The evening world. Newspaper, August 17, 1921, Page 15

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t THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1981. “OTHER SPORT NEWS HiNESONLYREBEL (PRODUCE DISTR Bradley’s Bit +: Sunstar Filly Loses Its Second Spa, This Time It Being Croc on a Former Occasion Prude: By Vincent Treanor. SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y., Aug. | bie Sunstar filly, is the best of her sex in| the West, then Harry Payne Whitney | Reputed Western Champion, Again Beaten at Saratoga leader, 0’ White, ABOUT FISH AND FISHERMEN By William E, Simmons. HIGH WATER. Race to a Whitney Horse at us That Does the Trick, While ry Did It. | | hour for daylight saving time.) | Increasing cloudiness probably fol- ter Girl was third from last leaving showers in the afternoon the barrier and hopelessly out of the lowed by : \race apparently. Zoeller, however, hus- moderate shifting winds, is the fore- It Bit of White, E, R. Bradley's |tled her along, but still she Was A cast for to-day. a teen Jengths behind Swift Grass, the turn. | Zoel- coming to the home A Ashing party tha went to the 17 | Str htene: 8 ol hag a clcar claim to the threc-year- | WEbtened Out in tne eer ng and fathom bank last ‘Thursday and old filly championship this season. in the final sixteenth she was run- cattght all the ling and whiting Bit of White has started tw here i ew OV rane ut nt her. wantea, sighted off Sea Bright, return- and on each occasion she has run| She caus te ut Janku and it was iny af eC, ded or fight- aD Gloas betwok * g, a large whale, wounded or fight- | second to a Whitney cntry. The first | ee betwoen them, that Koster!) ine enemy, ime she raced against Prudery and| linished right on top of her in one of uhe best races of the meeting up tc that time. Excuses were made f ner defeat, one of which was the ride that Carroll put upon her, Mr. Brad- ley voiced the opinion that had Lyke, : and accordingly she ran nowhere. be stable's regular jockey, been on} Besides she ; led up lame. She will) The Drury Lane Fishing Club of her back the resuit of the Prudery |do later. Brighton Beach, Brooklyn, made a race might have been different. Car- roll rode her as if he was in a five furlong dash, Yesterday Bit of White came out again in the Saranac Handicap against Crocus, stable inate of Prud- This time she had her regular rider, Lyke, as pilot, but again sho ran on behind the light blue and brown Lyke rode her differentiy ) from ( He lay in behind Cro- cus, who stepped off in front and led all the way. Leaving the far turn, Lyke made a bid to go up on the outside of the Whitney filly, but the move didn't get anything; again in the stretch, d to hustle Bit of White but he couldn't gain an inch shook Crocus up with a few cracks of the whip, then took a tight hold on the reins and glided home without further contention. Bit of White's. performance wasn't as good that’ which she showed against Prudery previously; on the contrary, éhe just lasted yesterday to beat Idle Vell out of the place movey. The lat- ter was picking them both up at the end in a manner which indicated that ata longer route she might have won the whole race, Natural Bridge was backed with so much confidence, that tany of the scandal mongers likened his victory to one which might be seen at a re- gatta. In the stretch, the Cosden Horse bore out badly, losing several lengths, but, take it from the dis- gruntled ones, no one else in the race had any desire to go and get him. Rodriguez, who rode Snap Dragon, was enjoying the surrounding scenery all through the mile and a furlong trip, they say. Jack Joyner and his friends lost a tough race when Koster Girl finished just a stride too late in the third With any kind of racing luck sh would have won by ten lengths. Kos. Neht Outpitch When Dodg Home Runs by Olsen and| Johaston Cause Defeat of} Giants at a Time When, They Looked Like Sure Winners. By Isaac Shuman. | Burleigh Grimes, Uncie Robbie's| stalwart righthander, annexed his eighteenth victory yester when, the Dodgers defeated the Giants, but tne winning lay not so much for the day in’ his own merit as the luck of his team mates in obtaining hits, especially two in succe in the| ninth which were home runs. j It was the latter, hit by Olson and} Johnston, the first driving in Rue- ther, which were the immediate | cause of the evening's woe in Har- lem. They © bled the Dodgers to evercome a two run lead, which t Giants had collected alter the visit- y ors had scored four runs and teing the tally off Arthur Nehf in the s.xth, when Bill Ryan replaced him, ~~and to win by the score of seven to ix. ‘Phe lucky hitting for the Superbas | came off in the sixth, Until that} time Nebf had yielded but three blows und was + pitching airught ball ‘Phe fact that Schmandt led the fitth with a triple but was unable to come home was ample proof of that. How- ever, Olson started the sixth with » single to left, Johnston drove a hot ‘one to Bancroft which Davie could | not handle cleanly and which enabled ‘Ole to reach second. ‘Then, Hood, bat- ‘ong for Neis, hit a similar one to Nebf and filled the bases. Nehf started his own downfall by delivering a wild pitch, on which Dison scored, and a moment later al- towed Wheat to single to centre, scor- jng both Jol.aston and Hood. Myers went out on u sacrifice to Kelly which raat Wheat to second, from which voeck scored a little later on Schmandt's double to left. ‘Arthur was yanked here and suc- eseded by Ryan, who did well unul his cracking in the final ‘The Giants had piled up their scores more or less laboriously through a generous hitting of Grimes aided by errors in the Brooklyn outfield, each member of which contributed to the day's misplays Nehf's blow-up proved more disap- polating than the usual blow-up of ‘ (iant piteher because he had been well, outpitching Burleigh going 60 at every stage of the game, This, with Ryan's weakness after three wings of labor, to say nothing of | vess Barnes's inability Monday to yop the puny Phillies, indicates that up without protest. fast, Exterminate, who was just learn- | together, with Turnabout in front to | daughter of Fair Play and Job Lot, | Until the Ninth Inning, ers Win Game I's number could have been put ‘The race was al- nost a repetition of the one Ray Jay} an at Yonkers, when, after being left| et the post, he was beaten only by a} ip. A well-known fishing captain of Freeport wrote a regular customer in this city at the end of last week: “Sorry to say that [ will not take you out fishing this Monday, as it would be of no use, there being no fish in the bay.” Jimmy Rowe didn't have Meadow Mist quite keyed up for the last race, trip to Fire Island Inlet last week and | Citation, a 30 to 1 shot, just rolled|got 12 fluke. The party included S. home in the last race in front of aj D. Samuels, N. D. Hyman, I. Agus, lot of hot good things. Among the|Hy. Agar, J. Goodman, Pa Agar, Joe latter was Dolores, who had worked |Agar, and Ben Goldberg. The trip was so much enjoyed that the club will ing how to run, and Rose Hill, There) make it again was a lot of jamming and rough work pulled in tht back stretch, out of; The Orange Fishing Club made its! which came the disqualification of|regular outing from the Battery last Rose Hill, which finished second. Sunday. The Recording Secretary writes ‘The boat that used to John E Madden has sold another/charge $2.50 regular fare with bait) two-year-old. This time it is Mer-|now charges $2 without bait, and/ cutio, which ran second last time out} collects 50 cents for seven decom- behind a good horse. J. K. L. Ross|posed clams and one fish in same was the purchaser. jcondition. ‘They took us to the city . dump for ling, and among the 140 Donnacona disappointed again. The passengers the catoh averaged one | overrated Loft colt was well sup- per man. When the passengers pro- ported by some of the wisest specu-| tested they were told the regular lators at the track, but he stood stock | pilot was absont, It was the poorest still as the barrier went up. He ran) outing the club ever had.” a sixteenth of mile behind the fleld | ei ee down the back stretch and showed! (a, 1 t hap ; | pt. Dave Martin of the steamer enough speed to Beat His opponent | Giralda writes: “The Klondyke Dunks Kad he got away Mi break and neil continue to hold their reputation as bisa and telat ak and he'll jeing one of the most trustworth come home on the bit in the best of | Sehing grounds about New. York for Sich hed sea bass, The Giralda has been fish- ling there dally for the past eight weeks. With few excoptions the catches have been very good. The totals have been from 200 to 1,800 per day. Some of the high hooks Friday were Charles Lutz, No. 327 Fast 57th Street, 2% bass; Louis Buer, No. 112 East 96th Street, 26 bass; B. | McBride, No. 107 South Eighth Street, Brooklyn, 22 bass, $ porgies; M. Mayer, No. 504 East 89th Street, 14 bass; W. N. Bollen, No. 68 East 23d Street, 12 bass and one $-pound fluke, which took first prize.” The first race was strictly a family affair between two full sisters, Jyn- tee and Turnabout. They ran close the stretch, where the six-year-old| said "day day” to her three-year-old relative and came on to win handily. It isn't often that two sisters or} brothers meet in the same race. ' Trainers who want to win a bet| engage Fator to ride, and nine times | out of ten the young man delivers. | His services are very much in de- mand, He is leading Sande in the race for jockey honors at the meet- In quest of information about sharks i ing so far. | Dr. John ‘Treadwell Nichols, assoctate | curator of recent fishes at the Ameri- Be patient, the Rancocas Stable | can Museum of Natural History made a cruise on the auxifary ketch Yuma along the southeast coast of Florida in April, 1917. He succeeded in get tins five specimens of the jeapiny shark recently referred to in this col- umn. The scientific name is rather formi- dable — Carcharhinus limbatus — but the fish is as active as a rapid fire gun. One of the specimens was four fect eleven inches long and the others ‘over five feet. All except the smallest carried young, Two carried six, one four and the other three. One taken at Rabbit Key is more particularly described. | Dr. Nievols says of it: “The jaws of the Rabbit Key shark were saved, and the tips of two sting or whip ray spines found imbedded about the mouth. A steak cut from the side of this same one fried was good, resery- jbling that from the C. obscurus, though somewhat less excellent. The close conformity in the size of the young indicates a very definite breed- ing date, It is significant that no males of this species or of C. acrono- tus, which also had young, were tnet with. It appears that when the young fe- male ground sharks (Sarcharinus) are not accompanied by males of the same — speci Considerable data proves this, for C. milberti of Great South Bay, N. Y. C. limbatus was the shark most commonly met with. It is an active species, frequently taken when trolling for tarpon, and known to the boatmen as mackerel shark. The much rarer Lamnidae, with bet- ter right to the name, would very likely be called the same if taken.” STANDING OF will win a race or two here before the meeting is ove! es Grimes RUNS FOR WEEK NATIONAL LEAGUE. Pittsburg How'on Rrookivn, hun. Tialtimore Wuttalo Syracuse bad way And with the Reds here for a three- day visit, followed by the slugging Cards, the Giants’ championship »spects seem remote. It is too soon say yet that the Giants will not win, but one might say safely enough 1 if they do not win more ganes than they have been taking in the | 5 the Braves and even | NATIONAL LEAGUE, Chobe, ow. L. PC. | Clubs, Ww. Le PO. Pitts'gh 71 39 .645 /St.Louis 55 54 .505 N. York 67 46 .593/Cin'nati 49 62 .441 pa three w Ly the Dodgers may be fighting them | Beaten. & & B79 (Chicago a 86 400 | toward the ls of September for sae : y second place. It's a horrible thought, GAMES YESTERDAY. put the Giants have been playing almost that kind of ball. ——_—_- BOXING COMMISSION PUTS At Polo Groun Brooklyn. Dew. York 2 Ratteries—-Getmes, Kya and Suyder ‘At Philadelpaia— dy tee oudor iret Game— TWO BIG CLUBS UNDER BAN.| "ists coxier sua ‘uo: Saas aes ‘Two boxing clubs were summarily ENTE Feat ie etry a oat ae (80000200 00-619 dealt with by the State Athletic Com- es Adam, “ini ual Schnldt; Sedgewick mission at its meeting yesterday, One H501e0 oC 13 2 OO 102 00e wT club, the Dyckman Oval, had its cense revoked, and the other, the Box- ‘ork, “Alexauder, Freeman and O'Far id Gowdy and O'Neil! GAMES TO-DAY. ing Drome in the Bronx, was sus. | Cinginnati New York. i s , at Brooklyn, | pended, Both penalties were tmposed Shintes ot Reon, | by the commission after a hearing, and in both cases it was announced that} financial irregularities constituted the ground upon which action was taken, Tt was explained by Harry Burchell Secretary to the commission, tha there was no hint of any dishonesty In either case and that the basis of Pittsburgh at Philadelphia. AMERICAN LEAGUE. | Clute. we. Lk. PO. Clute, w. Lb. PC, N. York 66 40 .623|Detroit. 52 61 .460/ Cleve'ld 69 42 .622/B:« ston. 50 57 .459 Wash’n 60 53 .531/Chicago 47 63 427 St.Louis55 55 500 Phila... 41 69 .373| GAME YESTERDAY. the trouble was poor business man- | 4t St Loul— RAE Detroit 20002020171 1] agement. Be Louis OO R08Os 0 5 OF ‘The trouble, according to the Sec-| , ielienes <inoiard tad Basser; Venger, holy retary, grow out of debts which had, not been paid by the clubs to boxers who appeared under contract for cer- ‘Only ‘game scheduled tn American League. GAMES TO-DAY. New York at Chicago. INPRIARY FIGHT; | WEEPS BECAUSE OF HEGOESITALONE ANNONA FUMES Guardia, Haskell and Ben-|Firemen With Handkerchiefs | nett File Mayoralty Petitions,| and Masks Shut Off Leak but First Two May Unite in Machine. Forces Before Fray. ae Oe on | Merchants district | about Washington und Murray Hines Makes Fight on MUFPhY | creas iis mornins made prices to| Alone—Hylan to Have No|proepoctive customers with tears in| Opposition Within Qwn} tneir eyes, and buyer and seller t Party—Talley Avoids Fight. “') * oe URINE in the produce ns- ness signs {through wet handkerchiefs held over their mouths and nostrils Bronx G. O. P. Bolis Locals yy was att due to et head on Coalition and Leary Leads fan ammonia compressing ee Fight on Connolly in Queens shaw No. 2 net 1 & Sons 2 Washington Strect,! —Other Candidates. {blowing out. Everybody in the pla cal was driven out, as the building oceu- pled by the Behrmans, whose busi- | Promises of violent revoits and is poultry, exes and butter, party splits were not carried out in] yg, Cochran, dealer in fruits, the filing of petitions designating can- | filled with fumes from the cold storage | didates with the Board of Elections, | machin’ | About the oniy insurgents entering} The mearsoh a za hein t street and other stores for a block the primaries were those Who: Baa’ around. An alarm of fire brought been preparing to do so for the last} jjattalion Chief O'Denohu who] month, qualified as gas officer at once. Ue James J. Hines, the Harlem Tam-{|#ave a sniff, wrapped a wet ba | kerchie¢ about his mouth and no: many leader, unable to ifnd anybody trils and telephoned for the ceicue| who would run on his county and) .quad. | borough ticket, went into the race all| Acting Capt, Connors, with Firemen | by bimseif against the Tammany|Varger and kennedy, responded, and designate for Borough President} wearing fume mn ks entered the Julius Mill: building, which had become so filled oa with fumes that it would have been John J. Hopper loomed up a8 4] certain death for anyone not properly candidate for Register on the Ben-| equipped to have gone Into it nett Republican ticket and as acan-| The mtn made their way to the didate in the Democratic primaries on | °?!!4r and located the leak, ‘The en : gine, which was still running, was | his own ticket, and if he is beaten In} iii of and the main valve closed, the primaries he will run on an inde- | stopping the Teak. | pendent ticket and try to beat both| Although the firemen were t rough | the women candidates. {ith thelr work ina few minutes, the Borough President Curran, the | fumes lingered in the neighborhood | Fusion candidate for Mayor will open , {° #” hur: | ———_—- headquarters this week in the vicin- | snocrath Unable to Agree on| {ty of Times Square, His campaign | Fight nul. | will be managed by John J. Lyon: WASHINGTON, Aug. —17.—Demo- | Secretary of State, who conducted | crats failed again to-day to reach an} Mr. Curran’s campaign for President of the Borough two years ago and achieved the record of putting over the only straight Republican that ever ran for an office in Manhattan. The Prohibition Party this mornir a resolution opposing the hew tariff bill, the eaucus adjourning | Until & o'clock to-night. ‘The chief dif- | nee of opinion seems to be whether | resolution stating the Democratic opporition should be in general term: igreement 0 or cor specific suggestion ax to} filed their municipal ticket with George | courees (rom which revenue should be | raised, Kenneth Hinds for Mayor, John M Kee, Comptroller, and John D, Quail, President of the Board of Aldermen. Bordugh President La Guardia, County Judge Haskell of Brooklyn and ex-Senator William M, Bennett all filed petitions to contest in the | Republican primaries for Mayor.| During the ten days permitted for) declinations, Huskell and La Guardia may combine their forces and emerge as candidates for Mayor and Comp- troller, respectively, on an anti-Fusion | ticket. La Guardia's petition was signed by 4,426 voters, Hamilton MeInnies filed as an inde- pendent Republican candidate for Borough President of Brooklyn, Wal- ter B, Atterbury, former Chairman| of the Republican County Commit- tee of Kings, presented a petition for member of Assembly in the 17th Di trict of Kings, bucking Assemblyn Frederick A. ' Wells, Republican ganization choice In the home district of “Jake” Li ingston, Republican boss of Kings, Emerson D. R, Creverling entered the primaries for Alderman against Lou J. Druss, organization designee in the | 68th District. The refusal of Gener Judge Talley to run in th primaries was in the face of a resolu: | tion adopted by the Terence Swiney Council, American Associa tion for the Recognition of Ire pledging its support to hit. council condemned th ac hery’ the cause of the Irish Republi Special Sessions Justice Corne!iu Collins, named by Tammany in pl of Talk A committee was appointed to canvass against Justice C In the Bronx the regular eratic organisation allied with ‘Ts many and heeded by Arthur is to be opposed in the primari: Sheriff by Patrick J. Kane, old time district leader. His petition for the place was indorsed by the sisnatures of 4,000 voters. I have Bu Driver He! Aaron Win, the driver of Fi esterday enw | . a Pathe p don Lavgasio! tor, wa. t homicide to-day in Yorky: will hay otion picture oper chnic will be crowded by a taxicab: ‘on bull igetietyae 3 New York stores all the uncalled Booklet k for suits from my chain of them, some as low as ‘TIFIC individual instruc- by the Dalton Method In tiled pools, for men, woren and children. COR. 40TH STREET tain percentages of the recelpta or for PMMEdalpria at, Cleveland. @ flat sum. igesteeepend Nale's Washington at St, Louis. ; pico ss 308 Wi 59th Street EXTRA PANTS FREE!! SUIT TO ORDER $ Including Extra Pair of Trousers ) As has been my custom in the past, ' [have gathered together from all my stores ends of th pieces sold b at prices of $25, $30, $35; some have enough for 2-piece suit and extra trousers,some have enough for 8-piece suit and extra trousers. so customers can come in, make SUIT T Including Extra Pair of Trousers of the Same Goods UNCALLED FOR SUITS 1 have distributed through my stores and marked Mitehell The Tailor 1431 BROADWAY Open Evenings Until 9 P.M. Saturday 20 P.M — PETER, FORMER KING} "re wars. peiitiutohea “the anes ad trough Albania and wet ti state In 1919 when his second son, | ea . OF SERBIA, IS DEAD | Grown Prince Alexander, succeeded But bis royal career was bi : —— 2 him, by o grave and terrible tragedy—tl Monarch Who Relinquished Throne | Despite his King Peter pre. omeninetions of his lecessor, sented one of the most courageous | King Alexander, and the inttes's wife in 1919 Succumbs to Con figures of the World War. Om the|Queen Draga—in the pal wat Bel- gestion of Lungs. day that Serbia rejected the Aus-|STade on June 10, 1908. A sruspicion ae : trian demands Peter repounced his|that members of the Kai prgeviteh BELGRADE, Jugo-Slavia, Aug, 17| temporary abdication of the throne | family, of which Peter was ® member, (Astodated Prevs)ccKing Peter ot /48¢) placed himselg once more at| Wore implicated in the adnspiracy | the h 6 Oountry. Serbia ix dead of congestion of tne | ike tesnaas ce tun He was seventy-six years old. King Veter, white haired, deaf, ill from the infirmities of age and euf- fering from the wounds of three or which exterminated the rival When the fortunes of war turned Obrenovitch dynasty, of which "kiee against the Serbians he remained with |ander and Draga were fepresenta- his armios tll practically the last|tives. and which placed Peter on the units had beem driven from the cotn- | throne five Gays later, was never en try. He then effected an escape |tirely removed. a, We state it as our honest belief that for the price asked, Chester- field gives the greatest value in Turkish Blend cigarettes ever offered to smokers. Leggett & Myers Tobacco Co. i e <s y me placed these in a line in the inside of my store wn selection, and the price IT TO ORDER — UNCALLED FOR TROUSERS I have a hundred pairs of odd trousers all ready to wear out. You might find something that might pos- sibly match your old coat and vest. I have $3 50 $ 8.00 placed these in my 3 New York stores for dis- posal. I can assure you of a fit as low as | | 2 COLUMBUS CIRCLE Oven Evenings Until ® P.M. Saturdays, 10 P, My 119-121 NASC.AU STREET Open Evenings Until 7 P.M. Saturday, @ P.M, |

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