The evening world. Newspaper, July 6, 1911, Page 11

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FLOOEY THE F { DAY EiKE THIS — wo, | ALwavs Oo” oer oe NERVES anvHow | ttended the wetghing-in ceremony, and AN @ @ P08. thar AT. eo omBOLe eh erent fect on the champion. The round was very mach iike the preceding one Ketohel to the floor once, but was up in an instant. It weemed that the harder the Micht- gan boy hit bis opponent, the harder | his enemy came back. After being nearly knooked through the ropes in the ¢welfth round by @ wallop on the jaw, Papke came back furiously, and lke @ flash landed terrific left and right ewings to Ketcbel's jaw. Ketchel staggered from the force of the blows, and in an instant nearly every man in the house was on his feet yelling like & mad man, "Go on, Billy,” “Kil him," ‘Finish him, Papke,” and other words of a etmiler tenor. But Billy coukin't finish him. Only for an instant did @tanley hesitate and tn thet instant Papke was unable to reach him again, Then the Michigan boy gritted his NING WORLD, THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1911, ~ T haanteateatatnh teenth There’s No Doubt About It, He’s Got Hs Nerve With Him. i ‘ke DOPE OUT Some way TR GET TR THA Gane = arren' 4 OE THINGS Gots IN THA OFFice a RE eT WELL = TELL WIM TA Loon AFTER THINGS !! men whaling away at each other in a Beutel corner. Referee Roche then grabbed Ketchel’s hand and held it up, declaring him the winner. The crow! was divided in its opinion as to the correctness of the decision. Roche afterward said that Ketchel had landed cleaner and oftener and was therefore entitled to the decision. There were numerous howls and hisses of disap- Proval when the verdict was given. The majority of the spectators thought that ft should have been a draw, In comparison with the battles ba- tween these two boys at Milwaukee, Los Angeles and the former one at Colma, this battle was a tame and dis- appointing affair, ‘Where wasn't « knockdown in the whole twenty rounds, Only once, when Papke staggered Ketohel in the twelfth round, was there anything approaching the dramatic ten- ASTOR QUESTS, ROUTED BY FIRE, FILL BROADWAY Blaze in Lumber Pile Scares Kimono-Clad Show Girls paratus from Engine Company No. 64 ar. tors by scores, While there was no panic the guests were pretty badly frightened, By the time Capt. SHIPPING NEWS. ALMANAO POR TO-DAY, Sun rises. 4.95/Sun gets. 7.83/Moon seta Tow Gaw and the a rived the whole netghborhood had been) THE TIDMs, aroused. Thousands of men and women | Hit Water, ave Water: rushed out of the many lodging housos | agnay Hook ... amy ote Se foe in Forty-fourth, Forty-fitth and othor | Governor's Isisnd 448 10.35 1182 nearby streets, and It was with dim. | Hell Gare ‘ Ome AeES ee culty that the police held the throng ve In check. | Hecauae of the dryness of the lumber | heap It burned Ike #0 much tinder, Sey- | Northwestern ‘streams of water were turned on tt | \\!", before the blaze was put out. One stream was directed against the rear of the As- | (i tor which was within thirty feet of tho| ‘ : blazing lumber. | INOOMING STPAMSITIPS. Kingston Baby | ae =e keeren\ ¥ rie. stementancu Wes muses caer mere wear umeRre on- umeueg.!! § ARE YA PA\ RO8eING US Wh) Acain on YET! Sil Ath Freckles “Once Freckied Always Freckied” No Longer True—How to | Remove Quickly, People used to take thetr freckles to the grave. That was before they knew about Kintho, the simple rem- edy that is sold under @ guarantee to remove freckles, or money back, Look in the glass, and at the first sign of a freckle get a two-ounce package of Kintho wherever totlet ; ‘oods are sold and seo tf It doeen't soon as that was over started for| teeth, fung back his tow-colored hair |aity that fight spectators love. That ‘ . cient eta Mad oat Somove ouch erectile Fourth Battl the arena at Colma, The orowd came|and sailed in so furiously that Papke| wae only for an instant, and from then and Pajama Brigade. | Seely tere be yin, eh & ie Ware re oe th er fr sy ‘oo pF id ur le Between Papke so early that Coftroth was obliged t0| was forced to eave himacif by clinch: |on until the finish the crowd hed oaly | Prospect Park, contentedly tackling on | JUTGOING STEAMBHIPS. | wee temnene Oo ae ., | open the doors of the olace nearly three| ing. Toward the end of the round Billy |the spectacle of two men pushing and |a nursing bottle, by Irving Herrick of | \ SMILED TODAY. only help give the freckles a push, and Ketchel Went the Limit, | nours betore tne time scheduled for the| evened matters up by landing some| shoving around tho ring most of the ¢ cre | NO: 163 Smith street. It wore only a sual Oo Se but {t {s delightful for totlet use. battle. punches, time, with a few blows being landed ace Med o Pathe Te) white ates without shoes or stockings United Ata —__——_—— lod ropp: now and then. the acene of @ fire scare | or cap. eyele Policeman Hoffman took | Paperani the Latter Getting the Deci-) Odds on Ketchel Di ed. Papke Becomes Confident, at 8.90 A. M. to-day, which routed the|!t to the station Later tt was turned ! /) The men entered the ring at about over to Mrs. Ulr.ch, the city nurse. 280 P M. As they faced each other in the ring Papke appeared to be in the better condition. He wes well Fleroe a Fight as Their Pre-|the, better, condition. He wae wall 1 fluous flesh on him. Ketohel’s skin Wous Contests. || waa dead white by comparison with the color of Papke, and some of the spec- tators thought he looked saft. Stanley eaid, however, that he was in fine con- dition and the only thing he was afraid of was thet his hands might not hold out, The odds on Ketchel wére affect. ed @ little by his apparent lack of con- dition, dropping from 10 to 4 to 2 to 3. Billy Roche was the referee. Ketohel started things with » hard right to the etomach and @ moment Jater put another one in the same place, In o breakaway Stanley put his left to Papke's jaw. There was a lot of clinching and Roche had his own troubles in making the men break. Stanley ended the round with a volley of hard ewings to the head and body. It_was Stanley's round. ‘The second round was infighting al- most from beginning to end. This was supposed to be Papke's long suit, but Ketchel outfought him most of the time, His blows were more frequent, although not any harder. | Nip and Tuck in Early Rounds. In the thin Papke took a brace and, weed, GR ath vious. antesy te the off wi cous swings 6 | Jaw and stomach. He drew blood from him {f desired, Ketchel's mouth with a righthander, LAeut. McMullen of Police Headquar- ‘The Illinois boy had the advantage in| vallantly at each other for forty-five |ters, represented the Department at the "1 In the thirteenth round Papke grew sion, but It Wasn’t Nearly as @tronger and became more confident. He opened the round with a hard right ewing to Stanley's jaw, a blow which ordinarily he could deliver hard enough to put the best man away, but it hed no ‘ceptible effect on the champion. The round was slightly in Billy's fawer, In the fourteenth the two swung guests of the Hotel Astor and caused a J one of the largest gatherings of kimo- | _ Ss : no-olad chorus giris and pajama- garbed men about town that the lob- _Clothes dee Men, r Remarkable Midsummer Reduction Sales Men’s Summer Suits at $13.50 THAT WERE 15, #18 & %20 and rubbish in West Forty-fourth THE IMPORTANCE) Blue Serge Suits and Fancy Suits street, directly behind the Astor, caught OF THIS SAL E| The best suits to be had for 815, $18 and $20. fire, sending a blaze fifty feet skyward | before it was extinguished. | Workmen have been tearing down tho | old buildings abutting the big Broad-| ‘way hostelry in the rear to make room for the proposed anne: and the splendid oppor-| bes. models and mast denttable saute and de i ne savings |Our own regular stock. Included are most of the Brill Twenty ps > savings |O' f I tunitie . for ‘j 85) , regular 825 values; our $18 blue serge and fancy suits; the which it presents is not . True Blue serge suits and the famous Brill Special fan to be measured so much |suits. An exceptional opportunity to get good, dependable, wi by a comparison of the tailored suits at an unusually low price. 7 7 ‘lworld Wants Work Wonders. SD FAKE POLICEMAN FACES 35 ICIS POLE COURT Lewis Used Old Uniform and Got Checks Cashed All Over City. Clothes for Men, Young Men and Boys ; READY-TO-WEAR , y < 75-STANLEY KETCHEL. Coprright, 1911, by The Press Pubiishing rhe New Tork, Word), bog FEW 4a} before the last Papke- Ketchel fight an enterprising re- Derter interviewed the cham- Pien’e mother out in 4 Rapids. In the course of his conversation with her the subject of her telegrams to her gon before each of his ring battles wae dis- eumed. In connection with the fight Ketchel was to have at Colma only a few daye away, Mrs. Ketchel expressed the hope that her son would not win. Im great astonishment the reporter asked: “Why do you hope he will not win?’ “I don't mean, that I hope he will lose,” replied Stanley's mother. “I and it was on| this site that the fire occurred. It is) believed some one in passing threw a) lighted cigar or cigarette into the pile of ol4 lumber, Policeman Haggerty of the West For- ty-seventh street station was at Broad-| way and Forty-fourth street when he | aw flames shoot out from the rear of the Astor, He turned tn an alarm, then rushed Into the main office of the hotel and notified the attendants. The next moment half @ hundred employees ot the hostelry wore plying water on tho blaze, but with comparatively ttle effect. Meantime the telephone operators were busy notifying the guests in the Astor Louis Lewis (No. 787), the swindling ex- policernan, was committed to the Tombs without bail to-day in the Tombs police court by Magistrate Frescht. He ts charged with forgery and no less than thirty-five victims were in the court room ready to give testimony against ll this season’S ns. Right from WITH, AN AWBUL WALLOP ON THE daw rh at on nerf eee on that the fire was not in any part of the this roun! eeconda or more without more hearing and requested that the bail be | putla! d that the occasio’ A feel ' The next inning found tantey in the one blow being landed, The rest of |hivn. Peete act Mareetan Geuiat ual former selling prices} Men’s Suits of aker Gr: men were fighting vici but neither with honors about even. After the #en-| nere to-Jay,"” said he, “and I'm mire with the reduced p! A one was able to put as much force sational flash in the twelfth the battle into his blows as in their previous bat- settled down into a wearisome affair crowding into the hallways and eleva- $ English Mohair and Spanish Linen, 15 the total list of victim will foot up | to more than seventy-fiv but by the fact that tles, The men clinched and hugged again. The fifteenth was even tamer. ecIAn. haves OR wiToh’ awk cee Par THEY SHOULD BE $20 a over the fing during a good part of It was nearly all wrestling and clinch: | yin’, sherile charge on which Towis every suit is worth at BiG A ay ead ; each round, Tt wae) era ine. There wasn't thirty seconds of | Py" ga which was cashed by Willtam | Keep the Blood P | lonat As. more thanithe Quaker Gray, distinctly a Brill production, has become/oné referee was in @ dripp’ good fighting in the whole round. The | cee Oe. aie | st & M4 | }from his violent efforts to bi crowd began to mantfost tts disapproval | Hortsman of No. 110 Tarclay street | Pp the Bloo ure y. It was Hort who lat frequent clinches. and yelled loudly fo action. Both mon | YoMervay, [twas Mortman eel ‘After being pushed through the ropes! wore getting weaker and slower. Tho e rallied and fought the Michigan Doy| ceding one, Referee Roche was nearly | and was drawn on the Xinetecnth Ward to a standstill. exhausted by his efforts to make the # . me. ‘The heat began to tell on both men| men break. |no depositor of that name : | in the sixth, and they beh ate to) “As the end of the battle approache gata nnd TE TERN) ran re hi re through ex- 0 id asked iT the floor together mo: both men wore trying hand for & knock |‘enat he should do in the absence of | PILLS into his blows, Just as the bell rang |Awser, He was told to write to a) haustion from their own efforts than out, put neither one could put any fo from the effect of the blows they re- L, tt eae UALS He HAGA Gi | i | Spectal Sessions have one as- + feel a Mageera Ce ey Cou Istened to Nim. | iovoucatentroubled swith) Constipation, Biliousness, | jof this summer's most popular and stylish colors, A celighetully prices that we marked | cool looking all wool flannel serge, thoroughly well tailored; hi them in the first place ‘and quarter lined. Unusually good value at $15. Cool suit: ! Priestley cravenetted English mohair, that will shed dust and rain, , f The Brill way is to} and suits of Spanish linen that will stand the rub-o'-the-tub, Unusually Good Fancy Suits, 18 “ That Should Be *20, #22 & #25, A large assortment of splendidly tailored suits of cool, durable and You'll KeepWell TAKE buy as close as possible (and the immense sell- ing facilities OF OUR FIVE BIG TORE Lg al forcing. . és an ‘The seventh and eighth rounds found masts ain CILLrl —" Kite HIMe the men fighting very hard, but rather! ceived. The champion did most of the on the jaw. In the next two rounds| Investigation has resulted in the dis-| Billy appeared to be the stronger, and | covery th t Lewis was a member of the {neftectually. Most of. thelr awings | gcveral tines elowed up Ieteel’ with |force f® four years and that he was| Headache, Dizziness or | permit us to do so), and) worsteds and cheviots in neat, dark, attractive mixtures. The ; hope tt will be a draw. This ts the first| whistled harmlessly through the alr, A) blows on the Jaw, one in the ninoteouth |Attached to the East Fitty-tirat street raleced ‘sing fi | then TO SELLA kind of suits many men wear the year round; splendid values at $18 . | time Ihave ever felt this way about It, lot more clinching. From the apecta-| round aending the champion clear wcroee |station, He was dismiswod trom tno any disorder arising from an 1 SELL ¢ i Dut Billy Papke has a mother alvo, and tors’ point of view, the battle was! the ring. ito ty lemaee Ballas Conatsnions ) ‘ a . | Haken At that time he wae onarees impure state of the blood, | b with having been found in conversation One ortwo taken every night | He ded into Papke and landed hard| 7 rT with a fellow officer for twenty-five . ¥ . Recetas «| aaa chiae, “hive Tihncle boy bled. freely | rat bale ci rnice eae oiend, Suna | | will keep you in first-class | I want her to be spared the sorrow of having her eon defeated. That's the reason I want the fight to be a draw.’ With the advantaxe of two Victories rather a tiresome affair, The ninth found Ketchel at his best. CLOSE AS POSSIBLE Slugged Till the End. This has made Brill val- The Most Popular Men’s Suits$) mL: a a hel from th a mouth’ all through | COkh Nove SUSMINE Ewer ot Gach other /MUNUIO ne hast diti Nothing bett ues, at regular prices, Br ought Out This Summer, to one deefat tn hl tchel was|from the nose and mo without much offect, Both ne uniform in which he has heen ap- 4 ay oe ae fa favorite in the odds o-| the round. stanley tried hard to swing | Weak to land a very damaging blow, ale |Poaring in various parts of th ana | CONGIION, othing better. the biggest and best 825 and &30 Values ing as high as 10 Plenty of even money Papke would be kr K ‘er the dreamland punch, but his though Papke had the better of the ox- awe either did not have the necessary | Gneanges, The round ended with the |, jsteam in them or he was unable to| I land on the right spot. He looked much using to hoodwink store Moved to be his old untform. For Sale by All Druggtsts values to be bad, and at! Refres}. ingly cool two piece suits, of silk lined blue serge; suits these greatly reduced of Oxford blue, the new, beautifully blended blue and gray, both ; AERC AL Blatamiliocta lta batten prices MOST RE- plain and striped; suits of Dixie gray, sligntly darker than Came fefeat the sturdy lilinols boy that he| In the next Papke rallied and sur- MARKABLE bridge, a little lighter than Oxford; and three piece blue serge und ; bet several thousand dollars that he| prised Stanley with hard punches to ae v ‘ + | blue unfinished worsteds that will not gloss; half and full mohair 4 would knock Papke out Inside of twelve| the head. Ketchel shook them off and VALUE rounds. bored into his enemy. Billy was soon The arena at Colma was packed so|in bad condition, and hung on tight on tho afternoon of July & that|porately to save himself. A smashing lined, splendidly tailored. Englisn and conservative models, The Great a 0 { Stat ate ent"ancter voafha| ata” tat “SS Mabget MS ether Sool Jspparel for All Oocasians SHIRT SALE Papke and Ketche! weighed tn at 10| through, Hans Wagner Whether you are ng away orremaining at Lome. $1.50 Negligee shirts, 85¢; Yelock that ning at Corbett's cafe,| Papke staggered Ketchel in the SF 4 ee a9 ee E : o'cloc! al a qranke stamgered Ketchel tn the &5 Flannel Outing Trousers at &3 cut and splendidly pongees, flannels and percales, with soft French cufts. $2.50 igees at $1.13; silk striped madras, pongees, flannels and woven’ madras; most of them with French cuffs, on the Jaw, but it had no apparent ef- tailored, in white pray and striped whit and serge, 820 and # its of, white flannel Khaki Norfolk jacket and trousers, 85; Linen Crasn, #10, Coat and trousers of Linen Crash, 86; of Linen, 87.50. Blue serge Norfolk coats, 87.60. White Duck trousers, 81 and $1.50; Khaki, $1.50 and #2, is enthusiastic about the delicious, refreshing and thigst-quenching goodness of ‘é, a, TRAW HAT SALE Were $2 & $3, now $1.15 Splits, sennits and mack. ‘naws in various popular styles and dimensions, PANAMA HAT SALE * $5 Hats now $3.75 ¢ $10, $15 & $20 Hats,$7.50 nuine South American muna hats. &3,.75 hats are (all trimmed and blocked, Midsummer Bargains for Boys $3.95, $4.95 and $5.95 Fancy Suits Reduced to $2.75 A splendid opportunity for mothers of boys to effect a saving on the boy's Summer suit. Broken lots of our all wool fanoy Norfolk and double-breasted suits, sizes 6 to 18; half the lot has two pairs of knickers. Neat brown and gray mixtures, Boys’ Wash Suits special at $1 and $1.50— military, sailor Russian and blouse suits of galatea, gingham, croxton and Hyde's Rugby cloth in a large assortment of neat styles and patterns, Play Sults, $1--Cowhboy, Indian, Major, Jack Yar, Baseball, Soldier He says it is the only beverage he ever drank that has vim, vigor and go to it—that quenches his thirst to stay quenched, and that has no let down after-effects. Delicious --- Refreshing --- Wholesome 5c Everywhere Send 2c stamp for our booklet, “The Truth About Coca-Cola” and that clever and useful scoring device, the Coca-Cola Perpetual Counter. THE COCA-COLA COMPANY Atlanta, Ga, hed a“ On Our Entire Stock of SMART STRAW HATS Including Bankoks and Panamas. Stores Open All Day Saturday, Harlem Until 9 P, M, TUE HOUSE OP BETTER VALUES FIVE CONVENIENT STORES Broadway at 40th Street 279 Broadway, nr, Chambers St. 125th Street at Third Avent 47 Cortlandt St., nr, Greenwich aren Sse ra st Whenever you see an Anow think L Union Square, 14th St, near Bway, roadway at Dey St. fitth Ave. at 424 St, Broad Beaver St, of Coca-Cola < . Bie SSH (GSS Masa | aA Fy

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