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4 _ Despite Fact No Decision Will Be Rendered, There Are Three Ways by Which Moran May Win Heavyweight Champion- ship From Willard. Onerrtt 80, Yor Brestna Word). « F Moran can stop Willard he will become champion without a ref- eree's decision, Although no referee's decision can be given in the Willard-Moran box- | tng contest, the world’ title may be at stak A knockout is an automatic deci lon, If Willard were fairly knocked Out, no decision by the roferee would be necessary. Of course, if the knock- out was unfair, Moran would be dis qualified and the title would not be affected If the referee stopped the bout be- cause Willard was unable to continue. Willard would lose his title, Th would be an automatic decision If the referee disqualified Willard for fouling, the result would be the same. The possibility of any of these three complications is slight, but in it lies Moran's only hope of becoming cham- pion, unless he meets Willard again where a referee's decision is given. A. referes’s decision in any bout, whether of a limited number of vounds or to a finish, would carry the title with it championship HERE is precedent enough in the history of the ring for any of the above possibilities. Scores of championships have changed hands by the knockout route, and as Jong as the Knockout blow was fairly delivered no spectator has ever ques Uoned the relation of winner and loser at the finish. Often the boxer knocked out has held the lead until the finish came, but that hasn't altered the result. A boxer who is unable to finish is technically “knocked out.” recollection was that of Bob Fit aimmons, world's light-heavywe champion, in the match with Jack O'Brien, At the end of the twelfth round Fitssimmons collapsed, and when the bell rang for the beginning of the thirteenth was unable to con- tinue. As he fatled to rise from his chair the referee counted ten «i o and ofMfolally Fit Knocked out,” although conscious, ‘The title wont to O'Brien, DIFFERENT case was in a battle for the Pacific Coast mid- dleweight championship bo- tween Al Noilt and Jack Moffatt of Chicago. Neill was in poor condi- on and was being surely beaten when a curious accident intervened Moffatt forced Nelll into @ corner and measured him for a finishing blow. He started a left book. Neil! pushed out bis open hand to fend off the blow, Moffatt’ dislocated. He was helpless and the referee stopped the bout to save atin from injury, Neill was deciared winner, HERE is one e on record | where the public has recog: | nized as champion a boxer who netther won a decision nor knocked | out the title holder. This was in the bout between Kid Williams, bantam | champion, and Johnny Ertle. The referee stopped the Williams-Urue | bout and disqualified Williams fouling. Willie Ritchie won the lig weight championship from Ad W wast on a foul, and the referee Je clared Ritchie winner after disque! tying Wolgast. Disqualification for| fouling automatically acta as a de cision. The old Marquis of Queens berry rules allow a rofe tion in one specific instance. Rule i reads: “A man on one knee is con sidered down, and ff struck i# ent.tied to the stakes.” no discre | The rules on fouling should alway be asirictly enforced, and Hefe Charlie White isn't afraid to act. tle! stopped the Hogan-Cross bout in the| first round, four 5 S Ago, because) Hogan violated the “clean-break rule. Whito was absolutély right on) that occasion, and he showed « iare| degree of courage in acting strictly according to the rules when the crowd wanted to sen the bout go 1 As referee of the Willard-Moran af fair White will no doubt protect either boxer in the aame way @ry. UBLIC opinion has a greut de to do with the holding of chain pionships. Some boxers have become champions by defeating other title claimants until the pub has recognized them these was Tommy Burns, who won the title after Jeffries's retirement from the ring by defeating the chain pions of England, Ireland and Aus tralia and beating a few A " heavyweights Notable among 8 one case of record in nh a boxer won # world’s championship by knocking out a champion in a no-decision tx It happened in the Al McCoy Chip match. When kreut S Ketchel died the title reverte ree nley Papke, who had lost ft to K Hf Papke, after Ketchel’s death, went to Prance and won from pontior, middleweight champion of Burope But shortly afterward he lost the title to Frank Klaus, Six Klaus was knocked Chip, Chip tn turn was k by Al MeCoy, who has been pointed several times in no-deciss # not yet taken the ten Mt to the heavvwe is mata flaw, t the champion to get should by any chance stop Willard nobody will be able to Gispute his right to be regarded as @hampion of the world we 8 —— ~ The most | famous case of this sort within my | ‘| ger Has Entirely Healed. left shoulder was! THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1916, | ‘CHAMPIONSHIPS CAN CHANGE HANDS WITHOUT A Copyright, 1916, by the Preas Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) an AN ACCIDENT CAN LOSE A ant - = Jack MorraTt LosT ATITLE BY DISLOCATIN His SHOULDET \NHILLE WINNIN EASILY | CHAMPION CHIP GOST HIS TITLE WHEN AL MOY KNocrED HIM ouT IN A NO*OEcIS\oM BouT. Bes Fitzsimmons Lost e- UGHT~ HEAVYWEIGHT “TITLE To o} BY COLLAPSING IN HIS commeseie’ | AND FAILING TO. If Dodgers Don’t Win Flag | ore Si | . It Won’t Be Because They’re 4 ay wt Not Trying, Says Robinson —-—— oo | Brooklyn Players Have Their Minds So Set on Capturing National League Pennant That They Are Making a Picnic Out of the Tedious Work of Training—Rube Marquard and Chief Meyers Just as Enthusiastic Over Prospects of Team 2g as Rest of the Men. SHOULD MORAN KNOCK 0-7 WILLARD “THe PUBLIC WouLD | | RECOGNIZE FRANK AS CHAMPION. ‘Baker, Maisel and Hartzell - Return to Practice for Yanks advan fw When a man we By Bozeman Bulger. DAYTONA, Fla, Maren 16. Hi) grinding work of a baseball camp eplit in half with a daily pienie—dinner on the ground and everything—may strike one as | being rather odd, but such is the way of the Brooklyn Ball Club. | Those boys, under Robbie, have got it in their heads to win a pennant jAnd, in a most convincing manner, have shown that the work of getting | in physical shape is first and foremost. With it is a spirit of camaraderie | that is as delightful as it is necessary. one as big as Jess, 1 experts, No fig good enough to r they make them, and I 8a marvel in speed for s a |Home-Run King Skilfully Han-' | dles All Sorts of Grounders at Third, Declaring Injured Fin- KAUFF REFUSES TO TALK AFTER FAILURE TO GET HIT IN GIANTS’ PRACTICE. Former Featherweight T have seen both men trai MACON, Ga. M 18. padag Rave wan in earn ea || Once @ day the Dodgers go to their quaint little park on the beach battle is bound to result | d CON, Ga. March . > ie }O0G " ” en ment and can han: | FRANKLIN BAKER seve that! lant night. Benny hua been telling {| 90a Seabreeze, but they have two regular practices 1h @ther words, ||) ome Gnal can mand Out oe | they stay all day, Two new players had arrived when we got our first plunging through the crowd in the packed hotel lobby ‘Nine-thirty he called to the new men owl though.” There was a moment of hesitancy and the manager came back as if he had just thought of something. “See the head waiter,” he told them, and he'll fix your can have some of mine,” he sald to me. everybody who would listen to him for a year now what he was going to do to the ball when he got into ant uniform, yet in hia two # to the plate in practice yes- tarday he didn't get a hit. The first time up he went out on an easy roller to seconil, and the next time he sent up an easy fly to Jim Thorpe, Benny broke his back trying to make a safety, and when | Jo bis injured finger has entirely healed, He took his first prac- tle at third yesterday and handled All sorts of grounders with ease and) perfection, ‘The batting order with which Dono- Yan expects to assail the rest of the American League in champtonship combat beginning April 12 next was Publicly exposed yesterday in action ‘for the first time,a high wind which portioned giant. I think th sight of Robbie! have to hurry, Greatest irish Heav: I think the fight the except structure, Willard Joke, Willard can’t fight a lost. His arms are so lon them, He has got to set a because he is a better man ' lunch, “You he returned to the hotel he was the A ball club going to practise and @——————————————————— the home team might cop the pen- bh Spistaly Lia PO eracure. wi most sullen player imaginable. The | taking its lunch along was worth fol-|masie you think the Chief didn’t hoscimaanced ae = — ne — =| t, he would Coan alc, stuff the opportunity, At newspaper boys looked for an ex- | jowing also some inquiries. “bust hold of one o | nthe carnival, To him every {lon being wifavorable | planation from Kauff for his fail “Oh, we don't came back to the} Pitche f reas ihe | was a bloomer and every etihe Yankee. manag Ure to get a hit, but for the fret ia. ne boys cut that out the| Indiane slax 5n9 FISTIC NEWS AND GOSSIP vet was dogmeat. He glued the 4 4 AE theeee time since the Federal League abut i “They like | ubhouse MaiealGndacteitie hae pas MY oe bation bras up ahop he refused to be quoted, J Second day,” he explained. “They 11K} home run D, | Salvalonde to ve last ‘Ams Dales which only. the prospective ead ah i to work so well they don't want to] “I look to see the Chief have the Qanw By John Pollock nnn ® |) away regretting that ne couldn't OTP R eral, wiosn lame lenilbire: | Jose any time. And f didn't put them | Pest hitting season hes had in sey) rea Fulton, the glant heavyweight of 4 ails, which Sate comistely closet | BOUT Paste on his own cortege. aponding nicely to the (reatment of the manoeuvres and took Advantage of up to it, either, Believe me, if these ay you € ent now |e be seen after all in a} 8 caused Marty ¢ ance ; Moral EVERY PORCUPING Trainer Jimmy Duggan, led off, fol- | the oceasion to practice quick stal R REESE T OTT! sehen RA » this clty. Rilly Gib wit LASN'T GOT QUILLS, wed in’ the ordersnamed by rani | from bath feat and second bases, faye birds don’t grab th old 5 Rasa eg reryen NeTetaaliM: As 6. on Pasa Gilhooley, Lee Magee, J ranklin pecial attention was given » bloc won't be because they are nc in hi Pan bet ay night, Jopnnie K has] A onft answer tumeth away wreath, bud ast Baker, Walter Vipp, Joe Gedeon, | ing of double steals and before the end anha ioved I never saw him so full which will hold its boxing shows in the) (4 (4.0% ! for him. In the met Mash 7 em Roger Peckinpaugh, Lealle Nunamaker | of the day Walter Alexander and Al On the way out Jack ae | ‘fe mor 7 Manhattan Opera House, to- with’ | cneaa an i seem and infield substitutes Charles Mul- | Walter were doing right wel from seat to scat, making Inquiries} “wren tie morning practice was a big offer to Fulton to come here and! she Met ' i i He! . only comebac " e or a q aa If he ts a chip of the old block, young midable string of pitchers, among! threatened with a. ehari horse in his remembered the signs the clubhouse, overlooking the ea, /in a scrap at the second show of the! Teach Crom, when from then er i them Hay Caldwell, for more than an! right eg and Hoy Hartzell, whose right OT wane you fellows to get up a set Athen came the picnic. | Hoxes of cub, which will be staged the second! Y's he ear Young” Savior, {the Yale eight against the fur. hour, the exercises’ Includin ting foot had. been giving him’ considerable a Cold sandwiches, hard boiled eggs, or- ee ie ys vide reba (Eig ih latch UN att | op ncn. gag, SEP aa well aa trials for distance and ® bit. trouble, 1 fon the field of your own,” he said to the second ban tOn ee, es Coles eee, Se; | week In April. Sulton to duted to! now 8 hte WN AT | at the St. Nicks and the Boston A. A, were f 1 anges 6 4d fight Fireman Jim Flynn ten rounds tn]! wi | priee fighters they would play off thetr tee SF ene CRE TOE for the benefit | eeey Ita ait wie chasing Mies, team, and to Rube Marquard he}came out of the lockers and in a . trade his hand at this line of work for a 7 jorrow night of the catchers, whose defensive tact against thievery are in need of polish ing. Led Magee led himeelf willingly t Milwaukee to dded: “I'll bet you a golf ball woe| few minutes the floor looked like de by fat hs as : 1 Mt nN tet. i? the scene of some big political out-| Wins would draw a big ccowd have them before nigh ng around New York. The attire, | fey here ae but did unravel several sharp burats of speed while running out hits in batting practice. y | = " He will too,” said Chief Meyers to however, was# quite different In| —— eaindeenaaeniehs — =. nt 1 19 1 hen rem quite different. In| meitung Lerisaky Tae teen booked vateean Makar caauerds kad: Ghia Queery Editor; The Boxing Com- ° e. “That fellow is the greatest sign | fact, in some instances, there wa other flabt by his manager, 1 M ¢ high t the Har. on Will. Crotonas Beat Hunts Pointers we catathe pond, \ koow now hew| mute vat all. excepting perhaps '® | ight e'wil kt go he pans tn Lint, Ssbeas 0 We BAG | Feignian RCRD SR f wisare in . Turkish towel wound round the neck. a Statiaira (he came Sterting Club tomormy night, The man-lrandom than Jess. If they stop the one ° the Athletics outtricked the Giants and | Others would munch their food clad tay They. will r 5-0 Aiea eae at ye m8) Coffey habit, do you think it will In Exciting Bowling Battle wri ese seo aurns 0 wore) in nothtie Worn lone swoon, Fh ittaraah hey ml ath conta bat ohm Kier aod iy Gites | COREY MAPA series, They know them better than | lees and feet bare. Others wore au-|tevinsky fights Rob Devers, the Kenses ( Haaliy aconpiads = x 4 ) | tomobtle coats with nothing beneath. | pearsweight, ten rounds at the Ryan 4 | Over in a@ corner sat Jack (Coombs | smoking his big pipe and conferring | earnestly with Chief Meyers over a| +s oeed Siee. change in the signals, or “signs,” as) Andre Andemon, the Chicago hes | baliplavers call them. Marquard had | be the principale is ne ele wr. ball lan expert masseur going over the! {os boring show of the Stadium 4. Even the recrufts had an occasional | mus ft arm, while he com AlN detail for the ma suggestion and it was not ignored, It Placently nibbled on a boiled erg, ad ‘i feral cel is Robbie's policy to have every man PLAYERS FULL OF ENTHUSIASM | enough for bim to box on on the club think he has a part in the| IN THE AFTERNOON PRACTICE. making of it and the plan has worked | “yw noon work syracuse to-morrow night talk of automobiles or racuse © The whole cara buzaed with There was n¢ of fishing parties special one, by the way Home Strips Favor Winners of| Evening World Tourney Match and They Capture Two Out of Three Games. STANDING OF THE TEAMS IN THE WORLD TOURNEY. SCHEDULE TO-NIGHT Eureka at St. Nicholas Inn wil be hiet han) % Madden when the lo you begin the after- yim their ten ws : onde} ucces > ose I inquired of Robbie, | Battling lev et the ‘which the coma UNTS POINT and Crotona, who with wonderful success, Among th Who waa bustling around trying to | Queeruboro A. C. of Long Island City on Sat eet the quarters which the commis Rasa ser alt times eican, abod who have caught the spirit of tne ae eee er hak! trousers and ‘a juniay night, Madden tan been tosing with Moran tion hoot it from griting by refusing to allow : | 1 © Marquard and Chief | jersey: . 8 and a i Dal Hawkina’s roadhouse and ia in grow Willard to charge any admission, The new scheme spcoun’: be Shaman yee iP 88% ADDR BES) HUD MAGNATE OOE e |AREees ctw ie, gales ire) aanic lite ee Leimeele ett ase PE a St Sat SM ee ctl et Seatahea in Rha Sven Jorld three- rs. Having been broug o-th! Ne : don't| peng deg tg rebsolien in passe HA eee ta] Bee Pos as under the strict disciplinary school of | have Put two he ‘or Vunch and) Jack Britton and Jimmy Duffy Pega mont Will Bo Just Like TAD SNARE? SON SEIROeY F | Haperee 171 McGraw it was rather new to them at | #olf" T then understood the search| terweight of Lackoort, N. ¥ 2 getty opening last December, me the | is St 100 10) Gahan TD et they have jumped right in| for the trousers, He was going tol again in another ten-round battle, The Freddie Welsh will ment Frankie Whitney in Heine & Kleinert alleys last ni a Wiiat WAY siecle ait and are now talking as freely” over | Play a nine-hole match with Umpire | matched to-day by Charley Murray, the fig stead of Young Brown at the Harlem Sporting the battle wa acheduled series, and a b wiing | nsued th than re d the fans who braved the els Their home Bill Klem, who is here getting in| moter of Buffalo, N. ¥., to ewap 1 shape for the season. | Queensberry A. C. of that ci rom what can be seen at a dis-| The picnic was over Ina half hour! ning, April @, This will be Na- tance there are no jealoustes vr| and at least a dozen players hiked | Hufteto To | grudges being nursed on the Brooklya | for the golf links. a short walk from club and Chief Meyers tella me there the ball park m ta a recre plans for the club as the oldest war- horse on the team nt LEAGUE SCORES. American Nu strips favored | tional, Ot If to th tne « nas for two victories, while eto th | cholle. 928, ve ; ation to break the monotony of work the unt nters captured the clos- | . are never any, Livery one is desply ye Hunts Pol aptured the close) st. Nichdias Intividual 1 1h interested in the work of the others, | onthe dlainond: It alan serves to keep | BRIEFS OF ne aeanlon. | 143, 183, 208, * tk 1 off sore arms ge. 1) the of | 0: et SOR: Harvey, 34 18) ROBBIE THINKS MEYERS WILL) The non-golfers sit around, lolled t re-] 4 Hibert,. 2 74,37 "4 DO BETTER THAN RARIDEN. | in the warm Florida sun and swapped them, | Harvey ‘ “Rig Jeft’ Pfeffer began experi- yarn sulted tn a hem ig Je rf ' ne Nee 1 4 \ Vrvdential Int Co. menting with @ freak curve caused) At 2.20 every man was hack on the! Miss Helen Alexander fai Ernie Miller vd we No.3, 8, ve New y Vite by “wings” on the ball during morn- | Job and they galloped into a practice up to the conquering apir Jing of Giakas and Grown ,@ve them} tice, and the shouts of en-| game with as much zest as if they had in Jan aimost ur toi of 633, ‘ ent from Meyers, who was] not seen a baseball all day. by her name ‘ Isreaks Visitor's an-| Over 200 Ave-man teams have dy ‘catching, soon brought every 1 Yes, and Jack ( bs Was right, matches of the singles of th chor, went thr him wemsion with= [entered "Che Tvening World f 4 player to the scene. Like @ lot of |The first team caught the signal aya- | ational indoor lawn tent out an open frame, aTHAMENt whic at Thuin's SChoolboya they all had to fiddle with | tem of the second string nine before {epee The Crotunke dropped: a litte urs aaa laren Monday the now curve, thelr efforts causing | two innings had been played plonghip’ tournam , ing the first half will and the Munts seventh inning w the middle string inters went Into the | how slight advan- | eam rallied, how frames and a strike with fre much knowing all the| “When it comes to a thing like the courts of the Seventh Mt number in he: t time that it could never be used In al that," Nap Rucker confided, “Jack Armory eat at game. Tho ball takes a peculiar spin | has got Sam Lloyd, the puzzle man, * hing like that of the famous| lashed to the mast. He is the smart rea Knackent, y which was ruled out by | est fellow in baseball! amusement, | Joe Man | Hor sprin by Ginlas and Brown de Ark, March 16 the major leagues two years ago as| At 4.30 the special rived anda ( ed the Crotona’s seeond game, | Monk Fowler of Memy had his yeing ilegal, The horsehide {s) ravenous lot of athletes started for Club, Miss Mart Breakstone rohed a clean! championship aspiration doin the roughed up on one side by emery! the he When this gang hits the ck Sehmitz 1 Miss M i e ‘ J last night, 'T largest ved that paper, causing litt ‘wings’ to atick | front door step, the head waiter tellq stedt also reached the ess on found the vinitors the wind, give| me, the chef begins to s the well he mht thin ety saw) and, and t ane knock Fow- | the bull a pe round in tm ly played, emble, And ughout this wet, fin r \ , ate, The # pro-| Such is the day in the camp of tt rae tonas for their ry The) had given a good account of himself, ! of the ball in the coarse sand. | going to win the pennant, And ft Taces t Hunts Po rst captain made his| Hating rst and only mn.ss of the series in the y eighth frame here. The scores: Miner of Memphis defeated vung Jack Hritton the eemi-windup. “Hey, cut that foolishness out and CPO a Or evliats, Robbie ordered from the plate. And off in doubt day, Harold _ BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK — Pel, What Welsh, Skelly and Coffey i Think of Willard-Moran Bout ||" es 2.0: sine" ° "4 BY FREDDIE WELSH, : World's Lightweight Champion n good condition he has a great chance to n't T think it will be one of the best bouts between big m out punishment Tt is now definitely settled that Al Reich end Orr @) the fourth round The able young player of the hiladeiphia Cricket Club bowed to the superior driving and the sharply | victory wa aggressive net attack of Mrs. Mills of the Orange Lawn Tennis |champion, when he defeated a cholce mat Wagner, Mrs, Fred- | field in’ thi hes that were brilliant- | Corps of Engineers last night fright, be well to recall no club ever completed at @ meeting of the Federa. { New Orleans In come up here and hit one, Chief!" won that coveted rag when !t started formed cycling body, in Newark yestor: world’s indoor record made by Jim Dels- 3 2 PUTTING ’EM OVER With “Bugs” Baer Cover, ow Fork Rvesina Werte YOU DECISION 660 VERY MAN HAS A LOT OF INFLU- ENCE WITH HIMSELF.” Bfl Donovan has a ning team, dreads it! punant-win+ gosh, how he and, Write Your Own Ticket. Tt Willard 1s as good at close quar ters as his manager— | always knew the culprit whe Named all the Pullman cars Was very queer between each ean =f Was one of Luna's stare, Sweet Evening Breeze, Starlight, Lark and Mandalay, Citronella, Albatross, Violet and Fay, Hy |Curly Locks, Hyacinth and any airy | name, Hach new effusion proved his cupola | was lame. | Full many a moon | thought this leon Was leading the Nut Leagu Tho’, strange it seems, the bowling teams Can give him skull fatigue. Olongopos, Moguls, Spuds and Mid- night Crew, Tarant Superbas, Crotona and Kio WNiLuans Lost HIS: TTTuS- To *KEWPIE" ERTLE IN A No-Becision wodt a= Elephants, Crabs and § Eureka, Goofers, imps, Be a good idea tf the Boxing Oom- mission kept its hat on when it goes out into the hot aun urd over Moran ts not as gre « 180 pounds me people ‘The coumeain of a varsity eight la a bind whe hand is |) rows four by nent, even as do some A unch, Moran ts ple Moran is as gar has a great chance to win, Willa nd over and can pun nock out any think that Willard is invineibte from a knockow I spot with his punches believe h uch a big BY JACK SKELLY. Star and Emergency Referee for Big Bout. leopard can't but it hasn't got at Ange tts spots, hing on a deuce. 4? The time to be in mid-season form is in mid-season, Poor old anaemic, £50-pound Jese | Willard's shadow 4s onty about four inches thick FEEBLE FABLES. Always upon atime there wage | dyspeptic skulled fan whose spe- cialty was gumming the parade. He suffered from cranial ind! BY JIM COFFEY. gestion and ail he ever saw wi the sand in the sugar. He ex- yweight Since the Days of Peter Maher j tracted his merriment from life by sealant Lita ever } ad Joss muctlaging the procession and ACAI Apia ava y, ne De Be the home runs in sand, A eee bs pares hut carved the boots In granite. If nd he has got to out-fight, Moran whipped mc he apprehended any genial multt- . and he'll whip Willard for the same reas: tudinous chinned gent suggesting er staged at a great t of punish n and both are {n auch fine fett Moran ts no dub. He car s well ast eW n apponen @ odds % to 1 4 asn't a thing His left is a cratches avy weight, | Harriman is just as Hable to stroke nd it b with Cof- | ie gull return { borsey G# about July 26 in Havana, | ANSWERS TO QUEERIES. and he Kid MePartiand will. refer tenround re | Champion Freddie Welsh, who holds the worlt’a| The queery abo lightweight title, and Al Motor, the middieweight | print anything ono fend their titles in we the, to send in queeri og Club of Brooklyn on next nigiit. Welsh will take on Phil Bloom, the clever Rrookizn boxer, and Mc ng fighter of fat the same chub s B. F. Spede is 3 weig!s at the open €. on Mareh foned toca bs ppuratcia and strong | ‘ana, who has ttins ay with murder, the Svidence” 8 ows ardieigh Since H ino for seats to the race we have noth- us until the caterpillar shows. Reoz, the hard-h son two be the thirty-day suspension om the ing Club has been lifted by the > Commission, Charley Dosaserick club, has devised @ plan whereby | Now that ler and ad atler mevis bout at the modes at the | Club,on Mamh 24 Brown is matched to Thurslay ere | tex Young Dyson on tit data at Providence hind scrap in! Welsh and Brown, however, will meet at John a ehib on Apni > THE SPORT WORLD} led to live, cepts nt ., it implied | {ibson. th and F ne Bron Have you Pyramid? If not, Pe ea ' GaGa The Arial te hopeiaee’ Bak, Apal d Th coupon below—and ibe Toeaits may ates races four nights °| Jou Others are praising Pyramid Gsiegation ‘of tyclista Were present. | Trestment ae thoi delivorer — why poe Thirty-ax rid # signed with the new) Zou! Mail pon pew Of Fete She hos froes zit | An unexpected and highly creditabie|| FREE SAMPLE COUPON | Le Pan tae! ANY Kindly send me @ Free sample of Pyramid Pile Treetment, in plain wrapper. th ng organization, lok, Jack Curley and Billy acing promoters. 6 women's nis cham- erday on Regiment Jarked three-quarter mile special race, which was the feature of the‘nnnual james of Manhattan Collewe at the armory of the ‘Twenty-second In win ning by more than fifteen yards from Dave S, Caldwell, the Boston A. A. run of cycle ner, whose performar have been aronx were feature in athletic circles this Wint Overton was clocked in 3m. 7 &-hs., only | {ifthe of a second behind the| olla Bjur- semi-final Nam ___ SPORTING. SPS Emenee the newly thre coll of Buffalo tn 1913,