The evening world. Newspaper, June 30, 1916, Page 14

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TEE BVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JUNE 80, 1916. ; ee. DE.:\ BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK Wiersma COL DILLON DID THE HITTING AND MORAN THE CATCHING IN BALL PARK BOUT SHIWSFAST TRIAL) —sssecser= sibs ee anaes | Works Mile in 1.9048 in Prep. 44 & LUM HERING | aration for the Queens | priv y a | County Handicap, % | ea | Make Good f | By Vineent Treanor, | ball Timber | \ ‘4 — Ditton Whipped Moran as Thor- oughly as a Man Can Be Whipped Without Being Counted Out. mre, Yo Lig Bait RANK MOKAN stayed tau rounds 1th little Jack Dillon Inet ntent ‘That's ali that can be said for Moras. Dillon whipped him as thor. oughly a2 & man can be whipped wrk eounta for anything Home iner of the Marry Magna) & Whitney horses, han hertar than @ fair chance of taking down the purse in fe" twill reve the Queene County Handiens Ih) Jom Thorpe ty Horrow. Thie ataka, at @ mile, fe rua) hornemtend haw ber smorrow at Aquedect and Rorrow » wold owt nor lal tat » now allowed ft wviil te bee of our lehtwelgnte te on etee an Miaed bow lon te ahewn by hie final) fore w mile on the mata | Mase any track at Maimont Park in $4966 Tl ony ere tang of meacat soaked fractional parte were 1946, 466,| And nom "s f the Mew hotrlens 101 9-6, 1.16 and 1263-6. Morrow bad a Ie wher that the entra fed Without being counted out. He “Te win, wins b asead Wowld have a fat chance tne whipped Moran in the fitet round, Fuh OF DULONS GLOVES « heavy boy ia the enddie aad was eagle! the second—every round right up to and including the tenth. There wasn't | & single round In which Moran had a Ohinaman's e! Moran was out claneed so far that the affair wae a Joke. The only thing Moran showed Ot a! was a vast capacity for taking punishment. | At the end of the tenth round Dillon | equlomed with tiinkers, “ ln Cy Norrow will have strong opposition! Rolite Zieder batted sleven times ow = RING = 4s some fast horses will make wp the | Wednesday and got no hite ages flcld. Among them is F. EK. Hone’s | that be has his old eye back four-year-old Band Marsh, a WH't-| tase gene gasoline was tourtees ney cast-off by the way. In Hand cents a gal. Marsh's final work for the race he eee waa sent a mile over the Aqueduct| Now It ts thirty rants @ gal MAJOR LEAGUE RESULTS AND STANDING OF CLUBS tional Leng 1 track in 1.40 flat, the fractional parts! Chorus of motorists singing, “ Wil was as cool and unflurried as if he'd N PC. | Clee. - a rele. On mice 2 & re, Doing quarter 181-6, three-aighthe I had my old gal again, « ’ AT6|| 8. Yorn ooton ...83 96 8 5 01 2-6, at been simply sparring with bired ‘an. a7 Hi eet | Gaeve € Hy EH O56 | Ietrott 94 81 on Loved ann apie aeerel sk de ‘ fr What Connie Mack needs to a tet of doing an ordinary day's work Clortardl $2 94 -487]| Wash. 94 se «440 |e Louie. #2 86 468 furlongs +6, seven-eighths, 1.3% | ambidexterous fans who can cend tg Bie quarters. There wasn't @ mark ines spypep tl tated at aah victory in the! With either hand An echo of Chick ‘ But Moran-—the sorrel-topyed Results of Games Yesterday. Brooklyn Derby, whe: colt snowed | Mansger Me on) vy coping terror who knocked big Jim Coffey fork, ©. (10 game). | New York, 6: Pi great improvement equlpped With Tale"yame wiilou: geiting mt ot Cosme out twice and fought back when Jess Rew York, 2. (3d game) Waakingion, 3 ° |Diinkers, after quitting in two previ- | Willard hurled 259 pounds of beef and ; lenis, 2 1 Clevetant, 6. ous races, when he didn't have the) BATTING ORDER. bone at bim through ten rounda— Moran was a sorry sight. From bat- tered eyes and noe and mouth Tork. @treame? the red banners of defeat. | Bie forced grin was gone. He had| entered tho ring filled with a conceit | that made bim laugh—at first—when was hilt. He left it grim, silent, | “Ter ona Shur “MoRA CouLd LAND ons opelessly beaten man. erre Financially the fight was not 4 suc- CURLY WAS DILLON'S THEE cess. The promoters said that in| —~ ——-—— sae en = spite of the large attendance the gat hood on, is the announcement that) hercafter changes in the equipment of | Francia Oulmet’s stilt a pro, horses must be reported to the atew-| Then of course comes Mexico, ards and posted on the blackboard at] Furope ts a’ hitting third, the judges’ stand, Woodrow ta the clean-up bird, The Quincy Stable method of getting, 7ed4v's batting number Ave, even for the boosting of their Chat-| Strth ts Villa atill alive? x Wednesday was shown yester-| Number acicn ts Frank Goteh, day when the imported horse Benevo Palm Beach suits are in cighth notoh, lent, which ran second to Kilkean Wind an all-star casts oy, was claimed for $1,096 in the eens 62 on ee ae Games To-Day. New York as Bowen Looks as Though New York Votes for women batting laatl rece'pts failed to cover the guar-) 2 e e Hey of Johnny Moran, ho was rep- cnmants 2... Dillon-Moran Bout Drew $28,521|( Fistic News Is Going to Monopolize |*"***" wee a criiga ORATOR ET it Was nearly 11 o’clock when the ueee Winning a 2-y ’ Ky to be a daily habit with Trainer) by, spraining the dome on a Next World’s Series) sive’ 2 %re tins cones p aw siding tg tre am Id. We main bout went on. In the semi-final Gus Christie, Dillon's sparring part- t The gross receipts of the Jack Dillon-Frank Moran bout at Wash- ington Park, in Brooklyn, last night were much leas than the promoters and Gossip stable, Yesterday it was Marte Odile, , fois “Mote taeate, yeu kia had igri there being only 628,621 taken in. The tickets were eold for By John Pollock _ And she won, ike most of Midgoly's | Bom bey by eho ian ap advantage in physique, which || the battle a» follows: juveniles do, in a gallop. Although | tie gars an he hat. Chriatie offset by a very considerable 496 at 615. + 67,440 00 Jack Dition, the legitimate isnt} With Yanks Increasing Their Lead in American League and| Marie Odile was making her frat |The technical name is flatwheelue of advantage in brains. 178 at 10 1,780 00 heavyweight champion, who decisively rf 4 t she broke from the barrier lke | ee cerebrum, The victim should eullgran's welxht was announced ag 356 at * 2'670 00 defeated Frank Moran of Pitteburgh, te Dodgers Still Holding Upper Berth in National, the Outlook Is a veteran and tintoed her fold ail the | O08 GF the hot aun, and. wel 04 unds stripped, Dillon's as ' ; . y. dgely Ww. 0 , ‘ ney Bytettine toyz obouk Wee ebpet: | ygap at 144 op [inet ara too avon and cnener in| Promising for the Holding of the Championship Battles Here] fe onancen.” sr nait she would be! aCatiny"af the abu. “Eor here was a difference of approxi- . 7 Moran, Ditio nd goed in the Fall tcarce as soap in Villa's army. twately forty pounds. Moran was in 492 at + 1,476 00 bape in, nm signed articles of agree- . but had his doubts about her stick- ph 4 i * @292 t calling for him to fight Fireman ing it out to the finish, = fitch. Wko“in white running pants, Tishinees Behari Jim Flynn of Pueblo, Col, « fifteen- By B In the midst of a confusing scramble| 3x0. Hirsh’ fnnily put Murphy ANSWERS TO QUEERIES, He didn’t smile, scowl! or display any \ccetticcecale round out at Dewey, Okla., on the af- 'y Bozeman Bulger. in the second game the Philies per. |Wver after having him in pickle for | wWeempul——Fact that fou are @ Pro symptom of interest in the ring sure Total... se $28,621 00 ternoon of July 4, Dillon ts to receive a HEY may beat our Glante—yes,| formed the rather unique feat of put-|#ome time. This three-year-old has ‘fessional runner shouldn't keep you hee ee ee Btate received (7% per cent. of arose receipts) . .$2,139 07 Guarentee of 92,000, Dillon snd bis they can even do it twice—but| ting the same runner out twice in the| developed very satisfactorily since out of the navy, You can’t run away last season and evidently he bhasjon the ocean. manager, Sam Marburger, learned to stick. He smothered hia Neer 4 ke It/#4ue inning on two distinct pla thare's) nobody going to ta) compelling them to get four men be HE fight began—as they always’ | away from those Yanks—bless ‘em—| ¢, } ¢ field with speed yesterday, was never Zibb—That wasn't sea lions. It was battle. | fore the Glants were retired. Benny ret Pades! 4 ‘ art rer ee do—with a clang of the 60M€ 1.4.) beating Moran to waste time on|the ring, pelt “ Sada all down there in Philadelphia by’ Kauft was on secord and Robertson | pushed at any stage of the race and the Roston fans roaring over and an expectant silence all tere detalla® thing Dut ther Decker in the, cooverys |+ Benny Kautt, the Gisite' test outfelder, was themselves und getting a stronger! on first when Doyle hit to the inricid| won In & gallop by four lengths, Speaker's sale of the biggest winners ou Dillon's victory, and a double play was attempted. around the ring. Dillon immediately | <i as Joo Humphreys says. The crowd |e toe hold on that pennant every minute, ° rot Re sop, but Nel- walked into Moran and began hitting PN the whole third round Moran {began to laugh at Moran, and Jin | tanueat that he woud et the seeouer vectee | THCY are missing the plaudits of the Maedeithta hedteirows ioctree sate bim. After a minute or two people| J landed two clean blows—right- eee brend bod toward MO, TO- | that he wagured $2,000 at eveu money ov hie) homefolk, missing the round table! Kauft scored. In the meantime Rob- began to wonder why Moran didn't!” handere on Dillon's ribs, And Dil- | (1 oftly: “Suy, what d’ you | chances, Kaulf wauted to bet $2,000 more, tut| dinner and everything but—you got|@rt#on, not knowing that he was out, hink of that? Can you beat it? rt ol "9 d wher e de something. Moran smiled his #u-|lon, his blue eyes blazing, laughed in] Wry, that guy hasn't made m foint | Bet et Lis money co to hand it to “em—they're playing | KePt 6m running, and when he tried ie Abalded,, | | Afar the fire wand was rey Bil) Brows, the baseball as ghe should be played t0} play and got him at the plate. It took } Wa S$ Ss a pfointin: m0" eree and physical culture director, tj 5 i A ee iryp daa as and exclaimed: “Wag, | H2V@ @ world’s championship decided | ‘hei fully five minutes to ‘understand ae - fecal by the way, was the best thing he did Ho butted Dillon repeatedly. Referee | of the State Atuletic Commianion, climbed thr 4 With Jack Coombs doing a big in the flight. Ho. “bided his time,”| In the fourth round Moran tried | Hinkel looked at ‘Dillon anxiously, |he some the inal sctereee, eho tet that cay (single afternoon the Yanks went! nore of the pennant work for the was to send Dillon “kicking. & ton low. ‘Tee crc et : f y a sexuc it loose. It was a slaugh- (his blows off in mid-air and tossed | lon 10} crowd hooted, The Harlea Sporting Club will hold boxing | With first place, the Dodgers con-| for the Phillies, ¢ onale Mack ts bes show to-night, To teu-round bouts and a epecial | tinued the wear the cat-and-canary| #inning to understand why i benches, the Giants have not look like a punching bag. Dillon was |ed and outclassed. As a fighter he | story to the bis town, 7 . Hi th h n'a body, by the way, hungloutclessing him at everything, out- | was a joke. in wil clash with Ally Kennedy in the othe | But how is a team to bring glory| Killed the batting Jins. = He even ou P Incidentally, he was just beginning, fessional battle, life yesterday, and McGraw is om fat, 3 the saying !hiia, Jack “as cool, businesslike and rattle, a a * oe eetited an’ unctuous | busy Aa a bill collector, ‘There was |to realize it, He tried to work up the| my mrowa A, A. of Fas Rockaway will stage | RIXEY with @ telescope, can’ even) put to his wits’ end to think up sell it Moran was|tried to hang his welgnt on Little Corte i ning. Frankie Bums of Jerey City will go | Jinx? — $$$ rr , rare wee| Dillvn, and Dition only slammed him |Goncy Osbls. He rushed and fought ered. all one could ask, ORAN was grogry in the eighth, ; | | | | } t ' Dillon and cast wise side glances at|/and around the ring. It was all Dil- " e o r Burns had been put out before the Frank took himself very seriously) walked to his corner after the round|to nit him. And_ Dillon, offering, no | He was In wuch bet ee , - as a popular favorite, and that he} his manager, Sam Marburger, asked | resistan laughed in Moran's syed Wittard than be te to. trouble started. Most of the crowd Dillon had held his jaw out to receive wild, The crowd was beginning to ‘lub to the tour winds, Cone iy the Sent might Dave onde ings, | mush at Moran and cheer the Little pee ee ae, | waaie Clif will take on Cau! Deze io tbl happy after all, Everything, but one, | niet Fee eee eer At n wasn't do 01 . | aah ‘ } Dil | main go, whilo in the set 3 o He merely. raised” both urins and | a Pedy ety you make Bi lon was trying hard for a knockout, | will hook up with Young Mritt, Anthony Me- |Seems to be breaking -ight. Looks) Baker has batted the Yanks Into the stopped Frank's fst a foot away froin ne Ot i ded a loft'and {and only Moran's bulk helped im| ote snd dobuay Loach wil cas in we ape like there's going to be no war and] (cow. ane thn Md Dot fee Amending Sa eae ae eee tine ropes /tWo bard righty on Moran's Jaw, and through. “Aoki him, Jack, he'll Jump |"! Se a the baseball crowds are getting | UP sy ithe big fellow reeled away from him c A good card of bouts has been While the P! were killing "t go ® expected to walk right over the litte | anxiously: “Can he hurt you, Jack?” |and caught his swinging fists with his | qWnen Matt Hinkel of Cleveland, who was oe | those revit xnaled ar Hii ae we fellow. Ho “bided his tim That, ‘aid Dillon. extended hands, Moran was wild. " t Ta ee eee ee feo aig [cut of the ring,” chortied a Dillon : hy . ehifted |and leaned i nes. a te fe Morun turneidaintully out over tho! fourth round and Moran was groggy. | Packer. Moran didn't jump, He tried lected to referee the vout by Chairman Wenck | Giants with a two-ply smash tn a ‘And Dillon bit him in the|In the fifth Moran was beginning to | to Nght, but he was weak, wild, wind- bigger every day. The “one thing’ that there are not three major leagu Even with their new green so that the Giants could also bring} screen and their change of slamming him lustily with both hands. Matchmaker Kirk for the regular w on perior emile, turned up his nose at| Moran's face and drove him around |{n seven rounds!” Corbett subsided, | After the fit round the spectators, It was evident that|lon, from the start, When Dillon beat him back against then ond teieg | Morea fe 1 right here in Now York. And that's| Why there were not three men out, poising for that devastating wallop! and tried, and Dillon calmly picked | And Dillon laughed. Moran hit Dil- | naa bern slighted, watched him very critically, right on famillarizing themselves) Dodgers, and Chief Bender a standby Ft U RKES ‘ | his clenched gloves aside, Moran w: Jap—an annihilating slam. If ed gloves aside, Moran was i f terous slap—t bout will be staged, In the two teu-rounder, | smile and Manhattan {s not so un-|iarvelled when he scattered that ght belt in'& greasy fold. |! boxing, outtighGng and outpunching teu-rounder, This will Le Goldstein's fit pro | when they can't find Eppa Jeptha| showed signe of returning te most places jno dodging or avoiding him. Moran |“red rage” that won for him in two ite rauisr weekly boxing cntertainueut this eve- |SWat Chief Bender and can't kill the) gnother plan of destruction. " ainst Willle Brown, the bantamweight of tie hoe a9 yam a pied to his heated visage, while Dil-|barde, Moran's fako smile was gone | Urlously, And Dition beat him on oe te tes ae tis Of ton een thee Until a careful squint is taken Y EXCLUSIVELY Hone grimly cain and. aeliberate, mac{now, ite Was very Weary. He tried | head and body and drove him back. — | hé¥ routs, wil lao bs couteated, Mev takes | ae the oficial standings this | : f cross the way and wiped hls ‘face |to box. Villon danced around Bim) In the last round Moran tried to fin- ‘he » G morning one can't exactly real- | with a towel. That was all Dillon|like a Commanche dancing around a ena ae e just what the Yanks have | b Induiged in. after each succeeding | prisoner atthe stake, And Moran |i" It with @ spurt, He was game to Labo Kueeks Ost Walts, Houde Vnatand of @ Rall game 1h round. [Was as helpless as a man with hia {8ht it out He rushed Dillon to the} MPRIDEN, Conn,, Junc 30,—Battling the lead they cling to that to; | i In the second Moran must have|hands ted roves, wiUgging fast, Dilton outfourht | tann, the Brooklyn bantamweight, ald - nto re that he being). Seventh round wiped and ontslugged him with ease, The | ("” : , i "1 rung by a full game und @ half : SS i Pefpeds for he struck Dillon. bolow face with a towe pee tat | little giant, tryluds demperately to stop | KuoeKed out Sainmy Walls, the feather-1 over Cioveland and considerably WHITE LABEL The leadi } the belt ‘several times. = -ferec Matt his seconds gave t ang (the big fellow who towered over him, | WelKht cha.nple. of Connecticut, in more over others who call theme Tne S¢oTcH of Orsay Aga @ leading Too t Hinkel skipped around t if any swig from a bottle full of light yellow , Struck out with redoubled fury, Aud{eleventh round of a scheduled Afteen:| serves contenders. Do you real } amaze was done, out Dillon paid no liquid, Moran began fighting wildly, | Moran, reeling, grim, hopeless, was}round bout here last night before the} ize, dear fan, that every other beverage of the attention to the blows. He was too Dillon pushed the big man around At staggertug bi Lenox ' A Ci jin the eleventh round! club in the first division lost? } s . man tn the fight| Lahn battered his opponent around the a ila Y Id | iM The last boll|body, when suddenly he changed his| Do you realize that the Yan world — H 1 the carnage. Dillon walked | tactics and with a Well directed right can lay off a day, lose a game— ———— the| hand knocked Waltz out for the full] or anything—and still be up y to his corner and wipe roils tion from. his face with « ea ena there smiling? Remember, Cleve. For Jack It was fust an- ‘ rege land, Detroit and the Red’ Sox alt other day's work, Ply Uroumisy Adm hoeadve’ | took’ the count. Bottled by E.& J. BURKE, The delightful thing about this hi Me oe P 7 . sudden rise of the Yanks to power is that the other clubs are taking them seriously. There is no longer oceasion tor jest and ribaldry, The T cynical smile that once freshened up yey Pease te RENT ET -- R e e| Training Trials at Local Tracks ; JUNE 29—TRACK FAST. |the facen of Lee Font Nl Covviean 5000Great i . Themainstay of our business is the ‘ Jand Hughey “Jennings is now’ a The$! reatAmerican . rs ' Paw al verloua couestn. ‘The Yanks man who guards his drink no less } Mevicutt gts smu sehares, ae any | The Queens Co, Handicap carefully than his food j i OR EASOM hatte: have played more consistently than A 2-Mile Steeplechase y ‘ood. TAREAS TA thevera [any club in the American Learue b That’ W Py : i inn wh "ehaycnt fede And $ Other Good Races at’s why we put WILSON in the i | ake the Captat 7 [pre henraginar ie make Cie capa | Non-Refillable Bottle—so that the } | not buy a lemon in the buneh, | wi e man always gets the same i | ay wt ' |" One of tho most notable nitching Ate re *e * * i perforinance ofthe aeanon was that | Bianchy ae || deliciously mild, mellow Whiskey . lof Eppa. Jeptha xey in the first | bw tr, f game of the Giant-Philly double! AND STA —Wi — - IMPORTED : Fest“ Se lt tt ah ee anywhere_he goes Wilson— Real ' ae i not one of t de 4 y + TooNight. 2 52 . —_ j aes Je fm 1a @ [page ope of fe men, Dune muse m Caus [mow Gate Avate Sestuenn# Bi, eile Wilson—That's All! WON GUS Hilt Oh ang qilatters: 11%. |throughout the gamo. The four of] Sooo ‘ 4 neren ightlia,” a3 them were either thrown out stealing nN ie x L ats hae her th 1 Pe. Tee: ison Ave if | TB6cn Bt. be The Whiskey for which we invented the Non-Refillable Bottle or retired in double plays. This gave Rixey what Is considered a perfect | game; that Is, just treniy-seven bat- as Order by the Dozen ¢rom your Wine ant or Grocer ce? had Fg ; HARLEM 6; i) \\ y own, | nie i for Use at Home fit? Babs tera faced him, the smaiiest number Parry Hicks, @_ rouinda,” FREE CLUB RECIPES—Free booklet of famous club recipes for Bietita? 1.04, [pesaible ina full game of wine Ine ahs Way el BANG Bah. mixed drinks, Addrese Wilson, 311 Fifth Aveg N.Y, Thpt’s Allt

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