The evening world. Newspaper, December 23, 1911, Page 7

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1911 A BIG YEAR FOR PRINCETON CORNELL AND PRINCETON [IT’S ENOUGH TO MADE HISTORY THIS YEAR |g IN WORLD OF ATHLETIC hn Paul Jones, for Ithacans, sand White, for Tigers, Stand Out as Individual Stars Among College Men—Rec- ords Made on Track and Championships Won by Colleges This Year. nell (6)—Track, Rowing, Cross- ‘e Yale (4%)—Swimming, Golf, Shooting, Gymnastics, Tennis Princeton (84)—Basebatt, Football, Wrestling, Tennis (tied). Harvard (1)—Lacri Columbia (1)—Basketball. Pennsylvania (1)—Cricket, ()—Assoctat! HE curtain hes just dropped on an unusually interesting year in the collegiate ath- work, a year replete with un- cted happenings and sensationa) levements in all able departure*by the big athletic versities from a policy of conservatism in athletic relations and several contests ‘which were elther new or resumed after lapses. The trend of affairs also promige of future contests which be welcomed by the public. It {s rumored that Princeton rowing authorities, after the excellent showing of the Prin: are contemplating sending @ crew to Poughkeepsie next summer, and the ad- vent of the Orang certainly add interest. The possibility of Harvard turning to {a also being discussed and @ four-mile race between Corngll and Harvard next season is more than & Possibility as it is sald that the Crim- @on will attach more importance to this race hereafter than it does to the Yale Sam Hildreth’s Stable Is Biggest Winner in 1911 Compared with the winnings of previous yea: can horsemen on this eide of the Atlantic this year is but a drop in the Sam Hildreth is the biggest winner horses captured. The finish of the first three s' in 1911, 8. C, Hildreth heading the list branches of 1911 will go down in ‘ath- te history as the year in which Inceton defeated her great rival, ‘aie, tn all four major sport en- unters between the two institu- triumphing in basoball, track, ing and football. year just closed marked ‘the re ia of Princeton to intercollegiate wing cireles, after an absence of five years from contests of kind. The Orange and Black Oaremen made a most auepictous re- entry, too, defeating Yale with their maiden crew and giving place only to the champion Cornell eight in a threecornered race Lake om May 20. ‘The laurels for the year go to Cornell. ‘The men from the high hills about Cayuga Leake have been putting forth gigantic efforts for the last five or aix Years in every branch of sport and record for the past year is a tribute to clean athletics. 1811 Cornell has not only won more championships in various aports than ‘@ny other college or university but she hea made a better record in this re- yapect than wes ever made before. five different branches the Ithacans supremacy beyond semblance of a doubt and in a sixth, nagnely, baseball, they made an excel- it record and have some claim to a title whioh the powers that be found It Very diffcult to award, owing to the Feversals of form of the leading con- ITHACANS MADE WINNING FIVE TITLE Cornell's five championships are traak, rowing, hookey, cross-country fone! The track championship ie Ny creditable, owing to the fact thet ell the events at the intercol- legtates were well contested and the ealtdre of the performances very high. ‘The rowing champtonship ts, of cour: story, as is the cri Championship, it being the twelfth con- Beoutive time Cornell has romped to vietory in the latter event, In the matter of the crew the coach- eg of Courtney was more than ever the predominant factor, as the Corneli would undoubtedly n eight last year, Incidentally, on Carnegie the money made by Ameri- & paltry $12,755 1s all his exactly the same thele wonderful with Richard T. Wilson second, and August Belmont third. The winnings of Richard T. Wilson reached $11,666, while August Belmont, Chatrman of the Jockey Club, rolled up a total o $11,500. The best individual winner was Hildreth's Zeus, which won $4,260 in purses that Included the Bowle Stakes, Eutaw Handicap, Stafford and Oriole Handicap, all run at Pimlico, August Belmont $3,865 as hia total. Watervale won the Preakness, Towson Purse, and Driving Park Handicap, also run at the Pimfico course. Th Wilson was the two-year-old Penobscot, which earned $2,000 and was winner of the Walden. Cubans Only Fair Ball Players, Says McGraw Upon His Return Here speed. We found it, however, even if it was travelling at a fast clip.” Watervale was second with best winner for Mr. PRETTY SOON A-THOROUGH: BRED IN THIS COUNTRY WRC _GE A_RARE SIGHT. — HISTORY BY $12,000,000 Worth of — State Racing Property Worse Than Useless BECAUSE the Anti-Botting law bas rendered racing but @ memory in New York State millions of dollars’ worth of choice real estate ts to-day worse than useless—worse than useless not alone because It ts standing abeo- lutely idle but also because ft carries with It heavy taxation, It is further worse than useless because the fact that it ts standing idle means a quarter million dollar cut tn the annual revenues of the Btate. An official high tn the Jockey Club to-day gave almost $12,000,000 as his con- servative estimate of racetrack property in the Empire State. ‘The approximate values of the elxht tracks that are fast becoming weed-overgrown, rotting ruins Belmont Park, $2,200,000; Gravesend, 2,700,000; Sheepshead Bay, $2,000,000; Aqueduct, $1,000,000; Jamaica, $800,000; Saratoga, $150,000; Empire, $1,500,000, Total, $11,350,000, Th ably amount to quarter of a million dollars, W! also got another quarter of a million, representing & per cent. of the earnings of the tracks, so now the public treasury’s income from King Horse is just cut in Dark-Hued Diamond Artists Bad Losers, Too, According to Giants’ Leader. John M. Ward, who is the new prest- dent of the Boston Nationals, !s back here after completing the details about the reorganization of the club. club will train in Augusta, and tho mes already arranged are with Wash- ington on April 4 and 5, and with Bal- timore on April 6 and 7. Ward does not believe in extensive Southern trips in the spring, and says that the Boston club will not be South more than t weeks at the longest. “We will tr: young players,’ trying to buy star players from clubs, because no club can afford to dispose of a star player. that Boston must build up a team of We have a Kood foun- dation to work on, for there are a num- en on the team nothing in trades, for any time a trade is offered it is t somebody has some- FTER a successful campaign of baseball In Cuba, John McGraw, manager of the Giants, six of the players, and Umpire Rigi who officiated games on the little island, have returned letory due to the excellent form the taught them, hockey team, which did not suffer do- feat all ceason, was an infant in the Intercollegiate Hockey 1 to build up a team of he spoke of as follows: McGraw says the Cubans ai losers, that they only in its second year a of thet organization. The fencing team Which carried off first honors achieved the distinction of being the first com- bination to defeat the Army and Navy with the foils. know little of inside thinkers, but fast young players. poleon, accompanied by Third Baseman Charley Herzog, came rail from Key West, while five others of the players arrived on the steamer Morro Cast! In this party were Josh Devore, Larry George Wiltse, Arthur Devlin and Arlie Latham, They all said they had a fine time In Cuba, but were glad to get back to New York for Arlie Latham made a big hit on the Island, for the Cubans never saw his comedy on the base lines before. Latham jearned a few quips in Spanish and chattered them at every oppor- ber of fine bat start with. There Big as this common loss to the racing interests and the public treasury lovers of racing more keenly feel the loss of horses, trainers, Jockeys and owners that once made this country one of the greatest racing na- tlona on earth. They feel this loss not Merely because real racing has through thelr departure practically disappeared (while betting Dut more because they see in st the rapid decline of the American thorough- Only @ few days ago Gen. Wood declared that the problem of furnishing cavalry remounts is becoming @ very serious one because of the disappearance of racing and to-day August Belmont, President of the Jockey Club and prob- ably the best known racing man in the country, echoed and confirmed the state- ment, saying: "Gen, Wood's statement to Congress of the harm done in the army in the matter of remount horses for the United | 08! States cavairy, by the crusade against racing in vartous States of the Union| 4 milion and a half dolar coming from neede no confirmation. “His claim that our best thorough-| of stdllions were exported, Thia would | breds are being exported in great num-| be all right, racing men point out, tf it) bers as @ result of this, {8 another mat-| Were @ regular export business, but it On this question he cannot state | Ht was on the track, however, achieved the greatest It was the Ithacans firet Coach Moakley de- pretty certain t thing up his however, the Corneti athletes victor? since, 1908. veloped « well-balanced team, in every department of track and fleld ‘work except the sprints, but, the work of Jones and Berna, fn the half mile and the mile and the wacond in the two-mile event were the predominant foatures of the meet, as fa fact they were of American track history for the were broken at the Cambridge classic Connte Mack, manager of the Philadel- has signed Roger Sa!- mon, @ left-handed pitcher, whose home 1s in Newark, N. J. He is twenty years ol4 and is 6 feet 2 inches tall, baseball experience has been confined to academy games. He entered Prince- ton University played in a few clase games. go South with the team in the spring triumphant), ‘Five records Twelve other players, whose homes t, went to New Orleans, ‘ated and went to their | Louis ‘The Giant squad | before going to Toledo from St j Announced that he had obtained Rich- ard Kinsella of Springfeld, Ill., as chief scout for his team. had come to terms with Arnold Hauser, jortstop, who threatened to become a Manager Roger Bresnahan of the St. onal League Baseball team, It {8 seldom that one year brings the setting of so many homes for Christmas, is due to assemble here late in Febru- ary ready to take the spring training trip to Texas, Groundkeeper Murphy 18 already at Marlin Springs with of landscape gardeners getting the bare- ball park ready for the coming of the Nationa! League champions. Manager MoGraw said {t was a fine trip and one which all the players en- Joyed. The campaigt a @ lot of gyod for th ments were made on the track by colleso athletes which are eepectaily worthy of mention. Nov, 8 R. L. Beatty of Columbia Uni- vereiy put the 16-pound shot 48 feet TM iach: ‘wo other achiev Bresnahan sald he beating the Intercollegiate je this year by J e other was the performance of the Cornell four- mie relay team at Buffalo on March 3. The quartet couched | and consisting of Mi and Jones ran fi ™ the remarkable time of 17 min, 43 3-5 ca, establishing a world's record, AND WHITE STAND OUT LEGE ATHLETIC WORLD. name of J. P. Jon pane bound up With the track his- that of Sam White August Herrmann, Chairman of the d/that major league over the formation here of an outlaw baseball league, put teams tn Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, Brooklyn, Baltimore, Wash- Reading and Richmond by Jack Moakley . Putnam, Ber- ar miles indoor younger player: and they will be in much |than last season when they begin the spring training. was the most successful that any base: States has made on ats won nine out of | the Havana m five games out of alx and trim: ming the Almendares team four out of with plans to ball team from ¢ anid Herrmann, ‘Tf our culls and horses of ready sale} contention {# borne out, too, were leaving 1 have hope and courage, but, unfortu-| foals has fallen over 60 per cent, dur- | ing the present year, lout could win him the verdict, Juarez Best Racing Prospect on Continent —_—_— Jany but the dyst-tn-the-wool optimist, | Manager Wir of Cornell 's Charlie White, the boxing referee, 19 \the “Wall street man” who was award- ea the New York franchise in the new | United States Basebal) League at | meeting on Thursday night in the Hotel White was present at ing, though the promoters refused to make his name pubilc. men elected to the Hoard of Directors of the now league. JIM STEWART KNOCKS OUT WHITE IN TENTH ROUND, After taking conisdarable puntshmen: Sailor White, the > was knocked ¢ t of the year tr Princeton is with the season on In fact these two men 8} nately, the exodus is largely composed and one more racing as we have had in 1911 sult in a depletion which Is fiti by Gen, Wood to be a national calamity. New York State furnisied racing of @ high order and on a scale commensurate | with, and demanding, performances by horses of the highest class, “The turf of this with the turf of Ei “These Cubana, ir ball player: sald MoGraw, “are 14 ‘They are as fa as lightning on the bases and they can throw to beat the band, picked up all the knacks of flelding, but | they cannot ba! ‘ot only that, but they do not play sensations of Won the mile in the Princeton a yivania dual meets, took first place in he ¢ross-country championship and at {ntercollegivte track championships! plished new Amer ention is given to bratnwork on ‘lato was on a par form the manual | Pt opean countries in and the alse of ity stake thuk proving part of the game 4! keen, crafty game here is at the half, the mile end leaving little douot in the minds ot followers of track athleti headwork we see in t issing. They know norh- and our horses, able to out-trick them most of the t!me, our highly effictent In an opposing pitcher they look for! peed, and, usvally, they hit a faat ba jbut when they teries of a curve they churn the alr ve fadeaway wi m, and they were the ball when he sent distances should the occasion ‘for nine rouns Jersey heavywelgnt, by Jim Stewart, the Brooklyn fixie fin the tenth round where realiy importa: abroad, even if our tance runier Moakley has produ Neit fe very probable that the ful ing even greater perto n he has already fam Warite’s work o the same stellar y great purzle to th es to the eoun- ata loss to fin twice In this reund “But I must say a £008 word," satd| Wallop that put him aw The bout took place po is @ fine pitcher, sure|ican A, C. of Brooklyn and attracted a enough, wit as fast a ball as you'll eee | good-sized crowd of fans, He burns it over ike @ rifle} no match for Stewart, who outclassed’ by the departure of stock 1s also tre- ball and depends entirely on bis great him all the way, setting the! of rvard and Yale e1: layer was the man of the hour, a. fore the Amer- runs won both gamen for the Jer- ites, besides making White the foot- MW hero of 1911, ‘The year just closed brought a notice- Whit was) tracks, During the last year 2,000 Daa. ee ntedincis tieapmecmnaneneenn aaa THER BVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2 NEWS OF ALL BRANCHES OF SPORT MAKE EVEN HORSES WEEP. Copyright, 1911, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World). 1 pil 000,000; Fort Erie, taxes on these properties prob- racing flouriahed the State All This Money Wasted In Idle Race Tracks. Value of New York race tracks that ane now lying prey to weeds and decay: Belmont Park ‘$2,200,000 Gravesend . Sheepshead Bay . 2,000,000 Aqueduot Jamaioa Saratoga . Fort Erie Empire - ” 1,600,000 ‘Total, eee 811,950,000 were sent abroad, Figuring a| rage value af $500, this would | mean $2,000,000 gone from the country, 8’ worth of such @ high q@uthority,} foals have aleo mone for good, while | probably half a million dollars’ worth | M I draw no ROBERT EDGREN ~ PRRY CHRISTMAS, ALL YOU GINK# AND GOOKB! There is honey in my heart for each and every one o’ yen an’ holy aalson, #0 there ts. Ine on this greeting. No matter what I may have gut print about any of yor during the tumultuous menthe agone it te forgotten at this writing, pipe v-tit occasions capt « the oa An’ Squared | a real White Leach Cross does more fightin’ an’ less stallin’, that somebody old home town, Pilly Gibson, the MoMahon Kide or Gil Boag or 07! on a match between Mike Gibbons and Packy MoFarland—oh, yal, yot, alse wurra Gibbons ‘May Box Ray Bronson for Welterweight Title (Qpectal to The Evening World.) Wis, Dec. 23.—There 1s @ strong probabiiity*that Mike Gibbons, the St. Paul boxing sensation, and Ray Bronson the globe trotter, will come to- Bronson recently made clam ‘eight championship be- cause Jimmy Olabby, the hoider of the had declared ¢ middlewelgh' considered Gibbons could not make the ‘weight of 142 pounds at 3 o'clock, Now, rom his home tn 8t. Paul, or at least his manager, Eddie Mike can make the to the welte Gibbons wires weight, and When Bronson heard that would make the welght he wired “T. 8. Andrews, = {I¢ Gibbons will make 142 pounds, arrange match for weltorweight ola: pionship at New him ede bet of $500."" No Atteil-Houck Go at Pittsfield (@pectal to The Brent PITTSFIELD, i Sap bout which was to ha tween Abe Attell of Ne Tommy Houck of Phila the Twentieth Century A. off because tho to raise the pur: Will give 23.—The een put on be- w York and delphia before promoters were unavle ‘so of $700 which was to been| the for his appear, Tho club had only $107 to! The crowd of 300| nd was then pay the guaranteo, waited until 11.30 a In the prelimin: fin of Albany won tho die McDonald of New Tommy O'Toole Meets Easy Mark (Bpeciai to ‘The rena Wi PHTUADELPHIA, Doce 3) the Port’ Richm welght, stacked up against proposition tn Darny Moc sington, at the Nonpareil a,c. a falrly large crowd, McCabe dis. | ary Darkey Grit- deciston over Ed. 2. — ‘Tommy ond feather. another easy ot have a’ chance and was @ mark blows, but may weather the storm and lasted the O'Toole was taller than MoCabe and had |a Yonger reach, - Manieil Defeats George on Coast SACRAMENTO, Cal, Dec, 3.—Frank jantell of Pawtucket after the second round for O'Toole's won Geolsively twenty-round before the Buffalo Was knocked teonth round | down twiee, once in the kknockdowns came during the last thi is not @ natural trade, and in their breeding on any large acale, Thotr fact, that the number of registered EL PASO, Texas, Dec, 21.—If the past three weeke of racing at the Juares ltrack ts any Mne to go on, it must be | gratifying to Matt Winn and+hts assoct- ates who have worked so hand to fur- nish lilgh class sport and attract the! Mberai patronage thas the club now en- Joys. To go back to the winter of 1909, } o track was fl pened keen ad to be met with, for the kK and the Jacksonville en at the height of thetr he same state of affatre existed last winter, Notwithstanding ‘vhis outlook, same being enough te deter seconds of fighting, ‘The first was avored with a left hook to the jaw and tho| opinion points to the ultimate end of | second with a ristht to the heed. Geosnn put up @ kame fight, but Was outclassed | by the] in @ majority of the rounds, roulizing that 4 knock-) | for this m " Juarea was bound to cc | there t¥ no roo, Oakland and eon abliterated from t forts of the reform now being mar question of ng Will be a dead while before ra , With Juarer ractng ts a different propo sition, for the clud races under govern ment license, having @ concession that has seventeen years yet to run, 4 HT phsatoian, Since the last time ould Senta came down the ohimbly and tho shteamin’ hot noggin o’ punch in his mitt there, have om which T have handed a polthogue to those who, within me In the front row. the faireminded nelghbors’ childher, deserved it, but it like plying n the sate of my unruly boy—It hurt me more than it bleas you merry gintlemen, as Toby Volin, the Tm Here's hopin’ that the boxing game prospere, thet ps purty quick before Johnson dies of old Tom O'Rourke opens a bottle with Harry Pollok, that One-Round Mogan the fame of his name, that Knockout Brown learns @ ittle more about of that Dutch brain of his in the ring that Battling Nelson be BPUTY REGISTER JACK LYONS | the plan to have flashlight D got into a sociable wrangle with | Phere and reporters there, but the it Maurice Stern, an eminent | editors thought Lyons was! joshing: hol the Silken |4dn't send ‘om. * Dr. Stern Wing, all New York | aitpped on a @woater and 4 Athlette Chu avout the | Sient Broadway. The automobhe Sele athletic possibilities of an ordinary pro- |iowed behind. At Union Square he! fesatonal / decently but who does no lives | climbed the wire fence of the oa with wae ace ‘ning. Dr. }intent to cut acroms lote. Stern allowed as how he himaelf could | grabbed by a policeman. walk from the City Hail to Broadway | began to charge foul play, col¥aston ama ind Bightleth street fifteen minutes. bottles and $50 on It. Professional G him. It wil out out @ lot ef ac): T a sion only But rty |him! He tland the 1 Jagres loarned tt last nly the ot Back.” He @ and he talks front hill and down age | Burne | Payton | Morgan ant \@ fine bunch to Cee He zee SAW A HHADLING In the papers | Dr. St and congenital friends. nd every time | had a So, Mesere. Dixon O/Nall, please allow @ decision tm these affairs. Bt only just to the pubic, and it will be better for the boxers end their «rguments and clear the way to get an explosive, non-rabble-influenced line on the merite of the boye who their way to red automobiles and planolas, And I think Cross can beat Brown if Cross will fight all the way through. HIS 19 A PECULIAR PROBLEM tho rest of their ttvest? Have back when they die? It's odd to have a dog that ta are the best that could be obteined hanted some- to represent their reapective leagues: thing. Yours anxtc TRUTH SERBKER. Are you sure the cat r he lose only one of his lives? ever belong to any member of Comp- Prondergast’s Corrigan's family? might easily account for exaltation on Uttle dog Two Spot's part. jorous tn Its tone expres If the cat died © there Is @ tough time ahead for your dog when ghosts of the feline begin to get busy with him, troller The Joy of lox . C. S—Wolgast fought Moran,| team would win out tn @ ee Knocking him round, remembe: growing whisk: he's that old, » Wolgast and Hogan go to {t again, 7 his feed wh And well f kn ym tt, ‘That Hogan He's handled |hin work wince G!l Roag took hold ¢ the divvtl ni | to-day In an hour and | tow political intrigue. Lyong appeased They bet @ couple of | him partially by using his to ‘oate the cop. But the Doo dignity made it neces jing dire things over the a {ary to have the test made at night. | route. F At about midnight Tuesday rfrueee was taken to the front steps of the City | margin. Thon, after hiding the 6) in Hall tn an automobile with Jack Lyona | hia kick, he sald he guessed even @ It was part of I pontictan could be an honest sport. “ REPTINGS, MESSRS. O'NEIL AND DIXON, Commissionaires de : Allow’ me to present to your notice, kind sirs, the unseemig of newspaper decisions t Knockout Brown at the Empire Wednesday night, Out of fourteen daily next day seven cave the verdict to Leachie, four gave it to the ittlp ing Purnpernickel, and three, having no strength of mind, took the eafe and called It a draw, although their stories favored Brown. One writer westt convulsions because K, O.'a bum lamp was again put on the frits daye after Misther O, R, Hogan had raised a hill on it. For that parently, that expert gave the honors to Cross, Well, tf T got the loser elma. houre, #0 I would. But when the shades of night began to show around either of my optica the fellow that caused it would be hedfing the bdirde warble an Re wan being borne tearfully to the emergency ward, It’s funny that the sight of a arip of rosepink from the end of « boxer or an artistic abrasion on one of hie peepers will sen@ some eo-ealled sports into eupreme spasme of hysteria. And that was the case Cross go! . Cross had lttle on Brown eave the heel of the left stove that emauled js ready to match up at| nose of the Dutchman, Cross stalled at every opportunity, while Brown Jamming away from ‘bell to bell, taking whatever wall Gibbons | always there with a return. On pure aggressiveness, gameness and orang Dr. Stern won by twenty it followed the engagement of Leach Creas ei@ i ji 4 lue eye I'd be tn the at once | to take the pills he had it all over Cross, And, believe me, Cross wasn't Milwaukee--| go very much in the elxth round, as some experts think, A rip of Browa'e jo the kiacus had @ lot to do with that play acting. Crosa showed in the seventh wasn't enough to even up the 2 if § I in paychic phenomena that may| And speaking of too much in the be solved some day: ¢ gab, I'd like to see some of = WURRA WURR. letter-writing gulld cut out their me T am superintendent of a down- | farious game. I wish Ca sig Fe town t pvand the Mayor's typewriter. above bon to be a common scold. Te the | Misnus ‘and myseit and ttle do« | 4Ucking stool with it! Yeat . Spot went on the roof to get nes ance) cat darted across OT EVEN IN THE or the roof, with Two Spot after him, WINTER does the baseball on The cat took the big Jump, but Two take a rest. He's wound up Sor Spot the parapet. I [ati time and never runs down, But he's looked down and saw what was once lan Interosting part of our spol pd @ cat spread out on the sidewalk. lang white we can't cure Mi ting: % Two Spot also got a lamp at the dure him. He: onn'ee im We On aight. It must havo turned his head |have been picking world centhen seen or set something working wrong In- |eyer since the season cloned naan sido of him, because ne Keepa twtst- | comey acrosm with this: ing around tn 4 clrole, yowling oe a3 banatiee, and he wont leave me night | WURRA WURRA; or day. Do you think he ts hanted? I have picked two teams, one come | the National and one ¢rom American League, and I think giey” ei AMERICAN, Natl Chase lly Qed? Did rind Did he d Magistrate) Se yont latter, It Thomas Street ; elwht! manager of the American John MeGraw at the head of National team the American i if ! rice of eleventh} games. What do you think of the in San Francisco on July 4 last, | teas and whom would you ploks at fa| they were to meet? Below is my his knees) Selection for an all star team: T'd like to see} Chase, 1B; Collins, 2B; Wagner, | 9S; Baker, 38; Cobb, L. F.; Jacke C.F; Schulte, RF c as, C.; Rucker, P, uard, Mathewson, P,; Walsh, P.; John- Pr A READSR, WURRA WURRA Young Mr. Frederiok Tanner, the He} Republican leader of the Twenty. nt Assembly District, uttered hi strange words 0 @ otlver olgarette © Presented to him by his followers last night: “ram a progressive, but I am net insane." In all pity and sorrow I move for Corge| the appointment of a convmiasion, Danay| New York, Dee, 22 LD. well, tan't that| Mfotiona granted, and let the on peg posts for! case be marked People’: Exhtbit A.*

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