The evening world. Newspaper, November 2, 1907, Page 6

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eck trouble wi strained of STORIES OF SPORTS TOLD BY EXPERTS THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1907. & | BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK Gio Q BAT werrten ae “New York Lightweight Alm ——a -Knockout:in New -Haveti Battle With: Johnny ave Summers. NEW HAVEN, Conn. and at the.end of the Summers showed only an occasional displayed in the bout with Tommy Murpny Jast year. Either he has . = ERT KEYES BEATS ENGLISH CHAMPION __ INTEN HOT ROUNDS tenth round had Summers holding on and stalling f DOINGS IN THE KEYES-SUMMERS FIGHT LAST NIGHT CHAMPION ATTELL ost Scored BY ROBERT EDGREN. = Nov. 2.—Bert Keyes beat Johnny Sum- ~ mers, the English light-weight champion, last night. There was no of- ficial decision given by the referée, but what credit there was must go to | __*#Ewetaro- me “American, He forced the fighting, struck the most effective-blows, — CHARUE HARVEY RoonNG °, CLEVEREST BOXER IN RING TO-DAY Featherweight Title Holder Is aGreat _ General‘and a Worthy Successor oo a ot Terry McGovern. © 0 4 =in Series “Champions. on =I Have Known. BE ATTELL ts one of tne—- A Greatest little nerwelghta _ a that—ever—helt-the tile — differs from his ilustrious prede- cessor, erry cGovern, in one thing. He's the cleverest boxer in the world. Terry won and held his honors by. pUreNetting aDiitty, Attelt-has-his— share of that, too, but combines with For SUMMERS = THATS Acc. H IN 24 HOURS flash of the grand fighting form ‘As for Keyes, te has fought better; The Atth round w battles in New York when there wes Harvey at the end of !t urgad Sum- far joes dopending upon tte result, The ith Keyes {s that he has been late ‘by one Jack Robineon,! §5 there was 1 that it looked like a frame-up, POOR AND Alc Durnell Was Broke on Thurs- | day When‘He Had to Let bid up after day he Durnell fortune. dull, and Charile jtiera to cut joose, It was so very dull couldn't protect looks Ike a amal ction in the sixth. Both “ita skill as fine as that of a master Tencer. : i I won't go so far as to say that Attell would class with McGovern 1t hig best. I don't think «ue would. Terry was a miracle amdng fighting Attell. against McG t hie best, would have jabbed Terry's head off for a number of rounds, would have made Terry look foolish, would have mixed it with him in good, slash- aay ‘Chicago, « faker of the Jac! “Sachool, who gxecutes_a lot 0 f fancy! gabe and ecoasionally turns’ an Honest ‘@ollar by lying Gown in a fake knock- ‘tient K work wi “Noose in ein trouble. Keye! 4 the game iittle Englishman and ced im to clinch and hold on. It had fought all the way as he =4m-the—laat. two rounds h “won with a knockout. ¢ travel the pace. ¢ fight had a fing setting. The club- ‘was packed, and around the ring Young Corbett, Pomorie MuEPhys " camo up for thecseventh ettine her He posed and. jal and blocked care- Seer e oe eter tally; walle Sommers jadbed that. 1or | | tmecand-agatn-into Keyes‘'s face. At preliminaries, and. then,! beeing “Burminers, had the heervat thet ty Baldwt: us figbting men, There were three interesting th all the pomp and ceremony of a jonship:-——batile..... Summera__ard riba. abe ae mers ) that Such are the ups and ‘downs’ of | fighters roughed in the’ clinches and breaks. Summers, boxing very _pret- His Horse Go. tly, throw veral blows Summers rushed Keyes acros. wallops stag-! treight’ Queensberry ern. ted. ; Father, the men besa fe MrHtcround=there-. wasn't .anyxthl t-even-nuggested a fight. n to box. In “Summers Was Jolted. he second WAS a Iittle better, but ngt much, Keyes began rushing a. Mt- 1| was Keyes +) Summer didn't even muss his halr, Just~before} ihe bell rang Keyes feinted with his right and caught Summers_tairly on tt with-a-teft Look that rocked hin a lead. Sum-| Keyes hit him on-the eye no hurd Maj the third Keyes) took a {it bewan to-cione and blacken, K 1 Mers was holding a little In the clinches 1/0088) ‘iting’ left into, Summerce to the “modern. and_heeling Keyes roughly with love in the breaks. distiner Tour, bet thé referee was a/ Toca) sport wh) know more about gron- | ut boxing; and he! He swung his right fist to Summer inten bas ohare IE ser oke Summoretanubled nr Keyes ap his | stomach. ant, Once ieyes-chased to-a corner, punched him ‘out|in the meanwhile pounding ineffectua ushed him across the-ting | St Keyes’s k she-rould duck an Sram sheet BRS CAOUE RE. %. ® man carrying a Yo watch In a Su “way crowd. Ia the fourth Keyes jarred the Eng~ e ic Might i hal pee nj dt was Keyes's ght, but at that he Uaaman with a hard YefC on The mourn aan t show anything that. would claws him ameng the champlon Young | Corbett, sitting there at the ringssle, |S) [sighed and looked on in an atmosnaers | of it and ri -anotherbetocg- Summers heeled Industriously in all of the breaks, ‘The referes was still blind, and began retaliating in the samo way. straight lefts, Then Keyes Cut Loose. |to the disgust of the nngside rooter: jhe remembered that “cleverness again By ARTHUR DUFFEY, HEN-the= Indoor chamulonships! of the A. A. U. were decided in | —Madison_ Square. Garden. there! considerable teading officials On the respective abilities of.the present-day champion: the performances of the champions of a decade ago, the old-timers, with that—usual plaint. " he-epinion -that track athletes second-class in their “performance and ability while! nthe other hand many of the officials, | mho had fotrowed amateur sport for the | ars or more, were of the the records showed -that there waa no decadence in athletics and that if a careful anal; as he came up for the seventh rous: scoring. And vo it went In the elgkth, while +he—Amorican's -backera~urged—him-on. tame in and took thelr corners. and ‘frantically texged him to forget} (ere -was-some discussion of thé rules, | how to box ami get invand fight. 9 Ti finally the announcer gaye out that Tite would chances wath ty raf aa nded swing that nearly droppe im. Summers, maddened, clinctid 1 ppatty— us a pictire—dancing lightly peaty sp RAL ORAIN 10) LAAN ‘about. tapped deftly at his sturdy riv: ay We Keyen tried the szme tac Bo Tittle less success. Only one good tiring. He blocked a few, but some | those wiid blows went home. and. the didnt de iiianegood,“Paizowta-the-| fe preserver, Harvey," howled a-gal- leryite, Summers hammered Keyes in In mim back: alli slong. one celde islamma: jim pack all along ane aide tlt, and Summers cleverly -ducKes—ot of the ring with furlous blows. This of| cornare-and-ateadlly jabbed Keyes! the stomach, and into Bert's make body. But-Keyes only xmiled in a su- ¢ tha pokey e Keyes | Serlor way and atill tried to be “clever. 5 Keyes Changed Tactics. ) Keyes didn't try to fight Summers last © might: He tried to box and 6s clever, and the redult was,that he was adout ds leflective as @ man using a pop- gun in a duel. Toward thé end of the eyes realized that the ‘clever n't getting him anything, cut) ne old, rugged, slambang way him famous “and® took) nell has refused many tempt- the man’ who devel- : ‘ 1 Senator! 1 used to see Atteli-when-he was & ing offers, snved by bringing in the third race-yes= had bet every dollar he could scrape together on the colt} and {n addition had some good moneyed friends back the colt for him with more. So much money was wagered on Sen time a ma- BY VINCENT TREANOR. DURNELL was a. poor man—Chureday— night hadn't a bean DAY EXCEL OLO-TIMERS record of 6 feet 5 5-8-inches should eas- fly take the high Jump from Moffett, of |OPening 8 and 10 to 1 were to be had. “Pent, whore Dest™leap—ts In the pole vault there would be another duel between Claude Allen, |. A. A, C., and Ch Clapp’s best but Allen has repeatedly this height and | have-ganeoser-12. Sear. | Summer i tho ring, Jabbing him rapidly in the face with REXES ACTON AUz2LED— SUMMERS FOR A WHILE. Few Stars of Ten Years Ago Would Match the Men Who Hold Titles To-Day. jterday. Durnel Then came a sudden surprise. Kayes forgot his néw cleverness for an in- stant, threw caution to the winds, and| went Into a bewlldcring mix-up. A jar- ring right stopped Summers’s rush. An- other right made lls knees bend. A ee ~turlopa left. brought up from. an wa- Then he speedily bad Sum ected angle, threw the Englishman's head back, and he iottered away blind- ly. Keyes was atter = him instantly. Summers clinched, held tight, shook his head bard to clear away the-cobwebs ta-tula-bruia,and—broke away.te—iaixt— it furiously until the bell rang. It looked Itke all Keyes's fight now. But, CHAMPIO $--feet-#-1-4} Dugan_put-up.one-of-ph leading the way practically trom the| bouts with well-known fghters. perfect-rides, neil won, but whatever it was it looked Cort “Eatoped pas’ A comfortable margin. trainer grasped every hand near him}fnlsting punch before the fight hadliad delayed the count to help Attell He had, fairly started. No one can doubt 5 kamences. He s recent leap of 23 fect t the Jamestown Expost- he could h t the old-timers, | wot as Rose's shot putting, which 13 better than’ George R. Gray's put of 47 feet in this event. Score, 1897—8, <1907—7. : With Weight Throwers, 2 for the hammer throw is-between=John—Pianagan;~of th and Abit McGrath McGrath and Flanagan are throwing 22 ur % feet farther than Day! Flanagan did in ‘Ji. And McGrath beats of 9 minutes. | Flanagan four tim: jehigan, recently rani i 1 S secondn for the distance tlon proves that {Ua hearty shake, been re-establl, Early In the seasqn such a that yesterday was-unimportant to Dur-| called “‘amatours” of his welght were|the furious efforts of Bender to knock He had John W. Gates behind him| buffaloed. Ha was such a terrifc hitter /im out again. And jn the ast round, 5 7 ed firancially, golng many miles to see @ race between Sheppard and Charlie Kilnat- rick, but the consensus of opinion seem that tho Irish-American , would just about cop" Charile | nneft's_ performance 18 3-5 ..for:-¢he-mil lem capabilities, ~ Soore, over 2 feet then, and money wai nell prepitred the horses or advised: the 1a amd-Gates's money. went-down.Big. st, Sey winnings were of-dilly occurrence, and| Leaving the “amateur™ ranks Attell Durnell soon occupied a prominent place| went “away back East’ to Salt Lake} was trailed all over,| city, where he put up eeveral good at his beck and| 9.0; veauite Whenever {t was known that he "the wise money wen! unlimited. ninth-round .began with a rush. had begun to realize that his ere sllpping away, and that ‘The fight: Summers ‘couldn't hurt him. jin furiously, left a wide opening that} i Summers took by swinging the right to | : Bert's ear, and retailinted by smashing | eliahman on the jaw ty i mile event It y race to decide. mies holds the American Tecord nee made onan o commissione’ He tore t down. | Dow, fer he was meeting experienced! hin pop the ring was; a -loser| boxers, and he didn’t put many of them | don’t care for a “decision! champion during this period, and all losses were charged to the Durnell-Gates combine. When Gales. decidedsto-gult-and-g0-10} England {t was estimated that he took | | of the bookmakers’ money-| strle_of boxing In which he took tow WV Various reasons bave been given for! chances 8 gidden sto to mis racing spect | reli back into—winaing all-of ts fighta| the colorado Wonder, In five rounds: ‘with a margin of 6 or As the discus event was practically unheard of somo ten years agu, this event could-not,be justly be considered, doutesleihartinl Bhorioaeera tgs joudtable Martin Sheridan, and it goes detiiiont caasinne tine chee Wome aes this tte to that of the jredern ecelve..the deciaion?} TScore1igy butvall-knewr-o! The hurdle events nqem less diMenit “WIG such sinart Hurdlers as! firey ete epaumen rs 2 old “Bl Chase in thess an break: The referee was atill blind or foolish. He couldn't ace the fouling. Cy neatly jabbed Bert two or } 3 ae 4.8) uliree ane ey came slam- | -—-opipwe-ianded-in-that-whole-round.. 8um-_ming In_agaln..with wild. awings—and | Ta janimed-a-tard-right-into~ Bert's books and” uppercuta Summers was ! ti Under these circumstsnces it seems Sren|thut despite records ‘youth must be La ees and_that.the. champtons-3f-t9- -day—arenot_wolng—backward-but-deo fF ahe victory over. the showing o break with; Durnell, Dut of this IU Je. .common...property..ow-; When_he finally. claimed. tho-chanision~} ever, that with Gatea's aepar { since a streak of hard luck for Durnell, which | only_came to-an_end with the of Senator Barrett yesterday i ti — f the champions of. hat the top-notchers of ten years; a ling style, but would have gone down in the’end like all of the great fight Jers who met Terry in his prime. = a : ~ But in-the-present day Attell -Is-e0 far_aboye the other _feather-welghts ———__1 that.not one of them can give bim a fight. : ED eek e HE mont desperate chance he took ss SEvtn then he ted a nat eas win Batting —Netson-—whe—— ‘leyerness that made him layinctbio In| outwelZ! lilm (ten) pounds’ or his class, He fought two or three times niladelphia.—Artelt reek San Francisco, working in| ne lght- Raven neceia eatucce tp te—tt tee knocked ‘ fnon.-And-he went in and fought favorite hangout was at Alex Groggaln’ “ll through the six nmunds the daytime as a messenger boy. His always jwilng to follow the money, were will-| San Francisco A. C., on Howard street. | as dead tired, weakand woug.y at ingly grabbing 4 {0 1. whereas at the | the finish, but he certainly did hand Here Attell fought himself into a localj Nelson an aw(ul (rimming on. points, | He made Nelson look tke a fool. prominence that soon Drolentee nue After that Attell went back to clever WOKS OUNIT She ftenc: TRAC Bender at Billy Elmer's club, in New. Somrt York. There {s.no. telling how much Dur- BE -was a terrible puncher inthose| Bender knocked Atteli out cold for days, Many etme T enw, him *fepn ered ia a mixip. Attell, waa | big to him, for he was jubilant an the walk from his corner with Dis iirving to knock Render out, nut Ton at by | rishi! © i Terow | threw the TEAC Across End ATS weer: The clever litti, | lead onoe -or twice, and whip over the|¥P wxteen weconds tater to find aftr yelf lying on the floor, The referee e Miruggled up to his feet and backed He had a McCoy-Itke sneer. and/iU) way evenvin his dulled consciousness: winner as| wasn't long before all the other 0-!retaining enoux) cleverness. to. avoid = after being knock. tm Dur-lthat—none of them could mix it with! 4ifc1 apkes age ons many Himes him. aL began’ to reform this -yeary two whole busy years of } Aging te hudn't won_a alngle fights, He wasn't quite so successful scrap with a knockout. He was losing larity with his punch, People ut hia clever boxing and away: with a punch. So/Abie cut out his cl Attell was alwa: tious, In a way teak ne loxicwaliop again: He tle studied out a- wonderfully—clevor | used fo li the old days. Vaist and Ba Hin latest feat wall parreT Med Onis tae and after a year or two hel Arcoles. when te-knocked out Weeks, | ey Weeks was a tough youngater, Byonn-— Uitle te) with) decisions Instead of knockauty, | Hyiceks ran 8 tone yO ee showed his Lure CAME) his title and lheld—{t—in—all--of— bia} —-AtteH—neae—few—to— : jer-weights now, Moran. the little more cautious) enMiraman may be able to give him argument But when Moran | ictory | fights, Attell became ago could-be beaten by a spare margin by the mon-f to-day: #8 round by «DIR —THargin. Selecting track teams from thi ‘Tooked very wenry as hore: it gi the men who wero: at thi ed Tos Corner. Summers Finished Tired. Summers opened the last round with a Mgat_straight left. That was the jonly blow he tanded for a mome [fushed at Summers, hurl epersut Mim. “Summers held for ita 1 LEA AO. Wether t SLOT oof ——-bbower—mink aot hye —ieet inet | found Summers y ed and tooting janxiourly toward his corner, w Net yard run} T. Keyes was fresh and mixing eagerly. in the game,’’ he sald. dest’ in 1897, and from the the men—wite-have done their best work In the past fow years, competition in| an Imaginary dual’ meet of the regular uid sive the victory by a score of 8 to 5. In-cases_whersmea-tan under diferent these ‘differences have been— considered, and. where _the com- took a hender through them himself. | petitors are still alive, thelr last com- | patition iscthosen as th® basis of com- : ‘ a a a A to turn Hshtwei'ght and firht the ‘top- my AA cad | j a : | motchers in the ¢lasa atove him, Ale > = ud : [feady he han Issued a challenge to Joe i i TT. Hl} Teajden his Aghting abliity and clem 4 t 2S beg ki i il | i jemers. Aba Attell has an abundant sup- Je - et = [hiy—of norte: ———. = Strang Buitds-an Airship~and Others Run the Gamut _of Occupations, Winter Doings of Players .__ - on Two New York Ball Clubs. |~ ——Collecting Rents in OHIFFITH—Montana-ranchman, || — CHESBRO—Farmer, se! ‘ONROY—Lye stock ratwer, — -KEELER—Pesl-eatate-deaiar, MORTARITY—Winter-ball play ORTH—Virginta farmer- KLEINOW—Sales agent. *HASE—Labelierat-cannery- APORTE-Travelling salesman, WIDLIAMS=Direhanter—— SHOMAS—Bookkeeper. JOYLE—Storekneper, SEWTON—Phyaictan, 2LBPRFELD—New York farmer, getting enough «rain and hay to keep le popped: a right. cross to The latter was a Min chin agho tried to fab again. | He led him against the-ropes,- and —imtssing a witt wing circumstances, M'GRAW—Broker end mine owner. —} MATHEWSON Forester, BRESNAHAN—Detective. HF. winter occupations of baseball piayers-riin-the whole gamut cf trades and professions. from the airship constructor Dulla a bell cord over a ‘mule's pack ,and walks inpioughed eroweA {or a dries TL Kispatrick; Unton, 89] 0CA0s of tyeitinad.—For ~aivarstned ways for putting food in the mouths of the ballplaying young, York clubs lead the world, with a bat- F,| tIne average as high as :| Sammy Strange probably tops the list | for adopting the unique. Having tackled the diamond, Sammy's; disposition naturally runs towards Champions of Olden” Days. — er, The 187_track team would be: B. J. i ys with its freehand, {| Then came-anotier furious Murry. with | ea —daliig. eclanding..and=i Wefers_. Georgetown, 100and_220-yard ; te Harvard, 440. MOUR—Race-track tourt sa VEVLIN=Recetver-for-pankrupt-firn: BAHLEN—Ownerof fathouses— MWGANN=Keatieky farmer, BE E—Agent for winter resorts, BOWERMAN—Miohigan dalryman, M'GINNITY—Iron foundry owner, ES—Cartooniat (good, too), WILTSE—Syracuse general store, the two New Cwettied gloom." nh I was back rap. —_-—_ BY JOHN: POLLOCK. OTHER good crowd of fight fans New York made and Kaye up 33 for raliroad and #2 admission There was ensily the trip over 30 of them, a special train bringing them back to th eity in two hours The receipts of Up to -xpectations, there belng exa A tho house at the prices of $1, 42 As the Jada fought divided é 9623.75 for thelr trouble, Frank Scoll! nerves of Annnouncernen barker would In front of 9 10. eiroua Jiarvey made Juat two syort announcerr that made Scallin look The ef the fm theatre for the sou rah hal, a red tle a that powlt querade bxil, the battle did not come compli the announcer, wor nager of the club resem: The umekeeper must have kept 1 one of thowe watches that are «ty with.n he cut each, round short by There !¥ an excuse for from the to five seconds. ON THE FIGHT | Stomit, Pennaylvania; Ciaud MOMs Dan Kelly, M. , broad jump; Ralph e put, and Matt Met |talking Cent. Several attempts were mi to mates ‘Tommy M yund Matty f While Charley HE net Tome scelved™ an Snot exaggerated of the pre t Cghter present « roots Just outside of Keyes’s ¢ urd for him to win. They Ae Diu te el and tele yelle of hin with rig: ver the hi Had it not been for the York and Hele but nd Ko hele t'manng rs. nager War called m few nanies that woul the “pugs a o9k well ip print — “es vie untried in the world of business. pow a full-fledged airship constructor, | the end of the season was largely due the only blotch on his escutcheon being that said airship will not fy, Before the start to the wilds aid the all of the ball play- ement at they . 2 yalds dash; J.B. 440 yarda run; / ., 880 yard | Ira Thomas. will also enend He Is not employed at present, but has the Highlander catcher:| jy down at Shelbyvile, Kr. vand. Bree, to his worry over! the condition of. his New Tork, | sat aie crimlnate: foe aed civic Baeppard, LAA y juy Hasking, one mile run; F. A. Michigan, two mile run; Forest winter hearth ers played & short engu race track and each of tham cornered la nice little wad. through the kind sistance of McGraw and that will assiat largely In buying winter | clothes for the bables. made but-one bet. igh jump, Ty) Arthur Deyiin He put §2 oF » three-mile run. i Years: MRO. been credited Schedules Will Overlap to Permit of Attending All Within Ten Days; ~ o common abe to riak a yellow back on the sitme nag. | Doviin Is a great bellever In id as Bill Dahlen way this was evidenced by the way he root nex on wil ¢ sum total of $1.20. MeGinnity lost N13 business, enced apatite or his money, and jt is on this s Grew tho tears fron: his eyes. Harvey's Kies { of Corbett as a great fighter that the com- this year will hold It«) Cournaments will probably aggregate at Feb. 8:22, | least_.$75,000, with the reeult that the The Governing Board of the National! attendance will be the largost ever be called to- known, and, judging from the greatly er In thx city by President’ Frank | Increased bowling averages of the carly N. Clute on Noy. § or 9, when the dates season, the scores will ve higher amd! , Roshester will be se-| the competiticn keener than ever be- The Cunadlan and Westorn As- | fore, . roclations will hold their meetings im-) At the New York meeting noxt week In this city and the selection of a new secre.ary for the He is the owner) ofa big iron foundry at South McAlls- Indian Territs had ‘auffered nom from the managerial reins, Mathewson {8 xoine to spend the win- t v York with his wi 9 4% meveral tt Wefers's) consistent 9 4 the century picked In. preferan: “Tq the 2) yards Woefers Ike. Should be selected better arrangements made their conyenlence competitions than have over been made In previous the hope of the commia- Inst apring in which ths Bowllng Congress, and Canaiiian through his absence Rowling Aswaclation will for the meet at would furnish one of the fately after that name thelr dates, Dates Will Overlap. f i or ra era It {s now suggrsted that the Roches- | nelg for the porition, several namos| ~ 4 rr * 5-25. The|have keen evxseated of prominent bow!-| CUBBAS COUNTY JOULE! CLUB, nirpamegt will fli] In dates! ers. ‘te need a high class man for AQUEDUCT his time at the Natural History ‘Keeler Is Counting Money, Keeler has Just etropolitan Museum * Dintory of purl Ket in the show the dowlers will be able to rol at in all tho tougnaments and yet not | ter meet be held about Feb. 1 be oblised to give more than teh days | Canadian arrangements, and he is kept How Runners Figure. aeecnlasn ing the baseball season, hak recovered, heres and Keoler js hapny, ers still holding their own. It would be] his rather mediocre’ playing towards L betwaen FoFb, 20 and ‘8 and the Wests! the. place,” sald President Clute this hyery Wok Day, 8 Ps ML Last year the. new Enstern League ern will follow. Under the now syat | moraine ‘and 1 believe! that he aboula Raclag Y Day, 2k, t body, the Natiopal Aswociation, found of scheduling tournament entries be veeeive e ed Auer te ty the old-Um- }a_ good out of the way, Attell says, he'll hav a Keeler, of the Highlanders, Is | Elberfeld has Just finlahed clearing up | fora new crop at his farm at-Suffern, N.Y. ROSE = |. McGraw (is taking “a—rest, and is amusine himself: at the race tracks. | When--tie-seasan is over—he will got @ to work actively in his brokerage office In Wall Street. Clark Griffith will leave for his big cattle ranch in Montana within a few dava, He Is yery.much cohcerned over his (tock alive during the expectes hard {OGG—Paving department, Pueblo. winte: enbro im on his farm at Conway. Riaas” Dosie {a running a’ store in Vheeling, W. Va. nnon is jon a hunting trip in the Northwest, McGann. sleuth agenty In Toledo, Ohio, that after selecting dates the A. B. C.j ers will not be -Tequired to remain in had moved Ms dates forward, with the result that both the Atlantic CXy and lournaments lost in point of at- was this point tod Garry Herrmann, presxent of the to suggest the organigation | Susay Brook Distillery Ce, + defterson Co, Ky. any city longer than two or three days and with the time given for traveling it will be possible for all who desire to which | roll in at least three of the big annual events within a ten-day absence| The prises this season in the four —————_EEEE = | N. B, A will be taken up, While thers = | are no pronounced candidates In the SPORTING, Aa

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