The evening world. Newspaper, June 26, 1915, Page 8

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1 ENB POM EAST RANMA ASS aN i} eae ee es Ash Soar eee Corts fae HE Gene Wont HOSE were the good Gaya,” I said to the Tin- Bared Sport. “Heh,” oaid he, “what 4’ yuh mean, > weed olf days. I've got more coin in kick right now than I over had Mo chance to bet it away. Bad g8itge ie Yale’s Triple. Victory Over Harvard Is Boom For the English Stroke | it was grand il The Great few strokes saw Yale in front, and at the mile they were a full length to the Cae this point to the finish it was @ proces- Harvard epurted several times, but. @he never could get near the Yale shell, At the finish the Crimaon rowers were very tired. Lund, a ! He'd 4 the coxawain. The two men bel Bim also coll The best race of the event for the juntor rowed over a two mile course, passed Harvard fifty yards from the start, and from there to the finish it ‘was a close fight, Yale winning by about ten feet, Not many of the visitors waited for the freshmen race. It was nearly dark when the crews were sent away, the struggle! Yale won by fifteen foot. FISTIC NEWS AND GOSSIP John Pollock Ei i F H E often! f i i if i? i ii tilt i | ‘The managers hart paced 1 Ol bout ot Brook The ch Hemel |caty hich Setght question, ietmarn, tbo manaser of wants the weigh 383 tee | pounda ot while Denny thot: ing out for 184 pounds at 6 P, M, Jock MeCarthy arranged two ton round bouts last ight to be decided at the Brown A, A. of Var Wochwway on next Friday wight. In the firm Jock Toland of Philadelphia will take on K. 0, Sweeney of this cliy, while in the main contest Harry Biome, the oul lightweight, ill © sevinat Johany "KIA" Alberts, of Hinsbeth, In @ better age thet the Became the manager of the Colorafo A. 0. of ta oning chevtiy snd Denver, Col,, woukl not give Ad Wolgast the Geen tatenh to beep money he wantel for fighting @tere Ketohel fit boning club will be permitted im each of Chetthres| ven rounds on the afternoon of July 5, Wolgust ditiee—0t, Poul, Minseapolis and Dubeth—and Geclared the bout off and left for ‘dbep will only bo allowed to bold ¢welre shows ‘Cadillac, Mich, Wolgast demanded year, A omnse foo of $100 io changed, with 8) $2,000 with the option of 30 per i ; I | | | Dan MeKetrich made so mech money out of the trouble Willie ‘outs Young Ahearn and Goliier Bartfield have Iter Mohr had that he bought an automobile, Denny paid a 19400 down end will pay the rest in pert pay- tents, He intends to engage @ chaff, wast wear © livery, to run bis car, . chanee for cheutfoum who own thelr ome 1d i g¢ n 5 ff iy HK rey iE si g22 fit tf » who has Mickey Duna, Hickey, tho welterwetaht t, has matched Duan wo tight A ae Hy Ed Frankie Nelson of Hoboken at the Wallac . of Rockaway Beach on ext Tussday night, BSE F port!” exclaimed the Tin-Hared ait bes’ bet “What d’ y’ mean by sport, | $100,000 on the next race.” An’ after A, T bet you're thinking about | that It didn’t seem nothing at all for pert Friday night, et The Champion Kid Williame-Jimmy Taylo: all rowing and running and ton. | 72%,%0 Pet pupa, cf hundred. | col, | contest, which was sbeduled to take place at the American A, A. of Baltimore the night of tie 334 utes one 1 stuff played|iow goes to the track and’ looks t fan't *) Jwy 2, bas deen postponed, Silver Br ae work, aes art around and remembers how the Gov: jars, Tay Ly cigar, and he doesn't see any money | %™ copemiel and od, and be dosn't hear any odda | "ite the next tw Sem. he #008 homo] Charley Perelli, the exsvessive cast side in hie pocket, No | weight, who has been Ieid up for some time ots | / ® Droken band, has fully recovered Grom this i swhere Would be | jury end will appear in & twelveround bout with | HUebaro, without hia | Young McMahon at SC HN "EE EVENING Woatn, 5 DAY, THE “GOOD OLD DA Copyright, 1916, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World). FUETY- ery pal No Rouen Sturr Mi Tue Rine.. AT Fe a ‘GM AGAIN NEXT HONTM AT Burrmo- ASD (T USED To Be... rmed Like _ Flag Winners Against Champion Boston Braves STAR CATCHER AND PITCHER FOR YANKS. 'T can be stated on the best au- thority that within the next deals will bs ma which the Yanks will get a star catcher, @ star outfielder and pos- sibly two pitchers, Workouts of Horses in Training||Giants Perft Works. ban eRnnd tae local tracks as clocked by The Evening ARMOUR, three-: AT. f, MO, five-cighthi 1! halt, PRESUMPTION, three- , aT. EB 4 ree-elghths, .3 # OUCH, halt sis ATURN, five-oighihis, 1.07 2-5, ‘BLL A alt be Knocked Out Two. Pitchers in Three Innings and in Other Ways Gave Perritt Fine Sup- RI a hree-quarters, 1.24 SQUERADER, three-quar- 1,19, WANDA PITZA, three-eighths, .37. Evenly Balanced Field In Leading Turf Classic' A Handicap Starters and Their Best Work. RRIS, three-quarters, 1.: CRE hat, 00, The negotia- tions for these players began when Ban Johnson was here last Sun- Though reasonably sure of the deals going through, the Yank owner who gave me the informa- By Bozeman Bulger. GAINST the world’s champs the Giants looked more like a real ball club than they time this season, With “Poll” Per- jritt pitching an airtight game they | backed him up with beautiful fielding knocked out two the stroke, fell forward into the nd in and, at the bat, pitchers in less than three innings. “In my opinion,” said George Stall- ings, who always has had a warm spot in his heart for McGraw, “the Giants will start now and it’s going to be a race between them and the Braves right down to the pennant. As soon as Evers gets back in the game we'll start winning, haven't seen any ‘club yet that I thought had a chance of beating us The loss of Evers has been the hardest jolt we've had in @ long time.” nected with the club. lines. He expects to be able to J. McTaggart Tay t shoulder a Jun next Tuesday, side of the stall. Mra. Whitney to her husband, that Meeting House's tire?” the race, when Meeting House bled, some one inquired what caused him “Why, he bled,” ad been hanging on tl jot nothing on sald ad backed the horse “What's that?” sald Davy Robertson added a few more samples to his collection of socks @ home run into that was one of Not in Years Has Such a Select Lot of Thoroughbreds Start- ed in a Brooklyn Handicap. yesterday by pol the rightfield stan the longest hits of the ball hit in the far cornet feet from where the bleachers begin. ait | out at the finish, @ listener who h: George Burns evidently has struck his stride. In fou. trips to the plate st different pitchers he helped self to a three-bagger, a double By Vincent Treanor. HE Brooklyn Handicap, opening feature to-day at the Aqueduct track, was the lead- ing classic of the season in the hey- day of racing. But even though the successful jockey is not lifted into a floral horseshoe and paraded before the crowd, the interest is probably just as great as when tho race was worth $30,000 to the winner, due mainly to the clase of thorough- breds that are included in the first rank. The oldest race track patron gan't recall the day when such a high class field went to the post as .| faced the barrier to-day. is many years since there was a field balanced as Borrow, Roamer, Rock View, Short Grass and the lightweighted Tartar among the older horses, and those speedy three- Sam McMeekin and Ad It t@ regretted that James Butler Peebles wae the but the colt From the Boston point of view the consoling feature by Perritt was the sudden returo to life of Big Bill James, Up to this time he has been one of the main drawbacks the champs, | Hughes and Crutcher knocked out and the game practically gone Stal- lings sent James in ment and ‘t proved a most satist. tory move, In six innings the Giants touched him but for two hits and not @ runner was able to acore, Johnny McTaggart their shoutout y Face everything he had to jake him last to win the second race. had to give McGraw need not worry about # substitute hitter for Poll got a two-bagger and single out of three times up and came within cae bounce of winning the automobile. jE WALKERS’ CLUB WILL HIKE TO WEST POINT TO-MORROW Leaving Van Cortlandt Park Subway Station at 7 A. M. to-morrow, the Walk- Club of America will start hike by way of Broadway, . Dobbs Ferry, Tarrytown, Os-jcom! sining and the Albany Post Road to Garrison, crossing by ferry to West Point, Their trip will take them through ea By the way, ai and Jamaica, too, would hi Looks as if Johnny had at last struck his stride. Tommy will be tn our midst in a few An eothusiaatic young lady sat in o! © grand stand and hard for Tale Carrier. a had told ber he would win, sure, but her escort said he didn't have a chance, Tale Carrier won at 30 to 1. Some one had! rho elation of the Brave was ne than th icGraw over the twirling exhibition ‘oll has pitohed several good ear, despite his few d oGraw, “but this aft noon he worked as if he had rounded into the real form that made him so successful last year,” Dengro, the medium of a heavy play In the first race, is probably the worst t actor in the thoroughbred world. threw Lilly on the way to the post, and then cut up disgustingly at the barrier before Mars Cassidy got the It's 2 to 1 he doesn’t get away well any time. patina Carman Wil Try tor Record, Clarence Carman will try to regain the ten-miie record to-night at the Sheepshead Bay Velodrome, where he meets Georges Seres, the French cham- pion, and Jintmy Moran, in a paced race for the best two out of three heats at ten miles each, Seres lowered Carman's record Thursday night, when he covered the distance in 18.17 1-6. Alf Goulet, Reggie McNamara, Jackie Clark and Oscar Egg, the Swiss cham- pion will meet in an alternate race of four one-mile heats, Hans Ohrt will go from scratch in the one-mile amateur Just before the game George Btal- lings called attention to the fact that Perritt had never beaten the Braves. Though admitting bi ness Stallings de Braves always ha “Poll's" number. at the shutout. “Yes, and he'll beat them a lot of more games before this season is over,” said McGraw. ian't_ represented, horse he counted on, went wrong at Belmont Park, and while in fairly good condition wasn't quite ready to measure strides with the best of the older di ‘The Finn would have lot of attention, but the him after a bij roads are in fine condition, and and expects the M. ccencentemmnsane ZBYSZKO AND ABERG ON MAT NEARLY 4 HOURS. Aberg and Viadek Zbyssko draw last night at the Manhattan Opera House in one of the nsational matches in the history men were to have race in Canada yes- If the Giants succeed in beating the Braves the next two games they will have climbed to the leadei second division, ‘his sterling three-year-old will ave his chance aguinst the cracks that started to-day. Mrs. Payne Whitney walked into the paddock as Meeting House was being ddled. Just then stall made a loud noise by kicking the Boston has lost more than New York this season, faving won three or four more are still on top by @ narrow margin, It will be a hard strain on both pfching staffs as the Giants and ames, There will be rae in another Braves play #ix fall, a double-header r the men had been on the mat jours and twent) th Theories have come fast and thick, but we now have the real explan: stiffness in the shoul- to @ group of American sportamen living in Cuba. hilip Lynch, Robert Orr and Robert F here from Havana, jolf Rheumatism!” Nearly every golfer in Cuba has rom the peculiar ailment " said Mr. Trumbo, rheumatism may have taken @ shot at Matt: STANDING OF THE CLUBS FORDHAM MAY ENTER POUGHKEEPSIE RACE. 4 alumni of Fordh raity are in favor of enter: freshmen eight in the Poughkeepsie re- suffering from RESULTS OF YESTERDAY'S GAMES Pa Sa CSU a Tere. will tudents from tal, and the hy i races evel it the fall when the ‘pave postponed, Rais affects us just as the FEDKRAL LEAGUE, reports say that Mathe fected. Several of us have fallen off badly tn Our gol ternces during Jon's manager, got tm touch with Sammy Harris body eles does over the lovgalisiance telephone and asked (or | ory elves teen’ Providence more ume for Taslor to condition himeelf, Har. | Fates eh dove will mevt some Ume Knocked Out Moonte, round bouts were staged at the show of the Long Acre A. A. last night, but none of them went the limit. | Joe Smith lost on a foul to Jack Turner ‘The only trouble about this theory jie that Matty has not played goif since the season began. W: to ask Mr. Trumbo how long it lasted, Dunn is in the fourth row JERRY TRAVERS MEETS REYNOLDS | INFINAL TODAY | . Both Men Win Their Matches in Golf Semi-Finals at Merion. PHILADELPHIA, June 26.—Jerome D. Travers and Walter Reynolds of Woodbury won both their matches y@de erday” and qualified for the 36-Riule final to-day in the spectal tournament at Merton. . In the morning Travers defeated H. H. Francine by 6 up and 4 to play, and in the afternoon he downed Cameron B, Buzton,4and3. * To reach the semi-finals in the Fox Hills invitation golf tournament, three winners were forced to play extra-hole matches. Percy Platt went twenty holes for a victory over Chim- holm Beach, the Fox Hills club cham< pion; 8. C. Clark took the measure of A. Palmer in nineteen holes, while Harold Slater played two holes ov regulation number to beat A, Allen. Golf rounds don’t come closer than that, especially in weather like yesterday, when a stiff wind blowing over the Staten Island links made balls perform all sorts of queer pranks. Max Marston, Jersey State cham- pion, and Frank Dyer, two pro- nounced favorites, were unexpectedly routed from the championship di sion in the first round. Marston, who has steadily competed for the last six weeks, said be was going to snatch a week's rest from the links. (ar 4 Unusual and sometimes freakish happenings develop in golf tourna- ments. A. P. Roth pulled one in the Fox Hills meet that is a classic. He had just driven from the sixth tee, At the samo time a driver in a light Wagon came down the road that crosses the fairway. Roth says he saw the ball strike the rider. He chased the wagon for about three blocks. Catching up with the vehicle, he asked the driver for his ball. In surprise the driver felt his clothes and finally extracted the ball from a coat pocket. Roth, after thanking him, returned to the fairway dropped the ball about where it was carried away, and continued his match, Both Roth and his partner will make an affidavit that this yarn is accurately reported. fall lba Le A dL EASTERN TRYOUTS HELD AT HARVARD STADIUM. BOSTON, June Bcores of well- known athletes from clubs of New York, Philadelphia and other citle: here for competition to-day for on the team that will represent the east- ern section of the country in the gaines next month in San Francisco. The try- outs will be held in the Harvard Stadium. Among those to race to-day Is J. BE. Meredith, captain of the 1916 track team of the Upiversity of Pennsylvania and holder of the world’s rocorda in the balt- mile and 800-metre runs, M the experts here think he. will come clone tothe world’s record for the quarter= mile, which was placed at 47% seconds by M"'W. Long’ of Columbia “#fteea years "ago. YALE AND HARVARD NINES IN FINAL GAME TO-DAY, Yale and Harvard will meet in thetr final game of the season at Ebbets Field this afternoon. Although the Rlue warriors were defeated by the Crimson players in the first two game, there ia still much interest left int! final conflict that will be played to-day. ‘The reason for this ts that the follow- ors of Harvard declare that Eddie Ma- han is a better pitcher than Pie Way, the star boxman of the New Haven boys. jahan beat Way and the Bi the other day in Yo New Haven lads for two. lickings they have already received at the hani of thelr old riv weight, added another newspaper de- cision to his list last night by dectatvely outpointing Mike Mazie, the Staten Iterwelght, in th ied rateresiets 2 thea, tet oe @ aggressor from start to Hats tnd ‘haa “ee trouble in ‘ioe bis bi Masie. pounds. Billard Fs = SPORTING, SIX STAR ATTRACTIONS INCLUDING THE Oakhill Handicap WIRST RACE AT 2.20 FP, M, leave 8 SPROIAL RACE Ti : tea ae Boulevard to Woodhaven Av} thence to Tee GRAND STAND 83, LADIES 81.80, MUSIO BY LANDER, ve, Al vommy Ward

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