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‘AMES’S HITTING | WINS FOR GIANTS NEWS OF ALL BRANCHES OF SPORT THE EVENING WORLD, 8 Dooin, Once a Tailor, Had His Ups and Downs - Before B Becoming Star as Phillies’ Manager Red - Headed Catcher Had Tough Time} Making Managers Believe He Was a| Great Player, but He Succeeded, and) Now Is on Prosperity’s Top Rung. T tatlor’s table in Cincinnati and cut clothes for @ living, | was frati of stature and his display of muscle was a) constant joke to those who worked around him. But under- heath that red shook of hair there was determination of the real Irish kind. Despite the discouragement that was offered him on all sides he went out in search | of his real spot in> life and found it. After many years of uphill struggling Charley Dooin has taken a mediocre ball olub that for years furnished the National League jokers with material and has turned it into &@ probable pennant winner. To-day the little red headed tallor is the owner of two automobiles, both presents from the Philadetphia public; has his own home, and can write check for a sum far up in the five figures. ‘Red Dooin is essentially @ “Harp,” whioh is to say that he is Irish through and through, and in another way he could be likened to t stringed instrument of Erin, for he sings almost as sweetly. The combination of a fighting “Mick” and a golden voiced singer hi worked wonders in the Philadelphia clubhouse. A heated rrel over a losing game has often been turned into a saengerfest when Manager Dooin suddenly stopped the bitter words by warbling the fers of “Sing Me an Irish Bong.” This would be followed by “Killarney,” ‘nose Bn- dearing Young arma” and ‘Come Back to Erin." By the time the last verse had died away the Philadelphia club— a mixture of Dutch and Irish—was at peace with the world and ready to go on with the fight for the pennant. The Philly manager insists that the success of his team #0 far has been due to the fact that he has a German in- field with the exception of one man, and he is @ “Harp. Luderus, Knabe and Lobert aot as the stone wall of defense, while Mickey Doolan injects the necessary ‘pep’ with his chting instinct. In the outfleld Magee and Walsh lead the Aghting, with Paskert as a balance wheel. ":ooked Like a Jockey. Until Hal Chase became the manager of the Highlande Pvoin, who is thirty years old, was the youngest manager in the major league, and he rose to his position by con- santly fighting against odds. He started nie paseball career a catcher who weighed less than 120 pounds, and to this| y he has feeling of resentment against Charles Comiskey, ner of the Chicago White Sox, who refused to give him a job on the grounds that “he had mistaken his calling and should have been a jocke: ‘Ten years in the big league has increased Dooin's weight to 180, but he remarked rather naively after the doubdle- header the other day: ‘‘If this heat keeps up I will be right back to the jockey standard.” Dooin declares that Mr. Fleischman, the former Mayor of Cincinnati, showed him the vfiy to a basepall career, and to this day they are the warfnest of friends. The Philly manager was born in Cine! and as a voy he became acquatnted with Mr. Fleischman. At that time he was a tailor, and aad a cutter's job at $18 a week wnen he became the catcher for the Nationals, a semt-profeasional team at Norwood, which is @ suburb of “Cinci"'=natives never call it Cincinnatt. It so happened that Mr. Fleischman, his father, Senator Fleischman, and the whole Fleischman famtly owned a beau- tiful country home tn the Catskill Mcuntatns, at a village which bore the name of Fleischman. Max Fleischman, then a young man with a lot of money and an ardent baseball fan, realized that he would have to spend the summer in the Catskills, and he couldn't see how his lire could be happy without baseball, He persuaded his father, the Senator, that {t would also add a few years to his lite to get a dally glimpse at the national pastime, and Max was intrusted with the responsibility of locating a diamond. There wasn't a level spot anywhere near Fleischman, so young Fleischman ought a plot of ground near Griffin's Corner and thereupon built @ grand stand, and sent for “Red” Dooin and fitteen other boys from Cincinnati. Only Family Sat in Grand Stand. “This grand stand,” says Dooin, “is the onty one of its kind in the world. It seats Just seven people—just enough to accommodate the Fleischman family, and as they all had annual passes, it was filled every day.” Dooin was given the Job of catcher, and for that service was paid $150 a month and his board. That beat the tatloring business all hollow, and though he missed tne plaudits of the public the Fleischmans managed to keep up enough rooting to make life worth while. “The only danger of @ setback that I ever had,” explained the Philly manager, “wes when old Mrs. Fleischman, who knew nothing about the game, suggested to Max ‘dot der leedie red headed catcher ought to be taken out for @ while and let der poy way out yonder be promoted to be near der grand stand for a while” Fortunately," went on Dooin, “Max was the manager and he kept me on the job."” After the personally conducted season tn the Catskills Dooin had an offer to go to St. Joseph, Mo, He promptly accepted, but when he arrived on the scene the manager looked at his diminutive figure and laughed. He told Dooin to go on back to his talloring business and he would be hotter off, The little catcher begged and persuaded until he finally got a chance behind the bat. Once ne had the chance 1e threw out so many runners and hit the ball eo hard that he could have remained in “St. Jo" for lite. But “Red” was BY BOZEMAN BULGER. HIS flery headed youth, who formerly squatted on &| So: sh wi in pr Wolgast | Made $17,200 by Beating Moran. BOXING STAGS At Fairmont A. C. and Bull Anderson Pass and Joe Shear ten-round bouts. bouts will be put on. Champion’s a oe 2 of Receipts Netted $12,500, Expenses | $500 and Bets $4,200. |] professtonal bouts. At Sharkey A. and K. O. Egar wil rounds. fighters BY JOHN POLLOCK. D WOLGAST, the lMghtweight | A champion, made a fine bunch of | money by his victory over Owen | Matches Ar Donlin. year contract. Rowan. down. ment is co! c., [JMANAGER CHARLIE DOOIN Wh op, but to ith them since 19 Dooin {a generally regarded as one of the best catchers His chance to become manager was largely the result of a string of circumstances that started when the Philadelphia club began to trade Sherwood Magee for Mike to be the manager, and the trade was all completed when, suddenly, the stockholders discovered that they could not get rid of Billy Murray, who had a three- ‘The following year the clup changed hands and became the property of Charles P. Taft, the brother of the President who wore short breechés at the coronation, Horace Fogel was mado president. the mean time the Donlin-Magee trade haa gone into his- tory and Murray was out as manager. It was up to Fogel to get a new manager, and after much soouting he found Charley Dooin on his own team, and he was chosen with the country. Donlin w some misgivings. ‘The first thing that Dooin aid was to make the famous trade with Cincinnat! by which he got Lobert, Paskert and Fogel tried to interfere with this:deal, and Dooin ptly resigned. Right there he proved himself a manager with real force behind him, Fogel was compelled to back Dooin got the playere he wanted, ana his good judg- nfirmed by the fact that he has taken the club to the top of the ladder and stands an excellent chance of win- ning the pennant. In the winter Docin sings on the stage, and ‘he and Mo- Cool, hie partner, made @ big hit with their Irish songs lest ‘om jason. Jo." and some associates. “Cine!” You should hay ambitious, and when he had a chance to work for Charley, Comiskey, who then owned a team in the Western Assocta- tion, he grabbed at the opportunity. en Comiskey saw Dooin he also laughed. you've got the wrong dope,” said the owner of the White ‘ou missed your calling. Jockey. Anyway, you'll be @ better tailor than a ball player, and here's your ticket home." An Early Disappointment. That was an awful blow to Dooin, but he packed his Uttle Delongings and went back—not to § He played such wonderful ball the next season that the Phillies bought him, and he has been “Young maa, and his tailor | TO-NIGHT. Wille Adams and Frankie 8 will meet in Three other g004 At Long Acre A. A. amateur and will meet tn Kid Hermaa for ten anged, Young and matched Wagner Patlly to h Century A. ©, Moran in San Francisco, collecting} young Britt and $17,200, He received & ntee of|f and Packey Hommey $12,500 for his end, an addittonal $500/f McGovern have been for expenses and also $4,200 In bets. meet in ten-round bouts at the next ‘The gross recelpts amounted to $32,046, | stag of the Twentiet 436 people witnessing the fight, Moran |{ 0” Friday night $9,613.80, as he fought for 9 per cent, af the entire receipts, tween Abe Att fen Frankie ( The proposed twelve-round bout between Matty | being Palein and Mate Wells, the English lightweight | acted in champicm, lias fallen through, ‘The men were to | Nearly pwo stars age. Dave fought at the Armory A, A. of Boston, but (eke yiace tie latter art « as the club officials a1 Alec Mcl#an, manager | ff Baldwin, could not come to terms in regard) 1¢ Willie Lewia is mu to the purse, Mish Murray, manager of the |dtenry, the colored flahte I alle off all u tations, Hout at Katekerbock ee Nimiday 1 Ihis manag Freddie Wels, the former English champton, |‘ ately thy and arrange, m Jones, manager of Ad. |} ior AEE. $9 be A month in whieh to | and only weighs 147 ponnda the $10,000 side g to bet on his chan uld | finger is not ta fight with Wolgast, Welsh says he ! have that time in which to send to EA it Now Orleans is trying to bring aly | Owing to the fact that Joe deanotio’s nls’ tensronnd bout. with ta mateh be: of AUR) satu in defen ity mughit a ands at preront for Wille one of for H nd ragoey, » Jones. will probably grant |f,,fosom,, which was canied, for nest rida quest as he thinks that Wolgast can fora a {apt may hand, to. We ood round ‘when T go agar Fiyna.t' sald dea pte, aad, for tuat"reeseu 1 anced’ for'the pate | t | | | new candidates f at the Parkway tra at the second ¢ Interbor \nees this afternoon has been to ten nts, Forty-six been named In these, the 1 been a SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1911. train at Cheyenne, Wyo. on the ranges.” year ago. possible out of the game, —>— National Sporting Club. 77 STANLEY KETCHEL, C ht, 3911, by The Prev Hublishing Co, OprTghts the Now Tork World Boston to fight @ native fighter. “Porky” but Stanley had a chance to get Uittle bit of money. very long, going down before Ketch« round, An amusing story {s told con this fight. who was backing Flynn. prowess. Stanley “Now, look her sport, don't : ou? got $1,000'even money or any odds you wa ok out inside of fo ky’ pur This that I kno rounds. your opinion. s looked he was out, grabbed up there, and saw that over to Flynn's corner, bucket of water standing the entire 6 "Porky." dashed over prost and yelled, “There's your man!” added with a derisive grin, ° that thousand?” feated the Gas House Pride, formed to the ohamplonship ments, Ketchel tipping the beam 156 pounds and Lewis at 164. to an obsession that Ketchel, fer the middleweight title, But confidence, ‘ig crowd at the National Princeton Picked Seeing Johnson Whip Jeffries Reason Ufer Secured “White Hope.” At fourteen years of age Frank B. Ufer, or “Frankie” Ufer, as he was then best known, found himself dumped out of tho railway “Quicker’n it takes to tell It, Fifteen years of work in the saddle and Mr. Ufer decided there ‘was no more money in raising beef cattle, and departed for the States to the south of Wyoming. good-sized wad of coin before crossing the State Ine. Arrived in the gambling district of the Middle West. ofl derrick and declared that was the game for him. Became a millionaire; bought of] wells in Kansas and Okla- homa and added a couple of fortunes to hig roll Had known Carl Morris, the “White Hope,” for a few years. Backed him when ho saw Jeffries beaten by Johnson at Reno a Paid $25,000 to an Oklahoma fight manager for Morris's release, but says he's forgotten all the details of the affair. janages Morris purely for the fun of the proposition. he’s got the greatest fighter the countfy has ever known, and de- clares he will be satisfied to see that Morris gets all the money Money's no object to Mr. Ufer of Oklahoma, and he declares the only money he will make out of managing the “White Hope” will come in through the bets he places. Inside lhe Ring L Great Fi Charley Whilé. | Ketchel Celebrated in Wild West! Fashion at Woodlawn Inn Af-| | ter He Beat Willie Lewis at Fiynn, “Porky” wasn't euch a terrific opponent, although he ‘was much heavier than the champion, nice Flynn didn't last oO May 17 a.etchel journeyed up to terrible fists for the count in the thra) ning | Before the men entered the ring, Ketchel became involved in a 4 s-| cussion with a wealthy sport of Boston Ketchel was boasting of what he would do to Flyan, and the Bostonian snecred at Ketchel's mad and said, | you pretend to be # Well, I'll just bet you chance to back Uke eany | he walked | walking back to the centre of the ring, contents » turned to the man with whom he had made the wager, who was altting at tho ringside, and “What about | Crowd Wanted to See Ketchel. ‘Ten days later Ketchol met and de- of talk, so the cop, who wan an ad- Willle mirer of Stanley Lewis, of New York and Paree, before! him, told them to beat {t quick, while the National Sporting Club in this city. he went back and reported that he In the matter of weight the men con-| had heen unable to catch the party, require Despite eupanta and his defeat at the hands of Papke, Lewis upper. had an opinion that almost amounted) anq Toby cl he could whip and freely predicted that one) tng individual out of bed and made him of his wallops on the Jaw would trans-) come down to the inn to help along the the) celebration by sporting public @id not share Willie's! The night of the fight there was a Sporting says he, “I was punching cows Incidentally he had tucked away Saw an Says ighlers Club, but they came more to see Stan- Jey in action than with the {dea of wit- nessing a hard battle, Ketchel appeared drawn and tired when he entered the ring, while Lewis was in the pink of condition, The bout was to be ten rounds, no decision, and Tom O'Rourke was the referee, ‘The first round was very tame, Hach man was trying to feel the other out and Wiille was plainly scared of Stan- ley's amashing right. The crowd got'up and yelled for action, In the second, after Lewis had put three punches on Stanley's Jaw, the champion decided it was time to start something. It started all right, The two men mixed it for a few seconds and suddenly Stanley's famous sleep prescription—that terrible right swing —was applied to Willie's jaw right at the point where tt would do the most good, Willie went down as if he had | been shot and was unable to move a muscle for more than two minutes, | When he finally revived sufficiently to be helped from the ring he cried Itke a baby. After the fight was over Ketchel went to his dressing room and hur- riedly slipped his trousers and sweater on over his fighting togs. Then tak- ing Toby, "Pete the Goat,” and several others of his party with him, he jumped into hig big red auto and whirled down to Iaichow's place on East Fourteenth street, where he bought a keg of imported bh several cases of champagne. whole party then started for Wood- money to the sport, who accepted the|jawn Inn, They went up_ through pet. In the third round of the flkl’,| Central Park and continued on up when Ketchel had knocked Flynn down) geyenth avenue, There was a fire tn | the nefehborhood of Seventh avenue &/ that night and the fire lines were ex- and, tended across that thoroughfare, How- ever, Stanley slammed through the Unes without stopping, A fire chtef caught sight of the party and sent @ Dicycle policeman after them, A num- ber of blocks away, after a long chase, the mounted cop overhauled the big red auto, Stanley's friends explained | that he had just beaten Willle Lewis and was anxtous to get back to his training quarters, and all that line but had never met Arriving at the {nn quite some time at after midnight Ketchel aroused the ac- up the drinis and a fine on sent “Pete the Goat” ir up to Yonkers after the partender and drageed that long suffer- Ne playing the violin, ‘The artender could play only two tunes ‘The Weartng of the Green’ and Where the River Shannon Flows." tanley felt no good over hin victory that he Jumped upon the table an4, pull- ine out his revolver, fired tts contents into the floor while he made everybody dance. Wi T, Stanley war seldom without a gun. © Win Trophy | one tas in'viserinerin ie nn wales Charter Hervey and Onga, Moran, the nasi : . | into the gymnasium and amused him- SneEah, Re Pg At S self for awhile by shooting up all the | zac, Sat Seeblick WIMMING | re re ones, gumnnelte ahd other of the films taken of the fight, Harvey wil | paraphernalla in the place, ending up the puctures here, and then Moran will take them PeTA AUR IN Shes Bee tines te to England with ‘him, for six months. Marty Brown, the local fighter, has been | Two fights. He sill fumt meet Johnny | annual intercollegiate swimming cham- zi a pa tus 21) plonships, which will be he x ® ternoon at Sheepshead Ba | MAGDALEN ‘EN CREW “RETAINS GRAND CHALLENGE cup. | SLEY-ON-THAME! Club's Challeng: Cambridge, | lengths being in Class A, pacing, H winner last Sat against some fast pacers Candidates at P. Moran will not fight aguia | | The Princeton College swimmers Saturday thelr prog 3, Prunty, starter, W. H, Robertaon, favorites to win the point trophy at the could put through each pane of glass. Ketchel Liked Little Toby. He was very fond of his mascot Toby t ¢ tanely's maga- rifle and extracted the cart es from It t Is, but o1 he overlooked. A little later in when Stanley was fooling the gun, Toby dared him to] Sta nto the floor and ff the floor and hit Ket rkway, | j or cups are| MeAleenan ir, 1 Hennen, P the card for|‘T. Powe \ u nugh mate | 8 Ly Otte Wa i | nereased | Dr. J. M. Breen, | 0" orses have | per Cluat and Mor E ng the ranch he had bought argest field | course, L. de B, IL for: ene 1p Michigan with all the latest Jot “ 4 arming appliances and plenty — of Amola, | diving, A. *vorl, ©, Belvens and Ar- | ptooded. stock | be pitted|thur McAleenan jr.; announcer, Peter’ (he next chapter ends Ketchol' career.) jcounts his money by the hundreds Carl Morris’s Earnings, Being| Content With Whatever He Can Win in Side Bets When! His Man Battles. OW different are the million: H aires who come to us from the West from those who! come from Pittsburg and go mean-| dering about our Great White Way! How quiet and unobtrusive they! really are! There's Mr. Frank Ufer, who nd hundreds of thousands, and still finds time to manage the pugt- Mette destinies of Carl Morris, the latest and largest of the present crop of “White Hopes.” Mr. Ufer has been in our midst for nearly three weeks without once breaking | into print. | But the humble managers of fighters, | even though they put up at the Wal 4orf, are prey for the men who fol-| low sports, and #0 we had a little chat with the Okiahoma millionaire as he was packing his trunk in preparation for his departure for home. | A wide-featurel six-footer, with the, keen, penetrating eyes of a plainaman, | roared “Open the door! and we wero face (o face with Ufer, He was sitting close to his bureau and pulling all sorts of wearing apparel out of the drawors. Fifty or sixty dollars tn bills fluttered | on the dresser while other bills blew about the floor, some of them lodging under the big bed. However, the bills were only a small and uninteresting detail of the surroundings. On the dresser was exposed a .S2-callbre re- volver. “Don't be timid about asking personal questions,” grunted Ufer; “that gun has been lying there ever since I arrived in town; it’s an old habit of mine to tote one of ‘em around wherever I go—one of the habits X acquired after ff- teen years of cattle business in ‘Wyoming. 1'4 be lonesome with- out a gun—more lonesome than Ta be without having # finger in wang pugilistic. “You see, ever since [ landed In | wyoming as a kid of fourteen [vo been interested fn men who fougnt either for self-preservaton, mere devol- opment or the very love of a mix and that's why I take an fnterest tn big Carl Morris—that and tho desire to| bring out a white man who will bring the boxing champlonship of the world back to my race. Calis Morris Best Ever. “And, without bragging, 1 know Carl is the best man this country has ever seen. He's better than Corbett ever was, Jeffries, MeCoy, Johnson or any of ‘em. Why, some years ago I wit- nessed a fight in which Kid MeCoy showed all his punching ability and [ thought he was the greatest ever, But Morris te the best man IT have seen when tt comes to delivering the punch,” declared Ufer with an honest gleam confidence in his clear blue eyes. of EDITED BY ROBERT EDGREN for the privilege of managing a hope" was tho interesting point was asked about that $25,000 and replied: “I've forgotten ti details of that deal a long while ago. A fel- low named Stone was managing Carl—ho was « ‘regular’ manager and took @ good-sized share of Carl's winnin; Morris into the fighting ga up to me to take charg t was this way: [had known Mor- ris as a regular, fine fellow for somo years, and, having seen him clean up some tough crowds along the Frisco railroad line, I Immediately thought of him as a ‘white hope’ when Jeffries was beaten at Reno, “One day Morris was passing through a town where I had a couple of oll wells, He wai an engineer on the road and I walked down to the station to see him ‘arl,’ saya I, ‘you'd better crawl down from that engine and take up the fighting game, You can lick this coon Johnson, If you need any help just call on me,’ A few days later he threw up hin Job and began training. Ever since then him in yt I've been ready to he possible, and that's Stone's contract Ufer says when he first started out as a cowboy there was a lot of fighting 1 the ranges, and as he was ® large youngster he managed to become mixed up in some of the seraps, As he grew older he took great delight tn witness Ing the few bouts that were held be- any way bought out w tween the travelling professional boxers who Invaded the far We ater on, | while making @ fortune out of the oft Wells and natural gas of the Mississipp! Valley, he devoted all his spare me to seolng big boxing bouts According to Ufer his prot But we didn't Morris. vu ‘s wonderful car the reasons why he, a milliona and gas manipulator, should pa are to hear a lot about er and | Morris, is ¢ giant who fears neith- er man nor hia weapons, Ufer says he has seen the new “white hope” wade throvgh six and oight men — Despite English Scoring Sys-)« tem Harvard-Yale Team Is Confident. scomenemenendl | international | HE fourth of the athletic ontests vetween Yale and Harvard representing the United States and Oxford and CC bridge for England will take place Tuesday at the Queen's Club, Lon¢ Already it Is predicted by the exp 4 that Uncle Sam's boys will carry off the honors for the third e, accordin to the English system of counting only | for Fconsecutive time according to th the first places won, or the fourth | tean way of counting the po! The three previous meets tn 1899, 1001 and 1904, the firs years the contestants meeting in Eng-| land and in 191 the games being held at Berkeley Oval | Because of the easy manner in which the Yale-Harvard athletes won the last | two champlonships wide margin, they have uth that it will to Jefeat the Britisher , In the ordlna \ Engiiahm trip t | 1a ry, oper | ve was t W. Hedrick Mad River, wa 10 rode Judges Alling $100 by the The new echoone: Kiena, which ts owned by | bn, if Fitz Herbert Pulis Up «Lame After American Athletes Sure | They'll Beat Britons formances of athletes who rank second and even third in thetr r ‘eevents recognized a place in the final Teck View three sets of Harvard: | y Oxford-Cambridgs games from the | American standpoint, that of allowing 5 points for first positions in each event, | t for seconds, 2 for thirds and 1 for! fourth places, the Harvard-Yale ath letes ave t © Umes been victorious over thelr English opponents, In 188 while the Knglishmen scored five firsts to the Americans’ four, the points re oned on our vasin stood: Harvard and Yale, 00; Oxford and Cambridge, 4 | Three years the Americans won, 5 to 4s, and In 19 the score was the | same as twelve years ago, @ to @ in} favor of the American team In the appended table the result of each of e thre m as le given. Each college's record for places In 1894, | {1001 and 194 1a followed by the number | of points ed by the team on the] } basta 141 potnte for the firs fou finishing, according to the] un » of figuring the voints| scored S00 Ist, 24s Bde, 4the Tes | 1 ‘aie be aoa: (Hey fae? iar | | et ae ae ‘ 4 o 4 i Winning Race wiokes, ow's ant for seveny-t9o holes Was | Can use Nis fists to advantage, Here’s a Millionaire Fight Manager Who's in Fistic Game for the Fun of It | as | Ufer Doesn’t Want a Cent of! Rich Western Oil Deale: Thinks His Protege Greatest Fighter in' History of Game and Sure He'll Whip Johnson When They Clash in Ring. i at one time, and that Morris he@ the of4 habit of butting in on gun fights :nd depriving the bad men of their guns. Undoubtedly Mr. Ufer hag his share of Western admiration for the man who ind he i» #0 Grmly convinced that Morrie ts the «reatest fighter in the world that he firmly belleves the big Oklahoman ean beat Johnson, “I waa forced to return $14,000 to hold. ora of tickets for the bout that had been arranged between Morris and Jim Fynn when our Governor declared he would call out the troops to stop the contest, anid Uter “It was suggested in ‘No Man’s Land,’ whieh [ts located dian Reserv the bout be heli a plece of ground within the Osage In- Ye ee the State. a crowd o old squatter i company all lay claim to that and there's really no law can tract, touch It—except the law of the Governor 4 be no fight even In ttled the affat “Now, money to be made out of Carl's fighting I want to tell you that the ability won't be split up; he'll ge: every cent of it, because I'm his friend and want to the boy «et a little ban! account of his own. When we land th big flights I'll get down a few thousants in bets and that will sult me. “You know, of course, that we Wes: ernere are all gamblers. Take this pi ture of me, for instance. Look at tha sporty suit. I used to call it my gam bling garments,” remarked Ufer, aa ly pulled out a photo of himself that way taken a@ short while ago, Had Uter, the retiring, man of Weatern experienc: with several millions of dollar: in ofl wells—explained why he was backing @ new heavyweight fighter? But to make sure there were no other Toasone we asked again, “There's just three ample, ttle reasons why I'm going to aee the deal through for Carl Morris,” replied Ufer as the trunkman shifted from one foot to the other, making enough noiss to remind the big man in his shirt sleeves that it wae time for him tu close both the trumk and the conversa- tion and hike for the wastbound train. “Firstly, I am 9 anzious as is any man in the world to see the dozing champione*tn back in hands of a white wan, give a few pesos to triok turned; secondly, it’s that comes to all of us old sharp eyed © man invested natural ark horec; and the third reason is that Carl needs a bankroll, and I'm going to get him as much out of the game ae I possibly can.” After Ufer threw the Inst of his gar- ments into his grip, stooped down an! gathered what few bills were tn aight on tho floor, he departed. And for once In our lives we envic! the chambermaids. Surely there mi have been at least a thousand dollars in small change under that low, rak! bed In Ufer's room at the Waldorf, How did your friend catch that horrible dis ease? Don't know. Ask your barber for the Sealed Sterilized Cup Brush and Soap. Used once only. Costs but Sc. extra AMUSEMENTS, WEW AMSTERDAM % Mote Wai. iat law and Belang comedy. THE PINK LADY JARDIN de PARIS Si7.5.¥ Tee ZIEGFELD FOLLIES | Smoking—Refreshments. Table Bente FOLIES} HAE OB BERGERE| &,!s!""1" as ie Tames GLOBE Sit ytek Be Se Vv mai ‘SURATT | Miter | PHY, Hireworka ‘Thorsdaye Alruhip Ascenaions, IN THE OPERA T ABORN COMIC OPERA CO, IN MLLE. MODISTE Sat ype irnar inchets ‘at 3 | Sth av, include free adm, to park. HAMMERSTEIN’ s ragette iy Matinees in Theatr with Pull ‘armeretion y MILL—1T STs {oot Bill cr! ¥), yous Temple, ‘i My ron 6 Bc Winter Garden sii) co ters! Last 2 Thies Gertrude Fann announces Nénwelnn” Halteta ha Priees oe to AST MAT TODAY _ PINAFORE ASIN Las Coney" e Proof end Place, pS ay Eo. . NEW—Dally Ma 4 * hoe tome Yrenklia BRIGHTON gus ache cchas "a Panay Gonruy Brighton Beach\ies’ Monee’ Harden. othe. a oa LEAP EXvbey American Letra a7 SPT ‘26 and b0.|12.30 ‘to "11,80. DFM, Hesrved, [Mata 10-18c. Nights, 16 12 "Hig Vaudeville Acta, tinuous Vaud, Hicdnah lines reported by toningy at the matinee TEATS W483 9, BrB.a6 *Gohan’s *Miicince sat “GeteRich- Quick W lingtord ACADEMY S.A: 10, 20 & 300 ROOF Table Seats, Be, rue: ve. We Ba El Hic sehenek\ “POP GONGERTS Pais ERT et N woote ie x Ww New Th Perna i i es pe RS A SS TS