The evening world. Newspaper, June 3, 1916, Page 4

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b. t i MIDGET AMONG Bla FIGHTERS, __ DILLON HAS POWER OF GIANT -$—— id After a Race Horse, He Is Showing Heavyweight Class, s% Some Speed and Ponderous Title Hunters Fear Him—Al- | = though Not a Champion, He’s the Most Sensational Heavy- | ‘ weight Since Fitzsimmons’s Time. | | Sovrtent, 1916, by The Press Publishing Co. (The No w York Evening World), ACK DILLON 1s of Scotch-Irish FA t J descent. Perhaps that’s why he S fs such a terror among tho o heavyweights, He has the Scotchman's unconquerable obstinacy, combined with the Irishman’s wild love of fight ing. | Also, #0 many of his opponents | claim, he has a hypnotic eye. Dillon's | eyes are the lightest steel gray—so) light that one sees only the black pu-| pils, They are fringed with coal black | lashes aud shaded by heavy black eye-| brows, h eyes aro found some-/ times in the north of Italy among the mountain men; sometimes in remote H parts of Spain, where the Moors wero Sever conquerors; most frequently of all in Ireland, where, tt ts sald, they | afe souvenirs of the great Armada and the shipwrecked bands of ae Who took refuge on the hospitable Irish shore, In the ring Dillon js the picture of a fighting man, His expression is #ul-!a very clever boxer, game, aggressive, Jen. He is eager to begin and he !8/4 har! hitter, 6 feet 4 inches tall, In! eager to keep on. Before a fight he iowa ond round Dilion, rushing fur- ; ¢|lously, swum a blow’ that struck its in his corner glaring pepe ih Weinert on the chest and knocked bim | way at his opponent. The black PU-| clear out of the ring. It must have! Pile of his steel cray eyes never waver. | been one of the hardest blows ever | Hie attitude is that of a caged tiger struck in a fight, for it split Welnert's : : ores ne and completely knocked | waiting expectantly for the hiarsgerts him out.” Welnort saya it wae like be- | to throw in his daily hunk of raw (ing nit by a cannon ball. beet, The bell rings and Dillon Js) After beating Weinert, Dillon began | instantly out of his corner with ato fight all the heavyweights he could | tigerish spring. He goes straight into | pul itis he tras ee lg oad the firet attack. From then on there|Carty, Andre Anderse’ om Mc: lw no backward step—by Dillon—untl! | Mahon, Jim ‘Savage and’ bunch of or the last bell rings. Others.” Some he knocked out, Some Leah Sabet has never been | he beat. Some gave him a hard fight, And up to da: f He had a Mitte trouble with tho on the floor, This is his eal Han eer nen ee the bix slow ones ever been knocked down in a} Were his pie, He met Weinert again he mt and beat Lie badly, And Weinert was figh considered about the best Bast- Dillon's real name is Ernest Cutler Jorn heavies. oe ee : Price, and he was born in Frankfort.) KNOCKOUT OF COWLER GREAT | In@,, Feb, 2, 1891. When ho began FEAT. fighting, eight years ago, he didn't! Dition’s greatest feat, about this want his identity known, With true} fini its the, Knocking out of big inclinations, he took the|Tom Cowler. ‘This particular heavy- aber reat race horse, added | WCiXht was Jim Corbett's pet. Corbett name of @ &' +e tte | ieelared that under his couching the Jack and became Jack Dillon, He tall Englishman would become world's haw been Jack Dillon ever since. pion. Cowler lived with Corbett IDDLE- rained for many months, He WAS A paNaunous Ll won several fights in spectacular WE . ..(Style, Six fect threo and a halt yffhe unimportant part of Dillon's inches tall, welghing well above | career was when he fought as a wel- | tho pound) mark, muscular i and clever, he at least looked ter, then a middleweight. He A ae like a champion, Corbett selected number of good men in these classes, Dillion us an easy victin who fought a fow draws, lost @ decision could add somthing to Cowler's rough a great | sowing reputation, or two and went he rage Pil Ho| ., When the fighting grew Bot Dillon number of decisionless bou slammed a rib-crusher home, and gradually became known all over the rushing into (Glons quarters put his country as a very dangerous fighter | head against the big man’s chest and {swung his fumous overhand right, who had a frugal habit of saving OD- |irhe blow ntruck Cowler fairly on the ponents for future use, That is, he did not always try to win by the knockout ro: .c. At times this made Jaek very unpopular in some locali- | carcer ana boxer, ties, He stayed out of New York for! This mady Jack Dillon's reputation, | a long time after a dreary ten rounds | He was nicknamed “The Man-Eater, a Square Garden with |2P4 the “Glan? Killer.” “He becam in son Sq |‘mmensely popular with fight fans. Frank Klaus: Both Dillon and Klaus! Unfortunately he became immensely and point of the chin, and it knocked him 4o cold that he doesn't know yet how {t happened, It was necessary to car. [ry him to his corner. It ended his| THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JUNE 3, 1916. _ BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORI PUTTING 'EM OVER With ‘‘Bugs’’ Baer JACK DILLON, Copyright, 1916, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New Yor! ‘ LONS Dieenss., FACE = THE AYPNOTIC EYES HELP To Parmaurze- WId OPPONENTS. HIS AMBITION 1S TO FIGHT WILLARD. With Chance to Tie Dodgers tor Lead ost 13-Inning Game to Reds Giants L —_s>— pat While His Bride Looked On Southpaw Clarence Mitchell Tamed Hard-Hitting Locals— Maybe It Was the Silver Cups! That Eddie Leonard Presented the New Yorks That Jinxed Them. ‘St. Louls..19 24 442 ¥ Results of Games Ye: % bay Jere. 4 ( F: Breck Sei Philadetphte, 2, chicago, 2; By Bozeman Bulger. ETWEEN gilver cups, straw hats and umpires, it.was a rough | homecoming for thé“@iants, but virtue triumph in the end, Clar- ence Mitchell, the left-handed piteh- New York at Chicage Washing Son ei Dotrett ington a , Pidlodeiphie att. Leste THE LITTLE GIANT OF THE ‘k Evening World), Jack RING. Ditron's WONDERFUL FIGHTING EQUIPMENT . Many ‘‘Layers’’ Forced To the Wa Years Since So Many Public Choices Have Won Races at | Local Tracks, By Vincent Treanor. | HE layers of odds at the Bel | mont Park track have been 90 heavily hit by reason of the great number of favorites that h ive | been Winning daily there that nearly | two score of them have gone out of | business, Up to the victory day nineteen straight favorite won, Miss Puzzle, the public ¢ in that event, finished second. next four ra though, were won by favorites, It has been many years since so many of the hor: that have been the heaviest backed by the public hi won the long end of the purs This looks like another big day the public choices, and if such prov the case by next’ Monday there a ot Lorao yester- | had | bound to be many more “bookic ! who have been forced to go out of | commission, i} SéTDRETTY Soon the Fighters Can Saye Time by Holding the Fight Right in the Mint.” Bi racing. ball has more jockeys than ‘The 8. P.O. A. should investigate the lone tum belg worm by the grandsiand jocker, 68 the umpw are all cut and beading, Some folks die game. Here ts & Boston chess expert admitting that | baseball is one of the country’s lead- ing sports, University of Pittsburgh football admirers have finally given up hope of inducing Cornell to play their team Jast fall, Sam McVey and Joe Jeanette have had their act translated tnto Spanish and will produce +t personally in Buenos Aires, | making « bum deet- “ire of @ Dice, © Ry cares sion, ant drink of 0 SPORTING OUTLOOK FOR JUNE (Ry Rabid Rud Left-Handed Expert.) pine eee Shamrock IV, shouldn't lose @ at Belmont eee The Phillies should win a lot of | close bottles. Louisvitle, to-day. Eleven of the eee American turf's best all-aged horses| eientifically Inclined umps will in- are named as probable starters. Thaloculate Rabbit Maranville with the handicap is worth approximately | germs of a few $10 fine $15,000, and is the richest stake 4 ues Amorica this year for all-aged start- will be benched for bab Hs of 152 pounds, | igo for the 19,876th time. which is top weight, F er, Andrew ee0 FY shipped from | frank Moran and Jack Dillon will Mat to start in the stakes) meet to decide who joins the next will got favorite, Hor- | meet | row and g former the wine | cane ner last year, wiil have many warm| freaking under the long strain of supporters, especially if the track 18 /stience, some ump will fine Johnay muddy Evers $36,000,000 on suspicion, eee Ina Claire was scratched from the} Jack Knigt should turn up for a third race beca Jockey Ball, who | meal in one of the big leagues. ad been engaged to ride her, was eee still on the ground, owing to his ques- | Yale crew will again loss becauss tioned ride on Ambrose on Thursday. | of wet grounds. mae | —- ler Was) thacanly at the| Brseball crowds have improved we ts sites vi SPEAR AEN te | wonderfully in Cleveland, where a few There Littie Nearer, 4 sure winner, but tipped as fourth ju the ninth which fell at p and Agon hit the top of | jump so hard that he un ‘ere only three start- | seasons ayo even a bum batter could hit the size of the attendance. Jack Johnson is in Spain claiming championship of the world, or un- th n= seatad Rider Cantwell, This left | derwerld or something like that. Thomas Hite entry to finish sine SS aceae bat ee ittoree na | etter pull up the oang-plank on the good ship “Comebac First Piping Rock again clashes with| Passel across the line he threatened | thing you know Kid McCoy and Monte Belmont to-day, better still, Hel. | a am me Cross will come crutching up it. te vith Pip Rock. Pictldes Bieerischenine Wil feature tbe The Toborean Handicap features! Nap Lajole is In his old-time form ond day of the spring meeting at the | to-day’s card at Belmont. The fields jang easily makes one chew of to- Locust Valley course. Sixteen of there larger than has been customary tyaceo last nine int ve nd good racing should resu’ ATION best jumpers in the East have been | nd go ! re e ~ named over night for the rich Whit- | Butler's stable, with Spur and High tnaide of the two ney Memorial Steeplechase at and a haif miles for four-year and upward. | This stake will worth close to $6,000 to the winner, ‘The fourth annual running of the Kentucky Handicap at a mile and a ing hero of the Reds, now seeking « quarter takes place at Douglas Fark, wore out their weloome that night— Bohrer with elt ta heave ant permanent job—and very Tamer tied for the lead. and paid for it in lost reputation, | Hehters, possibly Levinsky,|apout it—hud the satisfaction 0 es Jack fought a lot of good middle- | Tevinaise” ty now ane eNoEe | uamaning the coming champions with {The big surprise ot the day was weights, Among those he met often, | permanent bumps handed him by Dil-|his bride seated ip the grandstand she erase OF ie Don eere Nee only aay Cia gical merry iia around the circuit, were George Chip, |Jon, but fs stilt willing, where she could hear the mulutude hing innings Robbie's men falled tol tigntweghe whe ante be neo ce Eddie McGoorty, Bob Moha, George| THEY ALL DODGE DILLON Now, |#Ppitud the Broom. Let but three hits off Youne | real stars of the lightweight division a kK. O. Br Howard M Harry| Coffey, the Dublin Giant,” ve) Phirs, Mitenell saw a lot. Not only] Mamaux, who bas not been sotting cask aeetalap lige tied tee riche AP i A Glant,” couldn't] gid ane voserve a thorough taming of | the woods nfite for Jimmy Callahan, |£¥ months ago, by decisively outpoint- Mansfeld, Leo Houck, Jimmy Gard- | Pe dragged Into a ring with the little | tig hutingest club in tie 4casue OUET Te’ Mamaux has returned to bis 1915|!ng Freddie Welsh, the world's lght- ner, Jack Twin Sullivan, Frank) nanager couldn't. be drapend ie [sie Was privilesed to see Clarence] fore Jimmy may hope for better) weight champion, in a ten-round bout in Klaus, Gus Christie, Frank Mantell,! making a match. Frank M Bae [a teTe el ee ey te ea enins | Cae Madison Square Garden, is to get an- Buck ‘Crouse and practically all the |just. signed to’ meet. him vafiee | fvus Wallop to centre In Ane tare ; other chance at the title. They were otters who could draw a gate with holding “out for months, “Weinert |eulhg ‘us wiarence kept up tor}, The Western cigs of the Natlonal) matched to-day by Promoter Harry Pol- im. He had @ couple of candidly states that he wanta no more frteen dnnings the Giants | 1 LAs 8 er® lok to clash in @ ten-round contest at fights, : of Dillon for at least @ year, after eee een cecnany mouns, und att and wound up the first day | the Washington Park Sporting Club tn All this timo Dillon fought along | which time he hopes to be improved | PAVE BEL BENT OF OM Cups, straw | With @ clean sheet, Boston, New| nrocuiyn on Thuradvy evening, June 15. without being stirred by any great |enough to feht him wgtin. are | But returning to the cubs St" | York, philadelphia and Hrooklyn | Hrooklyn on Thu 5 . ambition. gives no answer to his challenges ayy | hate and wins 1°85 | were’ all beaten, And to show you n Billy Gibson, manager of Leon ‘And then he outgrew the middle- signed articles to fight Jess Willard, {Saco the Giaais Uled In Van to | chat these wild and woolly boys meant | M1, was offered the match he quickly wight class, He began mingling | world's champion, and Willard’s man, (vercome Was the proverbial JBN) husiness St. Louis and Chicago came | accepted it, with the heavyweights, Jager sald he didn't want Jens to Took | Hak te ee ae eet ape | through in the ninth inning and the : Jess to lo “ on, and tis time naD= | Heda too a Gls ig : A MIDGET AMONG THE GIANTS, |ridiculous, fighting a man halt hin | Present e ye a nian cup | Luuls oul (he Giants to the thir~) Because Promter Jimmy Johnston would not it here I'm going to put in a |#lze. Aw Willard Is exactly 11% Inches | pened to TRO ba wadio| eee ive Benny Leonard the percentage of the gros Me description of Dillon. He's a {taller than Dillon, and wolghs a fui| provided and oe vein ot Uy | ; ts bis manager, Billy Gibson, demanded midget among the big fellowa, He is [100 pounds more, perhaps his objec. |ieenard. the Mite Cums were Charlie Herzog has effected @ | tor ns return fight with Johnny Dundes, at Only o foot tig inches talk and hig {ton to being made ridiculous was wall | BEER Warned Uhet wunin DONE A) good working arrangement in | the Garden on next Wednesday night, the bow normal fighting weight now is J6¢/founded. Willard is the one man the | Jin%, DUb Be Milli Coed to, turning Hal Chase into a teft | tas deca declared off. “Gib” claimed that as Lila is ' public wouldn't like to see Dillon {in the germiony vs iid not bo al fielder and putting Molwits back | Waenard wus 0 bigger drawing card than Dundes, But physically ho'a a atick of dyna-[N&Nt. It's admitted the Kansas Giant |'0t PO MC hping that ho did| on first base, Chase plays the Upuuurs™™ souted % @ latewr percentage then mite. He has the power of a giant in] /* lone in bis class, | “get down the bet, Phen came! outer garden just as well as he iJ pas Bie thick, bulging muscles, His round A, 0p und ma pORve relent | ine sraw Nal did first base and it was Me ) der t 200). pour mark— <etche! hes Nehieed - ‘. ‘s 'é 8 Jawed, high cheek boned head is wet | Under the 20 pound mark—-a Ketchel| ty tne been on the road, Davy! fieetneas of foot that put that | gam, Dockie: who looks after the attain of on @ short, thick neck. His arms are} ush leaguing tt, Roberton was not prepared tor New | Gunboat Smith, the beavyweight, is still sed at fighting second raters because t wed first class heavies are afra tremendous, and his whole t one ertra run over for Herzog in the heart because the Governor of Indiana rofused last round. raw styles, | to permit the ten-round bout between Smith and York's early rush on (he fired muncular tismus, He ia’a skit. | tke a chance with him, 608 wien & line Sy Bones OP lone — | Jack Dillon at Indianapolis last Monday night, ful and effective boxer, with a trick|, Belng @ real fighter haa ite draw. |in the frat inlaw Ct ss so] Mathewson had @ great oppor-| Jim slsime that Gmith's sud would bare been ing terrific bedy blows with elthor! piesces iead eon ball aid let it Bo for a lung | ly in the hearts of New York fang | 100% hand and reaching up at his tailer/ WIND PREVENTS RICE’S | oF Ane that undid Mathewson, but, as usual, things broke against aces Opponents with oyerhand rights that F ‘Now, to dake the witar ail the | im. Lucky hits and bad plays ®av| Having broken one of tho bones of bia lett sagry a clean KO. when they tad CREWS FROM PRACTISING, |j.5 inauspicious, Cinpite Mal Eason | the Reds four rans off him in Uo ound im his tenet atte with Vie Moran at thn jlion's ambition began to grow —_—- t wuj Bred Merkle out at first | first three innings and the Old) Harlem Sporting Club, Phil loom, the Brooklyn when he knocked out Jack Lester, a! ponaHKEEPsiE, NY. June sal eM die and cut olf the run that) Mirster had to retire under fire, ugitwelght, will mot be able to fight again: for heavyw had been br BURRS! tie south wind drove Jim Rice }Would have tied the score, and that, | Though ritt pitohed the remat at least three weeks, His manager, Jack Asher out by As A champion | ve Columbla crews under the shelter eventually, would have won for New| ing ten innings Matty. is charged | declared todey that when Bloom is medy to Bhp ce inate Tae rs bows vet, Rod | ita erika Kula wien tt vag sen York. has Bis bad days, but he | with the defeat in the official records, pattie again be rus me © dosperate effort to y ording whiter, nono cla of & jaate nibs he ne ‘001 6 < tou — ‘sign bisa up wit! euny Leonard, ¥ . 4s no ed. dn ur ving bh eo The exploit attracted little attention, |the water for the afternoon's ctice, ee Aen (avon out ab third, when |i Miovink gothink. alae? do. do. te Bvt a month later he wpe Hat: |The coach was disappointed because | ee en cna pur Ww looked | Yanks went up to Olean, N.Y, the Te Broadway Sporting Club of Brooklyn. wit! gies. savinesy Sie, al one he could not send the crews over the| perfectly safe from the grandstand, | place where McGraw started in as a | bold ite regular weekly boxing show to-night, In ~— ratty to believe that Levinsky | Course Just one dore exhibit Lo prove con | baliplayer, to exhibit in @ practice | main event Silent Martin, the deaf mute Gaok coming champion. Dillon's stock| “TRE men have got to have two weeks | clusively the influence of the jinx: 1 rrmane At a late hour noth. | Maldiewelght, bs ® geared ‘Toland of Went up with a bound, He followed |of Kood hard practice before they witl| "Voll Perritt pitched nine full in-| tng had been given out for the prints Lia rae Pi bgila synced on by ting Al Norton, a tall heavy | be able to make any showing,” he said, | inks Without yielding but two hits, | and there is a suspicion that "Cap" | me. . ¢ y ne Os. | bea! 0 have it tossed away in the! Huston has resumed bis old army | Kele end Twin Nadel of Ohicago will battle for with a “kick,” who ‘was regarded | "1 have not decided on the final make. | only (o have it ‘ no | Hui L tra neuada’ in the Gemeitinal Chroughout the Middle West as a very! up of the crews and probably will nog | thirteenth by the oddest play of the | duties of censor. | nt final, ely man. be abie to do so far a wi ek yet.” | — " he r e ber of fights a week or two apart, un not round s hit at Merkle, By | Giants the suffragettes are un-| py buocking out KO. Sweeney, the Pigged hovel til Oct, 4, 1914, he met George K. O. | INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE, ] «& besuutut ploy Bek the runner) daunted and will endeavor to root | fighter, iu the second minute of the final rund in Brown in St. Louis, and hippodromed _ —— at the plate, but ‘ in ation (-|the M iw oclan on to victory to- | their tenvound battle which waa fought at loch ft so (and Brown too) that the referee ing to make it a double, throw to} day, ‘The would-be women Voters! wer, N.Y. The wee (urniahed a rattling good atopped the bout and ordered both | STANDING OF THE Chua, | J) neme ads allowing Hie wlonin run have reserved Lie entire upper stand Fett tes Gaia's caate bode bees nat melee ie boxers from the ring. tty EG |) to soore. Phen as Mlorile picked up| at the Holo Grounds for to-day's| ie jaw had Swoauey 10 « woah condition afer Ue THE TERRIFIC BLOW HE LAND- H14 ‘S68 amie’ 1 tf tat Re bnoak of thinks, -}ial Ginn | Ate tunis Manteeree He Saw Mh round, ED ON WEINERT. Jromped home with an extra run go] One of these suffragettes, by the Up to this time fighting had been | ‘Tom MoAntie, matchmaker of the Feinnont | Fistic NewS som You. and Gos si as to make the thing sate and sound, | way, called on John Foster yester- ) pn: 6 auL ou something of a joke to Dillon, Now | Such was the homecoming of the | day to make inquiries as to the eti- fed é J oe - a Wes etine ad sort of he suddenly discovered that he had record- breakers, quote gt the game, | pa lenin’ ins tee tenes eae | opularity, and it hurt, Ho was wee, — “If, for instance," she aaked, “a | it will book oh TO light in Now York. His bout was Hoshentes vo. Meatrea) It was another glorious oppors | player should make a home run ‘in it| fet, | Ray Pere will book up with Jobmay cancelled, Much disgruntled, ho took erento v9, Buzue (rele) tunity for the Giants to assume customary to call upon him for an) JM)" ie ae een young Fulton on another as near New York as pos- GAMES TO-DAY. the lead, but the moment they | eneor Johnny Heul boses Joe Hooker oz rounds. a with a young heavyweight who Richmond 0: Moves ne | saw that Brooklyn had tossed a | Mr. Foster was consclous and rest- Teo had earned a position among tho best orgaic ot Irene! 2 enmee, game to Pittsburgh the pep ap- | ink easy up to the last bulletin Freoks Brown, the east sie bantemwe!zht, who | metho big city, Al Weinert, Here Haluimore at peared to die out. Had McGraw’ mprovee out be engages in, hae been VMlon really cut loose, Weinert was | men won they would have been | “(ante {0-day with Cincimmatl: 310 F. Me cliched te fight Becny Kaufmann, the Quaker f \ City featherweizht, for six rounds at tho otrmnta| A, A. of Philadelphia om Monday night, Brown | has been substituted for Johnny Ertle, After the | bout Brown wil journey to New Orleans, where be fighte Pete Herman twenty rounds on June 12, Jimmy Anderson, the crack Indianapolia wel: terwetght, added new laurels to his fistic record last night by punishing Young McGowan, the! Brooklyn fighter, eo badly in their bout at the { Brown A. A. of Far Rockaway that Referee Bil! | Brown stopped the one-sided affair in the third round to prevent a complete imockout, Owing to the fact that the four fighters who were cugaged by Jimmy De Forest, manager of the Brooklyn Stadium A, C., to appear in the two ten-rount bouts at the club's opeaing hoxing show to-night had not sufficient time in which to got inte shape for the contests, Dp Forest de: cided to postpone the show until June 10, Jack Sharkey's right eye was eo badly cut by being butted by the Zulu Kid in the fifth round of thelz battle at the Vanderbilt A.C, last night that his manager, Joe Waguer, wouldn't allow him to continue, as he was afraid that a chance jmnch would impair his might, Up to thie stage Sharkey was winning eastly and didn't want to take hie manager's advice and stop, Sharkey leaves for Sullivan County next Tuy to rent previous to his impending battieg with Champloa | Ertle, Monte Attell and Frankie Burne, ——_— PENN CREWS LEAVE | FOR POUGHKEEPSIE. PHILADELPHIA, June 3.—Thirty- one University of Pennsylvanta oars- men left here to-day for Poughkeepste to prepare for the Intercollegiate Re- June jeap, two-y ay win the Tobogga oon coupled, 1 valimd out for ne, The Saratoga Asso on has just Walte Joh on would win a lot announced ite list of events for the| more basebail gaines it he didn't get meeting at the Spa starting July $1,/s0 much competition from the Wash- The list of feature events ington team, Monday, July 32, the Shillelah hase, three-year-olds and up; | N°" of! Audiyragt: rece States Hot are | ep ng on thelr beads unt olds; th ar 4 Handicap, three. | the gad event takes piace, year-olds and up, Buanday, Aug. tart hittme their spect that q . & Pinaway, fill two cee ge vaay. Aug. 3) the|Mmore than stride te Catskill nd up. Fri- | limp. fay, Aug, 4, overnight ovents, Batur-| PROBLEMS FOR THE v. lechase, three olds) and} If a fisherman sells a half-pint 19 nford Memorial, two-year- |be @ profession Travers, thre jay, Aug. 7, the Delaware Hand three-year-olds and up. Tt cap, day, Aug. 8, the Troy, two-year-olds, e FI Wednesday, Aug. 9, ds. Thursday, Aug. fillies three years old, ernight events, Sa , the Saratoga Specia ar-olds Fri- | | | 1¢ a hunter looks down the gun |parrel is his widow an amateur? vee Who should get the gate recetpts when two birds try to change seats In |a canoe? Ie If a _basedall fan sold pop bottles would he be an amateur or a pri is al, twe r-olds; the Champlain Handi- cap, three-year-olds and up. Monday, ae Aug. 14 the Kentucky, ities two) THE WHITE ELEPHANT years old, us. the Sar- 7 He Handicap, three - year - olds, | BOWLING & BILLIARD ACADEMY Wednesday, Aug. 16, the Grab Bag JOSEPH THUM, Proprietor, Handicap, two-year-olds, Thursday, 22 BOWLING ALLEYS Aug. 17, the Mohawk, thre: Friday, Aug. 18, overnight even Saturday, Aur. 19, the “ALO! Steeplechase, four-year-olds and up the Grand Union Hotel, two-yea year-olds, 3S BILLIARD TABLES RESTAURANT 1241-1251 Broadway, Cor. 3iat St., N.Y. re EVERYTHING FOR olds; the Merchants’ and Citizens’ Bl li (it ts seas B Li ‘andicap, three-year-olds @nd up. | IS g Fane Aum a1, the Albany Handie | ards GH Own ar-olds, Tuesday, A\ the Huron Handicap, three-year-ol Wednesday, Aug. 23, the Adironda Handicap, three-year-olds day the Amsterdam, thre year-olds and up. Friday, Aug. overnight nts. Saturday, Aug. the Be wyck Ste chase, thre year-olds and up; the Hopeful, tw year-olds; the Saratoga Cup, ar-olds and up, pe TIGERS AND HARVARD MEET ‘Thurs- | three- Prices and Terms to Sult. REPAIRS BY EXPERT MECHANICS, | | The Brunswick-Malkex x | _ SPORTING, _ RACING S gatta, to be held on the Hudson IN SECOND DIAMOND GAME. | 17 The squad includes the varsity, | June varsity and freshmen crews. and| i | substitutes, and was in charge of Coach| CAMBRIDGE, Mass, Juno 3.—Har- AT DEAUTIFUL Wright. A new shell for the varsity! yard and Prin meet in their second | sw was ordered shipped direct to) es etre theanct: toccaye Mit Poughkeepsie and ts expected to be in baseball game o! 7 | readiness for the men to ® their] was expected that Mahan would piteh | first workout late this aftern’ for Harvard and Link for Princeton, Training Trials ALBERTA TRUE, soven-cightha, 1.33 2.5, ACABADO, three bightha, 37, ENT, Uree-eighthe, 38, HOICK, ‘mile i No fiveceightha, DN, half, 5 72) iD, halt, Hite WORTH KE three qui mile inile e-eight he M48 14825, 1 Ot Sone mile and guarter, 2.20 at Local Tracks KENWORTHY, ot KING Bite KILKENNY EVRY git MONMocr AI heny MAIBLE M Ny nil quarter, 2.20, be WhAb 146 fiy ARCHENO mile, TOM, “thane Woot AWS) three POLLY J, half PRME OS nthe. PADDY WHACK PANDEAN SHOT GHASS SASIN. halt fe SRY PILOT, ie 118, 1.08, uarters, SPP ERNE LI ft Si DENI JOHNS BELL nail SW PINKL VAL tt Woon PAT YADDOW PERE. PARK MONDAY GARDEN CITY HANDICAP LAKEVILLE HANDICAP 2 MILE STEEPLECHASE and 3 Other Good Races M, BEGINNING A Special ace Station, Ow a be Wkly. : Wien Wiela ts, Seah rete ay So't'e Mat po Wight

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