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- ‘ e o- a ue ( THE EVENING WORLD,’ SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1911. ara “Sp ORTIN G P AGE IN NEW YORK AVE pgs ae * a ; TOM SHARKEY (NE OF FIRST “| LITTLE LAUGHS CONNECTED WITH THE RING---SOME OLD---SOME NEW. BOXERS 10 MAKE FIGHTING GAME A REAL BUSINESS a _ {SMITH EASILY i DEFEATS CROS s| pyright, 1911, by The Press Publishing Company (The New York World). ‘ THAT WALLOP of BERT KEeves* BROKE ONE OF ITO. BRowns MOLARS ~OFE SHORTS BROWN WAS SO MAD THAT WE SWALLOWED AT RATHER THAN SPIT 'v OUT. Sailor Has Reputation for “Tightness” Regard- ing Money, but in His Day Has Lent a Helping Hand to Many Fellows Who Were “Down and Out.” MADE A Lot OF FUN ONG NigHT when He WAS @& NoWee BY ROBERT EDGREN. Copyright, 1911, by The,Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). OM SHARKEY pulled off a few [ funny ones in his day. ‘Com wasn’t such an easy mark as| he looked, He was one of the fore-| runners of the modern school boxers who make fighting a business and | save their money. Tom came along | when John L, Sullivan was still re garded as the {deal fighter, and when every one thought a fighter ought to stnd on the street corners and throw his money into the gutter. To tell the truth, that {s why so many stories about Tom came into circulation, Tom wasn't so “tight” after all, and 14 tell wt many oceasiona-when he has helped a poor “bum” along with ‘a dollar or to, and when he has even bought railroad tickets across the jeontinent for some Dusted sailor who hailed from Vallejo, where Tom first fought in this country. ONE oF THE CoLDesT MMNocHOUTS Tom SHARITEY GVER OUT OVER, “POP” ANSON TELLS | STORY OF 30 YEARS | WITH BALL AND BAT Greatest Batter the Game Has | we tbe AL tha ee Ever Known Has Now | 42, Turned Author. AFTER CycLone Keuy USED A MONEY PUNCH on BLACK BILL OF MERCHANT VILLE « AF. ELMER , You To.o me To BE A PERFECT GENTLEMAN Toni But You OioN'T Teu MEI way To FIGHT. A Buty GaoaT, —_— ’ Att gS Ssoasenteasne a WHENTMISSISSIEPL FOUGHT DAVE SULLIVAN. BV FOZEMAN BULGER, ca |! iis es Hail | | Fire Tagore Power of THE HUMAN ey | DEIAN- Cy ANSON, oF “Cap” Ane || But, as 1 said, he waen'tvenactiy eM] love and roileg his eves noariy out ot] | TIL" lay” euce cast A Bumeiy oh Pacem Leen | AQ tom, as ne was known to the *! DOCTOR CROSS FINDS bs oy ag war at the height of his] “What are you quittin’ for? Get up) —- ek cece, ont wibas, resort || 100 ait : an tune in the ring he usually trained at] And fight,” yelled Cyctone | ; ; : — t his time along] “Ah ain't goin’ to fi | shows him to be the greatest hitter 1n | \csssssssssssssemsssss | Coney Island and spen e cee NO: ARee) SE the history of baseball, is an author. | nay | “the beach. ‘One afterron Tom seated) they quits throwin’ bottles out of the| He bas po i to the reading pubtic a| } © written {t to suit myself, I be-| “himself at a table on the porch of a fa-|@allery retorted Black } Al And he ve an author ought to be an author | book called “Thirty Years of Baseball,""| and not write a thing x {mous hotel down that way ont ott the Havin Po rey ba a Hind of 8: Ritgay | which will be printed 1n ‘The Evening | other people's ideas. I think nave hie ‘e dinner. While he png bed pode pi effective World, beginning next Monday. the scheme and that I will make some! fork along came Nd iy Saas — “and I am a regular author at that." | money. You know full well that I went right after Cross and landed eo ¥ ‘ptrangers, and, spying Tom, smme(lately PRAKING of teeth, aid you know said the “C ‘who is very proud of tree tt. . ‘ . | fast and often with Jabs in the face and » walked up to his tatle and opened & that Bert Keyes, when he landed) Me achievement, “for I wrote it my-|,.4™ONg ball players Anson ts very Leachie Makes Poor Showing] }efts and rights to the Jaw that Leaohle c we ney stood ond that right hand wallop tn the frst] oo popular. ‘They have had many good Nearly all in at the final bell. Smith 5 Sonera qaiked, and ‘Tom, becoming |round the other night broke one of selt. fokes at his expen 2 | _— In some wi i hit straight to the mark in these aee- the 1 nds. Hi a afd 4 ? . war | Raschot wteewe Soket as me the 100 yarde in 88 seconds. He per-| “is st your idea to teach the youn|ho is absolutely lacking In a aense of Against Young Sammy and | sions and his blows were so clean Gnas jay?" sked. hun . mertaat ait eowne He did, and rather than tet Keyes know | Pilgrim Thinks Former Stars| twice: and under competent timers, too. eehome Owe Dar Ea VInGatly iene ee azere Kept him com, they not only bewildered © “Not by a jugfull.” snapped the Cap-;tinually tn hot water, Is Badly Beaten. also made him miss with mi oy ee Sharkey Catied the Walter, that he had done | damage Brown init Leweon Remerapes trainer inter | tains ‘You cane tell a man how tol [8 Ans Sof management, : blows while Sammy's admirere yelled they would, And ne somer rere they | ont to. Nin corner ttter nee Srows| Best, While Lawson Robert- ot no“mean anitty, alangrees entirely | lay baseball. Tf he can't play when liv, “wage ‘continual. nora, ff ata "When the Walt ten toils acted they 0 with Pt = you uu < surely and kept up xs “Morgan,” said B: Fah t. iE letes competing now than ever before. It was a new way of putting it but|worst of tt. The C. pulls ‘eoant fe O _ipape tae ier a ‘The strange ™8D-|Gased. I feel mad ns the devine ow we have c thousand athletes (0) cnere is a lot of wisdom in that view.|of playing the races, ‘The viasecs teeth fm the day and srequently | Cram iases Arter Cig ees aes coe jeged to finish at the same time, and one In the olden times, There 18 &| iow citen have we seen recruits turned|knew this, and they used to bet with engages in a boxing bout at a ‘one fallen a! Dack in the spring because they did —_ with a —“Srdering « couple of Havanas leaned I REMEMBER one night at Kimer’s| PYERPETUALLY the question wilh de |selazy of champions now, wille at ine him on the bench. He would run a| fight, will soon be elected a member couple of punches, Smith again ordering Sueurely enjoyment ae Tom! ] first club, when Elmer matched asked: Are present day athletes |time that Lon Meyers was running tere Jab’ in ae thie ‘s knendtles OF the comet | feaular Bandbsok for the’ sus, “Labe | ot the age bees’ clase If he eannct levee Than eee uations teans with called the waiter. m Mississippi, a great little colored Better than the old-time starat | "Or? aa welehien es have pertected| ,,“N®" continued the Captain. That len discovered one day that he eould|Agnt any better than he did in his/Jaw, sending him against the ropes. ry “AN on one check, Mr. @harkey?" | Mghter of that time, against Dave Sul-|_ The answers wil always confilct, no! oon until the r is have ‘boosted inl my idea at all, I - «imply re- oe ee pe aloe ne races from the|ten-round bout with Young Sammy|Smith then dacked away and as he did lasked the waiter, livan, Elmer wanted to get "Sipp” a |™atter trom whom they emanate. Mod-| beyond the 9 Feeney beats neg hoe tre | Nites MY euperience to show what a) Prose bos before Anson know about it: gmith, the near-sighted fighter of Phtla- so Leach threw over a right awing to | “Naw,” repiied Tom, “give me mine being Dave Sullivan was training on Ci) world beaters will say that ‘there | old-timers could have even Can baseball back in the seventies and the| Out the winners and then bet $2 or $3| ‘elphia, at the stag of the Empire A. C. ytd s bry tes Shomeieg back a j ; erat: a ce then—or he wasn’t training at| "88 been no period in the world’s his- Tne above goutations, Lage, Bd manner in which a player gets a job| With Anson, Naturally he had @/|in Manhattan Casino. floor. Smith was a3 papee Be yo) fi 4 What!" ejaculated the b=} ol inyertaay be fot deating him all Ped phab ee athletes were as good as they ten ae nin an ciel of mod. | (Gey, In thos. days we didn’t play so cinch, Leach made a miserable showing a ° , “I said, ‘Give me mine separ Ing. Suddenly Sullivan caught day fore the wild cheers of Cro. friends much for money as we did for glory.| “Yuu certainly are a wonderful| against Smith and as a consequence) nad subsided tr ‘rom with a scowl {,nippr bY doth ears and deliberately) “Greek records were ail right tn thelr arn experts disagree when ft comes to! Many ip the time that I have paid my| Dicker," satd Anson one day. “Why |he was handed one of the worst beat-| Japbed sided he sailed into Leach nd % Jabbed him hard in th vre{ butted him. ‘Then ho yd thelr | deciding the question of whether or poo ney Oe don’t you go in w ¥ S Topnaes Smith “But you asked ws to att down—ren {and butting deal ae pV hed ba iviage ahi fa ital Branch ofl not athletic prowess has improved one eperea ees Aes T EIS aad raids teal with me and help make | ings he has recetved in a contest at etait, Mecond third rounds smith joked te Ditkeed Heed a) * {tempt to use his gloves, “'Stpp" stood Piigrim Poke ccainnn vend et ‘4 within recent years, “Are you explaining the ‘big games| Just then a reporter called Dahlen to|®™Y of Bee eee es ox: [Jnle and elke Cmca ee whrieked the ed pena Wh vs Jou tf . . jabs and algo managed to get bh i‘ ‘it for @ moment, then turned to El ‘Sheppard |» @ better runner than was|and how they were played?" I asked.|tell lMm the result of the second race, |T? say that Cross fought about 16 per rf get bis right at's none of my business,” #4) ang vag, “Mr. Elmer, you told me to} Atens When our boys journeyed there| ton Meyers,” said the “Sparrow, Matar at re Cnirped the Captain, Anson overheard {t and for the frat |Ccent. worse than he has in his other|Scroas to his jaw both at long range ‘trom coldly. “I asked you if you Would be a Sertect gentleman to-night, but | F the Olympic games, \he closed the door after Simon and | whose 3 till snap in the way that] time he realized how Dahlen had been | battles is not exaggerating things @ oa quarters. Cross was oF- “sit down; I didn't ask you if you'd | you didn’t tell me I was to fight a billy-| "“Y0Uu'll notice that most of the stand-| opened the window ‘and I consider | used to terrify pitchers. “I don't think | having fun out of him to the tu f)bit. In the first place he did not £0) in tno Bt Rk. to go In and slug te0d," Goat.” ard records are still held by the men| that Mel is tho best ruimer who has|the fans of to-day want to know Row | something like 880. There was a mad|in and sig with Smith ae he should|torc'sy caren yTound: and althoush he ea. eying dor his own dinner he got | Elmer grinned and told Gullivan to go| who competed a few senre ago, ‘Mhere| aVéF gone down on any records in the|we did those things 40 much as they chaye across the fleld and Danien says] yave done and then again hie fudement | to his tace and law, Belt cone Mek jap boned pleasantly and walked away | ahead Of the three men in the ring,| were fewer men competing then, and World's histor: want to know what wa did. I am|he barely escaped with his life fi th came right Uttle Miswissipp! was the “gentieman'— from there. no doubt of that. “Take out the pole-vault, wolghtsand| simply telling the story of my early) Anson was always very strict about |! “stance was very bad. back and punished him several they were encouraged to do their best. 4 | the face and head “ the hurdles, and any man can plok a| baseball adventures, In thirty years'| not allowing the ball players to drink| At times Cross boxed like an ama ad with stiff lefts, To-day we have hundreds of men train-|team from the old-timers that would| ti yers in a alwi “ a ime I can ure you many queer|and stay up late at night. 1H tour who seemed frightened to deat! Seventh Round Best of Fi ne B* FITZ#IMMONS has ays ing for just one event, and # will be] put yt all over the present-day ath-| things hai a ‘hake me * i fe would ight, i every ni to let go ch, In many of the) Th h wanted to be an animal tamer. but @ short time when the old records! jetes," said Robertson. “In this book,” continued Anson, “ eae Wan inibod | teosauthe nad cb ty ae the een fonant eiesene cat p’clock to see If everybod: ent rtunity | fight, as th t Down at Coney Island his ment | Insurgents Fail will disappear from the books, An ath- vbody was in bod | rounds he had an excellent oppo y | Ne ¢ men fought viciously and ’ ‘and then he would eit in a chair in front ish on Smith | banged 1 at close qua: Bostock had to watch him all the th lete who devotes his entire energies to TE the, DOtal 1 GAtGD Tne date ceric [oo anes aeeere PUDIRNEDS 20. 3Fs quarters with both q ° by folowing up some of the blows which| "ands, scoring to the face and body. ‘to keep tim from slipping into the lion 1 he Tf one especial event ts sure to outdistance B h S I di id F The players discovered that they could Cross had the better of the eighth eo Bob had many an experience to ake ourney the feftow who 1s an all-around athlete, on a in en t orm 0 down a back fire escape and atay out | 2 had Pls OE a round, as he tore at Smith the moment with jons, | F; eaye Pilgrim, as long a# they pleased. One night | ™O™Me! regan d the bell rang and whaled him on the . There was one that oame 4 few days rom Newport “Even tn the sprints there is hardly after he won'the middiwelght cham- | = @ man that can do ten seconds flat no} pionehip from Jack Dempsey. Bob was) adays, but Bernie Wefers, who was run- @o tickled over his new title that ae |Sirong Opposition to the Place ping 4 Se aa did the distane couldn't keep atill, ut coming hi abou: TN ae . the ropes he captain had stayed up later than usual |4o recovel and was proudly telling a local magnate mt him on the jaw after Anson had made him rounds they | h/# straight jabs to his nose Leach) jaw with a heavy left swt ‘i to Make a New Record Bll. slipped out, Inthe mean thee the | would alow up and give Smith e chance! smith backed against’ the tome te —_.— , swing, this ume Cross Often Near Knockout. w Pes under what control he had his playe: j Across the ring, ie 4 Pos He waa iRise al the aca Several times it certainly looked as it | “rose, (h : . i: A bas of a mai | Smith then got got again jumpea off the tran at every! oc National Tennis Cham In feel, he was timed tr pean ag tn | Irish American Games To ies ger allowing is players to ster ang [Leach was going to be put away, asleome nice swings cn Lescne nee Staten and jogged up and down the “> 'VAllOnd AAT tReet eS Te TIp SURAT | At ‘ cam § late when all of a sudden five players | Smith scored hard and often with heavy| while Leach ripped In some. heavy platform. At one station a traveilin’ Neary 4 that trae sald that it was impoaate| Night at the Garden Prom- be: started in the front door and ram right | stiff left Jabs to the face, and as Leaoh| blows in the clinches, This was the last Jrous was unloading its animal show pionship Battle Ground, for a runner to go that fast, and the| : | into him, He fined them all $0 each, | would fall in he would shoot in a short| spurt of any account made by Leach, Bop ied a big cage with a lion in it. ‘record was never allowed. ise Some Great Sport. .., Anyway," he explained to his friend, |instde right swing to the jaw which|for in the last two rounds Smith bat R tab he said, “here's where 1 show “Who ean compare with elther Wefers | 111 get even with them for the money | more than once made C: old on for] tered him severely and had him tired : ‘ ey: oer dae a yy f they have won from 1... on the races.” | dear lite until they were separated by the | at the end of each ; you fellows a trick. You've heard of] Despite the efforts of the insurgents \97 oven Arthur Duty? Why, when e fale | > i te , low does an ‘even ten’ now ho gas Anéon hoids the remarka: » record of | referee. Cross's left eye will be # the power of the human eye JU} of the Nationa! Tawn ‘Tennis Associa-| ay q real ten-second man," continues | SORGE BONHAG haa been show- having @ batting average af .399 for a] In the ninth and tenth rounds Smith| for several days. nh mora watch me.” tion at the thirtieth ani meeting, | Piigrim, ing euch wonderful form in his by period of twenty years. Years ago he ——— Bob stepped close to the ion cage|Newport will again Oe the battling | It Wil be remembered thet Duffy held ime tae cacehe Gat mace tae f | |was selected as first baseman in the and directed a blue stare at the lion. | ground for the All-Comers’ National | the record for several years, having done) yim ax the probable winner of the epe- | \ ‘iii All-American team. Nolody has sue: ‘The lion stirred uneasily and yawned. awn Tennis championships next Aui " 1 ° eded in repla.ing him. ‘Th A t S ft 1 twoumile scratch race thet will take leeesara Gelected oe 4Gat team ater at nswers oO or uer. es “He's afraid of me, chuckled Bobs | ust, Chere was strong opposition to this ‘a, and y ‘ p place to-night at the annual tndoor | G, Spalding, pitcher; suddenly shooting out his left Mst| piece, as the vote of 9% to 60 shows, and Evening World’s kames of the Irish-American A. ©, tn | ie ne, a he punched the lion on the nose, Just R column {f Miller and Walthour ever p rode as a team 1x-day bloyele rac h there) bes a camualen of lenher Medison Square Garden. However, both ‘ { steinfeldt, third ‘base; George Wright, | To the Sporting Editor: sill data ig | fas suddenly the lion whipped one huge | sian two weeks waged the chances are First Fob Goes Tack MonGnan? Gna OK Getlian aaaan e j rhortstop; Joe Kelley, left fleld; Hugh | Was James J. Crbett ever champion a. V. B. paw through the bars und gave Bob ali 0 going other city Would have had ara in gncd Baia aca’ vane ene Geeaee / {Dufty, centre fleld, and V ‘Keeler, | of the world? JOHN M'GOVERN. Taking wiash on the forearm Th i ” 4 “ Fi right ‘Meld, ; ‘The Captain ts not a strong believer in so-called inside baseball. He Yen. | To the Sporting Editor: Would you be so kind ‘ L . There | the lonor of staging this treat of the A E. Gi k. fere with Bonhag’s designs on the glory was a shower of freckles, Bob cone | (0) 1 to oe A uck, that will go to the winner, Coblins has Hy) tinued his Journey with the famous left 2 Ss ib , uh 0 cago a D tn dandages. His fighting career came | The Ont Club of Chicago wil n working hard for this race, and he to let me| To the Sporting Editor toll Wille Lewis pulled off that fake knock-| 5), ovt with Jack Robinson of Chicago. |, Leachie was already touted as a ws ; again hold the preliminaries to the na- 5 nt the in 9.47 at the ‘Twenty- | : could. He be ree of the | teated by McFarland few or it hey World, in orting inquiry column, S -Bear ending right there. Honal dow In spite of the efferee ae] The Evening World's headpin tourna | second Regiment Armory the other | wallop. "Give me the hitters” haa beon | {irish and where he lives? A sald he| YOU answered an inquiry with: “Bure, Ft — ha Crescent A. Crof New. York na gor | ent is Moving along at a record-break: | night, Monument is entirely recovered his slogan, “and I can upset all the | iy 4 Jew and B sald Irish. Who ts cor- | Champion can be lost by decision HE first time 1 #aw Leach Cross} tien peck Get ling pace. ‘There ts more interest 1n I] trom the cold he contencted lant weoe < mvaterlous inside stuff In the world.” | 42°" Gonig ao. you will oblige mol of the referee.” Gan you cite a case om bac Pe. le id ,. wie else BY J. C, | Where # championship has been I fight was at the Dry Lock, ¢n| pie other important fixtures vy Ghee ston vetore, and if the National Champion miler is very much. 5 p en lost in I Pe eee ae Tian inet y Important fix went as] Since the opening night there have 4 Rastern iplonship |becn numerous inquiries as to whether | N@4F 48 Good as he was @ month ago Ket Chub, [it {8 too late to enter now, For the | he Will be able to give Bonhag the race | AL champlon, | benefit of the bowling fraternity let it] of his life, | the Philetetonig [be sald that the tourney 1s still open to) Perhaps the ten mile team race will | Goodw fs of Irish parents, He| tat way? I am a pretty old sport, but \ 4 , Hoppe Has Signed) .:23+ tis voce tite icant remem af any’ chargion ning his title in the above wa | ‘ro the Sporting Hditor: sibly you may be only kidding, For Three Months OE oe eee kat, al pens Mindi wally 63-YEAR-OLD SPORT, ship tournament to “comer.” He could fight, So could the reanized chi J applications will be| prove the most excl ly notity [Cricket Club, clay court ch . - exciting contest ever | me throug’ the columns of The Eve-| One instance that com: i fellow against him. Before the Aght) o¢ the Uy Hine te thé Gone received at 141 Broadway untt! further | seen tn the Garden, Professionals have | en had gone long Leach caught a bard | notice. -|run team races th terest | Etna Number One has high toamt| the extreme, tnd ppp er thi nthe Phila-|score, with 481, while A. B. Giuck, | strong amateur teams will be able to plonship| from’ the Packard Motor Car Company | furntsh @ sensational race, In the event | : Bowling Club, fs so far the only winner | wil) be the follow : | and a) he Evening World fob, with a 105 i 6 flowing: Seoul Bxese | 8 to the | 0% the Me a Huysman, I. A, A. C.; Kramer-Ober- sank, meyer, Brooklyn; Dwyer-Cillbert, Mo- hawk A. C.; Jordan-Clark, Xavier A. C., and Rozettevensen, Pastime A. C. In the team race Mike Ryan and Huysman of the I. A.A. ©. team will be given oxygen at the conclusion of | ach lap. Both men tate that the stuff nusylvania State champion: jon Cricket Club kK State Athleti¢ portant m smash on the mouth, and out flew a -\ece of bridgework and a couple of| ; Grtificial teeth. Artificial teeth cost money. With a wall of dismay Leach ped back and danced around ihe} ring, yelling, “Me teet'—me teet'—don't |” step on ine tect’! The referee picked them up and the fight went on, Play in Gay Paree ning World if K, O. Brown's veal name aurtee ts when Erankte N is Brown? E His name jent! ——-—— Wine Hoppe, the holder of the 18,1] 79 the Sporting Editor chine tities, ts not going to} T2 decide a wager, will you please CITY COLLEGE FIVE PLAYS : state whether Miller and Walthour (not 9 from bitiiards after all. Accord-| Mati) ever teamed In @ six-day race. STRONG TUFTS PLAYERS, ing to stories that have been in ciroulas GEORGE FRANZ, tion, he was to have quit game to 165 Broadway. Those Interested in local basketball to the talloring business with his and Weller wou, th Will _be able to sea the City College team 4 Walt father-in-law, but no such thing Is go- a | play Tufte @ollege to-night, "we | 'ng to happen, in 1901, nile on Heccman Hilt—Bely ficera resulted tn the |3 on of James Dwight officials: D: FUNNY stunt came off in P. A delphia years “go. Cyclone Kelly, | must be enwed up with MeHach He stated th jacked Motor Cat Company—-Gluek, 106; W with Munroe in 1908, with John |® fecent trip the City College repr ‘ ep ys ht igh : Cracken, 18; Barnard, 61; Borger, 2 Hoppe has just rigned a contract to! Hedell in 1006, with Eadie sentatives defeated the ’ ;| must he rewarded aa bie last year, a iti et "eer. |}ias helped them while practising, and pis ter three months in Paris, and one| tease with Collins ip 1008 tt | ee care neeanted the strong Roche &@ middiewelght rough house from| be Ae ee eo ert D. Ween, SS tao View Think ©., 67) Fanoing, 11; Hott | it byl ihe] interesting to see whether or week from to-day will find him on tne|Lawson last year, Tufts College orci Sf # Fe oe tober | New r, 101 te: ! 4 i . hi 7 California, arrived by the brake-beam | eee ce nis Presidents Tech Hus O91 Tales G,, 16, | DOs Sale Senen will ehow UnMEUA epdun Atiantle bound for the gay French cap- | To the Sporting F pol | route, borrowed tights and a pair of| ca Stevens of Hoboken, N. J, Treas, Tale Ferry, ¥ Please notify me through The Five-|4 SFO’ Kame this season and will shoes from Kid Carter and fought Bleck | ye dA. L. J.-Pohi, 78;] Dan Ahearn will meet his brother in : | Stat. whether Eddie Root was | Probably give the home Hoskins of Philadelphia | '¢ ar, TH; Spalding, | the hop, etep and jump after all, Danny | Mi Ducts of the Olympla Academy wes ang wane up with Bobby Walthour | gaine. Capt. Heskowlts, Yeap, § ser. Bill of Merchantville, a big negro heavy-|£ u t—Olven ©.) 71; Hasting, 69; | ¥82 WOTKINE @ few plore away from the | the man to successfully bid for Willie's |{n ‘the annual aix-day race, and aleo in lee, and Gorschen will play a» een oy weight. In the second round Kelly fon for the Executive Com. | ho” ‘ulus, BT, ldtidge, 60 Mfotal: | Place Where the big explosion occurred services, and It 1s ho will re-| what year? ae pn’ Baa play as well as leaned over in @ clinch and, clubbing| mittee resulted as follows: Por three Held aed “| the other day and for a full day after ceive $50 a day and expenses for a round BERNARD MoBNTRGART. | af “riedman, the two guards nis arm like a baschall bat, brought hie| Years, William A Larned, Louls H, | Ite Kerry, Mehoyp, 02;] the event Mr. Dan was not to be lo- trip as a compensation, métie faa ond. Galhens wane | « * an excellent reputation wrist down heavily over Black Bii's| Weidner and Raymond b. Little: for! gr 7h) Zwilling, 48; HB. |oated, Game feared the champion bad Cure, Cassignol and Adorjan will be ei » Wilita , Clothier, Hi | Kidneye—twice, Black Bill went down| ¥o Youre: Wiliam, J Clothier, Wdwin | >) brillant playing, jn 1008, when they M ek ¥, Torrey jr, and Palmer DB. Presbr among the experts that Hoppe will meet, ih to | 4 joe ninary game the , ‘back to the ould aod, but such 0) Rothman, 22) Bens, Cet eho coe, Denny tes appeared t ain hen together and if he should be challenged for any | M * team Wii play Commerce as if he hed been shot, and, lying on! for one your, Ralph Molterhot, . 9. °) jaamterte . again, and brother Timmy of the New ‘promi: » fost {nt f hia titles he will have to play withi the Sporting Editor: Both High Sohoot, | Ge Momacd, covered nietread with ene Srott and Svinner itary snr Mane, OB, Peligg, 41 Peten, 201] SERIO ee ee mete to Trees. menine cremuses to, be the Moet inter of days oF ats ee eee Ee PT eh iarur amas saree Will be Mawed ab ) . 5 “: Z IR afin emergence