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- 2 With Good Weather the Diilon- Moran Fight Should Break Al i Recent Attendance Records. MIM ia the week of the IF Moren fight. It seheduled for next Thursday night at Washington Park, fy The fondid K«randatands the ‘atda for the Mr . Seal boxing ar ate fF make very liitie differs opt t a i those who hope te heute At oe bone went focated. ay ihe "hvene How Diccow uhway line thu ' igi out joor, only ten minute from tl BiG Tom York end of the Brooklyn CoWLeR.., THE EVENING WORLD, PORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK SOME POINTERS ON DILLON AND MORAN ik all, recent attendance record will have une great feature that hu sadly jacking in other near ™ ‘ebampionship events of the past few It ts quite safe to say tha th men will actually try. Neither | ‘& championship to lose, and each om fas all the world to gain by being re- eadurned an undisputed victor. 'T in easy to dope out the Mor Dillon scrap in favor of ett 4 man. b) Take Moran first. He can't be |] lous 2; Cinetanedl 1 (tet game). beaten py little Dillon, of course, for | Pittebergh, 8; Chicago, 3 (12 innings). didn't big Jess Willard hit him hard enough to knock out a mule? Giant mine Frank once in ten rounds, He jabbed him until his head bobbed about like a dancing ball on a shooting gallery fountain. He uppercut him several times, and every spectator ex- New York at Brooktyn Fonda Heaton of Loy TS Piteburgh ‘wt Chicago. Mt. Louie Fe Saas Resutts of Games Yesterday. Leia, 81 Dowel. 3 (let game) 1. Leute, 8; Detroit, 1 (2d game) Chicago, 4; Cleveland, 3 {11 Innings) oa ted to see Frank turn @ coimplete vy, Momeraault, and fall on the press} Referee Bill Brown would have le rank on the head s0 iy hard that he broke his own right hand. |heipies, "°° cave Bim, ae he was’ “Tt was bone meet bone, und They fought again, Moran was trim’ epeftacked. He knocked Frank groggy./and thin waisted this time He was and then when people were reaching | ft. Coffey, well coached, slashed at 1 Gs hats and remarking that it}him from a distance, and pumped in & shame to match a smaller man |yome very wicked uppe me Jess on the ear. He swung left and routs, Frank's ; Sgainet 9 great big beef like Jess. | blond head bobbed. But at last over 1 Frank swung one back and | came the right, and Coffey was whip- ped again, And why shouldn't a eri that would flatt Jim Coffey Matte t, left and right, time and again, le big Jess leaned back and rolled js head swith the blows, waiting for k to weary, Of course, Frank idn’t hurt t Wwittard in the least—but ‘What merely human man can hurt the Kansas giant, anyhow? Frank took a heavy mauling and fought back with all the desperation of a man who hopes ‘and expects to win with a knockout in next half minute if the bell doesn't 5 feet 8 1-2 inches of Jack Dillon? UT ON THE OTHER HAND— B there's Dillon, Our old friend Jack isn't called the giant killer for nothing, Not long «59 he cam into the rine with big Tom Cowler-- { . That's the point. Two hundred ,6 feet 3 1-2 inches tall, and suffering oT tty. nine pounds stripped, swing- {# little that evening from an attack “tne the best educated heavywelght {of chills and fever, ted to Ket ms in the whole world, didn’t flatten | back to bed. So he hurried and wk Moran—or even discourage him | knock Cowler out in a couple of Keessively—in ten rounds. Willard or ao, He hit Cowler In th VP soutclassed Moran completely, but the and then swunr an overhand putting him out for jarring him. loose Jim Corbett, who Mteresting thing about it is that Frank {right to his Jaw idn’t know it, didn't realize it, waa] five minutes’ an »@imply conscious of his own attempts | from his me land a deciding wallop. Why, neat; had thoueht a world beater ceeday Frank was even talking to people | That isn't either, There is our d about how lucky Jess was that the | Charlie W ort—-avery p ‘omising lad, r f he seventh round was only three minutes et 8 in . Can you be ffey, tough and game hey come, swe Moran too at Sed’ twenty rounds| Charlie fought Dillon in Philadelphi Y Swith Jack Johnson, who felt peevish, | Dillon swung his right and hit Charlie ‘And after that, how can a little fel- !on the breast bone. Tho terrific im- Sow like Dillon, who on Thursday eve- | pact of that blow lifted Charlie from ning will weigh just about ninety-five | his feet, threw him over the ropes and / "pounds s than Willard weighed, out of t ing, and eked his breast make any impression at all upon the! hone! They didn’t have to count over Diond warrior from Pittsburgh | Charles. curried him out, Again, ‘And of course, there is the Moran’ Dillon gave Weinert @ return mateh “kick,” noted in lk ring history, |in New York, This time, In the fifth a rib-crusher that Weinert’s legs, and derfully well to stick He was soundly Moran beat up Al Palzer so badl und, seven rounds that Palzer retired /nearly paraly’ “thereafter to that dear Minnesota, | Charlie did wo yhere he could make a living run- | out the ten nt a harvester between fights,; beaten. Dillo such an impres- PIN Moran went to Europe. Bhits.| upon Weinert that to this day knocked out) Bomiurdier Wella. | Hight in fighting Wella had been knocked out by Pal- , &e, but he pres rer, and twice by middleweight Car- | fers having vin which to ntier, so he Wax used to il, and} mature and perfect his fghting style Foran didn't perform any eatraor. | before mingling again with that rough sion But ae |dack Dillon Aineriea and yhoo Also-and yet apain there is our Ihe he pal Levinsky, We like Bat. bee a big young cause he's the real thing, — He's and a lot of \clever, fasi, game ax a man pomidly could fight,5 He jean be, and willing to fight anybody inches taller than! Bat ts covered with the sears of hus hocking out les with Dillon, and tiites preity fair freely that he thinks Dil tho «shifty boxer nt in the world. No * Jeing (one else ever gave Levinsky a Poosted tora fight. with! Wil He |scratch, Sstmight have had that fight too put) Of these men T doubt that Cowler ¥ Moran Frank “interven: world have more than a barely pos- f He was too fat to sible chance to stay ten rounds with Wor « round ¢ Moran. Wut Levinsky would be very eran Was totter /bkely to outpoint him easily in’ ten ! His face !vound: Weinert would have a fair ic, People around chance tu beat Moran heeause of his BOIeUCH A deranecivns a take punches without weakeaing yoamuten with a broth of here w yave (ren that Dillon m cll has 6-6! ' can beat easily and beat any time ank to the wrist in Jim's ribs, who would lave a chance vgainst \) Moran's right landed) resoundingly s dope we n base only | but lusion, it should be a whale anyw 1 fight ee, ° The man who takes the good things of life moderately is invariably the successful man. Because he is clear-headed enough to be moderate, he is clear-headed enough to keep on the road to success. His judgment tells him to drink moderately—drink only that wonder- fully mild and mellow Whiskey— Wilson—Real Wilson—That’s All! The Whiskey for which we invented the Non-Rejillable Lots FREE CLUB RECIPI mixed drinks. Addr Free booklet of famous club recipes for Wilson, 31 Fifth Ave, N.Y, That's Alll n 6 feet 3 inches of: r than Jim Fistic News and Gossip By John Pollock } Ad. Wolgast, who {s to exchange Punches with champion Freddie Wel fn a fifteen-round no-decision bout Denver onduly 4, has also been mate to meet ‘ether Joe Mandot or Willie Ritchie in a twenty-round battle at Salt Lake City on July 24, Wolgnat fs train- ing faithfully for his go with Wel he thinks he has a good chance of stup- | $0 nea, Kearns of Brooklyn. inet 8) Mubon im the two star bouts ef rounds, lef handler of Joe Cox, Whe the latter gore the Chicago fighter, in it teu-rund bout at the Broadway Sporting Clit of Brooklyn tomorrow night. Cox has been taining with Dillon at Washington Dark, id Jack saya that if Cox doe not defeat Bren a0 he will be greatly surprised, A. ©. of Harlem has an at- accire cant of bouts for ita regular weekly box ing show to-night, Jimmy Dutfy, the west sue Nahtweight, will take on Johnny of Har hom in them the other ‘The Olympi event of ten rounds, ten rou will meet KK, Pa. Mealy bat wih outa Glready scored four knock. Marty Crone, the local welterweight other K. 0. to his list on Satur the Arverne Sporting Club by beating ‘Hing Nelson 90 badly that Referee Le the contest in the seventh round, In the other wan sonveat Jobuny “Lustig outvolnted “Founa) | ju added a1 Frankie Burns, the fast litte Jersey City | Vantemweight, aud Jack Sharkey, the promising weet de boaee vday by Bill rn mn event of ten rout at the nest show of the Hromu A, A, of fF Rockaway on Friday might, Burne bas tot fo A a few montis aad the reat vught to box at tay speed aga A Having come to the conclusion that Benny Leonard necda to do more fighting in order to wet his former good fighting shape, red to-day that more frequently in tired considerably in many bout with Vit Morap, which ty Of boxing. n selected vy Manager Harry My ibe same capwedy at the and Dillon at the of Brook ya on slabia has been Dominick ‘Tortoric), the premier fight iromoter of New Orleans, ‘The 94 who will clash in it age Johnny Fisse an | Kid" Herman, both of N | come together in a twenty | (orioh’s open air club on July 4. They | = Moa on of Doe Kyening World on No ta Yeung Saylor bout wae that _ TT, FINAL COLLEGE STANDING. )| " Vale Penney tvanin Ninn oP rans te Weal, PONY, 1918, by The Pree Pattieninn Jac, cence WENERT'S BREAST Bont WITH A PUNCH AND KHOCKED HIM OUT OF THe RING, MONDAY, JUNE 26, Tork venice World) on Bay Lene Lied To FiGnt Dion .IT'b So exciting & @, ~ 2 Nearly 100 Golfers to Play For National Open Title Hagen, McLeod, Kerrigan and Sargent Added Starters for Tourney, Which Opens at Min- | Jaccorded all the praise due a three- neapolis To-Morrow. HE twenty-second national open | champtonship will begin to-mor- row on the links of the Minikahda | Club at Minneapolis, Minn., when the | first half of the fleld which now num- | bers n ly a hundred will compete! in the first qualifying round. They thirty-sIx holes, the first ty-two qualifying, and then the | other half of the fleld will go through |the same process on Wednesday. | The sixty-four successful golfers jwill play in the seventy-two hole | medal play test which constitutes the championship proper on Thursday | and Friday, two rounds each day.! The maker of the lowest. total for those four rounds, the qualifying ( scores being disregarded, will be the) open champion of the United States | |for 1916, the title now held by that | great amateur golfer, Jerome D.) Travers, who will not defend it, | Walter Hagen, Fred McLeod, Tom! Kerrigan and George Sargent are} among those whose names have been added to the list since it was first announced, and if Macdonald and Alex Smith fall in line at the last mo- ment the entry list will be much more impressive, | ,,The fifth junior championship of the Metropolitan Golf Association will be played at Englewood to-morrow and Wednesday, The tourney is open to boys nineteen years old or under who |are members of or have playing privi- TO-MORROW’S PAIRINGS FOR INAUGURATION OF THE NATIONAL OPEN. George, Lafayette; tigen, Rochester: a a Geo Dickiomn Reid. Wictuaoad; W. Brady, Oakley: are Yor cari Anderson, 8. 20-1.60.— Wal "9261.65. — Viens Jha ieuter I a 9.30- 10 — Arthur x jichael Max, ers ris N, Robinson, Lincoln lug Av Hartsdale Mansfield; Dunnuedie; Oak Allvghe hh, Minneapolis; 2.4 1 Simowon ek diutchinan, Wark 1, hea 'G, Bush red.’ Rartach, Atlantic City, Ml iad, mbia, ©, Audubon 5 Mitchell: €, chirewond, Faron, wel x Mey % argue, Calumet; leges at any club which belongs to the | Metropolitan Golf Association, An | elghteen-hole qualifying round, quali- fication to be in eights, will be played to-morrow morning and the first match round will follow in the after- noon. The semi-final and final rounds will be played on Wednesday. Pennant’s Racein Brooklyn ieee But for Friar Rock Whitney. Horse Would Have Won Big Handicap, By Vincent Treanor, | i Brooklyn Handicap has come and gone, and which was the best horse in the race? Ten thousand will say the winner, Friar Rock, tipped by The Evening World, and other thousands will say something else, In the wriicr's opin » Pennant was far and away the better horse, although Friar Rock is year-old which can turn history up- | side down by winning both the Su- Jburban and Brooklyn Handicaps. Mr ock has run all season with remarkable success, He’ won the Imont and reversed the opinion of Jravegoers as to superiority over James Butler's Spur, but only few could hope that he could meet and | beat the best of the handicap divi- sion, he did Brooklyn Handicap, one race under his belt before the handicap it is likely that he would have been returned the winner. Friar Rock came from behind like |the game thoroughbred his breeding intended him to be; he overcame all | 8 Saturday in the If Pennant had kinds of racing luck and at the end} Joverran everything that most |favored at the s But for him} Harry Payne Whitney's Pennant] might have continued his record as | invincible, Pennant had the race won up to the last sixteenth, He it }was who forced Sand Marsh into submission and came on in the stretch in the gallant fasbion that Makes Him Great Horse only a thoroughbred can boast of. He outgamed Slumber II, when the latter looked all over the winner at the head of the stretch. M Joe Notter, with was in his system, the skill that ve Pennant to Puncwe Mave Moran Peevion. uy WE WENT AT @ILLARD LIWE A WILD MaAN WHEN HE Looe PALL IN " McGraw Picks Tigers To Win the Pennant In the American League: New York Leader Thinks the Other Contenders Are Red Sox, White Sox, and Possibly Washington, but Doesn’t Figure Yanks or Clevelands Have More Than Outside Chance. By John J. McGraw. (Manager of New York Nationals.) ‘ough luck, this prediction don't go.’ Dishing a great race thts tee ee ate ee oesity | eon. The showing that thé! near calling the turn. The only clubs Detroit Club has made in the last ere Pace with a Wiens: ve the nerican League were the Re couple of weeks is remarkable. Cobb! White Box Man Pigert. and poenliy is back hitting and going as the Cobb; Washington. Speaker has already of old. I pick the Tigers to win in|®#own he means many more than three games in the swee f a season the American League. I don't be- ne | HE American League 16 tur-ja leg or if 1 should run into a lot ot | down that $45,000 OME- “S TIMES an Utter Stranger Utters Too Pitvesn doliars for a Moran-Dillon ringside seat is kind of tough on the | bird who han all hie mond Wcnael | Inte nickels wo it will sound I therm negate, Vale Bt nth “rose Recently Dick Curley and John Pe eo kefelier both hit Parkersburg, W, on the mame day, The papers go! an earthquake extra for Dick oa he wanted to announce rival at the regular advertising natant tina THE ONLY TIME, Yale was even with the Harvard crew, But juat then the starting whistle blew! | Habit is a bad thing. Now the Ath- letics are making @ runaway race of it for last place, TMs has been a year of upsets. Firat | Fred McKay failed to torest Jess Wile | ard’e title away and then Pitcher Pere | ritt Alt a single. A hundred against one ie Mexican style of fighting. Five thousand against one ump is the Brogklyn fans’ style. Any umpire would be safe against the rush of a baseball mob if he took one of the insect powder shooters along with him. ‘Thie not only turns the mob back, but they don't die in the house, Lawson Robertsen will coach the | Penn eleven thie fall, but then Law on still hae July and August left to injoy himself in. No doubt Jess Willard will turn Labor Day offer. Small change Hke-that is similar to | shadroe. Hard te-eount and gets Into jone's hair. to any ball club, So far he has been lieve they will be stopped now, de- spite the double defeat of yesterday. “We've got a real ball club this | year, and we are going to make them hustle to beat predicted Ty Copb | confidently early this season, | Hughie Jennings has long been a great friend of mine. Said Hughie, before the race began, when he heard the Boston Red Sox had let Speaker Bo to Cleveland: “We ought to win the pennant now, The Boston Club beat us out by three games last season, and the Red Sox had iker then, Believe me, Tris means a lot more than three bali to any team through the run We should beat the Red] if we get any of the r strongest rivals, ng of the other teams in the league will mak Sox. Boston beat us last year hy wading through the ather clubs. We ‘ourselves could always beat the Red ‘Sox. Of course, if Cobb should break Entire New a ah American Team in Shape, and Thanks Over Senators the Club Is Only a Half Game Behind Cleveland. By Bozeman Bulger. ITH the entire team in shape, the wallopers hitting true to form and the lead just one- half game away, the Yanks are ready the front, and just when victory was|for the big drive, The four succes- Within his grasp Friar Rock ‘came | give victories over the Senators have along and spoiled the best exhibition]. ye more real courage and of jockeyship that had been seen | even them ability as a well tind in year Notter, hope-|confidence in their ability as 4 i beaten: at the head of the }organized machine than any one in- stretph, knew his horse and never he season § 1 doubt- stopped riding, Mix one idea waw to| cident since the weagon tite’ Yon te beat Slumber HL., which had ran with | fully back in April mm top oO! ie him practically trom the start. When] Fritz Maisel, one of the most reliable within the final sixteenth Pennant] yitters on the club, is in harness drew away from the Talbot horse, Notter's efforts on Pennant seemed crowned with well deserved success, The final sixteenth, however, showed another horse worthy of at- tention, Friar Rock hove in. sight when Pennant had nothing left, and the result was that he caught the Whitney colt, went to the front and The Hrooklyn Derby will Wednesday. li is a rave and a furlong for three-year-olds, Among the eligibles are Friar Rock, Spur, White Hackle, Mustard, Celan- an Churchill, Star Hawk, The Cock, be rur Smnith. aa DILLON-MORAN COMPARISONS, MORAN. of one mile ward, Achievement and George again and ready to be called upon if danger threatens. Little Fritz 1s so enthusiastic over the showing of the team, though, that he is perfectly willing to rest content and let the good work go on. This is the first time in many se#- passed him without any trouble. For f t m many pMhorse that hadn't started in two|sons that the Yanks have been a y the effort of Ponnant was most close contender for the pennant at | refect PALA DIe, ONG Nie POMOCMANGG | thig time, and the vlayers have li reflects credit on Jimmic Rowe, the \ ne hatute traincr of tie Whitney horse gun to realize their strength, The moves made by Capt. Huston and Col Ruppert last winter, when so many of the old hangers-on were shot along the minor league toboggan, They know that it takes real ball playing for a man to stick on the club now, and that for those who do there is a chance for a |share in the big money that goes with orld’s Series. All of these things served to weld shape and make it stand {n other words, the Yanks, as . have taken on a look of indi- It has color, is a real, dis- element now appreciate the n the club into tinetive $150,000 spent on the New American League Club may have been distributed foolishly in some directions, but it has vortainly served the one purpose for which it was tntended. It The York on't hurt us, because it! e them better able to beat the to Four Straight Victories, !training season, has been a bust, DAILY REVIEW OF BIG L’ 'Yankees Now Ready for Big Drit Drive Into First Place ad Pat “If the Cubs showed ait bie ya ve about as lively as an ant one u ie Most of the Cleveland team, which has made a better showing than any | hor aggregation representing that city in) years, and, incidentally, more money. Outside of the contenders I have named I don't figure anybody else with more than an outside chance in the American League race. By great luck the Yankees might bree: through, or Cleveland. Fielder Jones, to whom the news. paper writers of St. Louis had cor ceded the pennant during the spring cause he had too much talent to sort Whether !t's horning into base! 5 boxing or racing, some deadheads al- ways insist on matntaining their amateur standing. When you see Manager Herzoe talking to himself he ts merely baw!- ing out Player Herzog for turning an easy fly into a hard grounder, have changed. Ne-wadays eveland team departs, we Times when the ( out and because baseball ways fi know what we have lost unt! changed since he won the world’s! we 1 downstairs and count the championship with the White Sox in| spoons 1906, eee [can't figure Washington as nosing} qjnough Philadelphia's new sub into the championship because Grif- A not be campieted ton wi 'fith's club does not carry the batting iy nde be combi stoa fe strength, and Walter Johnson was bites yl pere ROBInac a rage always most of the Washington team, | t, Wjll be finished im plenty of time ta American Leaguers tell me the great | anal pitcher Isn't what he was two years 3 ago. Slim, Salle pecul, Copyright, 1018, by Wheeler, Ine.) mf ie Winker "hi" Son. EAGUE RACES ANSWERS TO QUEERIES. ants have about games. The boys may only work « half day on Christ- mas. eee Juff — Don't know which circus Fred Fulton is with, Circuses all mell_alike. SPORTING. _ has given the team a punch, the thing that has been missing since George Stallings was let out some years ago to make way for Hal Chase, An excellent ex ample of this was furnished Sat urday when 22,000 people saw Home Run Baker come within a run of tying up the score with a circuit wallop, Then Walter Pipp, the other slugger, came through in the eighth with a homer that won the game. In the earlier contest that same crowd saw Lee Magee make it clear just why the Yanks were willing to pay $25,000 for his release from the Cubs. STIRRING EVENTS TOMORROW INCLUDING THE 81,500 Canarsie Stakes Finan RACE, AT 2, The seven home runs lane Tenn Th AT see steal ve big league games Satur H ii a crimp in the advertis 1 pria various sorts fe Niky ren Wom, ‘ cuit wallops. It was a field ¢ tr ation ah) aeons oy the sluggers, That also is probably apirs a hitting record for one day of war- fare. The home run hitters were | — Baker, Pipp, Wheat, Konetchy, Sater, Pee We Neh St oar ratante f tig Paskert and Chase, Harvey ve, Duffey, aly ve. Ryan, Summer Clothes At Summer Prices Previous to stock taking we have made a number of interest- ing reductions, You can save from $5 to $15 on a suit if you buy now. There is a larger variety to select from in these “marked-down” fabrics than many tailors carry at mid- season. Notwithstanding the low price—fit, finish, and com. plete satisfaction are strictly guaranteed. SUIT TO MEASURE, $25 Blue serges guaranteed strictly fast color, $20. White or striped flannel trousers, $5 and up. Samples on request. Arnhetm | TWO STORES BROADWAY & NINTH STREET 30 €. 42D ST, BET. FIFTH & MADISON Paves. Exclusively Custom Made Clothes, $20 to $50