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a es per ers BVBMANY WUMLD, WEUAwEYAX, AUGUST UP-TO-DATE Eko kewey| BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK | ROBERT EDGREN I PAPE “CHEESE CHAMPION” | ©» «.s'=<s=*«*«é«a WAS ABAD. DANY. FOR. CHAMPIONS BAT NELSON HAD IN MIND ++. World's Middleweight Titleholder Puts Up, 1 One of the Rankest Exhibitions Ever in His Ten-Round Bout Against Sailor Burke. Copyright, 181, hy The Prem Publishing Oo (The New York World). | HAT Papke-Burke fight last night reminded us all of Battling Nelson. j Not because thore wan anything about the fighting fteelf reminte- cent of the Battling Dane—far be it from me to suggest each a thing—but because of an epigram matic saying of Nelson's uttered about a year ago. Bat referred to Ad Wolgast as the “cheese cham- pion.” Now by a atmple course of Tre MARQUIS OF QUEENS BERRY TRIED To SAY A FEW KIND WORDS., ON TOP AGAIN ! nothing, but he was also worrted ove the calidown he got from Morgan, to believe that Tama oft—take ‘em off!" |long wallops by Snodgrass that drove|ter in the hole, id not realize thet the abrieked the crowd. he! over with excitement, but the the name of the author. “Bang!” 1 lean singh event” Wont on, for in the preliminaries | jeared. In the seventh there was some|t®at Joshua Devore hed pickled the| {Dingl., Tt was e clean single to left. | the tWrno snold out in Terre Faute, of teint im. first piace, they satiie that hey only made the trip to New York f e jualify you if you don’t stop hoMiing,” /ainglea But none of them eaw the faint hearted, ‘the Cubs will win out eon or Wiltse will piteh for New York and One | . in the more clever of the two. And in thelaiq Papke. In the roughing around! on the Giant bench at the crucial |comes to bat." Fingered” Namesake. is two mt, Loria end coors, b in the winoer a £001 Proviaeace: 2 the big ¢est. Meyers took a whack at Josh's brother took him eround the ai had the punch of @ bullet. ‘Three times /TAD @round the ring. A fine champion! | Doyle. that Bat had his wires crossed when fhe spoke harshly of Wolgast He wasn't Wolgast at all. It was Billy Papke of Kewanee. ago, when he knocked ont Stanley Ketchel, he was a real champion, a H splendid, wiry, fast, aggressive fight- Baier burs Ins tov bn van 8 ode Being man Tr be a _ LOCALS PLAY WAITING GAME AND TAKE LI LEAD | & good looking, round bodied imitation of the old Billy Papke, lacking in | strength, speci, okill, aggressiveness, direction, punching power—everything bn Doking that first one over as big /it off, and then, by guessing with that must go (nto the makeup of @ preliminary fighter—let alone a oham-|New Yorks Davee 0 Cubs by Hit-|es 2 baiicon, with no fear af it being | Brown, managed to get a treo walk pion. In the eighth Devore came up, and| sacrifice, end Murray, who ran the orp dheeraplaay distetigte|t--pere a bre Meret Pata eal alg cera ting the First Ball Pitched inj ,7f, n°, ole’ hesitating slammed at the |banos for the Chief, was safe at eeoona,| hattan Batters Would Not e in Dee rea caua Guy seeniy |Akboiny . cod cbiacams nad pansueny dunk, Bron ter & bale ob vali was his Sith ‘kitela ned Murray Strike at First Ball Thrown. ‘Thompron licket Papke in Australia, | heavily, and Burke was countering and h bench. With an awful swish, Doyle cut loose at At least Thompson was agyressive, and|hanging on in the clinches. It was BY FOZEMAN BULGER. “Now ge and get him! snapped Mo- | the first one, but he miesed it cleanly. The | town to show him off last winter, and ever came and fight as well as he knew|the whole bout that looked good. ‘dench 1 away. Never mind about the base run-|over. A sharp curve brok of the Giants” the townamen woukin't how to fight. Willie Lewis jumped into Burke's cor-| ty thes sat the abide under Moriec|ning, Crack that frst ball, and crack |plate, and Larry, with a h stand for ft. “Get out of here with bout boxing last | liked to see Burke win, for he thinks he Snodgrass was the next candidate, |and—well, you see where we are. Giant! Huh!" Moréecai Brown was the; briny ates Feecyeliigr ys amt headed GGA Whi (hOaALIOL Manhat with a flood of joy. Ae thelang with « ewing from hie hips he| In¢wo innings Miner Brown had been| town hero and the Devores couldn't | bs out of the Polo Grounds to proclaim to|groove and smashed it against the|game. But you can bet your bottom dotar | end Pre ereiea; owe Beek pag sks Nya dilodian cal nude Apel pasaied the world that the Giants had mount-|fenoe for two bases, scoring Devore| Of the five safe blows delivered in| that they knew it Inat night A eimple | other 2 Wh; wash: arms —" g f cracking that first | of Devore last night, and !t read itke ladder thoy saw only the wallop by|_ Then came Becker, and—Bang!” right |came as @ result o Carey k : TT: mwentiein Century A. ©. hetd|sanlly have disqualified them both. vin |L@Fry Doyle that sent the winning run|@t the frst ball he lunged, and it, was|sroove ball this: "Josh Devore of Terre Haute Mt the largest crowd thet was ever|fact, he threatened to do it But the ‘not @ base was s' jammed into St, Nicholas Rink. |Agbters paid no attention to threats or/they managed to remember the two| Brown, still anxious to keep the bat- Giant?” ‘The telegram wes unsign ‘The great hall was literally “packed to|°Féers. "Take ‘The fans of New York may be run-| but it wouldn't be hard for you toomens | , Cand and Missed the f| rain the doore.”” There was enough to inter |" Again’ ‘after the sixth round, Pagke| fog” cree on ene eine machine, |r estrooved the fret one ton Merkle, | focal Millabailoo cant hold «Tight to lay a the crowd before the allems “‘matn| piufted as if to hit, while the crowd |on¢ ® few of them Hed the fact | eS P y left, |the turmoll that Je going on in the| While the Olants are wallowing tn the glory | was in a angry mood because he no ‘the run that had tled up the game. For three years now Joah has hud to Dsve got to win again this afternoon to bod | K, O, Too Late to Have His fattling four rounds, with Iftle to dbaoee| He clung to Fapke like a leech, “T'li/ Terre Haute for a atring of five clean! “oh, well” murmured the crowd, still| suffer the ignominy of not being recog. Today's tattle, promiem, therow, to be the between them, although Carroll was Picture Taken With ““Three- fon hed ‘better Get out early, | gait or | Crandall wae travelling. In quiok order Be yg ge ini eter ar ihr dpteitel fire orders that came snapping from Burke woul do in @ n Qn ths Pape eee puree) rota) 0 me | ene aaa eek teres ue ad) tne lips of John McGraw and’ Larry (pe, ‘posed of the side, and then came | Gant. : (Bpecial te The Evening World.) | avebecder} of Yesterday's Games, | Savin Rook, Conn., Aug, 2. reasoning and deduction we know | had a champion in mind, but it Poor Billy Papke! Three years ub Sailor Burke In this town, he was a model fighting man. Today he {oe just the waiting game was to continue he the first one tn the last half, but fouled molested. Crandall ‘punted. the “Stet bal’ fora, Chicago Ptoher Tho Thought Man- Papke came there fresh from knocking |not missing a punch. Now it looked as first ball and ripped off « single. Doyle| Again Josh oame up, and again Brown the Eighth and Ninth Innings. ad the cue to wait and he managed whistled through a groover. ‘@ easy to unduretand why Johnny /dancing and plunging and punching hen aamne the hurried caucus on the | moved up to third. he would walk tn steadily, take what-|Papke's round—and the only thing in| oo was @ quick, sharp order from the|Graw. ‘Dow let that first one get | next time he didn't wait for it to come/ when he introduced him as “Devore ‘Aa for Sailor Bure, he forot every-|ner and advised him. Willie would have | 4g; Brown and ewept the old ise of [it ard. We've got to bat this one out.” |swing, shot it Into right for that stuff," they would say, “Him a one spectator remark: ‘They fought| But the fighting ended with the fourth 0,000 victory orased fans went bowling|caught the firet one squarely in the|double-crossed and beaten at hie own| got awuy from it. “coed mt faa they held, while White wrested ana {*?.t0 the top of the National League |and sending Doyle to third, those two exciting rounds, four of then little telegram was sent to the house harp i And in all this nerve-racking melee | Mordeca! f the eaine t fe B WwW it d t B S skipping over the pan. A litle. later |S enar?, founder to Tinker, oa which sea id onan ‘som, who. Mt rown alied tO DU ome jand Snodgraes was over the plate with Jimmy Carroll and Joe Sears fought «| slugging and Burke's lips were bleeding. |Aelvery of his fellow townsman : said Witte, Burke still held. And 60| hurried ittle conference that took place|in the ninth or tenth when Sohulte or Richter for the Ouba This ts one time i semi-wind-up Young Cashman and Buf! something—head or elbow or glove-cUt! roment, nor aid they hear the rapid| But they ney forgot the et which Buffalo... eM re ae ey in oe, 2 a, "wit for be -—— he floored “Bull,” But Anderson waa | Otly & phonograph could give any idea| It was in this quick conference that dead game. He came up slugging after every knockdown, Cashman won. Char- Me White refereed ali the bouts, and he made the little fellows avald clinoh- the wool wae pulled over the eyes of Miva! Sern wot ne cue AS Fans in the Bleachers Saw the Game tong innings. This three-fingered wizani, | 'NOCKOUT BROWN hes sottled down to herd work again for his coming battle against Matt Wells, (the English lightweight champion, ‘ng and fight fast and herd. After the usual dull routine of an- ‘whose middle name |» “Brains,” for one which will be fought in New York next time lost hia bearing and fell for it FDR the seventh inning of the week. Yesterday morning he received copogt | Gee. 1 mia eld ound, ‘em over ere where game between the Giants and pes AE met ba) Ui eee 8 conn at i nouncements, the Marquis of Queens hook, ) tine and sinker, Then came @ the Cubs yesterday, the bieacrer- | Wen the Cube! rain, Teg, tier 5 Baca, 70. a =| | Danny Puaraint tauine amie eet 3 i berry was solemnly introduced by Pte, OF (gnaaenell musketry and the| tes came to life with the suddenness of radar it Pov Mtete Ta tht | ow, at made The, ope | Gotham on the 1 o'clock train without } Johnay Dunn, who followed the intro- UNE noted forward on thelr road), released watch epeing. Larry Doyle) {941 ass aie: | caaates Belen a bee, fail, He though it waa e partioular } duction by looking around ¢: The ‘last. time the Gianta faced | Wee the hero of the day, and not a|riioy. Hes « wonder” reuacked 4 tar who | engagement, ro he went to the store to | But the Marquis failed to materialise, Brown out in Chicago MoGraw tesuea |Dleacher occupant but would give his| fits’sats, #* ibs pil Gant fr over witiien tae tees = em Fear te orate | Duy @ new straw hat and some candy Finally he did stand up on a seat half & peremptory order that no batter must |left hand to shake Doyles big right i Rese dae is acd “ene ola Lo te, tn in iaate, rare Pats x tall to eat on the journey. He then put on a @ozen rows back from the platform strike at the first ball pitched. There | hand. nearest It tht ries hare are Mitlento eas, with thi Moline ‘aedn to stranger. “Ain't Johnn; af pales 7 out ress Cet bo, S Te Sid mf ‘noigabor, a total | his Sunday best sult and hurried to the station, but found he had missed con- nection Ie It was 2 o'clock before he started, hese | Arid when he reached the One Hundred and Twenty-fitth street station of the Now Haven Ratiroad he met Morgan, Who was 48 mad as a March hare, Ho hed been pacing up and down the platform for over an hour waiting for his protege. The reason K, 0. was to ha’ to » oe him with him up to the Polo Geounte aha have ie gle | PALISADES ?X PARK ture taleen with hie ake, “Three- and try to make a speech. He was|etant olinches, and was too tired to do|were batters constantly on the bases ‘ nicely decked out in his “Tux” and Nobody could hear w Eventually some dis- courteous person behind called out in @|the Sallor well. shrill voice: “Sit down—Mar-cheaset” And the Marquis sat down again. “Whee, but my son Larry's a great any more. After the bell had rung at/and this order to wait was given for) ball player!" whooped a grizsly old the end of the tenth, Papke suddenly | base running purposes, pure and simple. | bleacherite as he heaved his last sea- galvanized tnto life again and walloped |Though they hit Brown hard in that son's atraw hat into the alr and aban- Burke mixed, while |8me they failed to win. In the mi doned it to fate. Soreneciotty a half White walked away to let them go on.|t!™e Brown discovered that the Giants dozen fans had him up on thelr shoul- | Molar gpungsty ger, Dob Clark, |Wer® Playing a waiting game and, the ders. \& wise fox that he {s, he promptly began| “Hurrah fer Doyle's father in the mixup and out his eye wide | to siam the first ball over, right in the | th APKE came into the ring first and | open. groove, and put thom tn the hole. One I ain't Larry's pa!” Was welcomed with @ cheer, He) ‘The same thing had happened at the|he had them there he could work the| gasped the old man as he atrugsied walked about for several minutes |end of the Burke-McMahon fight, and | corners, By that means he managed to|to regain his normal position with feet testing the platform with his fect and | White caught a wild swing that nearly | get away with a win. downward. The fons blushed at their out three rune tn‘tne elghth® anda Big Ohtet M let three balls into the rand stand, andthe fureatle Dleasuente rate! Gotch Opens Favorite shouted | >) STEEPLECHASE coery tre Nake Irom Steamboats that Morgan sent for “e a ” p> orite was emiling ana |Xnocked him out. At last the seconds SON: tae bene baened 66 £ Over Cc a 0 5 eee one OOee. bagel climbed Into the ring and stopped the| Giants Played the Same Game. Larry Doyle had just driven out the \ > 2 Se | ren want wheuen toe’ on ee Yesterday Mr. Brown caught the} nit that brought {n the winning run in exception of several games of hand ball| 7insered”, Brown, tne famous Cub | Opposite W. 280m Bt Beez | wnd at once went through the olf| “rt wasn't @ fake—they both trief—| Giants playing the same game of walt-|the ninth inning and placed the Glants and a baseball game, which were viewed | Ditcher. They Jumped into x1 and | NEW —Daily Mat, fc. eer | stage trick of rushing over to his rival tut they were rotten," explained White|!ng and began sticking that frat one rushed to the park, but the e was ation wnd examining the bandages on his) a fow minutes later, over with an annoying regularity, her than | aaa for the pennant, and he was | | Both Men Do Do Lie Work for \sn the light of re Iready in progress, Brown was pitch- ON eonees tn i work, Gotch enjoyed a day of rest yes-| $ i ‘BRIGHT tase vons & owe, hands. Much talk in the middle of the| Many of the spectators were of a aif-| ‘Say, Mack," suggested Chief Meyers, pay ‘ i ee njoyed a dty Ms ing r3 me plohire cond be tanen, ae 1 anton Reach! Twin ‘Bian ke rushed acrows and hooked his] | > “ : 8 7 been a the py the remainder of the week and nothing o i th & We, I rig Sp cue. ‘There was 8 ong vetting that Hurce. would. stay "the ten putting It right in the groove. 39 id) ashe etere, fhe peat Best mt Wrestling Bout resembling the strenuous routine whion |onuse, they thought It a eens is etre, eft to | rounds, odds of $ to 1, Still, the bet-| “Never mind,” replied MoGraw, ‘“T'll players, : resting Bout, has been followed will be attempted rown ci Li a nuderie Aste, Minch, By iding Papke's left arm| ting wasn't heavy enough to warrant «| tell you when to start. Keep on walt: |, Si the Rit: “Ames gore to to-day fer ox, tut | Bec Gheanion Nave toe Ch. | ee ms reporee while White ai iaong hast Ag) Fr eens. peed kyr Fr pose ge ty ie a a one they — owed to [MNO i finish wp them Cubs,” Ames tye har Nothing but handball will be indulged ANU REM ENTS. ACADEMY Y O43 NUsig, them apart. As they elong 10 give any decision at all after ° y men tha re allowed to | luc (Bpacial to The Evening World.) in to-day, after which the whole cam; WA Re a OL, N wiizz0URA Papke seemod heavy und logy and|#uch a miserable exhibition, a) Fe ies ores, ee ee eee ware |e Qh pF hy ag Se O Gulcees Aus, 3 ra planted © awim in the Dap Moines ) WEW duisTEnonw a Wi a sate ‘gas, || 10,20 & 30¢ ca “i shed and hung| OW? ° m that the whole tro@ble was Devore and Snodgrass, an at WES was yanked out and Crandall went the 5 Sap fea Saw fe’ Laue, painfully slow. They clinched and hung this, that Battling Nelson's ep!- because Devore is a natural first bull |pufled his tile down pardon his head.’ "Now we | WENTY-FOUR HOURS’ complete | THE “BINK LA LADY | OLYMPIC} Hott shit ans 108 to @ach other and punched tn the] appites very neatly to Buly Aitter and Snodgrass came up when | ing diaanse” Wid,”” he to! overpay within Tear rest worked wonders with Hack- haiti. simaicbinsad rn NtGHT ng’ Sa He cMnches, while White pleaded and ar that he fe & “cheess champton,” there wero men on bases and ther: \* enschmtat, and when he clam- REN Ss Howe’s Li e | gue@ and lectored them, It wes a| ‘ior Burke is tn the same class, was nothing needed but a wallop. wetleny why don't ro per, Te, out, near the fence /ored for some ind of work in the eym.|| BOXING STAGS TO-NIGHT. jain Howe's Lovemakers i miserably slow and slovenly exhibition, | It was Dutch cheese and limburger,and By the tine the elghth inning Fe | ween thal yy pom to belt 3 Smad han oi" |Dr, Roller yesterday permitted his i] Hurtig ig | & Seamon’s Wo 2 # After the bell had rung the end of| the limburger lost by « whiff around Brown waa #0 confident that /fir neltie” en "Roclgram. niditen! Site’ | oifkrwe to indulge in light exarciae with <j mE 2 Do SBE & 0 perks diMoore > Th Merry Whirl nt ne Sara bases | 9 a ees ats EL cal as a. ‘ths ‘ " j the three minutes they broke from | Cute’ right’ tlelder to vert in hea the medicine ball and weights, following|| ycttette meets Duminy Maxson ralval Soa ey CUSE ‘ME lorton & Moore e iA me s hug and Papke pulled back his right | ‘There must be eomatioa fo thou ranamimon |® SOF daah up and down Sheridan|{ in tne main bout of ten rounds alae beats ibe Water Wagon, a 7h 470 th urleag a and bluffed two or three times, as if | coampectally"at'e Tail game, as thie: followine fine road, ‘The exertion put the big Russian Long Acre A. A. Jaok Den- JARDIN d le PARIS 4'y.>, Ye THE MAJESTICS S Ba intended bo) sirthe enctar blow |taithnoemii Bie Shtted gi diet |in excetient apirita and he thoroughly | iv and Jonnny Waits come to- 110g Die GEED py ‘et CH ; Perhaps he thought that would make| | roared ‘simmuftaneously sod Bight, Brown! enjoyed his second gutomobile tour of|| ler in the star bout of ten Weeks. GFELD OLLiES. the crowd think he was really fighting. rounds, ta. Tab the boulevards and parka ‘ Punt | rua cat Soak’ and 3 . O, Far Rovk- nee | fut the crowd only hivaed and booed hn fertent fellow om the | Attar getting through with his work || a At Ban Mead A Or eee ela JOHN AY TON sia Ret Reine: ceasea oenaa 4 " HY JOHN POLLOCK, pct mun tn cogching Bator Harke how 0 | Feranother when, Deve + at the North Side Gym “Hack” stepped|| meets Johnny Carroll in the atar a i so ae Rts \ In the second row the wrestling 1 twenty-two hundred fight fans, Knew that it Burke Be could get wate fag | {bird before you Imow it,"" one wa upon the scales and found that he bout of ten rounds. Fo! olies , ae BES Hite T a went on, while White begged them to| T peri ripe befall fo a fencing Rim. bewia wl “robb | fe eeconds inter Woah nated eatin weighed 227% pounds, or a pound and a i itay—Table’ Seats toe break. Why don't you mep kph wr F . rh ag ay half more than his own estimate upon) Sinha quality you," shouted White, But igi ¢6 BAR Dicks Aiming Sem OS C0 retest tabe Him ca, ehree OOOH Re Ot “finally | Mota, savatitng fort buck of itn, attracted Papke-Burke scrap at the entury A 1 crowd to-day, fhe Penchiere Taneh “Festerday ation him af ) every play. we r Diat. JOHN BE, KELL OEDIPUS REX \.\ * his arrival here from New York, As a focler of the wagering market, Jim O'Leary announced his open 1@ boxers paid no attention to hun Finally he began pushing in between disguate and prying them apart At the end of| Reynolds Boxes O'Toole « Draw. | Twentieth | PHILADELPHIA, Aug, 3.—The dig- Bob Clark, manager of Purk for set" Ps a sf on, ground wes ads the di { sensation in local Dugiltatic ranks & PHU TORE CL 8, i TATAN % 00 | va " 4 feng not uileaing seeliug « use |Odd8 on the big match ‘The Bourn|#est # pr a BN DECK WITH, tis ound punks mote bie bint oo os | are handed @ “lemon” tt at this Stee ‘art ra Re allor'ei: | be Shed Ble sate toa Sido penctler, never far wrong in find-|in many years happened in the wind- VALESKA Biali, y ca i Tid AVE. i, (Gtteron, as lond, ng on fighting—-and ag wa | ae STAM ts, cre ween Ret ing the correct favorite no matter how up at the Dousias A. ©, when Bobby “Cohan’s oe Fy Kroaned and hissed, It was ao clearly | ba fare oteihes, or Yel tesa fht \the money eventually swinga, installed thwark featherweight, & hippodrome, le ny tide, Tie Sauer, gente oh | Gotch the chotce, at ¢ to § with “Hack” idol of Port BROOKLYN AMUSENENTS, \ When the third round of wrestiin toe ire'e verdict i |the outsider, at 6 to 6. was over they continued to hold and tug for several seconds after the bell More hieaes. All over a draw after lx hard at The bout was wit banner crowd, HUMBOLDT, Iowa, Aug. 2%3.—With the nessed by Refore th 0; < Detore the guine atazied Crandall wee warming | veel mienoed $0 “vey ye ‘hal ey another SANE Si imiiny ty Noam TAREE ge wan ex a) Pe vmO% cHUnOE KL hand WINTER GA GARDEN bor te RU HEIRS oe the ~ ne ‘OODK_& WOODS TRIO rhhstl eanboany yo save = a | were whistling the | oa roar "need "MC wher Ton’ is | PLAYBOUSE waltz, “Take ‘em o! Gowistaln, enng out “a fan, “Uh oly "grinned 3 | ND: 7 UBL A gusted spectators to W Marquis of | revly sy garionat 1 erax ING OF THY CLURE DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS waved his hands helplessly. As Burke the, (ante had_two bases and ‘Ay aia bs MAXINE ELLIOIT'S Suey Sot bet Riway turned toward his corner Papke stru ‘« Snod ome 19 bee ue he out |] New Zork 4 i 3) ti oat, % Hen Hay 3.3 2.40 Im in the face with @ ght | Ry |? W a Flt ee: bi ais! CROSMAN Ake Real this time the crowd was satisfied that) { me ‘agéor aud New York qored | ator SF | niu Bt. Byer im it was nothing more or | than 4 plain » husvine OF’ YESTERDAY’ Ss GAMEB | fake. Papke's actions indicated not i Homphrim and Atte, 204 ot ene mg. ten : | ele “Ooh-ooh” hooted the crowd, pie piece by, betting | tha a to tion bein — eo be hs BaD of mind es, ered Mi El, Beem AUTOMOBILES 4 MOTOR BOATS, ng AUTO ana BARGAINS known, better, 4 Joe, ith ‘ee fe chatmeey Beste believe hari BS Chaypeey, Dicokt, ute, “hick the ‘bean | | cover again, YB rath mo, ny « hurpie a Wace weet SS Rare “when that White warned them again, Burke | | “ftteq!, Oftieert rushed and Papke suddenly came yelled ee e-lunged eet indica re the tle 13 Beate na a ace error a cyt Aare ‘sat clos to the es & A 8 they came up for ‘the fourtn| teem them work. ws e Man ring, hammering him ¢o the ropes end oosaolnd ph datines ake BR ew FELOS—e Tie W SEL A as ama