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_ UP-TO-DATE AND NEWSY | —_— All English Boxers Are Not, Lacking in Patriotism. Cesores, 10)8, Ts Pree Gyiqmne Ce NGLISM boxers aren't jacking tp Patrictian. They shouldn't be judged by the few who slipped away fram England to avoid possibie Conscription early in the war days Ip & programme of syorte receutiy | at eid at Stamford Bridge, Lonaon, for | the benefit of disabled soldiers and wailore, 1 find the names of many boners Well known in (bis country as iy 3 it home re included boxing exbibl- tions. “There was a thiee round bout tween the great Jem risoull, Lest of all English fighters wiv ir ited America, and Dick Hurge, whe the world’s lignt| it championship to Kid Lavigne | @ National Sporting Club of Lon- | Many years ago. Lurge was bors . 1%, 1865, so he is nearly fifty-one me gld—but not too old to efllst to jt for bie country. He is a rif man in the First Surrey Kiles, Db rl ie @ sergeant in the Royal W orse. There was a three-round bout pe. | —< << $$$ ai tween Corpi, Pat O'Keefe of the First Burray Rifles, who fought several bouts in New York, und Corpl, Ernest » World's sculling champion lron are once heavyweight champion of England, boxed a ffieen- contest with Sergt. H. Om — en, tigty $ cbasdpivu, is fn the Brena ir Gui com Berg. Jack Miller, five times Army and po champion of Englan’ fought Rifleman Duke Lynch of the Firet Surrey Rifles. Eugene Corri — Private Jim Sullivan (former Eng- Ush middleweight champion, who Tost his title to Carpentier) boxed a three- round exhibition. Sullivan is ja the London Scottish. Sergt. Tom moe nto pexed pot Paddon, well known boxers in Eng- land before the war, . Rifleman Jack Goldswain, former Mghtweight champion of England and now in the First Surrey Rifles, boxed Major Jack Meekin. Jimmy Elis, However, Always Take| Wonderful Brace About Time |” They Are to Meet Rivals of | tn Old Nassau. to By William Abbott. ‘wi fiyweight champion of Eng- ea * Yael boxed Pete Ladb: RINCETON should beat e West Ks . «abhi Saturday by @ small score. poral Johnny Summers, former English lightweight and welterweight champion and very popular as a boxer Only the most optimistic Nas- n sau rooters really expect the Tigers} ! ton, bave Tibbott o {kickers in the business, | Yale, on the other hand, hag shown wolutely nothing except a squad! phy. '¢ t strength, realize on misfortune after a the most disasir had. tion of Harry Le best ground gainer and the only good punter available,‘ coaching staff prevented the squad from developing to a Yale standard, THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER i0, BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK {nodit"2.Shen| NOVEMBER GOLF AS THE CADDIE SEES IT Here cCApDE, Tur ueT You Caster THis SHEATER 1f YOu Don't Past Performances This Season Show Princeton Favorite Over Yale Team & rock-bound 6 of the possessed exceptional Yet the Blue wasn The first was the disqu: Gore, the desperation, Tom _ Shevil summoned from the West last week. defense, and in| best drop this advantage. nother resulted in 18 season Yale ever en a defective « Putiehing Oo (The Ne 1906, by The Pre York Erering W Feds’ New York Park Will HE Federal League will invade New York next season. cial announcement was made last night in Indianapolls at the cic of the annual meeting, The franchise forfeited by the Kansas C Club will be transl a site in Manhattan has been selected and a park with a seati capacity of 65,000 will be ready early in April. park.” said Gilmore, by the popular prices.” and 50 cents. Buffalo will remain in the Federal League circuit, will be organized, | more, It {s said that the scale of prices will be 10, 16, 1 n't able One A new compa: ali fics Blue's Kiviat and Smith Are Denied in was ———| Accommodate 55,000 Fans This offt- rred to New York, and, according to President Gil- ‘We must build a big 0 accommodate the crowd that will be attracted New Trial by Met. Associatio ora) HERE Gapprt , 1 Dow? Need East Side Present Day Promoters Ha Secretary and Must Wait —Matches Are Not Made | Bx Bozeman Bulger. time pure. day and 99 per cent > has 8) is pret fo [man w me ity rt of what's going on, the invest gating was done and it’s all every word of it. mB 26 || committee found | suites: eight my was a stenographer, could ‘Managing Boxers From | | Dingy Back Barrooms of ee Feet Rest on Turkish Rugs and You Are Announced by a R business eMfciency the profes- sion of managing boxers in the on the hand of John d to call it—-secens mighty strange. | But, being sent to investigate the re- true, In the confines of New York your handsome not plain offices—in the ex- pensive skyscrapers given over to the | conducting of the affairs of the prize | ring heroes, and in every one there switchboard operator, private office in which one talk to the manager in private, and not @ single loud vest, a rakish WU! nat or a boxing impresario who drank Thing of Past ve Handsome Suites Where Your Until the Manager Is at Leisure | Over Bottles of Wine Now. p » t | poses preferred ¢ mye events should not sifting out process aiong with untried and upknown » peted more or less regularly fo potas toe auiarly for years thirty-two for the match piay rounde be required to compete w wieldly Geld in the elimination round? be limited to 16% players to play om Monday, one round stroke play for 64 reserved for men of tried merit, to be allotted in due order of a —s CALKINS NEW WAY TO CONDUCT nT Would Place Former Cham pions and Untried Players i Separate Groups, 4 Latghion Cathing. f © the United Biates it Aw © methods of Conduc ne. ut ne the Ba amateur golf championship, To down the playing Gaye he pre- | of former rd and unknown Mr Calkins arp nen em is how to Limit the I have often thought Who in previous years their in nations: be subjected too men Why should yers, for exampie who have wm walified in the selected an un- “Il suggest, therefore, that the field urther, that 100 pi aces be 4 known application. Various preferred done, ‘These managers wouldn't be| might be ‘decignated. Por exsan seen again Uni it Was Ume to get Up|group 1 might might include all in another fight. vited guests and ail previous national If you had talked to one of those|chumpions; group 2, all associath ty| Cid Boys woout card index system heland State champions: group. 3, at would have ' you about to try) players who in 1915 qualified for the | Ww system on a faro layout, if a! match play rounds; group 4, all play~ uiliv: cent) f L, Sullivan, bas silpped a Otty ay have spoken his mind, plece to George Dixon and has got) Less than ten years ago your in- Terry McGovern a pass to the ball| igator Was sent out to 1 tervierw | kame this new way of managing (he) were found in tie dingy back roome| affairs of them that box—“fight” they | of east side saloons, There are elght "Big League” man- ers of boxers in New York, and Hof them have offices fitted out in he sume style as those of lawyers or capitalis Harry Pollok have sult t a 4. | 4 Dan MeKetrick utile Build- ing, in Twenty-t . Not only that, but they have branch offices at No. 43 Rue Blanche, Paris, and No. 18 Old Cavendish Street, W. C., London. Jimmy Johnston handles his fight- ing affairs in Madison Square Gar- den Tower and the Knickerbocker Bullding Billy Gibson has two offices in tho Bronx Danny Morgan's suite isin the Put- Nam Building, in upper Broadway Jack Curley has a suite in the Fitz- d in the Bow! and pile up a of spirituous, vinous oF malt Liquors, | eT eo be business-like, in this country, boxed Trooper Eddie | 9 UD Wild In the How! alia pile men, Sapered te eee reen © snes i ; shit ap Can you imagine the bachers of! these fellows have vied with each Biton. ¥ per Eddie} bi score. On the season's record of oughly coached team in less than Case of Disqualified Athletes sane use algae was on the appeal! y,\¢ giirain in the old days going to| other in the matter of systematic ap- Over a hundred and sixty other| both colle the Jerseymen should Geo eeeke: foat any Opetee don't 7 , the verdict of the BL ope) fom re thie mahawer: of Goud Ss Sullivan | Polntments, such as file clerks, ste- Dozers well known in England and’ simply parade over theis, vpponents’ always accomplish in an entire sea-| Will Now Be Carried to Na-| mittee. the mecting was marked by |end finding his way in the ante room fepeer net donee Nasbones ee @ Brtish Army, took part goal line, but there are other sides to! Done my A continuo A, i 4 D3 'xtensio in the programme, and the register, these annual Tiger-Dulldox scraps, | Personality and driving Abilis. may) tinnal Body and Then Into| ‘or the Pane et thee tw xerS of a suite barred by a pretty girl) Of the ianagers mentioned It ot competitors in the athletic events! A glance down the annual records & point where It will be dangerous bers of the board MeM~| stenographer? Goa little further and| might be of interest to note that ni ¢ names of many who rep-| gives the reason why Princeton men It ete | I jout of the entire eight only one ever resented England in’ the Olymplo| are not over anxious to let Val up| ny teaching. 8 weriad ip bia duties) (Courts. Beale anne noting for Kivias and smagine cael taking seece| takes a drink at all, and it Is a rare Games. rters write their own tickets for hy ee ee aneins | duce three ne P c ints’ ©-/in leather bound chairs, thei thing for him, Raturday's game. In twelve years tho|Meures if the Tigers can be stopped ———— Ord after the ierk had ward tee ee | esting ona Turkish rug, waiting un-| “You know," one of the stenog- T'S evident that Wellington might | Tigers have only won two amos and| Los night be able to score on| g pit, KIVIAT and Hi Smith | Utes of the previous trial, a weary re-| til the said manager was at leisure?) raphers remarked while 1 was walt- have added something to his state-|tled three, others, | Ever Mihump in {Just brute strength. | Ted Coy did it A re ety amateur ath. |cital that consumed nearly two lours.| Just keep on and see if you can pic-| IRF at one of the oMces. UT was ment that the battle of Waterloo | Wien the Blue first began to slump in} Oe, °F) “iiake Sheviin's work a re now lost to amsteu Dooling made strenuous efforts to} aaarw Beluw onnoried: 60| rer een att A ek ome “ football Princeton only captured one] iti, easier Guernsey, Yale's only letics, The Board of Managers] have his affidavits read, There wera | ture these backers bd here, because J liad the impression was won on the cricket felds of Eng-|gume—in 1911, when Sam White re-| 1) Ciel. turned’ to practice | of the Metropolitan Association of the| frequent clases between opposing | the private office, the terms of agree-| that’ men engaged in the Mahting | land. Several other branches of sport|covered a fumble and ran eighty) oP A Guernsey was injured in|. SRRSESD factions about the advisability ef tans being taken down by a stenog-| business would be very rough. To 4id in the development of real men. | yards for a touchdown. Princeton | {pt 7 ‘t eed has Leen out |’: A: Us at a midnight meeting at} roe Mirastic acti Whe. ceccans | ene being my surprise IT have found them the had the superior elovens in 1912-12, |¢R¢ Weliigh Bame and has been ouk| i coventy first Regiment Armory fastic action. The motion | rapher and arrangements for moving | (1 ATTLING LEVINSKY seems to \ ves yet they ‘only managed ancient enemy. For years the sight of blue jerseys seemed to hypnotize the Tigers. to tie their have found a punch. Mon- day night at Shenandoah, Pa., vho. le 1 kick 1 he whipped big Jack Geyer and broke| Princeton teams never got, going | Dots: Who leads all Kickers with | his jaw. At 178 pounds Levinsky was/against Yale, mainly because the) “phough the lime is very shore at Geyer a fifty-pound handicap, | Blue's aggressiveness put them on] gneviin can be counted on to produce LS nver giant was once touted as | to des nse right at tho start, es A hard fighting team. Yale teams variably 19 gers ha ie ways been noted for their in- & coming heavyweight champion. thowing up to the Yale battle, but have alway! they frequently took this critical time to slump. Yale, on the other hand, was alWays at its best against Old Nassau. If only the past could be erad rinceton wou favorite thin Tigers have had a good with the Harvard defeat as coached by Speedy Rush shown wonderful Kicking power, fensive strength unusual for Prin West as “Kewpie" Ertle, shas made good in his first Hastern fight. Ertle's rushing, aggressive style makes it easy to believe that he had the best of Kid Williams. The twe should make a great drawing eard for a New York ten-round bout, Ertle is probably willing. Williams should jump at a chance to prove that he is still master of all the ban- tamweights, ( up with discussions of ama- teurism in college athletics, Many college athletes are working their way through college. Whey) haven't much money. If their ability) Jim Buckley has taken another fighter to play baseball can help them to ob- Under his management. ‘The scrapper ts tan an ¢ ueation It seems a pity, to Tommy Burke, the hard hitting mid- them from college athletics be- | dieweight of St. Louis, who made such cause of any participation, in "gums | a want Aetna ah egg pga cea ver mer baseball” in vacation time. They psp a ale are not real professionals. Necesnity [Qube Layee meer asiend be Matt Burke and not desire to profit through a here with him when he Jr ERTLE, known tn the The OLLEGE circles are all stirred Fistic News and Gossip By John Pollock per cent. of the receipt for be at Hudeon with any mat came to New | bas sored two knockouts recon team gives Yale additional scoring | last night voted, 50 to 6, strength, though Guernsey can’t be| Registration Committee, which bad classed with Tibbott, the Tiger's star domitable spirit. and even with {ts/day that they will carry thelr cases poor record the 1916 Yale eleven can to the highest tribunal in the be depended to rally at the cructal | tour time and ase ooh cuales and! tional Registration Committee. Should | Church House star. arvard a tough arg ; ‘The New York Baseball Club has sold what few tickets it had for the ason even | Ariny-Navy ‘The team | Grounds, game on the They didn't Wu, Friday night ie that he arranges for "The club only had about has| 4,000 to sell. of last long against the flood of applications that Secretary Foster received, staining the roar, previously found Kiviat guilty of de- manding $75 and Smith $40 to appear) iter ars: telling the managers a mect in Schenectady last Sep-|{+ pained bim to hear tember, Both runners with Olympic regords to their credit anpounced to- h ‘ottad t e8: saat ‘Associaon—the We: |e tcestein o press the cha’ this committee deny their appeal, Kiviat and Smith plan to carry their troubles into the courts. ‘The action of the Board of Man- Columbia Holds Justice Weeks carefully went the record, pointing out how the accused runners had received Polo defend themselves, the negative. Although Columbla still retused to|*"Q tree ye. the two announce its stand yesterday af to whether or not {t would play the ‘Trinity eleven on Saturday, there was to the highest A. A put quit was finally denied after a long up- Justice Weeks, Chairman of the A. A. U, Law Committee, followed Law- | yer Dooling and reviewed the case the serious charges against Smith and Kiviat. Justice Weeks told how he had made it possible for Smith to compete in the Olympic Games in Stockholm and of professionalism against the Brons ficient opportunity and fair play to The venerable Justice concluded his address with an eloquent plea that the managers do star athletes expect to make an immediate appeal U. committee. . en when it was all|'The fighters sometimes make me taepbone, Then laugh by the way they act when joyers they first come in, but even they are Case NO WINE 18 OPENED WHEN| geiting to act like the managers MATCHES ARE MADE. rges from 4 to 6. your card with my secretary! ‘And, that's all. talk, and not one sult of cloth louder than @ whisper, over two suf- rranging a nothing to tear down the magnificent . vests that would make a leopard) sporting writers all over the United ructure the late James E. Sulliv.n ete jook modest, and golden 108] states. In this is the office and home 5 t fe had 80 carefully built up. chains to support their watcher. Me Ot evel Woking man in (he ‘Pp Uc e 8 or Tt was just two minutes of mid-| After a few bottles of champagne and there are also the ad- as night when a standing vote was|messages would be sent to the hat 3 Of of managers in Lon T. it Game taken, fifty delegates voting that|ing writers to come at once. The) don and Pari rin y Kiviat and Smith had forfeited their | fighters would be led in, allowed t0) Ay important detail of this work is - amateur standing and six voting injaffix their names to the articles o Nie awapanece da haw agreement and depart, Then of some kind and the thing would has tn aead him, ‘ong presumtive evidence that the ‘columbia authorities have decided that the game wil not be played un- Bowling Strikes and Spares picture rights being made over the “Gentlemen, 1 am delighted to have seen you"—this from the manager. ‘Drop in again some time. I'm al- ways here from 10 to 1 o'clock and If you miss me, leave No drinks, no loud ula days the accepted way pence boxing match was the every ‘an in the party Would open up a few Inore bottles of wine, make a big bet most considerate and quietest man- nered men I have ever worked for. IN TOUCH WITH EVERY MAN- AGER IN THE COUNTRY. At the office of iTarry Pollok, guite of three rooms, opportunity was afforded to inspect the system. A record book showed that during the past week 084 letters, containing press. information, details of matehmakin and instructions to fighters had by mailed from that one office Mr. Pollok and Mr, MeKetrick have compiled a remarkably comprehen- sive book for keeping in touch with boxing promoters, matchmakers an 8 r- looking after York printed in a foreign language This is not surprising when it Is re- membered that a large per cent. of| is boxers are of foreign birth, and ‘a majority of their supporters| speak a forelgn tongue ems of information and notification of new! matches are sent to the sporting editors of these papers every day. — | Practically the same — business) | : Gibbons, Buck- f . Y y do tipu- t ® in vogue in the other | ‘ranch of athletics drives them into! York for his battle with Gibbons, Buck: According to a report from Chica less Trinity agrees td certain 8 methods are the game. Jey signed Burke up in Bt, Louls a few | Montitn, while in that city, signed up A ations, among them that George | d-emremcescem:ae-aecemcescemram came (ian een eesine > | tices ; Isn't it better for a college boy, in) days ago. gast to fight Joo Bhugrue, the Jersey Clty Nabe | Brickley, (18 stormy petrel Of the} i101, goores are common now in The/and 219; Miller, 235 and 213, and Tipe] At Jimmy Johnston's suite the girl! summer vacation time, to be playing erg ” in the main event at the Pioneer Spo itback on is teste. Al- | Man, 211 had a few ttema of news ready for healthful outdoor game than to be| Jobin Rebsier, manager of the Harlem Sporting lub of this clty on the wight of Nor 1/15 football season, star hal Evening World elimination contes Rhine of the younger element nt the 2ny Newspaper man that called. Her faking tickets in the subway, selling| Club, announced early today wat be intends 1 fe mathaniee ct tatoan, |the Hartford team, be barred from | though none of the bowlers were able to) roadway Arcade are beginning to bowl | PTS MOC ed iat sir, Johnston would > 4 t. | Lantee cores, “Canpbell made 247, 203. h books or working at any of the few | pot every dollar of the qua with thie " at ove of the shows oca-|the line-up. ‘This presumption gained | peat Bender's 278 record last night, | better scores, Campbell many att, ai |i. at the Garden until 4.80 and could eae Some” open to him? Before they | Athistic Commence thet be hap snel, to si | month aoa a quan Harry A. Fisher, |some of them chalked up unusually big) 70). ENA: ibi Wee and its; Ro, |e reached by telephone er eereraer Dewenall the ecucarorn| the fighiees Whe will tae pee oe that bt oreo tte inanager of athletics at| tallies, ‘The third round of the compe-|jiuil, 192, 188 end 179, and C. ‘Jock Curley was out, but the ate- | Bete Tan toxter ite” ateatteeee|aae cc Mer. 38. ache ease that ave sok Mach tae Deen practically aranamt between | BUTT hin, refused ty well tickets for tition starts to-day with the leaders at aA Ferra ann | NaSTAE RST toe a them when Jak carefully and learn its advantages Nov, 1, John says that every one lohnny raeight champion, and | U0! ee Ail yA aye rf ‘ xe of an ; Fa ers and informed them when Jack and disadvantages. ere have posted forfeite for their | Mi M the Milsaukes iemmeun, [tho game yesterday, saying in ex" Jeach ncademy holding an average of 217 and 218, a creuld returns and jusi what enguge- Appearance im the ring. They will cb at the Toleto AL A, for ten |euse that h woud Bot ri ek about 280 for their best ten annie, 2 Hera, 215 an 311, Tho Brooklyn SHNG | ments he had, so that they could ar- FTER all, the amateur idea ts a om fomnda on, ‘Nor and the chances are that Ku | this morning nother date, Harry Breakstone heads the lst) Central high scores, wera 218 and 213 ronge their time accordingly, | , pout | bane will fight at top speed vould be played 2 M. Enright and 220 by Joe Soria rie eta jooks, after all, as if the twenty.round bout e Davee. dows not want Would be play average of 238, is to the arran sort of a fetish, Real amateur- | Tt looks, after all, . fr eat 2 a] with an individual ee —— Ww, i \petween Kid Williame of Baltimore and Frankie] ‘© eet in bad with the fight promote in tuy| That Columbia has written a secon it the Park Row alleys Eddie fen- A Lon ienonere ahd boxers!” These fam has beon entangled In | porns of demey City will surely take place in| er cities in the West, letter to Trinity was admited gen- hit the pine for 244, 236 and 223: LEAGUE SCORE! a , men that I have mentioned are what | mass of technical rules made only to | New Orieane on Nor, 29, Sammy Harris and| Johnny Mayes, the popular east aide bantam |Orally by the Colnennis. Cre ee eine Yes and 217; Johnny Hili, pafmariogn Notional Pourne. Senior. would be call iff baseball “bis | brok ecret. wal on the way to New Oriesue, Wil:| who beat ri at ditasy aman! and not until a reply to this wr nao, 22 iJ + va Ri 4B; . outers”, They do not bother with 6 85 Aes that hundreds fame to moar o omnes of $5,000 and $500 | Hrookiyn cee ‘oe bong 2 . t “| despatched early yesterday morning, ‘and 207; Vic Nelson, 214; Fred Sepp. Hackensack, a Rosedale, ee Ne thew AICHE to” WON: of college men now competing in va- | for exposes, | match with Teddy dacste, tither ee ite tant | Wil it be known whether Trinity will Ernie I auschild. 318, and Btantey, eters "xavier, 807, vs, San Salva-|thing, In the old days they would rious branches of amateur sport hold Acre A.C, of at the Broadway A, €, of Brook (come down to New York miny Tae Matt Fleming. with ; Kavicr, 183, va. Rosina Conll,|(ake a, young, fellow, train, him and | ‘their ppajenr ‘ palng through ove: tyn, John O'Bne AM) West Twenty Brickley; or - he nee se A 2 un a CPR 5 0 Salvadore, 859, vs. Regina bring bien ore om py bi i Rig f -| sions the rules, The same mig first Street, wh managing Hayes, feels sure | KOC* Jeet dls pilaf 2 8, and Drescher, 213, Joel, 84 grees, No’ ay he must have gone be said * joearbers of te Amateur | Mikes cite Younes Bawa On Nor. | Re te y can best 1 other good boys st —_—_—_s——— the H inte Poink academy: ne. suave te Clerks: Bank of, Savings, ats, through the minor Jeanne stage ane | Base are very few. real umateurs, | 10, Morean has ust signed Wells up wo meet | IA Sh SMITH DEFEATED COX poltd Som, 208, 208 And 201; Henry| Vonage fie va, Bank of Savings, 8203|they can spend their tine on hin College boys may use their skill to |dehooy Gritty, the W for] Hilly Gibson, matchmaker of Madison Square | IN VERY TAME BOUT. | Neston, 13 and, 209 Charles! Firat National, 797, vs, Emigrant In-| The manoxer 1 percentage of themselves through college, but | Mundas at Akron, sa iy | "| Manz, 213 Boe wand 198; Willlam | dustrial, 741, the gross earnings of the boxer, as at t ninety per cent. of the most | pom Mecarty, the Montana hearywoight who may te saa Cartes — Swanton, att Som, 301,187 and ? Crotona, §-man: | Bronx Church| cording to his prominence, or ins | muccessful alleged “amateur athletes” | jurends wo go after all the heavywelgbia in the ihe Pe ec ens aed pa ead ST. LOUIS, Mo, Nov. 10.—"Gun- Bros, G. “Erdman bowled | 530, ve Me ern ane Le able nee, t itt fe low who hi 1 ° outside the colleges compete directly | tuiure, will bex: Saturday nigot Detween lightweights and one between (HOt Smith outpointed Joe Cox, the 4; Liebert, ne pe House, 471, va. Bronz |C° pushed nas SOUUy at Brahy: by j for money, which is paid to them |, on Bat! ky in & ton-round |Missourt heavyweight, in an eight Heyma: 8. 216 and R. Bo- |b expected mor an a cham. with all necessary secrecy, and oft@D | yy gt the Broad) ng Clud of Brooklyn, 9 round bout here ight, Smith led 211 and 200; Freeman, 252, and Hit” Eahwartssnies Hubert Gos | Poe who merely needs some one to} by the very officials who boast mo: fat er Mohr is anoiber fia the way. muri giant was | Kowenteld, 211 Sill, Schwartzenbach, Huber & Co! Keep track of hid affairs, loudly of their stand for pure ama- | Soldier Barifield, who fighis Mike Gibbons « ten d ontinually on the neive. A left] “Kid flter, one of the old Umers HY re 8. » Opp m, I's intensely interesting and all in sport. ten-round go at the Capitol City A, ©. of BI. | taro part in two bation, His first yok and a right Jab at the ner | put over his frst “double century,” a) 73, Bld Sun Insurance Co.,| that, but, somehow, this kind of box clean and outright professional ou Dec, 8, is to receive a guarantee of] Kid Burns, the west side now and thi Cox tried | 408, and Clasen tine vomistered 268, 646. 105, 872, va, Aachen, Munich Insure | ing business doesn’t seem like the old fe better than any dishonest “ama- bo with the privilege of scoepting 25 yer opt. } rounds at New Britain, ¢ scittel ce” Se eae te ened at ihe Crotona, ‘The Bronx Pul-|ance Co., 764, 728, 748. days, What {t has gained in eff. e ir fOr | of the gross movelpta, BartfieWd fa to also meeive| second with Sam Itubid oc |thes er * ‘csented by J. Levy, whol Brio Railroad: ‘Freight Account, 852, !clency has been lost in the romantic teur” ad secretly takes money {i toe 66 81,000 ith the 2 A de for |the affair hooted the | ace wes, reps rey ‘ue Y "1g. 665, Sim ve. Opera Maa Ti Ties nod toe piowuresque, ule wor! + suasanive x with wwe 40" Gltevn rounds at New Haven, Coun, on My. a7. | fighters, made 234, en i 222, " a Une, " ead other competitors to play play ro don the Sal urday before for the remaining 62 places. day with a fleld of 168, 64 to quality | for a qualification round on Tuesday, ‘This could be at 18 holes, or it might be at 36 holes, #0 ag to dig- regard the scores on Monday. would mean two short 18-hole rounds on Wednesday, only elght playe viving, with 36-ho day, Friday and Saturday. Or, if should be decided to have only the finals at 36 holes, a day could be ved. In other words, you could have the 4o-a8-you-please canter on Monday, the elimination round on Tuesday, the re round on Wednesday and four mate' play rounds on Thursday an: with the finals on Saturday,” —_——_—_ NEW SCHOLASTIC LEAGUE terested in the organization Interse! in conjun & meeting tory Schools Athle | by Herbert M up avemed to by question. ‘that no boy ove: ts eligible to terschol etitutic age Who partake in leticr and for this reason it is doubtfi if their schools would agree to league where there is such a restrigtl as to ane. SEATS FOR 47,000 AT stands at the caps Saturday, The nounced yester pacity has to this MORIARTY RELEASED DETROIT, Nov. 10.--George Moriarty, a Tiger infielder, was given his un- itional release by joan League Baseball Moriarty was f Highh welght, Quinn in the main bout of ten rounds al with a right swing to by a left swing to the stomach. Tham's Aca ga ‘ league, by the in 78 inn! The winner run of & and Stone's high run was 4 Billiards FISey ¥ stenographer had been with 9) ery who so qualified in 1¥14; group 6, arahot he would have been #0 timid gil players who so qualified in 1913, he couldn | going back perhaps five years. “Finally, the programme would re- “Then begin the real event on Mon- in 1914, This 8 Bur » rounds on Thur 1 36-hole qualifying Friday, MUST ADJUST AGE LIMIT. entatives of seven schools in- of a new antic Athletic I ue to work tion with the P. 3. A. L. held at the Polytechnic Prepara- yesterday. The Publ ague was represcnted “reary. nly real diawback that cropped © limit ¢ 8. A. L twenty-on. sent his seboot in petition. In private any boys over thi ome form of ati Repri School The The F atic th —_—_—————_ YALE-HARVARD GAME, CAMBRIDGE, M: 8, Nov. 9 Extra Harvard Stadium will BY DETROIT TIGERS. re, Jose to nine » ee Herman Stops Qoinn in Sevend, Kid Herman, the east atde leht- short work of Chiel made show last. nigty in the see in Jaw, followed Quinn Block, out Stone Beaten by Moore, Moore of Chicago defeated w York last night a John Joseph Stor When ordering saye BURKES GUINNESS. Most places serve it exclusively Bottled by~E.&J. BURKE KVELYTAING POR Bowling | Prices and Terms to Suit. REPAIRS BY EYPERT MECHANICS, Bi Lok» Boal