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oid 12 - COLUMN G Gibbons Will Have a Hard Job) With Dillon, Although He May Make a Better Showing Than| Some Much Bigger Men, Onvriant. 1916, by Thy Pree we New York Bren IKE GIBBONS and Jack Dillon are to box ten rounds in Bt Paul, Minn. Mike Iikes to Gave bis best matches at home, where he has 4 large nnd enthusiastic following. The “St. Paul Wizard,” ae he f# called in his home town, seems to have done nearly all his good fight- ‘ing in the vicinity of Dayton’s Bluft ‘and Bwede Hollow. Like the party in the old song, he never cares to wander from his own fireside, Little old St. Paul is food enough for him, He has tried New York and has Copped out a fair share of money along the Atiantic Coast, but for real comfort, or even luxury, give him the home town every time. Up in Bt Paul Mike asks no muisrantee and Prefers to box on percentage. In thts goming mill Mike will take a percent- Age and let the promoter guarantee Dillon $7,500. if you can imagine; Mike Jetting Jack away with 7,500 you can imagine what he thinks that percentage wi!!! run into. | Mike, after much wra eared up n pound and a h weight demand. He no longer Inalate that Dillon must scale % pounds) ringside. Dillon said he'd have to lowe & leg to make that weight, and Mike gave to Gibbons will have a hard job with Dillon, although he may make a bel~ ter showing than some much bigger Dilion severad hard fights, opposing Bis rushes with speed and skill. Mike once fought Badie MeGoorty | in New York, when MeGoorty was 7 Very good. Miko dane 4 and kept out of danger for nine rounds, while | 46 Eddie fairly ran at him and tore huge | Football Should chunks out of the atmosphere with his swishing swings. In the tent®|| Have Error Col- round, when McGoorty was discour- bl aged and army weary, Mike began to tor inves minutes he fookea | umn for Schedule like a champion. He may try to fieht Dillon in the same way—which will Maker. no doubt be more pleasing to thi ” Dopulace in that dear St. Pau! than It]} Coach Gargan’s Boye All Had Numbers on Their Backs and the Pennsylvania Lads Had Lots of Opportunities to Add ’Em. HE Boston Red Sox players who took part in a game in New atte penne: Wren Youve : = men. Battling Levinsky has given Hors bee TWUING THe Gang ABOUT Last S ays Commenting on THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, OUTOBER 23, 1916. Wien & Pom see Wo HAS DRIVEN INTo THE Rovend BALL WHICH MAS A Good Lie Os ‘ \ Boo YARD DRVES ‘You PULLED SUNDAY — AND ‘You YouR Firen Susquehanna- Fordham Game on Saturday. Haven last week, on their own By Bugs Baer. account, are to he severely punished! Copyright, 1916, by The Pi by the National Comminsion, They HE football team misreprese Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) ting Susquehanna cae up to meet will not receive the “embl given to the champtons every year. Fordham’s cross country eleven Saturday, but never did exactly ‘That, however, will not yybeind | succeed in meeting ‘em. Although the field was only 100 yards the col h, cush, or roun ay fohgealy heer in, Ni 7 Haven, |!00g, Susquehanna never got within five miles of the college that gives its fessional athlete, as @ rule, Fa sean ot var comm, | SBCOtAtOre one of the longest 1. rides in New York for « nickel. Blem.” It has a Liberty 1 on one| Susquie travelled almost as far ae@—————— ssSs or. wide and an eagle on the ot Rien Dar but Fordham did all the travel- a e At aur- FF’: She yateane » Seat lng after that. Coach Gargan'n boys rounding the camps of Bob Moha and Charlie Welnert we can all had numbers on their backs, and suspect that both are in hard tratning | ‘M¢ Pennylvania lade had lote of op- for the event of the Sint. Jimmy |POrtunities to add ‘em up. Although the bandit impresario, their opponents spent the greater states that this wil! be the battle of part of @ perfectly legal afternoon in Johnston, the century, if not for all time, The | convalescing from concentrated only trouble with Johnston is that he bumps and young accidents taken in janm. He doesn't peotpunt ane Hooan't DOM) tabloid form, Bo unnecessary rough- enou r |nose marked Fordham's play, All Benny Kauff is now busy man- | they could have been charged with sping boxer, Benny bo that | was unnecessary smoothness. a scrapper is going to hit are ako made during the ‘The only mi HARLIE WHITE. C gor are still sending out letters) field the same afternoon that Ford- telling how White was “robbed” | ham was using It, Such tactics were In his Colorado bout with Welsh.| naturally @ social blunder, just like ‘White may have been all th this late dato we're not any tears over tt, White should have | wrong flavor, The Buaqic line looked knocked Freddy silly, Since he failed | good on paper and seemed to be made to do it, or even + good earnest 7" ftempt, were willing to forget that |f th® same material, The Ford- fie ever had a chance | hamers didn't healtate any more than - - the Twentieth Century Limited pans- Promoter threatens to hold an- \ing @ pump. They ran wo much and peg aaiell irre etieee | eftan hat: they didn't have time to uve have avoided the police thie \PIAY Football, week. They may get away with tt, | The visitors brought fifteen sub- ties stitutes with them, Eleven on the EXT Saturday will see another field and four on the bench, We re- Gold fuse to describe Susquehanna’s play- auto race—the Harkn Cup with prises Qegre- | ing, as if we Can't say anything good Bating $10,000. It used to be Inter- about anybody we koep quiet, At all esting to watch the drivers and speo- pyonts, they would have played much late upon what they'd do with all petter if the football had handles on it, that m Under mod ommer ela) conditions the money a salary and a bonur |town. If thetr pinochle ¢ The self-controlled man is a poised, square living man who does everything in moderation. He knows exactly what he wants and quickly insists upon getting it. Most times his whiskey is Wilson—a wonderfully mild and mellow Whiskey —That's All! The Whiskey for which we invented the Nen-Reflllable Bestle FREE CLUB RECIPES—Free booklet of famous club reelpes for mined drinks, Address Wilson, 911 Filth Ave. N.Y. That's All some of the fane to get to Fordham t, but at) bawling ‘the walter because he ne to shed | brought you @ finger bow! with the the Fordham went through 'em like a Ciel comers while the drivers are part | travelling map through a prohibition m can roll up ®@ soore Ike that they will have a wonderful season. About the time the fun was escaping toward the west the official score was 47 to 0, with @ few edges of the field still to be heard from, It was so unanimous that even Boles Penrose wouldn't have de- manded @ recount, Suaquie went through all the mo- tons of @ football team for a few wiggles of the second hand on the timekeeper’s Ingersoll, but soon re- lapsed Into @ comatose condition, and Fordham curved the turkey for the rest of the afternoon, When the ind his mana-|day was that Gueguile tried to use the| Pennsylvania youths weren't Hmping a linkment ad they were, ng from ehort and sharp Hinesses. knocked down, beaks e bleeding and all thelr hair was mussed, There wasn't @ single part left in the whole Udy game. ‘The me was fairly good until there when the referee blow. the | opening whiat About the middle | of the affair Couch Gargan announced that the Fordham team would re- sume its regular schedule next week, Bo far Saturda: riot was con- cerned, je bird who arranged for Fordham and Susquehanna to be on the same fleld on the same afternoon should be charged with a boot, Football should have an error column for echedule makers, The only proper time for Susquie and Fordhain to meet ts a week apart, Outside of the football game It was & nice afternoon, Saturday's defeat seriously tar- nishog Busquehanna’s chances for the Fastern championship Wasn't much excitement during to cheer if student needs any in- centive to cheer, een after the game, Coach Gargan he was very much pleased with showing of the jusquchanna eleven, je acted as if they had eleven | Seranton, | | winter with @ bliseard, in, and Suaquie got ‘em, 8 re TA as scarce as baritones in ‘acears giee club. Only the Building | \ the h | mite kept Fordham's score from be | ing about 800 feet higher. bout third jod it was hb pee 8 ete Bae i. re still showed their old weakne to realize that it wes still the eome. i this week, Cornell men now are go- ing through the motions of hedging on claims that their team this Sat |, sharp football. Yale, Princeton and Cornell In their week-end games en- countered fairly easy opposition and acores, jome of their curs were) eleven's hair, Football ts such an un-| mortification set in, and {t was right) | lessone still coming in the mat) from | The coach of the Pennsylvania | eleven evidently wanted to start hie ‘fashion hints say that bangs are in ws regulating a With Haughton on the Job vw Harvard Team Is Showing Something of Old Form Crimson Eleven Only One of Big Teams to Show Marked Improve- ment, and Now Cornell's Adherents Are Hedging on Their Claims That the Ithacans Will Duplicate Last Season's Vic- tory When the Rivals Clash Next Saturday. By William Abbott. HE way Perey Haughton T cranked up the new Harvard | Massachusetts Aggies eleven 47 to 0 has upset the dope for the big games urday will duplicate ite 1915 victory over the Crimson. Harvard was the only dig team that really cut loose and played were satisfied to roll up comfortable was different with Harvard. trieve thelr lost prestige following the Tufts defeat and to give warning to the football world that they'd be do- ing business as usual this year. it will be recalled that Harvard had to build almost an entire new ma- chine this year, While Coaches Brown and O'Leary, in Haughton'’s absence, were slowly gathering the parte for their 1916 model, the Tufts eleven came along and walloped the Crimson, This was construed as meaning that Harverd lacked championship ma. terial, The following week Harvard easily licked Carolina, but that didn’t chunge the general belief that the Crimson wouldn't be very trouble- some against Yale and the Tigers, But see what happened last week. Head Coach Percy Haughton finally returned to the job, Boon reports be- gan coming out of Cambridge telling how the team was tmproving, Tho game with the Massachusetts showed the Crimson eleven bad un- dergone @ big change for the better, It is true the Mass, Aggies didn’t put up a strong resistance, but no team ever will that ie eo far out- classed, The Harvard forwards played well together, charging low and hard and making big openings for the backs, What will probably be the regular backfleld—-Casey, Horween, Thacher and Murray—displayed unexpected strength. ‘the Crimson backs all started quickly and were tough run- ners to bring down once they got un- der way. Casey was the bright star of the backfleld, This stocky youth is regarded @ nd Mahan. He was especially good on wide ond runs, his pecullar stride making all kinds of trouble for expectant tacklers, Carey was re- aponathle for three touchdowns, Harvard used only simple forma- tions. mostly end runs and dives through the tackles, The aerial at- ck Was neglected. Probably the Crimson plans to spring something now in tho passing game against Cornell Cornell defeated Bucknell 19 to 0, hut the team fell short of expe tions. Coach Al Sharpe admitted that the linesmen didn't have suffi- Ment pep, ‘The Bucknell forward occasionally broke through and atop ed the play before {t could get starte Cornell's chief weakness was the ends, Gillies and Tilley were not up to the standard. ‘They were slow and frequently boxed away from the run- ner The lows of Eckley, who was dts. qualified lust week, iv evidently going to be a hard blow to the Ithaca oom- bination, Frits Shiverick, who ta the chtef hope against Harvard, did about all that was expected of him, Shiverick didn't do much ground gaining be- cause the Bucknell tackles laid for him, but his kicking w ‘onderful. He punted long and accurately and shot over @ beautiful fleld goal from the 45-yard line Princeton rooters expect a dectalve victory over Dartmouth this Satur- of structures in the city day, defeated b: even that caused Je trouble. “Wwen ‘rou ALiow Fon A BLICe AND GeT bott, Brown, Driggs and Shea all had @ tendency to run high after starting Eddy, who travels with his knees machine so that st overran the | high tn the air, proved to be the best ground gainer, The Princeton ne play was easily the strongest of any team this sea- forwards couldn't be charged thelr opponents #o easily that many times the entire Laf Harry Sherman, the St. Paul fight) K. promotor who signed up Jack Dillon and Mike Gibbons to meet in @ ten) round bout at the big auditorium in Paul on Noy. 117, wi was published The Evening World on Saturday, left Chicago yesterday accompanied by Tommy Walsh of Chicago, the well known manager of fighters. Before Sherman declared that the bout ought to dra: Princeton tried McGraw at tackle, is a strapping dig lad, fast and down field under Frequently beat his tackling his man by the hatr. h announce- ambridge boys were out to re-| Will have @ good chance of becoming for the most played conservative football the presence of the Yale team, k Exidy, who has won out from Ames at quarter, showed considerable improvement in hia new position. Spéedy Rush intends to this week speeding up the team's Should the Tigers develo) a strong scoring punch, that ls powerful enough to keep going, nay, twenty or thirty yards, they will ga Proposition for 6, ‘Two tm round bouts, one sin round ond wrrorei pretimivariaa will be comtased wectal boxing show of the Clermont A. In the two tens Mol will go again Joe Stacey of Long Inland, Babe Johomn, colored, wil book up wit Honmted of Seattle, ‘The Olymplo A. OC, of Harem food cant of bouts for ite weekly tainment gonight, Brookiyn to-night, to be a tou either Harvard or In the feature the promising went side y punches with Willie Astey, and tm the semi-fiual of tem rounde, Jerome Henneomey of Long field goals are getting to be a regular ‘performance, shot one over from the 43-yard [in against Lafayette, whilo Fritz Shiv. |2mm7 Oly will tackle Young Ketcte erick kicked a beauty 45 yards uwa, in the game with Buoknell, Dave Tibbott Y | Biuy Mike, the crack light heerywolght of st, Poul, and Battling Leviusky, the fest Hebrew Pitteburgh beat Syracuse so hand. |Merwela™. are ging to Datta again, They fly Because football science overcame "ev Matched todey by Paddy Mulline, matche maser of the Clermont A, 0, of Beookimn, fo meet in snother ten round bout there ou next The men recently fought slower moving brawn. It te @ remarkable feat for a new Madey niet, coach Ike Bob Folwell in hin firat “setae batue, season to take a team like the Quak- ers, one that was deep in the dol- drums, and triumph over Penn State, a formidable opponent for any col- ily Roche, the well knows local referees, hee | H bees eugaged by Charley Johnston, manager of ot Harlem, aa offictal referee of the club, Roche will judge the ten: | round bout between Joe Weill Irish Patscy Cline of staged at the club on the \the Manbatten A, 0, of Chiongo and | The managements of several of the larger college and university hockey | A cew club will be opened on*the east side requested the Ice Skatirfy Monday, Oct, 90, The eb will be imown as Palace, One Hundred and Btghty-frer the bs Street and Broadway, dates for the playing of some af th more important games. consideration fed EY ENTRIES AT LATONIA. and ty lovated at No Joe McKenna, the President, bas | selected Harry Lenny as matchmaker, ured Shamus O'Brien, the ‘Fighting Ineb- | box Johnny Clinton, In the second ten, lo will meet Jimmy lightweight of Lang Island City, has beet appoluted referee of the to award them as The matter is Obariay Doemerick, of whe Woneer Sporting manager and matchmaker to-day sigved up LAUREL ENTRIES. “The entries for to-morrow's s races are as follows: % i Fouitri kabe—tn i Gncer, O6; aWoot toh, MT, twket, swe mile, | 8! mainly because the Big Green nd. ‘What caused you to do that? wed to talk to an old, Against Lafayette the Jersey men —the lack of & geed@ seoring punc! + elaine hae wire NS " R&4:| BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YO THRILLING MOMENTS IN GOLF Copyright, 1916, by The Presa Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) Courtney le Once More Coaching Cornell Crews (Special to The Brening World.) ITHACA, N. ¥Y,, Oct. 23,—Corneli’s crewa this year will be greatly strengthened by the return to active duties of Charles Courtney, the man who for years has led them to victory at Poughkeepsie, The much talked about retirement of Courtney has been given a K. O, thie fall. Courtney has attended to the repairing of all the shells in the boat- house and the seating of all varsity crews, John Hoyle, who for years has assisted Courtney and who took charge of the crews at Pough- keepsie, has resigned, giving place to last year’s coach and captain, John Collyer, Hoyle at present ie negotiating with Penn, and it is rumored that he will assist Coach Wright in his reorganization of Penn crews. Meter to Captain | 10%, Wood: | be Re ea ep ie pinocle beture At’ over, there's @ chance for handed spectator to bust Rip Van ‘Winkle's record for the big sleep. scarce as comfort in the subway. ways be on his toes or some one's cles, | eis waush out of an okt Ink | team, why don’t they trai Cin- cinnati to the National ? trip on the subway or ‘L’ knows & would be a good tdea to transfer the Giants to New York. Patsy Cline, the clever and speedy New York Nghtweight, had an easy time de~ feating Patsy Broderick tn six rounds at the National A, C. Saturday night. Cline scored a knockdown in the third, @ropping Broderick tor the count of nine. A match bas been clinched between Albert welterweight champion of Europe, and Augie Katner, the promising Bronx fighter ‘They were slaued up by Eddie McMahon to meet in the star bout of ten rounds et the show of the Empire A, Friday night, Badoud of , of Harlem on nest ‘As both men are game and atit punchers, the bout should be « hummer, Althoug the ten.mund battle between tion Al MoOoy of dirooklyn aod Jack Ditton, the | BOXING TON! light heavyweight ebmmoion, will not be fought | 14h wy Nene the demand foe tickets ig already lanes and the viepecte are that the Broadway Sporting Club will he packed to ite cagacity when the men enter the ring for the contest to-day, Fiddle Went, Mike MoGowan's Newark middle. q weight, will bos Madi Nugeat of Maley et the | Doom etiee teen SS.ncoa ive Renatis! 7 Sporting Clob, W , Night, Weare tees, BO", Wess “Lan Mies: until Oct, 81 MoCoy started training Queenatory A, ©. the star event They’) appear in I They Gotta Transfer the Washington Team, Why Don’t They Transfer It to the First Division? Millionaire has Just purchased painting of Mar- quis Abrose de Eee eee Mes iid musta LJ °o [aaa in the Police Gasette record Can't stop the boy from laying football. Got to be @ black sheep Lt every family. Bob Moha can’t figure whether the Dillon-Gibbone fight Is to be at 166 pounds or dollars, President Ebbets has returned that $50,000 to the public and was reating easy at the latest bulletin. nists Eth ba? te WR al mason here, good two< With the lacrosse Good quarterbacks this year A capable football player should al- eee oy tw un Yee beng curved over to Toronto, Mike Gibbo 1161 pounds. Mike didn't want @ fight, he wanted an autopsy. If Dillon could, make 101 you could make @ Hf they got to transfer a baseball And anybody who haa ever made the Thies is the time of the year leaves are falling...... n't anything so original savcosthle ia the babe | of she yon when the popers print the color of a fullback’s ears and the shane of hie forehead if he has any far ae publicity is concerned, Edison, Woodrow Wilson end Angelo are on the scrubs ..1f you want to get your name in the papere this month you either have to shoot your uncle or be a football player. : RABID RUDOLP! t Brofertck Eany for Cline. PHILADELPHIA, Oct 28, — Irish Biwuy fi ‘Tula T ues. Star f Next Semrtay = "hi! Hunte Point Sporting O1 ‘o-Mor, Night. Mgtay arved ve, Hit Phong. ht. Whee ecial Cloths 7. $ Suits & Overcoats In anticipation of colder weather, which will be here , soon, we offer a number of unusual fabrics which we will make to measure at this exceptionally low priee. There are about 150 patterns, all good style, all ser- vicesbie. Call Paty Fas iT Miers what you prefer, The farments you o1 ry ranteed fi ish and satisfaction, idl enenilins Samples and style suggestions sent upon request. Sp BROADWAY 4@ NINTH Lal 20 B, 48D aT., ‘7. FIFTH @ MADIGON AVES, AND