The evening world. Newspaper, October 24, 1908, Page 6

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2ST REE | \ f f ' STORIES OF SPORTS TOLD BY EXPERTS S'LONG TO GIANTS, ERE’S WHAT THEY'LL DO THIS WINTER Manager McGrawand Pitcher Mathew- son Will Remain Other Stars Will ‘ourney West. By Bozeman Bulger. W that the firat cool weather has nipped the bloom from the barn- storming trip, the Giants are be- to seek quarters for the winter. New York has seen the last of them ntl the dope sheet begins to come from the mothball beds next spring. It so happens that not one of the t team of 1908 can claim Manhattan for his home, though a few of them will hang on suntil the spring. Manager McGraw has decided to make New York his permanent home and so has Christy Mathewson. Matty has taken @ house in St. Nicholas court and pro- poses to spend the winter in “taking the life of fans.” He will write insur ance. Manager McGraw and Fred Knowles ave already started business in thelr ew pool and billiard parlors in the Marbridge Building, and Sammy Strang, the former utility man of the Giants, ts the handsome cashier. Bresnahan a Sleuth. Roger Bresnahan has already gone to his home in Toledo, O., where he will serve as & private detective during the winter. He is said to be the nearest approach to Sherlock Holmes that To- Jedo has ever produced. Mike Donltn, accompanied by his ‘wife, Mabel Hite, will spend part of the winter here and part on the road. He nd Mrs, Donlin will appear in a vau- deville sketch. David Brain has gone to Hot Springs, where he will stay when he is not hunt- fng. He wants to be in good shape to} Degin the season next spring. Arthur Devlin lives in Washington, but he {s on the verge of a job as recelyer for some broken concern in New York, and if Evening World’s First in New York, but things come right he will remamn here | for several months. | The proposed trip to Cuba has been abandoned and that will lead many of the players ta change thelr plans, Fred Tenney has already gone to his home, in Winthrop, Mass., for the win- ter. He will spend al his spare time in making water color paintings. That is his hobby, and his work is sald to be first-class. Larry Doyle ts still in town, but he will leave in a few days for Iowa, where he intends to do some shooting of small | game. | Joe MoGinnity is now in South Mo- Allister, L T., where he owns and op- | erates an fron foundry and molding | shop. Joe is one of the wealthiest ball- | players of the lot, and he can afford to give up the diamond if he ao desires. Wiitee Ie a Merchant. | George Wiltse will spend the winter in Syracuse, where he and his brothers are interested in a furniture store. ‘Al Bridwell will leave in a few days for bis home in Ohio. He 1s also fond of shooting. The greatest hunter of them all ts Luther Taylor, the deaf-mute pitcher. Taylor lives at Baldwin, Kan., and practically all of his winter is spent in uunting behind @ pair of bird dogs. McCormick is an engineer and min- eral expert. He will work at his pro- THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1900. BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK -BROKAW’S RACER ROUNDING A TURN | enue fession in Chicago. Seymour proposes to spend his winter travelling around. He lives in upper New York State, but ne will probably go to some winter serot in the South- west. | Leon Ames says he does not intend to work a lick unless he feels like it. He has gone to his home in Wooster, 0., and will remain there until he gets the call in the spring. Herzog has alread: Prayers Instead of Horse Racing at Old Brighton gone to his home Pimlico Meet Will | Be One ot Years Best Gack shcgtine’ and will “frend mug | If the Brighton Beach race track 1s to | F ne aa pee time on the Susquehanna Shoals be cut up into building lots the corner | Baltimore Track Will Have where in the old days was located the . mutuel pools will be occupied by a Many New York Regu- church. This was announced yesterday at the offices of the Somerville Realty Company. It was said there that Charles C. Overton, one of the oldest lars on Hand. LESSON IN ATHLETICS — cise. They should be taught to control themselves, for the fever of competi-{them would erect a free church. BY EARNIE HERTBERG, Trainer of the Irish-American A. O. OYS should be boys. B That's the fret athletics, Playing tag, baseball, shiney, follow master, leap frog, one foot off one foot ‘on, cat, prisoner's base and the other games that have come down to us from our fathers before u ‘These natural pastimes are not in- furious to the young, there is no set mental effort required, they take to | them as naturally as a duck takes to water. They are all physical efforts, and while the boy may be tired when he fs through with his day's sport, {t is | ‘lan enjoyment and requires but sleep in a ventilated room to make him big and strong. ‘ it's the mental lesson in effort that !s most | compete tion is what costs them sleepless nights and, which they are entered. in many instances, the races in I would advise youngsters to start of with light gymnasium exercise in a well- ventilated room. strength, with elasticity of muscle, and This will give them help prepare them for the more strenu- ous competition on track and field when they grow older. If they want outdoor work on track| When Brighton sold pools there were | posted on the blac : many famous coups consummated. It| boards, with vouchers for every dollar and field I would advise them to take| fad both $ and % mutuel machines, "|| DOArass with Bee eee eats things gradually. Putting a light shot| One man conducted the machines, | bet. has been a 60 at ! le very beneficial, and they should use| With his compensation only the odi| racegoers, who hay restricted for It first with one arm and then the other, | Pennies, and out of these old pennies | tour months to “¢ Tn jumping they ‘should not try for the track mutructed, If a pool catied | the possible trimmings of a bl paehyHis atyin cantare pase BS |for the payment of, $100.9 the holders | officer of the law “ : |Or tickets recelved the even $100.0, The |. r, aK « ylan¢ ® natural spring, as a hard pressure on} Sad pennies went to the man who ® 7ace aa ieee ERinAnvatiie the feet after a jump is arch. They mus: not jumping at one time n pt to lower the do too much residents of Coney Island, had obtained @ tentative option on the five lots em- braced in the old “pool grounds” and on When finished he will offer it to the| denomination, which, ir his judgment, has done most good for Long Island He now ownsachurch at Neptune ave- nue and Henry street, and may move tt to the new plot. The “pool grounds” are famous tn Brighton's history, though for fourteen years they have not been used for the purposes for which they were intended. owned the machines and bulit for him a big fortune. Se race tracks in th its gates to-day. the old Baltimore the been New York’ has been Maryland's gain, and a rec- ord-breaking crowd of Gothamites will help make the attendance a memorable one. and as it Las no “Old Pimlico,” one of the most noted country, throws open meeting at promises to be ner one in its history. What has loss in a racing way parts of the coun- h Speculators their -favorites Turfmen from all rested 1 ¢ affairs there Is osition to t running avold racing. ‘The first 3 a no oF ‘ harmful, Take a youngster that 1s to! principle is to know how torun smooth-| BELMONT STRING SAILS. 1 will be of the in games, and the mental Wy. pleking the) feat up aulokly from the] 25 and rubber on the Ine to- strain he undergoes prior to that com-|§'ound, and refrain from trying the —— The application for stands ex- 4 ong stride. Allow the arm ving ne: ADE Petition is what will work havoc with | freely ao as to prevent tying Up. Gey) $150,000 Worth of Beat Horses In) ceeded that nu! Rociinelemans his constitution, and not the sport that | the movement of the arms from the ac- Stable Shipped Abroad. ment determined to et the he engages in as an exercise. en Or the Lone A string of August Belmont's race list to forty book: Even , Ings to be avolded—tobacco | Fi non t a F Boys competing in track and fleld|jiduors in every form; pastry and ail| horses sailed to-day on the Atlantic with this curt it will be sports should be taught to look upon foods that are spiced, pickled or! Transp Mner Minneayy among a. record break ist, for in the these games in the nature of an exer- | corned. Nae helbert, Octogon,| past not more than twenty-eight DRE Ae ea have | on hand at the D Nearly all the minen| ured for $50,000 and racing men, owners, jockeys, bookmak- D | ers and plungers decided to make Joss Tells. Secreis of the How many times does one hear the expression in regard to certain pitchers: “I can't for the life of me see how he | gets away with his games? Why, he basn't a thing,” says Addie Joss, the Cleveland twirler. To m good many fans, and especially those who are not close students of the game, the pitcher who Is not blessed with tremendous speed and a fast- breaking curve ball is always called lucky whenever he wins a game. In reality, the twirler who can win consistently and who 1s not fortunate enough to have been endowed with the natural ability some of his more fortun- ate fellow pitchers possess, 1s entitled to at least as much, If not more credit, than is the other slabster, In order to accomplish the same re- wults he must have developed something which he can use that will even up his Pitcher’s Art. effectiveness to the same standard of the other twirler, ‘This {8 usually accomplished by three |things: control, a change of pace, and, last of all, plenty of nerve. A pitcher of this class is termed by the baseball fra- ternity, "a mixer.” By not relying {8 meant a pitcher who is constantly mixing them up on | batter, One of the greatest examples of the successful twirler of this type 18 none other than Clark Griffith, who for years weed Rangers), Zeke Zuneberg was a topnotcher, | (Nettle Rashes), “Grif! wae never accused of having | First Base—Home-Run Haggerty enough speed to knock the mitt off the | _p Altalfas). catcher’s hand, nor did he have a won es F derful curve ball, Still, he managed tc Second BapeeFrank Merriwell win @ handsome percentage of his | (Liberty B kames every year, simply because he Shortstop—Cactus Sawyer (Wil knew how to pitch and had the nerve| low Swamps) to hand up @ slow one any time he 2 Third Base—Ralph Rapidfire Wought he could out the batter Uerriwinkle Pippins), J <P *S\_/ Lett Field—Bill Bowsprit ( George Bonhag’s Ambition Is to Win a Marathon Race oT Unoaunted by ill success during the outdoor season, George Bonhag, the strong-hearted distance runner of the Irish-American Athletic Club, wiil tratn faithfully for indoor running. Bonhag has established several indoor marks, and he is the proud holder of the national indoor title. At the cham- pionship run in Madison Square Garden fast winter he defeaced the best distance men in the ry and established @ few mark. That victory stamped him ge the posses f bo speed @tamina jie spr the last hb yards of @ five-mile race in less than @laven seconds. Ammediately after that race Bonheg ) the Pimlico track thelr rendeavous for | the two weeks. | Washington Society to Attend. | With the Bennings track closed and/{ its fall meeting abolished, the racing wa here will take its place, Many | 3 set" of Washington! ified their intention of paying It is quite in the line! hat Miss Elkins, who i the Duke of the yon at the a member of the exclu- w bruzzi, will pass an afte track he 4 v Club, of Washington, | and a devi r ougnbreds | and hunters. As there will be a pink coat race e over the steeplechass course, which will attract many ama- teur riders of this city and Washing- Miss Elkins may accompany a f her friends to the track, At ennings track at fommer meetings was almost a dal Stables are now fill ton, arty m now on to of the sport the clerk of 1 to have a large nl { nominations ach rage. O' ve come from Ke y and N to take part in the meeting, de- ing above all the opportunity to on their horses’ chances rather than | for big purses. | ——— MANY ENTRIES IN FOR MIXED CENTURY RUN. century run wu 2 Long Island L will the Bedford entries have inmittee, who it will entury ts the ich atest century he novel feature of th eyele division, w will be. dof over fifty riders, and will » C, R. C, A! club-house, Bed- M, jon ‘will start prompt- 1 , at 10 A The ly at 7A M., and will be pacer ve ran Daniel'M. Adee. Mr. Adee holds record of pacing more centuries n any other cyclist be fhe | Oh, You Hunters! Here'sa Whopper | By Laughingyet The return of the first duck hunters from the far end of Long Island bids | fair to mark the passing of Swat Milli- gan as a disciple of truth and veracity. The friends of Laughingyet Wingate, a! well-known shot, are congratulating him for having pulled the first good one of | the season, According to Wingate—and he swears to ithe made the best shot in the an-| nuals of Long Island on Thursday last. | Wingate and a friend were being rowed to the duck shboting grounds by a guide, From his seat in the skiff Wingate spied a hawk overhead, and the guide advised him to try a shot. I sipped a shell of No. 1 shot in my (right barrel,” says Wingate, “and kept a load of No. § in the left. I got a good UP TO DATE, NEWSY AND WELL WRITTEN 'Wolgast Gets Chance With Champion Attell ‘ | Milwaukee Fighter Will Mcet at Los Angeles on Nov. 10. | [2 BY JOHN POLLOCK. NOTHER battle for the feather- | \Ch weight championship title will be | that Fit decided on the night of Nov. 10. | fore it if he The fighters who will figure tn it are | Abe Attell, the present champion, and Ad Wolgast, the sturdy Uttle fighter of Milwaukee, who has made a great hit with the fight fans of Calffornia since he went out there. Attell and Wolgast were matched last night by Baron Long | to battle for twenty rounds before the Jeffries A. C., of Los Angeles, on the above mentioned evening. Tt te not Mkely that the attempt | club-house building was they will Fighting Dick Nelson, weight, and Mickey Gannon, the Pittsburg fighter, who ts boxing #0 well in Phtindel- phia fust now, have been secured to try conclusions in & six-round bout at a show to be held at Pittsburg on Monday night. It ought to slashing bard fight, as botu men tear right In and never stop punching. They will box at catch weights, which w! permit both of them to be etrong. Phil Brock. the Celeveland lightweight, fs not going to engage In any bouts at the local clubs. He received a telegram from the local Meht- fight his hardest out as quickly a8 Jom Jeffries last night offering him a fight 6 ¢ with Freddie Welsh, the English light- | — = wetxht, for twenty-five rounds at the Jot. fries A. C., of Los Angeles, Cal., tn three weeks, and he has acceptet it. He will | TAL leave for Los Angeles in a few days to ge: into shape for the fight. One of the best fights next week should be the six-round go between Billy Glover, of Boston, and Jim Bonner, the lightweight fighter of Summit Hill, Pa. They will clash at the stag of the Brown Gymnasium A. A. on Tuesday night, and the clubhouse should be packed to its capacity. Bonner "PLAYS WOLF FNAL New York and Massachusetts wil! be fought three hard fights in Hoston a few | represented | al round of the Mouths gao, and as he is in great condition | yon an. plonshtp fe ought to give Glover the hardest batue | Women’s nat onshi of his career. tournament at Chevy Chasavo-dey, The ae winners in the s x! round were Al Getatts tor the twelve-rount bout be- fe tween "Young Loughrey, Puliadelphia, | Mrs. T. H. Polhemus, of the Richmond and Tommy Galil; the New Engiand wetter’ | County Country C Miss Kate weight. at the Arinory A. A. of Boston, ountry see eo have finally been clinched, They wil of Fall River. In earning her er on Tuesday nigat mt caich wel ty Mise and will doubtless put up a slash onvchelsedousts both are Aggressive fix ey ners, and also capable of of Philadel- jerabie’ punishment, Shie, 5 the noua Jack Twin"! Sullivan, the lent heavy- | green, while Mrs. Polhemus contributed wclent of Cambridge, Mase will ombally | Gaocher surprise by de eating’ Pe ae eta Gosh Ay th he | stiss Marion Oliver, of the home club. Armory A. A. of Boston, aa 1t te learned Reulbach Tops Pitchers; Matty Is the Real Leader leading the van in percentage of won, the minds of the fans will ever remain impressed with the notable feats performed by the other stars of the box Mathewson, of the New York Nationals and Walsh, of the Chicago Americans. bead on the hawk and fired the right |-Though called to the fray at all times burrel. The shot went true and knocked sti, As’ the hawk began’ te full he gasped, and his beak flew open, Up to this time we had noted nothing wrong about the hawk, but as he opened | his mouth @ sparrow flew out. Hetore the little bird had gone ten feet I nailed him with the other barrel, und both hawk @nd sparrow fell dead in the boat.” The right hand of fellowship ts ex- tended by all good sport: pe ee es | SAYRES DEFEATS CULLEN, | LOS ANGELES, Cal. Oct. %4.—Mau- |rice Sayers, of Milwaukee, proved too clever for Dick Cullen, whe claims the [title of champton Iightwelght of Aps- tralia. They fought a ten-round fight last night before the Pacific A. C., and |the veteran from Milwaukee had it on ‘his opponent in eyery round except the first, which was deciared even, Neither man took much punishment, ‘although C en was bleeding at the end of the pout. Sayres easily demonstrated his | superiority over the Australian, (Poison Oaks), dune! ons). gers) Jj weed Ra Tank Junctions). re & Selected By Bozeman BvicEr. Batting SpectalistSwat Milligan Pitchers—Harold Hangover (Osh: kosh), Whitey Whipsaw (Big Tank Catchers—Jerty Grabsall (Rag: Centre Field—Stiffy Ashleg (Big Right Field—Sour Stubbles (Pole into the land of the tall grass whence our seally great ball players come. In looking over the various se- lections in the public prints of re- cent date the writer has failed to find one expert who was broad ‘enough to select the peerless hitter Swat Milligan, who demolished more fences and outlying houses in one Season with the Poison Oaks than al! of. the players in the so-called major leagues have done during thetr entire existence. An effort was made at one time to bring the i the National League, This proved Rag- a complete failure, however, as John McGraw will tell you, because all owners of property adjacent to Nav tiona! League parks demanded in- demnifying bonds at such fabulous son Oaks), figures that it became prohibitive, | Club Physic'an—Hiram Heave But for that Hans Wagner Mike retired temporarily from the track. Js letown Corners). ) Donlin an§ Ty Cobb would have Hn Mi een erat e Bb urn Ap | 4 S? been I'sted among the pikers with 4 he forapok the , In justice to the country at large the willow, Milligan’s batting aver- nths. Prev to the Oly Bonhag resumed training at first, he gradually rou and two weeks before t mantreniluits I! Philadelphia. was in fine ete that can really he called the All» yogi hile making 14s last trial for t N tr g. But 6 Wer er ume he wa or cawlons be had romped away frum, + off af hor w " however and return ¢ to select No effort il has been deemed advisable at this 4 championship ball 3) American team in every sense of the ys In doing this the writer is of the gross injustice that ome of our most i players by the experts been so narrow in their $4 ade players from National and American Leagues y- whatsoever has been made to extend these selections age at the close of a most successful Season was 1285, the rule being in that he could go as far as he liked on every ball hit, Where can the experts find a pair of pitchers the equal of Harold Hangover ‘and Whitey Whipsaw? echo angwers “Where?” (her of these great twirlers were ever beaten ex gan pickled Hangoy driving it into a tenem house and causing the lamales untold suffering from coughs and colds, Whipsaw, as all wellinformod baseball men base, In the ouefield fact, know, could pitch with either hand that all of the men selected suffer or both hands at the same time,and from some ph infirmity, would catch the batters going and coming. He also suffered a defeat at the hands of Swat Milligan under the new rules when he pitched two balls at the same time and Millgan landed when they crossed—hit them ina bungh, as it were—driving them both over the fence for as pretty a pair of home runs as were ever seen in the Wire Grass League. As catchers Grabsall, of the Ragy weed Rangers, and Zuneberg, of the Nettle Rashes, are in-a class by themselves, There is no room for argument, HomeRun Haggerty is easily en- titled to the position of first base. Ashleg efits to that the the ball All fans doubtless remember the ing that Bowsprit had never ¢umed ; time when the Spot Tails forced him loose the ball, to play in a rain storm and he foiled Sour Stubbles, as Is well known, them by receiving the tall from the Infield through three-inch pipes that were surreptitiously laid under the camond for just such cases of making emergency. Safty Everybody witl concede second wooden bgse to Frank Merriwell. His one actif no other, of disguising him- self as all the players on his team in turn and winning a game by that superb strategy would entitle fim to the position of honor on any Alk American team. As to Ralph Rapidfire little ean be fad, No other player can even be der, taken into consideration for thind Bowsprit has a cork arm; many games bave they turned by clever manipulations of thelr artifi- cal appliances. fecall the time that Bill Bowsprit used spikes in his cork hand and a drive from Swat Milligan hit so hard elbow. Tirat night the umpire found witlistanding the fact that the cork affair had been knocked difty feet, and he called the batter out, declar- once saved a game by turning his. glass cye to the sun in one of the worse sun fields of the ciroult and ner in which he got away with It is a matter of history, Hiram Heave was a ‘baseball doc- tor who ‘doped up tals to order. The experts tell us he was a won To sum it up, we have a team here that is ideal and one uly American, si} without regard to their turn in the box, and responding with promptness and such earnestness as in most cases to pull their teams out of the difficulty with which they were confronted, neither ever showed the faintest sign contain brighter pages than were made by these players during the season. ‘Under ordinary conditions a club carrying five pitchers should give each about thirty games as & season's work. ‘Thirty-five games is about the av) age. Yet Mathewson was sent into fif- ty-five games, in forty-seven of which he held the key to the position, and out of which he emerged a victor in thirty- six, Walsh had a part in sixty-five games, but was responsible for results in fifty-five. He won forty-one. In the extra games, both pitchers saved victories when other men had gone wab- bly, for which they get no credit. Con- sequently, the average fan will award the palm to Mathewson in the National League, while in the American Walsh already holds first place. Excellent Record. Mathewson's record for the season 1s two men, going into two strefches of | four games each without a single base | on balls, He hit three basemen and | made three wild pitches, Walsh was | not quite so effective, his record show- ing fifty-three bases on balls, twelve hit | batsmen and thirteen wild pitches, In strike-outs the two stars are tied at 258, Hits off Mathewson numbered 277, or has a leg of weathered ash and Sour Stubbles has a glass eye, Those seeming handicaps are ben- these men, however, and You all probably arm was broken off at the still stuck in the hard, not- acatch that saved the game, | Ashleg often used tls deg for @ bat, and the man tis CS ‘League, 5.04 per game on an average; off Walsh, $88, an average of 6.2 per gam {Mathewson pitched one one-hit, two Ithree-hit, eleven four-hit and three five- hit games; Walsh pitched five three-hit, five four-hit and seven five-hit games, No-hit games were more frequent In the American than in the National the former contributing four, the latter one, divded among the pitch- era as follows: American, Young, of GRADUATE MANAGERS IN CHARGE AT CITY COLLEGE. Groduate managers will in the future handle all the athletic events at the College of the City of New York. Under the new system the faculty committee and Executive Student Board | have placed in the hands of « graduate| committee the runoing of the annual) indoor meet, Nat Fleischer and Hurry | Cohen, former managers of the basket | ball and track teams, have been made| members of the committee, and together | with Coach Mackengie and an under- greduate committee have already begun work. ‘Arrangements have been made to hold the annual Indoor meet in the Twenty | second Reginent Armory on Saturday evening, Dec. 1% Thirteen events are on the programme, and It ie expected ath- letes of national prominence wili com: pete, Valuable trophies will be offered of flinching or unwillingness. The his- | chance, and his one tory of major league baseball does not | pny Crab tered Alan an excellent one. He passed only forty- |’ the Lon, } Boston; Joss and Rhoades, of Cleve- | Bmith, of Chicago,” National, HILE the pitching record of the of New York. hit games e pulled off 1908 show Reulbach, of Chicago, the American. The performers Wer games | National, Mathewson, of New Yor Willis and Camnitz, of Pittsburt Quillen, of Philadeipht: McIntyre and | Pastorius, of Brooklyn, and Raymond, Jot St. Louis, American, Young, of Bot |ton; Joss, of Cleveland; White, of Chi- cago; Waddell, of St. Louis, twice, and Lake, of New York. Oddities. One of the oddities of the “dope” book is that the entire record of one ambi- [tious youngster to shine in major com- pany consists of a single base on balls, He is Pitcher Graney, Who had a chance with Cleveland early in the season. He nad no time at bat and no fielding chance, and his one base on balls evi- r Lajoie. The one gane strike-out record goes to Waddell, who won it twice inthe season, With a 17 and a 16. Walsh came near him with a 15, w 1 League's Dest show: |wit ob the nt | stands f cent. of won games, jhas a lowgr strike-out mark than many |poorer piteh itchers who Went |through the 1d pitches were bs Coakley, of Chicago; Steele, of Boston, and Ch nd. In Wildness for a sing’ e Dygert made Ja record that will ly not be dupli- jeated for some time. He gay on balls and hit four batsme: the derrick r hed him. Willett, of | Detroit, tn oi e passed nine men, | but omitted 's feat SEVEN CLUBS HOLD STACS TO-NIGHT — At the Sharkey A. C. Tody Golden and Jimmy Flynn wil! be the principals in the main bout of six rounds. In tho other bouts Scotty McGlynn, Ned Red- dy, Tom Murtha, Young Egan, “Kid” Howe, Harry Woods and Scotty Walsh will clash, . At the Dry Dock A. C., East Tenth street, near Avenue C, Joe Hyland will tackle Joe Palmer in the star bout of six rounds, Besides this bout there will be five other contests, There will be some merry tussles at Acre Club to-night, and the members are looking forward to some thrills, The star bout will be between William Leary and Sandy Williamy, who will box six rounds. ‘Dhe next will be between Frankie Gibson and Young Waltz, In addition to these there will be five four-round bouts, There are several lively boys in the preliminari At the Evergreen A. C., Bushwick avenue and Boulevard, Brooklyn, Joe Cisid") Coster will meet Young Joe Wagner, for six rounds. Four 9 bouts will also be put on, ‘At the Terminal A, C. of Brooklyn, kim Donovan, of this city, will meet Frank Klaus, of Pittsburg, for sue rounds. 'At the Clinton A. C., of this etty, Joe Hyland. will meet Frankie Adama, Boston, for six rounds, Other good bouts will precede it "At the Natio) H na Pa LTHeEvane CHEMIOALOS, gant

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