The evening world. Newspaper, November 21, 1904, Page 12

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— ——E Soper Oot tote ae tetenen et ante DALY TOO FAST FOR JOYCE, Ctr erent tte tet tette tne ete ee } MOCKWELI AND THE COLOR LANE | “Rockwell, of Yale, feels like drawing | the color tine in football. vard game Matthews, a black | @@4 rush of the Cambridge team, Dutted Rockwell in the stomach, rui Bing at full speed, and inid the Yale quarter out for two minutes, As the trick was ninyed while Rockwell was heeling for a punt it was clearly a foul, but the Crimeon team was penal- zed only fitteen yards for It, and Re Well's effectivencsa was impured @everal minutes, The black mon showed wonderful | @pced and ability t get down the fle 1a | on punts, He was scrappy and taken all around he played a star game until he was laid out | ‘This precedent opens a new fleld for @ark-skinned athleies with scrappy in clinations §= Instead of going into the ring and being barred from meeting the chumpions who draw the color Ine, tha Jack Johnsons and the Waleotis Gan take up football and be allowed to Play, in the most select of company. | ‘What a terror Joe Walcott, the “Glant | Killer,’ would make if be were to play | end on @ high schoo! or a college team! Hf there ts any great at nee Detween fighting with gloves and play- dmg football, it isn’t apparent at a Glance, There is more blood shed In a Gingle game of foovbull between two | lg college teams than there ts in halt / @ dosen championship battles. T have seldom seen men ao badly cut up in boxing as Capt, Hogan was in the game with Harvard. The blood Streamed from a cut over his eyes and (iekled from the corners of his mouth His nove seomed to be broken, At any | Fete, It has been broken times before fa playing football, and the blood was flowinw from one or two cuts on the bridge of it. ‘Tripp was hardly better Of, and some of the Harvard players | Showed more crimson than the sleeves | Of their jerseys could account for, Ho- Gan was not lati out at any stage of the game, and in fact he makes !t his boast that he never has taken the count | In the great | for | | too, Coffey Sullivan Conway, Augh Inv PPE ores Uaaisaa Wha n _ NOVEMBER 21, SPORTS EDITED BY 1904 | ARMY AND NAVY TEAMS GET READY. | © eet ee arenes « ihn in @ football competition, But some of the others were jess fortunate, @aturday Matthews, the Harvard end, | knocked i in abe the fret rush in which he participated, ite (ThE 70*Yard Handican Will When a man is knocked o} ta @ Aght he has ten seconds In wh to Teoover, If he ian't At to continue at Jay limp while the trat sprayed him | ith sold water ard. placed. a sponge| PAW Out Many Champions at sadurated with ammonia at his nos! vile, the Games of the Twenty: second Regiment. ARMY AND NAVY TEAMS PREPARE FOR BATTLE ‘The Sailors Expect to See Their West Point Me Men “Think Their the end of that time the affalr stops right there, In the gentle game of | football things are different. A man knocked out is given two minutes In @ead of ten seconds, In the big game | Finally he waa brought to conscious: | ness, He get up and reeled back Into his place in the line and the play con- | tinued. A few moments later some one punched him on the Jaw so han that he staggered like a drunken man, but | Lovers of athietle sports will be out bo recovered enough to play on. Then In full force to-night to witness te Team Put Up a Good Game,| Players Will Have the Struggle ‘hen he dutted Rockwell {n the mid. | fall games of the Twenty-second Rekl- P Pane j Fiff, running at full speed and witout |ment Athletic Association, at the but Have Little Expectation It) of Their Lives to Win from the @lackening up ae he struck, he was laid | armory, Sixty-eighth street and th " . | @uk senseless for two minutes, barely | Boulevant Will Win. Navy, f @etting to his fort in time to hold his| The seventy-vard handleap run should a | a - Desition, | prove the star event, aa among the Others sf the players were knocked | men who will compete are P. J. Walsh ANNAPOLIS, Md., Nov. o1—The Navy) WEST POINT, Nov. 2.—Fvery effort | Out ih slentiar ways during the progress | and W. 8 Edwards, ex-national cham: team began its final practice today will be made this week to bring th Of the gue, and much time was taken | Plons; W. Ro Knakal, present junior for the football game with the A , army team up to thelr Out for their resovery. If a man wm-| champion at 20 yards; Myer Prins eleven at Philadelphia on Saturday, be game with the mid onsclous for ten seconds in a game of | stein, metropolitan champlon at 10 tng encouraged by the three consecullve shinmen on Saturday. By c omparison football had to be removed from the | yards: Frank Ricketts, metropolitan | victories from the much heavie * of the work accomplished by the two field, every dig team in a big game Junior champion at 10 yards, Chester of Mennsyivanta, Stage University of | tg year the army appeared toy would finigh as an eleven of substi- | Peabody, ex-metropolitan junior cham- Virginia and Virginia Polytechnic Ine)», winner in the annual grid tutes, plon at 2% yards; Dan Frank, metro- stitute. That the Navy team ts stronger ipo. 4 ala year the form of a politan champion at the running broad this year than last Ia indicated by the! tie navy leads the cadets to This comment isn't intended as | jump, and O F Luders fact that two of the th t 5 tem will have the struggle o @ Wmock for the great American gamo me foned defeated it last season hele lives to wi Of foctdall. In my estimatton the « There will be stif scrub eames for! West Point defeated Yale lege sport 8 a maker of men. It lan't the midshinm n the firet three daya| way in turn bent Princet @ game for “sissies” in the first piace, | af the weak. and on Thursday Coach pie oy soldiers into ke croquet. ‘fe became & successful Dashiel will give the team Sts Anal in ib Uhowing ihe most ardent football player any youngster must see rita sal tructions on the home erounds. Fri ee eae have some natural aggressiveness, ; [day morning the teem will leave for) i one on the result JvMgment and eelf-reliance, Playing the | Jack Root, the Chicago hight heavy pating Waa ate: Weak 1 airewie tant Game develope just cheer qualltice tu | MEADE. who ie matched to Mgnt Tommy |! 0°) sie of midahipmen, with | The army tin crong, the welsh the fullest extent. Tiddie-de-winks | Ryan before the National A, C., of 5, Ally all the naval officers and the Dene well distributed aM petraree ‘Won't do 11, neither will checkers, Drop | Lgl elas haar ra Beiter Will eave On ape eee ene ey and thee iva m ne He has been ; : > mt vards, each 189, and the ends averag @ seasoned frotball player into the mid. | rains for le a Saturday morn onl ie of the darkest province in China, | sed beh ae fealg ake na ieesort at Motae, wad Neueeld equal t bd he will vome beck fat and hearty > Aighter. for ten rounds before the a, Navy is confident of making the Ptah UES PEOVER, BHNGEss PAUG: : Wwieeneas the average citisen would dis. Blue Taland A.C. bed outside of Chir game this vear @ neal conteat, Instead etalon ‘snd ‘ Bares See cago, on the night gf Deo. & ik ig (hit baaEB, Sek there weton, and he > hol appear Uke & bubble on the Hudson | °S®? o Li Hie a Pee The ; "Kid McCoy" haa caught the Tommy Undoubtediy atronser t Boxing, while It is a lees strenuous Ryan hadlt of making every hislsive and offensive than Short, develins the same self-reliance. | ome he happena to Vislt any length of \eam is lht in weigit Aljrost any man who 's a goo! CootDill | time MeCoy claims to have ds player coukl be a good boxer if he home at Los Angeles and w. Uled to, Bhevlin, of Yale, Is clever |. i - the reat of his days ther ner ; nine to be| team © t lacks the mith the gloves. He had a set-to with . " ’ . ee opinion here seems to be nnd well. L jot the matter la chat Kid will that the Army will make from two to punte. 4 mt tobe d > diay Corbett in the Yale gymnasium &| sick by Loe Angeles as long as he can, four touchdown la ereat confi Hing the kicks The back ial eves y few months ago and dropped the ex-|fgnt men like “Twin” Suidllvan. and dence that the Navy will score. ae it has, ages { pounds, but all are speedy hampion twice in the course of a | wnea he can't he will move on to the never fatled to do agalnat the Army and gool grow minute's boxing. When Bheviin leaves Next burs - —EE college and takes his start in the bust Martin Duffy, former white welter Ness world no doubt the self-re @ webght champion, is doing soni nd aggressiveness that he has nc. training (or ba qi Culred in pleying football and in boxto, allace. of Philadelphia, whic Will be a valuable asert eciéed at Dubuque, fowa wx Aftecn rounds. vattle Negovatims for ~mO$o Mike Ward ! ¢ eam that won ¢ vixeday b \ hat ss ante proved to me 88,212 Answers eagedtnod thay Fe eet acts eave oper tore TERN , to World Advertisements te i te 4 \ ‘ u | Mantes sorking hart were received at The World's Main fre: during October—40,590 more) wijiie Law's, tiv » than same period last year. elty, is certal would take you 18 days of 8 !ne ‘here ry wat i ahake has won ev fght in the Quaker satinue mselt ile at to:merely open, read and file OM, “uring the luet torce montha, siduue ie . this clin when 1 look around f ‘of mail | |and We defeat of Jack O'Neill, at the exirart. fri junta paper, near’ fad Benale back of me smiling. 1 call Rye Ay €.. of Philadelphia, makes which city the boys are tralaing, #hoWS to him to come up and take his share October in the history oo ae for any of the that this team promises to be an ime . and he is there of the par = bev th | Portant Tactor in thin yeare race Hie nen up aad ‘Last year Bennie did not marer.| shape for the race Jn time, Allan.) (hur: “and whe We wared, oa a oe oa ® nto| clip steady and . the Quaker Sry wa jana . ion him. bas rented @ oott at mathe, SPRINTER DUFFY IS HOME FROM ABROAD A young man who looked like Arthur Duffy, the champion sprinter, arrived yesterday on the Umbria under the vame of A. L. Dudley, His baggage was all marked “A. F, Duffy,” “Are you Mr, Duffy?” he was asked, Why, certainly not,’ he replied. 4 am ah Bngisinan, You taik too fast for an English-| man,” he was told. (lat the reason you take me for American because I'm fast?” he in 1 guess 10¥ because L look lke | Jufty. Someb ody on the ship thougut 1 was Duity, and it so it was all the| way over.” And Duity it was. | Duffy was defeated in the Amateur| Athlede Asso nH champlonsnips at whdale, England, on July 2 by J, W. Morton, of the South London Harriers, who won the 100-yard dash by inches In » seconds. Duffy was second. Duftye record is 190 yards In 9% nds. BASEBALL Mike Do: arrived in Cineinnatt Thursday morning and began shaking winds with his friends. Mike not walk up from t t the old water wagon he wil ide for a long Parent arrived in Boston and signed a contract to play » Hoston Americans for and 108, Parent hag the Maine woods, and nds lesa than when hohe mys "reddy aor t have a strenu » pitched for the Reds Jin the spring » ‘ H in the outfeld of the St, Louts Amerie ANS Next svn If Selen's hrough, the Obt-! cago N * practically ' aseball season Rrown Unive sity he Chicago Na: ved from rese rt (Conn.) team sling for ans . ank strive about (he Red bookings early ta March, ne Reds will meet the De at Augusta, Ga., April 3 and 4 et THANKSGIVING DAY FOOTBALL, Lovers 4 good ving Day at Equita- ty-seventh street and Weat| °' The Xavier A, A. eleven, haa been playing A very frat since the season mt the m | Order of Hiberul ZI wis, 1d Cur ROBERT EDGREN JOYCE AND DALY AWAITING PISTOL SHOT, EVENING WORLD'S CUP AND OFFICIALS OF GREAT FIVE-MILE RACE WILL NOT MEET JOHNSON Champion Will Not Take Any Chances of a Colored Man Winning His Laurels—He Also Is Superstitious, (Spectal to The Evening World.) BAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 21.—There te no truth in the rumor that Jeffries will fight Jack Johnson, the colored heavy- |weight, In March next. Jeffries has been importuned to give the negro a battle, but has declined. During bis theatrical engagement In this city Jef- | fries told some friends that he would | fight Johnson on two conditions, They were that the winner take all and that |Johnaon put up a side bet of $2,500. | Jeff's \dea was to prevent Johnson from jresping a loser's end that would be larger than any sum he might earo battling against a second-rater Johnson was introduced at @ boxing show the other night and said he would fight any man in the world Tt Is too early in the fistlc game to bs will be in the Geld is no doubt that John: be a good can, as he is big, would be the best 1s in & telogram to this city at he would meet Johnson, The champion has often told sporting men he would not fight a “coon” for fear vegro might wrest the champtonship laurels trom him. He Is superstitious. ————¢-—____ Thousands at Celtic Park See Irish) Champion Carry Off The Evening, World’s Cup, After One of the Best|;* Contests on Cinder Path in Years. Capt away J. Crowley, Scott, yesterday to witness V. RB. Murphy, Dantel Coffey, P. J. Cody, Major Chartes Capt. John & Dutty, John | Peter Curran, Patrick Green and | Kelly, the famous Javelin thrower Never In the history of athletics waa | J there such an enormous gathering in! attendance at a contest as crowle! Celtle Park, L. 1, Dunn hy the five-mile match race between John 8nd jhu-sitsu exponenet were some of ! Daly and John Jovee for the maasive ai A ininent Hriehmen there. tae ‘ i the Ev e as little time lost when the! silver cup presented by The Evening | two men ent ered the race inchosure. World. There was the wildest sort of enthu- Daly, who ts a loka , good-natured giant, ike a mountaln alongside Joyce, flasm displayed by the adherents of | They *yuct little man by any means, jboth men, The men were #0 evenly | those clovely aamiclated with eee eed matched that it waa diMcult to plek a by oo here waa to be a race to t i ‘ deat eee 1 ¢ E Ey but the betting was slightly In| Wont, yn eee ‘prea ran"® or of Daly on the strength of his lof age, stands ¢ feet? Inches In height ae ae and weighs 189 pounds, He holds cham honors nacep ten, the net a mth ago under the by th goore, having Garne. conditicns, end, atime One ot the | Pectin Omen tA ireland, tinge most remarkable contests on record. and taken moet of the hi mors Daly won because Joyce fell during the al contesta at the lost lap, and when it looked as if Lows. He haa a would carry off the honors, The result | ihe wens and action ang one fe sion that he is ater a lap or two, but he is persistent and determined of men, and has fooled thousands of pe: ple wno were led to belleve that on was that of an enthusiast rather was considered unsatis‘uctory, and the | friends of both men concluded that the question of who was the better man Was not firmly settled. As this impres- | alon grew In ythletic circles, The Even- ing World offered a loving-cup ae at is twenty-six, five feet | Phy to be competed for under the aus- | Wuight.” de cre ithe rep pers | pees of the Greater New York Irish | by mun looked fit’ for any mans and Athletle Aseociation Hi cup {8 of ativer, gold Ined, and engraved, lt ls one of the finest prod of the firm of Dieges & Cluat, who furnish cups and medals for | wll the great athietic contests | Dew Cara for the Crowd, The wide publicity given to the com test attracted the multitude, which bes gan to swarm into Long Island City as early 8 j00n, though the event was | scheduled for 3 P. M. The crowd w. so reat that the cara running to Celtic Park from the Thirty-fourth street ferry were swamped in short order, The Idiotie management that thinks K | |operates this line had made no pro- Jaton for a crowd. though the Athletic Association, which owns Celtic Par had notified the car company tn advance that there would be a crowd, Half a dozen cars wore shuttled back and forth just as they are on ordinary days. The fesult was a successton of riots when- ever a car started for the park. Every ferry-boat that landed at the slip after noon poured forth hundreds of men and women who massed up on | the sidewalks and waited to go through Was tralued down to per- § confidence was #hired is thousands of admirers, who ted the cup to stay with the Greater York Irish Athletlc Club rather noisee it go to Ireland with Daly, the champion of the Green Isle, Marvellously ¢ Race. When the shot was fired that sent them on their journey Daly let Joyce spin to the froat and around the track they went In that order for four laps, completing the first mile. Then Daly took the lead and held {t to the ninth lap, when Joyce again went ahead and stayed there until the three and a half miles had been reeled off. Daly again forged to the front in the sixteenth lap, and from that point onward the two men held positions so close to wether that there never was @ yard be. tween them, | At the second last » Joyce called : | — ——_—_—__—_———= his famous sprint, and it looked to the wildly cheering concourse as if he would romp In, hut to the amazement of those | wwe who didn’t know the man. Daly pro- duced his own sprint, The scene that followed was one to be remembered for a lifetime. The two inen ran as if linked together as they rounded Into the turn for home. The thousands of men roared out thelr en- couragement, and the women waved flags and handkerchiefs and screamed for their favorites. But the men tugged by the ordeal of getting aboard a car, on without appearing to hear a sound, Hundreds of the (Imid ones taced the | Tae, ttPatned every muscle, tendon and , e y ere ablaze, thelr long tramp to the park, which Is dl-| hands eliiched, and thelr mouths wide tly across from Calvary Cemetery. | open as they gulped in the alr that | At the park Itself the unusual throng M- 1 ee tees be rea th by every stride, | was too much for the facilities to cope | ANd 89 they entered the atrotch, “Joyce haa got him,” with It, but the good nature of every: Me wt yelled the ‘ean American contingent as thelr man body was unbounded, and allowances | tuege! for pe lead. Aa 468 ath ohortas "The devil he hi Tesponded tho were made for all shortcomings Daly tiene who were aimee ae eth | High up on the fence and on top of ous as the Joyce following, and they | the club-house were packed smail bore Were right The grand-stand was jammed | h the sturdy sons and winsome daugiters of Ireland, and the grounds putside the track were lined with lov- era of pure sport half a dozen deep. Noted Irishmen There. Every Irish society In the East was represonted, among them P, J. Me Nulty, State President of the Anclent who had to walk (eal The Close Fintan, at a niride apart were the men as | hed =the tape. Daly who looked” ‘ua it hee widn't move an: ither foot, dashed in the victor, with J right on his heels en there Was a scene very orderl the fe veiling They gathered around Da n their shouldei the holsted him ¢ around sort of thing put to the park, although he offered to Sort Gh URNS Sad jumps give $0 for a hansom, jack, auto or dy he ran to the six-f | airship. A big delegation hi teht hand side swing and Was acro: “Tt would take Fin McCool himaeit to beat thi ." declared that fam- ous Irish historian John McCarthy, who still belleves that John Joyce can win laurels. these tick wes Against me,” raid Joyce after the ra ‘he time shows that It wasn't a record-breaker, and fore the Included Thomas J, Ke iC. MeCryata: and Daniel The Knights of Columbus, the igo, Cork, Laltrim, | Kerry, Dublin, Tippearary Monaghan | Down, Donegal, Limerick and Kilkenny | societies hag a big representation, and oars, were members from all the ey ty benevolent and athletic stations of Irishmen and women. order } aard ney. Galway, Mayo, Dr. L.R. Williams, * Kee Grin solentitic boot aan tein ovesee, pe Y BEATS JOVGE BY NARROW ~——AMMRGIN' IN GREAT FIVE An ‘HOW THE GREAT RACE WAS RUN. The times of Daly and Joyce, with the leader of each quarter mile, follow; Dia Time, Name, Time, i mile 1.00 Daly .. 1.00 mal He heed Poy. 8 mile i mails BS bur go miled Ly mil 14a ‘ ec i 9.08 8-6 Joyce . 0.08 a 10.25 Joyee .10.26 W480 Daly 11.48 F wit Bt etl a Ww 14.93 5 3, 58 15.58 Hd a 1.32 iG ee 48 118.48 4m of 20.08 }” miles 21. 0 ‘Baa 4% miles $24 83 [43 miles $4.6 1.18 J. 4% miles 3.4 3 Wises 20.42 ganization, who polm to the fact thay Joyce's performances at ten miles ani upward have never been equalled, Kilkennys Back Out, The contest between the Waterford foocball teams that was also scheduled was then announced. It was to oe Played under Guelle Athletle L rules. The Wa rd team took field. but the Kilkennya declined to rlay then on the ground that there were two men from the County Tipperary among their players Prosktent Conway, of the Greater New York Irish Athletic Association, suge gested that thls was 9 frivelous excuas, but the manager of the Kilkennys >er- fe din his refusal to let the team play Allow them to compete in an exhls bition m fy of friend “T won't’ was the curt anawer, “Well, allow them to play under pro- test,” persisted Mr Conway snapped the manager. Then the crowd said things about the vai kennye that would put blisters on ®& block of the black marble that is quar- rled Kn their county, Coggey, who put jerman John V. P A massive silver lovine cup tor the football contest was very much sure Prised at the action of the Kilkennys. <i wall now Present the cup in @ cone test between > he chosen by the Greater New York Irish Athletic Asso- caton,” he said This ourht to brine out a great gathers ing of those hone to see a real foot. ball mateh kicked by real Irish giants, —— J, E. SULLIVAN TO REFEREE, James E. Sullivan, Secretary-Trease vrer of the Ama*eur Athletic Unton, will Teferee the annual cross country cham- plonships of the Intercollegiate Cross Country Association, to be held at ‘Tra Island, &, at 290 P. M SPORTING, CHICAGO HANDICAPPER HANDICAPPER pablishes JL bal e Ate Dr. Williams CuresMen ¢ Seeedemeeneenl New York's Master Specialist. OLD DR, GRINDLE, rere, 9 moectan 18 the dieanons of én, treatmens ina in sore throat and mouth, wlvers, biedder ak, ie eer, 3 | 3

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