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‘ / THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1912. HANCE TO COTHAM COLUMBIA ALUN) |Beerbohm Tree Leans to Rags, BRINGING ( AT BASKET-BAL Distinguished rig Actor-Manager, ‘ : : ‘ \ tae cos Spite of His Pageant Makes This City Pivotal Point OF Goat Is Scored in Last Minute] Plays, Admires the American League Circuit, So of Grand Stand “Rebels” of Drama and Should Add Thousands to Finish. Raises the Ibsen Flag. Season’s Profit. fervor —— B" 8 camel's hairbreadth the Co | J), ce lon vii ee Ane fumbia alumni basket 1 closes Plan to Come MAN BULGHR. | CHANCE, $20,000 SIV Menutba tie Caray arc ntvy Next HMB coming ot Frant Chanss to] STAR, MANAGER line univeraty gvmnneium to tne metty | €0 This Country be the Highlanders means more to] OF HIGHLAN DERS, °*}.,'0 "6 the final result being in Jom! Seqgon and Appear uotil the last fortytive seconds of pla: baseball throtizhont the country and! when Howant Osterhout, the lanky! @ Shakespeare F tival to New York in particular than any| silisiminmieieininieintelaietoteloleteleies centre for the “old grads” aggregation, ° an it succeoded in flipping the sphere through Five Plays. ove since the American league wae! 4 X lthe mesh for the winning points when of ay organized. | + + Roveris, the only freshman among the It means tit the Highianders,| } [varsity subs, failed to guard him. déopised in the past, are to occupy | With the tab 9 to 7 againat them, the | 40 important positio:: in the coming! five went onto the floor at the opening) campaigns for championships. It! lof the second pertod determined to pick \up in points, and after three subst! means that the Amerttan League , tutes had been placed succeeded in run- magnates are determined to make} 4 + |ming up the score to a@ tie at 15 to 14, ‘i ° when Reynolds caged a lucky goal after New York a pivotal point in baseball, a ad dash GoW tie Boor: It means thousands of dollars in | Charlie Lee, right guard, tonsed « (ree profits to every team in the American ‘throw, and the chalk marke stood 16 to League. It means that the Giants (15 in favor of the varsity. With only ts a ' “old grade” are to have a real rival for baseball Dedsan cea Goies: SOM the iar | honors and patronage in Greater New York. down the boards filpped it into the wait- For ten years now ¢ ling hands of Oaterhout under the bas- Highianders ih 5 * ket, who scored the goal and thereby a have experimented with managera in - Y y final win of 17 to 16. the hope of digging up some one who : ALUMNI FOUND STURDY OPPO. could'lead the team to auoce: very SITION. Buccess so far has rewulted in fallure y Content ae they were of their ability Of near faiture, The fact that these te “come back,” the alumni found experiments were weakening the hold sturdy opposition on the part of the of the American League in New York regular Biue and White bunch and ‘wae at last realized by the big men of phyed ao careful guarding game during that organization and they decided to the first pertod. The varsity scored the come to the aid of Farrell. point, « fee by "Kid" Beet ‘When Chance was let out by Murphy, Seat throw and after that {t was a hotly con- Ban Johnion, Charley Comlekey and Saris a others saw the opportunity to get one pee-eaw cont ‘The exciting feature of the whole con- eres cece Steak (aanngers Of he weme teat came early in the second half, when x : “And th - meececey bey Shows te seek : Ted Kiendl took the ball on a dribble) BY CHARLES DARNTON. spre I ln My AR gore 4 i fram one end of the floor to the far aide M OST of the time, it seemed to 2 Presses me most of ali, not that your earband Mis sabed & teal eave lincen me, he stood at the telephone} stage has grown strikingly modern. jddeways near the out-of-bounde line, saying: “This 1s Bir Herbert| Right is right in ail tines, If we aaw Pa Se She a bad ta !—m-m-m—yes, I am ea- ma wold ey ‘How ‘rodernt’ Take f Stiven, an aplasia iow tee trarnic: sage—sorry!—to-night?—I am g0iN8| example, Mr. Arliss in ‘Disracll ehowing that the old boys have no: tur. |t0 @ dinner—to-morrow?—I really | performance is identified with the p at gotten entirely the rather rough and |couldn't say—m-m-m—no, I coulda’t|»¢t !n tts appeal and its effectiven tumble style of play that prevalied four ” A {a distinctly modern." or Sve years ago. Had “Kid” Bengon, | SAY definitely—m-m-m.” Click! WHAT HE WROTE OF SHAKE- who 4id most of the free throwing for| Experience had already taught me SOLAR PROBUSTION®S the varsity, been up to his regular| that Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree, Ens- af form the game would have been iced by | land's most renowned actor-manager,| Shakespeare was no wooner me o wi couldn't—or wouldn't—eay anythi ef. | that Sir Herbe: a | tke Listy stag bathers = sth ways HN Ty f v " ir Herbert took up a book and) the ing! out of sixteen chances, while Lee flipped y anything def sald: time give you thir eration of actors ut . ‘0 t time after e shots and some |tess wretches at the-other end of the ene as (Gaptsd Gh nae tank |gictent mene F poet. ‘Whenever the varsity mould stare |*AYINE It at the Rits-Cartton) was con-|{0 the, molec ma ot ie porta | aroma up and oa | Tou people of New York are |{ho ball down the floor by dint of short | Yeniently inarticulate one moment and ds which | ally good jim extenuation of those met! ona to ball players and ball | eide-arm passing, the alumn! would be|¢Pisrammatic the next. But he was ave heen Tied sin a renesie rane olo |p ent tin oned aaE n the younger gen: I asked, m) i Z rbohm | FOR ENGLAND. i g rk fi one unusu to anything afterward. court. ‘He dropped into a chair only toswing|at Hin Majesty's Theatre, | was sur- tening, was born with DN’ ITO prised to hear Sir Herbert say: ailve oon of technique In. he Raps, thea HIGHLANDERS WILL PLAY ON|FIGHER OIDNT GET INTO THE/himseit out of it. The telephone eee | PNG, apectaciecdraia dessa't sAbureDt | frtuin.’ Bae IGIRenoentDl laer maaieria! eine POLO GROUNDS, Game. grown reefless again. He stood there, W.. most of all. Pageant-plays are, of she haa remarBable power to do! B i Harry A. Fisher, the well-known | well over six feet, a trifle full a8 oon in pressive, 1 #0 hur’ thare eerie thE lant future eee euneton an Sree eer Se) Gta: basketball authority and mentor, who|to figure, and gray, rather than white, @ part like that of Dr. mann| After all, the stage is the one arena in om Nemoae paar ere ee o, their !was expected to play, did not «et into|as to hair. ‘There was absolutely noth [in ‘An Enemy of tha People.’ ‘The fact |ijfe that glved women al equal iaoe Poe CUE, rae on band at, his cus- ling about him to sumgest the actor. He in, Ibsen aside, 1 adinire rebela, T have, {tunity with men That's the ‘phen it i Interest of the team will not de on st | got eo excited during the final minutes | 00ked like a man who had grown gray|#o to say, an aristocratic leaning to-) did” ance etrict @eciplinarian d raga” He Inuched and then]. ‘The telephone was gt un, ‘This tong. Chance ts « Of the contest that he forgot the last|in the diplomatic service, His mouth, | ward rw |, inuaied and then}. Phe telephone Wad Yowiog agale. hl Pestay ent al and @ hare driver, two lsttare of bis name and forgot. to [a bit small for the rest of him except | Added: “At the aume ime 1. cea Bir Herbert wah more than diplo- yy The Highlanders have another great | came to the surface of things and even|when it broadened into a smile, might | Sone of rain | Shanwing tas laine ne opened we frees - Sry Chuwos in thet they are’ to ny athe | Dneatte, have held state secrets, But ne ap-| muse, ay it wereein other, words by {eum he hi known jon ‘ fog the whole Polo Grounds, That! aione ult ness | , Tie, le the third atumal game that |Deired to be watchful rather than caU-| playing widely different parts. Inet-] “Come In!” he « 1 asked “onary ‘ot. the cube tm the meeiree) | Each tel ec: Ti cotate etl cee Fae Deen played at Columbia since the | tous—a fine distinetion, but in his case |Gentaliy. in doing this, 1 have wought| with a laugh, “should Tsay ‘Come right League would lose money but tor the|a maa eo familiar to the Polo Grounds | {cor sort trio the veterans have [4 true one, When I stepped out of the] to satisfy my friends atid my pe rites, fing mph,” he’ sald, slipping tt $5g5 Ursunde’wnile on tho rows, G5 the | at the head of on American League Reapeeden lc rteimnuiiie thee wecenis ane | elevator’ Tcmetiond a Gatiaaviened Saure| Nesdiene 10 4d, this hw not always] My photogranh.” heal, sllpping tt y the American | team will in (tself be a great attraction. | ponents. tn 1909 the result was Z to 2{at the end of the corridor. The next MR gh uROnilbantaysounre eeandet peat 0 Go a * Senet eee ea never received any reat | ‘Tore fina Always been much diecus- in thelr favor and in 1911 the tab was|moment I heard some one at my olbow| “Do you find very much promive for out’ "You have my by man r (oe Donefit from being wble to play | #'™: ae to the relative merits of Chance | 2! 401, “It ham been planned by the| saying, “You have come to see Sir Her- 5 c telty in America, They do|an@ McGraw as leaders. Some have | atniedc management to make the alumni arte ¢ quiad’ ana aha kasnaves vvud Anu ENDS . {0 Ore bikeethadcipnte, Boston, Chicago | maintained that Chance could not bulld |game a regular event om the programme {tert 1 turned and saw & Keen ved EWSY PARAGRAPHS : Oe oi cithee, ag atzect ontnestiy | cate ethertioce Win ba peemen ain ce: herentier. alumnd with thet co-wete, | card im his hand, When I faced about N f Faene™ Memneat, tt 18, waacsevora|Citienal interest. If he auccesds tn |Gapper urderarndualon win tal oneas [again the distinguished figure in the AND ALL KINDS OF ; s of the first moves to help outj buflding up @ pennant winner he will/and bespectacled professors defied the| distance had vanished. But there was tay A ae 4 ; co will be for Detroit to tara| have to be put down in history as one |portentous signa colleagued with Friday | an open door and naif behind it, the —_. John &: Drs GAAS San: Crawford and let him come| of the greatest Dasoball leaders that {the thirteenth and filled every, avaiiabl corti i Ney re anti Wand me inl ‘Mighland ‘That deel is quite| cover lved. bit of seating space in the gymnasium. a erve Harvard in) ':« Wee oat Tawney, the millionaire| The rather contemptible underground The rooting toction kept the atmosphere Heern, are. sae, Selamtione 8 second Haughton May S sea-| 2 Mi ty ‘the Tigers, anxious to/ rumor that Change was so mentally un- |lively with their efforts and oocaaio! q ! , F = | Tnittee, Tons i hava licckine Un thet Santen can hie ‘head [Columbia sones. have an opportunity to meet my| Advisory Capacity Next Sea: | LF Hi meet! that he was not entirely himeelf ts rot. Following \s the complete lineup and | friends, I fear, until Monday afternoon, mY Sele ry ty A te oe. manenal Meal by whos |I talked with him betore and after the |score of the game: when I speak before the League for! gon, While Daly or Withington! ch waivers were made on Inflelder Gor-/ operation and there Was absolutely no | Alum Vemity. | Politioml Education on ‘Our Betters.’” ‘ weiite findings aon. '2, t2e atealousi, rhe Grawvore | Chunee show haif an macht mena ates | Wee ate | <Meeningt'= May Replace Him as Head) iit 'ni. ‘in the Mational, Fhe Crawford} Chance show half as much mental fibre ‘—4-mem,” radi Min Mestext asin | malt Fumor started wile Yawkey wae here, thelr leader the result will be more 0 a retui Pee py nee *hanc 8 always had) than sitistactdry. {roma ‘fheld— Mabon, “Mh J a Rae ret neta New Tork shown] Change has some good. material to | 1; Wiendin t: aterhout ‘The meaning 1# to be disclosed on TR a eevtaik he lod with me just defore| work on in getting together a team ana | ga , “ous from foul, Bi Monday afternoon?’ ina andi ae ae on the players who have shown anything ws aa ; Osterbont He gave me an enigmatical smile and Pte rumored that Perey D. Haughton, Ie of the Cree wrote thing that 's surprising to me,""|the past need have no foar of thelr or Kegs Hemmoide for Hla cigarette. Meacoach of the Harvard football | ‘a Chance at that time,” 1s that al jobs. Those who ave hung on by the : “Are you never to act here again?” I cat, has deciled not to renew his fosing teazn Ike te Highlanders oan | “skin of thelr teeth,” however, wi hang eee Toa Th ‘asia Lon Te a iy aca | keen the support of the press and the no longer. Tine of halreotPwenty mastes COMING NEXT SEASON WITH A[onine viene while Haughton will taal “year Tid position | It ; E ” SHAKERPEARE REVIVAL, [100 trom active avrvice a va Chance Expected Here Soon THOMAS HAS “COME BACK.” | sew rors nope to my Sereir ne |e sivas conch wil Crimso: foot ba by noice Wigs + T ry anewered Hihtly, Then he pulled him-| nim. His position in Crimson fooiball é - ‘i Joe Thomes of California, who lost |S \e our of his chair, took 5 few i Jes would then be somewhat similar | For Purpose of Signing Contract|y: wiser: nemoicntin nein eee sed ange ihe ta Tang |e, Ta, fl Waker Cap. ley Ketchell, is “coming back’ - k eae ket 2 hae geo ° !with Chan 1 under a he ¢ nd nds, Last night at th | plans keep me very . bul ale, but pos Chicago, Dec. 4. | With Chance, understand he desires | & Paee Nowe ine vere ets bat b . ai power t . “ ke a trip |4 De salary before he will handle the| A. Thomas kept up his winning str wah Charley Daly, who t RANK CHAN edge rye ge Pt ciuue I expect tA give It to him, It| at the expense of Billy Grapp of not entirely despair of return! | Coweh nae ton’s successor, has just Rowen York son aster sen. the | Would be indiscreet for me to say how| Louis, Tiomas complete! telassed | York, In fact, I expect to come havk | toned Oe ication to be reinstated to his sign a contract 4 Lear ae 11 {Much I plan to sive hun vefore he haa | his opponent and several times had him |next season and appear in a Sratce. | made applica ans. Fran! “i ne a wre an has t : i in the apn from which he New York Amer! gned his contract hear the Knockout stage. ‘Thomas | spegre festival, giving ‘Richard 1f,'|omeeranip in the anny from walsh be gave out this information before hel wwould it be wrong to say he will; showed all his od time ‘oolnens and anil eiving “Hioherd 4" fen i Stay tn he ded the train for home, be the highest paid manager in base- | skill that made him a wonder before Nah OM : " "se hte ea venrasian to open. negotiations with | pens ‘, 1 do not think #0, You can | Ketehell veat him down, Janant of Venice’ and ‘The Morey W ves |imentioned an Coach Hau Imost immediately after ms!| yay for mie that I think he will be and Jot Windsor.” Arrangementa to this end | sor, mince: Hong | with prob nade before I sail next in New York," sad Mr. Farrel: that will not bar McGraw of the Giant , [Sal probably be m ate not com with him UP | who recoiven $18,000 a year. The Amor. RIVERS TO MEET BROCK. |". “% to date, but I have been assured that' can League is eeger to obtain Chance] OLBYVELAND, Deo. lh Rivers, | “Phen 1's practically seitied peony of he is willing to manage my team and and I am more than desirous of setting | Mexican lightweight champion, he el] Ven" adinitted Sir Hervert, “but, ax | i ren will talk business with me as soon as I) nim, Tam sure we will have no trouble | » nted te for a twelve-roimd bour| Mis, ‘Tree often « ‘Lite full of am ready. I am prepared now to enter) in agreeing to terms.” with Phil Br Cleveland boxer, here {[Gitappeintments; nothing comes At but “2 San into negotiations with him, and you can = put Jan, 1b. Rivers will receive $2,000. | Uuttons.’ Umem-m."" eay that I am not going to lose any) Fant’ H. Yingling, | The boys will welgh ch | Dodgers, nas neat 1st pounds Yo ti being y own Hoult fime in doing #0, for the sooner I | oder ins ea ae pe Load PE ud ol peck oa eee an agreement with him the bett a * ma? = ; é }ietaned aan ere ater pu “IT am more than elated over obtain: | | Sylor W - 1 siail bring every aiiteh and the ing Chance as leader for my olub, and I _Srlor uum [BE Dutton," Ne declared, with can honestly say { expect him to make reauited INDIANAF M-Youn’ behing more than @ merry Vgot the greatest leader we have ever het, | oowiyas done a litle bet Saylor « iy Jer Mu phy boxed ten | eves, "E want very much to act h : ‘ a 1 will do all in my power to aid hun | O'Day. former manager of the Weds, ig| O° She lardeat rounds ever witnessed | oy, tate the real truth of the! f T opiate | CLEVELAND, ta strong club. I will not stand what he will 9. pax . q/ip an Indianapolis ring at the Bimpire| Tee Nite sisteen years since L. ape [Cleveland Athlet yt y in anything, He will have |g beck (3 limping’ Hoth with honors In fav Mayior, There | eeeed in Amentens” plevelands, AtiatGy | eerie wait 1 ip SN eed ely ead Pat at . . Sweeney of New fall charke of everything ae far 88 jaf itm romping Ube coe, TPR A tte] “Bo you find @ great change n the to the ring by def oenguae the layer te concerned 8nd | ae oF shaft. apt bas” Jon rounds, one round Was iu favor of Mur-|Amerizan stage | athe? canoe oe Johnnie Beivu!tz of Columbus in a slasa ae eo aad what teruia 3 will ronan @stes W ods w tere [phy and one was even, "E Ad great activity in the American OAL, Hee 3 pana att MEANS (OT 10 BASEBALL LOSE TO VARSITY But in an Aristocratic Way l: “Henry VIL. | HE'S KEEPING ENGLISH ACTORS | « table, We have} On #e ere promising actors | polit of the« nelisi accor here at the But I'm not going to ion our wonderful young actors, an: ity in the country. I ht at their heels, guarding carefully | never without @ sense of humor. This ual illlancy and vee| fon D r : oF : fet ok Ah 4 ert. wists chat T would be Tuck enough some sna matching every attempt to throw. | discovery was made the moment Wis Grerennens 06.107 Tr clelia ties AGE tine {fOr Hf Fd they’ might te snapped a city like that." |B well was this out during the | gmtled. | a poll : au part hance teast important mission of t other tragic low« for Bngland. No, I'm Ct away Gi toe tageinen gorse in caging a goal,| “Yes” he confessed, “I'm having @/ theatre ie to give to the publ | Mee rdark—for purely pa } ee on Taft "Hote his theory, that nd toum | “icid'" Benson and Reynolds, "| very strenuous week of it; I don’t quite gentations of history which shall he at | sit you. under aqoend division hag | staf. It ‘without ph pitchers. The| Jack Ryan, all-American floor centre|know how I'm doing it all. But I 40/ once an education and a delight, * * * “A ; never heen at Bree thing he dia an going to Chicago |for three years in succession from 198 | know that ft can be done. It's like ad-| It 3s, I contend, better to reserve Shake- ¥ lish ac ue Soe the, weason. ire Mordecai Brown, who up wine boyl Ping d bart is the eens ministering a self-anaesthetlo, as i) apoare for the wtudy than to seo im had been a mediocre twirler |‘¥' his feet two inches rawn | were. One takes things as they come—| Prosente heartedly be had the bases full and there were three balls called on the batter, The y Gnance hee bo and speed. He tossed the third goal of] tot somehow pull through.” that whatever may tend to destroy tle wide OE ne ere a nt tter, The next went two world’s the evening and brought out a series of illusion and the people's unde | f Oe | Chance eur me ch raduate body | LOOKS LIKE A WELL-SEASONED /js to try condemned ee Four balls!" cried Kelley and thon took w look at the crowd, “Fouad Meely chat Thi he eave in| Cheers from the unders: iy rowd, “Your're agate aw I Oa eee tin. Te, man De eave 2 | coaseed In the seating stands sround' ee] DIPLOMAT, NOT AN ACTOR. Recalling the magnificent productions |” y1" exclaimed Sir Herbert, hie tace| out!" ha adaen at te. ts where HYT would be hard indeed to find a busier man tn any line of endeavor than I Billy Gibson, “the honest sporting man.” ‘The Honest thing, by the way, |“ Goes double for Gilson, He has a reputation for straight dealing thet has | frown wonderfully throughout the country since the closing of the race tracks went him into the sport promoting line. Packsy MeFarland never asks an ac- counting from Billy, Gibson is on the go every day of his life from early morning }to midnight.” He always has ‘eteen things to do and does them all without | the ald of a secretary or a note book. | ‘Tell him «omething to be done to-mor- row afternoon—he thinks a minute and says “O. K. Vil be there.” | “Better put It down so you won't for- | get Don't have to, I've a memory Ike a fish” (whatever that’s Ilke) answera Gib, |ana to-morrow finds him there to the Bil runs ar taurant In the growing Bronx, the Garden A. C., the Fairmont A. Cy @ caroussel at Glasson's Point and one or two private enterprises. In addi- |tion he haw the political interests of a jdistrict leader, and any one familiar | with district politics knows what that |ineans, Ten lock in the morning } find Gibson at the Bridge Depart- nt Axing up a detail for a constituent; noon seca him at the Public Service Commission arranging for better transit Tactiities for the Bronx; at 2 o'clock he is matehing @ pair of scrappers for ¢he Garten; at 4 he ts in conferen Bronx Voters’ League, and at 6 he is arranging something tn the nt | Rronx Wagles, in addition to all thie Billy te pi | the Telephone Company ever had. Wherever Billy Gibson ts there is almost wn Uninterrupted string of telephone calls, Gibson has a reputation of being a prodigious feeder. He isn’ | such few chances to eat that he usu j any th with the eat of the ably one of the best friends + but he wets lly makes up for meals that he has missed 1 apreads a napkin over his knen WO large, solemn-faced, bottle-; Gus turned on h shaped gentlemen, who had a) parently inoulcated a generous | “you're foolish in supply of “he grape into their ayatems, | der . feller vot is aheat is had been watching the monotonous alx- to |day grind at Madison Square Garden |,” cried Jake |for an hour without exchanging a syi- | feller behind ts leading der fel Just ike T sald i llable. Suddenly the more protrube: | nt} “Make it ® an’ jof the pair remarked to his bloss snorted Gus. heaked neighbor: Jake agreed to a $ bet, with the pro- “Gus, vich do you figger ts aheat mit | viso that a man standing nearby shoul © {the race, the bleyeler vich is leading {act as referee. This man happened to \oder der feller vich Jy behind? be oross-eyed, which enabled him to ments and then fell to panting. At last! and tistened to thelr argument. “When has xploded: |Gus and Jako had finished the cross- You make yourself @ couple of jack-! eyed man stuck the money in his pocket |asses, Jake! feller vieh is leadt and sald |is half a laps aheat, He can't help it both lose. The man in the mid: friend and i him, mei money “You Jake shook his shoulders a little and @|dle is ahead. The man leading oan't spite lurked in hiv double chins, catch him without passing the man de- | jus, take tt a look, ‘The feller behind | hind, who would then be ahead of the [ts half w taps aheat of the feller vot 1#| man’ leading and atlll behind the man leading. If der feller vat is aheat can't |tn the middle. Do you get me? jeatch up mit de: Me hind, den | Gus and Jake took one long look at Vainde it feller be-: the crosa-eyed man and then fied in ( hind 4s leading? panic to the long-polished counter, ¢ 1) TIANLON and John McGraw teil a g00d story about en empire be N named Kelley who was selected to umpire a ball game between two ad | tems of miners at Shamokin, Pennsylvania, Though Kelley didn't know much about the game then he afterwards became a great umpire. A close sion In one of those Kames was almost worth a man's Ife. The miners had $1,100 bet to a wide and Kelley was selected because they thought he had nerve | aid was honest. His knowledge of the game cut little figure, raged at Kelley that he wag on the In the last inning one of the teams ‘al ooensions the fans became #0 env Ing, but gamely stuck to his port, There was a wild rus) of players for the vire, ‘They wanted that pun ty | count, 2 “What do you mean by eal on bails rept “I Kelly, “But the bases are " now and ve nade patrioti¢n in porta asf of the Boxtng Cox was born 4 nowar. A striking In| England and " teotte In h Vas witnessed at | fay : othing ie rs this weak. | Mah adc , poe Rounding out a furic he got bis start aines Manin the} here among us on thie tight tie tes Frenchman, collide rs of Manhattan. Let's see right thrown | track, | Maxin} down tn ‘Twenty-fourth sireet on’ the : mus. Herthae was] way to the Hast River wae whore ; hurt when Dy our oe aneaiene ley first gazed out o c than 1 there Creamer, race ptyslotan, that) were two tine, h prodiets of the ferther Was shamming Pfauld wod—his parente—wh 1 one of is trainers and remarked taxt (him, Chartes Y an Bagh Harvey an Englishman? the rh one he a flash Berther broke away from BOXIN n wayfaring down (n lers and, rising to the A Bath Beach these days would eee ‘or the glory of France 1 drop tn at a certain retreat of god pele nd quickly Jumped on hie iaae| beer, Any afternoon night on dut shine and commenced tearing after the|@t Dis hotel may be seen the smtlin: had the strongest heart of any Go way w ver saw, Balti toevane onion Ge Bae manta face of Sailor Burk Hlor no longe but @ proprietor of a moadhouse, Yep. the Batlor has retired from ¢ ring—retired for good, too. Bur! neve. did like much the business of exchai ing blows in @ ring, especially when received more than he gave, Now the ex-boxer ts a boniface -an@ kes his new Job, which be purah: with money saved from fighting, —————_ OHN T. BRUSH was one of the few baseball backers who could classed as a “good Ie Tuality in the little man com even those rabid, ferocious and insatiable I 4 of the I fans the baseball writers of Cinctnn It awed them into silence, for "John was the only man ever comected with the Kame in the hog city who wasn't roasted at one time or another. How far he would go for a man was shown in the case of Amos Rusie, whom he ‘dincovered.” W the great Amos was down and out, in the dts far as every other leaguer was con- cerned, It was Brush who gave him a m himself, and he stick, respect 0 lim Savage Far Too Clever for Pitisburgher every that Ruste wasn't @| CLEVELAND, Dee, 14—Dan Daly, the Dowsiole comeback. There was a lot of |Reavywelght of Pittsburgh, had’ his stick” about John T., aa h ‘white hope” aaptrations come to an his colleagues at many a red’ end by being decisively defeated by Jim tonal League imeating that threatened ) gavage of Now York, in a twelvecroend to dlerupt the organisation. contest before the Cleveland A. C, RED TENNEY, tho retired fret) SSVAS® Was & surprise, Never before chance | nee & more olever heavyweight boxer f hown here. Every move that ga ing intoxicating tn his Hfe,)% vege dropped into Waldorf during the re- | made rie. 8 Wes, te eae A enaopy cent meeting to sce his old friends. lore om ryt ing into Daly's ran minor league ball ptayer| f oe t cross to the jaw made s gradually dropped down and bl ‘hope reel around the The New Yorker's cleverness proved 12,08, t00 much for Dan Daily. althougn thy the latter can out terrific punish- know." explained Tenney, “T never took a drink in my Ife. men Re Sen tet eee ezainst “That's just what I was thinking foe foe fae 4 bin went & grea: about,” replied the olf player. "I just | impression, and Ts 2 ho want to show you what you have|” read je hope, ed, ‘Think of the free drinks you ap Haig: have got at these annual meet- A vet who out #hook bh Brows Easily Defeats Mahenes, RACINE, Wis, Dec, 4. — George = Knockout Brown of Chicago UNNY the notions some people get, | Bill Mahoney of Racine F and yet they profess to be follow: | route, though only the ere of eport, What do you think honey from being lneok of the chap that bet that Charley Harvey eighth, 2