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ng — BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1911, ° Morris Proves by Geyer Battle That He’s Absolutely Hopeless as a White Hope. best that can be sald of Carl | Morris, the Oklahoma giant, |} that he has Improved since he fought Jim Finn at Madison Square Garden. He beat Jack Geyer last night @t the Olympic A.C. handily enough, it was his bulk rather than his rity as a fighter that brought the recult. Morris has yet to show from which great fighters are rer exhibited little aside from a cer- ON WEDNESDAY gameness that won him the crowd's thy, and when Charley White the bout at the end of the ninth THE SPORTING OBSERVATION WARD 4 ‘You TO JUMP? LONE SOME: age FOOT BALL! THE GIANTS SAIL FOR CUBA SOMETHING FOR THE PROFESSORS TO FIGURE our. IT IS RUMORED J. GULL KNOCKED OUT BOXING 'N ENGLAND, COMING OVER SATURDAY he was as well pleased as any- 14 when he refereed the Morris-Flynn periority. @ ead looking object he retired to his corner in. the final found. His right eye was cut and @lmost closed, his nose was as red and r dolled beet and he was and apparently good for any 4 ; ‘i tent was worse than ordinary,| Until After Their Work- ‘Was apparent, however, th: Morr! oa profited by his experience with out Friday Afternoon. He has learned to stick out deft hand at long range and use somethiag —_ resembling uppercut a. close quarter: ithe snap that goes with the knock- Princeton, (Special to The Evening World.) N. J., Nov. 14. doesn't know how to put a sting ous yer fils blows. He also lacks the all- no fighter can hope to be a suc- Against a real good man he would efforts to the as & White Hope. rope, He’ climbed into the ring. In the were notables that probably saw the inside of the club house . ‘They were paid for their visit ) plenty of action, crude as it was, they left the club house thoroughly that the white race must look offense. v Morris for a championship pos- looked big and soft when he His face still bore some marks . Fiynn battle. He was cool @ould be and talked to friends around slender in comparison when Min te armen om wo LEGErS t0 Practise Bact, teewne'ne'm'ne aces! ~§=@Q@S Much as Possible For Game With Yale yard, fat the stomach, Morris was un- Eleven Won't Leave t Leave Princeton | Mina Hom trod ot formation and made several great goals. Both Wil- son and Duff were seen in togs, but {a not ikely that Farr will be used Saturday. He may be able physicalty, but having lost three w he would be seriously handicapped. gti hloaeh NO LETUP IN YALE TEAM’S the ‘figer team will not be taken away: from Princeton t fighting instinct, without | for the last few days preceding the final {s absolutely lacking; in short, Cs to the custom of previ- maging was t y Yale Field. Head Coach Field an- nounced that there would te no letup TB Marverd undergraduate body until I given a rest with only a light signal drill before the game against Princeton, | ball men at work. Last season the i | here and to have a regular practice on Pia he Bec ate ean, Sood stand: | wrday afternoon. In thid way an extra tn the cab and confine his|day of practice will be gained which can be used profitably in adding the fin- hing touches to the machine which is hoped to humble Ell the following day. Olympic Club was jammed to] This afternoon will be devoted largely the doors when Geyer and Morris|t9 moulding the power of attack and offensive work in general, which has not been mush in evidence since the team has met fast company. The defense, too, will not be overlooked, but this de- Partment is in better shape than the coaches thought the men needed ay after the hard game yal Dartmouth Saturday and only lght signal practice was held and the Baker and De- at drop kicking fon with vary- ringside like @ veteran. Geyer Baker was more sure and but was expected back to-da tha not necessary to use his plays in the | saias Pennsiivania State the coming Saturday game against Brown Saturday, but} “*Practice yeaterd NEW HAVEN, Winants was given a trial at drop to the they were not in general practice. It spirit of the game, and they don't think fhe college sport should be marred by any such questionable triumph. Therefore the Bulldog 1s going to make gure that no victory she may score will be clouded and the step mentioned herein will be taken in both of the coming games. ks’ practi PRACTICE UNTIL FRIDAY. (Special to The Evening World.) NEW HAVBN, Nov. 14.—Hard a order of the GRIDIRON feels aggrieved that no crores | riday, when the tean, would be is forded it to watch the foot- The squad divided yesterday, the first| practice was open on Thursdays and team and the best substitutes eating at| Fridays. ‘This year since the men start- the Quinnipiac Club with the coach while the rest of the squad stayed at the regular training tables. ed behind closed gates the first week in October, the only chance afforded those All the players will be able to, go into | Whose untversity this football team rep- the game Saturday except Baker, and he| resents has been at the scheduled games, may go in for a while though hi , is still bad. Gallauer, Perry and Read Haring suffered no losses by injuries tn Satur knee played on the second team yester- | 4ay's ame against West Virginia University and day. with all of the feet string men who have been on t 0 erippled Hist y ‘i Tom Shelvin was not with the squad, | te, <viek I “toatl team haste nd It was | to hind work, fully anticipati tthe gaine hard 0 wibracticg "30 Anoaelip continued $9 they are belng demonstrated dally in| secret and consist thie ‘usual igual and secret practice and will be used against | formation, and before the vardty plajsrs were sent Princeton, ecrimmage againat the strong scrub team in the his sweater. For a big man his was amply proven as the bout hadn't gone a minute of the Girat round before it was apparent that had learned something appearance before a New Yo: Geyer was Nae or aenktt| Reds’ New Park in Series ce'aignt| March 30, 34 and April 4. bi eect ‘on "Morris. his fac He BY LOZEMAN BULGER, WHERE was little variety to any Morris had the better of it nearly all the way. Geyer showed a willing- to mix it with the bigger Morris, | # he couldn't hurt him. He tried | D¢ such @ short, Jerky upper-cut at close | themselves into shap: sly looking for instructions from | Mice things ner on what to do next. Li juaeg fer’s showing Was fairly good up The announcement of the New York ‘@xth round, but after that Morris's | American Baseball Club's plans for their flor weight and strength bogan to | training trip makes one feel as though he weakened, Here is where | the crack of the bat was about to be Morris ignorance of how to deliver a {| heard and, although the Hilltoppe blow was plainly apparent. One well| won't go into the land where the # directed punch might have ended mat- magnolias bloory until the #rst week tn fefe abruptly in the seventh, but the | xgarch, it iwn't such a long ways mauling, siapping, pushing style of Mor- : aed wearing Geyer down. with the folks and tntimate friends, to look for from every pitcher, beaten a mile. Our large manufacturing and , I aa ied ‘non hcmanen [tie oe ‘movement of christy! purchasing powers enable us to make to your signed against nothing {next year's American Lea Safhewson of the New Yorks ait) measure overcoats or suits for $25.00 that Aba enough to take him off his feet. | ynatead of Athens, Ga. w ry tho third time he faced! would cost you double elsewhere. returned te winner, but ithe thinks his | There Wil be no bolling out done at Io der follow samples; they will speak for themselves, showing entitles him to any considera- ns, Va. Uke there was last year} tion as a r of Jack Johnson's | either. tution he’s a candidate for The Cineinnat! club will be played emprting observation ward, ®galn and the Broadway boys will hav 4 Witte Shaw, the crack American jockey, » ) after a highly successful sea 8 abroad riding for urged home \ man noble- Sea man Prince Hohenlohe, while ddie Dugan, ane r famous American ti { horse pilot, is expected to arrive in this city some time this ik, pre- Paratory to going abroad to ride for Baron Rothschild. Shaw's mounts Won many \mportant stakes, Including the St. Leger, Big Prize of Rer- din, and the Austrian Prize. He will remain in this country until March 1, when he will return to Germany, where he is under contract (o fide wnother season for the Prince, Dugan's contract with Rothschild fails for an $8,000 retaining fee and expenses, and the Haron has the fption te renew it at $25,00, Avsiiei Beimvui wave in permintion to Y ride for the German hor, in. He hap just clozed a successful sonage ‘the Latonia track, * Ho started with straight lefts Broadway Boys Boys Will Open Alanapolis for games on April 2, 8 and 4 and will meet Dayton, champions of the Central League, on April Sand make| 48 that way for years, he could: things hum at Columbus on April 6 and Just left the baseball season of|™ 1911 behind cs. the season of 1912 t heading dur way, and ft won't awful long time bofore thing of what little he knew, He |t@e clubs are in the Souch whipping while the fans son Morris, but when he did the |@t home are reading the accounts of thetr favorites and wondering !f all th id little attenti Boe Nite tile 14 about them will come | of the rounds up to the sixth. A LTHOUGH we have practically Scout Arthur Irwin !s much changed| guessed him when he used his curv from that of last spring, when the|ball for the same reason, Our men team played at Birmingham, Chatta-| studied Matty until they were able to nooga, Nashville and other cities along |*"0W what to expect and the rest was that route on the journey north, times world's champions, ridicules the story, #0 persistently repeated, that the| try to steal our algn measure responsible for thelr oft a One Star Jockey Returns Home, ‘Another About to Go Abroad zaeerrcomnmie| Dans Practically Completed ___ For Hilltoppers’ Spring Training | the honor of opening the Reds’ new ball Park, the games being scheduled for March 30, 31 and April 1, Before the: games take place, though, there will be contests played against Atlanta, March Their Preliminary Work % and 26, and probably one or two other National League clubs, at Atlanta. New wae vrerie Americans to Do} |» The New Yorks will stop off at In- change his tactics. “Matty didn't use his ‘fadeaway’ more because we knew just how he delivered The training schedule as arranged by |it and we wouldn't hit at it. We out- easy. If the Giants had made a similar study of our pitchers they would have hit with better results, but as they weren't up to date in that respect they proved easy marks, The Giants didn't Connie Mack, manager of the two- Going to Provide Against Fluke Victories In Both the Princeton and Harvard Contests. Nov. 14—The Yale football authorities are going to see to it that neither Princeton in next Saturday's game nor Harvard th the battle at Cambridge the following Saturday will score any fluke victory over'the Blue like the Tigers did over Dartmouth Saturday last, so before mado several goals from the forty-|] both of these contests they are going to have it decided that in the event of any such accident the play won't be scored as a field goal. Although it 1s generally admitted by gridiron experts that Referee Langford lived up tter of the rules when he allowed Princeton three points on the much-disputed play, still they think that it isn’t in accordance with the Latest Doi: of All College dines NEWS| one touchdown rare in hele old" position mat West Virginia, were % that ve aay Gilehs tween Joe Jeannette and Jun heavyweight, being clinched to the it ‘he also their vict higan, a altar was en é Soma rest i, appear ‘ai the field ren a although the” wary meat of the squad satineh tae wba Ame the will bo resumed worked “up for The OR Shatse end Practice the 1 ‘ ager of Frankie Bums, i sen ch Ty Gs Gancaranelai, ow says that he will | o man, Til tnake the. D, is prot had’ pI lout elev‘ iss rips na who Dinyed tres’ ches of the het order ted, Mose ° bruises and here are ate dulte Last night @ blackioard talk was hold in the gfe, varity sound ont ngeronts wherety fee feng ‘rtayen, Cit et! this"chty to-morrow on the Black’ Diamond “Bx tole the Glants’ signals in the|{t couldn't be done. erles, which was in a@ large tory Ho says {t 18 beyond human possiblity rs on his team who can tell, after ul study, Just about what an op- s iso's posing pitcher sto dellver, and that in| For style, tailoring and value of. material, we * el 5 when one thinks how soon he will h practice th ti t the knowledge t - ers oa. | to ve baying Christmas premeois tor cal wre vatters, who know then about what| ave every ready-made clothier and tailor Impossible for a man I . n ing Mine to detect the sign ain kind of ball given by tho A H 5 catcher and at the same tn- tant get word to the batsman in time » wise him up, T know that we have received credit for doing this lightning trick, but We are not entitled to it, for we know {t can't be done, If we at- tempted any such scheme the chances ve would confuse our batsmen so that they couldn't hit at all, The bats- man cannot coacher, the t and . 80 that anybody ca surb the statement “The first time-we faced Mi ewson in the recent world's serie he puzzled us because we couldn't solve his methods, We began to hit him the second time be pitched againet as because we had a fair line on what he intended to serve. When we tackled him the third see how time we had he number, didn't steal his signs, we ugh Drow, mntch eaves the Reading "Terintnal atin because they knew | at The etuteuta hare planned ah 4 meet! down to give the team « great een Send for Broadway &|! 9 Ninth Street Ria || Si Robt, BURNETT ¢ Go's London DRY Gin (The dO Wilh Be Wed heepel) Ke mess sinc e 1770 © By George McManus FRIDAY NIGHT ROCKOUT BROWS VS ‘ONE -ROUND HOGAN, 11's A TOUGH STREET AND THE FURTHER You <0 THE TOUGHER IT GETS. Jack Welch Selected Third Man in Ring for Wolgast-Welsh Fight a BOXING SHOWS TO-NIGHT. C.—Leach Cross penne wae, Ad’s Manager Posts $2,500 to Guarantee His Boy Making Ringside Weight. BY JOHN POLLOCK. ‘ACK WELCH, the popular referee of California, has been selected to of- fictate in that capacity in the com- ing twenty round bout between Ad Wol- @ast and Freddie Welsh of England for the Mghtweight championship of the world at Vernon, Cal., on Thanksgiving Day afternoon. Wolgast and his man- ager, Tom Jones, insisted that Welch be the referee, and as he was acceptable to both Welch and the club officials, no, other name was proposed. Immediately after this point settled Tom Jones |¢ handed Tom McCarey, manager of the | j | club, @ certifled check for $2,000 as a guarantee that Wolgast would weigh in at 133 pounds at the ring side and would | also go through with the contract. | The only. thing that ore Drevents the mated be. Flynn, the Pueblo a 'Prancisco, ts | he sum whieh Danny McKetrick, manager of ‘the former, demands, Dan wants $5,000 for tis man | and dim ‘Cotfroth, the ‘figit promuter, does not seem “anxious to pay Uiat amount, This is one of the spectal nights Billy Gilson | das instituted at the Palrmont A.C, Whenever there ‘ia a cand of such local importance ay tat | of. the Tommy Maloney-Leach “Crow progratmine | fonight, Gibson, wil get dalde, Tuesday’ alge” for | 60. 9) ibegn's develop a Putable opponent for ackey “McParland. in teats | Like that of to-night, the cle” of Johinn he Ete te jinaking fea Cc Bekwee 7 i het fore the ater e aha Cy Stew Otles t Sind EDITED BY ROBERT EDGREN SENATOR FRAWLEY IS SATISFIED WITH LEGALIZED BOXING Senator Says New Assembly, Will Not Have Any Fffect on Its Future. / York who 1s satisfied with the At Fairmont A, vs. Tommy Maloney, ten rounds, In the semi-final Phil Cross vs, Alberts, six rounds, At Brown Gymnasium A, A.—Cy Smith vs. Kid Burns, ten rounds. At Royal A. C., Brooklyn—Charley Harry Forbes, At Standard A. C., Greenpoint— Bouts between amateurs, fight ten rounds at the New Star A, . to-morrow night, Young Ahearn and Jack Dorman meet for ten rounds at the Brooklyn Beach A, C., South Brook- coter by, Hugh Mcintosh to fight try rd he lost wo time in atarting for the Antinodes, Harry will probably be matched to a Langt: t ‘As Lantived: has wveral. times the chances "are. that im away if they meet again, the California heavyweight who ia first fight in this vicinity by ‘arland at the Standart A, defeating Jack M of Greenpoint last Saturday nig! match with the other beavyweiphte, {2 snpamely, AL Balzer, Tom orris, Willie Fitzgerald isn’t superstitions any more, fighter, be used to think it 1 to be preesnted with flowers in Like many anoth ing just before atari just (as Willie. was ii the ropes enim oe ed rowers proved anything but pet jem round of te. ten. AAipoe tee, the Fighting Harp, 8, ke, tide oF 198 gt 8 o'clock fot ‘any et ode ana Bar ak 81k JOHN DREW in ¥y. SINGLE MAN lice sem, Rove Olitaki - rt" Apalding (violnish, "Ped Morengo, Oscar Seal ot. Eves, 8. To:morrow, 2:10, rt SO1HST a to Mitinee 4 Bway & Fin ae Miss BILLIE BURKE i PARK fi pau “St, Playhouse 4 0 10 BOUGHT’ ‘AND: “PAID Oi | Wie COMEDY 3 “BUNTY PULIS Tat” ‘SWINGS ea Woettah rr SOME MARLOWE ” ‘Siete Fie HERALD 8Q. frou Ys be a i WIFE HUNTERS of Pun fern, rr rmugleal play int towas re De ligt a ‘ORTH, chads de Co... ie Fowntdy & Mforesrott | HAM HOCK Mf UDR | GRbAT | wilt Bie DR ON X tat i aie eft Lines, ie Eves, 7.45: er’s Musical Comedy THE pine Ga LADY [5 Ww, om Bi 2 ND. WILLIAM FARVUM THE LITTLEST REBEL Te nie F THOMAS hi WISE apt JOHN BARRYMORE Tree {eo at Yeast one man in New manner in which the law legal- izing boxing tn this State is operating. He Senator Frawley, father. of the law, who declared to-day that if the boxing game ie in the same condition when the Legislature reconvenes in January as it is now he will not ate tempt Its repeal. He has reiterated on numerous occasions his intention to lead such a movement should the law prove @ failure in any way. “For @ long time after the law went into effect,” said Senator Frawley, “It didn't have a fair chance to prove its merits. At the outset there were cre- ated in certain quarters condjtions in- tended to make the law appear de- fective, This handicap, I believe, has at last been overcome, and it has been demonstrated that the people of New York want boxing, want it clean, and that most people think the sport ts not criminal when there 1s no hypocrisy, “I think the reason it appears that boxing shows have not been largely patronized of late Is due alone to the fact that so many clubs have been granted licenses. I can hardly say that I believe in a large number of small clubs, but I believe that by the process of natural elimination the number will gradually decrease. 1 belleve an ideal condition would be four or five big clubs, The only trouble with that would be that a lot of people would start the ery that Tammany owned them all “I know of no real movement to te peal the law and I don't think that changes in the political complexion of the Legislature will have any bearing on its fate, If 1t continues to work out as well as at present I will not inter- fere. If, however, some of the pro- moters think they coyid make more money under the old hyprocritical club membership system and would like to @ the present law repealed on that account, as has been suggested, I will ald them in every way, but I won't stop there. I will keep right on and put boxing out of business in New York for all time. If they think they oan pull off @ trick Ike that I will make the game 60 tight that there won't be left any subterfuges and the sport will be done for good, as far as New York is concerned. po a [ere OF THREE OTHER BOXING SHOWS. While the Carl MorrisJack Geyer fight at the Olympic A, ©. was the hig attraction last night, there were three other cluts that held shows, The bonts at these clube resulted as follows: nie Jones minde Gene of @ ten-round bout, key Burns outpotated Jimmy At the Carisie A: C., Brooklsn—Harry Thomas naland defeated Johnny? Moran. the fighting the final contest of ten rounds, ite for Ty Cobb, who complained that he'w wo Malrern A, C., Bronz—Johnny Rey he, iirien Yougit ‘hard en-round be en atthe finish Orleans, im their bout at the Americas ight, id not ertgatot' the, Southersel aad. wes nin @ hard fought «ix round bout, THE LARGEST DANCING SCHOOL, DONOVAN’S INSPECT IT TO-DAY. Open 10 A. M. until 10 P, M.; 4 lessons, 24, 88. ir ot Clreted. is VATE LESSON FREE. Ae ENTS. iY’ site eet [Phones Tie GARDEN or ALLAH Beats op Sale to Dec. BO. 50c to $32, WALLACK’S 43,8 eh 55 5 bef GeonGEARLIS SSiw DiSI 2d, a Mats, 10-150. Nig Berean - eT we PROSPECT tists eth, “MARY JANE’S PA.’ ACADEMY‘, Mins, 10, 20 & 30c THE GIRL, GOLDEN WEST MOULUMBIA ” Smog OLUMBIA i, BU BURLESQUE) sictas br & Moore in| fdas, AB, PABA. Le: ities ei A & Progtor’ vents. rida Mat HAMMERSTEN Sif i ee A and o "4 ___ BROOKLYN AMUSEMENTS, | STAR day ‘and Fulton st F BOWERY BURLESQUENS” With MADA int car GAYETY {prone BIG GAIETY ‘COMPAN Hnecial Fenture—DAtsy ts