The evening world. Newspaper, June 25, 1919, Page 18

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“3 at % WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 1019. Seen EVENING WoRLD, BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK DUST TALK WITH CADDIES INDICATES WAY GAME IS GOING _ By Thornton Fisher IN 20 GAME GIVES ( Copyright, 1919, by the Prous ing C0. (The New York fvening World.) : i | ; THEM EVEN BREAK | | Giants, However, Roughty © Treat Three Brooklyn « » TWirlers in Opener. By Richard Freyer. IGHTEEN hits in the secon@ , game enabled the Dodgers te’: break even in the double header with the Giants at Ebbets Fiel@ ~~ ‘The games were the first since both teams came back from their trip around the circuit and a record crowd of fans greeted the players. In the first contest Fred Toney wae on the mound fér the visitors and he outpitched three Brooklyn twirlers, Cadore, Cheney and Smith, He was INSTEAD OF WHISTLING TO KEEP HIS" Seqars7UP nepthae’ sunaaaate Wen some des faa, rothe rs, wi ur runs THE QUFFER. SHOOTS CONVERSATION Ar HIS CADDY> eerees the slate, two move than the Dodgers. Toney was in good form, His fast one was a mystery to the home players and his underhand ball was baffling. The sunset affair was very differ+ ent. At the beginning umpires Har~ rison and Byron did their gosh derndest to make the Giants winner, but the Brooklyn ball tossers rose on [eheir hind legs and smote the offer- ings of Jess Barnes all over Mr, Hib« bet's ball field for @ total of nine | runs. Harrison was officiating beq h{nd the plate and in the second tna } ning he called Hy Myers eut when the Dodger, from all appensances, Was as safe as a Liberty Bon& Byron evidently wanted the fans to know he was also in the game when in the Nor THE ORIVER- You MTree Local Owners of Havre de ace Track to Dispose of Holdings to Maryland eat Gere, 1010. by Toe Prem Publicis Oo, ‘ne New York Evening Work), HE Havre de Grace race track, one of the most popular of the Maryland Circuit, owned die Burke, the former book- and several other New York- by Ba maker, time this Maryland Horsemen's Associa- WILLARD WON'T TAKE JEFF'S EXPERIENCE AS A WARNING ampion Has a Joke Staff of Trainers and Refuses to Do ~ we © aw + heat ‘ ‘ z : ay? if -| player made himself solid with the means persons looked upon icion, Toledo promises to |: ~ | for the Delaware State championshi SIDE from winning the ball |0f how the Yanks can win the pen- | pi Peter aseces dantentty, one: keeh the town Gloaned out Wile the sitrs Hae Wik ee Gel eiented (ar -Witanonon ie the aeee game and doing another giant /Tterg 1a the idea! The Yanks have | immo ascepted. eightacs “chests \ right fleld bleachers in. the seventh | Norris Wijjiains, former national ain- 3 Here is the idea: The re | Jimmie accepted eighteca chances erowd of visitors is here, oe the first pitch by Robertson, his|&!es champion, and Harry C, John- swing on the top rung of the|several more games against weak | without a slip and played the bag els to Charge $25 a Room. #0) form mixed clubs at the Polo Grounds while the | like a veteran, teh: Will ‘ ng each other. pn these ad- Profitesring is going on in great style. Hotel Toomns, that peo ee Coen Tana estan she offerings | mOleh Piledeiphia tn straight Riz |the second defeat of the Athletics. |versaries are through with that kind | winning pitcher. He twitlad in cood yn ogo y Sinn aniank aay. to al Sotala but it does apply to ®"4 won from Pittsburgh, 9 to 2, at 6—2, ¢—3, ile Johnson elimi-| While these Athletics, mere remind-|°f fighting they also have to tackle | style and allowed the Giants but five oul nated Harvey Lak " other strong clubs in the West, while | hits and three runs. In the first ‘the big ones. Cigars, cats and some other things have gone UP ine ncanon yee eee Tht one yee | delphia, at Set eee, 120 Of Phila-lers of former greatness, furnish nice | over sirons, clubs in the Went, white game Mitchell batted for Cadore tm and the taxi drivers expect to take a harvest on the Fourth that Cornell, Cuddy Murphy, in the box | MISCELLANEOUS, pasturage for feeding ball clubs, they |Colonel figures, should give Huggins | the fifth inning and slammed the third stanza he called Hal Chase safe ot ni ’ : i ey got it cheap,| Road Work—Believed Now Dempsey Will Be Favorite at Raa besa takaed "occ bE taaloan Ti Face course, Ring Time—Tate Says Challenger Is as Rough as the At- fore he touched the bag. T'was @ 5 popular with , raw decision and the fans objédted goers. vociferously. . The games were featured by all e B k thi. t . sorts of phenomenal plays. Iietcher, World). who shortstops for McGraw, made TOLEDO, Ohio, June 25, EVENING WORLD'S OWN SPORT. HISTORY. Quinn lan s A (4 ics, some wonderful one-hand stops of is growing -~ REL SHER the utvenee unis ; Wh il P ke K Ui hard hit grounders and was easily the fielding hero of the pastime, | sing saat of te Mager 0 What Happens Every Day ule Fee. 1, en, APRA ong ae Pe Berm promoters ° ° ws home team, backed up to right field i ; Cae Tt ation, [ee BA ne SE SPER fOr the nl wots, to win} His Batting Rampage fence in the first game ana made @ { * men, pickpockets ‘and | trom the White Sox by Suid Wala Twilight saved 8. Howard Voshell . great catch of Young’s hard hit BAVS COM Jour, 3 to.6, Cnadlilty’ to bit 1a) Re | tele Seer oe ele on ORES ether to puit| mash. Ho had to check hitnselt as Toledo, and with the bunch already centred here they ha’ making | pinon, thi he Ki County Lawn . , disturbing thought is whether he reached the fence, and turning ‘ hold-upe have been busy and mneak | Pncne When tay na ee vi |Genais Club, Brooklyn. ‘the’ tamous | ONCE Great Team From Phila- for cieveland or Chicago in the baitie | Ne. res gtabbed the ball in his gloved iting away with hotel guests’ cloth- teanl bet rirregted italy and Gard- jermandec, an one ot the te | hid delphia Easy Picking for the |€°l™s om out West. ‘ Aasal ir pockets, * 0 own ns! ringing all his Samant Consequently the Toledo City Counc yesterday determined that ‘To- | PF, cost Chicago the game. te | trades Der. The taster hela! chiefly League Leaders. De ie Lar er Gert play, fol-| Jimmie Johnston covered second | gould no longer be safe for crooks, domestic or foreign. An ordi-\ , 1he reer Ph Ren By gerd te | a is opponte lowing a conference with Munro 145, |¢or the Dodgers, and while he did not for the arrest and detention of “suspicious Which had beet coiabliched in’ the| All of the. favorites won their By Bozeman Bul; Bill Slocum and other noted atatiall: | sow to advantage at the bat the . | Taking the intent rather than the wording of this, “suspicious gevenin against Roberson and. gie_| Matches in the annual tournasreat uv eer. clans, has given me s blue pi i rf i 3 eS ! i field wall for the cir- ite rt of the year (whiskey running) look for the Green, held the Ithacans to Pol are as colorless as rainwater—the |u very big lead before the Yanks start | pill dver right . SicEeven dinate reserves for his tee an rb in Nek Minter cfie. tert ten otill he obtained in obene five hits, “Willie Kopt was the bat. hiadoueese ann V rorleoeh id national beverage beginning next |<! ® hike which will take the greater | cuit. Ho was changed with three b- ng. star bree 4 ‘werk, the same as Basham’s end, and ities at four bits a shot, They call this traffic t-legeing,” prob- sinbien of the day wi wl clubs, the piping Rock and other clubs | Wednesday. lead, which they will certainly need.| and secured two more hits for him« the stuff tastes as if it were made in a boot, George Kelly, the Rochester slug- ot Long Island witnessed at Meadow- Jack Quinn had a pleasant after-|to carry them through the Western | self. hotels are rapidly filling with newspaper writers, artists, pho- | gor Pstabished batts ord Prook An umusually hotly contested | noon, pitching a shut-out game with- | Whirl, they should then be in position from all over America. The scene is becoming wens hit four ome runs over t eck toe he ey 2 Piping |out getting up a sweat. o win the pennant. ‘There should be| Grimith was the batting hero of thts -~ ” 4 Dodi r fread oe rincmlrg al yale ot a fence’ in, succsesion, truck gut one* | Piping Rock beat the Rock jay Tan| Our champion hitter, M. Roger (ro,,7Meulty in them holding their | contest. The Dodger ow local exci ent abou dese ay | i &F f li : Ld 7 i . if) i lot ved thoreuatsbrelid hia ot 11% foals to 10, Pekingpaugh maintained his great-|White Sox ‘and Indians wilt Then he 1a sate twat on all the trips. A home 2 greg third since old| Jess Willard, it is said, holds out firmly for Tex Rickard as referee, He TP, {he Plate. | ile four home| Twenty-one thoroughbred year: ness by making two hits out of thres lone long sod {rip and" up ‘aeciopt | tune ‘one double and. three singles. ge he knows Rickard is absolutely on the level. Jess thinks some of the |Heiananty, Bob Lowe and Dan| 9&8, the property of John N. Cam. | technical trips to the plate. He mad Na. J their hardest grind of the year. In| The circuit clout came in the eighth for that office are about as square as a stove jess | it | |Brouthers, Rochester easily defeated den and John H. Morris, sold by|two other untechnical trips, but one |other words, now {s the time to build |inning with the bases clogged, and HE [ Hi i | i of thi Read’ George Bain, the auetioneer, at Dur-|of those resulted in a base on balls |up the surpi It i ed, tremendous biow to centre lous iP ‘plus, t is an ge in the} was a 4 SaiGeranes ‘esdiotéen up against the rough edges of things until he is as suspic! fending Ry B 200 ee ae 10 eens | fand’s, brought $43,476, Mr. Camden's |and the other ina sacrifice hit. which |element or chance and schedule that | field, On this wallor Tommie trav- yw as @ cat in a dog kennel. Meanwhile the Board of Boxing Control has | Hustlers Bite for a total ¢ Offerings consisted of the first of the| do not count against his anti-Ty-Cobb |should last all Ise | elled around the bases faster than Jen followed though Major Riddle is still missing as a| bases, Rightflelder See and Third | hate di galas peer pay Colles epee Methataaitie’ dt acca A re 4 Benson, and Johnny Whalen been represented on the ground, al Baseman Nagle odded hom ume | ket sof Light Brigade, a celebrated | record. breaking even. « 8 FU Islander tances—wh'ch is go a him. Now Dick Miller has assumed part of the fight scenery, and mysterious conferences have been the order Jersey. City defeated Binghamton English race horse and @ succeasful| The Yanks smashed the two Ath-| Somehow that sounds as simple and| ing some—but he breezed in ith fob, and from present outlook : & g g ze re 4,|si7e In Great Britain, to be sold in|letic pitchers for twelve hits and|plausible as the argument of a gen- | plenty to spare. focal Boxing Commission has done just as I sald it would do a|itve hitn counied Withee ase § 24:| this country, One of these, a chest. |nine runs, tleman who tried to sell me a set of =| nut cold out of Wild Thistle, was| All of which goes to show the Hug-|books, but—well, do you under-| Bennie Kauff seemed to have great fn erg’ yotfiolal wake othe psd peg Nea pao Bee ae he ent inlet eeigtitht IRs | sola to Walter M. Jeftords for $10,000, [gins ourst is° moving alone tote lcema' its aimculty in centre field. Ee played Peoord, This Carignan od 8 coment ce fice ra as a handler and |Skeeters to overcome the visitore’ | the top price of the sale. nicely toward @ pennant, Their only several fly bale with Vid judgment ten Connery qhyes® AP hoead onthe "Wiese meecns’ torte nothing | !ead. | Jersey City led all the way iu Had it not deen for the ninth inning| and had trouble handling the lino trainer of boxers. eco! eam this column Was all ready to announce | drives hit out his way. In the fourth against his record of past performances, and the only objection to his big teat ory of its tyrelve hits that Jack Quinn allowed but one run- | inning of the final game the Giant serving, ao the managers of the boxers say, is that he isn't known outside | eount in the scoring, Detroit defeated nér to reach second base, and that | midget was made to work hard. The of Toledo, and that he hasn't been referee of any bouts of importance in| St. Louis, 8 to 4 The game was af ; i iH 8 a a8 2 I ; i i 5 waa on a steal. Unhappily, though, ae AYR Ronee bat acy thls " the Athletics got a free walk, a bit | stanza . the past. The fighters don't know whether or not he could be trusted to |featured by | the heavy hitting of pci, Py GOLF SCHEDULE. tnd a’ atolen fate ine the Testirork: |every one of the cloute Bgl good udgment in giving a decision if the contest 1s at all close, How. |Flagstead, Ainamith and Shorten, : TO-DAY—Junior ‘Metropeli and one runner, Witt, reached third. j ever, this could be covered by the appointment of two judges to decide | After the Cubs had won the frst Thirteen. Vear-Old Lad Wins His Champlonship at Biwencnn MC : GOLFERS TIE WITH 76 ' upon the winner, which, after all, is the safest and fairest method of | hitting Sallee hard, Cincinnati evened First Match in Junior Cham-| Vernon. Final rounds. ™ ‘ of os giving a decision in any boxing bout, big or little, it up by wists aa second. aw Met. Intercoll Championshi 0. IN QUALIFYING ROUND. H - playing erro Lr] Lr ler’s - y ff isnt champion Pets Herman, ua| Jess Has No One Who Will Give Him a Real Workout. fine pliching, “ihr struck ‘oat ten| Plonship Tourney of the Met-! at Merion Cricket Club, Philadel STANDING OF \ offer of $5,500 for Herman to meet Joe Lynch, the international boxing ys phia. Second d NEW ORLPANS, La., June 25.—Bb ‘The workouts at the oamps were rather slack yesterday, At least | Ten 4nd made a three'base hit which -ropolitan District. i ve the Rede their second run. Tyl Club Champienshi lis Knowles of Pensacola, and Nelson thin was the case with Willard. The gvhole trouble with Jess \s that he|pitched a full game for the Brat time at Plainfield, N. J. Seoond mate THE CLUBS Whitney of New Orleans, were tied YO: MORROW — Annual Apa- can give him a workout, He needs a man like Joe|in a month and did well, E As a result of the qualifying test and for low medal score in the qualifying | ado erg pany fellow, who gta his punches and let him gut loose | Tennis, frat round of match play in the Junior) wamig” Club invitation tourne. NATIONAL LEAGUE. round of the first day’s session of the i without spoiling the whole show. If he had men like Bill Brennan, or two| 1» tho tonnis championship mateh | championship tournament of the Metro-| ment, Rye, N.Y. Qualifying | ohm Wat. Pc.) Cwm Southern Ce Tournament here. { fn order to secure Herman's signd-| or three good, tough heayyweights who are in condition to fight in the ring, |at Wimbledon, Willis Davis of Cali- |Politan Golf Association at the Siwanoy| round, iota cn ale Knowles and Whitney turned in cards tare to a set of articles, Bcdie Mead,| jt would be much better for him, Willard is so huge, powerful and heayy,|fornia beat P. M. Davson, England.|Country Club, G. A. Bomanw jr. of| rag oie Sibes Beeer gbee3 “ a . Bobby Jones, Cinelomati ...82 20 615 | St. Louts.. of seventy-six each. the he hits so hard and gives his men such a gruelling when he works as|'The score was 6—%, 6—T, 2—€ | Plainfleld will clash with J. Berrien of! = i a, Soreniv seis. seeks BODby bonus he ought to work, that he has worn out hi aff of sparring partners, 6-2, 6—2, Clarence J. Griffen of] Upper Montclair in tHe semi-final round, the last place in ti championship 25 620 | Boston ...... third with 77, and Reuben Buen ae yt. Bere ah ew, ane, ae ed with | aang, Ca wet. Ward of! white 1. Tobin of the New York Golt | won.” ree, 5 ee my RO GAMES YESTERDAY. New Orleans, former Southern cham 4 anemone cme moa ‘7d ons bin Geneguern ne Siryee caren He Kowa every mavecuent.at Mone- ee ak aa Princeton | US Wit meet Peter Harmon, repre: |iow ‘lad was beaten by Tobin at 6 up ; Brookiye, 2 (first game), pion, fourth, with 78. Heavy rains § a} the biggest bantam attractions|han just as if Monahan had sent him a letter of explanation and in- senting the Sodttiah American Club, iniand § to pla 1; Mew York, 5 (second game). which have fallen daily have turnea 4 ~~ roved himself a master of it bracket. = ‘ i} a ¥ in years, struction before gach workout, He sees Ménahan starting a right, and be pep Mbetectrts Or onereccn: | helene Me the quaittying round la Zh? Zoungeat, playes tn the tournas| —Chieage, “6; Oletanatl, fit sae). the ,ooures ate a bog and sloppy : is @ big card in the Oriole 5, ids it with ease, In fact his bouts with Monahan look good, but| ing G. A, L. Dionne in the third round| with a of 78, two atrokes better | and “under, ‘was Charles ‘Seance a Ctnslncet, 3 oe Nery) ‘fleet gamed. Jones led the field until he reache@ largely because of his knock- rls Ittle training for the rushing attack of Dempsey. of the Middle States championship |than G. A, Bijur of Hasex Wells. After youth of thirteen, He needed. an oven ee ee ume), |the ath hole yesterday. He took six over Kid Williams, the Baltimore | €V® Mitt ver ole, he is strong, ruswed and willing, but he has been box-|at the Orange Tawn ‘Tennis Club, |teking 44 to the turn, including! «7 at hundred for, the" round, “which. ‘placed a Leaks 61 Proven: 2’ [putts to make the hole, which ls par | favorite and ex-champlon. igs, MAME a eure penta Bak ban Daas tae Gee ees Mountain, Station. 'N. J. During the |" Setting, “bird” 's at the hin arat round ‘match neint W." Le GAMES TO-DAY, Fon. who tied with & card of a4. ‘is ! cman nF nth for & 87, : moked he 4 HEY mast de side-stepping| can't cut loose his fighting punches with either of those men. his court, making recoveries until he orepeents see Weta par, Simmons at 2 up and 1 to play. low York of Breckive. being, ahcn to win the “Bout Lynch, the lad who a Chip is much too small, and even Chip is not working as actively as|fnally wore down his opponent after|" J. G. McMahon of Sleepy Hollow and : ——e Boston at Philadelphia (two games). plonship, Play was resumed ‘ twenty-round [le sl he did at first. eighteen gruelling games. Then he|Nathaniel Stevens of Plainfleld tied for) Mrs. William Chilvers of the Dun- ‘Chicage at Cincinnati, morning in @ driving torm. z woodie Golf Club captured hiet honors Pitteoersh at St. Leute, D) Tommy Noble, the English bantam | jegs’s Staff of Trainers Is a Joke. In the Inst of | the # one-day tournament held over the Scarsdale champion, and who was credited 4 didn’t hit a hard blew, didn't take a quick step, stood stock stil! most of | fpipnam try Club links at. White UE. < : Bteamboat Bill Boott, latest addition to Willard's camp, is a veteran | O"time waiting for his men to come te hit, tapped carefully to avold |Gol,, snd country, Club links at, White AMERICAN LEAG! \ the English press with having! » oe war titled to a world of credit as a hero of the Argon: ‘cor: WL PC.) Club, w.b. © Whopes Jimmy Wilde, although the| ot ‘ni’ can do Ate but pound at Willard's body ‘while Jess stands wien (engine them along Heinen's trail, and let them PAeie: RR. HS POL: meee akndicae ets taeae , St Lowle,....26 28 Te referee's decision went against him.| Put BO! rein peek targets Go an ta8 ba hid civton wi Ew hearted body blows. It was a sultry, muggy, hot day, ‘Willard didn't | 37°vemch captured’ the low net score Boston arms raised to give him aa far as his giving Willard | show his usual pep, even after taking a day's laytoft. prize of the @wing to the fact that Kid Wolfe sample of the fighting he is to go up against July 4 is concerned, it's a joke. '. 2 ols ‘Washington “ iar eign to to pout his for-| Jens might take the experience of Jim Jeffries at Reno as a wurning. Atlantic Never Rougher Than Dempsey, Says Tate. on RACING AQUEDUCT 1-25 28 490 | Phitadetphia. . in “Chick” Evans jr., former -national| DAY, uly 4, Matchmaxes | Jeffries did ten miles or so on the road every day, and was in remarkable] As for Dempsey, he fought four rounds with Bill Tate and Jamaica, |open’ and amateur’ golf, champion, ‘and TOMORROW ‘of the American A. A. has| Physical condition, but he would not get a lot of sparring partners who|ana danced and ducked and dodged through two with clever Jack Malone. Oe rT iy Botlecn tt jetented Gorton, 6; Washington, 2, $2000 UNION STAKES * ¢ off the match, ° could fight him. He had old men like Corbett, Choynski and Bob Arm- | He gave Jamaica a tough session, and in the second round with Tate bat- |Gardner White, New York, in the cece ais Laie, ne A aoe Mead, manager of Lynch,| strogs. who would crack if he tapped them, who were entirely out of touch |tered the big fellow until his head rocked. When the boxing was over |ond of a serics of matches at Toronto ‘ 85 Oblong 6 ROSEBEN HANDICAP om ie @ legitimate bantam, firet| with the latest boxing methods, and who were as wseless as a bunch of |Tate sat down outside the ring. for tie _benent of tas Canadian Red TO-DAY, 2 MILE STEEPLECHASE the vs me to be 138 Founds ripples, except at toe fraining tania, Paitin 4 “He's a little rough So-dey, tea't ner" ake 8 spemiaton, mie The, best card turned in was a 13 Sy Wosnlegten of Boston, AMD 3 OTHER HIGH CLASS CONTESTS needs wor ‘or js tig! and needs it more than he “Rough,” exclaimed Tate, crossed the Atlantic Ocean and it wasnt pyans. Leule at Detroit, “FIRST 1H AT 2.80 PB, ‘olfe | ever needed it before, He doeim't agree with this opinion, He has his rougher Ded tak boy. The rocking of the transport wasn't nothing to , % Cleveland at Chicage, rats, TRAL “’ “©! own system, planned by himself, ahd perhaps after the fight we may all| the rocking he gave me, Ah wasn't never seasick, but that was before I| Nelson Whitney, New Orleans, and Penn, Station, 334 Bt. and Tth John Jennings of the| have" to take our hats off to him, But to-day it looks as if Jess might |met Jack. I'll say he's rough. Palle Erawies, Penoeroia, Pia... tied. for Jem Smith Wins Easily, OP ana at treaten: tee A. A. of Jersey City is try-|do a lot better by working in the same way he worked at Havana, with When Jamaica came ont, considerably battered, he compared notes 10" aor the championship tournament| MONTREAL, June 25.—Jeff Smith of r. M. ery Fes ing ices suitable opponent to] a fair lot Re agahady Sab Salty, aes fone with ren who were then pretty | with Tate and seconded the motion, John Ryan offered to bet me a sult iat Ney, reane of the ‘southern ott Bayonne, N. J., middleweight, easily Mace Truins, fairly Ot ive @ fight at least for a couple of rounds, of clothes that the odds will be 10 to 7 ringside, Dempsey favorite, John | AS8°: M, to Gree outfought Eugene Brosseau, former ve ‘The champion's workout yesterday consisted of two rounds each with |has $10,000 on Jack at even money, and says he can't pry another Willard 2,76 calisthenica, a ed a A, |amateur welterweisht champion of Can- stqiler 81.119, Hewes Chin Meambost Mii end Mooahan, and name He dollar loos, sa a ace Vda ean 4%, An © teu-round bous hace sorniehs, : ‘ eo an ‘ 7 oe , Pity ees, pee * ee PER aa ae nisl ae i — WY formate SS ama —ececeoseremrerenrimesemaman * asset | been mrt TE ablaadindaseneat scpmeaeiiniiies ate essai

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