were exe- cuted in fine style, the pitching being apparently stronger than heretofore in these “clubby” contests. This bat- ting development was pretty evenly divided between the Regulars and Yannigans, who played eight full innings to a 7-run tle. Paddy Batmann, playing third for the Yannigans, made the big four- wack cloyt. Maisel came near to matching it, but was out on a close decision at the plate. Frits had four obes to bis credit, hitting eafely po ey GAVANNAGE, Ga., March 38. TLL, DONOVAN’'S ears may be ringing yet with the many de- tonations of safe bingles that his ball players made yesterday in the four times at bat, one Mne double. Plen's ord tore off a brace of catch. ee rei Rte te ve thia year. The Colts leave for’ Waco this morning where they will play ises to develop into an attack of the stippe. SS JOHNNY LUSTIG SOUNDLY THRASHES DROUILLARD. MONTREAL, March 13.—Johnny Lus- of New York defeated Patsy Drout!- lard, the Canadian lightwolght, before a crowd of 2,000 fans at the Canadian Ath- letic Chub of this city last He Satin sate hond Donovan has finally se- cured a left-handed pitcher, some- thing the club has not since the days of Big Jim Vaughn. The new southpaw is a raw recruit recent- ly discharged from the United States Ni ‘The boss Ya: hopes he will at least Rave enough of stuff to give hie batters the very desirable prestice at ing wi we a Belding als bean vary fast and good. “Rabertega |b The 761 ROUND THe Rereneer « SoPPap cir and OROERED The PGuT COMTNVED “agr NeDcT NIGHT ¢ Registered Three of Wilson’s Youngsters ' Still Unnamed Because Other Owners Have Prior Claim— Trainer Healy, Back From Coast, Predicts Revival of Racing in Cailfornia. ELECTING names for two-year- old thoroughbreds often re- quires a lot of thought. There are. so.many young horees this season that have the same blood lines that many of the youngsters are hot rule in The Jockey Club that all horses must be named by March 1. The owners have observed this rule, but Row we learn that there have been many duplicates, and it may be sev- eral weeks yet before every horse is duly registered. These duplicates are 0f] due thin season to the fact that there are so many horees sired by such noted stallions as Celt, Trap Rock, Dethi, Ben Brush, Ormondale, Voter, Stalwart, Ogden, and one could name many others. . ||_Fight Results || Many Duplicates Among rutapsrun, warn u-| JV@mes of Two-Year-Olds at Jockey Club‘: Club in the East and is backed the prominent men in the ~~ TALE TEAM WIRS | INTERCOLLEGIATE. *| BASKETBALL TT, New Haven Five Beats mouth and Lands First pionship Since 1907. | NEW HAVEN, March the championship of the feati % ating Dartmouth Os teen | legiate Basketball League first time since 1907. The was no match for the fast and was outclassed in all ments of the game. The Bigs: ers dazzled Dartmouth by thelr and accurate passing. Yale took the lead early in the game and after the first few minutes of play was never in danger of losing it. oly PRINCETON, March 13—In the” roughest and closest game of dasketl'® ball played here this season, Prinostod’” lost to Columbia by the score of 23 tol 20. To Dwyer of Columbia Princeton owe jer di it. He was the fastesta: man on the floor, and his three gouls.);; from the field came at the crucial mes,,; ments when they counted most....7h@, last one he caged decided the contest. Four thousand followers of ti a fleld athletics witnessed the ‘conont gat nual indoor games and military review, of the John Wanamaker “* Tastitute, held last night in the Beven. ty-first Regtment Armory. “Prob.°" ably the vent which contained”” greatest interest for the by pee yr the onlookers was the one m: institute relay race, in which phia and New York lads compe: centres of California. Gov. Johnson, it 1s said, will not oppose a measure e to restor bookmaking. “I look for a general ing all over the country,” “After California gets it sour.” racing, provided, of course, that there is no open gambling yo eald Healy. hack, don't be surprised if they get it back'in Mis- or defeated J. £5) , Ferdi: Foqeen! New York in the final match of the fif- teenth annual touranment of the tonal Association of Amateu “ Players. The score was 400. £ FISTIC NEWS AND GOSSIP. By John Pollock ‘Many of the best amateur boxers im this coun- try will participate im the big inter-city boxies dubs toaight: “Gyma" A. A., Young Brady tournament which will be held under the sue pices of the New York Athletic Club in its gym nastum to-night, Besides the stars ho will compete from this vichity, Pittsburgh will be represented by the following champions of the Middle Atlantic Amociation: W, Johnstone, 108 pounds; G, Pryle, 198 pounds, and 0, Schone, 188 pownds, Albany will depend wun J. Mo- Caftray, 108 pounds; G. McKiveney, 120 pounds; FF, Bybee, 198 pounds, end F. O'Connor, 158 pounds, ‘All of these boxers hold the tri-Stete amateur championship titles et their reapestive . weights, ‘Champion Freddie Welsh will receive some esay money next week as he ie signed up nother battle by his manager, Harry Pollok, opponent will be Hal Stewart, the ie weight, drew. who recently boxed Tommy ‘Take as an example the horses that | W 1 have been sired by An own first thought is to get a name that ls typical of the Emerald Isle. Many hit upon the name Tipperary. But Fox- hall Keene beat everybody to this. He gave this name to @ two-year-old colt by Ben Brush—Acushla. There Park three y peg Trainer Healy doesn’t know what new pomee =. wine these horses. ah te have Rann 97+ ga there were more than ever this season, ate Sooke eee ae - i predicts that aah ase training in the an ‘awe Gov. Hughes caused a halt in rs. Healy in ‘another year there EARLY TRAINING. er Healy has had a chance to look over bis string during the past three days, but has nothing to pre- dict as yet. He sent Gay whet me moni n -year-o} EES oni 4 of them ahd his ei last year y afternoon he breezed the cules norose after giving them a slow gallop of about a mile. The group was sent about two furlongs at near racing speed. Tartar showed he is coming around fast by racing awa from the bunch, and a big, stroni boy had all he could do to restral this #on of Ogden and Yankee 5 “Tartar is coming around well, 10 |eaid Healy after this work-out, “but go are all the others. I think Pixey h|is going to shine this year and Hee- @afe drives injter looks as if she is ‘The latter, I am quite sure, wil tora up_as a winner early in the cam! we re sent Montross to the to be bred this spring to Olombala. She was a very speedy miss, but a hard horse to keep in con- dition on account of her bad knees. ‘The two-year-olds thus far named ba son string are Ormadale, ch. ¢., Pgh ies, ata }—L' Alouette, an \ tw i by Trap Rock€-Lady Moc- casin. ‘ RACING IN CALIFORNIA NEXT SEAGON, SAVE HEALY. er Heal; it five weeks in Cantornis during his vacation and brings back the good fe that rac- ing will be resumed on the Coast with- in a year, Ho says that a bill to be introduced this y will bring about the new condition of affairs . ists night, ‘The a uk end \ it it ‘They include offers from Milwaul Queeasboro A, C., Memphis, New - Ot, Loute my wariner for Frddio Wei: . has decided to try li ‘He will moot Irving fs They will meet for tea rounds it foung Beoay; Queenshoro A. 0. of Long * City, Jimmy Fiyna ve. Chick Simler of Scranton, a CLINTON'S BOY SWIMMERS “x; WIN CHAMPIONSHIP, “= . One of the closest races for the High. School swimming championship, whichs > ‘was held last night at the City College % Natatorium, resulted in a victory fer De Witt Clinton with a total of 1D,» Points, Stuyvesant was second with 1? and Commerce finished third with 16... "® Four new records were established’ by the schoolboy “‘fish.” In the 800-foet. relay Commerce, which won the evente! broke the first record by winning is 474-53. The new 5 ue 2 tt at We § elettl nt, compe! ce, broke the in 1918, by The mect as a whole was very excit- _ ing from start to finish, but the feature event of the evening was the 220-yard swim, which brought toget! er Jeading! a boy 8) of the n high schools of the city of New York. 9 rrieed hes it out of a non-refillable, aant @ 4 ; 7 1788 Rye 1915 Be sure you cet Carstairs Rye in the noel, fefillable bottle—“a good bottle to yu good whiskey good.” From 1788 to present day, there has been no change ia) the quality except to impreew it, : STEWART LISTILLING Philadelphia N oo jew York EVERYTHING \ 4