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OR FEET AE PE, Te a mame = UP-TO-DATE AND NEWSY THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 19 BEST SPORTI PLANNED BY TO KNOCK OUT WILLARD WATCHFUL WAITING POLICY FRANK MORAN “Every Man Has His Weak Spot; I'll Find Willard’s,” Declares Pitts- burgher in Interview in Which He Outlines His Plans of Win- ning Championship in Big Battle * Here Next Month. Gopyright, 1916, by the Proms Publishing Co, (‘The New York Evening World.) “ champion. “I whipped Coffey by driving right handers into his body and then chipping him on the chin, Coffey’s VERY man has his weak spot; I'll find Willard’s,” sald Frank Moran when I asked him how he intended to fight the big legs weakened after the body pun- inhment. Coffey grew too fast. Willard ts three or four inches taller than Cof- fey. Ho grew faster. Ho's more of a physical freak. All freaks have their weaknesses. They don’t develop evenly. They don't round out phys- feally an¢ mentally. If they’re not mushy in the upper section they're likely to break in the middle like bridge that isn't properly braced. expect to hit Willard in a way never been hit before, and when I do I'll bring him down. “Fighting ts just a matter of studying the effect of blows and then egpiying your theories in practice. I ‘The man who can wait man to fight. I like code lo sal rd con to havo them come at me red Bet to knock mo out. They find me — Frank,” I said, “but it isn't @ne who can afford to walt. ‘re waiting you get hit pied There aren't many men have waited through those Detter handed you in the @eventh rounds of your last ‘t hurt me,” he eaid. made him feel more like os LRARN a lot of my boxing from emaller fighters. Wille Lewis “was the greatest fighter I ever eew, in my estimation. He knows how to fight. He could wait his chasice, and grab it, One of the best its f ever saw was between Willie a “Marcel Moreau in France. Mor- eat was @ corking fighter. He was a tough one, They thought he'd beat Willie sure, Willie used a little trick ef countering his leads. Tho referee and execution is the thing that wins. not because | learned in my early fights that delib- ‘That's why Fitzsim- doors entirely. It was hard to per- suade Willie that he needed hard training, and if he hadn't shot bim- self in the big toe I don't know whether he souls, have ee oer great fight w' joreau or not that wae a funny one. WilHe had a 2-calibre gun in camp to amuse himself with a little target practice. tried to persuade him to leave that gun alon. I didn’t like the way he handled it. Ht didn’t know any more about a gun than a kid knows about caloulus. down the barrel to see tf It was loaded. With my United States navy training I knew all about guns, big and Little. 4 NE day Willie had the gun out, fooling with ft. I told him to put it away, and ho said he would. I went into the house, A few minutes later I heard a shot outside, and in a moment Willie came limping in, looking pale around the Bills. “I asked him what was the matter and he pointed at his foot, He'd been fooling with that gun and had acci- dentally pulled the trigger, He had on russet leather shoes, and there was a round hole im one right over his big toe, I got the shoe off and found They weakened because “TH The MAN Om Can UAT WS THe DeeEROUS MAN To Flex NG PAGE IN NEW YORK Copyright, 19: e Save FRANK ORAS NO TRUTH IN REPORT WILLARD-MORAN BOUT HAS BEEN CALLED OFF. There is nothing in the report that the Willard-Moran bout scheduled for the Gamen on March 8 is off. True, Tom Jones, Willard’s manager, exchanged a few hot words with Tex Rickard, the promoter, but that is all there was to it, Jones wanted to pur- chase a few box seats at $25 apiece, and when he learned they were $50 apiece he went up in the air, declaring that he only signed for the match with the under- standing that $25 was to be the top price. Jones says that Jess has a slight touch of the grip and won't be able to come here for a few days. Ends Pract School’s Transfer of Chief Meyers (The New ¥ ‘ork Evening World.) * TL uweto “To _ reNocrt ‘ve ALWAYS eeen z A FOLLOWER OF ToUsN SPORTS. ically All Old Great anarers No One Seems Able to Give a Plausible Reason Why Such Good Batsmen as Doniin, Heinie Zimmerman Have By Bozeman Bulger. HE transfer of Chief Meyers to I the Brooklyn club on account of weak hitting marks the end, in a way, of practically all the great hitters of the old school. Though the Chief never won tho batting crown, he was in the first three two years in succession, giving Heinle Zimmer- Drew, Loomis and Ray Race - To New Marks Negro Speed Merchant Displays His Best Wares in 90-Yard Special, Equalling His Own tn- door Figures of 9 1-5 Seconds. ANY records were broken by the Western athletic contin- went at the Fordham Univer- deserved @ draw, but because | chat the bullet had gune through the] sity games at the Twenty-second thought he could afford to let man have a compliment- draw with him. It was some- like that in the Carpentier where Carpentier got a twenty- decision over Willie. If ever a deserved a decision Lewis de- the decision over Carpentier, was great in that fight. his Moreau fight I asked bim me that little countering and he did, I keep it in re- use when I need it. A while a te of those Western heavy- came out to Dal Hawkins to box with me. He had a L asked him how he got it. eal he'd been boxing with Andre don't know how he hit me,’ he , wat. “I fust feinted him and got hit om the eye, When I feinted him I got hit again. I don't know ‘it happened.” run across anything like that I like to figure it out. So I told to start in and feint at me in same way. He dabbed out his and I moved about four inches used that Willie Lewis counter landed on his eye. * Gee!" he said, ‘that's the way I EEBER, “Bo now I know another fellow ean use that trick. I study all fighters that I may meet some time. I go to fights to seo them, and T have them all down just the way a Dasebe!ll pitcher has down all the Qrieke of the batters he'll pitch awalnst. ight me ‘ TLL LEWIS has t a lot about hitting, He's a master at that. He was the est runcher of his weight I ev gaw. 1 think you'll see a 200-pound Willie Lewis punching Willard. I'm going to have two master-boxers ad vising me in my training, Lewis and Attell, Abe knew as much about the game as any fighter in his time. He dmmows a8 much now “The reason that I'm going to train at Saratoga for ten days is that 1 Uke to rough it. 1 like the Weather and the exposure. 1 | get away from the cities. There's Bothing like it for « fighter. ‘There's cold Rothing worse than living in the giles and breathing foul, used air ears and trains and stuffy rooms. Lewis was matched to fight Moreau in France he was living tr Paris, @od you know what that means, He was in no condition to fight at all. | persuaded him to go mt out into the countgy, a long weg Grom Paris, und wo : sted | the skin below, doctor and he We got @ French injected a tetanus | had to diet and stick around for about three weeks out there in the country to heal that up, and then finish his training without going into Paris at all, It was the best thing that ever happened to him. He got into great shape. Seeing the result taught me something, I don't have to shoot my- self through the toe to learn that the open country is the only place to train for a fight, “When I get into the ring with Willard I'll still have t Saratoga alr in my system, although I'm going to put on the finishing touches at Dal jawkins’s to be near the arena, ° rough navy ports, training that rounds a man out Well, and I've played football for a year ‘at the University of Pitts- burgh. I began to train for wrestling and found I could fight better, and ‘I've fought some of the best men tn the world. I know T haven't any weak spots, I belleve Willard has one and I expeet w prove ft in the ring.” TENNIS BS a SOLONS SIDESTEP AMATEUR QUESTION. ‘The thirty-fifth annual meeting of the United States “onal Lawn ‘Tennis markably tame. The avoided the amateur «means that M gues | Bundy was the standing wo by into the DUSINESS, May compet without being protested. Tennis Club fell heir ners Natlonal Inament for. its L. 1, with not a the Nutional it Went of Clevel Th & to th nampionshii turf nt Porest dissenting Hills, ¥ Court Champions lay Court Champton- ithe Lakewood Tennis | Youns wn Stops | SCHENECTADY, N. | Young Brown, the New York | |knockad out Young Billy Papk an up round at the ate fighter, in the thi lectric A.C. show here last night Hrown finished his man with @ heavy righ hand #«Wing on the jaw. Out eb, 12. elkey. —Carl Morris added a st last mii SA, al heavyw tewt Morris before puluas | that Cowie le very il) and that hie had won so many fights that) middle of the bone, It was just under! Regiment Armory, rd P. Drew, the negro sprinter serum into Willie and threw a scare|f the University of Southern Call- jinto him and dressed the toe, Willie] fornia, won the dash and equalled two indoor records; Jo Loomis, the long-legwed jumper and runner of Chicago, captured the hurdle race in record time, while Jole Ray, the stocky distance runner of the Illinois A. C., who holds the one mile na- tional title, carried off the honors in the ong mile special in the fastest After weeks of dickering, all arrange- ments have been completed for the ten- round bout between Mike Gibbons and Jeff Smith, the clever middleweight of Bayonne, N. J. The contest was clinched to-day by Matchmaker Dow of the Capitol City A. C. of St. Paul, who went Al, Lippe, manager of Smith, a telegram notifying him that he had ac- tepted his terms and that the articles of agreement were on the way, The mon will fight ten rounds at 158 pounds at the ringside on March 1%, This ts one of the three bouts which the above club has booked Gibbons for this year, and for which he 1s to receive $30,000, Tow Cowler, the English hearyweight, may nover fight again, ‘The writer learned last wight physician, efter giving him @ thorough examination, has advised him to quit the ring. Gowler was sick when be fought Jack Dillon, and bs manager, Chns Beown, attributes his quick defeat to lls Ailes, Cowlor has called off his bout with Baruey Madden at Ploweer Sporting Club west Wednewlay nig bt AL Reich, who went under » serious opera. tion ten daye ago, tof the hospital and Hig next contest will probably be with Frat Mul ton, Whe Westem beavyweight, at the Harlem Sporting Club om March 3, "Pulton’s manager te demanding $8,000 for hie big fighter, which is the only hitch, Maxey Blumenthal i willing | wo give Pulton $2,000, and it ls expected that Lie manager Will accepe ib, ‘Tom McAnile hae tookel three goal ten-round boule for the boxing abow of the Fairmont A. O. of the Brona to-night, Tex Kelly, the roux fighter, will meet Johuay Kine in the main | event of the evening. In the other two ecraye, Tomuny Maloney of the weet side will go agalost Awsie Ratwer, and Jerry Murpiy clashes with Charley Leong, & brother of Benny Leonard, Leo Bens, the middieweight of Butte, Mout Fistic News and Gossip By John Pollock. at Fordham Games tUme made here at that distance this year. Di displayed his best wares in the 90-yard special. He defeated Ro; rae and Joe Loomis by a yard @ halt, hia own world’s in- 1-6 seconds. He con- 106 mark, where he finished more than three yards ahead of his oppoents and equalled the world’s figures of 10 sevonds hi up by 5 of Yale at ul iy Oval at ford-Cambridge- ¥ale- Haryard meet in 1901, After his defeat in the dash Loomis returned to the track and defeated a trio of the best hurdiers in the country in the record ume of 14 seconds, The old mark was 111-6 seconds made by himeelf last year. Joie Kay proved all that Western ex- ris have said about him. He displayed form to warrant the belief that he & the best miler in the country, He bea Bid Leslie, of the Long ‘and Willle Gordon of the C. in easy fayhion in 4.27 Drew led in his finish and was opponents at the wecond A New York A. nd. Morse and Loomis third. Doute, will engage to his first fight im ¢hie Weinity at the Broadway Sporting Glub of Brooklyn two-night, He will go against Jeok Toland of Philadelphia, who hes fought maay food bouts at the same club, Eddie Wallace and Marty Allen and Bert Spencer and Willie Kohler will also battle at the same show, It te definitely settled thet the ten-round go Detweon Jack Britton and Ted “Kid” Lewie will be fought at the Broadway Sporting Club of Brooklyn op next Tuswlay aight, The managers of the fighter tried to get John Weismantel to postpowe the bout so that they could bring it off im Madison Square Garden on Feb, 27, but be refused to do eo, Both fighters are in training, Rennie Leonard, the Now York lightweight who has been the sensation of his clam for the past two months hy reason of his knockouts of Joe Mandot and Phil Bloom, maker of the Ganien, wired Billy Gilson Inst nigbt asking him if he would let Leona:d box Harry Donahue, the Peoria lightweight, who des made a big hit here, Will acoept the mateh, Tt fe thoogt that Gideon Harey Pierve, Brovklyn's most dangerous light- weight, will start training at Orango, N, J,, of Monday for hie teu-roand bout with White of Chicago at the Clermout ink, Brook tyu, on Thureday night, Feb. 4, Jim Savage, who le alao training for bouts, will work out with Pleree, ‘Toe Clermont A. ©, of Brooklyn will hold tte rewular weekly boring show at the Clermont Ave- the Pittsburg punches with Frankie while Joe Ohip, brother “Kid Ad Dixon of this city aud Willde @chaef. nue Kink to-nigut, George Cuip, miidlowaight, will ewap Notter in the star bout, of George, will vert, Va fer of Atvany meet in the first tea rounder, Terry Martio ook up with Jobany the fast and game little bantam. wergat RK. 1, and Battling Labo, the aggrumive Lactammoight Dreokly a,” just been matched to meet in a eround At a show w be staged by the Mbode Laland race from start to wing away from bis finiabed Chartie . O, Whe aitived bese o fay Wools ago im eeu af of Jcuridence, Bh, J. oa next Wednesday might, Sherwood Magee, Wagner and Declined. man ao hard battle in 1912. Tho Chief's averago of .368 that year would have won the honor in a walk this season and in many other sea- sons, for that matter, but it did not bring home the bacon against Heinie's .372, Another great batter who never at- tained the great honor, though a bet- ter hitter than many of them who have won it, is Mike Donlin, For three years in succession he ran a close second to Hans Wagner and for several seasons is listed among the bonored “three.” It was al- ways a big disappointment to Mike, and is especially so now when he sees Larry Doyle reach the coveted mark this it fall with .320, the lightest hitting that ever copped the distinction of a championship. But with the decline of Meyers the others have declined. No one seems able to give a plausible reason for this. Some of them are getting old, it is true, but others are not. For instance, Sherwood Magee, a One-time champion, hit but ,280 last summer for the Braves and the greut | and only Hans Wagner hit but .274, | Even inte Zimmerman, still « oung man, dropped to .265, being eat out on his own team by Bob Fisher, supposed to be a weak hit- ling shortstop. Daubert, a one-time champion, managed to get over the 300 mark by a hair, his average be- ing .801, but even he fell far, Chief Meyers, though a one-time .858 nit- C,| ter, has fallen to .282. In Brooklyn he may build up again and his many Srienee hope to eee it that way. @ Chief was always popular, There sooms to be a general beliet— and this was expressed freely at the National Taso anniversary banquet the other night—that the present day hitters do not compare favorably with the old timera, This {s not borne out by the records. For in- stance, as far back as 1891 Billy Hamilton led the league with a bat- ting average of .388 and the follow- ing year Dan Brouthers won out with -885. In 1912 Heinie Zimmerman won with .872, while Seymour won in 1905 with .877, Pat Moran has come to an agree- ment with Chief Bender, late of the ‘eda, and former star pitcher of the Athletics. Bender will sign a one- year contract with the Phillies, SWEDEN’S BEST ATHLETES COMING HERE FOR MEETS, ‘Tnirty atholtes, the best athletic tal- ent in Swoden, will make a tour of this country next summer, acconting to an announcement made by Ernie Hjertborg, fow weeks ago for a short y Ernie, who formerly waa trainer of the irtsh-American A. C. athletes, has ar- Tus ‘charges engage Ir three dual meets, one with the repre- sentatives of the Metropolitan Associa- Won of the A. A. U., another with the New England Association and the third with the Central Association's contingent. According to the plans temporarily agreed upon the Swedish athletes are to arrive in this country on June 20, LEONARD BEATS O'BRIEN. (Special to The Brening World,) SYRACUSB, N. Y., Feb. ‘Benny Leonard, the New York lightweight, had no trouble defeating Shamus O'Brien, of Yonkers, before the Ryan A. C. here last night. Leonard of- fered @ splendid exhibition upon his first appearance bere and had O'Brien but the latter gamely stayed until the end, Both fighters weighed ta at 134 pounds, their trainer, who arrived in this ety a| m; in trouble throughout the ten rounds, | Come aT ME RED HOT ey MAN WHO CAN WAIT IS THE DANGEROUS FIGHTER,” SAYS MORAN , by the Preas Publighing Co, Have THe, me ovr.* TAD JONES SAYS YALE WILL BUILD ELEVEN ON SELF-SACRIFICE. NEW HAVHN, Feb, 12.—“Our plana for next fall have not been formed yet,” said Tad Jones, Yale's new head football ovach, in addressing the candidates for the en next fall. “But can tell you now what we shall expect of you. We are going to bulld this eleven up on self-sacrifice, and the reward of your self-sacrifice will be a chance to play in the Harvard and Princeton games. W: are going to use in those games many men as we need, no more. have heard the question asked, Is the spirit of Yale football gone? J do not believe that it is. “Seif- sacrifice on your part will mean training all the tim The mem- bers of the squad must keep on training or give up their sults. We re going td have a hard-working and a hard-fighting team.” |Andre Anderson Stops Bob Devere In Three Rounds | By reason of an advantage of twenty pounds in weight, several {inches in height and a much longer reach, Andre Anderson, the young Chicago heavyweight, won another battle in this vicinity last night by stopping Bob Devere, the Kansas City fighter, in the third round of a ten-round go at the boxing show of the Harlem Sporting Club. While Devere was not actually counted out, he was in such a helpless condition on the ropes that Referee Kid Mo- Partland jumped between the men. Up to the beginning of the third session Devere had made a creditable showing, as he had dealt Anderson many heavy rights in the stomach and ribs at close quarters and had also hooked him on the jaw while in the clinches. Start Off Well, h to Hunts Point STANGING OF THE TEAMS IN = HEE SENSE me: Bes SEREEE: Bashan aads matched by the Bergman Bros. to meet Jimmy Watt at their Lenox Avenue al- leys in @ ma best five out of nine games to count, to-morrow night, plaice, MANY LEADING BOWLERS IN BIG MEETING TO-NIGHT. A monster mass meeting of bowlers will be held under the auspices of the Atlantic Coast Bowling Association in the Red Room of the Hotel Imperial at 8 o'clack to-night. It is expected to be one of the largest gatherings of bowlers New York has had in years. A numbar of prominent speakers from prinajpal cities east of Pittsburgh will be present, ‘The main purpose of the meeting {5 to form an orgtnization by enlarging the ©. B.A. to protect the Interests of PARKROWALLEYS Size of the Latest Improved Alleys | ° Dancing Masters Harder’s Double-Headers En-| able Eurekas to Capture the | Opening Game in Evening) World Tourney. SCHEDULE TO-NIGHT, 8t. Nicholas Inn at White Elephant. TO-MORROW NIGHT. Bergman Bros. at Broadway Arcade. FTER losing the first game to A the Eurekas on thoir alleys tn the Grand Central Palace, Bob Lowenthal’s Hunts Point trio grabbed the second and third sessions in a hard fought -match in The Evening ‘World amateur tournament last night. The dancing masters pinned their way in front at the start of the open- ing game and through Harder’s double-headers maintained their lead until the final frame. With the Hunts Pointers but a few pins behind, Capt. Blackburn struck out, clinching this session for the home team by 22 pins, Both teams were rolling in splen- id form, but the Eurekas dropped a little In the second session, while the visitors improved, They shot away from the dancing masters, increasing their advantage with each inning, and finished forty timbers in front for their first victory. In the last game the Hunts Pointers bowled better than the two pre- vious affairs and outclassed the home talent, man for man, winning the rubber game by the best margin of the evening, giving them two of: the three sessions, Price rolled an even 200 score, making alternate strikes and spares, The scores: {iy Linden starts a home-and-home hi I with Charley Meyers at the Ja- maica bowling alleys to-morrow night. The return series will be rolled at Cordes's Grand Central Academy, in Brook! Champion Jimmy Smith hag _been ————E—— BVERYTHING FOR Billiards ‘Yeaea” Bowling Prices and Terms .o Suk. 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Jae" Zn 66F you are promised the lion's share of the proceeds, make sure they ain't dividing birdseed,” They haven't yneart white cently, Must be burying ‘on toa ¥ 12 AN BASHBALL LEAGUE. * Three-cushion billiards ts too homocopathic a game for Manager Bill Donovan, One point every seven minutes is too swift a se quence, The racing is v jood in M both quadruped ani biped. oo award Weston has decided to wally mat again just when we thought these hington noter going to cease, PICKING UP ATHLETICS AT YALE ALRBADY. DEBATING TBAM AVPRAGDS 200 POUNDS TO A MAN, Who thought a year ago that the Feds would eventually be able to re- duce the price of baseball from 10 cents to nothing? FACTS NOT WORTH KNOWING. ~ George Goulding is the popular champion of the most detested sport in the world. George is the champion walker, All the folks who cheer George when he is walking nrust own automobiles. If they were com- pelled to be toe tourists their tears would mingle with ours, If walking was an enjoyable epidemic George could be elected President on the Pedestrian ticket. But it ain’t, This has been a bountiful rtm ter for the entomologists, Wree tling was never quite so populan BOXING COMMISSION GOES WRONG ONCE IN A FINED A BRACE OF FIGHTERS FOR NOT FIGHTING THE OTHER PVENING WHEN THEY SHOULD HAVE REWARDED ‘EM, Every Republican bowler is firmly convinced that every pinboy is an ardent Democrat. Nom, that, the Harvard oarmen arg their intention of buying thelr shells tn. hyphenated, Princeton-Yale fanatic father, foot arvund blowing up all the: st nitiom factories, If {t comes to war to the knife we will be forced to choose between our country and our ple. IN. 1992. In response to numerous entrea- ties, Columbus was about to do an stunt. If suc- k would: mark the fifth centennial of the works. As stated by. the league rules, the out- look again discovered land. The plane for disembarkment were sidling along without a tremor. Suddenly Colombe broke out in a terrific screech. “Sixty er cent. of the movie privileges or can the act!” he yodelled. Are they dotng Te Gore a ry, in {ilouing him to again play on the Yale football 1S oT eae dace Qa! NO DOURT THE FRIENDS WHO INFLUENCE. TO INSTATED ON ELEVEN, WOULD IT BEAUTIFULLY SOME TRENCHES, Hunt’s Point Bowling Palace 1029 East 163d St., N. Y. First Class Equipment Tournaments Open Games CLUBS AND PRIVATE PARTIES 4 PEATUBR Broadway Arcade Bowling Alleys 1943 Broadway, N. Y. 13 Brunswick-Balke Alleys 13 Tournements Open Games PHONE 6994 COLUMBUS. THE BLUE CONSIDER WIUMANE TO NOMINATE POOR RIRD TO TH Hunts Point— CAFE, GRILL, GYMNASIUM Price... 188 Tat Bi Foe. we '8—BOWLING ALLEYS—8 Pisbere Aloe. 191 | 2.3, COFFEY. Prop. 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