The evening world. Newspaper, January 28, 1911, Page 8

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STANLEY DOES LOTS OF FOULING DIGGER STANLEY LOSES FAST BATTLE TO BURNS BECAUSE OF FOUL TACTICS ! English Bantam Champion Uses Every Untair Ones in His Bout BY ROBER class. He easily outboxed Burn superiority as # puncher. But after those regulation English stomachs, freeforall style, elbowin and hitting at the same time . According to my theory, there are o tain rules governing boxing conte even though they are disregarded in some New York clubs, According to the rules, Stanley should have been dis- qualified for fouling. Ho had the best of the first half of the fight and was outfought only in the last four rounds, Dut the foul work he indulged in cost hum’ @ Gecision he might have won if he Bad fougts cleanly. He fost. butting, Copyright, 1911, by the Press Publishing Co. te finish. Stanley started like a real champion, seeming to have all the and there was no question about his sending hard right handers into Digger's stomach him up and annoyed him to such an extent that he began fighting in a/ Trick Ever Seen Here and a Few New Against the Jersey | City Boy at National Club. | T EDGRE} (The New York World.) IGGER STANLEY, !mported di: rectly from England especially! for the occasion, gave us al grent exhibition of the English atyle of boxing at the National 8. C. jast| night. Hereafter we will relegate} traditions about English fair fighting | to the waste basket. If there was a foul trick chat Stanley failed to use| on Frankie Burns during the ten rounds it must have been one that he TH Pees PEN PICTURES OF FEATURES OF STANLEY-BUR E EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 28 EST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK Copyright, by the Press THe FIRST CouPLE # RLOUNDS DIGGERS GUT HAD BURNS SOMEWHAT WORRIED STANLEY WHEN BuRNy Becan Getting To STANLEY'S Publishing Co. IN THE LAST ROUND LYNCH (The New York World) BUTTING SUPPING A STRANGLE HOLD ON BURNS NECK AND POUNDING AT HIS SPINE NS BATTLE. TALKS ABOUT UMPIRES! WNRESTLING BURNS oFF HIS FEEP AND PUNCHING With THE OTHER HAND | STANLEY DECLARES HE PUT UP |( WORST FIGHT OF HIS CAREER Digger Stanley, the Httle English champion, was in anything but a happy mood when the fight was over. When an Evening World reporter arrived at his dressing room, which was situated one short filght of stairs up over the stage of the hall, Stanley had just discarded his fighting trunks and was being given @ rub down by his seconds, “What dc sou think of your opponent, Burns?" asked the reporter. “Burns is @ good boy and he gave me a hard battle. I fought a sucker fight,” shouted Stanley, ap he raised his right hand and threw down a towel ‘1-Round’ Hogan Loses in Twelfth Round on Foul a The Much-Touted Frisco Lad Shows That He’s None Too | STomaces with great force on the table. “It was the worst fight I ever put up.’ I should am ii 4 eee wre cece | THe BRitons never have allowed Burns to weigh 117 pounds I only weighed 114% Game Against Burns of the fight. He used all that we have Lost A LoT Pounds, and can do 114 pounds without any trouble." ever seen here—and a few new one OF Seren. It was @ rattling fight from start a little while the Jersey lad began Digger has one of apparently. Frankie's blows slowed | wrestling, back heeling and holding would probably have been disapproved ‘by Loni Lonsdale in England. After the end of the fifth round Sten- ley jumped at Burns he turned to- | ward his corner and tanded four or five blows before Haley couta interfere. He did the same thing again after the seventh. Burns was having the better of the fighting now. Stanley seemed tired, But he boxed with good head- work, slipping aside and running away Jersey City Goes Wild With Joy When Tickers Say: “Frankie Burns Wins Fight’ FRANKIE BURNS PLEASED BY HIS SHOWING AGAINST DIGGER Frankie Burns wae ae jubilant a8 « clild with @ new toy after the battle. As soon as he reached bie dressing room he Jumped with Joy and imme- lately began to shake hands with his manager, hls seconds and at least tacticn al through the contest and certainly roughed me up @ STANLEY PUNCHING WHILE HALEY WAS BREAMNG CLINCHES IN. Y. U. Five in | Game With Fast | Penn Players Local Boys Handicapped in + Philadelphia Struggle by Ab- sence of Capt. Smith. The Gotham boys have their usual EVERS *S LEG ALL RIGHT AND HE’LL PLAY AGAIN Cub Second Baseman Says Giants Are Only Team to Be Feared. of breaking my other leg. “Now In regan to the different teams’ chances I have said all along that the team that wina 1 National League the coming year will have to beat the Giants to do it (this {s no bull, either, {t is on the level), and I honestly think ing this te none other than the same ‘Cub’ team. ‘They seem to harp on our being all| Troy, Jan. %. |in and gone back, tao old and several OHNNY EVERS, the great Cub sec-| other things th always come to the ond baseman, is going to play bell} team that loses in a again this year and he claims that | Series, but when you took over our team that the team that is capable of do-| (Spectal to The Brening World.) SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 2%.—Frankte Burns of Oakland won from “One Round" Jack Hogan on a foul In th» twelfth round ‘at Dreamland Rin Warned time and again in prece rounds against butting tactics, wht: | he was adopting, and warned twice mors it feels so good I am thinking seriously | in that twelfth round, he was finally disqualified by Referee Jack Welch. It may be harsh to say of Hogan that he delfberately fouled Burns wit the intention of losing the fight tha: |way rather than suffer a decision ainst him or even a knockout, bu that was the way it looked at the ring- de. The most charitably inclined of those who saw the match are arguing that Hogan, who showed he was noi too game, was trying desperately for championship | the last rush, and that in so doing ie lost his head. More than that, it was a ; | The Now York University Dasketba! his leg, which he had broken dur- bait pew yh nae 1a the weakness? jeastly Burns's bout when the mate) ‘Stanley is a tall, wel! butlt fellow with |when Burns came too fast for him,|[ twenty more friends who had puriied their way into the room. team will tackle the fast Pennsylvania |ing a game in Cincinnat! a few weeks lere are a few things I had to con-| came to its sudden close. | tiack hair and a lean fighting face. He and then rallying for a moment “Well, Frankie, what fs your opinion of Digger Stanley,” he wan asked. [!fye to-nteht on the latter's court at| before the season closed last year, is as fies Pees ee pete me Hogan tried in vain most of the tira Weighed in at 117 pounds, with Burns, | with two or three herd blows. In the “I think he is a great fighter,” repiied Burns, “He ts awfully strong, but || phiiadeiphia in what promises to be al strong as ever and will not interfere| tuck, I had my auts hit by trolley ear | (2.8 throvEh the defense adopted wut looks tall and heavily built for that |cighth Stanley deliberately struck half) } 1 am sorry I am compelled to say that he is a foul fighter. He used foul}! gast and well-played contest. with his playing tn the least. This glad/and my friend McDonald killed; broke | ‘* O8klander. The going tired hi ‘weight. He looks like a veteran, Burns,|@ dozen blows with ais elbows, with « \ i veyish, round muscled and pink skinned, Wad the advantage of youth. The crowd ave Stanley @ good cheering, and when Turns was introduced in turn Stanlvy, Sitting in his corner, clapped his hands. Stanley Confident at Start. As soon as the fight began Stanley jumped up confidently and went after Burns with a dancing, light footed atyle, shooting cut clean lefta and an odca- sional right and avolding returns. There was no stalling, In the second round ftanley suddenly cut loose and fought with a right on the chin. turne¢ a good body punch, and Digger caught him around the neck with his ‘farm, choked him, and at the same time pounded at his epine with the side of Bis right fist. The crowd hissed. It ? the third Stanley still hed the best st i deftness that bespoke rong practice. Also he butted Frankie very neatly, and backheeled and trip; him, If they don't allow foul fighting in English clubs I'm et a loss to account for Stan- ley’s easy and accomplished manner He surely didn’t pick up all of that foul work during @ couple of weeks in Phil- adelphia, be Stanley Often Wrestied. Once in the ninth round Burns bent| © over at close quarters, and Digger! Jumped up @ foot or #0 and came down ‘The ninth and tenth rounds were hummers. Burns was fighting like « wildcat. Stanley was very tired, and all through ¢he last round was com- pelied to clinch as often as he could. under Frankie's chin and butted him back against the ropes, where he was oat when the last quently, N™: Democrat, for mn so much enthu: Jersey City as r the sides over in that cussed over there the chances of others from ov Th who international but Governor, the pri the reservations gave up willingly to has Uttle Burns, body rooted hard for him to win, and thofe who could afford the river hand to see the battle. could not ggt there im- he got by tossing me around lke a wrestler, and also used his 1 hope my showing pleased my friends.” ince election night when the returns came in announcing the| 4nd it finished up by saying that con- ; ‘tison, the | #ensus of opinion was that Burns was election of \voodrow Wilson, the | iitied to the decision Burne's adavrers began to yell like a band of wild Indi- ans, and, rushing out in to the street, began Wins!" In the fight and Every- were on there m displayed in there was last night champtonship fight between Frankie Burns, who re- town, and Digger of speedy aggregation, and are always in} the game from beginning to end. Coach Mellitzer has done wonders with his team this year, and as a result they present a very formidable machine. Mellitzer has lata special stress upon | his men's defense, and opposing teams | have great diMfoulty in penetrating Burna| their stone wall to score. In all their | games the Gotham boys have held thetr opponents to small scores. ‘The Quaker five are in their custom- When the final round was read off to shout “Burns Wins! less than three minutes the glad was conveyed to Burns's hor everybody in the house elped to get the table set. Little Burns, surrounded by close one hundred boys of his own age, left) the National Sporting Club shortly after | midnight and started for Jersey City. {what handicapped by the loss of Capt. |@mith, who has been playing a credit- tol able game at forward. He has seri- ously injured his knee and will be out of the game for two or three weeks at yentng and cheers] Marshall Tied for Burns. When Frankie reached hts home there | were close to 500 men and boys outside news will surely be recetved with great Joy by thousands of tail fans all over the country, for if ever there was @ popular player in the business it is Evers. Evers ts the player who pulled off that great stunt of doing the Giants out of the pennant two years ago by tagging out Merkie after he had failed to touch second bai In an Interesting interview Evers has the following to say Yes, I am surel my leg just before a series I wanted and waited patiently to piay in on ac- count of {tt being so near home, as our other series were ail played in the West. climax, just as I moothly in Chicago in my shoe business there, I received @ telegram cating me home to my shoe business here, as my partner had run out on me and gone, whereabouts un- known, “However, I feel as if my luck had changed, for last July we moved our) store across from where we did busi-- going to play this ‘Al Kaufman Arrives | | For ‘Match er | Jack O’Brien Likely to Match, With Johnson| also, and when he was stung sharply, happened three times, he ai showed that his head work was lacking, for hts wild rushes netted him bat Mttle and eventually led to his downfall. The only knockdown of the eveninz, Partially from a blow and partta from a slip, came when Burns put tn a left and right to the Jaw in the ele enth. Hogan was on his feet withow waiting for the cOunt and rushed su ge his opponent. In the tw and last round Hogan was fighting eve: ‘English Polo Team Asked to They carried American and Irish flags | }€4st: | ° A was the firet ayrhptom of the Engltsh- | Finally Burns grew arm-weary from|see the scrap. As a result all Prom |and certainly had @ great time going | | | Play in ugust man’s inelination to fight foul when he | pounding him. Stanley got his head {nent politicians, businews men and{over in the tude, : ee eee BOXING STAGS TO-NIGHT. | The National Polo Association did ness for five years, and the other morn- 1 agel LT tt Stanley, the English champion, which 4 Fret street, where his mother, | ary trim, and expect to give the visitors + al-ling I came Hs wi only Ha {hind the Re feation te SH dha 8 pod poi _ harder, sending several good stiff lefts |on him with ali his weight. He often) Uithley Ale ln tn 0 Mle in orting| Sister and a host’ of neighbors and) shard, close battle, They have gone pating no trouble ‘in| whole block where we formerly” occu. Bo method hs Niaiework cand only 89 nes MUL A. YOY SE 20FTC8 | wre icine gles avout n00 puochins | © TiNAS | OCS AW ELIne et See: heir league seaon so far un- that direction. appears and feels| pied a store burned to the ground, and. “) Ly jut tla urns and ieft him worrled. Near the |neck, twirling him about and punohing beh) al ip bed ten was frat ar-|A% the mother of the little fighter had chequahy thele lesrccaatie cot + Ce acanea sur aan canarentent ring and butt him with his head, BV \ f -| prepar > per for . pee eo aah ‘end of the round he staggered Burns as Sd Jaw with ¢he disengaged right. pete ees es Pach ap, Gate AEs prepared a big sup him on hia| eater. york quintet will be some ‘ le nd Frankie re- | Stanley was strong. ame, will playing the bill: bell rang. Burns fought a clean fight all the way With Chajes in ‘Aghting until near the end of the when he rushed Burns againat ‘and in return caught a sting- At Long Acre A. A.—Ten bouts between amateurs. At Sharkey A. {nothing definite at their meeting re- |warding the challenge from the Hur his house, and as he went up the stoop! mediately hunted up tfe different ho- they, cheered him continually, Hie| tels and cafes where tickers were in- Him Against Champion Amateurs ‘and never tried to retaliate when Stan- to hit on the breakaway, occasionally neid with his left ‘slugged with his right, @ thing that Perhaps when he hea been in this country @ few woeks more he will put up a much better bout. got worked up to @ high pitch of ex- eitement, mother threw her arms around his neck break wp until nearly 5 o'clock this, Monument to Give Bonhag CAPTAIN OF EL! TEAM IN HOCKEY TO-NIGHT. Hard Tussle in 2-Mile Race sulted object coming their way they act as though they were seeing a ghost. Yale and Tiger Hockey Teams in | Siruggie on Ice! Chess Tourney Chajes of Chicago in the National Chess Masters’ tournament now in progress at the Cafe Boulevard, having ‘on five games end lost ons “ro Paul Jobner of the Manhattan Chess Club belongs the honor of being the first player in the tourney able to take the measure of the Windy City player, and he did it in decisive tash- jon, too. Marshall had the easiest kind of a time defeating Morris, who hes yet to fornia heavyweight, in town, having arrived here early to- day from San Francisco, the chances are that an effort will be made by | Philadelphia Jack O'Brien to clinch a! bout between him and Jack Johnson, | the heavyweight onampiqn, .to take place at the Americana.’ ., of Phila: deiphia the latter part of next month, O'Brien had intended to put Joe Jean- We big Al. Kaufman, the Call- | |ingham team of England to play hers \ es will meet tn all the contest |in July for the international chaliensu thander ou the chin that mede - psy ate ene, SAR | stalled so as to get the returns of|as he entered the door and kissed him | for His Club. At National A. C., Broollyn— || cup, won last year by the M fv hake, ‘The Aghting was |! used. foul tactice, | Btanley out} ing ght. Everyone of these places| affectionately. Then his sister showered | Willle Brennan vs. Eddie Rector, |! (0 >sxs of thi hig jknees shake. : There |claaeed. Fra as a boxer and had) way packed to It# capacity, and as/him with kisses. ‘Then all hands eat J. Maranall, the American; Tantycanae: | brooks of this country. rougher aad faater, There |iots of fighting qualities, too, although) gac round was read off describing|down to the supper and partook of a| Frank J. tied with Oscar | ‘At Reno A. C., Brooklyn—Harry |} A cablesram was framed and ser ‘were many short cinches, with t | they were mostly of the rough-and-tum-| too yiows in the fight the Jerseymen| fine big Irish meal. The supper dia not|champion, is now BY JOHN POLLOCK. u nd ble order. | across the water accepting the Englis's rounds. |men's defi, but stating that it would tw At Colin A. C., Brooktyn—Lew || preferable to play in August, Sheppard va. Terry Young, ten || A favorable reply is expected before rounds, 7 |Monday, when another conference wii At Independent A. C., Brooklyn |e held at the Downtown Club as o ir Joe Bailey ve. George Hoey, ten |! aate set for the match aa well ab a rounds, | At Standard A. €., Brooklyn— || Place of meeting selected, which Is ay All-star card, to be Meadowbrook Club's groundn near Hempstead, Long Island, Powers ve. Jimmy Dolan, ten “You may not believe it, but just let me see a farmer driving out of town and I get the best pacemaker in the world, After we get 1 let out @ few yell like MoGrath uh looks around, and, seeing the ‘s whips up his horse. After that 1 don't have any time to yell because I'm too busy trying to overtake the fleeing out- Many Records Will Probably ‘ Go in Great Games of . Irish-American Club. Yale and Princeton Also Clash | | KELLAR AND DYSON FIGHT in Important Game in pi he | ADRAW AT NEW POLO STAG. win a game, having lost five in @ row. —_—_——>_— nette on with Jolinson, but now taet! A t S ti ° Haveoogn tas got tere ve tee aecite | AANSWEYS LO Oporting Cueries the decision of Kaufman in regard to |. —_~>——_ bof Kau | Keene's Castleton astnd, taking on the big champion. To the Sporting Editor: Fa 4 john Ma Please notify me through The Eve- | sold the c. ning World what title A, Wolgast holds | To the Sportin, at present oe and oblige AREADPR. | What was the biggest attendance at a 2 Montana Jack and Dan Sullir tn town looking for fights, hy cessful in landing bouts been, matched to meet Jack Dillon of Indianapolis for six rounds Sammy Kellar, the English bantam- i weight, and Young Dyson, the New | st the Northern A. {of Fittebure oy Feb, 4, Mahtwelgh¢ cham- game of ball at the Polo Grounds? “\CK MONUMENT of the Trish | At."" said Monument, WO more Intercollegiate Hockey | rr gland fighter, fought @ fast ten-round | Philadelphia for ten rounds at the Kuickerbocker | ‘To the Sporting Edito: A C. A, W., Saranac wake, Y. ore :American A.C. ts training harder Fes yr de pag pi tea} | League games will be Played 96 | bo it at the stag of the New Polo A, A. | A.C. of Altany on Wednesday night, Will you kindly advise me what the | ,di@ve "oe official fuures, About : | t when Cornell meets Har- 1 +f Jonah Man ever before for the two-mile the Irish-American games. Bonhag is with honors even at the finish, Kellar! Frank Moran, « hearyweight of Pittsburg, whom | ’ Pp Dan MeKetsick bas im under his management, record le for one how . ing On & } Sennen ite acheduled to take place at his é rd at Boston and Yale and Princeton | .irted off as if he was koing to win by} VAP omen UM in this city on fuesday {Pedal propelled bicycle; also when, | EEE, Vaseeta tm Madinon Gauare Garden | Tolcer,.0F the American record, having claah in this city at St, Nicholas Rink.| Grpying Dyson to tho floor in the frat |Raht” He’vlil ine Jack Hepolis, the prams | where and by whom this record w NITCHIE BEATS FITZGERALD eedaturday night, and you can rest! seconds, Another splendid runner, Joe The kame at the Boston rink will| ing with a right hand swing on the {ike ‘ways the Brown's “Gymnagum As a: | ? MILLER TROUNCES ROWAN. e-nesured that Jack will give George Bon-| Ballard, of the University of Pennayl- | virtually decide the Intercollegiate | oo" Dyson got up dazed, but by ooy- | Morad ‘lag tea. subsituled for'dace iat, ihe | Bal hagp great fight for first honors in the kel to compete in champtonship, as neither team has loat | 28. oY managed to get over the effects se | saa ecae eae Wi.) ‘ rent. | " won the national & game this year, and this contest will! o¢ the blow. Artie MoGorern ihe stanly bantemeelght, ang PHILADELPHIA, Jan, %8.-Youg ee Monument made a trip | championship at Seattle in 1909, ‘break the tle for first place, It will, After that Dyson kept repeatediy rush- | Rarry Hill. the former amateur bantam wala! ae week sg0 Monum and 4p said to be in even better form at Champion, ‘will De the principale in the mala bout Nitchte defeated Terry Wity of ten rounds at # the, Olymple A.C, erald jn up to Boston, where he expected to cap- not only be closely contested, but will ing at Kellar, letting fly with both ma the present ti F tooo. ix round bout at the Nonparet! A. « probably be one of the prettiest exhi-| hands and getting home many hard | of Harlem, | nt Tat peek ond tens Setien He'd been winning “miles” every time) the heavy shot events “Babe” ta fate circles this year, as both sevens 8, Kellar evened up for Dyson's | should | mie ue Se rn OOM an, Fae was dover, bane ie out, and it looked a cinch for him up In anxious to annex Ralph Rose's world’s ate ae eee icy ine | work by using @ left hand Jab which: he | fi ages cyclong, wi | °F, 12° Dig lenses? A B.C. [of mx. Fite was clever, but was unavie Beantown, However, Hedlund, winner records witn the heavy shots, and Law- a clean, sctentific game cont vending Into hie face. At the fina | wuay afer to, Pad Aiand gret| Hal Chase, He te twenty-six to (ur wainet his busy op- Of the junior “naif mile” national cham. | pon Hobertaon sees a Mero ; ‘The contest betwoen Yale and Princes | bell both boys worn ne, hard, and a he Nationa A, Cot that city. Sutth was |'To the Sporting Editor : — utting the ie f ey : fo be hard fou? Ithouga draw vracttc - meet | f , plomship and placed third in the senior | vq feet. beyond ihe record ton tL SIR Be MASS AMUAD Tate Tatat| Rete: bean, AinED Fee eee eee theEie'k. Cst| Has Philadelphia Jack O'Brien retired! Buck (Twin) Miller handed out a « en ree coment, ost ik oi) Ofer standard and have no chance for the Evi Marletm on the ‘night of Feb, 18. | E,W. | vere trouneing to Rowan Mr. Monument and defeated him by | jopnny Hayes, the "oro" epee Bae ht abound A cuss @ammy Buin, the Quaber City fighter, | now ts maanager of | Brooklyn before the New Northwesie half m imp. ‘That's why the 1. A. A.C |edit’ ginal tn, Pe ee ct Meee treat and enthusiasm, As ATTELL AND M’GOVERN al iach Crom, the sects ae is Ai, 0, OF Phlindel | A. C. R ; with ke eat ani - tt for their ten-round hou 0 h ‘ Siar ie training for all he ts worth for | age ia : aren up ae to which seven ie READY FOR FAST BOUT. a, taining for their fen-round 1e ean y alin® | Rowan did his best work in the four he two-mile run in the Garden vee tah een the beat, Tier and Bulldog will «o at Casine, "on ina, Feb,” 8, To the Sporting Editor: when he caught the Philadelphia “] didn’t seem to do well indoors and — Walsh Too Clever for O'Donnell, | each other for all that ts in them, oa casa tner atria vanaernul (Tea aut hutely “attract “ORE crowd from “the | "gy fn agpirunt for pugtilatic honors aware Aad, shehed bin about tie. ring vamp ld bret se started |r 1h “an Kreis) o Zhe Bissing Wonk) A. Cy Clermont Avenue Rink, Brooklyn, Ste Rat sll enerty a bad te tow | Winning the tte wiinaeh unceklhe thes —— ° VILBES- 2, Pa, J he el) Phi ye | ¥ ry a eliy maw u | oot trom his home in Newark last night, Beebe: fou BAe: Re College Hockey Monte Attell will meet Phily, McCoy) H%6 AMEE Aa art Ati ata out? incon Ailey Shades Tommy Nelson, “For a few days 1 worked on the ilitie, | O'Donnell oF WikkesrBarre and dims ern of Hrooklyn for ten rounde tn the jin’ Broklm. “I calicd upon McFarland ip ver | Sure, champtouships may be won| Benny Riley, the Baltimore featier: track in the local armory, but I found | calaee | Walsh, toe bantam champion of Bosto League Standing, | yi. sou. at 18 pounds ring side, Im |, 404 inate nim a good ovfer to, meet Ahearn. i z weight, had a shade the better of that ft made me sick. The roads are| the ten-mtle Jenn race at | six hard rounds, Walsh ales meeting MoGovern, Attell Wil tackle | {inks enough’ of the -yonvgster to back hint ng Editor: |'Tommy Nelson in a ten-round bout at bad for running now, but I've been ee jes has boon limited to state | aster and was far to the of the gamest bantamweights in| against Abe Attell for a side stake of $2,500," | Kindly answer whether Al Kaufman the stag of the Bedford A. C. of Brook On them for the Inst few daye and am | jst, comulon HEP ie er: ep ege ipcait Bae Gatll” (one the country. Ho has fought all the best | jonony Loftue of Philedelptta, who te one of | 18 4 Jew oF not JOE MAGNER, —— |iyn, Nelson was substituted for Jack founding into Jolly good form, d'ye | (ler * Bec hc oye in his clase, sndORRey tflnere "end Fug No, 12h Lexington avenue, N. ¥. C, | Bradley of Philadelphia, who seng wo | pee Righter, Hots rounds O'Donnel us ved Aftelt te getting Into shape at John- |i ‘cunty. jae been qugtced by Dain Motrat | Kaufman ts wot a Jew. Jat the last minute that he was tov “It's bloomin’ funny the way some of |” oe ll al Nie meedest, bad ar a aa Fy son's road house, This looks like the | {or aly coming fight with Ad, Wolgust, the light; | T9 the Sporting Hal *|stek to fight, Although Nelson’ was in the farmers pull ou! of the roadway | Heney eh ©, taben yp with hie sixth, In the first f 1 jbet bout the Vanderbilt Ataiete Clas Champion, at’ the American.” A, Who bred Novelty, the champion two- {no condition, he nevertheless put up a when they see me coming. Maybe it's menial thie duties that he hes maed” Walsh did nothing bat content limos has put on in a long Ww Both hoya | hledelphia, on vets the of ble rae ie rt C, T, | fast battle and Riley hed to fight mis ark, and when they soo a white jin ‘a"the Higimens's Armory” by @ Harrow margia, |nave @ great following, important battle, aon at James R, hardest to best him, ' \ ‘ 4 \ Sad / us “7 \ » veered < ms.

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