The evening world. Newspaper, June 30, 1915, Page 10

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— I've GoTTa SPEND Me MONeY IF I Have TO START ANOTHER. Leaave ‘THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30, 1918. BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK | THE FEDERAL LEAGUE MAGNATE AS PICTURED BY J. GILMORE Copyright, 1915, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). —-_— worth mentioning, with- ‘@ven a trainer to condition the rowing in form that would put astern crew out of it in first mile, came within two yards of most skilful and power- the Aulantic Coast. ly one posible answer. Californians, brought up in their Dealthful, out-doors-all-the- climate, were physically te the men of the hot, cold, @ ‘icy, slushy Kast, They +f more strength, endurance and ail- ” and that was the whole G2 course they were “game,” ion't a matter of oll- are game men every- and the Western sea. Soy ip earyage hold bee cae ir ®ames at Gray Next Baturday, with a few The games \as SMITH'S manager writes Australia that Snowy that Australia ® very poor place for w. F, op- t discussed and that the only quention before the league {at a distance approximately #60 miles from Cincinnati is either insane or a Figures. (Aorctat to The Evening World.) GARDEN CITY, N. Y., June 30, HILIP CARTER of Nassau and Regie Lewin of Wykagyl, a palr of the country’s most promising young players, came through to ihe title round in the Metropolitan junior golf championship over the Garden City links to-day, Both youngsters, performing with the skill of a Trav- erm, had easy victories in the semi- finals, Carter smothering Archie Me- Tiwaine, who won the qualifying modal yesterday, bv 6 up and 5 to play, and Lewis defeating Howerd Maxwell jr. 5 up and 4 to go. Both the finalists are but a few months short of being nineteen years of age. Hach has shown unusual abil- ity on the links, Carter has the ad- t Barrow Denies His League Will Throw Up Sponge In response to a call issued by Ed- ward G. Barrow, President of the In-) uation of the Newark club. Present at the conference were J. J. McCaffrey of Torontu, Samuel BH. Lichtenheim of Montreal, J. C. Simon of Buffalo, C. T. Chapin of Roches- ter, Thomas R. Ryan of Richmond, . i, Wickes of Jersey City and nagan of Providence. When the conference adjourned for Janeheon President Harrow said that the league had before them a very, offer from W, R. Dougla: burg, Pa., who represen en of that city, He offer would be a cussed when the conference recon- President Barrow sald there was no truth in the reports that the In- ternational, League was going to throw up the sponge on July 4, that the situation relative ark Club, to the} World’s.oxpert clocker are as follows AHARA, mile, 1,47. ALSCOND ae JRAINGER, seven- halt, ba. StAN: igh then, 1,08, If, fe-alghihn 1.08. anes five Carter and Lewis Meet in Finals For Junior Golf Championship Both Lads Play With the Skill of a Travers in| Disposing of McIlwaine and Maxwell, Re- spectively, in Semi-Finals at Garden City— The Champion Negotiates First Nine Holes in Thirty-Seven Strokes, One Under Par vantage of more experience, but Lew- is, who has been coached by the vet- eran Alex Smith, has leaped to the front within the past year, Hoth Inds possess unlimited fighting est was a ment. Carter's older champions, iwaine. powerful ability, and their meeting in the final true exhibition of su- premacy over the other thirty boys who competed in the junior tourna- game againet Meliwaine in the semi-finals would | have been a match for any of tho} The Nassau star negotiated the first nine holes in 37 strokes, one under par figures, burst of form simply discouraged Mec- After being 4 down at the! turn, the, medal winner realized the futility of continuing further and the Thia Herzog Trades Epithets With John M’Graw (Special to The Evening World.) CINCINNATI ternational League of Baseball Clubs,! sonn McGraw representatives of the various teams | thal ux sha ek in the league met to-day at the Hotel \sdbgiraeing vat horse] Belmont to discuss the franchise eit- | Chief oO. Meyers June %0.—"It said Buck Hersog young Brainerd for Ivy Wingo, he's—well, the lawn forbid my expreasing exactly what he ts. Ho made that offer, turned it down, “What do I want with the two of them? Now, McGraw says that if I size of it: I jrald it I'm a lar. ‘This in about the| “The report of the offer came back to New York, the big Injun threat- | ened to slam McGraw in the chops for | trying to can bim and McGraw, to get under cover, says I'm a liar, Weil, there are times when the man who goes back on his own offer and tries to villify the other fellow is both a liar and crasy. “I repeat that McGraw made the offer, and I also repeat that somebody Har, or both. MALPOU. Lost TUNE, three MURPHY, five-e! halt, Workouts. of Horses in Training ‘The best trials of horses at local tracks us reported by The Evening one sided mateh finished on the thir- teenth green, Mellwaine managed to win only a single hole, the 45-yard sixth, where Carter trapped a masaie shot and took a six. This was one of the few mistaken the defending title-holder made in the entire match. Carter, starting with a rush, captured the first ind third holes before his oppon- ent really knew whut had happened. At the 490-yard fourth Carter, after 4 great drive, put a tremendous bras- wey shot on the groen and was home in four, a stroke better than par. He won the next with good putting, and a point he was four holes in the : waine braced forja few min utes, long enough to win the sixth and halve the seventh, but Carter soon caught his winde aiu san duwn & 20-foot putt on the eighth for the hole. , , The ninth was squared turning for home. Carter captured the elev- enth and thirteenth, which gave him the match, The cards: 4344456544-37 4446 $23 56.468 4-4 4646 Kegele Lowis, like Carter, was in grand form and had little difficulty beating Howard Maxwell jr. 5-4. Lewis was exceptionally long and straight from the tees, his approach- ing and putting was the equal of many senior stars. Maxwell did not Lewin brand of golf and the uneven match ended on the fourteenth green, Maxwell being satiefied that he suc- ceeded in carrying his hard hitting opponent past #o many holes, en ‘Jim Coffey, the Irish heavyweight, who bas bem unable to work for over four weeks on ac: bearyreight battles Welngrt bout George Rofiel will go apeinst Femi ‘Sailor Fritts and Jack Hemple of Celifornia, who has wou all of his bouts bere, will take on Battling Jobnton, the While heavyweight of tae Gouth Hea Islands, Jimmy Glabby, the clever Western middle: stop in the secord ro.ind, real tesi, the former ama showed he posscmes all the requisites under the mavegement of Billy Gibson, i 3a by rf ( ze i 4 tf EEE ze Z | z i F © i | i til ] fe it i i i fi have much of a chance against the | w FISTIC NEWS AND_ GOSSIP By John Pollock weight, and Soldier Bartfield, of Brookira, have! ‘li"aile led, will mest Hare Covdec, o ookise: been matched to mest in one of the star bouts to| fv, ‘They are light weights, ‘be put on at the Brighton Beach A, ©. on Satur. —_— day evening July 10, Bartfield recently made a| Young Wagner, the epecdy featherweight of the ‘big Mt with the fight fens in this vickeity by | weet side, who has not boxed since he outpolnting Mike Gibbons, — * Mike Malloy in New Britain, Conn., shout a _—_ month ago, will start again in @ short time, Augie Ratner, the 's ameteur welterweight | Wegner wae matched up for two important oom- champion, has received the stamp of approval of | tests hy his manager, Silvey Burns. On July 12 the boning experts who watched him work inghie| Warmer boxes ten rounds with Frankie Morris ty professional debut last Saturday might. itoer| Mount Carmel, We. aud on duly ie el He te 6 fat and careful accurate puncher, Ratuer Not caring to take any chance of having the b t Soe Drs aaa tert |g TAT RACE oat thrreeenatte dag iph Taya HAGEN AND BRADY LEAD FIELD WITH T3SATBROOKLINE Ouimet Has Card of 74 for Qualifying Round for Massa- chusetts Open Title. BROOKLINE, Mass. June 30.— With most,of the fleld of starters finished in the first round, Walter C. Hagen of Rochester and M. J. Brady of Wollaston led with a#cores of 7%, One stroke “behind was Francis Outmet, amateur champion. ‘The most | spectacular feature of the opening round was a 32 scored by Arthur EB. Reid of Upper Montclair, after hav- ing 47 for outward journey, The |. Hagen, Rocheater, 7 Wollaston, Ta; 74; Tom Andergon, ._ J. Brady Francie Quimet, —Wordland, | Montclair, 735 73! loon Mt ove. dea, Among the golfers beyond 85 ware J, M, Anderson, Metacomet, 86; A. H. Fenn, Poland Springs, 87, and David | Brown, unattached, 91. | Charley White is gotng to defeat Freddie Welsh tv thelr tep-round go at the Brighton Beach A, ©. ov Setunlay aight that thay wired $1,500 to Nate ‘Lewis, manager of White, today to bet on Oharley at even mouey, Lewis i as equally confident, aad hhas asked Harry Pollok to have moving plcturee taken of the battle, as he figures White will sovre a’ knockout, Another Wester boxer hax arrived In New York tn the pemon of Joe MoGurn, the Fighting Celt, of San Francie, MoGura has lees boxing for past four yearn in Prisce and Los Angelos, Hi a iniddlewelght sud ie (outed ae one of the ‘boys developed on the Coast in recent years, ‘Two star ten-ronnd bows are on the boards of the Fairmont A, C., im the Bronx, for Satioday mie of Jermey City will be seen im the main atirac- exel i FLO ad ikea Se 2 A LATONIA ENTRIES. RACH TRACK, LATONIA, Ky, June 30,—The entries for to-morrow's races as follows: Si fn 10h: elie job: "fo u "Ral ‘Waterwi " jes, 105; cl mM night, Patey Klein of Harlem and Young Orava | Capt. Johnny Evers Returns to Play After Month’s Absence and Prevents Giants Winning Both Games From Braves. By Bozeman Bulger. OHNNY Evers returned to the game for the first time in more than a month, and by way of introduction decided to play the janded. The score was York, 0 In addition to saving the game by a wonderful play at second, when he touched out Chief Meyers after taking a long throw from Gilbert, Johony helped himself to a single and a double. Neither of these wallops producing a score, he got bold of the next one and slammed it into the right field stand, then and there ending the pastime. We can now unde! Stallings’s lament at bis absence. a Having won four out of six games from the Braves and crawled within two points of the leadership of the second division; the Giants have backed over to Brooklyn to make room for the Yanks. Donovan's club will bold the boards until after July 4 and will then proceed West, giving the Giants a chance to continue their ¢limb into fast company. Though they may not start bim against Washington to-day, the Yanks have with them as an extra attraction Bob Shawkey, late of the Athletics, and rated right handers of the past three years. ‘That baseball still has a popularity punch in New York was pretty well proved in the recent Giant-Brave series, In the six games, played in four days, Secretary Nickerson of the Boston Club was paid for a little more than 50,000 admissions. It was ~{ more like the old time baseball than | anything shown this season, ‘Verbal scraps on the diaimend may strike some folks as being rough and un- sportsmaniike, but, somehow, these New York folks will pay money to see and hear it. The Giants, in the second game, made four double plays. Two of these were corkers, and both en- gineered by Larry Doyle. In both instances Lerry grabbed a hot grounder, touched the runner who was passing and then shot the ball to Merkle. It was well for the Red Sox that they trimmed the Yanks, even If it did take ten innings. The White Sox won another and would have been well out of gunshot by this time. | Chicago is not such a bad place in which to have a World Series at that. : Fans last night were discussing the remarkable similarity of the tenth inning rally of the Red Sox yesterday and the tenth inning rally they made when beating the Giants for tho World's Championship three yeara ago. Hendrixsen, the same man who went in in a pinch against the Giants, appeared against the Yanks and got on. He scored on a fluke, and then Speaker drove in the winning run after a chance had been offered to retire the side, It is another coinci- dence that the Yanks had scored pne run in their half of the tenth, and it was necessary for the Red Sox to make two. This was exactly the ait- uation in the Glant-Red Sox game in | which Snodgrass made famous muff. the now Boehling, Clark Griffith's crack man from Virginia, seems to have come back into his own. He shut out the Athietics yesterday while the Senators were batting Wyckoff, Con- nie Mack's pride youngster, all 0 the lot. stil, anybody can beat t Athletics these days. ’ President Comiskey of the White Sox evidently intends to cinch this pennant at any cost. He has just offered the Cleveland Club $15,000 for Shortstop Chapman and was just as promptly turned down, very much to the joy of the Red Sox, the Tigers and the Yanks. It would be tough going to beat a club with Chapman at short and Eddie Collins at second. Beals Becker of the Phillies seems to have stolen the honors from “Wooden Shoes” Cravath in the matter of home run hitting. He got another one at Brooklyn yesterday. EDITED BY ROBERT EDGREN ROAMER’S SPEED. AND GAMENESS PA TOCRUELLNG TES Andrew Miller’s Thoroughbred Noses Out Stromboli in Remarkable Race. . By Vincent Treanor. NDREW MILLER'S good race horse Roamer had his speed and gameness put to an @x- treme test in the Queens Coun’ handicap yesterday at Aquedudt came out of the eontest with colors, He won one of the beat seen in years by a nose from Al Belmont’s Stromboll, and in doing #0 put himself down in racing histor? aa a thoroughbred pure at heart. = ¢ Not in a long time has a race pro voked #0 much enthusiasm. As Hears monicon, Stromboli and Roameé? fought every inch of the last eighti¥ of a mile the crowd, men and womed? too, was on its feet, cheering jockey# and horses on in frenzied excitement) Harmontoon, in front, was weaken ing in the pinch, and Roamer and Stromboli, almost sido by side Bs hind him, were being lashed witty whips and urged with hands apd heels of their riders. Roamer, the popular choice, looked, beaten, but Butwell, hte woukin't have it so. He put every bit of energy in his system into his, work, Harmonicon was finally caughts and then Stromboli and Roamer hai @ sort of a second tussle for George Chalmers, in winning for the Phillies, proved that control, after all is the main thing In pitching. The Phillies did Dell, but Chalmers gave Phillies didd Dell, but Chalmers gave but one base on balls while “‘Wheeser” issued five in seven Innings. The lay-off of the Cubs and the Tigers has endangeted the position of both of them in their respective races. In fact, the recent spurt of the Giants has tightened the National League race that but sit games now separate New York from the leaders. And we aro still In sixth plas Though a splintered rib has kept him in the background for a week, Hans Lobert proved himeelf still strong with the atick. Asa the Giants in the first game walked to the rubber, took one swing and drove in the winning run. An in- s one of the best young! ning before, Jack Murray, also some unkins as a pinch walloper, got on, ut nobody could help him around. By a stop watch test in the two games yesterday it was shown that Davy Robertson !s faster getting to first base than any player on either the New, York or Boston Club. It ‘was Dav¥'s beating out of a bunt that started the winning rally in the j ninth, inning of the first game. is ; Hamilton of the St. Louls Browns, considered so good that six clubs have been trying to buy him, was just Sox as some of the Though stingy with hits his lack of | controt did the trick. At that the Yanks would atill pay az much as $20,000 for this fellow if Branch Rickey wanta to turn loose. | From an obscure position In the bat- ng records Tris has come up to .288, and it was his stick that beat the Yanks yesterday. pesca ey KLINE AND BROWN ENTER ‘yacing hos been already received for the day and night races to be held at the ; Brighton Beach race track next Mon- |day, two more entri eing received |yenterday, making » total of twelve to compete in the fifteen events, Kline, 9 recent art Indianapolis entrant, 1 x |and William Brown of Memphis wore | ir. | the Inst to date to send in thelr entry janks, and like all of the other speed demons entered so far, these drivers will start in the 100-mile race to be run Monday night. H | South Hend Wins Pennant. SOUTH BEND, Ind., June 30—South | Bend i» the pennant winner in the | South Michigan Baseball League, defeating Saginuw yesterday hi cinched firat place. It was also h thirteenth consecutive win, L LEAGUE, fo Chub, ae er ac i LEAGUB, aia STANDING OF THE CLUBS at es mel TBee ia LTS OF YESTERDAY'S Gal Pere eit tei ind GAMES SCHEDULED FOR TO-DAY aun pinch hitter foF | Poet “man jas weak against the victorious White | unknowns. | By slow stages Tris Speaker is be- | |" ginning to earn that $16,500 salary. | 100-MILE AUTO RACE. ; | A record entry Mat for local auto, drivers and fourteen high powered cars| ., By | strides, and. othera insisted he di At any rate, Roamer went past the \dges with his nose just a trifle it of that of Stromboll’s, and promacy. Some say Stromboli his head in front in those last as Butwell galloped ir to the scales he was applauded and cheere@> Roamer hadn't run his usual rae. ‘That is, he didn’t go right to Es ee SPE ane yee stead, he was ke; e " ‘acing as of Harmonicon, but in Butwell suffered all the worst 4 the racing hic! He was about, shut off and otherwise both-' ered to such an extent that Re 4 rather than words of praise have been the jockey’s share had ~~ lost. Stromboli earned himself = big rep.” utation in the Queens County. who saw his great P \to beat er think he was the {best horse in the race. He certaimiy, wasn't helped any in the bansping: match with Roamer in the eighth, but for that mattee eae was Roamer. Some think t ‘with a little further to go, Stromboll might have won. Races of the kind’ jtner, put up explain the sport's popu- arity. Thomas Fortune Ryan was a it Jot Joho Madden at Belmont ax early yesterday morning. |About two hours with the “Wisard of Hamburg Place.” It is possible that» the millionaire contemplates ing some of Madden's good rac | material. cekwenieeigeisibasaii HAMILTON ENTRIES. |_ HAMILTON JOCKEY CLUB, Ont, ‘The official entries for tox | morrow’s races are as follows: a ee ie "Purse. #40 fount ioe Relat SB ing urne 85005, 5 eee marpelne’ 103" Clift Kage: 108; Ponte TO, Pig ae ge ea Sne-cighth ada, 106. tl bl i a a Vives. sace-fae. * liom, Bact ia 108, fren oat a ae eoprenticn sMowance el ae Trach fs ina Buliard Acade ios. Vat At, SPORTING. RACING AQUEDUCT TOMORROW SIX STAR ATTRACTIONS INCLUDING THRE $1,000 Union Stakes

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