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3 HO TRAINING NECESSARY FOR UKE KAHANAMOKU ~—ANIERICA’ SWIMMING ACE aes Peouliar Traits of Hawaiian, Whose Life Has Been Spent Most- * lyin the Water—Uncle Sam’s Swimming Team, Aided by — “Star Honolulu Men Fishes, Should Make Clean Sweep at , + + Olympic Games Next Month at Antwerp. | 4 | By Robert Edgren. | bY Copyright, 1990, by The reas Publishing Co. (The New York World), és HY, no.” said Duke Kahanamoku, “I never went down after sharks Py with a knife, That isn't done in Hawali now, you know. The ancients aid it, but they were better men in those days. They used to take a knife and swim out and go down and kill sharks, accord- ing to the old stories. But none of the boys cares to try anything «lke that, It's @ little too dangerous, It 1s done in some of the telands déwn south still, but I've never seen it.” Duke Kahanamoku ta the greatost of all the native ewimming champions of Hawati, He will be one of Amer- foa's strongest contenders in the ; ewimm nog sprints at the Olympic @emes at Antwerp. The “Duke” ts an Olympic champion. He won the one meter swimming event in the Olympic at Stockholm tn 1912. In Olympic trials he has just broken Norman Ross's world's record for 100 meters by covering the digtance {1 ®————————_____ one minute one-fifth second. four-| ment, however, ts that of the Duk fifths of a second better than the old |pectoral muscles, the breast muscles nee pales he eet eae Athletes. That is because swimmink | iif. ‘They are, I think, developed to fe almost as natura! as walking, At/about three times the thickness of feast it’s that way in the South Seas.|the pectoral muscles of the average “E hardly remember whether I trained athlete, It ia something, like the very unusual development of the dearned how to walk or how to swim | breast muscles of a duck or a quatl— first,” the Duke told me. “One of |heavy but fast-flying birds. he first things I remember {9 taking| It Is hard to heat @ man like the : allan, bred from generations of . gel ag Pcie saat Shapes swimming ancestors, and living al- @urf, using it like a surf board. You @an take a smat! board and go a long THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY 17, 1920, Sreroy-PRom Lire T MADE oF" ® Duce’ IMMEDIATELY AFTER. Hig Rrecop BREAKING RAcEG AN THY OUYMPIC TRIALS. (The Ni ew York Evening World). anil = OLYMPIC TRYOUTS eaainnartons's Liat START . FoR. a SPRINT - HE HITS THE WATER. pIN &_RONNIG STRIDE ‘AND THROWS HIMSELF FORWARD ) GhINING SEVERAL YARDS, = oS KAAHAMOKUY BREAKING “Th e 1 Wor.’ 100 METER RECORD IN LAINUTE , be farm Shetel mada 6 the Finks. OF INTERNATIONAL GOLFING ACIITY Vardon and Ray Arrive, Hope- ful of Annéxing Our Na- tional Championship. | By Wiliiam Abbott. VH the arrival to-day of Harry Vardon and Ted Ray all inter- nationa} golf activity wilk.now |be centred in the U. 8. A. for at least }three months. The two famous Brit~ lish stars played forty matches, win- ning thirty-nine and losing one during their 29,000 mile tour of the country back in 1913, But they slipped up on their chief objective—the winning of the natt6nal championship. This year Vardon and Ray have twice as many exhibitions scheduled, ) which will bring them Into every nook of the landscape. And they are hope- ful of returning from Toledo next month with the national title. The two invaders will play thelr first ex- hibition to-morrow at Siwanoy, meet ing Tom Kerrigan and Tom McNamara, \the two crack Siwanoy professionals, lin the morning round and John Ander. son and Ned Sawyer, Siwanoy’s eff- client amateurs, in the afternoon. Ve SEC THe — af : To Swim By GONG OUT To most as much tn the water as on dry land, way. I used to swim out, turn around fend come back through the surf. Af- terward I used a surf board, of wouree. “Training? Why, I never did go into eal training for a race but once, and Mhat time I overtrained and wont stale. WO HARD TRAINING; JUST Just Pie for Browns Trot Out Lefty Bayne, Who Beats Yanks, Holding weter all day. There's nothing elae to do down there. I swim all the eer around at Honolulu. The water Yt change much. Sometimes I ‘eke a board along and go far out end stay a long time. Sometimes I BO out to sea ina canoe, I'm always around the water. “How did you begin training for Pacing? I suppose you raced quite a While before you began to win and Break records,” I suggested. Kahanamoku laughed. “No,” he said, “I didn’t begin train- fing, and I never did much racing Without winning. In fact, I swam my Face in 1911, when I was eighteen @r nineteen. In that first méet I won My three races and broketwo world's nd one American record; world's ;fecords for the 50 and 220-yard events, GBince that time I have held all the lpecords up to 440 yards, but I am not By Charles Somerville. “Lefty” Bayne—that was the mon- teker of the little, square shouldered, square Jawed hunk of southpaw that Pop Burke trotted out yesterday to take the measure of the Yanl's and, unpleasant though the task a, hon- esty forces my admission that the bird was there with the tape. None of us knew much about him, We know more now. Much, He went after the great Babo with the pluck of a terrier facing a lion. He otruck the Babe out once, he also knicked him on the blouse and sent the Babe to base the second time, and again the Babe got a base on balls, but not because "Lefty was not try- ing to atrike him out, The fourth time at bat the Babe got 8. P. Bayne—but only for a hot single, a grass clipper, This “Lefty” young feller held the Yanks hitless until the seventh, It wae Del Pratt first broke through. He th \ r might be described as a lo @ fast long distance swimmer. Me Pee eee Poses = onda eit Veit |f%, Pekinese, Airedale, dachshund fest distance is the eprint, about 100|right atter hum Meusel was aent int, | Woamotsky. But that he was all Jinx yards, wallop for Mogridge, who had been “A tunny thing about my swim- roughly handled from the beginning. got into the field. But there’ I threw © grand stand. vERy his color Babe Ruth and “Murderers’ Row”’ This ‘Youngster “Lefty” Bayne, guy that had a lot to do with down- ing the Yanks yesterday. another up SWIMS ALL DAY. if my hands when I saw him in the first aersiainingl Gorse ot meine cone Them Hitless Up to Seventh, inning. " He ‘came suddenly prancing " - out on the el an stopped he 24 ewimming around, I'd be in the whole darned game. Ward and tho umps and a small boy had all they could do inducing him to go back into None would say they knew him. None knew how he But this was THE APPBARANCE OF THD BIRD. He FRIENDLY to the Yankees was only too plain Goshalmighty, was week. 2 office holders, YORK, ‘The diagram of the yachting course shows tt’ ‘There ts still a difference between baseball and politics, Ing the league they don't go out and dig into your past, . . LIVE WIRES By Neal R. O'Hara (Cuoreight, 197, ty Tho Pree Pubiishine On (The New York Brewing Worth) In the summer New York has cup races on the Atlantic and in the winter it has saucer races on the Madison Square bicycle track. ee 8 a three-legged race The Shamrock might be closer if they called it the Thistle. The A’s are li! the union actors, They play about two afternoons a ‘The way the Washington players have braced up, you'd think they Were Philadelphia 1s @ way station on the timetables, but it's a terminal in the major league standings. ” THE GIANTS ARENT ALTOGETHER WITHOUT DISTINCTION. THEY'RE THE ONLY SECOND DIVISION TEAM IN-GREATER NEW When yeu're lead- am, The Yankees draw the Sunday crowds away from the Sunday movies. The Giants draw ‘em away from the comic supplements. The Cardinals are a great hot weather team. But the fl th is that the World's Series are played in the fall, SOUP By Vincent Treanor. ME Jim MeClelland-“Kim" Pat~- terson combination got a late start on the turf this season, but judging by events of the last few days they are going to finish out strong. Since going to Yonkers the McClelland horses have been showing their long overdue quality, and from now on may be expected to win’their way and prove profitable to thelr backers. Trainer Patterson sprung his original surprise opening day at the Empire meeting when he trotted out Leonardo Il. Everybody who follows the charts at Jeast knows all about Leonardo Il. now. He spread-eagled his field lke the $150,000" Inchcape, and right off was proclaimed as a real troublemaker for Inchcape and the rest of the sup- posed cracks in the rich juvenile stakes |to come at Saratoga. Leonardo 11. looks the part of a champion. His perfect conformation would make him stand out in any company. He is as imposngi In ‘ooks as the leading man in a movie drama and he ts a racehorse born and pred. ‘The other day he heard the bilgle call for the first time in his life, and as his colored rubber said, he pricked up his ears as if he knew just what it meant. Yesterday Patterson started another McClelland two-year-old, Chevalier, in & selling race. Of course this one 1s no Leonardo IT, but he ran as if much the best of the company he met. The tip on the colt was all over the race- course when the crowd arrived, but just before post time in the last race Brooklyn Wins next round. |ANOTHER FOR M’CLELLAND Horses Trained by “Kim” Patterson Get Late Start bc Promise to Finish Out Strong— Dempsey an Attraction at Track. Jim Barnes, who finished ffth in the recent Deal championship, returned with Vardon and Ray on t Long Jim was enthusiastic about Eng- lish golf. He intends to try his luck next seagon for Johnny Bull's blue ribbon of the links. Barnes had lit- tle to say about Hagen's poor shows ing Deal, He merely said the American champion neyer had con- trol of his shots, which high sea winds at & blew clear off the De ys. Davey Herron isn't going to sepa- YONKERS SELECTIONS. aie . First. Race-cAbadanc, Piokwick, [Tate himself from his national ama- Vice Chairman. ° * |teur title with out giving his udver- Che cee er Smoke, War antics im battle (royal. r iusky Third Race—Broomspun, Pluribus, Pittsbt®eh lad will not be caught nap- Kfourth, Race Gladiator, Wildaic, (PINE by not knowing the many plt- Donn falls that cover the Engine Links Bic Sea Mint. at Roslyn, where the national amateur Billy Me- Jevent will be Played in September, In PAH eons vet order to gain early information just 7 at een what shots are best suited to negotiate the word was passed around that | those trouble: greens and the litle Chevaller wasn't all that had been said | goat-g: hole Herron about him in advance. When stripped nilgrimage down in the paddock both of his foreiegs | Will Make’a special vigrimare dows showed the signs of generous poul- | tora wonkout. He will be the guest of Ucing over the knees, and this didn't | f{mery ted. Dy former Pacitle appeal to the onlookers. Coast champion, and one of the fore- Patterson explained that the colt : " : ost El ers’ Club players. Herron had sore knees, but that he was fast, | most Ooeinecrs! Club players and equipped with a bit to prevent his Tunning out would win barring acale | Travers and Ned Sawyer. dent ; eats aul Mlodtcuiar oil Meanwhile the word went the rounds | DOxt Tuesday And Wceiewd ieas that Chevalier wouldn't do, he was a|‘icnais who will shoot for the many “lob" and what not, and that George | /\0))"Grizes offered for the lucky win- Odom's Arada was a sure thing. The | nen.” It is expected t Vardon and play of the race then centred’ on !Ray will play at Shawnee, which was Odom's trick, Some even took their |thelp first tournament when here in wagers off Chevulier, Arada’s price | \g19 Jim Barnes won the 1918 went from 12 to 1 down to 4 to 1. The story of the race is ‘old now. Shuttinger broke Chevailer off in front, and never was caught. He came through the stretch four lengths in front looking behind. Arada, off none too well, ran a creditable race, closed Shawnee fixture after he had estab- lished a new course record in 6 The field that entered the Western amateur championship this week at Memphis was the greatest that ever went to hunt for the main golf It would i of the corn region. fast in’ the straightaway, only to pee that the Middle West has the weaken at the end, He luckily lasted |.4ge on this sector of the country in jto save the place money from The |geveloping young golfers, The St. Cook. Louis section especially is notable for — {ts dig crop of youthful mashie Jack Dempsey, heavyweight chain- | wielders pion, and his manager Jack Kearns, went to the track yemlerday as guests of Capt, Nick Housman, the oyster King, and created. quite a stir in the TRAINING GALLOPS. ’ paddock. As soon as {t became k:iown - H. e ; t Yonkers, July 16, Track Heavy. ging," went on the Duke. “ie that | BOD blasted a bounder down the third | BROWN! EVENING WORLD that Dempsey was present the crowd | A t Acaianmtni ads , heme dine Ghats wee himeting coe a sought hin out and thereafter ho was cialis from the titne I was a kid I used ° efttl jor NOTE. Nevelands lont ro eas row esa Queen, aaa used @| Smith's glove and far into left. fo far |), JOY NOTE.—The Clevelands lost, t the centre of an admiring crowd fiv feta a ee tee modern craw! kick. That's supposed |ghat Dol and Ruel blew home, But | too! . ° at appens very ay row deep. Tom Healy, Jimmy isi dig enti moyeer aeat Sebo a modern invention, but T used [Wh thet two Ribas Ii ie HEY, RUBE! Holding the Stogte Uphill Struggle Shock Deldveay(a hang end peaciains ‘dl Bee, 1:00 9-64) Ongore, 64 $2) 6h Se es he same time the ice of the ny, ie f = 2 0 * hand rocla ina , # naturally—always used it, Nobody | goq ain't all it's cracked up to be.| Addicts runiess for seventeen Innings ee SEMI-FINALS TO-DAY forced, ue Openings gaainet Ph iromen.|him the ideal athlete in movoment a4, Een rir ever showed it to me. I swam that | Take in the fourth, The Babe had| Without the twitch of a. bunion! B.| CINCINNATI, July 17.—Purther evi- IN VICTORY CUP EVENT — |eutytf 89 eta however, he showed and general | appearancy Leto: ede tO: By don, 1 PRY fhe first time I pushed a cracker | nis jacket prushed by the ball and got |fr you, Mr. Renton, dence that the Brooklyn team iv out of that he was far below par iawn tennis: | Dempsey could get wut of tN paldock | woah, 6) nT; Parnes Ay f i or c 4 eo vorld’s chi ¢ i 0 and in he club house, Benny Leon petites ¥ the eurf, The fact js there's no much |grevor edi awe Rew away, But IOEIR S SOAISDLENNAIS CADIS HAS 10 FY OVER WYKAGYL LINKS 7—§ victory over T. D. Robinson. | Arg, the Hghtweight chanimton, and (4 $9 2.27 45; Norebaling, 1 fn 2.81; Panammen, Mein i ignor Bodie—it looked for certain nee here yesterday afternoon, when ckmorton took the measure of Ce- | MF BEN ECR E CORDON, AAG) a H,, 1-2 i Sy Chsline @, thing as a modern way to swim. I e- | sib r ing ‘ \ 8-4 tn 01 Alma i 5 fave Bo doubt the ancient Hawatians | cure ‘tet Ping had taced out « homer, beat the present title-nolders, the ee dric A. Major, 6—3, 6—8. Billy satbacs Appeared: Chen Jovany |e io: 3100 Marie Anteinetia acd Wiha, feeed every stroke we know and per-|Q7,8,‘riplo at least. ‘The ball was tamon us Reds, tn the first gamo of a so-called| The stalking shadow of a promedi-| | The appearance of Miss Mlenaor Ten- Yinewe pores Wan Maal Kon in 118 24, had better swimming ‘form than |pPecding down right centre. | You'd crucial sorica, 6 to 4, but only after the| tated Siwanoy victory is hovering | {ir Wnwnis einen Hoe daghlog the seound race, Joined the pugilistio | salon, 34 fa 40 2-6—1.10 3-8; ‘Thea-Lng we'll ever have.” ebaito tke, Teen he blenny Secretary Joseph O'Brien of tne| greatest of uphill battled. Uke a menage over the Victory Cup | made short work of er opponents. In| horse wae completely forgotten 5 | s.at; Coste ire, $4 te 1-24; Melee Parte, yo STRAINING DIET, RAW FISH OR|Brown centre, sprung his long logs |New York Giants, who has been a} It looked as though the Reds had put/event at Wykagyl, the final round of | den, 6—0, 6—0, and Mise Edith Sizour- — in LS ori Bi a ie Sis Gan ie ae ANYTHING HANDY. for a sprint of more than Afty yeada, |stockholder in the Milwaukee club of|the game once in the second inning, | which comes down to a decision this | ney of Boston, 6—3, 6— A week or 50 ago we called our|})to iene ts to sian, 1-2 4 08 28, Do you diet in any way, ua a mat. |*t#etched out a long arm and the ball the American Association, has dts-| when they acorod four runs on some fair | afternoon, It ix hovering expectantly | sre eee saw w nlw De + _|readers’ attention to Jimmy Hewitt’s | yas. 12% 82; Bhe Relle, 1 je ter of training?” I asked. stuck on his glove. Have to give it to | his future home in this city. O'Hrien |Mitting and some breaks In thelr favor,/in the immediate buckground, about |*™mmett Has ® Bis Dax t St. Allan, and said he was being | 1091.21 3-5; Mow, 1-2 in Bt 1-0; Armume, “No,” said the Duke, “I always eat |!™. F ndie did. After Ping got| made his home in Milwaukee up to| Which chiefly conslated of the ball tak- ar | Court. primed for Yonkers. Yestertlay was |j'y jn oi; Se Sioner, 118 iy M4—15— @hatever 1 feel like eating Tt cat Over Bis first outburst of rage in Da-|the time he uswumed the position| ing some pecullar bounds that helped |‘ Mt awiftly across the title page of fred D. Hammett carried off the| the day and St, Allan-breezed home in| hp," Nortinen Welle. 4 in 1.80 tt, 18 Fralt, vegetables, steak arsihing f{Uve, Neapolitan, A great oath, In] with the Giants, Otlo Borehart, Pres: |i nit up the bases, yet another metropolitan fixture, and| honors in the singles and doubles as| front of as good a one as On Watch, | 6 eat pie and ice cream if t want it. {Sil “Lefty” was touched up for six | ident of the club, ani ather sto oe ane on inning, though, the| 96, Henry J. Topping of Greenwich, |the lawn tennis tournament on the[St. Allan had been running “up| “prow, 4 in 1 Bright Goll, 1 @at fish. Sometimes I eat fish raw, |t*—Peck, Ruth and Bodie each find. | holders have taken over the PHT y da al etal han trl 5 ae siub | A#alnst it” at Aqueduct, but just the 12 in Derhie, da ia Pecpre tomeine ling him for one, aside from the threo | interests. Cincinnat! crew were completely pue- stands alone in ity path as forlorn as| courts of the Woodmere Country Ciub| “4 Shaeh tasen Ware iting Mik toe Be oes S We have many kinds of fish in|bunched by Pratt, Ruel and Meusel| waginnaron, duly 1%—Chicago| Ze! bY Burleteh Grimes's curves, as/the late Horatius, who stood on the | moved Into the semi-final round yes-| S00 Came off yesterday, It was fine oe ee Hawait. 1 think 1 like steak as weil {tat got the two tallies of the 8ev-| won hoth ramen of a double header with | ey did not score again off him. bridge at midnight and ac like a|terday, It was in the singles that the| manoeuvring on the part of Trainer Lean, 1 te 181 ar @s anything. I often eat steak, 1) onth. Washington, 4 to 1 and § to 6. Rice of| The Robins didn't tally at all until) tough guy with casual pedestrians, | former New York University captain) Hewitt, but the public can't be on to eat voretables and fruit but 1 am no], The Browns hed eleven hits and |the Washingtons falied to Ket 4 hit after | the fifth, when they got one run, They! gr, Topping is undoubtedly a brave | *cheved his greatest success by beat-lall the angles of racing nowadays, Vegetarian; positively not.” five runs on Mogridge when he was|having bit safely In twenty-elght con-| scoreq thrice in the sixth, «tying the picked Ove | ing Benjamin M. Letson and Dr, Wi- ae Wvhatever Ne ents, and however he [Pélleved In tho weventh for the guodly |accutive games, “In the final Inning of | scored [rics tn Mie aint ety Se man, but the late Horatius had quite |i ios cnbaum, the latter the playing | Jockey Tawrence Like made his fat i DUPpOsE 0 or |the second Kame, wit Vashington | score. ene 5 were 4 . N) the tats ose my fring, Duke Kahanamoku is, an| Purpose of allowing Meusel to hit for |the, second game, | with Washington | sore | Alt an edge on him at that. A 1 ji 4 : first ance of the season on c ; ‘ome| Ray Fisher, the old Yankee twirler, through holder of the trophy. 4 {deal athlete in appearance and a|him. Afterward MoGraw, of whom | Mf tye bases full ; . Ms eet ter had to do was to hold his temper, is mont | Kashmir in the Melrose Stakes, anj . Mt Aree ctition {little hus been aeen, faced the Browns e bi I. Reuther of World's Series fame then rae Hamynett’s fourth round engagement | yay Mon “carefully. judged’ rack Gonsistent performer in competition. | Atti" Mies Me ably. One clean and| CHICAGO, Jui U7-Mann‘s triple] went in, and the winning runs, a brace | himself in readinvss, and a mere inci- | against Letson was a severe teat, Tne ng 6 Bide, SareGnly JUbeed eee | : Like many other Hawaiians, he clear- 1 iy 17 dental brid while Mr. »pping | latter continually resorted to tosses, vy | landed the Hallenbeck horse home a (YONKERS & MT, V ly shows breeding. Hix head Ia very (one scratch hit were all made off him|and Eayra's single In the eleventh | of thom, were made off him in the elghth, | dental Pridey, | white | Alls Cup latter continually resorted to oe tan. |handy winner, Lyke got quite @ re- | ry AY well shaped, his hair thick and black {2 the succeeding two innings. He fining ave Boston a victory over]. Bd Khoctchy waa the chiet swatamith | Must first dispose o} Sweets Wah RO paces tO ey ee’ leention. when he returned to” the sa notion’ that he rubbed grease ines {Showed proper gameness as well in un| Chicago by a xcore of 3 to 2 for ‘the winners, getting three In four|the intercollegiate chamimen, im Meo ( mit, however, aways played the ball scales with his mount, |] The $3,500 Fleetwing wed — o orning finals, e . ty ng cho 1 arfii BE ees ee re avo RE maces Meat sora cpctalane temsboes wae PORTON, Tule ie ener e cane oaecins-<ane to the mat with the winner of tha | seu), UNRE Ole Rane one eon to re Fm | Fairfield Purse lars his forchend high, ears perfectly [Walked and Williams sacriaced. |fetrott ‘a victory by a scare of 6 to Bent Capt Ned Sawyer-Johnny Anderson mateh | olley’ or smamn, “neyond the tines.| , Not watianed mith one day, the Fishkill Handicap 2 4 he alterno: amine! haa —3, 2, 3 C~ Bhaped, eyes well shaped, open, quick | Smith Ct cece it oe & bien hevtonged Stover Boston in the tenth inning, enton ap ures Aphis quartet representa the surviving | Hammett next outplayed — Dr.|cess of War Mask, with a profitable Putnam. Purse Gnd infellizent, his nose wtralght and | tind. |) Wikrd made (ee tine the| Art time in eleven weeks and pitched * unit_of the original sixteen that went | Rosentaum, &— 4G 19. From|score, with Sibola, “Happy” Buxton | And Two Other Hkh Class Contests uti TR Ge Gxpranatre. Tilk he barrier In. yesterday's {i nd| iia wide of the net Dr. Rosenbaum|rode ‘this one too, and ome. 0} j B02 Me mouth mrong and ex) ii [Play of the day by leaping for tho! fret time in clevin woeks and pit 17-Inning G @ Jie tne! warrior fh Soatendag'e fet and h Dr. Rosenbaum| rode ‘this one too, Rot home. on NCW An 2.00. are rather small and his fin-|D4ll, grabbing it and slashing it to} mel bit wes tnkln out for « pinch g am second rounds, the features of which} fought for the net in all of the rallies.[time, although pressed hard in the Tle Hong, slender and well sbappd,| Ruel with such speed that Myddy| hitter In the ninth. . ‘1s night, be found In the fact that there| "in “the doubles, “Hammett, waited Anat gixteenth by the lightly welgnted rainy to A nked Sister off successfully at th = at Fi G t 0 weren't any with Embree enderaon, ed a y the lightly i praia to feet are big, brond, and shaped ee en Motraw took “up. the | ye 7 gOUTE: Mo outs or Giants, ¢- a Willian Katz and Jchn McLoughlin] Oceanna. There wos 28 good as 10 Al'traing Sate Al] lke paddies, an inheritance {rom hit Causey ¢r Phila- . to an application of the well-known | to 1 against Sibola at one time. Also reached Many centuries of sca-swimming an- | guntlet and struck Gerber o delphia by a so M1 to 2 in the ae W. M. Washburn Double Winner in| to an application Pretic Wee rome. Ave, Bubwey, Gostore, His toes are browd und tone. | Hp Pop Benne eroies ie Rinna opening game of the acrtes. PITTSBURG, July 17.—Rube Bon- Singles. ,| {ies Bonmeused ao, much ‘Anat! Louis Feuatel put Gordon on Dream Rupwng to Mole Ate One could almost !magine that a few | busting up the gar sf PI sugan's|ton and Earl Hamilton, veteran south-| tt was a pretty race that developed | the opposing palr complet oath on tho Valley 4n the second: raoe cena, Aa ATR hea te teens more fenerations of swimming cham. |fMst mning, when Gedeon singled past aA C OR the basen’ niled ine the | paws, ataged one of the greatest pitch. | between the men and the women com: their bearings While the victors tai-lhq ‘a’ renult. there was 16, 6 and subway, thence by trolley’ frou in the Kahsnamoku line of de- | Ward and Bisler roweled the pill fol) eighth aye Philadephia the finatl io 3 petitora in the Field Club of Green-| I Qgorick HL Alexander and Dr,|@gainst the gelding. Gordon cour. would develop web a crash to right that got past Ruth) S600" AN fo} Keries be ts | ing (battles in baseball history in a op. Conn, aa to which | wiltcg Rosenbaum, former nationai|agcously shot his mount through « FECT AS AN ANCIENT GREEK. | and to the fence, making it a homer! fcore of & to 4 wonderful seventeen-inning battle | Wich, Greenwich, in Te eee eeutayad with aii their| knothole on the rail guing round the 14 arrive in the semi-final round | indoor cha play ver saw & man With u fines | for Sis, with Ged, of course, rumbling — that the Giants won by scoring | ¥°™ 4 old-time fire, They defeated Hugh| first turn and went into tie lead, He torso. His shoulders are wide and|in ahead of him. In the fifth this) CINCINNATI July Aurust b frat as the tdurnament got under way) So ing und Lesile H. Fishel, at 6—4.| maintained his position all the way ‘Tiicketn "Now On Sale, well muscled, His body tapers neatly |same George Sisler made un honest) Merrmann. President the Cincin: [seven rung in the seventeenth. A Alessterday, ‘The women won, aa Ars |G—s, They will encounter Hammett/to the Anal sixteenth, where the WORLD'S BEST BOXERS, to the small waist, with the perfect | homer into the right fleld stand—| i) soa ie none result of their victory the Giants are mavens hy Lyneh and a Benita? and Henders LM te The inate of! Dream weakened and beaten out FULTON ve. WILKS. fauesle Hines so often shown in stat-| lower tier. Thetr other two came in hye gts ‘ow In Atth place, Ls Neg i a round be-| the tou ae 4 * |lby War Mask, which had saved : ibd - | manage the team during the n fifth p while the m bi DUNDEE vs, FITZSIMMONS, wes of Greek athletes, His lege|the alxth, Gerber grounded to Reck.| gf 1921 und. 19: Up to the seventeenth Bamilten @i-| hind ——— ee ground at the home turn. AUNtod ne Moe @bove the knee are thick and por- | Revered, however, knocked tt through — ca oni 5 rane Tr pays, reball and Jaffe Oraw in Chess MORAN ve KENNY, flectly round, the muscles not stand-| the box for a single. Bayne fannea, a, lowed only eight hits and three bases! wast n ward Match, Little Weiner, who rode Lunetta, FIRST REGIMENT ARMORY, dng out in relief, and no ridges of | Fut Tobin singled to centre, This ‘or Morrow-lon balls. Benton allowed only nine| Harold A norton, held *| APLANTIC Crry, N. J, July 17.—|the favorite, in the Cornwall purse, | NEWARK, Mpscle showing. His knees are ex-|ehused Severeid to third, and Tobin Pare: tormertow aftien hits and two bases on balls in the en. | fe oF tM ‘Ne Washburn, dis, litrank J. Marshall of New York, Unitea [Mid afterward that he couldn't have MONDAY, JULY 26, Hy in proportion to the thighs and | moved up-to second on the throw tn championship matches wil} tine game, He received wonderful | flayed or first engage- |. I | lost if his mount had beem straight et ap A well-shaped calf, neither too/that nearly nicked Severeld, Would |be deol under the auaploes of the | support en } do, ba bey [statue chamnion eae Charles Jaffe of) when tho barrier Went up, An ngs INTERNATIONAL tt nor too heavy, These logs, tike| have, I think, if Wardle hadn't| Sew ont Friends of Irish! Benton's pitching was most remark- R thy AS WnGie ed Reema the kevent(MURreRe, Me ad Lunetta by the | posom git Te fal arms, make a porte sped the ball, Next @edeon rappea Freedom. In the union contest’ Wex- jaible Only three men rma tied SE ea oe ae Ene staterany io Gan ataatore’ Cay and he was turned DAVE MACK AY'Sy Machine for his swimming it into left and secred Sey and Tobin. fori attie Tipperary will oppose Gat. | {Ive to second. Mut fiftecoieht Watters {SUIRAMIEnE Hace The Rasa ccwantl? ward the reser. | 120 Market Stes stroke. Sisler fouled out, ay, Clare and Limerick will cross! faced Rube, and he was as steady as @ | Wasburn displayed lightly im- ‘seventy moyes. ‘The ejghth round will| voir, When Starter Cassidy released | Newurk, The mew extraordinary develop- Of course, I've given due oredit to o1 rook, though not ‘ joke in the hurling match, Often in danger, proved form in the Ho ‘be pliyed to-day, the webbing. Tel. Market 1735-1749, ’ Celtic. * ‘BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK USANWCAIE HE’LL HELP TO KEEP UNCLE SAM IN SWIM AT ANTWERP A2opyright, 1920, by The Press Publishing Co, ‘ | |