The evening world. Newspaper, December 23, 1915, Page 12

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1 State Commission Took $58.05 Out of Money Contributed to Kid Lavigne’s Benefit. Prem Publishing Co, Commer New York ening, Word.) HYLOCK demanded his pound of flesh—and the State Boxing Commission took out of the money contributed for Kid La Vigné's benefit. The State got its “bit” by snatching a few of the dol- lars freely given by Lavigno's old friends and intended for Lavigne him- oolf, Bust What possible excuse the Box- ing Comissioners can offer for this niggardly proceeding no ordinary citi- sen can imagine. According to the managers of the Lavigne benefit, Commissioner Wenck UP-TO-DATE AND NEWSY THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, DECEMBER & « nee: ‘Sean Oud SWAKE OUT WW APEN Bucks PLATING (ANOTHER PILL FELLY WITH THE Gana \ BEFORE DINNER — — Bos =k ON BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK ED A HUNCH THAT FAILED Copyright, 1915, by tho Preas Publishing cae tok Ouse ) Jit | VL Co. (The New York Evening World.) GLUTTON For A PUNISHMENT He's Been Paying © HOURS AND He DOESN'T ANT TO Quit ver we 4 ‘ Salient Features of Peace Agreement | Ending Baseball War Reinstatement of al have jumped their Chicago Nationals Americans to be sold to Fe L gue club owners. Federal League players, except- |} ing those of Chicago and St. Louis |] clubs, to be Id to highest bidders. otated that the usual percentage of the gato receipts would have to be Heid out for the State. When a pro- 5 teat was mado Mr. Wenck sad he|| Bennie Kauff Is the Greatest Player 155 OL read rode adage In the World, According to Bennie Kauff. If we have a law on tho statute , books that allows the State to confis- This is how Bennie Kauff, the young Ty Cobb of the Federal Le cate a portion of any sum donated for | | resards his ability as @ ball player and his prospects in organized baseball @ charitable purpose it's about time “I have rented @ flat in the Bronx and will stick around here to have the law repealed. until t the Giants live up to their contract with me. . Wha . : “Vl show those birds something when | get into that league. If Eee a ee titca acme thexa| | Larry Doyle and those fellows can bat around -330 I'm good for .375. were rs * \ didn'tireally take a full swing at the ball last season. | just chopped waen% @ paid boxer or athlete in the at it when | scored those long homers. When | play on the Polo 0 Mat of those who exhibited to help Grounds that right field atand will be a cinch, Ill knock them in the old champion in his time of right handed. trouble, Those who appeared volun- “Those National League catchers stop me! Say, if | don't ste teered their services. One ten-round Vil give you @ year’s salary. Those pitche paid bout was scneduled, but it was pais ee toels tails Tentcat. ie “The hest player in the National League I Show ‘wasn'tin any tense a sctios of | | know whe the gent will be next season @ ; boxing ‘competitions. In fact, there “No, siree, the umpires won't get me. It's going to be ‘Mister’ ‘wasn't @ single competition or con- with me, and they will not get any of my money. | was only fined tage, of any kind. once last year, In 1914 the Feds got about all my dough. Gilmore Commissioners have|| would hand mi ry 9 k @ precedent—idiotic as it|] umpires, but | couldn't stand their lip: I've learned a lesson since then. dag FY Oiiineey, vis “MoGraw is a fing feller. He and | will get aleng great if | go ‘part of the mony paid'in or] 4 te the Glanta.” bo by Lavigne's friends they yrery ter} to tax boxing wher- ever it und. Since they collected the Fer ie men eer. ia ap no xing contests, is ob. 2 fo be consistent they mun Fistic News. and Gossip State tax of-7% per cent. wherever boxing of any kind forms By John Pollock a of any performance or enter- it. Where any boxer appears| Leach Cross, the Fighting Dentist, whos bored Campl » draw, lence the (nterest in the pag) stage tis Oe duty of the Box- stopped Ad Wolgast in <'x rounds | ¢ | “AR! slated for Saturday sfternoon, commissioners (unless ey re~ el ae jon ir verse themselves) to collect 7% per|#Fiday night at tho Harlom Sporting] , lle ack. the smsational ex-amateur feather. cent. of the theatre's gate recelpts|Club, mects Packey Hommey of the} learing the ranks of the simon pure boxers, las for that day, east side in the feature bout at the same | ben matched by his manager, Dave Simo \ 5 Linea bouta, to take place in the month. of ¢ HE receipts of the Lavigne ben- club to-night. Cross is much peeved Neck meets Yor aw at the Broa efit, turned over to the Kid by bi he has to go through this hype ’ on New 6 Day, The following re ne slg & contract for it, but ts] week he meets some guod boy at the Fairmont ee: Pelalor, thay ran the | caly boxing because ordered to do so by| A.C. Nach ls eleo tooked to meet some tora! ow, were astonishingly small. It! the Hoxing Commission, Crovs was lightweight ia Pliladeljita the last” week in ‘was expected that Lavizne would re-| around yesterday declaring that he was | January, at least $2,000, Hut the money actually paid to Lavigne, including ehecks and cash sent him through the mail, amounted to only $464, oe a) is still due, according to the 4 fatements, me for tickets sold and not yet paid for, The State collected a tax on this ‘entire sum, Reisler attributes the small receipts t@\the holiday season, watt NEY,who whipped Wolgast and spoiled Wolgast's chances fn the Cross fight, is in town and ‘net up.” Met Frankie yesterday, states that he inten legal advice in New York and use every effort to run down and punish the person or persons who sent fake t@egrams in the name of Whitney's manager to all the newspapers on the it of the Whitney-Wolgast affatr. whipped Wolgast,” sald Whit- ney, “I don't know whether there a8 a cut on his head or not. | t him deliberately and stopped , is wild rushes, When he quit I haé him tamed. One eye was com- ' pletety and the other nearly closed, «md he was very weak from my body pounding. I was ready to finish him when the bell rang and he staggered to his corner, To tell you the truth, I ashamed to hit him, he was s0 beaten. His manager threw in the sponge and gave up the fight, ye was the only thing he could “After the fight my manager sent ott wires to the New York pa saying I had won the official deci Later that night the same papers re- celved what purported to be another mr signed by my manager, asking t they disregard the first message, “This second wire was a fake. It ‘wasn't even sent out from Atlanta, although in the first line it was dated “Atlanta.” There was no New York + date line. We have traced the fake wires down far enough to know that they were sent from a Thirty-eighth Street office of the telegraph com- pany. No telegraph company has a it to send out a message with a $ date line. And no one has a t to forge another person's signa- ture to a telegram. I've been injured financially by this fake wire, and I'm to make it mighty hot for some- body B” NY LEONARD just dropped in in Atlanta last week’ ‘ ast night, Benny looked quite neat and natty, He didn’t sport @ cauliflower ear, «!though this is an omission that can be corrected later, bly. I asked Benny if he thought he gould run fast ¢nough to catch Weleh, with whom he is matched “TM catch him all righ! id pesny. sfinging. Asver a moment of thought he added: “And. I'll knock him out.” | ex lightweight | White in Milwaukee, | counts, 1s to get the beat | | going to make Hommey the goat for the | decision, ax he says that he 1s going to Willlo Astey, the rigged liytle west side ban tamwoight, and Yong Koso of the east try, as never before, to knock him. | will clash in the mai t of ten rounds next lhe rest of the card 8 of one| Monday night at the Olympic Club of Harlem ten and two six round bou' Astey, who only a last week defeated Young Charley White, the Chicago lightweight, who has been trying hard to secure a bout for the Nightweight championship with Freddie Welsh, is going to box Matt Wells again, Recently the —. amplon of Kugland defeated ind ever ince thea White} TOM COWLER EASILY has been yearning for a chance to aquare ac: | DEFEATS PORKY FLYN He will get the opportunity on Jan, 4| Tom Cowler, the big heavyw Witnewed between little men, hy ® match with Johnny Krtle at this ho is mccesful in winning dbeiai i ly oyer Kose, Armory A. A, of Bostow, when the pair Rosner in one of the most seusstional bouts ever | Climbs Out ‘Koster Pin Knights at Last’ ; Register a Victory by Winning} Three Straight Games on Their Home Alleys in Eve- i ning Worid Three-Mai Tour- ; ney. * SCHEDULE TO-NIGHT: Grand Central at Metropolitan. White Elephant at St. Nich Inn. HE Bronx Central trio gradu. ated from the cellar in the ble Evening World three-man tourney last night by grabbing three consecutive games from the Hunts | Point team on their home alleys. | ‘These are the first games the Koster pin Knights have been able to reg- ister to thetr credit, Up to yesterday they were tied for the bottom posi- tion with the Bronx Palace, but the chances are they will gradually work their way up near the top. The series opened with a clean victory for the Central bowlers, Nockler and Himmelsbach outplay- ing their opponents by fifty-five and nineteen ping respectively, Tometz sained another point over Pais, The | Hunts Point trio were rolling far be- low their usual form, missing single |pin spares, There was a little im- provement {n their second game, but Tometz’s even 200 tally gave this ses- sion to the Koster aggregation, It seems strange, but nevertheless it's fact, every time Jack Levy, owner of the Hunts Point Academ accompanies his team abroad for tournament or match games they make a poor showing, Levy's pres- Bronx Central Tri By Beating Hunts Point No Players on Blacklist In Peace Agreement Signed at a Cincinnati ven the Men: Who Jumped Major and Minor Leagues to Join, Federal League Are Eligible—Two Clubs Change Hands,! stinor teawuo clubs have claims ROBERT EDGREN ITED BY BG LEAGUE CLUBS ~BDNG ALREADY FORFORTY FE Gilmore Says sighty - Four Players Are Under Con- tract to His League. | CHICAGO, Dec. 23.—There are \eighty-four players under contract to clubs which are mombers of the Federal League, and already bida for forty of them have becn made by American and National League clubs, vccording to James A, Gilmore and Charles: Weeghman, who returned day from the peace meeting in neinnati, Tha Federal League Jowners expect to have to carry a comparatively few contracts, as it s certain, Mr, Gilmore said, that the lh salaried better known players will be taken over by their late rivals seg i ‘ ‘ lon players who left their ranks for aederal Teague club owners to || Charles Weeghman Securing the Cubs and Phil Ball the ()) "yn" wae eh toes oppor: players. Browns. tunity to buy the men who fall to National and American Leagues snidichaiainipaiiiens find places in the majors, according to reimburse Ward int , to Mr. Gilmore. In few of these | CINCINNATI, Dec. Will be seen among major league! occu jt ig possible the owners of the seems | HIE baseball war is ended, the} magnates in the future, Charles) pedgeral League will havo to supply committees representing Or- ganized Baseball and the Fed- gue having at last signed a of peace, The principal fea- |ture of the agreement is that there | will be no blacklist of any Federal | League players, not even those who |jumped major league or minor league {contracts to join the outlaws | ‘The Federal League promoters will recoup some of their losses by the |sale of their stars, Many of them jare bound to bring a handsome i figure, | The details of the agreement won't Ibe announced for some time. Two major league clubs will change hands as a result of the bringing about of peace, and two new faces treaty of Cellar STANDING OF THE TEAMS IN THE WORLD TOURNEY. Won 6 lant. 1 1 Nicholaa ‘Tou. ergman ros Bron White bie bite icons brent" Moiace nt ‘ent If Yanks Get Lee Magee There May Not Be Peace Here After All Capt. Huston and Manager Mo- Graw, Close Friends, May should acquire stock in the New York Club or should get the controlling in- terest that he will not do xo under any consideration without John McGraw as the manager. Lock Horns Over Recent) Among those who are not worrying | ree cue Gener tie st Corey Brookfed Manager. MeGraw. He has a fat contract with 14 ial ome time to ran, and even if it uld be termina by any pecul- jar prank of the game he could get Just as mu if not more from three or four of the big league teams: By Bozeman Bulger. | * the Yanks should set Lee Magee, MeGraw will not en discuss, the recent manager of the Brook-| plans about players feds, as is rumored in Cincinnati,|, “This thing is all mixed up now, than 4 M4 wh. peng | hasaid, “and I don’t feel that it would e@ may not be so much peace! he right for me to make any state- around here after all, John McGraw,} ments one way or the other, It is Harry Hempstead and John | my business to run the team and not Bava bean analine the tint | take. hand in the politics of the dutflelder for some time—not exactly | angling, but yearning. Capt, Huston and McGraw are the closest of personal friends, and it was through the aid and suggestions of McGraw that the ap." got into baseball, Now, if they are going to lock horns over this young man Ma- Masked Marvel And Lewis Go to Two-Hour Draw Lash iu a twelvecround bout to a decision at ight} ence last night must have surely been |&ee @ new truce may have to be de- | pounds ringeide that Jim Corbett has been so persist-| the Jinx for in the last sessyn his|clared befofe there can be any abid-) 4 crowd that included hundreds of | eae | ently touting, made good in another bout | representatives only rolled a total of | ing peace, smartly dressed women and filled to | Knockout Brown, th haired lightwelsht, |here last night when he easily defeated | 461, while the Bronx Centrale piled) Ana itne funny part of it is that overflowing the spacious Manhattan jar N. Ju, where he hes @ farm, with bu | Cowier gave his opponent » bad beating Himmelsb’h 171 183 117 |Graw lose Magee just as mauioh {8 and the Masked Marvel wrestle two rede of ban com aad op forth, fie will bas | ig SAT UAatee Ue Wate cr Mit 798 {eo | McGraw would hate to see the Cap) pours to a draw last night. It we w Jersey at the Pioneer Sporting | that Flynn stayed on his feet. In the Brown will umet | SIXth round it looked as though the Boston heavywelght would be knocked out, but the bell came to his rescue. It was one of the beast heavyweight bouts staged around here in some time, ee Moore Knocks Out Goldman. CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Dec Young Val Moore of Memphis, bantam champion of the South, knocked out Young Goldman of Cincinnati in the first round of the scheduled eight- round bout here last night. Feinting to the stomach with his left, Moore shot a who used to Joe Azevedo, e under the man- | agement of Jobn Reisler, is now being managed by Diek Curley, ‘The latter has matehed bim to vox Padie Wagner Christmas afternoon at the National A, C, of Philadelpiia, Curley that be basn't yet closed with the Armory A, A for Avevedo to box Vhil Bloom next Tuesday night, but he says be is willing to do so if be secures the guarantee he demands, Charlie Weinert, the Newark boxer, who meets Jim Savage at the Pioneer Sporting Club next contest, Lady James. A —Dr. Dougherty, Pen: alc bean Doumherty, Fen ‘Two Knooked Out at Sharkey. Fourth Race—Russ, Sand, Cocti || Artie MeGovern knocked ont Walter Kennah. Fifth Iola. Sixth Race — Canapa, Eastman. Brooks of Jersey City in the sixth round of their ten-round bout at the Sharkey A. C. In another bout Bartley Madden Knocked out Soldier Delaney in the fourth round, Race — Steranise, Prepaid, Mud sill Thursday night, will probably be signed to meet 4 Walsh and Lipman of the Bronx Palace Jim Finn, the Fighting Fireman, before the | IBKt smash to Goliman's Jaw that sent | toa are also left-handed shooters, Enwineers’ A, ©. at thelr opening show on Jan. 6,| him sprawling on the canvas, Vic | dacs Boer Hodel ‘and Sailor White joined Weinert’s of New Orleans knocked out] 4 yesounding crash does not always training camp at Trosler’s in Newark today, Prince of Chattanooga in one | signify a strike. Bottling Levinsky, who bosee Jim Firnn at the Ales Dunbar and Jimmy Smith re Broadway Sporting Club on Christums afternoon, RS ity aE cently returned from an. exhibition tour ly wanted by the management of the Armory cue ay Over Sweeney, The expedition would oston to box Jack Dillon next mont. PROVIDEN( RB De «8 had they con- offered @ guarantes of $750 for] Knockout y of New York ante ons but b elve-round decision to Mike ts to ap- uunleas he gets Creire-retns Srcsmien. 19 ike Bi in dates, pal th of Ne York in the ain out this week Tommy Touhey, the Auburn-haired boxer from might at the Rhode Islar A. The Nana i te Paterwn, N, J., will meet HAdie Campi io the | DOUt Was a gruelling one from start to | !uE Coiled to nu undoubtedly ear atizaction of ten rounds on Chrisumaa Day| finish, neither having much tier af fred wing cham at the matinee c © teu-round boute to be| until the fifth round, when Pigue | pions waged in the ALC, to the Brows, [forked “to, the front.” “Agwin the pA Banas kesh she f twelfth MeTizue punished — Sweeney | Touhey of Victories ree twe y and ia three matches at the Fairmont he de. | #e¥erely. . GEORGE BOTHNER WRESTLES feated Mike MoCabe, stopped Jack Goldie and —_ | {ested Milly Piteaiiunus, The latter recently | Mack Easily Whips Nelson, | GIANT COLOSSE TO-NIGHT. — a aa HARTFORT Conn Dec eeseremroners = Frankie Mack of Boston gave Frankie | ‘Th® popular referee and undefeated | Nelson of New Jersey a sound dfuthing | lightweight champion, George Rothner, JUAREZ SELECTIONS. im twelve fast rounds last night, Macc, |WIll meet the huge French champion, cen left hand was too Fase for the Jersey-| Pierre Le Colosse, at the international First Race—Ambri, Coos, Endure [| raamy Adie cinched at ¢ Wg ovetion | Oper House tocnighte Phe bath ts d ovation | nig i 4 Nite eee vane, grace for his gameness at the close ‘of the heas-catehsean style, In which Roth- 200, LEAGUE SCORES. tlonal Tourney—Presto, irwood, (forfeit) towling Black Charles Costa of the White Elephants is not the only southpaw bowler in The ening World tourney. We discovered er remains |ponents of the world “The Mysterious who has been the cent ‘fortnight, is matched to wrestle Tyan Linow, ‘the untamable, man-eating , Cossack, Linow was scheduled to meet | the unknown on the occasion of his! second appearance, but refused on ac count of an injury he had sustained, of ‘the cleverest ex- Masked Maryel,’" of all eyes fora knocked out of a good player, their @tar players to the highest bid- polities the two clubs will be so anx- ious to avoid hurting the other's feel- ings that neither may get him, the office of Garry Herri McGill wants MeGraw to have Kauff it will be so ordered, inate all legal difficulties, gnly the other night that Lewis pre vided the real sensation of the tour- ney whee he scored a fall over the If the Feds are permitted to sell a der it will be a question of which | Marvel in less than fifteen minutes. New York team thinks it will need Up to the time that the Strangler Magee most, If it is a matter of) pinned his shoulders to the mat the Marve! was consid was uncanny the feated 4 unbeatable, It sy maner he de- his other opponents, and his work alone was responsible for mak- ing @ success of a tourney that was slowly nearing the rocks of failure. The tip that Mag Yanks is said to have eman, » may go to the d from nd that an, When the Marvel was tossed by stamps it with a little authenticity, Lewis he declared that he was not as it is known that the National Com- | only ill, but that a slip enabled his ae te kn omid like to seo the Yanks | adversary to beat him, Last night have a good team in New York as well | he was back in the form that pre- as the Giants, viously marked his work in the tou nament and many times in the course In the mean time the fans await na men y 0 the verdict calmly seated astnide the of the evening it looked as though he fence. They will be tickled, no mat- | had both of Lewis's shoulders touch- ter which way Ma’ falls, juat no) ig the canvas, but Referee Bothner “7 e 3 New York ruled othe se Pueae sualte (ae annie deat) tal: 0f the mateh had not, been stoped ante 1 ” dice regulations it th jants seems i ost certain, as ; 4 Mr. McGill, who formerly owned | Ws the opinion of a majority of th Kauft's contract, in anxious for Me spectators thet the Marvel would Graw to have him, MeGill likes Me- | Dave won, a8 } was the strong at Graw personally and has been tho | the finish, So Interesting was the recipient of several baseball courte. | bout that few of the thre thousand sies from the Giant manager, If) spectators left before time was callec The management is now rrange for another finish ween these two stars trying to atch be- That will elim- | Capt. Huston was engaged in a long | eet ee La digtance telephone conversation with} Ask 4. A. U, for No his office yesterday, but Mr. Spar- | soociut permission ma : row, the secretary, said that tt was ota valian Assocla® a nothing of news int st, At the sam, t Athi l 45 time there is an air around the Yank | fr sry nian te headquarters as if something is doing ard outdeo v ri ampionship race in Honolulu: Harbo There is still nothing definite about next su the sale of the Giants to Harry Sin-/as the result of a visit by Lorrin clair, but it is known that stockhold- | drews ry of the lation, to ers have been conferring in New York pyederick W. Rubien, Chairman of the ‘as well as in Cincinnati. Harey| vations Champtonahip. < Hempstead has had several confer- | \* Dconcgy trige ences with Harry Sinclair and N.| NO 71 Warren Street, y . " e 00-yard dash is not recognized by the Ashley Lloyd, t eof the Bru A. A. 8 an outdoor event, but \* estate, the largest Individual holde han outager syent, Bur in of stock, is at the conference evn ditndte hence ee Bani ae Stantly at the side of Mr. Hemp the Championship. Committee stead f uthority to issue @ sanction for Mr. Sinclair announces that if he the contest | franchise \ {ny Weeghman, who has been President of the Chicago Federal League Clup, will purchase the controlling interest in the Chicago National League team from Charles P, Taft of Cincinnati. Phil Ball and his associates, who were ronnected with the St. Louis Federal league team, gain control of the St Louis American League Club from Robert Hedges, Cal » McDiamard, | John E. Bruce and others, who have long been connected with majot league circles. The announcement concerning the reimbursement of the Ward interests in the Brooktyn F ‘al League club was short. It was: “The Ward interests will be reim- bursed, oth major leagues «assuming this responsibility.” No announcement of was given in respect to this, but it is unofficially though authoritatively stated it will be $400,000, payable at the rate of $20,000 a year, These five principal conditions took little time of the meeting, which ex- tended over two days. The chief stumbling block in the way of a quick decision to have peace was the Inte national League. Two propositions were concerned. One was that the ny figures Buffalo Federal League Club wanted ed to be consolid with the Buffalo International League Club, but the International League would not agree more ul Dunn of the Richin for some time, accordi sident Barrows of the International League, been considered as having the legiti- imate right tog in Lared, Inte Baltin en peace Dunn appeared here nded this right, and. Je an offer for thi onal League w League ands, The Fed- fue made a counter proposi- the 4 in the two figures was so wide that no agreement was reached, However, in order not to delay the signing of the treaty of peace, it was mutually agreed by all of the confe sat yesterday's session that a cor be appointed with full pow to act in settling both of these ques- tions relative to the International League. who signed the agreement August Herrmann, Chairman of National Commission; President ‘Tener of the National Leag nt B. Johnson of the Americ League, President James A. Gilmore of the Federal Learuc President Charles Wee of the Chicago Federal Leagte Club, Harry Sinclalr ot the Newark Federal League Club, Secretary J. H. Farrell of the Nation, Association, President Edward Bar- row of the International League, and President Thomas Chivington of the American Association, man ‘ When asked what disposition would be made of the suit of the leral League against organized baseball charging Violation of the Anti-Trust Law, now pending before Judge Landis in Chicago, President Tener of the National League, acting os spokes- ne suit will be with- meeting up the of the committee to International League take question will be held here in conjune- tion with the annual meeting of the tional Commission on Jan. 3 next rhe“committes consists of Messrs more, Barrow, a member the National Commission, a represent. ative of the Buffalo Feds and a rep- resentative of the pltimore Feds. eae FEDFRAL LEAGUE OWNERS CONFER AGAIN IN ST. LOUIS. ST, LOUIS, De hief owner of the st and Harry Sincla s from Cincinnati and t fere hoot stockholier int Kumors continued Vai in ‘BROADWAY SAYS FINEST MADE BARKER: SILK | COLLARS part of the contrate salaries, So far as known, no deals for play- ers have been arranged yet, and re- ports that Kauff, Magee and others who had bee nawarded to one team or another were denied, | Mr. Weghman insisted to-day that he would buy the Cubs and move them to the North $ despite ries here and elsewht that there was a hitch in th deal. He confirmed story Charles P of the major portion of the extended indefinitely or until reed to, It wis likely, Mr, Weeghman sald, that the nick- name, “Cu would be retained, Manager Tinker, who is in # hos- pital here, was informed over the telephone of the successtul termina- tion of the peace meeting and.of the announcement that he would be man- ager of the combined Whales and Cubs. He was not permitted, how- ever, to discuss his plans. thi his agreement with aft, providing for bis pur- chase stock, peace was Reds Buy FF CINNATI, Fed Star, Dee. —The C o., purchasing of Pitcher Moseley by the Cincinnati National League Club from Harry Sinclair of the Newark derals, Was announced here to-day nd is said to be the first of the Federal League players to have been isposed of since the signing of the v agreement. Moseley was for- merly with the Boston American | League Club, going from there to the Federals. Granade “at Spent | HEMPSTEAD GIVES GAFFNEY ; CREDIT FOR PEACE PACT. James Fi. Gaffney, owner of the Boston Braves and the individual re- sponsible for the boys being out of the ‘trenches by Christmas, received the following telegram last night from Harry N, Hempstead, President of the Giants, who attended the meeting An Cincinnati: James E. Gaffney, Sedarhurst, L. L ‘ongratulations on the final out- come, Negotiations settled satisfac- torily. You are to be congratulate “H, N, HEMPSTEAD, Gaffney, along with William F, Baker, of the Phillies, has been nego- tlating with the Feds for peace for more than a year. “The With The V'hree-Dollar Look.” «$450 Dolltar-Fifty Hats THERS buy the Hats they sell. Ve make our own | Hats. That’s a big sav- ing which you get. y style that high- | priced hatters show we | show at our price of | $1.50. fpyinc Hars | Fifty Stores*in New York and Principal Cities Samay tamous $2 Hats eeduced to $150 Inis sale it on intormer Sarnoff nly. Stores TO=N4G4 LEACH Anat | fo, aes 1 Xniap Day, 3 oaine Bute, pat mia Day, 3. | haitg Levitsky vs, dim Pighn, Harry bi Brno Kd, Kelly, Josh Mattuews vu, Young

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