The evening world. Newspaper, July 22, 1915, Page 12

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d z Wh Bey wg vey UP-TO-DATE AND NEWSY Punch. " —_——_ sys yD Eom bone after a few years spent in the West. Tho versatile Kid, who much prefers now to be called by his name, which is Norman Selby, it to fight again, although he forty-two years, and says more hankering for the ring. He says that in has added one inch that he weighs 205 i me that the study of changed his character that instead of desiring is fellow men in the most ve manner he now prefers to vate their friendship and see how good he can do, In any one McCoy this profession of altru- micht have a ring of the “bunk.” there are so many sides to the MoCoy character that this new 4 velopment is probably just as genuine ali the others. fet 1 notice that the “Kid" has a ttle twinkle in his eye when he talke the bad old unregencrate days he swatted whosoever crossed Path and enjoyed nothing more winning a fight by outwitting other rellow all the fighters that ever lived has the most varied and career, The reason for it *, e had a wonderfully se 4 je Was @ genius. in box cars and lived in But the box car epi confined to youth, of the most interesting exper! Lever had was my trip to Aus- ” guid M talked over | iu ith and was prosperous ai ‘us, when I took it into my head to travelling. I'd had some discus- Son with my first wife, and 1 used over things in those days, 1 under the name of ‘Charles d’ as a first class passenger | bound for Eagnké. hing the; Aor] r yOu, 80 sa m} rich Wits a er died in Eng! and I was fever to settle up the estate. [ bod nicely treated and made a ‘of trends, Nobody knew | was a until just before we landed, some one recognized me, That | red with my plans, as 1 wanted fight under another name and pick ¢ easy money, I knew the would have a story about Mc- | I sent my baj and ha back aboard o steamer that to leave from the next dock tn fan hour bound for South Africa, | took passage as Harry Egan { oboay knew me. I didn’t FIVE ABOARD BHIP. “It was a jong, hot voyage. We) ‘@ set of games on the mer, with uae heen atl entered everything but the runs a won the broad and high jumps and it everything else. yben 8 came I tried to look os if i'd seen a glove before. I ad- a as if I'd ne knocked him down with He took @ minute's rest and insisted = ree on witu the bout, He was m wise to you. D }that 4 was McCoy the; wise to mo, Bo fy tea with me and Up him off. It was a | funny situatio 4 pore 4 mn, reversing all my ar. for me, was McCo; Dougherty, piopship with = stakes of x man. It was to be weeks before the at 4 ~~ a with South ‘Atrican fe & hospital. relative: it| He came in to see mo | Was done for, and that, Harry Egan eCoy in disguise, and tha: dying in the hospital ‘thes has the steamer saw the MEN th tors in the country, me through, for that, f me a benefit, at which 1 wop $1,200, i with Dougherty un McCoy, /1 fought twenty |Ryan of Australia in priva } {TD M'COY is back in New York! Soutn . (=< Accoy Db oO F Men NA rT, AS AWKWARDLY AS HE Couto? 1 had three more in my pocket, which id taken the troubie post to myself, general delivery, so Uney’d be ready when | arrived. Coop- er told and he'd try b aerobag to have @ lot of his friends ¥ to write and Lo come to his gymnasium me out himself, He him ‘trim the bloomin’ ‘They wére there. eime awkward way, © had a glove on, but i right jab, e to ankee.’ “Lh boxe clear through, He sailed into me and 1 flattened him. When he'd cooled down @ lite he asked me to dinner, dress, at me all the time, but that tomb- stone front nearly paralyzed him. He'd never seen « real tighter dressed up before, out @ Police Gazette clipping with a wood cut of me and a story about my mysterious disa, 1 showed up in evening He was looking suspiciously But after dinner he pulled rance, jaCoy,’ he said. ‘I'm No amateur could hit way you do,’ Why, that's funny,’ I eaid, ‘three “*You're Kid men caine up to me on the streets in London and called me McCoy, I'm not oY, Surely I don't look like that mug whose picture you have here's @ pocket full of letters I've received.’ him | wasn't McCoy, one on me. But McCoy, an. I'm Harry there, IT talked until 1 convinced ‘It will mak diagulse, leCoy, as we times” {had just whl a z and M; ” i can discover my mi it an apolo h you look Ii my mlstake Metoy." TELLS HOW HE INVENTED FaA- MOUS PUNCH, “Thad to think quick. If he printed wet d to take bim in and rather embarrassi ut it was easier to prove f ua y than that I wasn’t, ‘So we fixed up a match with Bill who had won the cham- of South Africa, in @ match £9,000 for each Two neal aaa went There I got so bad the sent for Cooper and told him ‘ng and he'd better cable my if he know where they were, and thought L printed a big story was the famous Kid happened, lady I met on er, ca Stent att se ea and the: nM I would have Sica but Z guess. “When | was well soon they gave oxed, and I put up $500 for a match ler my right name, ‘hree days before the ‘ot rounds with Tut my right band and right foot, | jy; when they told me that was tbe way I tangled myself up, but them out. J won the boxing knocking five men out @ little left chop that | landed | second cabin passengers had a fellow they wanted to match it me, and I fun. Dr, Bummershield, a wealthy ‘bout seventy years old, look @ great Unga to me and offered back me with £100, I knocked out cabin champion in two etl awaward and with my and ou Dr, Summershield |, to the £100 he'd won | added his own £100 to it. He was enthusiastic and advised u. get him ty teach me how | said he'd back me with gide bet against ay if I'd learn how to fig! #: hand out in the regular One of the lady passengers, of » big South African miping | man, Wis very nice to me, too. “I took Dr. Summersbield's letter introduction and said I'd see Mr. C and try to learn a littie about ming, and that I'd try figh but as an amateur Re, A processional pugilis limmy Cooper was sportti ‘Standard and Digger's News, had a gymnasium and ers and boxed a little, If and promoted matche: t tee my letter of introduotio Est. 1892 was on the level and I erty wouldn't have go: he'd won, for we bet every dollar that came in: on me, scattering it ali tly by accident. They all said erty the biggest fluke in the world, ;eigund the country. “The I \ tee, |made $40,000. ‘The last day I knock jout a South ‘African fighter and four landed, I in the |Charlie Perry's revolver a to ' the rif_iny Mr. Jimmy Cooper as soon asl for und jbullet travel fast | would man ip | nt with |o24 tried it, punch and a lot of other men twice as I was.” j out | when - down there, and a hot Cork and Kilkenny will ned Union of Steam” and ~~ gineers, ow. The fight guess Dough- t anything it There was a 10,000 gate. We cleaned up $25,000, showed with @ circus after that for WT ery tte june | $120, Week, and fought all comers nder a four-round knockout ran Before 1 left South Atrisa i stralian heavyweights who'd just invented my ‘corkscrew punch’ Dougherty it. I was looking h the bai of my friend noticed 1 asked him what it was e said the twist made a I wondered if it make a punch travel faster From that time on I rove my punches only half as far d twisted them. t gave me the that knocked down Sharkey big —>——— Cork vs. Kt my. Gaelle football of the real old Irish I didn’t care | type, and with all the dash and go for whieh this port ts famed, will be the me next Sunday at Je Pa the championship game between decided at International al the members of which Mati their sixteenth annual sports occasion. Baths games_of Local. 20, ce) $1.25 Including All-Night TURKISH and RUSSIAN ess ti?"tineh, 113 West 42nd, Bet. B’way & 6th MORE DELIGHTFUL THAN EVER— NEWLY RENOVATED THROUGHOUT ‘The most modern and ee clear as crystal. tely sanitary bathing est ur plunge is oniy. 01 en ir t led with filtered water, making it SKILLED CHIROPODIDIST, BARBERS AND MANICURIST We stil) have a number of Brushes from Everard's Baths Amow closed) that ha: ve not been called for. MURRAY HILL BATHS, THB EVENING WURLD, THURSDAY, J BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK > ve ahr ULY 22, 1915. SOME OF KID M’COY’S EXPERIENCES by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) JOHNSON WANTS “LAY-DOWN” MONEY, SAYS ENGLISH PAPER Alleges Negro Cabled Pro- moters for $50,000 Due for Letting Willard Win, According to the latest issue of John Bull, an English sporting paper, which has just reached here, Jack Johnson claims that he laid down to Jeas Willard in the battle at Havana in April, in which the heavyweight championship of the world changed hands, In the story is printed the wording of a cable that is alleged to have been sent by the negro to one of the promoters, demanding that they pay him $50,000, per agreement. The article in John Bull says: “The first cable was despatched from London op June 9, and this is| how it reads:" ‘You signed contract to pay me fifty thousa dollars to lay down to which | did. You never kept your promise. | did. Now you must pay accerding to contract. Litigate all you like. | will put my case bi re any court and press in the world. JACK JOHNSON, “We do not know the exact terms of the reply which Johnson received, but it is obvious from his next mes- saxo that it was not of @ satisfactory character and that his demand was chacterized by a somewhat ugly namo. For on June 11 we find him wiring ag wi wi fide tw Wi take all JOHNSON. pa Bae BIG ROWING REGATTA AT DULUTH TO-MORROW. DULUTH, Minn., July 22.—Scores of rowing enthusiasts were in Duluth to- day to welcome oarsmen from Chicago, Grand Rapids, Michigan and Peoria, Iil., who will take part in the Northwestern International Regatta to-morrow. Crews from St. Pavl, Minn., arrived yesterday and launched she! on St. Louls Bay, They were out again this morning for a workout, Seven elghts w ein the senior events. Ideal weather was forecast. OLDFIELD MAY RACE RESTA 100 MILES AUGUST 7. CHICAGO, July 22—Barney o1d- field to-day i» awaiting a reply to his open challenge to Dario Resta for a 100-mile race on the Maywood speedway. Oldfield issued a chal- lenge yesterday following his first tryout of the Delage car, presented to him by D, G, Joyce, an admirer, If the world's two fastest drivers’ can get together It ts probable the race will be held Aug. 7. a ood Auto Meet on Half-Mile Track, The entry lst for the automobile t Olympic Park, New- afternoon and night is rapidly filling up. Ten noted dirt track drivers have already sent in their blanks, It will be the first time a night meet been attempted in the Jersey town, and on the half-mile track the racing should be even more spectacular than the contests at Brighton Beach recently, NATIONAL LEAGUE, Wok, POL Club. Ww. 4 it ‘881 NATIONAL LEAGUE, iadeiphia, 1; Chicago, ©, Called end of fifth inping, ‘B QQacioyatl, ton, 1, \ Louis’ aiid Brooklyn Pitts burgh gal pond. tala oe 1, HAGUE, Lows Cineiumatt Chicago at Pol cub, 404 in Po, 488 Providence 48 448 Battal... TNVENTED “THE FAMOUS “ConnscRen’ PUNCH" Teli, + CHAMP AFTER, IN A REVOWER Barr FIROT KNOCKED ouT SOUTH AFRI IN SouTa AFRICA SUEING THE RIFUNG e+ ON WITH IT, NESS HAS NOW HIT SAFELY IN FORTY-NINE CONSECUTIVE GAMES. LOS ANGEL tinues to be the sensation of thi July 22.—Jack Ness of the Oakland Club con- je baseball year. He has left Ty Cobb's record for hitting in consecutive games far in the rear, hit successfully in forty-nine straight games. hits in forty will probably be feels confident that he the end of the season. He goes attitude that seems to say, “You ay games in a row, so with forty- hieved a record that will keep up his good work till up to the bat every day with an an't keep me from hitting.” jess made his forty-ninth consecutive day with a hit in the ining yesterday in the ga me with Vernon. Ness is now the biggest kind of a hit in this State. Fans go out to the games just to see if he hapelteye hie great record. July 13 that he p: ed in 186 games and y mark. Last sea- atted 292, He made 199 hits in it bat. The fans are all saying, “Good, Ness!” Several Favorites Eliminated in Tourney For Bay State Golf Title pana Francis Ouimet, Champion, Has Easy Time Defeating W. E. Stiles of Brae Burn. NEWTON, Mass, July 22.—Several favorites were eliminated in the first round of match play in the State amateur golf champion at the Wood land Gold Club to-day. The defeat of Paul Tewksbury of the local club and A. G, Lockwood of Belmont, a former titled holder, were unlooked for, Francis Oulmet was not pushed in bis match with W. E. Stiles of Brae Burn, The summary: First Round Match Play—L. B. Paton, Homestead, beat Paul Tewks- bury, Woodland, 4 and 2; B. 8. Evans, Belmont, beat R. M. Purves, Wood- land, 8 qnd 2; 8. K. Sterne, Tatnuck, beat B, W. Estabrook, Country, 1 up; R. D, Pierce, Brae Burn, beat J. Fy Reid jr, Scarboro, 3 and A H. Goodale, Wollaston, beat J. B, Chas Woodland, 3 and 2; R. Hornblower, Braeburn, beat H, Selfridge, Country, 2 1 #W. Brown, Meadowbrook, beat E. K. H, Fessenden, Albemarle, 1 up, 19 holes; W. C, Chick, Brae Burn, beat V. 8, Lawrence, Woodland, 5 and W. 8 Wait, Brae Burn, beat P. Pullen, Vesper, 1 up, 19 holes; P. Schofield, Albemarle, beat C. E. Noyes, Crow Point, § and 7; R. P. Gorton, Brae Burn, beat C. K. Bel- lamy, Springfield, 3 and 2; J. H, Sulll- van, Jr, Woodland, beat R. Lyons, L STANDING OF THE CLUBS A Ww Boston’... Detroit. ork: 42, 44, B06) Cleveland, 20 INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE, coup, EES ARON g Eko We Bi 00t|Rochoster,, 34 41 $0 “Stt| Richmond; 35 ‘b41|Toronto. ‘boo |Jersey City eseer Serer arriaburg 40 34 Montreal., 88 38 RESULTS OF YESTERDAY'S GAMES AMERICAN LEAGUR, ston, 4; St, Louis 2. Phuadélphia, 4; Detroit, a, Richmond. ‘0. .' 6; Montreal, i. Buffalo-Toronto game postponed, Rain, FOR TO-DAY AMPRICAN LEAGUB, Now York at Chicago, Washington at Detroit, Boston at St, PhLadeipbi at Cleveland, INTERNATIONAL LEAGUB, Roatvaler at Buble Albemarle, 5 and 3; L. J. Malone, Woodland, beat A. G. Lockwood, Bel- mont, 3 and 2; P, W. Whittemore, Country, beat R. J. Oulmet, Wood- land, 3 and 2; A. C. Colombo, Wood- land, beat F. Cuming, Essex, 3 and 2; Francis Outmet, Woodland, beat W. R. Stiles, Brae Burn, 4 and'3. SAWYER’S REMARKABLE PLAYING IS FEATURE OF WESTERN TOURNEY. CLEVELAND, July 22.—Ned Saw- yer’s remarkable playing easily fe tured the morning round of to-day's match In the Western Amateur Golf Tournament. Sawyer was leading on Jack Ne- ' ville, Oakland, Cal., ten up at the end lof the eighteen holes. Sawyer holed out on all but one shot where his ‘ball was but two inches from the hole and his medal score was 72, equalling the’ low mark set by 3 | Fownes jr. of Pittsburgh Tuesday. Sawyer went opt in 34, three strokes under par, He “made the nine holes in with a card of 38 The par in Is 36. His medal score for the eighteen {s one under par. Neville had trouble jall the way and unless he is able to play remarkable golf in the afternoon round, he will not last long. Rain which fell early in the morn- jing did not handicap the golfers any, for the sun was shining brig! at noon and .the course was in ideal shape. J.D. Standish jr Detroit was leading E. H. Bankard, Chicago, up at the end of the eighteenth hole. Chick Evans, Chicago, was leading G. A, Miller, Detroit, 7 up at the eighteenth hole. Evans's play was almost as good as Sawyer's, making & medal score of 73. Evans went out in 37 and came back in 36, equalling par of the cyclist, barely Tuesday night Velodrome in aped serious injury the Sheepshead Bay practice spin which gaponaibie for hie spectal ‘agal foretti being postpones Saturday night. Kramer did. not rained hard enough to prevent e races being run, and donned h riding clothes for a dash over the wet On the sgcond lap, going at lip, Kramer's wheel ‘slippe Kim, ‘tailing “to hold” the wet boards. Kramer sustained a few slight bruises, and informed the managemen| ithat it’ was Impossible to race on the track. ra ‘until Has F rep. Roamer was sent a mile and a fur- long in 1.52 yesterday. The Knight Errant gelding had weight up. This is his final prep for the Empire City Handicap, to be run on Saturday at Belmont Pork. | beta Fe Mais Made it IN Soum AFRICA’ INTRODUCED HIMSELF CIN Dsouise ) BY KNOCKING OUT THe CHIEF Bowne PROMOTER. ; He Stoop With Kis RIGHT HAND Our .' Giants’ Chances of Pennant Depend on Pittsb urgh Series: If New Yorks Are Able to Successfully Stand Test of Six Games in Next Three Days They Will Be Dangerous Contenders in National League Race. By Bozeman Bulger. F the Giants can come through the grind that now faces them without being materially flattened, they will have ample excuse for consider- ing themselves real contenders for the pennant. In the next three playing days they must take on the Pirates in six games, the first of the double- headers beginning to-morrow, To- day’s games were postponed on ac- count of rain. Saturday will bring an- other doublo-barrelled affair and then after a rest over Sunday two will be disposed of on Monday. A clean-up in this laborious period of pastiming would easily place MoGraw right on the heels of the Phillies and the Dodgers with a possible chance of actually climbing into the lad. Philadelphia's defeat of the Cubs, while the Dodgers and Giants were idle, has dropped Chicago into third place and moved Brooklyn up. The relative positions of St. Louis, New York and Pittsburgh remain un- changed on account of yesterday's postponements. In addition to thelr numerous de- feats, more ill luck has fallen to the Cubs ‘9 un injury to Victoriano Saier, the clean-up hitting first baseman. “Vic” is in a Philadelphia hospital with a strained tendon and may be out for two weeks. A longer absence than that would mean the ruin of Chicago's chances for the season, Al- ready Bi ahan has lost as many games as the Gia: but the fact that he has won five more makes the Cubs ure in third place for a day cr two at least, As the season goes bounding fans throughout the country coming more and more impr with the chances of the Phillies. The: have shown more consistency than any club in the league. They started out at the head of the league and have never been in danger of being worse than first or second, Occa- sional slips have dropped them down, but there are no more of those old time toboggans which usually started the Phillies on their way to the bot- tom around July 4. They have re- sponded every time Pat Moran ap- pl'sd the spurs. long, be- McGraw is of the belief that the acquisition of Charley Dooin as a second catcher has done much toward steadying the Giants and starting them on their way upward. For the "| first two days Dooin appeared to be over anxious to make good and con- sequently made several nervous blun- ders, but once settled he has been go ing at a great clip. It was indeed fortunate that Charlle came to New York when he did. Meyers in- fured before he had been here a week ‘and, outside of young dell, there {s no other man to use as backstop. Wanamaker, the Dartmouth catcher, {s rapidly getting on to big league ways and wil@be ripe for starting along in September. Col, Ruppert, Capt. Huston and a few friends went to Chicago yeste: day to see the Yanks operate against the White Sox. They will escort Don- ovan and his crew back to the Polo Grounds. Two or three of the new players will report at Chicago and to see them is one of the excuses given by the Captain and Colonel for taking the trip. In the meantime the strategy board of the Yanks is working a regular gang of scouts all over the country and Secretary Sparrow says at nights he is a train despatcher. In the last four weeks, Messrs. Ruppert and Huston have invested more than $50,000 in minor league players that fre to be delivered in the Fall and next Spring. The club will not make @ cent this geason, on account of these heavy expenditures, “Even if there was a surplus” said Capt. Hus- ton, “we'd invest it in players if the; could be found,” baad if Ty Cobb says the most promising ball player in the country to-day is Walter Pipp, the stringbean first baseman of the Yanks. And for that, Cap Huston will go on a quail shoot- ing trip with the Georgian this fall. “Yes,” says Ty, “Pipp will be the best first baseman in the league next year as sure as you are born.” Larry Doyle ll watching the games from the grand stand on ac- count of water on the knee, but he says he can't make his wife believe that an injury like that should keep him from wheeling a baby carriage. Larry is living in the Bronx now, where he is no longer bothered with yd traffic rules regarding perambu- jators. EDITED BY ROBERT EDGREN TED LEWIS WINS OVER WRITE WHILE “SUFS' LOOK ON Chicago Boxer Too Flat- Footed and Slow to Cope With English Lad. . With a delegation of suffragettes ®! looking on, Ted “Kid” Lowis, the Eng. lish lightweight, outpointed Charle: White of Chicago by a large enoug.' margin in @ ten-round bout at the St. Nicholas Rink last night to entitle him to the honors, Lewis was too fast, clev and also too quick @ puncher for the Chicagoan. The Englishman kept on the move and scored repeatedly with a straight left hand jab. When they got into close quarters Lewis would slug away with both hands for White’s face and stomach while White most of the time ~— a on. though White fought @ mu! harder battle than nen so far layed in any of his previous con- tests at the local clubs, he made the mistake of boxing on the defensive d of being the aggressor. White forced the fighting and also battled in the earlier rounds as he did in the last two sessions the chances are that he would have de- feated the Englishman, for the latte: showed as early as the third round that the weight he made for the con- test, 135 pounds at the ringside, had weakened him. But White claply stood flat-footed most of the time and seemed to be perfectly satisfied to counter on Lewis with a left hook or swing to the body or jaw. Before the main bout began Mi Frances Brewer, one of the party suffragettes, entered the ring made a speech in behalf of votes fo! women. Mrs. Brewer could not be heard very far away and as the gallery gods became impatient after about five minutes they began to stamp their feet and also whistle until Mrs. Brewer brought her speec! to an end and left the ring. pena A TB FIVE EVENTS ON CARD IN GRAND CIRCUIT MEET. CLEVELA: largest of the week, including five events, The bargain attraction was expected to draw the biggest crowd of the mecting #0 far. The opening heat will be started 1.45, thir: minutes earlier than usual. The cat embraces the Facig Swee °) to three-year-old trotter nd oe Tavern “Steak,” worth $3,000, for trot- ters who have never beaten addition to the 2.20 pace, the 2. and the 2.17 trot. FISTIC NEWS AND GOSSIP By John Pollock It was learned last night from the manager of boxing shows at Madison Square Garden that there will be no referee in the ring on the night ot July 29, when Jack Britton and Johnny Dundee clash in their important ten-roumt Wattle, If the official ie sincere in his deciara- tion he is surely making a big mistake, for this same stunt was tried by Harry Pollok at the Forty-fourth Street Sporting Club a few yeam ago with ‘Young Corbett” as referee on the outside of the ring, and the bouts were jokes, The fighters refused to break from the clinches and Corbett on more than one occasion bad to climb Into the ring and separate the men, When one of tho suffragettes was asked, after the boxing show at the St, Nicholas Rink last night, if ehe thought the contest between White and Lewis was brutal she simply shrugged her shoulders and said: “Why T have seen two boys battle harder in a street fight than White and Lewis did in the ring, And to think they get Dis money for that boxing exhibition,” Although the officials of the St,: Nicholas Rink A. ©, bad not started in to count up the tickets for their show last night, up to midnight, it was learned that the gros receipts amounted to close to $2,200. One important item in connec. tion with the show t Carley White re- ceived a guarantee of and an additional $100 for expenses, Frankie Callahan, the lightweight of Brooklyn, He is Dan McKetrick, who ims of Soldier Bartfield, Joe Jeanette and Young Abearn, Callahan has al ready knocked out Joe Rivers in two rounds and has fought three great ten-round battles with Johnny Dundes, With plenty of work Callahan can be made topnotch lightweight, Phil Bloom and Harry Pierce, the fast Brook- lyn lightweighta, have been matched by John Weissmantel to meet in the semi-final of ten rounds to the Joe RivesJohnny Dundee fight, which will be held at Ebbets Field, in Brooklyn, to-morrow night, Pete Hartley of Harlem and Young Fulton of the lower east side will clash in the ourtain raiser, Frankie Fleming, featherweight champion of ‘anada, is back in town, He came here for the urpose of getting on bouts with the good little men in his class, Frankie will be looked after in the future of Billy Newman, the Harlem sport- ing vnan, who is also manager of Harlem P. Cline, A match was arranged to-day between Harry Stone and Johnny Marto, the west side light: weight, ‘They were signed up by Paddy Don. nelly to battle for ten rounds in the star bout at the show of the Olympic A. ©,, of Hay Monday evening, Aug, 2, Both men har training for the ‘contest, ‘Tom McAnile, matchmaker of the Fairmont A. started 84th Remnant Sale ‘(Coat and Trousers $16 $25 to $50 Spring and Summer fabrics—piece ends from our Spring season’s selling. A very large variety added to daily. To measure only. Fit, finish and satis- faction strictly guaranteed. Broadway easy @® 9th St. until 1 o'clock, Suit $18. Arnheim C., bas clinched two ten feiular week! and swings, Al details for the battle between Jim the Brooklyn hearywelght, and Jack ie, CaMfornia fighter. Dave Deen completed: agers of the ten today accepted the terme of- fered them by Billy Gibson for ‘the fighters to meet ina ten-round go at tA. On. on Saturlay evening, July $1, Stewart we & come-back stunt, WELL KNOWN UMPIRE JUMPS TO FEDERALS CHICAGO, July 22.—Umpire Jack Mullen, of the Western League, and one of tho best known arbiters in the Cen- t, has signed with the Federal and will go to work at once, The announcement of Mullen's switch was made yesterday by President O'Neill of the Western League. “Mullen is leaving the Western for the Federals," said O'Neill, “because he will get a big salary increase and that's what people are killing each other for these days.” ection CLEVELAND CLUB BUYS NEW PITCHER NEW ORLEANS, July 22.—Pitcher James Bagby, of the New Orleans Southern Association team, has been sold to the Cleveland American League Club, President Heinemann to-day an- nounced. Bagby will report to Cleve- land when the Southern gue season ts over. SWIMMING INSTRUCTIO CRAWL STROKE TAUGHT BEGINNERS, PROF, MEFFERT, Woolworth Bldg, Baths, RACING) BELMONT PARK By Empire City Racing Ass'n TOMORROW The Hillsdale Handicap The Mahopac Handicap A2 Mile Rene & 3 Other Attractive Races FIRST RACE AT 2.30 P. {

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