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~ SPEAKING OF EXTINCT ENGLISH, HOW ABOUT “LIPS THAT TOUCH LIQUOR SHALL NEVER TOUCH MINE?” 7 Cs HARDEST RING BATILES MADE BY LIGHTWEIGHTS They Furnish the Best Combination of Speed, Skill and Real Fighting Action of All Six Weight Classes—Fistic History Shows No Set of Boxers Who Could Compare With McAuliffe, andar THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JUNE 22, 1918. _ SOME LIG HTWEIGHTS WHO MADE RING HISTORY Copyright, 1918, by ‘Tho Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK BEFORE MARRIAGE A MAN BELIEVES HE PICKS HIS WIFE; AFTERWARD THAT SHE PECKS HIM. ANDERSON MEETS IN SEMMFINALS ~~ |Siwanoy Captain Plays Bril- liantly in Second Round of JS. WORTHINGTON —— ae ’ ’ Gans, Nelson, Welsh, McFarland, Leonard and Other Great Lightweights. ognized during the past century—tbe bantam, feather, light, welter, | middle and heavyweight REL, Red Cross Tourney. In his second round in the Raq Cross tournament under the direc tion of the Westchester County Gol Association at the Siwanoy Country Club, John G. Anderson, Siwanoy Captain, playing against M. Parish Watson of Ardsiey, went out in 3% and for the five inward holes played was one under 4's. As it was, An derson, turning for home 2 up, wo HERE are six weight classes in boxing that have been generally rec- Always the lightweight and the heavyweight have been popular fa vorites, The heavyweights are looked upon with respect because their champion is the champion of al! champions, and because a@ great Ae ™ bad sea by 5 and 4. His scor heavyweight contest is a rather awe: | Paewer PS FARTAND He will have to meet a strong play. ¢ emi-final ro . inspiring spectacle, owing to the| WAS CUSVEREST oF Ss Worthington, former! of the bulk and the heavy hitting ability of | Aw c id-Surrey Club in England, Worth- the men. LUGHTWIENGHTS gion, in hie morning match, kep. | slong on fairly even terms with wy But the Hghtweights have usually | H. Holston o: ykagyl, the pair be= square going to the fifteenth, winning and the done the best fighting. They fur | nieh the best combination of speed, | skill and roal Oghting action. The lightweight champions have been | more interesting to the public than! any other set of titleholders, Some will never be forgotten while the Jack McAuliffe was the first great lightweight champion. Briton then cut loose, Re 6 th y finished the bye holes, Worthington getting nee, last named 7 and 6. ‘The Gand AND NELSON Were AMONG “Ther iT of ALL FIGHTING a 72. Charley Brown, for champion of the Hudson River Golf Association, after fecelving a default in the morning, defeated C. C. V ster of Scarsdale Sport lasts. th cond round. As esul MEN IN THEIR, Bowe will meet N.D, Becker or the He was a man with a genius for fighting. He had a very large head, and CLASS. home club this morning. Recker won from R. it was full of brains. Probably no better ring general ever lived, and but Cc. M. Miller of Wykagyl and | Hart of Dunwoadle. tse aa for his habit of going into fights without even a day’ of training his rec- | marked th eeota Pana: 9 iit a : Q ixteen. Cornelius Smith jr. o gee would be inconiparebie. een Ardaley finally won over J. 3. Bent After McAuliffe came such great men as Lavigne, Erne and ( ‘ of Wy kasy! at the twentieth ually { The high tide mark of the light- : Feira sh. Sswnce of Weight division camo when tho woD-| putting Gans down. 4 Wuue . Some Consolntion. Seite ato & Deas derful Joe Gans was nearing the end) Gans never recovered from that! Jimny Britt, a Fitz.@erarbd MONG some treasured relics in an ancient trunk to-day, Bia MM bell, foutsome of his career. Long bouts, with de- Sant aa aamies war hammered A Furiousty , aptly 1 found a wrinkied little card whose white had turned to gray. ar, the winning aie ns Pe of him. Nelson wa ly beat: ONC : ‘i liander and K. C. Mite of the cisions, were being ee ated OF Baer tee bead Pps ea | « ‘heamaeenne Renuleo e ! 1 looked at it quite tenderly, and through a mist of tears, fitmse olab. whey had_a best ball of the hepa and more arieloned twenty rounds, but came back the FIGHTER, — NELson's¥” aN ‘ Recalled the day it came to me far down the distant years, Shout and $6 ja tor ad tad tines eg ht kay sinh sane. Miaay ot wear rail # renewed stock of DEADLY RIVAL, I recoliect it came in June; I worked so hard to earn it, Sleeps Hollow and ¥. B. Brown oP han at any * ury. ‘ourht Gans in " t Scarsdale were second, finishing 2 Benny Leonard ts supreme, and ranks| San Francisco and knocked him out | ——-——~ — —_———— I never had the hearticssness to tear it up or burn it. ng down. ne in his class.| {9 #eventeen rounds, winning the aly fighting about four- bled IE ager ros ag oi ML td r 0 months teen years ago he would have been up and knooked him out again in against a doen men who could give htwen rounds, him a fairly even battle. jelson’s finish came when he lost First, there was Joo Gans. “phe | te Ad Wolgnst, the Michigan Wiid- cat, ror a Old Master,” they called Joe when his} vay not knocked out. Na en he stamina was waning and only skill/ his feet, but helpless, w + Crowder Order Affects 258 of Majors’ Reserves CINCI ATI, O., June Augiet Herrmann, Chairman of the National Baseball Commission, in a statement whick was sent to Provost Marshal Gen, Crowder, calls the latter's attention to the fact that 258 baseball players of the 309 players carried on And every ycar about this time I look it over, pard, ‘Cause nowadays one seldom gets the old promotion card. WIT A LA PHELON. The many friends of little Bill Hanna, the veteran baseball chronicler, will be pleased to know he is resting quietly on his farm in Kansas and bids fair to recover his health, Bill was stricken im the harness last spring just before the opening of the baseball season and sought tho healing powers of the great West in bopes of regaining his form, Next to the late Bob Fitzsimmons and Rube Waddell, Bill Phelon, the veteran baseball expert of the Cincinnatt Times-Star, and widely quoted authority on the game, was, and for all we know still is, one of the most chronic practical Jokers in the world of sport. MAJOR LEAGUE AVERAGES Compiled by Moreland News Bureau By John Pollock Although Jack Dempsey, the prom- ising heavyweight of the West, was booked up for fights at Tulsa, Ok: and other cities in the West, his manager, Jack Kearns, wired this of- fice to-day, declaring that he had cancelled all of these contests and that Dempsey’s next battle would bo ing Averages, re played uo to not knocked out, was on Refereo . Gans was a won-| Eddie Smith stopped the fight and tel havior started as a boy Tee dete sata bat rays bane ° Oo elson always in @ Baltimore fish market, where ho he could have fought on. Hie Donat showed unusual skill in a fow ema wae pet he (maan't Human," ‘and Bob Mitzsimmons wes in hi at he couldnt’ nocked out. But iene then, ren Joe Gans stopped’ Owen Moran knocked him out nine months tater» Ys work to travel around and study Convince Nakeoet bak nine Hor Fitzsimmons while Fite was meeting several yeara more, but never re- Thorpe New York, Holloober. Chica | i asteresusezer= SELTSESETSSsssELESO ian the reserve lists uf the sixteen major im 8 with Fred Fulton for twenty rounds lubs will he forced to seck all comers on the stage. He took snes the fron endurance of his He) at the big aseball park at Hal vi Many years ago, when Hanna began to feel the nervous strain of trying ae ecinyment if tue selective per- many of Fitesimmons's best fighting | © gee OF et of tight ig} H lon the etteracon ot July 4 Diley to keep all hands in good humor, he used to walk every night from Park | Vicg regulations issued from Washing- tricks, amalgamated them with hla] weignis fought in Nelson's time. : i 4 4 leaves Milwaukee to-night for New ion te Be home in the West Fifties, hoping to relieve his tired nerves in tof, Are atrigtly entareed: payee own natural style and became invit-| ‘There were Gang and Britt and Ca: * M4 Yt Sf col York, and will finish up his training| "2 Still mieht air, ‘ * |e applied to these 258 ball players of cible. He was the coolest fighter in|nole, Young Corbett, Tommy Mur- he ih 161 # 8 BRI tor the scrap at Baltimore, One day while the Cincinnati Club was in town somebody told Phelon | rie “major leagues that are aff r-| phy, Owen Moran, Ad Wolgast, Au- ww York cn me . about Hanna's nightly rambles and he conceived a practical joke on Bill with | sald Hermann’s statement, “it will ab- the ring, absolutely deliberate, pe: ingham Detroit’; ) 1 183 78 BA 1285 —_— " s that has more fect in defense, and sudden end ag: rella Herrera, Willie Fit: id, Ed g # 13 814 18-2001 Jotnny Dundee will surely box Mickey Doniey,| “1! the cunning of an arch fiend in search of a good time. bere 4 SOUGO" capital’ ineated -aenten sok, He could hit like Sequence Aad many more. Terry ‘Be 44 181 33 Ti :ERe | the Newark tightweight, in the star bout of els That same night Phelon waited until Hanna was well on his homeward |{hat $8,000,000 capital Invested exelus Srosaiyo mine iam tect ain: min : Hi i} 2h SPBo [rounds at the Armory A, A. of Jeney City on] trek and then hopped on a Broadway car, alighting apout two blocks beyond | players. Re ali & middlowe: , : % igaa| Monday night, He resumed training for the} whvre Bill was treading al th an easy stride. “The book value o! @ combined . re 6 i ek & along wi Yy a t includ- KING WON| Aurelia Herrera was unquestion- ip $ $3 7 'S ‘BBL | contest to-day and claims he le in eolendki chape, fo.w . not inelu » GANS gohkly TE o ably the hardest hitting lightweight ineiohis "<2 FB 84 HR STB | Bealden this go be clashes with George Chaney for] on 1° Waited on the corner until Hanna was about to pass and then stepped he value of * the | the class ever saw. He was a lean, Sein I io 15 93. {HRA | twelve rounds at Baltimore on June 20, and Matt | UE ws ¥ oblits aan Gans once told me how he won th®/sinewy Mexican from Bakersfield, st lon.) 49 374 17 0 Brock for four rounds at the big benefit for the Hello, Bill,” greeted Phelon, passing on. ‘holders of the various clubs for sNghtweight tide from Frank Brae 19) He “knocked ‘em kicking” from his HL Mrore Brooki:.; 48 112 gl & soldiers and sailors at Clorelsad on July 6, “Hello, ill," replied Hanna, greatly surprised to see the visiting scribe Liberty bonds amounted to $8,523,450." ene round. first fight on, Battling Neleon once Caley, Tipe OR Eesggne out alone at night in that part of town, But Phelon showed no inclination] ‘The statement brought out the fact ae et ee rg EB yt hs: feld mo that whenever Herrera hit pel, owen 00 ie iy ee ta ne handler for Oren. | ta renew acquaintances, so Hanna kept on going too, that ot the 931 reserve players on major iting and drawing his im he felt as if he had been kicked | Mis ve Seay rene ha ” ue clubs on October 1, » 91, on c' i" Crim StL if ™ to Phelon continued his way until another car came along. He hopped “ ut a foot, 1 practised wep PiOe ara| DY 4 mule. The Mexican would have Hickman. Bron 4 ous ig § gest Tosedey sight, Bount la vwkiag oot for the) abOurd and repeated the performance. About the fifth time Hanna caw Py geet: RAN®, Velen oo ee ‘and hitting to the spot wh Ie been a great champion but for one fiwwler, Cineinmatt |! bs 8 15 next Tuesday night, Benny i working out for the rd and repe 53 or 11.8 per cent. have been draft head would be after the foint. Wi falling. He drank a bottle of whiskey v i wo 32 BN scrap at Billy Grupp's. gymnasium and will con-) Phelon pass by and heard his contemporary greet him in the same manner, |into service. we came together Frank ° felted |g *night—and it killed hie, 2B $ ik ove training there ual onday ftemeon,. The] nig brow wax bathed in cold sweat. Mr. Hermann continued: | oe sing Swittly, and with al my might] Jimmy Britt was « keenly intelli ‘Bip kg gomnmtecs Cresaln ene Tastee Cgwe thet tes one aibily BITE eromed Eeibien Jn the sams tans, of buninens or orcupaticn can make his chin to|@ent fighter, a well- boy, suc- 5 is ct reoeite will ver $8,000. ello, Bill,” replied Hanna, weakly, @ better showin he a A te ike spot, Tex pee ee there, and|Oesstul in business, who fought be- at 18 | ° hale co Phelon then disappeared, but Hanna jumped aboard a car and hurried | 4,The statement informs Gen, Crows K never knew what bit him, 1 bad|Cause he loved the sport He was a $e af Ab SHE) aarty Crom, the lol witerwoieht, bow « tard] home and stayed up all night 90 he could go and conwult a nerve spectal- | tf, that the average salary, of the his movement measured to an inch | ®4mMecock in the ring and fought like #t J 31 BES | Job on hia bends to-night, He is elated to meet] ‘e+ the first thing in the moraing. nd of those who were drafted ae ream fail to knock him out it| fury from start to finish. ‘The 194 2 $1 HF lean Downey, the creck Columbus fighter, for $370195 cbe°S period of six months perié whet 1 expected aim ire kai Agee foarte bios dre buldeoar:: 81 1 at a 0 treuahs at the Dusen Orne omb bs MILLER HUGGINS HAS DISCARDED THE WORD HELP.” WHEN ons this paragraph Herrmann added: udent as well as a . iv a . L : “So, it cannot be held that they ; fought Britt won twe isic — basoball park at Dayton, Crom is also matched | i No . ABS NCE HE SIMPLY HOLLPRS “M ” 0, G ots omar, Feare weal made bine, 29) Ulscked out ones and bat ons orate National Leagwe Pitchers’ Records. |i. nei Champken To! Léwis in» four-roand go| /Y NEED OF ASSISTA SNRSE teURee oseaition “trom «financial confine Reg eG at t strength| Young Corbett was a great light W, LOH, Are. : (Up to dese 18.) b, tare, [Ot the benefit for the soldiers end sailoee at standpoint.” and quickn sins 0 fh x ould ve waire with & tercife overhand right ae | rt 100 prabitehers and Clubs, ¢ «6 {pos Cleveland, 0., on July 6, wise Asrators will never have to go hungry as long as they have a made him eof @ iehtwe 5 7 2 08 CTs | Hudold, Boston q Dick Curley hae got together a very attractive | Pi¢inich behi 5 champions of his time. with this blow. ‘Tho first time he oe ee & 3 8 18 180] card of tosing bows for the benefit show at the —_— Battling Nelaon was a champion|fought Nelson he broke two of Noel- ae iY i 0 8 100 jen tone, Gna, wei. th mo less great than Gans, but of an|son's ribs with a right-hand swing. | ie ee | 173 8 LL Upon Della ogy A gyre wit dl rg The umpire who has to announce the names of that Buffalo battery, entirely different type. He won|Nelson's amazing gameness and en- $38 df Lo RR Senta wm aw now fighting In France | OMdrachak and Bengerigh, might put it over better with the aid of a ukulele. Ahrough endless aggressiveness and|durance won the fight. He wore Cor- ae + 5 i 8 ieee SS cee tm ina panier 4 4 onde n- H "i 74 Ban bald erase Seneey Yen, neneele| aberit Surahy-wae be watortinate now $8 2 ARR Prank Bnd, Praia Hara. duck Waar, FOUR MINUTES BOILED. ) io a ‘133 | tomuny Sh Joo Leonard, Charley Rerger + fi John Dunn. tikes to, wil about nial lightweight, “He “should “havo. been han Rh 4 ‘illo Nock and. Bolling Meddy va Jee "Ours, There is two-bits in a sealed envelope in thie office for the ig gli Srey retiaralte inch a Ne oie ene ahortl eee 1 338 a | All the Route wi be sen) Sah, in Park Row who may be just recovering consciousness from Sago when Terry Motiovern Knocked | Waleast won fren Nelson and Were ae fe | ae Toy Lowts, matchenaker of the Anmy 4, 4, op | the effects of a knockout administered yesterday by such « harmless Gesith, Dunn was ‘on the door” whea| Ant forthe une’ vt * onanee fo iii Pit Pen, cana rit ie crest] SIF ar emptying a nessbag containing chowder, Vienna roast, ple |1 SOUTHAMPTON HANDICAP mith, Dunn n the do nt for the ttle, ‘ 122 furnished by Johnny Dundee and Frankie . ® grim-looking, shaggy-haired young- M’'FARLAND MO6T SKILFUL OF 5 of MD Te lage} Young" Brite at the club on last Tuesday night and beer—ouch!—the writer nonchalantly called for the check. Shorn (W ater came up and offered to fight any ie | Pi that he rematched them to-day to clad in an. of small change with which to butter the extended palm, he asked THE OHIO HANDICAP One if he could get in to ane the show. ALL. 1 i a | fae aa | other Uwelve-round decision scrap oo Tuwtay! the waiter if he would be so kind as to change two-bita, and Four Other Classy Events “Can you fght?” asked Dunn. |! packey «MoFarlan¢ missed the hewn io | evening, July 9. Britt geve Dundee a much bet The waiter summarily returned with two dimes and @ nickel, NNING AT 2.80 F. My Met e BEGL G AT 2, gnarled the chamey person ever" | Nehtwolkht championship by meeting i ee ee ter fight than ib wae expected he would, evidently to give the writer time enough to let such obliging service SPECIAL RAOB ‘TRAINS . Champion Battling Nolson in a stage 5 § 3 sa i Venn. Station. 83rd St. and Tem a @o Battling Nelson was allowed to *hicy j ef ? Hinkel of Cleveland Frank Pop"? sink in, pion. a, and be fought « god, rush- Feut & Chinsaa, Paskey val oe i ‘ $i} Omen of Paliadeigsie, who hes been apcetntea | “Here you are, si nding the change, se i Biudhe Ay Bhool anery, gressive. Neloon wis hit’ po many H 10 | by the cntherilies of Reltimery as effietal referee “Oh, thank you very much,” replied ye scrivener, pocke thes before he war recognised, He] mer 18 three rounls that he pro- ee it a ae firs, wal bo eid te eon Ta ibe teeny. | MO caarand walking Ow 8 Oe as Goon INTENTIONS, ol e D4 osed to become MeFaniand's man- H soa) raphe MEMORY . even fought heavyweights in thelQeer cna avoided fighting him tor ae Comey mecca sa) gf rauod bout between Dempsey and Pultoa there on GHG! er tank towns, and they couldn't atop championship, McFarland beat 2 O Smith, Cinainpetl,, 8 2X 400 | July 4, If Promoter Curley can induce the au. | 5 Bin, it wasnt until be knoeked oUt) goores of lightwelghts and eventually ! Rustin’ Now Weee’ sae thorities to let him use Hinkel, then Matt will! Perhaps those who tried to hold up the benefit boxing show for the War re, Fane JA Ban B Ayer 4 outgrew the class ! Wai a Tale 1 3 et the ib, ees Hospital Entertainment Association the other night would be willing to con- interested in the youngster with the|,, Wille Ritchie was one of the last of |r Ataris } {| Steele: Fit tabrarst 1 3 On account of 90 many wen baring heen draftey | :Fibute $15,000 to the cause. s Qghting name. Canole was a cork-| {hs lot. He beat Wolgast for the | Panfonh, Chicano r | conse, Mite sore 12 8 into the army aud maty from Baltimore, fig He homerun, catimated to hae'a tides. fought a fow aulendid Agha, [Dewan Lows tees MICO iomotrs “Hama and Bieta of “e “Aeran mon Panta" eine fthe Tonmtateaaamaies ate, ty |GRAND CENTRAL PALAGE J it to Welsh on a "point" decision re . ‘A. ©, there have eneounced thet they w had N'to 2 to wen on, chance against any one, but Nelson | /% 4 . cast the deciding vote wore himdown and kuscked him out|#"d outcrew the lihtweiebts. |INTERNATIONAL ATHLETIC ATHLETICS URGED FOR five any fightem » guarantes ia tbe Mite, mae OP NOW OPEN 7 id ¢ +4 claim © box for a) _ 4 SOUN a . Biter teh, Nelstc's: proves. wad tng during Nelwon's time, but his ASSOCIATION PLANNED.| MEN UP TO 50 YEARS OLD, |Stctoctes of the gram receipts they will wot toot rt CONG TO BE MEMI, TO PRONOUNCE THAT NEW BROOK. mos Serta este Seen ‘ id, He took the toughest of ° “ - them wo, aes [LIN PITCHE nae Ps hem, and won, He beat Aurelia {ANG Skill than declave fuhting He! repiaNAPOLIS, June 22—Plans for] Participation of all men up to titty Sa EE ns RL, Admission Includes Ska : Herrera in two desperate twenty-| weights except McFarland, who was|{he organization of the International |years of age In some form of athletic} ia” Graton at Maithore, Frat Yulton” fas ) W. d’s Jazz Band round fights, stopped Eddie Hanlon] his one master in skill, Patriotic Athletic Association, which | competitions with & view to being | gecided to do all hie training at Billy Gruops| jerank Shea ought to make a successful aviator, judging from bis abil- ar in nineteen rounds, Young Corbett in] Willie Fitzgerald, the “Fighting |has been in process of formation for the called into military service of the|ermnesium for his kuportent fed. with dace ity (6 stay off the ground during a race, fs Solendig., Flogre ss Kenfcet Ventilation, fon and nine, Britt in eighteen, and] Harp," looked like @ real champion |last year, were divulged here oo-|United States WAS Urged at a dinner |Demnery in taat citg on July 4. He wil eve |! fli PA PEERNOON AND EVENING, i} BUNDAY 4 Jost to Champion Joe Gans in @ ter-/ until he was knocked out by Joe|incident with the departure for the| tendered to sixty Gevotees of amateur | for te battle ground four days before the contest | | si st LEXINGTON AVE Fifically fought forty-two rounds @t}/Gans Jn ten rounds, He had every- | Fast, in the Interest of the project, of | emtrres by Capt. W. Gerald Hawes at only do light exercise uatil it & time Tivoli Team to Play Here. | ronx Stars at Dyckm, E 5 Idfield, on a foul hat was one|thing to make a champion, but the |charies C, Carr, former American Asso ie Great OG ia Breiman hat ne arena, ts ‘To-morrow afternoon et Olympic] With several new men in the lineup Use 47th St. Eafrance. the most desperate lightweight | knockout broke his winning streak. | ation and Federal League player and| ee) : DIAM | the New Jemeer Exhibition Comrany, which bag |Field, 126th Street and Fifth Avenue, |the Bronx Stars will clash with the | “> " “ - ts ever fought under Queens Y|Gana told me once that Fitugerald manager, night Jreceived a iicouse faa the Boxivg Conmmiaien the crack De Puyster team from Tivoll,| Kingsbridge nine at Dyckman Oval, OLYMPIC FIELD, on. Neloon plunged endlessly |was the one man he was doubital yas ne ,| 19 outlining the purposes of the new | mae 2 comune Sim cies show, hon ted |N. ¥., who have held the independent |noar the Dyckman Street subway 86th St. ood Bt Av. tommorrow, 1,0 P, q at the hardest, blows Gans about beating. Bosides local men, promoters of the nent Capt. Hawes sald: “Next to| N. ¥., who have :NGh St, avd y 3 association are said to include James , pres te ree povla: prices for its entertainments. 5 | championship for seven years, Will meet | tion, to-morrow, in the feature of ‘ig id deliver—plunged and fought} Owen Moran was one of the tough- Corbett, John McGraw, Harney Old aintalning our armies abroad the most ' Seabee ‘Saas Tisioan ee iP p> 1 LINCOLN GIANTS vs. » without an inatant’s let-up until alljest lightwetghts ever sent out from | Aid johnny kilbanc, Harty Hempatena, [important duty of the American paopie |eu to #2. Mate washer Dave, Drieoll decid! ‘ine Lincoln Giants in the opening Kame |double bill, The Bronx Stars will line * ef Gane's skill was of no avail, so| England, He had skill and strength | Garry H ( to-day, | believe, a uipping dhe oa there Lion J Mg yl ne of a double-header, In the final game ye, Ae Bres Tobin, catcher; Barry, HIGH BRIDGE. ans was forced to stand and|and fighting spirit. He won a score |H a Meatia: To Het eit) Aha eee eile lesseoe, Freie, Bares and’ t the hard-hitting High Bridge nine will fist gage Conners. second base: Kel | . ug with him through the second |ot famous fights, but old John |©9 en fed to camp pin Pele Herman on duly § again meet the Lincoln Giants. The|Rishy, centre’ Hela: We hed: | DYECKMAN OVAL Brckmay st the fight, Both men were Barleycorn had him beaten every | rhe be in consian — High Bridge boys have twice defeated land Levine, right field. Two w [tah sa Sei come ft thay met—whiah wae al! ten | if re ohetseate neh wt pratt To-Par, PMN Y vockee 0 season, matched local teams will furnish the H LON ewung blow below the belt frequently for a successful fighter. ment Uiat we have met 0. Waettta oa, ods, Adm. 4. — Ades, OMe alitacuem hidcoes .