The evening world. Newspaper, December 9, 1903, Page 12

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SS SPORTING NEWS SPECIALLY REPORTED FOR THE EVENING ‘tHE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 9, 1903. ot usb “WORLD. ef EVENING WORLD'S @bery person athletically inclined who cares to enter the Dawn-of-the- Year Foot- DAWN-OF-THE-YEAR FOOTR.ACE. FIRST PRIZE $25; THREE PRIZES, EACH $10; THIRTY-NINE PRIZES, EACH oe hae The Evening World will give $250 in prizes to be competed for by any and Ve on One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street to Eighth abenue, to Fifty-ninth street, to Broadway, to The World’s Uptown Office on Broadway, between Thirty-seventh from The World’s Harlem Office on One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street to|and Thirty-eighth streets (Which will be a checking station), to Thirty-sixth street, to downtown office on Park Row. ers will be accepted, amateurs or professionals. The route for the race will be as follows: From The World’s Harlem Of-' Main Office. It Will be a go-as-you-please affair, and all | Eighth avenue, to Hudson street, to Chambers street, to Park Row, to The World’s gon Entry blanks for this race will be published in The Evening World in a few days. SOME SIGHTS THAT IMPRESSED ARTIST GENE CARR AT THE SIX-DAY GRIND IN THE GARDEN LAST NIGHT IEW YORKS AFTER ~ FIRST-C ‘Help Strengthen ‘the Coming Baseball Season. f fhe baseball magnates were slow Biting together at the Hotel V Dp ela to-day and it was close on to 3 Welbek when President Harry Pull- Hoar gerlally succeeded in rounding up Ydrious club owners and induclag Sm to wettle down to the serious M of the afternoon, “ust pefore he entered the 6 Mr. Pulliam sald: 83 is considerable routir GE Mesposed of and now Py Ade tals late start 1 don't think w © ilba-uble to clean up the slate to-day 7 ig Wane that we'll not be In a poe Na to wind up the meeting until Thurs- ¥ or Priday.' (8 u matier of fact the clud owners “their managers are devoting most council Ks to the tusk of| fy) king over nd "deals" for eciyerr. All sorts of “lc! * are being yeuiered, but thus far none of bhe deals bean consummate Yyrk is in the market for a good iting outfielder, 4 Manag ww is willing to pay a fancy price release of a player of class and He {s willing to take a chance ( ur, ct Cincinnati, but Man: Kelly is apparently not overanx- opasitions. er we might make’a couple We are here to strengthen 9 Weaken our team. PBelee, of the Chiicag> Club, Another unprofitable day, and return to his home tn Bog- it Seles wants a couple of 46 round up his team, and 46 give in exchange Pitcher a re mre several mun- land ‘Taylor, hue the | Hot gult Selec, and Mecided to keop Tay- ‘roll. Duty Beli Philadel: Ah hea in y den LASS MEN Up His Team for and W. H ecretary and Presijent Frank D.Jiiss Robinson, of the St. Louls Club, fas decided to 're- tain Pat Donovan’ ay the manager of the Cardinals “All 1 know Locke was re-elected easu gr. about Donovan, resigning ent of vhe team,” sald Mr, what I haye read in the RUSH WINS THIS TIME. Court Orders a Re-Count of the Primary Tailota, Rush, who has fought in the Tammany leadership -nlnth Assembly Distri imuries, when Joseph 1 de ted by d another pi entritt, of 1 the’ motion of alf of Rush to op in the Eleventh and ‘Twen listricts and re-cour laimed that th oflicers. howe Thomas the courts for In the 4 | return four rolled in these distric! | the fusjueen's actual majority has been reduced to one vote, Rush n a chance to get rid of that one v You're, THE GRexTeSe ___ tant eveR SAARPRM, = Loney WANT Two 6o¥ Seats, — Ke ss a" “JUST FRIENDS OF KENNEOY'S THAT's Aut,» oe os aioe There ts a chance of Jim Jeffries) and Jim Corbett meeting in another twenty-round bout at the World's Fair In St, Louis next year for the heavy- welzht champlonetiip of the world, H. W. Lanigan, the fistle crite of that js at the head of a movement to hold the fight, but whether or not the police authorities will permit the bout to take place is a question, It ts hardly possibie they will let the big men fight when they refused to per- mit "Young Corsett" and Dave Sulli- van to box before the West End A, ©, of that city several months ago, Both Corbett and Jeffries have already (Svecial to The Evening World.) OHICAGO, Il, Dec, 9.—Benny Yanger, of this clty, knocked out Hugh Murphy, of Boston, before the Watita Club here st night. The bout lasted less than thre rounds, the local boy putting away his antagonist after fifty conds of warm work in the third round. Murphy was not in Yanger’s class, The Ttallan began jabbing and found he could land at will, Right and loft awings followed, and at the end of the xecond | round he had taken the Il measure of the Boston boy. In the third he went in to finish the affair, and did it in short order, forcing lim Into and putting him away right swings to the jaw, Murphy was slow and failed to get busy Inthe opening round, Yanger all the leading. Yanger kept jaboing inio Murphy's head and bod; the opening of the second the Boston with left —— NEW ORLEANS ENTRIES. rurt ‘ank Capt. Arnold "+ Hellarts Mynheer ; and a half furlongs; Fon O'Day Kingvland i Skibo Burleigh .055505/2102 Sparrow’ ( hird Race—One nile: selling | Ma 1 Goldaga | Alpaca. Capt, Gai Medal... *Hatd of Avon *satchel Fourth ude n of Vella “May... 98 weven furlongs. 2. Charlie. Tho) 7 Stand Pat sree: 100 00 : in one mile, “103 Hob "Ferrell. 05 Free Admins 05 Helen’ Print. | unt for pitchers and (ae not landed a |* xb * Whittmior 4a) Whitmore 90 Jove. miles purse, 103 Ora McK 5 “HOA “Louis ‘Kraft. 100 Overhana 96 {before the West End A. C,, of St. Louis, WHITE'S OLO-TIME JABS BEAT MORAN (Special to The Evening World.) PEORIA, lll, Dec. %—Eddic Sprague was unable to make the weight with White before the Riverside Athletic Club last night. and Tony Moran was substituted. The contest went the full ten rounds and White was given the decision, ————— FORBES TO FIGHT ATTEL. CHICAGO, Dee. %—Abe Attel, the California boxer, and Harry Forbes, the ex-bantam-weight champion, have been matched to meet in a twenty-round bout Tommy ‘on Dec, 17. This bout ts billed as being CORBETT AND JEFF AGREE, AND NOW AWAIT FORFEITS signified their willingness to fight. The only thing that remains for the men to sign the articles of agreement and cinch the mateh Js the posting of # Vig guaeantee by Promoter Lanigan that he will pull off the fight without any Interference from the authorities, A® Lanigan has praotically agreed to Put Op a substantial forfelt ns a guar- antee he will bringsoff the fight on the date he names, the men may be imatehed within a few days. Corsett has opealy declared he will not uncer any circumstances agree to meet Bob Fitzsimmons in a fight either at St. Louls or any other city. He says Fitz is a good old s-been,”” and that if he should ev wNe hit and beat him i would nox sive him any credit doing 30, YANGER PUTS MURPHY AWAY IN THIRD ROUND ‘boy gave Yanger several stiff jabs, but was short on his swings. The local fighter got busy befure the end, how- ever, and landed left and right swings sreely and had all the betier of the ses- sion, Yanger finished tt in the third after fifty-five seconds of hot milling, backin Murphy up into his own corner, A with right and left swings “dows and’ oat for the ul Rungeeacae nee ‘A the preliminaries Dusty Miller w the seml-wind-up, at 100 pou: ca tytite declsion of the referee against dow lor. The decision inet with almost ure mous disappointn tin the audien, % asily the bevter of the 1 the Anal one, aun Br etiae: aw ot e ay the decision ‘ould not leave the rust ane ager White ordered him out, oe! Man: Tommy Sa varded the de- cision In the third round, Pi I n Doerk kn duteh" Gentlem Inthe fifth round, and Jack Gust won the decision at the of the sixth round over Young Munger to Continue Grind. Leander's gurglings of sleep could be heard on Madison avenue. Barclay Felt Fine. The story that Barclay was forced to ride with a rib protruding from his side @ fabrication, pure and simple. After Barclay had a rib broken last night he was put in a plaster cast and insisted upon riding 60 as to save his guarantee, The management took a part in the matter, and when Barclay’ partner, franz Krebs, succeeded in pairing up with Gougoltz thea Barclay withdrew from the race. At $ o'clock to-day he was walking around the track joshing the other rid- ers. He then left and went out on foot. There was no protrusion of the broxen rib. The “steady sleopers,"" the men who Galvin and Barclay, Bardgett and Rettich in Bad Shape, Out of the Race--Gou- goltz Must Team Up with Franz Krebs (Continued from First Page.) will not go home, were awakened to- day ty the soaked sponge and seltzer bottle play. ‘The nders, carrying seltzer J. KENNEDY P. Powers. BAD SPILLS IN GARDEN PUT TWO PLUCKY TEAMS OUT OF RACE LANGEORD ASTONISHED ALL BY BEATING CHAMPION GANG (Special to The Evening World.) BOSTON, Mass., Dec. 9,—Sam Lang- ford, of this city, outfought and out- bottles and sponges, made it moist for; €@neralled Joe Gans, the light-weight the nodding spectators in the boxes and the fringe of faces on the rail. Gougoltz is the only rider in a six-day race who has had three partners. Siret Simar left him, then he doubled up with Rettloh. At 4 this morning Rettich said he could not get his breath. Hitherto his penchant has been for money. When he left his wheel he borrowed Breton’s bathrobe, which reached his {cnees, and with this paraded in the stalls below the main floor. He thought he-was the reincarnation of Bucephulus. A bath did ‘him some good, but he had enough of the ‘'s°x days.” Gougoltz, who does not suffer from hallucinations, then tied up with Franz Krebs. on that wooden saucer-shaped track at on grind out of the race. that the little fellow should go down for “Wearing of the Green." ‘clean over his wheel and Into a box the leaders at the finish, GARDEN CYCLISTS SHOW REMARKABLE PLUCK BY EDDIE “CANNON” BALD, No Uattle-field was ever the scene of more displays of pluck than 1s shown Madison Square Garden. Broken ribs, sprained ankles and other injuries severe enough to put an ordinary individual ‘a hospital cot are not enough it seems to put these cyclists In the six-day HARD I,UCK FOR GALVIN. First there was Frank Galvin, the little Irishman. It seemed kind of tough his first fall when the band was playing Galvin went down with a thump, and the way he hit the boards In the spill gave me the impression that he had a fractured skull. But his team was up in the race, and after regaining consciousness he had hi ead be e went on, with the race, head bandaged an een printy and the dizzy son of Erin was very bad, He slid ‘This ime he was out for good, and It's a shame. tor he and his partner, Walter Bardgett, would’surely have been up with 'SHREWD HORSE TRAINERS OFTEN MA (Special to The Evening World.)” NEW ORLEANS, La., Dec, 9—The third race yesterday furnished a thor- ough illustration of the fact that even the. shrewdest or horse owners fre quently display bad judgment when making large bets, A big fleld of twelve started in the third, and five well-known owners each thought he had @ cinch on first money, Henry McDaniel, who trains for G. C. Bennett, all his friends betting on Bountiful, Archle Zimmer advised his followers to play Tim Sullivan's Tro: sachs, A heavy play on M, L. Haymar Tower indicated that there was “aome thing doing’ on this one, Albert Simons and Sam Hildreth both placed swell commissions on Symphony. ‘The close of the betting saw quite a play on Glenflo “for the legitimate feather-welght championship of the world." They will weigh in at 182 pounds and battle for @ guaranteed puree of! x tet dal hae ye Soe si ap af trom A. C. Bellow's stable. It was one of the best betting races of the meeting. In fact, it was about tho frat chance the layers had to make an KE MISTAKES, ) Proved strictly a two-horse strugste, Bennett's Bountiful winning from Sym- |phony tn a drive, with the rest of the | fleld scattered all over the track. Glenflo and Tower finished back In the ruck, There must have been some ex- cuse for the stiff play on this pair, They y ido better the next. time. Frank HW dowst the gamest on the American turf, He outgamed Big Ben, going six fu }longs after the pair had raced through the ‘stretch neck and neck, Frank Bell is by an Ilnols quarter ‘horse named ; Big Henry, who has become famous in the West as the alre of extreme speed, All his get have tremendous speed. but | Frank Bell is the, only member of the | family that has éver displayed game- ness, Frank Bell hag been racing at St. 1 Louis, San Francisco and New Orlea jduring his entire turf career. ‘This his second wimter in New Orleans, is very consistent and generally runs hi race. He can handle any kind of trapk, Any, ettor who han & Hobby: for fot- lowing certain horses (had, pul Grane Bell on ho hs for the New Or. Dr. Williams ¢. CUR : Oiseases of Men, 165 West 34th St,, New York, j Champion of the world, of Baltimore, in every round of the fifteen they con- tested last night at the Criterion Ath- jletic Club, and at the end Referee | Buckley gae the award to Langford. |The result was a surprise, as Gans Was a 1-to-3 shot before the bout was started; but before the first round was concluded those who had given such odds were looking for an opportunity to hedge. Langford betrayed no signs of fear. Ho immediately went to the champion, who was jabbed and jolted around the ring as though he were a novice. Gans did very little during the round, re- tallating only with a few jolts and & cross-counter, which did no damage to Langford, Langtord Had Gans Worried. Langford confidently went after Gans in the second round, and, with shappy Jabs to the face, he had the Baltimore boy worried. Gans would lead, only to fall short, and then Langford would step in with a straight left aud back would bob Gans's head. Gans elther judged distance poorly or hts opponent's extraordinary cleverness j caused him to miss frequently, for he was wilder than a hawk when he got down to landing his punches. He could not find the Boston bay at any stage, who was all the time piling up such @ Score that Gans, to overcome it must completely put him away. Round followed round, and Gans did not improve in his work, and. along about the eleventh he began to ehow signs that plainly told that he svas worrying about his title, After that he would nervously go to the ecntre and try to draw Langford out, but hls attempts were futile, as his sable op- ponent knew too mueh for him. All the time Langford was the ag: gressor, and the club members we: amazei to see the champion breaking ground from a lad with only a local reputation, Langford's fast jabs, fol- lowed with terrific right hooks, did the work, and after the tenth round Gang had little steam left, Gans Landed Few Blows. During the entire bout ihe aid not jand a dozen clean blows on Langford, who blocked immensely. ‘Tne decision in Langford's favor was received with cheers, The preliminary of elght rounds. be. tween "Kid" Pantz and Matty Bald- win, was called a draw, altnouga Panis had the advantage. The semi-final, be- tween Jack Summers and Alex,’ Ed- munds, ended in the fourth, in’ Sum- mers’s favor, Edmunds gettiig a rigat to the solar plexus that made him stop. Sporting. Sporting. Ben at even money was my twi mer, DUt the ood things that T hi must be expected. Remember. form my winning record on @ §5 basis, would have WON $348.00 sivced sng ey Wika “BFILN, N th—PORMSIGHT, “6-1, Won; Nov, ZTth—ATHIOLA, 12-1, y Nov won OER. 1h wont cy ec. ee Dec. ISANTHROPE, Dec. 7th—MA'MSELLE, 8- Dec. 8th.—SYMPHONY, 8: ‘Therefore there was won and lost . rao wire Tuesday. ¢ put through lately more. than ional loners. “Of course, my selections cannot ail Wine and Mm loser once Ih, a white my information comprises ‘but tw: they have been xetting the money With startling Femulaelty. te reprodacs: Salen tn Camkidte @-1, Won; MEDAL, 6-1, won. BrHics, 4-1, dia won; CLUNMELL, 6-1, 20. % ADL Wi 12-8, Won; HOMESTRAD, 2. ‘2-1, won: TIOGA, won: ALADDIN, 3. 2a; BIG REN, I frankly admit when I SYMPHONY, 4 TO 1, WON, T reproduce below in cattgteg 6 ere at New Orleans to date, showing how a $25 account, operat UP TO DATE Won, | ates dat ha Y TL NEES Se 33) | - $888.00 g 8 superae Hours, 9 A.M. to 8 P.M. Sundays, 10 to 3, | $100 ACCOUNT OPERATED ON A #20 BASIS WOULD WIN $1,302.00 Sportsmen's Goods. “Tae Waite Backman: $50 ACCOUNT OPERATED ON-A $10 BASIS WOULD WIN $25 ACCOUNT OPERATED ON A $5 BASIS WOULD WIN, Opportunity ii si Pees missions, me ap account of $10, $60 or 606,00 249,00 t io offer! rar and twill operate wane’ hers mela it the t ‘under the following conditions: Your account but in operation tne gi "hyits feet Witenes savior ip aat'y bp Rged Cede iy al aah core at all tiches vxactly how you stand, Fecelve al itemized sta Therefore, t9 get anything for myself for von ft charge Which Lobtain here at the track, which @ Prasee teint accounts of For Friday, ‘Thin one hi day that wil weil follow these "on "saturda Santer homo. ond: Rections expect 10, nce theas tw ets Sie aah a Wat orders wired by! Deo. 11, price, ‘but: also. De, 12,0 wu ‘Atthe ent with check for winnings, Je 1 must nothing for the information, P always, week's tions you: Se ain aa 4 make you win, ar in this ad. are those a aiden two-year-old iii de. undorkad, that: will be. Rt FY Pe TORR i beeen ett ye lease “pl ppl ‘winner, roaray pt: By request, will ~ A G10 Trial Account Operated on n $2, BASIS WOULD WIN 10 DATE $141.00, Friday and Saturday. and; Next™ Week. °° | 1

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