The evening world. Newspaper, November 9, 1907, Page 6

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ENING WORLD, SA - STORIES OF SPORTS TOLD BY EXPERTS | DIXON DEFENDED _ FEATHER TITLE ~ _ FOR TEN YEARS Little Chocolate Held Championship Longer Than Any Other Fighter and -Had:the Most Remarkable Record. “Champions I Have Known.’’| EORGE DIXON: was champion G of the world for ten long years! What otaer champion, past or! Present, can boast as much? {| | The beginning of Dixon's fighting f career ia lost in blokerings and ob-| ——* scurity. Many and various fight : Promotors claim the honor of hay-| ing “discovered” him. Two or three | i did-have some connection or other; [with Dixon early In-the game. But it remained for Tom O'Rourke to! tle the promising llttle black | fighter up wita a contract and begin farming him_out to tae boxing clubs. O'Rourke made a fottune out = 5 Of little George, worked dim like i old min 4nd When he was wuipped at last abandoned him like a gold Mine that has “‘petered out” Dizon never failed to make goog 'n fing. He was a Aghting marvel. alsied arms had han’ might have WO-Year-old child, ola Dixon his Gee more strength ben shown tyne t Tu | BEST SPORTING P |GEORGE DIXON, WHO HELD THE FEATHER- “FATHER BILL” DALY THE Lceenpemmten € a) RDAY, AGE IN NEW YORK NOVEMBER.9, 1907. AND WELL ‘UP TO DATE, NEWSY WRITTEN | yy WEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP FOR TEN YEARS THEN YEARS A: CHAMPION , DINONW LOST: US FIRE AT_tAST—_TO— Ferrey 1Gove rr: MYST and: | \ RECORD ~ Here Je a record of ‘Father Bill” the beginning of Bennings up to date. only -twice. _they been third Starts, but Never Murmurs { Plugs Away. ~ i BY VINCENT TREANOR. etpt Wreck— =grand-llidie- chine we saw only there was nothing janre-faced,—did—the |— ul thing. He knocked Dixon at né blow. in the stomach nce that time the champion who TAs, cheered for ten long years has forgotten. - Little Geor; Dixon igztay fe & wanderer on the face ot Without a cent suk of clot or a decent other days twos ete eight he had very broad aa Jong reach. Ho was well houtdara “NIXON'S record, I think, {z the most 3 temarkable syer held by a fight- ing man. He fought several hun- who mad da fe E dred battles, and with wlmost unvary-| (i roam! 3 s “sng success. He lost to Ben Jordan ahd| mot “hin onan Geonce D a; pmnly Pitmmer on decision, but was never Peetually whipped until he Jost his title pMerrible Terry McGovern after four- tain the ring. : take-a-xiance—at—the Hat ol-fa~ ters numbered among Little le'n Victims, Dixon, always 8 jer-weixnt, fought the best men in (the light-weight class. “He beat ‘rank Erne in_twent pounds lie whipped Jack Downey, Joe Bee ein. Rddle Saniry, Oscar Gardner, mon: 4 avoid him. tf a pitital — i ex-champion and “tinge tu belns an C 7 1e/ Cuocotare — IN HIS PRIMES —————————— { O'KEEFFE IN RING. WITH PAPKE TO-NIGHT & bout. wae matched last night to meet the winner of the ‘Walter—Stanton-Johnny Car- Toll bout, which ls to be decided at the Brown Gymnasium A. A. on Tuesday night, The pout between Burke and the winnec will be fought at the stag of the Long Acre A.C.’ on ‘Thursday night. A bout between anton and Burke ought to bea hummen Langford Picked to Beat Jackson. Bam Langford 1s regarded by the follow- ers of pugiliem_of Los angeles, Cal., as @ Sy winner over ‘Young Peter Jackson, mend: Aare quieres stam, meta teem thee fol, colored hier, X Daltimore, whom he ~ ars. a Kae ve crown pmeew for arena ‘before the Pacifie seeing them: perform. A.C, of Los Angela. on Tuesday night: | Dick Nelson to Meet Jimmy Briggs. Langford bax been doing his boxing be Hiret crowds, and hie fast work and clever: | Fighting Dick Nelson, the local boxer who have mado him # favorite t nthe betting + made wach a’ xreat wnowingagainst—-Rouse: SE: [O'Brien in thelr ten-round bout before the | Fitzgerald and Memsic Matched. \x nisimmitt A, C. of Chaisea, Mass, it Tuesday night, to. meet Tons MeCurey,-matehmaker-of the Pasitie | Sinmy -Mrigpe-the. A. Gu of Ins Angeles; Cal,, haa finally ec- | Boston, for twelve rounda before x new cise H 2 Dover, 3 ‘on Thursday night, If Nal: Cored Va iexdod p ILEbEwerent alo mneet/. GOOrkY | sonibeats DB he will fight O'Brien again, the Chicago fighter, for twenty | x on ee ite has signed Barry and Ross to. Fight at Boston. Faldo dem the mite. WHR BD. acy Sturray, matchmaker of the newly it for the matoh, the | organized Armory A. C. of Boston, has prac- unds.weigh 10 at, toaliy clinched. amaich betwean Jim Barry, The second week the tight hearywetght-of Asihca Rp, Tony | Ross, the Italfan heavyweight of Newcastle, | Ba. who has fought some shard battles so Sullivan Kid — Broad, Tommy i¢, Eddie Lenny, Martin Domest yet e . MoCloake: Billy ve. nt fi if ooeg ‘and scores of others. He rough: ws with Young Griffo and Dal! Wiins. LTHOUGH Dixon was tmlly clever and game fightex; he had his weakness, —heaaiwaye—“blew!—what- hare of the winnings O'Rourke d-over-to him.—He-never realized. Gans Agrees to Fight Nelson, but Dane Must Accept Champion’s Terms. Irish Champion Meets Tough Westerner for Six Rounds at Industrial B, C. wonder- Uttte AT O'KEEFFE. the champion wel. thatyhis fichting powers would wane, or} ter-welght and middle-weight of hat dles{pation would make a wreck of | two countries, Ireland and -Eng- id Hghting machine his wilt; !and, wil! begiven a chance wenight to prove to the sporting fraternity~-of Pediar Pals “ame to this country | : Dinse 15r whe foatherswerent America If ho ts the great tighter that a mplonship of the World, T uta ty -touted-as being: male stood alone ih hia.class. He was}. Pat ts to meet Bill Papke, the hard first, ‘4 jena taake more money by aking on j#lx-round bout before the National A. cage ‘of easy marks In New York ;C, of Philadelphia, where most of the preening, a ah i English boxers _ongige in thelr firat sights, Terry McGovern —-wae pro -ponlest wien they dine here In _se— _ Tory knocked Palmer cold In a-rourtd~ winilckeneoureneotaicheet na he could get. —Papke is a great fighter} has been secured 1 j 13S pm far'thie year. Murray ts. anxious to have [the-contest decided within two weeks, which eed_lightweight, of | HAT does Father Bill Daly get out of the racing game? You hear! Horses. No. of et: Second, Third: W that question hundreds of times during a season at the track. | Umbrella ......... aesteeieenae 37 Sy es Here {s a man who has spent a lifetime with the thoroughbred: Knockirby ...--+.-seeesseeeeeee 16 - iit He has seen thousands of races, yet each day finds him in his accustomed |} Hartford Boy............. 20 = _ 12 OF THE TURF WOR “FATHER BILL” DALY’S FHIS SEASON. Never have thoy been second, and only seyen times have LD ’ Daly's stable for the season since In 142 races his horses have won tice boys} but he seldom wins a race. He makes entries to the various events regularly, pays the uaual entrance fee of $10, now and then engages @ real jockey, at the usual cost, but few purses come his way to help defray |] Warning .. expenses. | , a Killiekrankie . Let's estimate what !t costs “‘Fathet ; wn training, am my own. Fair Anna rene \ jones look “after ‘thi 1 If, reset Tpit tn season: Wiereas others pay ‘men to” do these || Veronese ........+cess00se+ Keep and train 14 horses at the regu- 4 Loser? Why no. I'm contented. | average of $2 a day for each horse, r ali the time do | id stick at this game?! © won a lot of money | in my Why, once I totalled $100,009 | three years running. { “This year I haven't had the best of} luck,-know, but you can’t be lucky all | theta. i i eid fal. York ..... $8. In a month this rould Ogure #840, And {n ten months of the racing se son $8,400. Add the $1,420 tor entrance. fees jo.1421 races, and the btl!/ will measure up to! horses, 100, were cut down early In Totals ment and control are licensed boy: under eighty pounds, who will make names for themselves in a year or #0. ‘| Willie Burns, brother of the successful Guy and Tommy, is, in Daly's jud: ent, more promising than elther was Witlle= Burns -ta-«: year—and—a—half older than Guy and a year and « half better right now ls the way Father Bill puts ‘Three parties are afte: him, but I won't say which tf any of them will get Bim just yet. I have another boy, Lynch, whom you'll hear from too. “Yeu, there Ing of jockeys: a lot these days. All kinds of stories are told of Dals | Mickey Miles, now riding on the Euro- Season, otherwise my purse winnin; might ‘have been digger. Five-Dollar Wager Hie Limit. “Do you bet on the races, Father?”* “Oh, “no. —Not-as-a_rule.—I—milg ht put}, wi a % bill once in a while, Seldom the secret of He doesn't bet. If he as one well-known gambler expres it, Daly -ts content to have hii Tun for.the purses, and if evury other owner and trainer followed the sam Une, they would be a whole lot richer and the bookmakers less conspicuous. It isn't generally known that Daly is z din the development of $9,820. : ‘There are dozens of other items of ex- pense in the maintenance of a racing stable, such as forfelts, Jockey fees and stadle necessities, which might saslly | 4, bring the cost up to $15,000. “Mather Bil” pays all this with murmur, /He never cries “Fraud “Hard ‘1ucki" por even criticiacs takes everything es a sport should. Mystery-of Turf “Father Bill’ ts called the myatery of. the turf by those who don't know, him, but to those who meet him day in and he one answer it succe: «ood money in the mak- A-good jockey is worth old man, saying he w r hand his boys any money. ‘He would always. limp up to where the youngsters were xrouped and, turning his back to them, Would tosx some money on the ground saying ‘There. | boys: ohange—for— you." ethan we knew what to do wi Ing, and in ¢ is told on the old man. AnoSecPy A. agent found gika b tng A—horse'n lex in a: tut bol natural, the tub ani flant agent. alk with him and have sme) riding material toan he son tie scc-7 aod t Ung v at ~ Father BIll tw oes of his norees. He haw made-as98-| —— — - SS = i : his-for-years, and hus | oo 5 Sas aaa ea far Tromn being a myatery. Instead, he (yee Vall repaid. Without Father Bill | ava = Vosiod 2 fs a very #ucceasful man, a big owner |PeCh Well tape ener Snapper Gar- a ot land wiles brings him a comfortable | ison. fimnls MoLaugnlin, Danny Income, a good judge of horses and *) ayarer and latterly young Guy Burns, Pa fee oY : | cee trainer’ ana developer of some of the| Fig rode with great success this season beat jockeys that ever guided a winter | and who will ride the hor of Richard | i j past phe judges. Among oer, thowe | ¢ iS winter onthe Weatern ; 4 Meith Nenaor. rely WONTAR CEST coat “cas a Mati Gnade-atar| __(speclat-tn-The Evenine World.) _ [| Carlo. Among the lot now _ beng, thave New’ dieponition to look on iar as | SSS UME Fee and hevie ailll| BAN FRANCISCO, Noy. 3—Tho race] (7aINeq- ty-Asuert Wentin-ate tie A 1x : ot, io minutes’ talk with the oli rive that impression from is_my first losing season ‘Father Bil to the writer that I am not out much. won -tro-—purses,deen—-ia..the now and then, and=nave sold young Guy Burns to Mr. Carman, I got $e Stor hl helps v0 hho same. line w! | r working slong th? there is money in |!ng season which opens to-day at the development of successful riders. | Emeryville track will undoubtedly be Hainer Bill, himaeit admits that the | the most euccesstul aver held in Call: biininess ie prodtable enoUR-t0-M2K8 | Toraig Guring Whe > Winter —seRscT Ei ahs aoe Contr There haye been other years wher AGATA AACE Satie mora horses have beon here ready t Talking of his latest crop of coming) 1... but never has the class been as money, “Dixon and his astate-manager—were and hay scored a number of knockouts uit. out over having Palmer é ous yy Yn jthis year. Ho ts. a terrific puneher Stotchmaker Bob Deaty to bix Billy Honey" | working at Brown's gyinnasium ai present. “Unk'' | Ruasell hes been secured sceme to be agreeable to both men. Barry le im, #0 You sée that all to put me right on the year. My ex-| stare penses are not so big. i eet atida tal tattoos (eusistno) Father Buanace-|good. For the opening handicap to- ow under nis manag ptatneysixan | day_ thera were fifty-five nominations i away from them py Harris und hoa Witle known novice ax Terry. | Wit rr To get cron O'Rourke arranged a sent ytsen nt, eam pntnd Wades dretieds, of Moston, for aix ruanda before | peat between, Dizon, and. McGovern: ithe bel Of ie Industri Doxine Club on the haat of “i wern had deprived the champion o aie g : Nov. Russell thinks ue can beat Mole Ane Juicy morsel in robbing the gett ene mee CAN, emt Danke he can indy. ae the latey is not aa clever a boxer Sorin abampion: Palper before Dixon should be put away it's a ante vet PMilaseat clevernees: eould ret at. No} on wi that Pat will b assenge: “to B “even tha score by” whipping the in- |the ae Meaners that will leave |Yimmy Walch’ to Box Two Battles, | Ee he glory in vror England within the next few day: Jimmy Walah, the clever boxer of Desi. - Gans's Retirement Was a Blut? has been matched to..engage in two fifteen: GOVERN and Dixon fousht. And} so, anya ratirecent ¢ * | round bouts before the Standart A, C. ot] M from the atart Jt was apparent |, 2° Pemeneatroma Ble rage waa. ices Ont Naver8 Hi take- on a puff. Joe now maken the an- that this furfous novice, h his nouncemenc that Pel inex eiae pecan ae { Gulllke rushes, fis tireless attack, him |\Neleon In a finteh fant for the large, } Fate dh WAN probed z trrins speed. was Dixon's master: | Maz |ilerre,, provid Be teee vow TS pes | clever for both boy fer.aia| in Rowing and Cross-Coun- @) Govern tore tn wha” tore Iti “agatn and draw, which are =) Sgéin, until Dixon's #tamina- slowly Rebbrd emer. Eig mes Dixon, was led--te~ tre tee =under -Metiovery's |) “try Running: he was compelled to he fournt him a fourteen months ag men hase Already heen at people Ket boxera met {n bouts gt ‘ hey sey be thai t Apel eA erat ara * (ERICAN t Jearnit me! y init On the other tne! ‘ine co! semashes, while {from the black boy's Di Roe a MERICAN arnietes are learning |men of yeary of training... On the Prey are able to. make a ten-mile run! starters. Uncle Is in fine Tom O'Rourke franucally urged | ~Sallor Burke to Box the Winner, | {i Siiwanukes. The tea great tr the secret ol Salem ron. Chelny bamd; in tie Vian g erties from: tis hour kréat fatigue 4t teonot the dis. Kae iriver: Ont SE™ RiRED he fe> rp Lilxan-would_... Asiior thurs, the tooal-gaiadi fpr elunes tan seal bese kood “contests at Mat cocaine Ia the value of ge (hele ure probably not two meni tance running that taxes the vital or-| tumed from New-York, recently, tev: et ; Sead taicidtenwetWts WAL Sorkin donnnec tiie: Peat Picea: English ore {who have had more-than three years| mans and produces the athletic heart, | ping a mile in 1,45 with 1% pounds up. shen alow AEA ts having considerable trouble in getting onl Charley Nowy Maat Vox MGeeraal = gariy trains tn rowing and —erOme=t ye eeyartenc—— = -igul the aeater- physical tensity and “and eased: up—at the ond, _ Firestone, again to carry out ins: ~ country dntests; In both of which} It 1s to the credit of the ~ Public} strain in the sorint. 80 the cross-coun-| Montgomery and Méetiok havo aio Brand exhibition of gam evecican schools are now. Schools Athietic League and the oars:| try run ix a tonlo and vitallzer while| done wi re sporte the Ame: men along the Harlem thar the early] the: monotonous tread on the cinder} “soot Durnell has” fifteen horse could not—win, In th > Pixon went down to stay, ood) and helpie: champion of the wor ‘And from that day” on Mttle fighter’s descent Wapid on record, O'Rourke fer a while, following those of Great Britain, hhe remarkable increage of interest whioh has been given to these two lnes of outdoor events thix year marks the progress and deve pment of the Amer- most | him GORNELL HAS GOOD RUNNERS and he fought Tut and doctors believe becrathe ool boy © coming world’s ax that had carrie : peste Sctate pellave coat the wath | loan mehoGl sey (84 the coming 7, for 30 many) years) nad’ gone, HOUGH Trainer Moaki~ ‘ ts rT deal fae nplon, te oats Wer to return. * Was beaten again ut defintely decide. Seri —_—— Cross-country running -Just at w MeGovern. thes hy Tommy Sullivar GRAIN CoG the runs | me ‘Twelfth Regiment armory In nixatly | { eh nd founk Corbett, Benny Yanger, A Thera that will Cornell) the scene of ath ining w Na Umo is a seasonabl ort, and more Hand Austin’ Tice In quick succession, | at the forthcoming intercollegiate cronn-| Kuardamen leave in {he attention Is being given to It than In oriwaa Ariaking harder thar eountry chainplonship at Princeton, :t| Gerke 0 iis Te Last erinnd) anys nnov ious cyents) une reason:is the came arodnd and Kota —Mpeats—that-the-men—wao—wilt-conati fren (Cue Are trains | tutereat of tie public _scts.ol boys who nwo. from hn old manager tats che team arb /B, J. Lemon, the cap: | eres I nae akg are already in hard training. for the| en. last, after A dozen or-more (sce the team, and who finished thir: | qa} )¢ frequently, take sping on the ASE CC CR AC ett edb deserted by his fo! fri rent last year; J. V, Cobpitts, who | same boar ub to be held at Ceitle lonely, despairing of Was a close second to Jones, of Pen! iy y -— Park, Saturday, Noy, 2. The boys ngvable iorwintvanothen fehtcin hie niu, the present champion; KE Walter Grady teceived three men as an‘ 1 divided into wectional groups m country, Dixon went to England i +e FE moquiettion to hin tra ring at th instruction vf ‘much atie i who finished — seventh; and | seventy firet. Regi ens i Oveo RG erne Pea real haan co attcdation cts sicher whetHnianed fcteenth; obut [sain ren eee y, on East leddors as John Joyce, George Henig ad alwa con ‘dition that 9 at presont has not been doing much urth atreet, luat i Laly, Carr, Howard, Vatentine and Any Amorican: Aghter could. whip innag ° Irish-American A.C. will give facil. (yh Cle ot rls Gis.) Gh great interest in their training, Five of this kind on Election Duy tea elu > have been sh > alt Young, Atwood, wii athletes, any Englishman, Dixon'a first ex- rs whether members of perience in Engtand was a defeat by s, or not. at. thelr club-house in Celtic rit ay, : A olltan Turf Club. 7 ALA nd Gerard, -of Pa hela os ys 2 - whe Out nearly two hundred boys unqualified indorsement of the: sport) Pollta 0 7 ¢ Pedinr Paimer—a fifteon-round 1 Truve, Sulltvan. i tg erin) An leeds UOC the results were Very grath{ying, not. overdone. port ta (rien, Willlam Ward, the Repuvil- | 6c thoroushly: altted, hen Dixon went do HW laat year, ands Nobis. who | nen wil SH AE EH 0 Bie future succes of American. IV?" yon wi StOre In Ait see : Mee asrenices pean and eighth, “were Meraduatod fast a3 vin Vand teworews runners In distance ents, W feature of fendance, ut Ahey are so rapidly take oD ie cudgel against the racing GAELIC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME hs say ayatinble he ni with the noya oF alone. oor spor nich ‘they are at Seals EMeeaeie ee} === | game a many. { Psaase @ desperate raliy tow be Golpitts, Beelye and | present sadly lacking. With the Olym- boy Bol i Ty if ost 7 ‘ i } It has bron understood that en's , Bis stay, and for t Day, the Irish “pro” brings some great | ple dhumplonships coming on next yeir,| SAIOW FOR YACHTSMEN. Ipetting wheets have been taken up.| MTOm the prosertt outlook, fully 10,000 en will compete and |! anhattan from far Australia, Pro-| how much America lacks! in thle P oc) 5 tead of #even. men m haa weakened amatour sport {1 ular will be all the more appa " Men Iatile Chocolate, thinking that| ie “ a waned teceytiy by tae! English schoolboys has given Engiand i Nate, HN strength does not look | Austral aa kimed to ¢ ; Ost every of ci pould sAght again, came) back to | iY Een Ea eae onr ail ih vd sta clack ( Abmoal avery: record of, any conasquence le Was. mal 5 from the ‘mile up. America ri hed with younk, | mit so Iwayr be depended on |» | to turn out a fast set of distance men acl Sydney where, the of electric Int and after Value of Early Training. (One has no furthér to go than. the English Henley regattatn. which. ‘al- Each Wears & one-coinr | ing Totomy Murpii atk mhame that “trained” on State ining was done on \e costume, affair Island. was! His Denis Horgan, the New York A. C. welm 5 Hqula” retren erta that arsed nt. the! trainitg | thrower, and who beid for years the world's and placed men are oanily kaown tothe | though all conditions have been made Batters in curlouslytabelled ‘bottles, | record with the 16-pound shot, fe still at the | oromd by specially cojored-iampa. Day ta | to favor the English contestant, it muat | great runner, and he | bin rages here. Loh who could beat nen. t expects 10 get on wo yern was the only Day at distances and aleo be admitted that the real merit with the oars hae withstood successfully the efforts of American caremen in the in the ring he little old man. ash out ike the Preabyterian Hospital, whore he was oper- ated on leat Monday, It ts thought that aperetion to- he ‘tried ‘to Horgan will undergy another MERICANS TAKE LESSON _ FROM ENGLISH School Boys Awaken Interest | Gui [early tratniig Dear in-tie preparatory + other fixtures tho Increase is over 20 per cent. ‘The California Derby, with the $5,000 added money, will have a gross value thin year of nearly 29,000, and-the wis- dom of making the increase {s demon- CHAMPIONS Intercollegiate claasto carry away the | es cer strated inthe quality of the horaes aly plate given as prizes it may py 4 | . 9 >) t “ipamed as probable starters, rite cancer cient upon | Foreign’ Scheme of Ei nL yineenya them belna Sam: Hildreth's $99,- the water than Yale or Harvard. | Bere Are) 000 Uncle, Meelick and Firestone. The | The reason for this will be found In| ~ Training Begins to Show aU Rcles eee eat has inereaned the-fact Wiat the leading oaremen- in} from_efghty-slx inst year to more than | colleges are thone Whose} For erated on the umber of owners The big English Results in New York. = for_stable room. For, the opening — hinidicay == to: es: which will ‘be the feature of the | seve hese Derby. entrips "will be two! several of thes St sen schools, and, consequendy, when an \merican crew entera the Henley it ts to compete againat the seasoned -on | pushed alonk..that in’ a year path {s a strain alike to mind and. body. HOLES THREATENS REVENGE Was George Boles fired by the Mets) sulted woll-known patron of the] ‘on the Jockey. Club's Instructions, or’ me, who proved powerful with the | mba. /Powers that be. This was erclustyely | told in The Evening World the next} day, Bince that time the bookmaker | has been Investigated along other lines, | which, If rumor may be delleved, puts him In an unenviable Ught. A commissioner of a wall-known owner and heavy bettor has beon men- tioned tn connection with Boles, Ac- cording to report, they were mixod up in nome deals which have not as yet sent seAKON Siw the suc- made to get the quartered at Emeryville, being two-year-olds, by Kin the majort Part ofthe | met and St. cesstul “effort publie | school boys into the Decoration Day ro- gatta, and a result of the good start) Mado’ will be to Increase the entry: list next May, and from It all will come the gradumt development of the Ameri- loan schoolboy from the Harlem to the | Poughkeepsie Intercollegiate or Thames. dual incet of Yulo and Harvard at New London. Thiy means that. the success-! ful continuance of the progressive +y4-! tem for a few years will enable A'mer- | Jeans to bring home the Henloy plate} °?, under any conditions Englishmen may | did’ he Just quit and sell his butte 7\mpose upon them; jcause te was tired ofthe game aly Cross-Country Boom. | whieh he has grown rich? Those who this) saana. wondltion exists in icross} know sare dugking: all questions) onsthe country srunnit nthix there is Tio 1 better of more hemMUiful sport for boys, | AUbJect. Rumor, however, saya he was It Js @ developer of the muscles and forced out, and thd same rumor goes } wind and heiptul in every ay A 18 further and intimates that the book- Dar to Its ndoptons for In England mayer ’may yet be shown the gate. It is sald that Boles will bring a sult the best results have been from boys whd begin ut ten yeats of age. for $100,000 damages againat the Metro Is also said that most careful investigation by the lead- ing English physicians hax led to an will Journey to Celtic Park to- | This doesn’t mean the sheet of any ona | Persona ‘or two races, such as the Gold Lady Morrow to see the Gaolic champlonahip and Okanite performances, with which |of this year decided, The Cork team | Boles'a name has .boen associated, but "AS deen one year before the public | the sheets covering a long periéd, say (2nd In that timo han struggled through \throughout the Brighton and Saratoga / many desperate games and won the ad- meetings, What Ja aought by thie may Mration of All Gaelic followers, and lonly be gucased at. Those who ought | "Bey expect to:he abla to take the sea- / | t i c y march which 1s to follow tle enter-| to know refuse to say. ~ peyoedl Sornederaualies Ea) fate talnment, Borough President Color! 41) poles'a. troubles. are believed between the Monaghan and Tipperary ; it a eae tena eee TAY* nave originated the day he/grossly in- tons and should be fast and exciting, Many novel and amusing features are promised ns attractions at the annual | minatrel show to be xiven by mem- [bers of the Arcanum Yacht Club a | Prospect Hall, Brooklyn, on ‘Tuesday evening. Rehearsals have been going on for the past wwo months, Flag f- cota frm all the loal clubs have been invited and will take part in the grand against forty-one laat year, and In the] ¢ Kentucky and 1 the eleven-year-old en more from Dumell’s sta’ Venice in Sonthe: Pacing wont begin there-b¥- President Pacifia nat such zed AWE the oh 8 represents ix the. recognized autheriy of racing titeresta on the Pacific Coast, there ix smatt _ for the success of the pro) S new venture. - RUBE’S_ CHECK ANONYMOUS. » addell waa gloating over. check for $110 that he had justyrecel¥oq! through the mall, Stratght to guar” Gan, Oxsle Schreck, ne wont wieu the ghad things. ib “Who sent you the money?" inquired), the Athletic catcher. “Dunno: replied Ruber-t'Phe. check'#! anonymous. Coggt Jockey Club, who says a frack wou ni e » Mr. Wint i Rube V orvegrite @ Dure itt whiskey G

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