The evening world. Newspaper, October 11, 1919, Page 8

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THE EVENIN G@ WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1919, © NEW GENERATION OF MEANS STRONGEST OF TEAMS ——-FORUS. AT OLYMPIC MEET + AIETES BESTT SPORTING PA. | EW YORK SINIVANEMEN 4 IN BIE MOTORCYCLE MEET HERE TO-DAY National Championship Races Postponed From Last Satur- lay at Sheepshead Speedway. ! > GE IN N ORK HOW STYLES HAVE ADVANCED IN ATHLETICS Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World). ecause of Tremendous Spread of Athletics Through Army Training Camps and Meets Abroad We Now Have Ten Men in Training to One Formerly—How Present-Day “Form” Has Improved the Athlete and Bettered Old-Time Records. The nationat championship motor- cycle face meet, with the moat pre- tentioug field ever assembled, will be held this afternoon at the Sheepshead Bay Speedway. No less than seventy- five intrepid pilots are entered in the elght events. Lieut.” Arthur Chapple, the world'¢ champion, wit! be on’hand to defend his crown against the greatest array of young riders the perilous game has ever produced. Chief among them is Gene Walker, the “Southern Streak,” who in practice last Tuesday turned the mile in 301-6 seconds, practteally two miles a minute, Walker recently won the national championship af one, five and twenty-five miles. Others who will attempt to displace Chapple are: Lesiie “Red” Parkhurst, the international champion, who swept the card of championship events in 1916; Otto Walker, the reeord hold 100 ‘miles, who duplicated Parkhu fent in 1917; Perey Coleman, the u defented Australian who ~ holds world’s mile record of §5 2-6 secon Mike Costello, the Italian champion; Roy Artley, the Pacific Coast chamy 3 Albert "Shrimp" Burns, the dirt track monarch: Floyd Clymer, the ‘Denver Daredevil" and ‘Master’ of the Moun- tnina;* Wells Bennett, the By Robert Edgren. Copyrtaht, 1619, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Bventne World.) EXT year will probably be the greatest year in amateur athletics that America has ever known. Even this summer, with. the war just over and our best athletes coming back from service abroad, there bave been many remarkable athletic performances on track and field. With the tremendous spread of all athletic sports through the training in the army camps and the great in- ternationa] meets in France, we now have ten men in active competition where we had one a few years ago. The next American track team that fs to go to the Olympic Games at Amsterdam will be the strongest team that ever carried the Stars and Stripes to victory over the rest of the athletic world. The new generation of American athletes will have a great advantage N Hon & mover WORLD Pole VAULT RucoRD WAS Pave BY A. WRIGHT, im MITCHELL BROKE. ALL RECORDS TURNING ence WI! THE HAMMER, Row They SHIFT FEET, SLAM AGAINST “Re"To& Boarv, : ever old-timers because of the coaching system now in use. Skilled bo ghey ghampion (Canada to Mexico): Maldwyn = [Jones who this seasoi . } axa] have been in every army camp and will continue thelr work in PornNa Loreet | zeven nat inces gut of ty four sears 5 and athletic clubs. SusT ew red Carrol, the twenty. tour Boy in; STAND, bs bad . the. twenty-four-hi i ‘There were some great athletes in be nb MARIS. \Ond holder, anq'dimuy French, ‘the AWD SHOVE - Littl “TES - fifty-one-year-old pioneer of the game, Scandalous Day of Racing Is Seen at Jamaica Track With Gamblers in Control day was the fifth race, in which R. T. ol days, even though they had) anout afty tect—or some two yards ‘work out their own style of per-| over the amateur record. and “form” is the most im- Rive be ibaa Bigind race Portant thing In any athletic event, | © jan a echoolboy, made his world ‘cord of 61 feet, Which stands to-day. from pole vaulting to golf. Much of| inut Hove was 6 fout 6 inches tail and the improvement in our world’s rec- | weighed over 300 pounds. In his huge tds is due entirely to improved “form” | hand a shot looked about the gize of ‘ & baseball. Pat McDonald, the great —to better ways of doing things, | Now York police athlete, who ts 6 learned in many years of athletic! foot 5 and weighs 300 pounds, and who competition. Boat Rose's records, with severe} of ‘The imprevement nt e hea: shots, has put forms an interesting Be Reh: pound pall’ over’ 99 feet ber seeing such men as Baxter, Buc- | A NEW YORK BOY WHO WAS A, Pee VAULTING , WIT “The ARMS SPREAD AND "LEVERING OvER® -. +0 (APOSSIBLE To Go HGH LATONIA, Oct. 11.—8. C. Hildreth's Mad Hatter rules favorite in the opin- jon of horsemen here to-day for the $50,000 Latonia Championship Stakes for three-year-olds, at one mile and six furlongs, which will be run this after- Public Choices Are Beaten and chola, Hoffman, Cheek and Clapp MARVEL, Hoda: lane a oe a . & a Wilson's TNunderstorm was the pub- 4 vault. ‘The {iret American cham-| But tho greatest shot putter I ever TD intact dod hie wee opera ae insiders Profit — Favorites | 80 chciee: Saunudsetar valle See sixteenth of a mile behind his fleld, while Trainer Tom Healey and owner R. T, Wilson jr, tooked on in amaze- saw, bar none, was a New York bo; plonship was won by G. MeNichol| nanied Julian’ Elliott 4 With 9 feet 7 inches. H. H, Baxter) about 135 pounds w! been named overnight for the fixture, whieh will be the richest race of the season, He weighed or HAMMERS n he ped the about of We OLE SAT Mabe min by | Racing Luck. ment, Paddy Whack won this race at was firet to reach 11 feet. Several pad fame by putting ———_ ae IN) AND THROING a fairly good price, with Tenons Bon arious weights very near the record = worm 0 Columbia will be ‘tree to play al} By Vincent Treanor. ‘4 a abe aed bdo he distances. aliott lived tn the Brows, UpTO-DATE HAMMER STYLE. S “TRIPLE : comers on the gridiron ‘next year, ae- ¥ Hegoehd 909 Gelngy third. The Owner cleared ere : cording to an announcement made last night at the Columbia Uni West 48d Str MOST scandalous day of rac- ing. That's the only way the of Paddy Whack felt that he had a good chance of winning the race, de- he begin hours every day va © height, Bucchole cleared 11/tising shot putting. He developed — Nb. 4 "5 4 spite the confidence of Mr. Healey in j in 1894. He was considered a| the most remarkable form ever seen kenthi “sport” at Jamaiga yesterday | my, sont" johderful pole vaulter. As a rule| iM shot putting, and developed it by Gniversity and chalray can be described. A few gamblors Repeetetars “Say ee a ie the more Paddy Whack’s owner pet, the higher soared his price, It then that, ecenting something, Paddy Whack'’s owner consulted Jockey Tommy Davis ana told him what he expected of him in the way of a ride. ‘This didn't seem necessary, for Davis an honest, manty little fellow, When the race was started, It looked like a sure thing for Thunderstorm the favorite. He got away in front, tut Kummer, his rider, wisely appa ently took him back behind the pace of Star Realm. Rounding the far turn, just when it was expected Thunderstorm would make bis run, he began to drop back. “Thunderstorm hi Practising alone and studying it out championship was won with less | himself. Constant putting built him 11 feet. In’ 1900 and 1901 John-| up amazingly, although I don't think and Dvorack cleared 11 feet 3] be ever weighed more than 145 pounds while in athletics. His hands were | wera ee ee ett ee ta covered with thicic bunches of mus- yu © limi! Athletes used cles, and one of the astonishin, fk about some Japanese acrobat things about his putting was th Glaiched to have cleared 13 feet | 2°, Cowld pute 2t-pound | shot even erin proportion than ie } ft the pole," which was not allowed, McDonald at New Orleans watching | Recent lider tne yuled. “In 1907 EB. T. Cooke | Nttle Elliott (who weighed Jess than ew uw 2 inches, and in half as much as either of them) win » cleared 13 feet the Junior Championship 16-pound 1911 Cooke, Coyle and Bellah tied at| shoe with a put of 46 fect. « 13 feet 6 inches. with millions at their disposal have Put racing In bad repute lately and the results as shown by the charts Indicate that the stewards are help- less. Horses are being “taken,” crip- ples, subjects for the 8. P. C. A., with No chance of winning beforehand, are sent to post, and the poor old general restrictions which hi Blue and White team with the bigger colleges will be removed. Public Will Not Stand For Another Nine-Game | World’s Baseball Series: attendance at the last game in Cin- cinnati proved that conclusively. What started ont with a great flare of enthusiasm wound up in a painful but tolerant -wait. Phe circus) or hippodrome effect disappeared after Young Jake Schaefer defeated Al- bert Cutler In two 18.2 baikline. bill- inrd matches at Maurice Daly's Acad omy "yesterday (afternoon and” last i i night. In tl afternoon he wo! National Amateur Champion febre° or’ 300 ‘to ‘tos and in the evening Herron Wins Both His Match- | "° ®7*! count was 300 to ‘public is betting. Meanwhile a few A Aki iN howl tl t Columbia |ien who would rather win $10 dis- es in Tourney at Piping ROCK | wis" sormuliy’ begun. yesterday when Club. Championship Was Too Long Drawn Out and Prices Were Too High for ns honestly than $1 honestly are profit- | Peat ay tee ico nat the | 198. No wonder everybody ts asking: hi aR Boat Club on the'Hatiem, even | “How long'{é thie going to last?” bontionds of youngsters were ‘sent out broken down,” If Jullan Elilott's tremendous drtv- ay Nationa}! is ry Yesterday at Jamaica was frightful J re ar foc the F; thevrirst two or three dass, The snail | S. Davidson Horron, the National) gn the river under the guidance of Rite | some yelled, and so it seemed, because bia ty BS sew OF: &. weighs of Pest pe ert ool A Wha Bd 6 Fans. See ee we uetry town who gets. all| chagipion, won his matches in the, And Capt. OMoughlin “of ‘the varsity, /to the unwise rogular who Js guided Ino horse could stop and drop back #0 mouth, {n thé Harvard Stadium, clear ia th of whdm fell to with a vengeance? | tn his speculation by public form. He steamed up over the presence of 4 pete of whe three-ring ¢ircu# would lose much of his enthusiasm if he had to attend the same affair ten days in succession s he had broken’ down or bled, ‘Thunderstorm, as ft after- ward developed, neither broke @own nor bled. He simply did a Natoralist. He pulled up as sownd as he ever did in his life, Afterward in the paddock Trainer ‘Tom Healey and Owner R. 'T. Wison, both perspiring from evident wrath, questioned ‘Kummer at tion. Ehey sudenly unl first and second rounds of the invi- tation tournament at the Piping Rock Club, For a. starter the stury Oak- the proader |And baseball, our national sport, can mont representative defeated Arch try, r 1. pre country, including the proade: |not afford to let this one big af a minded magnates, writers ahd | Dey aio oan on the public. The Held, the former St. Andrews title- | ort | other Htudents of the game, are con- Subne is = lively partner In baseball | holder, who has been absent from the sey in fighting, RM" MAKES THE CHAMPION. |, Throwing the hammer ts a It fe difficult t see why the cham- ht. | vinced that there must never pe an-|and must be considered. ‘ompetitive game for nearly five Beck, jn tes ae fe wie other World's Series of nine games.| There were not enough well-to-40 | yours, In defeating Reid, 8 up and 1 that usually requires a lot of w of thirty years ago, who were | threw the 16-pound hammer 145 feet = 7 th f Cincinnat! aid ait Were unable to get % inch, using a single turn In the| For the good of the national sport | soe em day for a week to see ball |t6 play, Herron made the round in 7 |, deat, ‘and circle, Outing Magazine published an|they are also convinced that the | games. to Keld's 81. | ing Aseociation, reports that the In- prices are entirely too high; that we we have had several article in which ft was solemnly set ba ; . two feet higher than that: forth ‘that in all probability this rec- fi we Pst nue aoa ore | cater tne champion apt a stitier | Gieeocee BOIL La, eure chet aas0 toes ute master of improvement ord would stand! forever, a it was the share of recelpts for the Players), Now come ctinuanee of the spit- [Pace At the. CPCs or ily maven |Mament, to be deoided in Chicagg, TM hele Denis aad ifted theme not likely Jim Mitchett's equal would | the clubs and the Naflona} Commis. | tet Bt THe Gon tance cher arin. | cock Of Curden City. In this maton | Rament: to be jen, TH. ever appear again, That was the old] sion are out of all proportion, and |(o\' methods of making the baseball | /1¢"T0N. 4 GRE Gop tat ree oe \ ‘ie ae y Giraduaily the style 208 Now we know by experience} iat in the future the playing of |fool ‘the batter, Roger Bresnahan, |soiy in ‘a stroke under par, sy that [aster ngnitat Coin" Bing. Raat, baseball's classic event will be en-|formerly of the Giants and now man wal dangered if the policy of greed is "4 fen Mark Wright made | tat no record ts so good that It may i f world’s record he was vaulting in Not be broken at any tlme by some seer Sethe Tofedo Club, declares most | (ve Match ehded on’ the fourteenth not onsaak emphatically that if these “trick’ : ot ¢ & Out of perhaps one hundred per- form;-siipping his lower hand | Pew champion. J was first to use two In both contests ‘on gaine e other as he made turns. spinning twice before throw- pails, as he calls them, are not abol- | advantage becaus iigecies Bae ished by stringent reguiations that sons, whose opinions wore sought on this subject, there were not more 7 or MoDonald the worl: shot tting the bur at 13 foot 2% inches, making | fecord ought to be about 16 fost, et & yoride recorg that still stands. no giant ever had such bottled up * - Nobody now thinks ft impossible’ vim and energy. In athletics Julian it any man can clear 12 feet with-| Elliott was exactly like Jack Demp- climbing the pole. errisel ves tS fd nablbom |hadn’t what is called a Chinaman's | chance of winning. } You may go from the first race to! {the last and the story is all the same. |The stewards ruled off A) Konigsberg | for giving a jockey a present for! winning a race. What are they going | to do with the jockeys who don't win) | By Bozeman Bulger. | AS people thzotghout the | ) jwhen all public form indicates that they should, As one wag expressed it: “Rule the horses off. That's ttre only way to get at the owners and tratn- ers. For instance yesterday, in the first race, Cinderella, regarded early In the season as the queen of fillies, looked, on all public form, a cinch. Rambler Rose, on whom everybody but the Olly’s own trainer, Jack Joyner, bet, rolled home, which showed that even Joyner had little to say about what kind of a race his filly would run. TING-A-LING AND_ TETLEY FOOLED THE PUBLIC. Mrs. Zoe Quinn, President of the S, with mo apparent satisfaction. y ‘oman's Nation® Tournament Bowl- Were beaten and had to take Geir medicine, white certain folk in the club house were jubilant, One might go on forever in bo in telling about “] strain races, but it becomes tiresome. gome body in authority should wake up. it isn't cripples, it's dead 6hes, and 1 it isn’t dead ones, it's Jockeys or train. ere with alibis, Racing might jast’as well be a dead sport as go on as It is conducteg at present. bio! number that bas ever taken park i this Tent, Greenwich, ‘Xavier and Castillion, the “steengest team in the league, azo ihe openina series A. meeting of hing.” cabs, his body under- |!9& beating the record about three long game. Reid said he didn't mind! were on a hori. | fect, and bia Sony Cane John Man- we will have no baseball in ten years. | being outdriven fifteen or twenty yards, the finish of the #2 from Ireland and was frat to Instead of the old-fashioned art of | but never had been accustomed to hav- fooling the batter with the natural the deleraten from ned out at a beat 160 feet. This was cogsidéred Ing an opponent ball travel eighty to the various coamprising the United Bowling Roy Moore Earns Decision, saad quar fect above where his hands «ripped | Who have thrown over 150 feet. ‘The je. The whole thing and extremely dim- vaulting @ beautil senting voices. . ube of New ‘York, will be hold at the hi r " 7 Bis poos pointing (E'S ee aves bad tegad thos Ha ew or those, who fad Juat [Use of the mind, the muscles and the ards further. Ww. white | Tetciciot or gine’ aterm ge | , tn the second race, Houemiaid, on BALTBMORE, Ma. Oot. i—por e cleare . Da e et ly iT Roger's contention that | of Nn, " “4 that aes bag e .» looked almost a . | Moore 5 . ne wel eight fully two [are dozens of American college boya| profited by the annual event. Bagers. It 6 Homers oonts of Neseny, one om Sromey Oe Ores momtershi in, 0] What happened to her? Back Bay,| earned reterce’s Gecision here Jast’ might best of th California, mall is Karl 8] who holds ttuck of In the’ first place the’ receipts amounted to a little nfore than $722, 000. It is asking @ little too much contribute three- There are the the game will develop into a science of mechanical appliances and thereby lose jts great hold on many others who agree publie. golfer, who th round of the recent Nassau tou worked their way to the after hard fought matche re: A. of orgamsed. in 4850, and ail of the ame ean be wachd to this ts the bowl. neta’ Ths asiociation was i the resoraus tion, even with Jimmy Butwell, the old- timer on his back, was played with rare confidence, He won. Ting-a-Ling, over Earl Puryear In one of the Best contests seen in this cfty in many J - 0 Yop O'Brien of Philadelphia Ae foi which on Fouord OF 318 feet 10 f pe ee oe Dixon gr, e e date wit for the anoual meeting} which Billy Clancy thought pretty|™0ons. Fop © Saeco Boke P ckepiea bita ts weighed under 200 pounds when he|@uarters of 4 million dollars to one |with Bresnahan. 3 On the hone green. In| ani‘siecuos of ofticem ot te New Yurk Bowl welt of, Wee Sour, and raseinata was the third man {fn the ring and his lear the bar, throw the vaulting pole|made his record. Al. Plaw, who| Set of games Just at ee mo. nee In the first place, the mere thought ipiternoon, while Grahem won by a | Amoclatien, che ‘goreruing, ol ur LT Ted up wixtht, Pairbrother. rode | decision Was well received. 4 Tn, fre and firn im Bir to drop on his |threw over 180 fect after ho gradu | When an pm 44 Te oe the [of the wpitball iw repulsive, and, im the | Aman iyarwin over D. C. Bakewell of RR ow A Ot recone] Finga-Ling and we Rnow he is rea.|other contest Frankle Rice, the q more featherweight, — knocked — out Frankle Clark of Philadelphia «in the third round, ated from colle second place, its use has ruined many natural pitchers. The shihe ball, as Fs is @ peculiar effec’ roughening one sid introducing “triple tur d about 220. John lanagan, when he was champion, | cradually put the record up to above 380 feet. John's weight, Nke Jim back feet. A pole vaulting competition Is 5 Recessarily long drawn out, but to} the Athlete it is perhaps the most thrilling of them all. George R. Gray revolutionized shot- sonably honestbut it did seem that if he couldn't win he didn’t want to be im the money. ‘Take the fourth race. What hap- pened to Tetley? A repetition of his cine economy. And this amount docs not indicate the outlay of those who attended the series. More than twice that moch was spent in expenses, hotel bills, railroad fares, tuxl- Greenway, the former Yale * baseball pitcher, began the. day bY | wint Mob “then defeating F.C. Beal, the North and |the Solth.tide holder from Uniontown, and lament supplemented that. by removing J. tele’ Husk of Newark, N.J., vidual championshigy Woiorw if ns may know, produced by of the ball and a " ely’ 7 2 t a) b Dean of Princeton Asa ” , ed petite 4 his “form has never Mitchell's, was about 265 pounds. 5 shining the other by the use of para- Bimpeon xi c : , BS nk fast race would make bim a good ‘ALL RACING Fa tacks Bune tote ee meoicen Matt McGrath, weighing 285, smashed | M&F ning py received $5,259 [fine Boaked Into ‘the cloth of the fin lower ceaacaral breceet: ite. oe Willd Daney Stops Green, thing, but with Preece on his back he RALING was a stockily bullt fellow of medium | Flu cord, and then along ches. This removes friction on BRANCH J. Oct, 11,— was no account. He was a drug on the market. Those who should have heen betting on him on form played Betty Bluff. Why, goodness only knows. They also showed rare con- fidence in their ability to pick ‘em by packing Jack O'Dowd to be third Tetley ran jike the well known Pig. Bour and mean, he couldn't even be whipped into contention. ‘The “gam- blers who had backed Betty Bluft the ach, which 18 fully two years’ salary to some of them. In other word when a player can make in the week | other st White an wahai LON! N. . other side White and Graham wit) TT Daney of the Bronx gave Sammy Green of New York a fine lacing here, Referee MeVey stopping the fight ‘in the fifth round to save Green from @ » knockout, In the semi-final Jinimy Bridgeport won from Terry Davis after six roun: of hard fighting. »b one side of the ball and adds it the other. The gyratigns produped by this are puzzling, as is the nftre color of the ball as it comes flashing through the alr, showing a miXture of black and white, ‘Thre are oth devices, such as the knuckle ball, the emery ball, an explanation of which would take too much space. $ All of these are theoretically illegal, Hetght, wetting lens than 190 pounds ‘came , the greatest giant of Nis “best. In 1890 Gray put them all, weighing 315 pounds, and o , and this was con- | threw 189 feet 6% Inches, which to oP 4 iy ast Sone the fimit in ahot-put: {date is the best on record.” But it} of the series ax much ae he Gove fo . In’ 1893 he won the champion- |ign't necessarily a fact that It willl Eoo.d to become dissatisfied in case ship with 47 feet, which was the a bigger and stronger man than} yi. cub doce not win the t world’s record for several years, un n to throw 190 fect or 200 feet, | Me tates de y > young giant Ralph Rose began 7 { which will be done in time will give the GBtng things with the shot that never | oop MEN IN THOSE DAYS—| cially, the suT— a gold n EMPIRE CITY TRAGK (YONKERS & MT. VERNON) BEGINS MONDAY The $2,500 Columbus The Le Compte The Levity DELAWARE, Pa, st and second ‘match finished in the invitation ent at the Shawnee ) the result that Regt- ton of the home club t B, Newton, | White- r half of the semi L. Beyer of Aro Ad Wolgast Scores « Kacokew YUMA, Ariz, Qdt. 11.—Ad “Wolgast, fofene lightweight champion, khocked marsh, int baseball is ° Uppe aseball final racket and Ht demand more ‘Two or three professionals wer 1m} 3 ? mink will be opposed to B : G. Valtet f Yumva last alge in ree wi 14 Jack ODowd to show, salary thon There were |but the payers manage to skin by the 7 x out Walter Kane 0 th ways am m better than Gray. Among these was | Astor all, Improvement In form I | goveral bil! that made no|rutes. Grace of Shawnee in the lower half; the eighth round of & scheduled ten- | “conped* The Diomed Purse Ofe MoPherson, a jean, sinewy Scot, line important thing In any athletic at all this yoor, but WE” tha Acrarican | Aesnotation, ane\ ie tne easier a wn Te round fight, ‘Along came the fourth race. Among Harper, the field in the jose cinhy professional spirit never | wed him to show what his true |i, NE in shot-putting was. ‘Tom Car- | eariicst Americ. ational champlon , the great Scottish weight-throw- | ship meets. Back tn 1876 Marry ebampion, has told’ me that Mc-| Ruermeyer won the 16-pound gon could put the 16-pound shot | cnampionship with a pul of fifty feet—a remarkable performance Y Over There, the @ stake horse and 2 Other Splendid Contests. FIRST RACE AT 2:30 P. Sperist Race ‘Train leaves Gri tratPermuinel> Harlem Divinion: at © M. lar trains to Mt. Vern 0. 18 tt This can easily be seen by he records of the | with ian the entries was Realization winner, among selling platers. A favorite? Why, certainly. Why shouldn't he be? But the oral market wasn't long {n session before Over There became Trenton golfer, who led: th qualifying round, and Dr, Jo Merion. Harpe didn't thing like the form of managed to keep on e home hole. ‘Three extra needed before Ri 8 hal hen on 1! cording to Bresnahan, a rule has been adopted which effectually prevents all le managers Are lthe trick balls. The league has put into effect’a rule whieh forbids the pitcher to place the ball to hts mouth or to rub it on his chest or his i ii nl, AT JAMAICA. First Race—St. Allan, Robin, Royal Duck. . at t nf that the big event be discon- a ai es, which ba Round Alxo “AL yis Lexington. “and € r ue eyer, o is sti bie league erial, will jobb finally won, 4 “poison” to the wise set, From even * fora 185-tound man. When Gray | Uctive in the NYA. Cw at the age ot face fnancial Fuln when ie comes to [Dreechee leg, oF to place hie hand In perry, Nene Wietten ef War | idoney Over There went to 6 to § to“itott. Ave. araneterrina gs. ies Hh Rearaar Fecotd St about 48 cients, was ; host pows | making contracts for next year: Oe ee atte Gnaces witht fone Fer |TUBNER STOPS M’CLOSKEY ‘Tnira’ Race-—War Note, Peerless | and anybody who knew a thing about vei Svoiray’ of Bi and "BER arhereap fried to set up 8 | orfully by op Pople are eurioy | nae gin. Fi s y lge Wingfield. * goings-on wouldn't touc’ m1 Aree 82 dereng | Ave A Shot-putting mateh with him. dray, erculy | Ents | gery ona Meee curleUs to lthe flat offense the Umpire declares IN THE FOURTH ROUND Oe ee ee Master, bu- [ith Binne pole “Lady Gertrude, 'm |Bgistion, oY ‘ever from: Woodham Knew StePherson by reputation, welghing 1 n in $73,000 pald to the National Gommis- |® bali which’ advances all base run- oe "| dactous, Blairgowrie. Wivh Shich heaw't shown e thittg until [BGreas: Send, £3.00, Ladies 91.05 Bat hadn't met him, refused to con-| the finest c ‘Vo was a boxer, sion as ite share of the receipts, Is it|mer® one base. For the second of-| miiZABETHPORT, N. J., Oct. 11.— Fifth “Race —Bridge Player. | her ast race, romped away with the Including War Tax sider the idea at al McPherson de-| oarsman, sprinter and welrht thrower to be used as a sinking fund.or what? fense there {s an additional punigh-| Clay Turner, the Indian light hi | Thonderbird, Fitbbertygibbett. raée like @ Purchase of a Sir Barton termined thet b how Gray up.'|{nd champion in everything he ate Jt surely is much more than enough |ment of a $29 fine. For the third he| weight, made a big impression on Sixth — Hade—Flass)" “Intliade, | might: have done. Crystal Ford, a — one day he dressed in blue sbirt|tcmpted, Winning the national cham- to pay the salariés necessary to con- |'8 put out of the game. fight {ans here last night by beating Al, Masda, i reasonable second choice, was second, Teath will not a: a " F MORROW. S'KDAY” 2 P. DYCKMAN OVALS Dytimart St. Subwos Staten. GUY EMPEY's FAMOUS TREAT 'EM’ROUGH AMERICAN LEAGU AME niEAN LEABUE STARR posed sox, ‘overalls and went past the N. 4. @. grovnds, Where Gray was ining, duiving a cow. As usual, a 4 was watching Gray's practice. enon, ‘Jeaning over the fence, tray what he was “throwing fof, and Gray invited him it pinesis joPherson came x McCloskey, the Newark heavywel badiy in the main bout at the show of the Betsytown A. C, eres White stopped’ the’ bo fourth round to save McCloskey from ing knocked out. ‘Turner fad” Me- Closkey so groggy that he could hardly raise his hand Turner fought one of his best figh: and from the start to finistr he McCloskey a bad round Turner loo! h on 80 xin that Rete t in pionship three successive years, he | duct the Dusiness of the commission, Roger decla put the record up to 87 feet 4 Inches. , The , $195,000 Reid each of the two|wonderfully well, He is very earnest It he had known how to put the shot |club owners: will be put to a goodjin his campaign to haye the bi with modern form, he might easily purpose. Undef a new rute this money |leagues adopt the same rule, A ma- have put ten feet beyond his best {g distributed among the several clubs {jority of baseball people are with mark, The first hammer champion. in the two Jeagues and will help out | Bresnahan. It would be an excellent ship was won by W. B. Curtis in 1876 those who had an unfortunate season. |thing for the future of the game. with a throw of 76 {vot 4 inches, and — The Government ' reaped” a_ rich , Es, ae ial for eleven years no winning cham- | in collecting its war tax and ip throw reached 97 feet. Any “plea: ool welght thrower of to-d it ip better be meleht at os that this has worked and Over There, a’ stake ‘performe was ‘third. [twas rumored around that Over Thefo was too heavily weighted apd that tis trainer knew it’ Why. Rest in all flrunderation was fe started, when jt was known that the public couldn’t® — bet on anythin else unless they ing? Over There, In 0 Beas we Baizgotie’ she oul a en serate! Ate we A oS LAUREL. , Eira) R “i oard, g Ry e——Weldahip, Warlock, Goodfellow, Third Race—The Pecision, Kall- tan, Arrah Go On.” Fourth: Race—ltoas entry, Ext: mip Rnes-Velon” Falry Wang, in Race—' unte Beige, Hand whe sen Kimpa- “t " how to put tl paren. i we Makes O*Too SCRANTON,” Pa}, Get. town of 2 oe ‘ sedernt ye.» AT es + de

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