The evening world. Newspaper, August 23, 1911, Page 9

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Warren being the ¢ over George Young and Bu bagher several ye lost his title to Ike W As was stated In th the feathe for many y regard to @» welghts in this division Tommy W nized feat fea under th P when Warren was be in 1887, fh ing a Billy Murphy out fn San Fr ‘The latter t Smith at weight went back to 1s pounds But yhile “Australia ey, Johnnie Grittin being. acclaimed feather-welght cha at 12 pounds the Eastern contingen were boosting Cal MeCarthy him George Dixon as champ class at 115 pounds ' all around 115 pounds, and they somet!m feather-welght divis M5 pounds. Me looked upon as pion of America at 115 pounds until his) Tt was th defeat by George The little color defeat of the conflicting weights and wiped the distinct 122 pound class, McCarthy Revived Old Cless, | tino cai wetshed probadl As will be seen fr the task of tracing the t practically {mpossible. MoCar inherit the title from any one, he #im- ply revived the whtoh had dropp weight division when fighting at a higher weight. champion at ithe original Ainerioan weight as were Wi ané Smith at the higher lmit. Charles, or “Cal” McCarthy, as he |ficiais we dut in Susque’ his entran was Oct. 4, 18 six years old his parents moved ty Jer- sey City, in which pla until his death in 1 training in the use of his fists w quired around the lots of Jer Lake al! of the men who have attained prominence in the r spent with compant kings and bosses ruled | thelr fists He was a very good ba’ write with both hands and was empl dexterous in many other wa At an early to work as an office a for the I pany in Mar up boxing at first, but to cross-country runn member of the club's cross-country team, these amateur ON THE LEVEL. AKEL, ('™ GOIN TO PICK SOFT ONES FoR You. NO MoRE sam LANGFOROS, SEE? YoU GOT ‘To GET USED To LISTEN - IF You SAW A NICE PEACH WITH A BIRD ON IT- HOW COULD YoU GET THE PEACH AND NOT DISTURB JHE BIRD? nside the rarent of the present Amateur Ath- ee etic Union, Cal McCarthy, Who Revived the Amateu Amateur boxing was th 115-Pound Featherweight and a! of the cluns nek ts, The winners of these medals. At that Class, Was a Product of the |i. Scottish-American A. C. of that mateur Jersey City When Amateur‘ amateur boxer Bouts Were the Real Thing in| oi .uun ek New York and the Vicinity. Charles (Cal) McCarthy. | Copyright, 1911, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Worl 66, AL" M'CARTHY was America at 115 pounds, Johnny The title did |! scend from Warren to McCarthy won it by virtue of h the second pound ene Horn- fter Warren had first article on -welght divis was the first recog pion of Amer. Queensbury figthing at 115 pounds. But the nd champ pared from and he | y Island in 18% p n lost the crown to Solly annie al nds, And Smith lost {t to George Dixon the nd Golly Smith were roughout the West as mptons of the world and afte now nts Wer es known nee young cham -welght Dixon at Troy in 1sa1, | cocky lolly Smith {In 1893 recone 8 ut | between the HB and the r m the for ttle down MeCarthy in an unbroken 1! nth pound championsht: out McCarthy was just as m Murphy, Grifin}! think rally known, was not born in y, as has been frequently sald Pa, Tha date this busy ttle en “Cal” was about see the of the serving Gre 6 Met p vacant decided boy's early 3 ace y City, nis boyhood was s whose juve! the might of always r ein the 1 count also hands equally we He stayed with th ttan eighteen years the Scottisi-Am y City, I nber 0 ere were quite a ginity of New that time, Tn | fe Manhattan ther t ts Broad ws A.C, the At Hae Bross . Cy, a t Manhattan in Sas An rooklyn, th Varuna Boat Club and gap the Nassau A. Cu: In Je City, the EP the National the Ring UH eve Amateurs. nents received ime the one time later! 'T to disqualitie non und 8, these « own club, Was a brilliant collection of ra was Pat Cahill, amateur midd ty, who was Victories | very skillful un wrestler . now Chief of Police of c i in Mar every day » had to make a was then on of of tMs store a collection e to be conte annual boxing tourna A display of this ow) Wigan's mon then t the noon hi surrounded yfice boys admire ssing t Billy" Murphy, | a dor or edals wh for in the the Spar sort was the window messenger medals and di able winner In the MeCarthy could always be found. gsier and he then held the| tell his ec long to hi t this welght | Class medal would t fis |the tournament was over | McCarthy had taken up boxing over at onsiderable skill, boy and there- would tel me of his medal, At that 2b und showed e day e frequently plans for he tourname 3 took plac scheduled night Me showed tournament I do not now ut the ofte troub lub's_ license in @ quandary and f nave to bi over the nwich arthy lived | tournament velled downtown and over to were twop and threes and taken upstalr 1 every one was inside the Little 1 came through victorion Third Avene, Boottish-American A. C. and the Jersey | §% paw Ayacors City A.C. There was a Amato ea, the HOOKLYN, Ne Fulton Bt Toa to 110 roadway, wi and 4 As’ as it Was called, (uy -18 Newark Av, i770 Pithin'A venta, yer! Hs Bie SMOKE 15 AN QWEUL DUB. THAT PARROT {MASCOT WILL GET | HIS GOAT SURE, WELL THINK (TS wuent do: ep into] Y until the last month. If it were, the Am: ca; his former a bantam: Caldwell or Fisher e\ day, and Warhop and V: be mbs, Bender or Plank. “On the and|ers had boxer | and I member was proba a-| the case.” | While Hughie classes cht |to Walsh a ng | pitchers—h cagoan was the j-pound |leag was working |Caldwell as a close second. Caldwell is coming and is sure to be a am-| star In case he suffers no accident or up on © 1s way he had to puss | injury. G Spalding & Deems Fisher an In-and-Outer. adway Fisher he deems more kp only occasional games m effectiveness. As Hughie will never forg! the move refuse nt of as it ts ¢ prob- this crowd | W the quick, the 1 By this time rtan Har al! of 1887, On All $25, $22.50 and $20 Suits now All $40, $35 and $30 Suits now is the final fall in prices in the most fashionable clothes of the year. with the The very last 4 drop there will be in these suits this season— because there will be no more suits hy, along try for that on hand to a friend of one to drop. Le eehie on You can wear many of them that the them up to Thanksgiving— the whole going South. admitted by dis pund clase ly, defeat- 150 Naseau® / if (ewrexinc!) alr in a fit of pe rson was on t cond base, which he ance for a play ~ \JENNINGS THINKS HILLTOP BOXMEN IN LEAGUE s part payment alert and dashe made without a se, the Yankeos which the visitors had assailed his It was noticeable that he had just before with a pitched In that case, fused to allow @ Kcored tWo puns as a direct who hal been batting Knight had BEST Tiger Leader Says His Clud Would Have Walk-Over With New York Staff. Manager Chase mind that he would send t who misht, en more damage to the ‘The failure to try out more fully W sible that Cha is one of the few blun at iach Ah one man to fir Hughle regarded Cree as a doubtful ex- as too small to a big league Bert {9 esteemed a more dan © wae no questioning Knight's periment and be ever of any real u hill, and the superior of either which Mullin handed hie watched Ford work Detroit bugs are glad that where It struck Detroit, Aus. t AT the New York H all the rage succeeded in organizing the best pitching staff in the American Teague ts the frankly expressed belief was run on the square,|Of Manager Hughie Jennings of ers. Certain {t Is that rk twirlers have been by all grew so bad|the most baffling to Cobb, Crawford Delehanty & Co., that famed brand of bight sluggers which has been running riot against all other clubs of the lating and pitching through: |Decause they w deliberate ac- nd body x vlso landed somo stiff a Crouse’s Jaw met Berger's rushes with right hand uppercut in wind and Jo t hopes without mselves and it ts only thelr ti which Chase's m. h Manager Chase t cular effort to ste ‘ough at speed, but cut Io spitter as if to play with to bring to bear the same great At the hotel after the game, suffered from fits of dizziness and leaving with they have hai ng the Tigers point where the batsman who happene at the plate found it hardest ‘Tigers got mor little effective was plain that held them tn the p: of his hand and was only working good- naturedly on the lead which his mates ularly when fac Knight was playing great ball ow on the hea the Hilltop star “It's a lucky thing,"* remarked nanager of the Tigers last night, “that » New York pitching staff isn't In the sion of the Athlet a riean League race would virtually be over before it ula start, Just think wh mean for a club like the Tigers, hey able to start a pitcher Ik ry fourth or fifth ughn ai Jespised either. And, Athletics, why, Ford would make the Philadelphia bugs forget when they had virtually sewed the game orge Mullin foi New York Outfield Played Badly. ot Jennings's New York outfiel the outer gardens nearly every Wolter, in particular, wa if the Highland- r 1 Cob ker, what a difterenc was similarly Weak on short line drives. shown up by Craw- elghth inning tn med to deve 4 pro-|make with them. It's Ssut 1 rattling !that they haven't se Wetr and good, clean-up baten fin down at type to pair along with Chase. a good thing for who went over to, Pennant contenders that such has been it is noteworty that outer with a delivery which The oldest whiskey in Amer- fea—over 122 years of in New York. Smooth, pelat- able, mature. STEWART DISTILLING CO. == ae | The Man in the Tower Takes His Last Drop 105 pounds FINAL CLEAN-UP SALE Solid Mahogany . Rocher, 6.50 50c Monthly Very handsomely fin- Lots more in one of the rt viding, “tt was| J] OF later still if you are And you can carry them over and break in a new Spring with them. Wecan't. The rules of the game wont let us. It would be as embar- rassing to us to be caught with one of these suits next Spring as it would be to the ordinary man to be caught ” |W. L. DOUCLAS | |I *itnout esuie. Lape ceat AR and om: $3 $3:89 &84 SHOES Carthy | For style, comfort and ervice W. L. Douglas shoes are just as good as other makes sold at higher prices. numb Stores In Greater New Yorks clubs tn the vie | gy Sasa Street Tt Hrowdivas, cor. 8th St, Simple to op at very little expense. And made expressly for the New York man. Mixtures, blues, serge and flannels still ample in variety but not too great in numbers, It is a fashion event for the man that lies in wait or the man that's borders with draperies, &c No charge for measurir $1 Monthly Table, $12.75 Everything included ex- cept the evening clothes. Imported and domestic weaves. Counterparts of the things the exclusive tailors—not the manufac- turers—used this year, a little late, man that can use a good thing at any it's a feast wont come back. It's the last drop, Weber c0 Heilbroner t 3 Stores marked with Star extends to 6 ft China Closets, , of every description. ‘Downtown | Park Row and Chatham Sq 193 to 205 Park Row Cloth 1 2 757 Broadway 42nd and Fifth Avenue® 58 N 369 Broadway 1185 Broadway Crouse-Rerger | rower on the uit Rives Teas GA IE Bout in Boston (or tine SON ive' nee socanton P | his opponent was Lawrence. Only one | Lawrence player reached second bese. Resucts in Draw) \a*:0" 2, 20% ceacned second tase ruck out five players, Both teams ayed an err “s game Fall River of 2 to 0 tn the an- (Special to The Evening World.) | BOSTON, Aug. 2—After twelve hard | sually quick time of one hour and nine- rounds of boxing, the bout between| teen minutes Crouse of Pittsburg and Billy Be; [ker of Wildwood, No Jy WC (he AT00TY | i a. | A., was called a draw, Berger was In grand shape and bestde had many | | pounds advanta also In good condition. Be yne stiff Jabs on the face, and thelr countering with both Hands on the Jaw /My present stock that mean a on Crouse, ho waa} Inceming Fall Garments 1 landed have forced clearance prices on rd and of and soveral tin > | Moe Levy FALL RIVER MAN PITCHES =| (My Only Store) HIS SECOND NO-HIT GAME,| 119-125 Walker St., New Yorts ( ‘or IN BUSINESS WPERTHWAT] New Harlem Store 3rd Ave. @12Ist St. 2212 to 2224 Third Ave. This Great Building Full of Everything for Housekeeping Acres of Floor Space What Our “Liberal Credit” Means Old Reliable We offer the easiest terms consistent with good ‘ goods at low prices, and we are always glad to give Sewing Machine extra time in cases of sickness and loss of position. We care most about selling goods in such a way $16.48 that customers come back again, We have thou- sands of customers whose parents and grandparents | Guaranteed for bought from us during the 104 years we have been § years, fitted with in business, s merked in plain figures—no extras and no 10% discount if you prefer to pay cash, newest appliances. Drop. Head. Smooth running, Free demonstra- tion at your home, Floor Coverings in Fall Colors WS Enamel” J A new Rug or Carpet will work wonders for any Our stock is up to date a Enormous illuminated revolving racks ena select Just what you want from 25c J Y mattings In a very few ht, open space for matching carpets and ANY =) vy ; ng, Mining or laying. You room Take fe Miia —) ke your pick, you to thousands of samples of Wardrobe Cowperthwait | Chiffonier, $38.25 Sanitary 75c Weekly Bedding a complete outfit of even more important tn hot weather. We make it In ther mahogany or quartered oak, our Own factory under per- | sorts of things designed to save fect sanitary conditions, It's r and money worth a good dea! to be sure ressers, Chiffonters, Wardrobes, of what you sleep on, Yet Toilet Tables, Cheval Glasses, Shav- our Sanitary Bedding costs 1g Stands, Tables, Chairs, Rocke no more than the ordinary ete, galore. kind. "™ Cowperthwatt & Sons

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