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AIN DAILY:.HERALD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 2, 1915 — —— ,,» Ye(.Good Folke of Connecticut Used to Sell Wooden Nutmegs to Ye Colonists | of New York But the Present Day Boxers of Manhattan Are Securing Ample Revenge - 'y 9 Newark in the first round of a sched-| men who had been killed in the ring e 5 o s an t ee ny uled ten-round bout. Paddy O'Hearn | “in the last few years.” As some of | \ of Montana was to have met Gattle, | the cases cited were as far back as S t h & but at the last moment got cold feet| 1894—although the writer carefully or o ra refused %o kel his engagement. | refrained from giving the dates of any BY “GRAVY | ! vice ,[f’_’;] ess Willard SMITH AND LEVINSKY Patsy Cline Winner. ’ OGP R HAVE HAD COLLINS ? Columbus, Ohio. n. 2.—Patsy tWenty years. This list included both in at “White Hope” Who Will Meet Jack el Cline of New York, outpointed K. n,'"'“f!'f‘m'\“fln‘vl professional bouts in the States, United often lasted more than a hundred anada, Great ribain rounds, and were measured in time generally agreed that the severes . 5 . | Mars of Cincinnati in a twelve-round 2l e . 9, * i heut here vesterday. Both went | and France. / ough, it proved that j I[ nr_ cut here yesterda) en b at Juarez and Doesn’t Consider | HeQvyWEIONtS PUt on FarGical EXR- |, e e amien™ e i i | boxing 14 3 horribiy bricar sna icions will and Mars struck seldom, but | Pastime and peculiarly deadly. Him Qualified. Dmon [0[ Wammmy cmb | Vith greater force. They boxed at| __SIXty deaths in twenty yvears 122 1-2 pounds, long dragged out engagements, mathematical expert figures it. Aw- tain Herald.) change in the complexion of the N S ful, is it .not? Yes, it is not, when | contest which lasted only eleven ack Curley, | reigning race in heavyweight pugilism Waterbury, Jan. 2.—In a slow, iunmparod with the fatality lists of | rounds and occupied only twenty- | New York Jan. 2 All was guiet, he Jess Wil- | in the near future. fcatureless bout, Gunboat Smith and other sports. minutes. It was eighty-eight years peaceful and s ) the b way that's o | The facts of the case are that fne y ’ .| Figures recently compiled show | J 2 pe AT BEreme. N Ot I Yankedd ng a pugilist | White heavy-weight class has not de- Battling Levinsky, heavyweights, that last year there were thirty-five | 480 today; on January 2, 1827 Fail rialto yesterdasy The Johnson and | Veloped a first class fignting man fought twelve rounds to a draw here ! { deaths due to baseball. Of these | Jew Ward, “the Black Diamond,” deal now is only a memory, and the battle for the | since Jim Jetfries. Barring Tomuay | last night. ? twenty were fatally injured by pitched | champion of England, met Pet only evidence lefe of the strenuous brid sometime | 3urns, who unfortunately was handi- Smith was the aggressor through- | balls, five were struck by ba four § .o o . SR 2t By - & L Eh trdm;, Bl | cabed in size,’ thére hasnt DEER | o4 poi oo biogne el 1o B Blows ® | died of over-exertion, one v fatally | oW '_"" known a Young Rump- campaign waged by Czar Ban 1., to ) Mexico, has | Wulte heavy-weight betore the publi Crreie ' 2 5 injured in sliding for a base, and one | Steak, at Royston, Crawley, a bring the military duo, Colonel Rup- ffectively. vi g a r con- —— S B " r battic zround, {in recent years who culd be rated any- S Syl oy nhaiepoirently (doh was killed in a fight. butcher by trade, had been fighting Pert and Cap. Huston, into the Amer- ican league, are a few barrele of emp- e for the big | Where near first class. (R OL kb s AR [ " 's wl‘lfil’fi Yfiu D'n’l fia G | Nobody wants to abolish baseball, | gince he was fifteen, but this was nis The press agents have been spill- [ Gunboat’s blows, and only occasional- U Dp H and it is not usually ranked as a dan- Heav too Mo “m’“ Lo ¥ i g “ ty lm‘!'v's in the Wolcott basement. € 3 championship honors. Among other things, which croppe lof those per- |ing & lot of stufi about Gunboat|ly did he display any agaressive work. . 4 gerous sport, but if statistics prove ¢ r d to poke fun | Smith’s “"come back” in licking young [Phens ward no knockoowns L and m lwg.__ V;S? anything they prove that baseball is At that period a big proportion of the up as an aftermath {o the Yank \ lire to take ‘' | Yommy McCarty, the western cowbay, : ; E ; = g SR i e It | bruisers were butchers, and: ihe deal was that the Yanks might' ey bionship, ani who succumbed to the Gunner's wal- neither fig.hter was marked. There i, may he’ ?lrged that more men and coskneys of s London gilimkety Wére ]:\T\rlwl IEddie Collins during the early plonehip, omt |lovs lnst week. But if Gunboat|was considerable clinching. The ] | boys play ball than put on the gloves | IS B R 3 -J-.z‘f-s of the deal. Johnson sald yes- the game is showed anything of a startling nature | crowd hissed the men during the fight, Hess 5 o mrovlels B (e Wi und_thls Ll el P <Fain 7 s ianafio | ireps 'lf that (be iy, ovpars. Rl hat the dark |in the performance I am at a loss|and especially at the close. men of the Hot Stove circuit to dis- E"n-mn anbd .thn :tams' I\)u"_n must | was matched with Ward for the ":vfln‘fj‘ "_’ get one of the greatest l:h S the Bacon, |to tell what it was. McCarty is a| Wild Bill Fleming, of Oldtown, Me., | cuss: be remembared that the boxing fatal” | uile, Grawley kept a butcher's shiop-BRTS SIS BSFETEC e to advance | mero novice, a boy who really doesn’t | won on points over Red Ames, Of | \What is a “rube?” Franee, . where nearly everybody | With a boxing school on the second syatt Bive had thie pl:{‘vér had they ul'::;l(}t:(i‘srre‘s: hilur‘IIS:nlyl:n;liglha}bl;,uulle;)l.o’;:zfidL;(tc:fl: irxll;nffnorl:;d lt]‘:w‘f};;haizflki‘:akmez]::s R. Edgren,-the sporting editor of b;:yx:sd mo{e 'nrl_less, and basebal] is | loor—a novel combination of busi ‘lv(‘r:\h\\'l]\!lngkln lr)]"'lr 'fiw player now lte race, the |out and to chop with his right at close the vle\'ere‘rvcvf !1:9 two. Spike Car- Y:t‘ New York Evening ‘\\‘m'lvd.» : in|P? iklfd rr::ut}’f‘alll'l.’ ‘.F‘iaures Sbverik tha | “esf“‘s-v y | “"V\'h:n :l';m:l r::““ ::n Huston laughed or more than | quarters. 1n front of a shifty fighter [ dell and Chick Carbon, two lacal | COmMmenting on the comparatively | o ipan fatalities since 1902, covering | awley . stood over six feet n| pen the name of Cobb was ainly secking | McCarty would prove the rankest| boys, hooked up in the preliminary. jlecent battle (?) between Sam’l Me- | hom 50 B 50 Fnited States | height and had an advantage of three ' tioned but admitted that Bddie with ekill | sucker. I doubt if he would lay u | The former won via. a knockout in|Vey and Battling Jim Johnson, hinted | (¥ AL PIE 00 O BIVEE [ BEY | inches over Ward, but hoth weighed | lins was the man Ban Johnso glove to a shifty fellow like Mike | the sixth round. that perhaps those gentlemen did not | oo ™io i Coq “show that the dfamq | about the same, talking oibut. However, thi CAl tion and who | Gibbons in forty rounds, if he had Only 900 witnessed the bouts and | Guite extend themselves to the limit.| o cuiting from the gridiron game in The memorable and ferocious ! various reasons, does not seem credit to the |the good fortune to last that long;the promoters lost money again. By remaining calm and unimpassion- | 10 ¢ | octricted area have never been | tle began with a minute or two of very strong for Columbia Badid in front of the middleweight wizard. | Charley White, of New York, was the | cd, Tdgren suggests, McVey “s2ved|joqq than eleven a vear, and have been | sparring, but after that it was an | says he and Ruppert preferred ba those back | But he did connect with Smith fre- | referee. Jehnson for return engagemenis Aatiag high as forty-four. It must be | exchange of smashing blows in rapid | ry along without the former loose among |vuently because the Gunner knows — ‘“‘:"k‘:‘:l'(‘:‘;” E‘(‘lt»‘:;;i thBi‘S'"“T and | .ongidered, too, that football is played | succession, Jem landed two punches | demon middlesacker lweights first, | only one method, which is to meet A % 4 W e = “Jean-y only during a small part of the year, | to Crawley's one, but they lacked the W i L portunity to | every rush head-on. . But McCarty’s Best Man in Navy Beaten. ctte and Langford have both played: while boxing is a .\'egr-rmmd game. | terrible force of the blows vl(,Hi)-!m.l i ‘“"" S e lieve he can |Dblows did not carry the force of the| New York, Jan, 2.—New Year's |700nson off the boards ‘on the Rube|gince the beginning of the present | by the butcher, D ge at present | Gunner’s, and when the latter did fin- | callers were many' at the Broadway T B 4 century the death list for the Ameri- In the first round, Ward blocked 0 e _WU[N)" “e“_wrd‘y' . pursuit of |ally get over a right, after ~many|S. C. in Brooklyn yesterday afternoon, Here we have “the Rube circuit” | can intercollegiate game has been Peter's first hard blow and countered [ Aaust: Fesy sy Svee "w‘.u B 1l | ihiortive attompts, MoGarty. crumpled | but 1t 1s safe to eay that at least four | defined by an eminent ‘wporting au-|hbout 250, while more than ten times | with. s smssh which 1aid opan tnel| otApietion Gt Shs ¥enEbeeHE I doubt. If | quickly. of those present wished that they had | thority as including the well known |that number have been more or less | flesh aboys one of Peter's eves and | ior an Co0led O Co e et by, Reich and In time McCarty might be made | taken some other method of spending | N4 Populous metropolii of Pennsyl- | seriously injured. stretened him on his back, Craw- liis medoe gre ]a"-‘lnflq o A,J?.h be matched |into a good man—he has a splendid | the time before supper. Just as an | VANid Massachusetts and Wisconsin.| The real objection to boxing sim- | ley was covered with blood when he D o o B feiiiotis, | physique—but ' his friends ought to|example we might mention one Sailor | Of °ourse, such an allegation has™nolmers down to the fact that boxing is | toed th® mark for the sscond round. | RBen wil remain over until ton @ if found | first place him in the hands of a cap- Fritts, who claims to be the hest fcundation of fact. To our personal| not usually considered a ‘“‘gentleman’s After a rapid exchange. Crawley saw-.) ‘an ?\ r:hnupl il o5 ¥t the public able boxing instructor for six months [ heayyweight Uncle Sam's navy ever knowledge, Bob has travelled as farsport.” Many of “our very best peo- | ap gpening, and landed with the forco s --q?'"?fl the -ah;mry\z of the as one man, | or s0. A man who knows as little Produced. If Fritts is the best, the | \Vest as San Francisco, and he knows| ple” go to football games, which gives | of 4 mule’s kick on Ward's tempie. D oipers when Rappért snd 35 arch 6, or|of defense as Tommy boasts can WOTst must be awful, for the Sailor ;2% “"']l as anybody that there are nofeclat to that sport, as also to Polo, | joor 5 byief space it was thought the | “p;', ’lnrk;‘ over the stock whiel for ‘the bout |hardly be dignified by the title of|&Ot a walloping from Tom MecCarty | MCTe rubes,” in the ordinary ac-[which is not absolutely free from |, hag killed Ward, but Jem quick- f‘ 15 bests NeId by Farreit, Dy ame the rec- | boxer. that caused him to seek refuge on | ePtance of the term, in the cities he | danger to the participants. A few peo- | 1" Looqvared and faced his hard-nit- ‘::'r;:‘o;‘,nd Elkus. y f Reno July 4, Gunboat Smith may have come Ithe mat]no less than six times during ;:::ps]?a‘;o ‘r‘:'lul?e{:‘lhr)fl[m.the, r;j:s:::; ‘r:l‘e( A “,ljn‘:e,d',‘::3;":2“‘?"‘;“cn:p‘:afl:i ( ting anwagonist. The new owners took charge ¢ e encourage- | back, although a great many persons| (W0 and one-half rounds. e o Hob il havelitn fic‘er::tedamy e AP rs.* Anorn In the third, fourth and fifth | Yankee headquarters in the > 5 i 2 . i y rounds Ward was felled by teirific second street building this moqg hter who fig- | are of the opinion that he has not Fritts W Same. i as Game. i v New 7Y ' admit that the wise sports of New | with it! blows on the nose and mouth, The and held open house. Dodovan ve a chance |yet arrived. i York are ‘st ' quit ft b, the sports Friends of Willie Ritchie announce Fritts, if he proved nothing else, ork are ‘“stung” quite as often as Ul rapid action and terrible punishment | Yankee pilot, was on hand and numbers that |that the American lightweight cham- | Showed that he was game. Three ',‘-]? ffir!-s Sfmher Beacali il Buks THOMAS PRAISES KOPF, were aiready telling on hoth men, anJ tioned some of his plans for the ity and re- | pion’s hat is in the ring again. Willie | t/Mes in the first round he was put “'r‘)‘;fl- . i gt X R e | the sixth tound ended when botu iell ' ing season. Huston intends tc s to build an |is interesteq In the hat business now | €Wn an dhad to take the count.| Defining the e e i ase| Believes Local Boy Will Play Second | together, after an exchange of sledye- | Donovan's immediate advice laccommodate |out in San Francisco, so that an-| Lach time he got to his feet in a \l‘Xll;Jlll‘ )eo._‘s]\or mrlih(-‘],"; (I"l 3 Pl‘ i Regularly For Athletics, hammer punches, A cross-buttock | training camp. nouncement is not surprising. But | rather painful manner and seemed to "‘ p.rnr;nsé mt" };‘;‘;" I""‘l”" % f‘ll' (it 3 . | which <=ent Crawley to the grass Hus-on advised his friends not has accom- |if Willie is anxious to resume his| Wit the final punch. But McCarty ‘:}:f_:l“[h (“fh“‘:-l"‘r"v T }‘;_']"h”w‘” New Haven, Jan. 2.—Considerable | momentarily unconscious ended the . bank too high on the different pl ts the belief |trade of boxing I have not yet heard | W25 Not there. One thing the big ‘“_”"~ ‘(\hr:\”fa”” ; :»\n'{h "'h’a;“"mh'\”:“‘k‘;p mystery surrounds the presence in | geventh round, Crawley appeared all which the Amerlcan league in, bt o show to | anything about it outside of a ru- western lad must be taught, is to | Y Yl izl | this city of Captain Ira Thomas of | jn anq ten to one was offered against to turn over to the elub. *“No d S who afelmor here and there that! Wilje|Judse distance. Fritts should have|ls probably full of them. ~But 1it{ne Philadelphia American league |y, giving us anything, and we ar most. white | would be matched with Freddy Welsr, | PESN Put away in the first session, but | Wouldnt be healthful to suggest any | pasebali club who arrived here last | " Wwarq tried to land a knockott in asking anything from any obe ¥ s o 3 anxi such thought to a Milwaukee sport. | n; 4 Sterod. d a - fos W on the sole | for a ten round exhibition some time MeCarty was too anxious and he Rl i 2 it night and registered at the Hotel | the eigath, but so wearied himnself Huston We had our eyes widg {8de of living |in February. swung right and left, missing by half | Milwaukee will pass the buck to| Garde. Thomas declared that he was | 4 b fol) forward on his face. when we bought, and we did noj : g y a foot each time. The bell sounded y O8kosh, but if you continue to pur-|pcre on a business trip and he would b s o . The etep before we reconnoitered ed him down | According to reports from San |2 097 *Fen U aUelithe Investigationt Aownl fEoaem| o SR e Ciny | Worn gladiators accomplished little in @ step before we have to be | Francisco Ritchie has taken on a| Ty (he second. Fr L tirtent Dk vouiitds | Bive Mo furtlor particulars ToRArcinE | ing ninth and tenth. totindd e (ITOENESEEEE b, judging by at d £ ¢ 2 n the second, Fritts seemed to have =5 . £ 8! L ., | his unexpected invasion of New Ha- | tot G 3 » S 1luston, however, came oul , great deal of weight during his idle- | Loouperated a whole lot, and he made | "eVer find a self-confessed “rube” |yon il e Joe Lannin fown in pub- |ness, and now resembles & heavy | ;" gosd fight for about two minutes, | COMMUnIty. Ve homas would not discuss the Feder- | _ 10 the eleventh it was apparent that { Tt 1156 DL <o o gt the fans are | welter more than a boy who boxes in | Fritts had opened am old cut on Ms.| We are also told that the Feds | al league but came across with a | Ward was scarcely able to stand, and e e i N 7oty & for a Shift |the neighborhood of 133 pounds. | caries oneom herein the ot on Mo~ |are doomed to failure because they | hoost for Billy Kopf, the former New | Peter, with a final summoning of his e Ghiie ie Shputiathil xt March. However, that is frequently the case | tra blood from this poured oat until | PAve. in part, a “rube circuit.” The | faven shortstop. “Kopf is a mighty | Strength. put all his waning power oot ey 47 . much of a|with a boxer who lays oft for a while | i lonked as if the cwboy was badly | Rochester Times' sport scribe recent- | good man.” said Thomas, “and I be- | Into a blow which caught Jem full | En Adsistrntion of T ppeared out- |and. Willle is not yet through srow. | nure. This evidentls dia net bocher |V alleged that the Federal league | jiove he will be placed at second bae | in the mouth. —The champion was | “Lannin is one ace.” sald H ithe fans are |ing, so that it would not be surpris- Mac, for after fooling around with | €&n never be given major standing | for us next season, that position hav- | rendered senseless and deaf to the “One of the finest we have me other cities. | ing it he had taken on considerable | short loft hooks and jabs he again | “With towns like Buffalo, Baltimore.|ing been made vacant by the sale of | ¢all of “Time” and Peter Crawley, dealing with these baseball With Carl | flesh while loafing. But at his agé | turned loose his right, and down went | Indianapolis and Kansas City in the | Collins.” himself unable to stand, was pro- | And he was very liberal 1o out tine product | jt is no great task to take the pound-| the Sailor. The bell again saved the | CIrCuit.” He would not comment on Bill Jen- | claimed champion of England {he let us have Donovan and very bit of | age off, and I imagine that if proper | pride of the Navy ) ) But why? Baitimore is the seventh | sen, who was drafted by the Athletics In a battle shorter in time than a |and that was certainly very de had for him. | inducements are made he will be| ' Mhe shird vae short and sweet. | Ity I population in’ the United | from the New Haven club last fall. | modern ten-round bout, Jem Ward | J3an Johnson is profuse in h t ends there | glad to accept a proposition to box | McCarty rushed his man and kebt on | States. and the census taker counted | Thomas is a former Connecticut | became an ex-champion. For hours ation of Huston and Rup eal of dissut- [somewhere near the lightwelght|tap of him all the way. Iritts after | MOTe human noses within its limits | leaguer and hus now outlived his days | he remained unconscious, and he was | usiness men, and Hunton ToPs pll sides. 1f {1imi For that matter I fancy that | stopping a few snappy lefts with his | tEan he found in four other cities | as an active catcher. He is now a | forced to spend several days in bed, ‘wm ro_as(, in taking on weight Ritchie has|face was he-\vll(l?red..nnd his legs | Whch have long Deen represented in [ nember of the M: board of strat- | while the victor’s condition was little it for foist- | nothing on Freddy Welsh. When | shook under him. Knowing that }:o the old majors. Buffalo classes in | egy better. Hundreds of Ward's backers | & , ] an]‘mso- Freddy did actually make weight in| had little chance, Fritts rushed in to | $12¢ fairly well with Pittsburg and ! e were ruined by the result of this Said Johnson e l“.““'x-‘)\“h if Willard | the bout with Young Shugrue, which |try his haymaker. MecCarty waiting | D€troit, and it is larger than Cincin- | TODAY IN PUC "0 ANN brutal contest. Although the right- [ POdY s wise as that Rt O ‘r.;fg what will be | was the first time in many months|for just such a move planted a left | "ati and Washington. Kansas City, 1899 Matty Matthews and Owen | ful champlon, Peter resigned his new | N0t & question on T 4 ffair. And a1l fhe had really reduced, he fought like | straight on the Sailor's jaw. Tritts | COUNting that part of it on the Kansas | .o = 000t Conee voung draw at | honors rather than defend them 8hiown anv- |, wooden man. - Welsh is no longer | went down, and at nine sot up again | Side Of the line, Is as large as Wash- | Zi¢gler fought twenty-round raw 2% , gt ward, ana Jem resumed the | ther throuzh | 4 chicken and finds it no trifling mat- | only to be met with a volley of rights | i"8(0n. Indianapolis is somewhat [ Brooklyn. Matty. who was a product | o when. he had fully recovered, | priunity will | ter " to reduce and enter the ring fit | and lefts that put him out for almost | Saller than any city in the old | of the “East Side” of New York, and | Relinquishing the glories of the |rri7.~' | | ig negro now in his admiration of Joh shrewdness Believe me. it honor to sell those men a ball which they were not informed were wonderfully advised LANIGAN TO REFEREE. Charlie Lanigan, former Coi cut league baseball umpire, ha ! named as one of the refereoes American Roller Polo league in the public | anq “strong at the same time. a minute. leagues, but is far from being hope- | giegler, who was a Pennsylvanian, | ring, Crawley retired to the humble lessly outcl d. position of a tavern keeper, and he- In a letter to a New York friend i v : ¢ 5 R " 2, ] the n no less than seven on would be | Ritchie says he will gladly box Welsh Ahcrn and Dillon Draw. The Feds may go on the rocks from | Met in the ring LAt e b o R s y fous r times. I'heir first argument was at any one of various reasons, but not because it is a “rube’ circuit The scarch of Diogenes for an honest man was no more hopeless than the quest for a “rube” town. Yet every hig city, New York in- t;‘e(;lct:let‘;];: h,ere next month. It is to be hoped | Philadelphia, Jan. 2.—Honors were ot kuine Coe il et that the match will be made. Al-|about even at the end of a fast six i ;‘é\_uugh no longer warld:s ch{impinn round bout between Young Ahearn of “Willard de- b itchie is a warm iavonte_\\'lth the | Brooklyn and Jack Dillon of In- Eblic is at a1 | 2nS and his return to the ring would | dianapolis here vesterday. . Ahearn here will be n}eatn a packed house wherever he conceded the Indianapolls middle- | (1.6, has o large percents ey elects to appear. ;i weight eight pounds in welght, but his | ;o0 © L0 FEEE persentags ok Ritchie’s return will be welcomed | cleverness enabled him {o offset Dil- Aivslaeen L llen R 1o stance, as those Bob Ed- negroes left | "y = sens, y lovers of the sport everywhere. He | lon's aggressi h 5 5 . re. He n's aggressivenes B S S 5 A celterweig f , Matty finally wWill accept | j5 5 credit to the profession and the gren described as giving up their coipn | Welterweight champlon b : y of the T 5 SEialy i ; TREEER ; te see *“‘the best imitatio % o | triumphed and knocked Owen out in of the prei- tp]:te\ gl:mv;e HaseR tumave e inim) in ; """"f‘-" for the Kink. over slipped to ‘|h‘(‘”‘I::]‘[‘)‘ii‘“"iyy:g"pff:)‘;(: the second round at Youngstown, O. e holding of Kid Williams, S ‘b y Philadelphia, Pa., Jan. ~Impor- | lace of this burg at from §1 to §7 a | They fhen fought another draw in American | o perfnrmpl}'m T \{laf;' :h?{m- tations from England had a good day | seat.” Philadelphia, but in 1902 Matthews K one of their mfls’da\' o w‘ o ,und 0!\ k (,hr‘x_t- at Jack ]\lc\hf!gans National A. C. The “Brutality” of Boxing defealed Ziegler in Savannah. gilism unless | % <O . round bout With | yesterday. Kid Lewis, the London!| “The California promoters who are | 1892—Joe Goddard defeated Ned fair combat | (N® Veteran Johnny Daly. Daly, be-|lightweight, whipped Willie Moore in | threatening to attack the constitution. | Ryan in fifth round at Melbourne, proud pinna- ing little short of an iron man, man- | gix rounds Lewis scored a knock- [ality of the anti-hoxing law had bet- Aus aged to stay the limit, but he took | down in the third round. ter choose some other dish. Some | 1894—Young Griffo and Solly Smith that stupia | 22 2Wful beating. Daly, while good Eddie Moran, Jimmy Johnston's | inquisitive persons might ask about | fought six-round draw at Chicago. hboat Smith | €10uSh to hald his own with the rank | Eritish featherweight, outpointed | the constitutionality of the law that 1911—Jim Flynn stopped Tony and recall | 80d file of bantams, if not better | Preston Brown, of ebony hue, in their | permitted the persons who were in | Caponi in ninth round at Los Angeles. a twenty |than the average, was not match forlsix round go. McGuigan liked Mor-[at the death of ‘Bull’ Young and ard to his |the little bundle of aggressiveness gan's boxing so well that he offered | ‘Baitling' Reddy fo get away dering what | from Baltimore. him a bout with Johnny Kilbane. ‘ K when they With the smgj(* exception of an- —— brain throb from Beatty, in fack is any- | Other veteran, Frankie Burns, I do Duffy Beats Robindeau the New York Evening Mail 1 t k f ;V'IP\'('lHnd club has gone into bank 910. not know of any bantam who stands ffalo X Ja ot ; Yeh. RPEut maybe it is the sa: law | . : 5 . w d e e e 1A | Luptey thakes it a certainty that®the n Every Way an ays ; Paterson, J., in 1898 and went twenty rounds to a draw. Later in the me vear they fought fifteen rounds, with the same result, in To- ronto. The third fight was in Brook- lvn, and a little later they mixed in Chicago, this also ending in a draw. In 1900, shortly before he became WATERBURY TO B The fact that Owner Somers of the | vay un- 2 3 v Villiams. 3 o 2 ey iy Jnboat Smith |2 chance with ¥ . Burns has|puffy of Lockport outpointed Sam |!hat prevents the presidents and 1 . e bout went challenged the Kid and 1 except to| Robideau of Philadelphia, in a ten | Wty members of some of the gr. W atfrhur,\' fl'anf‘hisc w,m be sr.v)r! ac- ds, and tho learn any day that a match has been round bout here vesterday, in the | St American universities from spend- cording to President O’Rourke’s view falr looked | 8Fanged. Frankie has fought the|opinion of the newspaper writers { 1§ theil time behind the bars. per. | Point. Somers’ financial difficulties ld l B time Sam | Pest of the division and has a splen- | present. Both men seored a knook. | DaPS it IS the same identical statute | Will mean the disposal of the Wa- | ea everages. rounds with- | 4id record, though I doubt he is|cown. Robindeau was best at close | (Nat enables our baseball magnates to terbury franchise at a low figure. The | 3 veéry much, | Sturdy enaugh to stand off the cham.| quarters, but was severely punished | P€ ranked as respectable gentlemen | I3astern association head does not be- CO . L d- B sither Smith | Pion in a twenty round bout. Wi | my Duffs's :(‘m,gm e €% linstead of convicts. Possibly it is the | lieve Waterbury is dead as a base- nnecticut’s eading rews. Jard, it is al- | 1!ams looks the best bantam we have < e, llaw of human nature which enacts | Pall city and he thinks that if local | that Willara | Dad in vears. Tioss Gots' Velsdisot. that a man who engages in any sort | men took hold of the club they could Are you enjoying them in & Siotim to JAS. J. CORBETT. it | of activity customarc among humans | make it pay ; ! Rochester, N, Y, Jan. 2.—Tony| pag to take his chances. There is a Cafe, Home and Club? nching pow- = Ross of New Castle, Pa. outfought i E - . , Castle, - O &Nt | chance that it is the law of common e d fevey, Lang- JACK FARROW DEAD. L Bpnsaistnehio RCel B Yest et syl endaREwHIc i s Vo i et e A JOIN THE BREWED S NART, Sl Hubert Fischer Brewery in a ten round bout. should refrain from going to bed lls, to say Jack Farrow, manager of the SR ) g because g0 many people die in ‘em. So A B remal: 5 r G n, ofem““f;nlzx; :;:a;:v:;slegzgrsll;jl;eivfxiouissxa!and Regular Gattle-ing Gun, many people die in bed that the re ternoon OW ers 4, 8 a New TYork, Jan. Harry Gattle | formers really cught to p. a law T o ve to &tm' catcher for the Brooklyn club, died | of Portchester scored his 'ninth | against the deadly contraptio AT THE znvtt::ng: er ;afli' this r;l’orninz: in the home of {s(raight knockout in the Olympic club| When the proposéd law gainst A AH - s)ect eofor; lns, srfm_“at herlll: A_mlm_\. He had | yesterday afternoon, when he put his | boxing was being agitated in Califor- { etna eyS On wp at Charle 1 Det P a L] i ong i " x N 2 2 a i = . e o g O\ OFF » D been failing health for a long time, sleep producer over on Jack Hagen of nia, one paper published a list of sixty i Business and Professlonal Men sk-hmurrnui’ ll‘;vu l!l l(’,‘:l::;; il