The evening world. Newspaper, January 26, 1904, Page 10

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THE WORLD: SOVDAY VENTING, TANUAsw~ ~0, FHUILLIPS RISING STARS OF SADDLE NOW @ \ Again the Crescent City Winter Meeting Is the olen Point of Promising Careers Va = y for Future Knights of the Pigskin a Fuller and Hicks Learned Their First Lessons in Jocheyship at Course. HOLDING A HEANY-HEADED WORSE UP CLG 4 LOY, BLACKBURN MADE (Bpecial to The Evening World.) CHESTER, Pa. lover Champion Joe Gans way A. C. ‘Kia’ Wi yurn did nm Wilson's work was aggre: lout ound and was at times In the second round Jack the Jers: jaw, but Blackburn all A POOR SHOWING -Jack Black- burn, who is accredited with a decision disappointea . big crowd before the Chester Broad- this evening !n his bout witn He ourried the fighting In every droppea y boy with a right hook to the “Wilson was up {nan instant MARVIN HART LUCKY TO __ GET A DRAW WITH WILLE & CHICAGO, Jan. 20. —Mar er Hart Pirations to become the world’s Weight champion recéived a severe se}- Back last night when John Wille, Yocal second-rater, conceded to him at | Teast fifteen pounds in weight and eas- fly earned a draw. "The bout took place at the Watita Club.” If mnything, the decision of ree Abe Pollok gave Hart a shade je best of it. From a spectator's viewpoint the hting was poor. Few clean blows BASEBALL SCHEDULE _ Ebbets and Hart, is the same thi butlt our schedules for four years Were reappointed for this seaso no one outside of them hi to act for the National League. According to President Harry Pulliam, of the National League, there is not likely to be any fight between his or gunization and the American League 0 SPORTS|—PUGILISM|—| RACING | SKATING |~/ATHLETICS|— “Winnie” Jockeys Phillips, Fisher, Robbins and Hen-| nessy the Newest Set Whose Good Work Has Earned Them Many Rich Bids for Their Services. Herbert Phillips, who leads the winning jockeys at New Orleans at present, hatin from the Indian ‘erritory. He $s a son of Jack Phillips, owner of Dutca Carter, Sarah Maxim, Morning Star and other useful horses. to ride for the firm of Shields & Thomas next season, This voy rode in Chicago and St, Louls last season. Phillips rode his firet winner on hin father’s horse, Dutch Carter, in Texas two years ago. ‘The boy had been yalloping horses for only two months when his father decided to put him up in a race. Dutch Carter won, establishing three track records at San Antonio the same week. Phillips made something like $7,W0 last year. His contract for 1904 calls for a retainer of $19,000 from Shields & ‘Thomas, W. Fishor, who ranks second in the list of winning riders at New Or leans, hails from Memphis, and {s under contract to J. W. Schorr. Fisher ts in the ninety-pound class, and !s @ oool-headed youngster. He won four straight races on Montebank, and will ride this colt in the Crescent City Derby for orr, at ‘Walter Robbins, who also ranks well up in the list of winning riders at New Orleans, is a native of Chicago, He first attracted attention by his clever work in ihe saddle last winter. Robbins rode for James Arthur last summer, receiving a monthly retainer of $1,000, His father intends to take the lad East next spring. Robbins has been riding for S$. 8. Brown and MAKERS WON'T FIGHT and authority &. W. Street this winter, He won eleven of his first fourteen mounts, Rob- bins is © cool-headed boy. ‘Wille Hennessy is another highty-promising Jockey developed at New Or- leans thie winter. He ts one of three brothers, all of whom are promising race riders. Wille ts tho eldest brother. Jimmie Hennessy, the youngest brother, weighs only sixty pounds. He has already piloted several winners, Willle has received a swell offer to ride in Austria next season. O'Connor, Burns, Shaw, WW SITEERTA ROUND ; . s © Austin | HE New Cpe) SAL 2) He have become famous as a nur} pi hun." ot eNew: London, | gery lor je develop! ey Has Conn., here last night in the sixteenth ‘Tommy Burns, Winnle O'Connor, Carl Mitchell, G. C. Fuller, Wel round aticr a battle. that “pleased. the Hicks and H. Phillips are some of the riding stars developed in New Or-j ono. thousund spectators at the Whit. leans, Willle Shaw also frat attracted attention while riding in New Orleans, | {ington Jari Acta y hd T Nh) Herbert has signed| ° HERMAN BEAT RICE World.) jsia’ SPRIN hicaso, put It ov A betier throughout and wag in excellent ne battle. It was not a i on acconnt ter against Showlng here last w “Young Corbett we was Bre airen, THE SADDLE PORTS WINNING FAME AT NEW ORLEANS JOCKEY NURSERY RYAN NOW IN QUAKER CITY IN GREAT SHAPE FOR O'BRIEN Never in the history of the pugilistic be game has stich interest been manifested ah Jan M—Tommy tg a bout! in’ this ity aaah Ryan, claimant of the middle- welght championship of the world, ae a pone Seale ave in this city to-day. He looks in the is ceived from all over the country, and it good condition he says ne is for his bat- tle with Jack O'Brien in the arena of | Wold be no surprise to see representa- tives from every State in the Union at the National A. Cw in thie city, to-| the ring side when the two clevereat m e middle-weights in the country begin Fairmount Inn to-day will be the| exchanging punches scene of Ryan's closing work for the The advanc cain ot. roth at CR vane s alone ex- bout, and to-mororw the man from Kansas City will rest and await the| cceds that of the paid admissions to all other ble bouts held within the past time to be called intg the ring with year, Congressman Tim Sullivan will re landed, while the feature of the t was the holding, wrestling and Mauling-in the cline Hart appeared be in bud condition, having evidently lected rigid training on the advice his friends, who tipped Wille as| gon. so pdabae “It has been asked why I was not ap- ville, who graduated from the wrest- | pointed to dikcuas the schedules with \Hing into the boxing game, made good| yr, Jonson, My answer is that the fuse of his knowledge of the former. | sixth section of the peace agreement Whe first round was even, with no} provides that the president of each KO ‘The second was easily Wil-| league shall appoint a schedule commit- In the third Wille landed low and! tee of three to prepare a schedule for rt justly wppeuled to the referee, for | season, and hence I am not eligible hich he Was hooted by Wille's {riends Me with Ae, Johnson, ac the ringside. Hart Janded a vicious . t ‘c v! aceyunt of schedules, Pulliam says he believes the National League schedule- mukers will be fair and that it 1s their Intention to haye as few conflicting dates as possible throughout the sea- 6 bis was Hart's round fr was Wille'’s by a shade, and Mar- Win went to his corner bieeding from ea @ Fesult of colliding with | the represent ead, ‘The sixth was uninte With nothing worthy of mention, ive of his league. “One thing Is certain. Mr, Johnavit will have to confer with Mr. Dreyfuss Evening World. z the two men. McCoy has met Ryan in the ring twice and knows his style thoroughly, in the Iatter’s hardest contests and knows his style thoroughly. V [ n delphia, and there is no doubt that McCoy’s verdict, which will be given in The Evening World on “KID MCCOY” WILL REPORT RYAN AND O'BRIEN FIGHT TO-MORROW NIGHT FOR THE EVENING WORLD ID M’COY,” asclever a man as ever stepped into a twenty-four-foot ring to do battle, will report the Tommy Ryan and Jack O’Brien fight in Philadelphia to-morrow night exclusively for The No expert in the pugilistic game is more capable of judging the contest between No decisions in the fight, he having engaged a big bunch of tickets. The immensity of the crowd expected has caused the of- ficials of the city to get busy. Mayor [thee a delegation of New Yorkers to ‘Weaver has given an order to the pro- moters of the fight that ail exits tothe C1Ub-noUse Uped OULWard to-morrow night, and the owners of the hall have to comply with this commanu. they do not the fight wil lkely be aoptea by the authorities. — LINDEN AFTER VOORHEIS. Willtam Linden, of this city, an- mounces that he will match “Dave* Shiman against ‘Johnny Voorhels to howl a home-and-home match on neu- tral alleys in New York and Brooklyn for from $260 to $1,000 a side. The only ¢ondition Linden makes {y that neither man shall practise on the alleys where the games are to be contested more than one-half hour before the time scheduled for play to begin. MAKE He has seen O’ Brien Se men fights are given in Phila- rea Oirate cure: ous, rary to expectations, the crowd | or thera will be nv conference over the Thursday morning, will be taken as official. ; \was small, falling considerably short of | gchedules, Our Schedule Committee, [) ‘the guarantee given to wind-up pair, which consists of Dreyfuss, chairman; WEIGHTS FOR THE WIZARD CAPTURES a lCE YACH YACHT RACE BANK, N. J., Jan. %.—A race NOT ENOUGH MONEY; ATTEL DIDN'T FIGHT (Special to The Evening World.) third-class challenge ice yacht) INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. Jan, 26.—Ex- i= of America was salled here|tremely cold weather and a break in this morning, the distance being twenty | the street car service kept the attena- 2 ance low at the fight scheduled last starters were George J. Gillig's |night between Abe Attel and Morris in July next, weights hav allotted by Mr. official handleapper,, follows: Wizsra and Charles Irwin's Georgio, of ; Rauch. Attel refused to take a chance the North Shrewsbury Club, and J. £,|With the clever Chicagoan for the Green's Eagle and W, R. Patten's | money there wen in the house and after a splendid c: of preliminaries the Sthistic Club, retunded the money to the #!x hundred spectators Weather below zero to bout. pf) Grreetheart, of tue South Shrewsvury be eho bravea witness the FASTEST RUNNERS MEET SATURDAY The fact that two National A. A. championships are to be decided at th Garden on sion of th by Wen H mater [yr the t Th this ‘A fresh southeast trom start to finish. “The! agile got away first, but was Hogm caught and passed by the Red Me fivers, “On ‘the third round t) tmast buckled and the boat forced, to withdraw. ‘The leading Was the Wizard, and the Georgio + close agcond when the accident breeze prevailed Tien Chancellor: Hilea Chaaeenor to} Wizardawon the race handily, her 45m. 18s, The winner's aver- #imig for the two and a half mile Was.bm. 20s. The Sweetheart was @jim. 24s, behind the Wizard, and | Was im, 46s, behind the Fuival to: be held Hhexe athletic Assocla- much activity Hhgotiant ae ne Y sixty he i 4 tas nea I in athlete elrales er Duffy's core are rank Rickert. Will o orrey one AFTER BRYAN. th Western turfman, has me | an to his two- by Commoner, ‘Lhe ars, d atter, Wiliam menpines | FP. 'L, Thompson, ation, “Amongtho prominent "x ais tance runners who will appear in the other championship event, the two-mile are Jo) ; Carr, George Pasi EW ot . Parkhurst * ‘areay. So: re at 0 Swill be race Pibers’ prominent who will try to lo: At the annual meeting of teur Skating Association, hi Clermont Ay Rink, in BRIGHTON HANDICAP. For the $25,000 Brighton Handicap it a mile and a quarter, to Bel sun een W. 8. Vosburs, SINNIRUD TURNED DOWN. —_-—+ plication of Peter CVCLISTS SAIL FOR SUNNY SOUTH On the Clyde liner Arapahoe, which jleaves to-day for Jacksonville, is a party of the beat cyclers, hey are go- ing South to prepare for the coming season, The men will ride at Jacksonville, where the Southern Circuit opens on Feb. 7, and they will also ride at Sa- vannah, Atlanta and Birmingham each week until April 15, when the racing begins at Valisburg, N. J. The party 1s composed of Jim Richards, who will manage the men; Eddie Root, Oliver SULLIVAN WAS EASY FOR BRlGGS (Special to The Evening World.) PORTLAND, M Jan, 2%,—Before 1,200 members of the Athletic Club in the Auditorium Jimmy Briggs, of Bos- ton, outpointed "Kid" Sullivan, of Washington, D. C., in every round of the fifteen they boxed. Briggs admin- istered terrible punishment to the Southerner and at times he looked ar | if nearly “1 He tenaciously stuck to the hard task before him and pulled through the limit, In the tenth Briggs sent Sullivan to the floor twice and the contest looked about all over. The Int-| Dorion, Fred Ernst, George Collett, | ter took his time about getting up, stay-| in the Herald s Hoye Krebe, Bob 1. Takes Fy ling the lim{t on the mat. In the elev- | Bt the top of th Ma ey cone erased narie e Dou notor velllicles. it nd rivate, Aine Frank Kramer and Johnny Fisher are |enth Briggs caught his man on the| (jaws Including all varietion, Ran ons now on thelr way by" rail. point of the chin and the blow dropped electric and gasoline, Among’ the new him for the count, The lust three| things that, fave come in during “tie Sas ee aut ‘table chop. |4a¥_ from, the adison Square Gurdon MANY BOWLERS TO MEET. | "2tzas, Sullivan, was a veritable chon-| show is the ‘automobile Iann mownr + | ping-block for Briggs, who beat him all that attracted considerable nitention th over the ring. |the ¢ Garden Inst night. | CLEVELAND, 0., Jan. %,—When the SE UREEEEEEEEEEEeneee : a ‘entries for the annual bowling tourna- ment closed at midnight the manage- ment found to their tater thas there were more contestants been expected. It ts setimated that there 11) ent in the five-men team con- i aes : Dr. Pettingill’s n, over %0 two-men term nd several hundred ente: ‘The lve New Vitali Rides. ‘wad Bladder Bike al eerqueat Calle, Pesitively New Vitality—New idual matches, This will tournament by fer the «i bowling meeting ever held, The purses “ill exceed ¥ ae DATE FOR ROWING RACES, ‘The Executive Committee of the In. tercollegiate pagers) at a meeting arran for itm at ah- Sad 30 stro in 6el was time Marvellous Medical Triumph, DAVENPORT FIGHTS PHALEN A DRAW (Special to The Er BRUNSWICK, Abo, crowd gathered at ‘the Brunswick Athletic Club last eyoning fo see the ten-round "go" betweau Bimmy Davenport joston, and George Phalen of Portland. “tp'to the thc’ Phajen had a ailgne, adganvans but from that round on the welght be: hind Davenport's blows told, Referee Fielding declared the bout a ari aw, | MORE AUTOS AT SHOW. About twenty new automobiles have | been added to the automobile show Which hus started upon its cl weok BLOOD” MARIE BGISTERBD. i weW Amst WASTER SPECIALIST, = As ning World.) A large of the MEN’ Energy—New Health tn the losnen, draine. at ance by stopped syste WEAKNESSE: VARICOGEL! o WV ORT el ui A.M an jee free. R. H. M. MACKENZIE, M,D., MEDICS AND SURGICAL OFFICE 46 Weet B4th St, New York, N,-Y. Dr.Williams Cures Diseases of Men PHAROR, t0 eens eee juaively. treat i Frill "ine hee eae uae you oy aif end If you cannot call. é PRIVATE DISEASES. cyt VARICOCELE Petrie « cotton ta. trom See Se ae STRICTURE ¢ From bustaess, PROSTATIC TROUBLES of meroury or potash. NERVOUS D DEBILITY ‘wn famous private pres Dr. k: R. Williams <3 ai 165 W. cenyae s DISEASES. le HANDICAPPER, friendly talk. fondly talk. 3 $0 years, , Nothian scence pan devise fort “and expense pee “oe Moolada: Pimusranies to 3 meultatio: it nease, ey at ak POISON ase abe alpha Sporting. path smoert racing Into | sunote™ Class" handic % =| AGovermment OF THE PEOPLE BY THE PEOPLE FOR THE PEOPLE Must be based on Intelligent Infor. Thest man i nis, fea WORLD ALMANAC is well informed on all subjects, It answers every question, The 1 cuobspia, eS ED ALTMAN, sate Eo Se hate: colored ' co sake Aled

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