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Mist PRoMoTAH! AWD Fo ‘To Box IN ONE OB VO PRELIMINARIES FO be missioner O'Neil Says He Boxer Palzer. . —— , 1018, by the Publishing Oo, (The N York World), MESE be thoublous times! ‘Al Pal- Zer has brought sult against Frank & O'Neil, Btate Boxing » @Bleging that Mr. O'Neil im possession of $800 that really be- Commissioney would secure a match the big lows farmer and Jack Palser cays that «his match Rever made for him, and that he oar = MOST LKELY EVERS'S following Mionday he asked me to ‘ify him at the Knickerbocker Trust Y, #0 thai: he could get the M Faerun’ nen ina tasty and ‘he | Charice Springs 8 Surprise by . Bigot cine ft pat Saying He Is Willing to Play Mie ad," answered O'Nell, “And 1 for Cubs Next Season, him at once that I couldn’t consider hing. I suggested that he ought set oon vay who mantged Jet.| BY BOZEMAN BULGER. He said hid always had a hard Coat ne in the real source of base- wun his mabagers and he'd be his ball news th days. It is hard manager rattlor than take Brady or else.” telling what the fana would do for gossip of the diamond were It not Rae ta ekaron for You could) ror the Cubs, who are making baseball certainly not," exclaimed Mr. O'Neil, |history as fast as 8 hore can (rot, iculous! ply A 1 had openly de-| The first surprise afforded by the ‘that I wobld opose the appear-! Windy City club was when the Cubs’ ot Jack Jobpron in @ bout in any frequent. bickerings of the past season im the State.” culminated in the announcement that «O'Neill's ‘op; sition to the ‘= grid successor would be appointed to Frank pe of Jack ‘Jobrywon in New York is &| Chance as manager. Lage ag ly hn ‘The “Peerless Leader’ had been at antonio aa the helm of tbe, Cubs so long and hea ly succesful that the fans psald hardly believe that the talkative Mr. Charley Murphy would ever part with him, Eventually Chance declared that he had gold all his stock in the club and that he would not be the boss of the team in 1913, Then came the announce- ment that Johnny Evers, the crack second baseman, would be the man in charge of the club next year. The Troy business man has signed @ five years’ contract with the club and if he {s'suc- aoe cessful in his handling of the Bruins AVE what I «wnsider a very excel-|he will probably be on the road to great font suggestions for the State Ath-| wealth, Jetic Commiagt| ‘more new ‘bso- | managing a club will be ~~ rate, Lat it abso-| iim it 1a a wonder that in New York State of any boxer gonvicted on any criminal harge | “ith him. part of thick country, oF, tor that <Now that Evers is on the Job ft is a itm @ convicted orimi- cinch that one of the first things hi in boxing bout, but Bre neppene 1 know of side partner have not been and in the future! wen toxether for the past i» @ clean it to see that it le erate Johnny's orders for a minute, It tl mit that made ti he may be given the opport! “ling the job the Reds’ manage: (aS 4 HAT was @ grand race between If the latest report art the Windy City ak ton Soe on erdinn | Will be a platn player fn the ranks of & expressed his willingness to go South VOULERAW, EpPeareG Defore the] train with the team and work Just ¢ Commission and swore that he] hard as any rec thas tila the Stewart-Smith bout defore| and that !f he doet thts e fe willing to @herift olimbet into the ring. Joh| accept a all a sum as $1,200 for his that he tended to stop the} year’s salary, anyhow, but he is, and at thim to it” w up bobs the: Sheriff with a letter Me eens wane herds Joh ts four-tushing, i tendered a contract by Owner Murphy. t over Joh's gnvasion of the lime- ‘What right has Joh, who isn't for anythin: the calcium? ‘course the Shetiff ts right. He was usy climbing Into the ring to see rms and waggle his cornet, Sutuesnw [RACING SELECTIONS. BALTIMORE, First Race—Honey Bee, Schaller, Geo, 8 ol. ‘Second Race—Brynard, Paris Queen, Montresor. Third Rece-Garth, Toniata, Hen- sparks. Fourth Race—Colonel Cook, War- m, ‘of the minute Fitth Race-Ochre Court, Blue Thistle, Ben Loyal. art rise | Sixth Race-——The Busybody, Spring- was when he rose up and|] mas, Fred Mulholland. firmly, over to earnestly very a with ogg Hibrburger and beg to LATONIA. <y , 8 fo cm. The bell for t! Firet Race—Anna Reed, Carpathte, | Roun: By nevis rang—doxers don't |] Guide Post. ore the bell, Second Race—fam Barber, doesn’t pettle the argument |] creary, Fairchild, Third Race—Gowell, Uncle owman, the Shari sit down at the |} con, Mockler Joh atand in the ring, ana || iitth Race~Itose of Jeddah, 3 nd cin “beat him to it" |] Red, George Oxnard. by act pve, Bets dowa, ge K., Stamps, slut abbuisth nt. iaisliplnidlahicdags ue, ING WORLD, FRIDAY, OOTOsES 28, 1912. (S258) BEST SPORTING PACE IN NEW YORK Be sd Cas ya ecw “EDITED BY. ROBERT EDGREN By VIC/WALSH AND ATTELL BOK TWELVE ROUNDS JOHNSON IS ON THE OUTSIDE LOOKIN’ IN Copyright, 1018, by the Prese Publishing Co. (The New York World) (TLL TAKE ME A LONG WHILE To RE FROM THE BEATING THAT SMOKE HANDED LIKE To GET DE OPPO-TUNITY SOP DRINKS CB ALL KINDS! SoFF DRINKS {! PRICE OB Rounds Reduced to Two Min- BOSTON, Oct, %.—A draw was the de- cision by the referee of the twelve- reund bout between Abe Attell and Jimmy Walsh at the Pilgrim A. A. Trouble deeveloped when Walsh's man- ager refused to let Jimmy box unless the rounds were cut to two minutes. ‘There was a big howl from the fans over this, but bt went. Walsh is sald to have weighed under 1M pounds yesterday afternoon, but At- tell did not, for, according to tho agree- ment as he understood it, he did not have to. Attell was far from being the Attell of old, although he showed flashes of his former cleverness. For nine rounds the honors were his by a big margin. After the ninth round Attell acted as if he had slowed himeelf up. He did not tear atter Walsh the way he did in the Previous rounds, and he did not try #0 often to work both hands on to the body. In the last two rounds Walsh made « Sreat flash and landed some good blows on Attell's face and body. INLY WAY sOHNSON N EVEN SEE a cigur TO OSGuISE. AS SODA MAGNATE ABOUT THE ONLY CHANCE <iOHNSOM Never Accepted a Cent From HAS TO FIGHT ON THIS EARTH (6 TO DISGUISE HIMSELF ASA PRELIM DUB <-- or SOMETHING LIKE “THIS SOHNSON GAVE THE. BOXING GAME THE HARDEST BLOWS IT Ever RECEWED , Tom McaRey OFFERS 4 NEW HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP BEET WITH THE STIPULATION THAT A COLORED FIGITER CAN NEVER. | PENNSYLVANIA ELEVEN EMERGES FROM SLUMP. Oct. %,—The Penn varaity team came out of their slump yesterday and played far better foot- ball than they have shown all week. Though the bull was slippery, there tle or no fumbling and several were worked F JOHNSON HAS Ally SENSE ler HELL stay YALE’S BACKFIELD POWERFUL other touchdown was made by Dewitt, who found no difficulty in ploughing his way down the ficld and then pushing the ball over for a score. have been Iner forward passes ecrimmage against the freshmen. shall and Minds got away end runs and Scored at will on the first-year men. Lou Young was in im first time this week and played his usual brilliant game at who 18 @ funtor, 4s improving daily and ws developing into one of the best ends COLUMBUS, 0., Oct. 2.—Johnny Kil- bane had a@ little workout here in a ten-round bout with Johnny Albaneze, a Columbus boy. Albaneze stayed the full ten rounds and finished strong, but the champion was entirely too swift for him and hit him almost at will, recety- ing few blows in return. HUB RUNNER EXPLAINS WHY ENGLISH AMATEU BODY SUSPENDED HIM! Failure to Run as iAghog scrimmage for Capt. Spalding ing Easly the Best All-Around Player of the Three Backs. s| Flynn a Great reas Indica Star, While Philbin Is Showing Great Improvement. k t.om placeme: obey" Biker from the 3 aiter the freshmen had for three dow: Such tines, when the varsity Is held by a weaic opposing line, show that the ‘Tiger forwa New Haven, Oct. %. ECAUSE of thelr rest the first three days of the week the Yale Vai s are stili| ing thelr formation: far from what they ought to be at| game @ thorough a! tin ear? hasn't come along as for the Brown NEW YORK'S LEADING THEATRES TO ADRAW IN BOSTON utés Each Upon Hub Boy’s Manager’s Insistence. (Special to Tho Evening World.) Albane; Easy for Kilbane. AAMUSEMENTS. immage this after- ‘The general custom is not to sctimmage the Friday before ® game, vw th Howe decided that Reason for Britons’ EMPIRE Bre & foun Be Says Thomas J. it, For the varsity, Waller, H. Baker and| ¢g Doe Nichol Dewitt were again in the backfield, Pen- Hg Wa Stadia and it's Mr. Wendell for @ cozy corner in the dugout Saturda: that 1s, unless he it over to-day, ush” Dunlap wa: ints signal, drill, iTceUNES Tea Buss BILLIE BURKE but not into sorim- assigned to scout make, E. Trenkman also wis out for al duty. Bradlee will play fullback again, three days of rei The varaity bad a forty minute serim- mage yesterday afternoon, the first of the week. The scrimmage was against and three touchdowns the fires by Spalding after by himself, Flynn as he did against Amherst, and Is looked to turn in @ good account of himself. Although Varsity Guard Driscoll is on deck again, Trumbull, his substitute, is still holding forth, in the Iney and loo! like the regular m Trainer Fitzpatrick will take no chinces, yet there Is a chance that Dunlap may go into the Dartmouth CRITERION e Claiming that he has been unjustly treated by the Amateur Athletic Asso- ciation of England, which has suspend- him for not taking part in the games; of the North Manchester Harriers last in England, Thomas J. Hal Capt. Wendell Won’t Be Able sGHNMASON: Thur, & Lit TLE: WOMEN Sothern & ae and Pumpelty; the second by Pumpelly after rushes and @ forward paas and the third by Walter Camp Jr. after the quarter mile amateur champion of America, has just issued the followin gstatement: goes to Princeton urday, Bradley, @ quarterback who sprung into prominence over night, to Play for Harvard To-Morrow. CAMBRIDGE, Oct. 25.—Things will be this afternoon at Harvard, HUDSON ¥;,! CSitubee Rolert Loraive 391 st. A New American has the freshman will direct the Harvard play. Harbison kicked two after the touchdowns and rushes when “I did not take part in the games be- | we cause 1 was in @ hurry to get back PARKS Ainerica and on that account I didn’t ‘sity will run! battle, and the contest should be a close for hal fit throvgh signals for @ short while, giv- one think I was molting any. Goa was back in Boston befcre the meet took place, and I was the most sur- Ketcham failed to kick the other. Guy Hutchinson, Ed Glass, Pop Corey and@ Burr Chamberlain were all on hand. ‘The coaches all watched the backs very in the world when I re- tter from Mr. the North Maichester Harriers notify- Ing me that I had been suspended be- cause I did not start in the games after having sent in my entry. “I suppose the reason for their iN- feeling against me is due to my non. I am willing to face any investigation which Mr. Wilkinson may ur ethe A. A. U, to make and feel con- fident that when I which I recelved from Mr. I will be exonerated from all blame.” 2 she's wish Go Gouint ty Chub ‘na as oneday joumaeat ct | me 0 f ‘iroke ‘tan Jack Britton Wins His. _ Ninth Straight Victory Again cut loose and in the last round had Duffy in such @ weakened con- dition that the latter only managed to last the round out by clinching. the semi-final heavyweight of Orange, N. J., stopped Jack Keating of North Dakota in less the referee stoppin: the one-sided affair after the batter had fone to the floor for the second time. Keating was a lemon, and if Savage could only get such men to fight the chances are that he would never think The development of Capt. Spalding, right halfback, as a vareity football player is @ great credit to the Yale coaches as well a# to himself. Goubtful if a better all-around back man then the Yale captain can be found anywhere, with the exception of be.’ great Wendell of Harvard. Capt. Bpaiiing didn't play football at Yale und his junior year, which was ‘Whew he went out on to the Clever Chicagoan seésadn, ia Easy PERRO i Cutpointing Boston OHIO. O: at DELPRINE! CFFICER 666 Cree ania giie Produce the letters than one round, It {sa surprise to learn that Johnny He He tout Pocus ‘do well to|has signed such @ lon tract. As on ih ‘prohibit Spalding has made a bit the appearance in any| ‘ince of inaking such @ long contract | study of football. een watching Yale te: say there has not been ® man here better able to diagnose the olay of an developed into player, though he will go down in Yale football hi team playe and a lender vers and few combinations have | put Boalding contest he landed at will, Britton started off as tg,| F0ins to put Duffy to sleep. He let fly a right ewing to Duffy's jaw which dropped him to the floor, Yale| Duffy got up quickly he was in a dazed thinkung that ing, did not make a hard at- | tempt te finish him, that Britton ju n jabs to Duffy’ BY JOHN POLLOCK. ACK BRITTON, the crack Chicago Mehtweight, who has been golng along winning battle after! aight victory | cote by easily outpointing Freddie Duffy of Boston in the main event of ten rounds | ‘at the show of the Forty-fourth Btreet | at the next Had Britton possessed | the wallop which wins bouts by knock- outs it is certain that he would have as throughout the vaser of Joe Jeanette, the | Dew a (A eacured Gross ‘prite and. ta gird ngateny oft Joe in @ ten-round bows the Forty-fourth Street it, Jeanette Sporting pil Wi Jehnaodt tov’ cm and ‘ae te oes wil! be to get rid of Joe Tinker, t| the star shortstop. Johnny and his od a) Sporting Club, or three see cour ess the commission | years and Joe wouldn't be able to tol- Leo Ph the sturdy ms middle in attempt will be p Tinker for Mike Dolan of the Philites, Rithough it is possible tnat nity of take ready offered him eas game Quaker chy mi and a fumble Sentch Philbin would Spalding would never even be acc’ Nattowal tndc would be held at Lott "aquses te the surest man in D creas, Ment". 4 Tour |i sie Pcl ‘can selection be vir tte plugsers, | Adlai NEW 1H twigune isntt, eats Cara, but those who all-round men who know the overlook Capt. Spalding. mi Fiynn bids fair to) ¢, gueco into an individual star like Ted 51" Cubs next year, Tt ia said that he has 2d Fall Sale $20 Opportunity Suits and Overcoats We bought for this sale 70 styles—brown, blue, and gray Cheviots and unfinished Worsteds— enough for 360 suits. They will be cut for you and tried on before finished and delivered in four days, if desired. They will be styled and finished as you suggest and guaranteed to please in every particular. Made to Measure $20 Easily Worth $30 to $35 We also bought enough black, blue and gray Meltons and Kerseys—in 15 styles—to make 127 overcoats. The same rule applies to over- coats that applies to suits. They are cut from patterns drafted for you—tried on—fitted and shaped for you. For forty years we have guaranteed ab- solute satisfaction or no charge. After you've been disappointed elsewhere, come Service that is as nearly perfect a sible has made us the largest merchant tailors in the world. Duffy made a good showing in We ce gg arab nd alxth rounds, but Britton | e reat SON EL he has had tn com any with the varsity from the visiting ; Chance, it Is sata, has declared that aw the Sheriff) ney ie no object with him, but that he would Ike to continuo with the Cubs m put him in good ehape for the game to-morrow wi and Jefferson. Philbin, too, seems to have gotten over hig inclination to fumble in the ecrim: the outlook tor No Effort or Expense has Been Spared to make the best little cigar ever. offered to the public. CCADILLY ITTLE CIGARS Wm which no explains | tig i Job as manuser bn ey nit up if This all accms to be too good to be! THER has been playing all the w-ek, as ha Baker, Camp, Beckert « rt and Wise. Tiger Forwards is Still Far rom What They Should Be. rain have rendered ‘ne Varsity Field so sogsy that the Tigers have been practicing on the Freshman Field this week, The wet condition of the gridiron to-morrow dimcult | CHO RUS. OF 100 are based on the ex- perience of 20 years of cigar making— they arethelast word in the cigar making will make the gam tor the New Jersey players, as the ne handicaps them, Yet two days’ practice in the rain has partly prepared them for this, A large amount of dril! in lin old atyle foothall will a Tigers in good vad. Mghtness of the '» Burlesque eres PUss iN BOUTS age was held y terday, the vai Morgan, paler, Morgan, for twenty minute lik Adler, Chas, B, Se eeded tn getting the ball they could fot hold tt long, aa they were unable to advance tt agaln: varsity, on the ot! diMeulty in pushing the freshmen o' the lot for two touchdowns and a field Me- Try them and be convinced. © 10 for 10c Hart, Fourth Race—Joe Diobold, Impres- au the Bherif coming. The Sixth Race—Dore.hy Dean, Phil. els Te Wh a IN THE MERRY COUN: had 48TH ST, THEATRE FF | LIYTLE MI: Wal ro ; THE NEW SIN ELTINGE ek WITHIN THE 1 HAMMERSTENR . Es. 2p 30785 81, RB. Te 81, Dally pat, 25 Pha Many Maint 2. Kalmer’ de Brown, Mosher’ hers Bigeye Lerier asi « Barnes’ ‘Barren, six ouuers, eat Presentation HORTON, ES Or EEN ; RED fora TH LADIRS? MAT. DAILY aa] SAVE. MONTE CARLO GIRLS TEL A68 HEL Ame: rure Tovalsht, ADIES' MAT, DAILY pow JPunEST ZALLAH'S OWN CO. ‘Amateurs To-nig BRONX. LADIES" MAT, DAILY LADY BUCCANEERS Amateurs Thorsd ae 9t.| Sinus, THE GOVERNOR FOOD FOOD SHOW? trp Cooking | Lestures & Denonstrations Fi] it Ht SARAH BERN ficiumbia “ey BROOKLYN AMUSEMENT! a Petty Bol S54 YS SiAS ROKER te EN 0 M MPIRE TE2syi, THE MERRY “Mal DENS” ATA ALMA,