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MNS'S PUNCHES HAD NO FFFECT ON JOE ERIM Mtalian Fighter Was Put Down Often,| but He Was Always Up and Ready “for More During Six-Round Bout ino Philadelphia. ~_ {Special to The Evening World.) HIA, Oct. 20.—Joe Gans, the light-weight champion, failed .o knock out the iron man Joe Grim last fht, but he gave the Italian the worst the hard man has received sinci became famous in the roped arena, Grim was not knocked out was a ‘Surprise to all who witnessed the en- eounter, He received an awful beating j | Jand was a happy man, indeed, when the ial bell sounded, ‘On leaving the ring Grim didn't show the same vim and dash he displayed “when finishing his session with Fitzsim- mons last week, In last night's contest ‘he met a man at least fifteen pounds lighter, but what the colored man lacked im weight he more than made up in ring Beneralship and good judgment in de- _ livering his blows. Am Uninteresting Contest. The contest was far from being In- teresting, owing to the fact of Grim’ haying a wholesome respect for Gans's wicked left, which found a resting place > on the jaw, and a right that was always in readiness for the ieast opening. Gans showed up to splendid advantage and ever once made a false move. At the end of the bout Grim was terribly marked up, and the universal opinion ‘Was that Gans gave him a worse beat- "ing than did Fitzsimmons, Carter, Wal- gott, O'Brien or other hard hitters, In the third round Grim was almost ‘out from three straight lefts on the Jaw, Pach one sending him to the floor for the { e0unt, but by crouching, hugging and )) Blocking he stalled until the bell. ‘The main pout followed three very fast | And interesting preliminary bouts, but was some delay, as Grim would RO on until the house was courtied sand his share of the purse was tucked away in the bag he car- in the ring. ty Forgot His Speech. {h oft by remaining cool, and at the frst v4 ie got In a nard Jab that} Grim to his senses, For the baiance of the round ho was on the defensive, The other rounds were all in favor of Gangs, and at no time did he lose hi ead. He did not use the same tact others have tried on Grim, 00% | lis time and made all his blows count. After the contest Grim had very little say and got Into his dressing-room minus the loud demonstration that fol- imons, but * ut aaid Mohe woud stand up! And ‘box there would be no trouble in knocking him out, but his defense was good, and, as he protects the Jaw and is naturally a strong man, it would take a direct punch on the point of the Jaw to send him down and out, —$—$—— WRESTLED A DRAW. Goorge Fisher and Harvey Parker met last night at Miner's Theatre and put up the fastest contest seen on the Bowery in many months. For fifteen EA. THOMAS AND FULLER AT ODDS Millionaire Criticised Boy’s Rid- ing on Several Occasions and Alan Was Entered To-Day to Prevent Him Riding Hermis. Unless Archle Zimmer, manager of Jockey Fuller, sees ft to change his mind before the horses go to the post for the Brighton Cup to-day at Brigh- ton Beach, Hermis, E. R, Thomas's $60,000 racer, will not have Fuller, his regular rider, on his back, And, furthermore, {t isn't kely that Fuller will ever straddle another horse owned by the young millionaire, ‘To- day In the Brighton Cup Fuller will have the mount on Alan, a 600 to 1 shot. Alan, outclassed in the Brighton Cup fleld, has been added just to keep Fuller from riding (Hermla, ‘Whe reason for all this ts that Puller and his manager, Zimmer, have re- led ‘against Thomas for his alleged eriticlsm of the jockey on occasions when his horses have lost. The direct cause of the trouble was Thomas's action in placing Rice, a fourth-rate Jockey, on his $17,000 Milly Lady Amelia, compelling Fuller to ride St, Valentine, an inferior colt. Thomas mado this move, as Zimmer sald, be- cause Fuller had lost two or three races at Morris Park which her owner thought she should have won, He gave Rice the choice mount on Lady Amelia be- cause of this and declared to win with minutes the men wrestled, and at the end of the bout it was hard to pick the winner, To-night Parker will have a worthy opponent in Wberhard Halm, of the German-American A. C. ee DUFFY’S FUNNY IDEA. Arthur Duffy, the world's cham- pion sprinter, has the wind-shield fev and he wants to make a record be- hind it, too. He whinks he oan aprint 100 yards behind the device in 9 3-5 seconds or better, and at the World's Fair in St. Louis next year will ery at, BRIGHTON BEACH ENTRIES. RACE TRACK, BRIGHTON BBACH, Oct, 20.—The entries for to-morrow's races are as follows: Firat | Race —Malden two-year-olds; Alforten has now become a real fighter} To enters the ring in a gorgeous bath- After the usual dillydallying the rules they were about to begin ‘when suddenly Grim realized he et his speech, which is the all impor- i event in his way of thinking. fo ,aay, he had Dut little to tala On <his occasion, merely saying: ‘Tam Joe Grim and no man in the brid can knock me out.’ mind now seemed at rest, and the-bell sounded for the opening fan Tushing, around the mit his arms wildly. Gans simply ll and looked his man over car and the moment Grim oame Within pieat i Conkling Sai F Ame! Mr. 7 T can Race—Belling; mile and t Nevermore 4) race again next year after all, ind Race—Handicap! mile and « furlon Stamping Ground.109 “Honnibert a Coli +/\02 Carbuncle ., 308 Salvatella sm Vitth Mace—Two-year-old. tite longs. ‘ FPiammula . "gue Huphrata her, Zimmer and Fuller were angry. ‘This bad feeling came to the surface when Alan,‘one of the worst “plugs” on the race-track, was added as a starter in the Brighton Cup. With such con- tenders as Hermis, Major Daingerfeld and Igniter against him trainers sald that Alan was a 600 to 1-chance, When Zimmer was asked why he added Alan to stant he said: “Because | want Fuller to ride him, I do not want him to ride Hermis. Mr. Thomas has criticised Fuller's riding severely several times, when I hardly believe that he was Justified in doing so. I intend to keep Puller from riding any more of the Thomas horses, even if I have to enter one of ‘Big Tim’ Sullivan's horses In every race to do so. Mr. ‘Thomas is a bad lo If Fuller Wins a race for him everything ts all night; if he does not land him first he makes a vigorous ki B, R, Thomas will sal for Burope to- day. "As the steamship sails in tho morning he will not be able to see his horse Hermis start for the gold cul When he found out. that Fuller woutd not ride he engaged Redfern to pilot the $60,000 colt, ‘The friends of Thomas sald late last t there had been so much trouble a@ wha should ride Hermis that tt was quite possible that the horse would be scratched. Mr, Thomas only recently contracted tor third call on Fuller's wervices, “CHUCK”: To RACE AGAIN. SARATOGA, Oct. 20.—Chuctanunda, John [, Sanford's great sprinter, may Dr, T. 8. Childs, the veterinary in charge of the horse, has hope of his recovery. Chuctanunda broke @ done in one of his front legs at Saratoga on Aug. 9. ‘The bone has knitted splendidly. MURRAY HILL’S LAST GAME. The Murray Hills will play their last game of the season next Sunday on the, Catholic Protectory Grounds, in ‘West- chester, when they will line up againat the Bpaldine: Emeralds, The Tat er is) one of the best teams in the Bronx: me RIVER PIRATE SOLD. 1%, V. Bell ts now the owner of River i Pirate, He bought the colt before the terms from JIMMY BRIGGS WILL BE TERRY’S FOE TO-NIGHT. Boys Are Scheduled for Fifteen-Round Bout Before a Boston Club. BY KNOCKOUT, WEAZENED-FACED, diminutive package of bone and muscle up in Beantown almost burned out the telegraph wires to Quakertown yesterday. And the tenor of his wall ran thusly: Joe Grim, Philadelphia: Rush me an overdose of youranti-knockout tablets. JIMMY BRIGGS, of Boston, The whyfor of this appeal for help? ‘Take an Edward Bellamy jump to 10 o'clock to-night, You ure in Boston, And, if your better-half is not wise to you, you are Seated in a great, roomy ,rectangular building ,one atom in a waving, tossing circle of dyed-in-the-woo sports, batea to the very rafters; your eyes glued to @ square of rope-Inclosed white canvas that glitters brightly ‘neath the glare of a half dozen arc lights. In one corner of this patch of white, restless, nervously pale, a buzzing nalf dozen henchmen hovering. at his back, sits—Jimmy Briggs. ‘Across from iim 1s the why and wherefor of the hurry call knockout tablets. Who? The world's ex-feather weight champlon—a knotty, wiry, little fighting machine that carried destruction ard death {nto the ranks of pugilism untit one fateful Thankeglving Day afternoon, a couple of years back—“Lerrible” Terry MoGovern. “Fifteen rounds, straight Marqnis of Queensberry rules, to a decision, the men to protect themselves at ail times, and break at the referee's commana. Whe announcer’s deep:throatod prelude batters its way through walls of smoke. ‘A murmer ripples the walls of humanity, Then a hush, and then—the dying echoes of a brazen gong tinkle in one’s ears as two flying niasses of arms and legs merge into one under the glare of those ars Ughts. Edward Bellamy had the hands of the clock tied up and the mile-post moved back a hundred yerds when {t ceme to breaking records at digging Into thé days that are to come, but It's a Jerome raid against the charge of the Light Brigade that he'd be a frost at predicting the wind-up of that fifteen-round trip. T think T've got {t on him a Dit this time. ¥ ie do) oy ete Hee ‘stings Mir. Briggs the Beantown gentleman will invest tm the tin can industry and map cut @ cinder track around the outskirts of the canvas battlefield. ‘Then he'll atart out to make Duffy and Wefers look like a couple of ice wagons entered in the Major Delmar-Lou Dillon race at Memphis this afternoon, And there you are. ; If Terry can catch him standing ett long enough, dnd find a big enough hole to stick one of his batterng rams through, the Briggs one will need the entire staff at Bellevue to convince him that he's still on earth. But, if Mr. Briggs makes as good use of his feet as he aid upon tho two occasions when “Young Cortert” played tag at his heels for a couple of ten- round sessions, then Terence will have to be content with a decision---which he'll capture by tho longest city biock that ever got onto a map. Put a pin in that LAST OUTDOOR GAMES. for antl- «Acme biadt ‘| Dteges & Clust, No. % John street, New York, Metropotitan athletes are priming) CHESS EXPERT COMING. themselves for the final series of out- @oor games, to be held next Bunday at Celtic Park, under A. A, U, sano- tion and the auspices of the socseet: 8T. PPTPRSBURG, Oct. 20,—Techig- orin, the Russian chess champion, will play in America next year. He has cabled his acceptance of the invitation of the managing directors of the inter- ‘$39 |Detional tourney to be played jp April ma a2, 3a bay of next year at i — ase ER MSOVERN AGAIN AFTER CORBETT (Special to The Evening World.) BOSTON, Oct. %.—Though defeatet twice by "Young Corbett,” the ex- champion featherweight, Terry Me- | Govern stil believes he can win over the other. In talting with Terry this morning, he said to The Evening Woild correspondent: ‘I would like nothing better than to box "Young Corbett’ every night, for I know I can beat him. If he will give me another chance I will bet him $5,000 and have the winner take all the purse. I saw ‘Young Corbett’ some days ago and asked him to give me another chance, but he put me off by telling me to go and defeat some of the fellows he peat." MoeGovern 1s looking grand and: so is, Briggs, Their battle at the Cniterion Club to-night will be a hummer and will be attended by a large number of mem- bers. McGovern ts anxlous to win over (Briggs, for he will be again in line to go after Young Corbett." If the latter will not meet him, Terry intends to try for a match with Eddie Hanlon, the California And SE FORT ERIE A.C. SOON 10 REOPEN BUFFALO, N. Y., Oct. 20.—A very lively session of the stockholders of the International Athletic Club of Fort Erie was held in this olty this morning. Several times the session became stormy, finally ending with an agree- ment whereby Manager Jack Herman {8 to be allowed to pull off a boxing contest at the club across the river within the next month. Herman {s to continue as manager untl{ a settlement can be reached with the members of the club. "There's just this to the whole affair,” sair Herman, after the meeting, “some of the members want to get out. I own 8 per cent. of the club. I will buy or sell. They want too much for their stock. I will win in my case with the Canadian Government; boxing will be resumed. 1 mill hold @ bout within a) month, and hope to match Jack Munroe with eome wood one as the main attrac- tion. The International Club will not WHAT GANS NEEDEO. “Young Corbett” will leave the city this afternoon for Philadelphia, where he fs booked to meet Tim Callahan to-mor- row night in a six-round contest before the National A. C. The feather-weight champion has bewn training for the contest at Johnson's Road House, on Jerome avenue, and has not been in such shape since he met Terry McGovern for the second time in San Francisco last spring. ‘Corbett" has been working for the past threo weeks and has taken off a good deal of weight. Callahan has been training for the YALE GOLFERS DEFEAT PENNSY GARDDN CITY, N. ¥., Oct. 20.—The championship tournament of the Inter- Collegiate Golf Association was begun ‘this morning over the Garden City Golt ‘Club course in a match between the Yvle and University of Pennsylvania teams, which was won by Yalo, The score by points being, Yale 161-2, Penn- sylvania 112. In all five teams entered for the team champlonship and this necessitated the playing of a preliminary round, the draw fringing Yale and Pennsylvania together. ‘The latter team was outclassed, only one of Pennsylvania's six players be- ing successful. The solitary winner be- ing H. B. McFarland, who defeated B. L, Smith, of Yale, by 1 up. Yale met Harvard in the afternoon, and at the same time Princeton played Columbia. ‘The. winners of these matches will t ‘a 86-hole final for meet to-morrow in the summary of the the honors. Following $s morning round: 16% |Total CURRY TO TRAIN RUNNERS. Jack Curry, the successful trotting horse trainer and drivet, who drove Prince Alert to do nis world's record close ri doors no matter what the out- come of the fight with the stockholders of 1,67, says he may quit the trotting turf for the runners next season. Men, Come to Me. dnated ea doy to men. It proposition, no trial or samp! free of char; ly tell rou vo. If, Gurable, 1 will. ineure you o “VARICOCELE fon. idee of UnERe. agate and chront, by ane Rens at “once. STRICTURE Sroueing No fain DISCHARGES stopped completely. BLOOD FOIGON: INI Dermanentiy cured with oF potash. r NERVOUS DEBILITY Booily SUA” eeaeeatne” tis perma- cured, f{rrespective of the time you have been affii I want every man that js suftering from any special disease or condi Weoclal chat with me and T you ey Seputation, condemn ad scontine opinion of permanent written’ guarantee to cure you or refund to you fon to come and have will explain, to aystem of treatment which T have or! experience in tre ting diseases pecull knowled; nave: oot et “CORBETT” READY FOR CALLAHAN contest on the outskirts of Philadelphia, and 1s very confident that he will defeat the Denver boy. IMs friends will bet their all that he stays the six rounds, and there is plenty of money floating around that he will outpoint the cham- pion. YORK’S MASTER. SPECIALIST, Bea rate he ate PROSTAT 3 pcm fice WEAKNESS © re Ee ef by Don’t Delay. Come To-Day, I make no charge for a Ne West 34th St, N.Y, Hours, 9 A.M. to8 P.M. Sundave.so Rupture Cured with toda? tee "Wtsthtnay the, With Sage ony nee eae haar ae iby NOL, Broadway, ‘near oation,. It you var call 01 raont to- ‘Or CAS, ana te find Pere eta ti he orner. east T find you. case is cul as I will give on ke nominal fee Aenaeren ies a for med Taf nttribute my suc- do, and always romise. is Ww Ip ine. HYDROCELE or any ewellings or ten- darns impediments te cutie ry operation. RHEUMATISM tn all Pare Mianently, & ayatem of ps Aa BLADDER AYS WAONeY: Ig 4 system of treatment show signs ‘Write if you Maat call. All correspondence stmctly confidential and all replies sent in plain envelopesd, Inclose two-cent OFFICE HOURS—4 A, M, to 8,90 P. stamp to insure reply. M. Sundays. 10 A. M. to 4 P. Of. CONSULTATION AND ADVICE FREE. DR. RH. M.MACKENZIE’S Sporting. 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