The evening world. Newspaper, October 16, 1918, Page 14

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THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1918 BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK WOSIRS 4 i hit THEY’VE RELEASED OLD JOHN FOOTBALL B MEETS FOR | | : : - : y Thornton Fisher a Copyright, 1918, by The Press Publishing Co. (Tue New York Evening World). li cng a (“6H DEAR AFTER We - ’ - LEARNED 3 Nice FoorpaLte \ Every Sport to Do Its Bit Dur- NELLS AND NO AHaqice AH ME! In THE = - ing Drive of United War aga Li aed LONG SILENT warcHes jee are ona Workers Next Month. OF THE NIGHT Have FeLow wie AinNtvED IVAL of sports on the | (WAITED AND greatest scale ever attempted WONDERED — will be staged throughout the Nation during the week of Nov, 1 to | 18 in conjunction with the drive of ing of Big Leagues for War od | the calendar will be recruited for the End Is Job for a Big Man. | b occasion. The week's country-wide | i nt tournament will be under the direction A} | “ = nie LD { 1 WN of committees of prominent sports ele awe | . j men, who expect, to Import foreign i iv orld \ = talent to assist the home battalions ITH the end of the war bo-| Boing the rounds of the re- sadist “sua x “en nee, ball teams and the poss fi isd A pe mation of the American and 3 Jonal Organizations, This would mean the fair, It is wage tacular Army-Navy football game Serhan, Se will be played at the Polo Ground : d ¢ the national carnival. Be nai a Winall iimecting will be held this after ¥ Di 4 Nn to see the _ % J ‘ thing through to @ successful end, | ae mertin a : : tte : ball under any conditions will First Race—Coe entry, Osgood, | rain i ‘ta have its own troubles “coming back." | Peter. . It probably wouldn't come back at COLLEGE LIFE SEEMED VERY UNNECE SSARY UNTIL RECENTLY CANT PERSONALLY POISON) THE Kaiser BOT HES GOING TO SEND Some EXPLOSIVES OVER With HIS NAME ON ‘EM - te take charge of t ) probable that the spe maiga ommittees hope to get the tre: endous undertaking in workin all as the financial institution It has Second Race—T ag F Hs been for some years back, but there] gart, Columbine Barry Shannon. Ors organ! 1s a chance for its rejuvenat : orts to help seven war org enation us a Thi ‘ a lete their drive next mon sport if guided by the proper spirit ind Race—Kolinsky, Bill AND COMP ORs lent at the Yule Club, ‘ As we iook back over those who} MeClay, Irish Lady II. was rade, is a Tees will be: fOOe have been connect he ; : | uring the week there wi sh im official capacities, iit hard tede. | Fourth Race—Htoamer, Me Ss LI Cc a S cenit Ui and servis tect ® Moses among them all, uniens Comber entry, Corn Tassel Various training camps and serves , Major, beg pardon, now Coi. ‘i = | es — » and § \ ‘ Tillinghast, Huston, part’ owner of Fifth Race—Orderly, Intrigeur, | stage games with their rivals, [t w: 1 that Yale, Princeton ar ard would play as in the dav nd every effort will the New York Yankees. He is one | Ninety Simplex man who has done things in the Sixth Race—Pet past and is still doing them, but in Sanfe y far-off Fra the ce of i ' Uncle Sam, E. W. Van Houten won in three nts In the last one-day golf tour- | Ha 4 nament of the Engineers’ Club at|/®0ne bY, ANA Mi ig and We Englewood yesterday. His card of|i wing to play their spectacular co vais ; ” ; cok _ = 176—24—161 was low net for the dou- | tout, The mej ity of the big gam Sa ae cise kas = ; —_ 7 ble ctreuit, while he also won the Red » Bast will be side beaver Aviad Cross match with 89. Wrrervene hat"? se'atinst| After Trying for Four Years Army Riders Paul McJunkin were the game the recognition it de- sn a tat:| Puts and Calls Finally Wins, 4¢ Horse Show HAPPY AS & GLY WITH FZOO WORTH OF LIBERTY Boros, Coe En » sports committee in charge campaign consists of Herbers pratt Chairman; Julian Curtis i W. W. Koper Raycroft, Walter In the afternoon th took part in an etx’! contestauts een-hole medal througn | play handicap in three classes, ana in tor, Bartow 6 be 2 | the A division P ster, Bart : patriotic ideals, he r ‘ sain the A division Prot. C. W kerville i 2 hg alg oselle ge tas MLL . Because 40 many hunting men are tn] ; ; Ted with 9 : Willian gayi: | and Willlam : record, “And the Colonel has aursis ace for oor PULLILG! \inke va ik ema 6 One Baseball Reform Should Be a Merit System for Umpires }] *\‘! 32° ENP Ram er eM Reet Pak made o ar record, not only | the Soca trot a - . are nd | ; " . my c , wy mad a Ore Meret lh aoneen Chimie hak ite ssa change the conditions for Corinthian |} How a Prominent Writer Sees the Diamond Game waaotine tor the aeleotes ciehieen | WY" mp. it European bi or demax hunter classes at the annual exhibition tetri A cut of thirty-six holes . tA q : acy Col Hluston lett family, nome [Old Gelding Is Graduated] !14. “tte stop tn ine streten Madison. Square Ganien, besinning Resumed on a District Basis for Players. by’ Frank’ Hoyt of Siwanoy, with fi, | mock, Parke Davis and John A. He wealth and pleasure to go ‘to tne ° h ~~ | the comment heard on Nov. 11, In 4,000 prize lists went out to the “committee Which cdaretes ce | charge of the golf, and matches be front when we got into war against} From Maiden Ranks in Huis und Calis wasn't sopping al all. /exnibitore last week the conditions | Py Hugh S. Fullert trophy he refused it. N, M. Gariar t available players will Vrussianism. He didn't walt te se : d e evidently was bent on showing the | Cr 00 as) My ‘Kune. Sake the 7] gh S. Fullerton. with an 84, Was deciared the winner. all over the country. Fret how his Yankees made cut in Mile-and-Quarter Event. racing folk that he wasn’t such w/o Torin, | COPPFRt, 1018, by the Pres Publitsieg Co, | that he has Peck's record beaten. - , on will have charge of t : ‘American Lehgue race: He didn: | aa plug after all. Down ho came throusn|fesulation hunting costume in Corin thie New York Breorng Wort.) Once a crowd chased Peck over|.,.Mts. Samuel Wetherill of the home| W. [tublen wil tit cen and be « care. Over age, physically unfit and | the nas haughtily as the king | thian classes. NE great reform which ought to] sx fences before he escaped, there- |CUY Won the net prize in the one-day | track and NOC et iy every cor f with every rightful claim to exem- | By Vincent Treanor. of handicappers might have done and| Major Thomas Hitchcock, Major come when baseball is resumod|by swelling his record. The yarnn | (Qurmament of the Women's Metropoli-| pects 4 NNT) iitas, some of the q ls tion, he exerted all kinds of influ- | Hts outstanding feat eth galloped past the judges withoui| Henry L, Bell, Capt. Joseph 1. Davis after the war is in the systen|these fellows tell of their experi- | County Country lub yeetera , agplon of ling the nat championsh : ences to get into the big scrap. He | 3 outstanding feature of the|/drawing a long breath. The time of] and several other officers, who expect to R wn-(ences in the bush leagues make ]|card of 99—12—87. ‘H ross acore y , an will 5 7 t 2. . of selecting um B score | jn qualit trained himself into- condition and | racing at the Empire City track/ the race way slow, 2.084-5, but why) ride at the Garden, called attention to Hiny| trench fighting in France sound sats | also tied with Miss Violet Miller of Balc| yume. the direction of billiards, TI ; then pulled all the wires at hia con yesterday was the fifth event.| (Ake away hen eae Pdiy ee oe the fact that they are not allowed to nee ,_ Sepectally | by comparison, ere tuto), who, had) 995-94 sideldl ers | tae wlrendy ained the consent mand in order to be accepted in thy | wnat made it a feature was the grad-| this late day. . " wear anything but thelr army uniforms he the pred iteh Lge BU Poe van Wiiich | 106-—7—99, was third, while Mrs, Ieare | Willie to play, ane EAR Sa mt > bs e vie a ea +5 hug 4 bi a e a e 4 : . ‘ et natch h elke Cc a A man like that would do wonders | Uation of a six r-old, Puts and a while in the service. To make it poss.- handoas d Bait = 1t believe’ won him the championship Renate pace ee = 10s Dan x p,| ra i a Mi pions for baseball, and if the club owners Calls, from the maiden ranks, For Fitzgerald, under whose | le for them to compete, the directors of as for years been | vn. spring. Doc Carson, who was| Dumont, 114—12—1 Bs att oy y Coffroth, the San Francises $ . . all of Plainfield: | Jimm - don't realize this when the time four years, or ever since he was a ent the Yonkers meeting {s|(he Horse Show Association voted yes- conducted on @! president of the Central in those |were next. Miss Julia Bredt of lesex who has been #0 suc 4 ‘5 | comes to put the old game 9n/'Its feet | two-year-old, this gelding has be: pelng run, is living up to his job, He|terday to make army uniforms accept- plane of favorit-|days, declares it {4 a darned lie, but | County had 114—9—105 charity boxing ven - ; } ain, they w 0 a art | 1 joem't st awarda® Tabla : tas shader De cae H ne pacific Const, will leave wgain, they wil be making ah almort |e to win a race, fle. tral vem't stick in the stewards’ stand}able as well as regulation hunting cos. ism and Abe vows It 1s SO8DEL. | one aces MacDonald Smitha former Metro. | iit" an, the Paclt . \ ‘Nike a graven Image as the other hig |tume. Abe had re without J politan champion and one oft for this elty to Frank Regan, a poor man, during that brow officials do, No, indeed, Mr . and almost everything else, so um- an c moi i driv aie " 4 Y do. No, ed, Mr.\ tneries for the Hi Show will clone ‘land almost everything i expert golfers In the o oat! or the boxing VERORODY has his own notions| timo has become almost blue in the Fitsgerald is in and out of the pad: | tonne wine tha Socmease Chee ee although on the] Firing baseball svemed to him a soft ;in the British armyn’ COUPE now tournam OF eanoe of taings, and there is no fig-|¢ace trying to locate a “spot” for hin 40ck between races, visits the jockeys |Smith, at the office of the association, average the um-|and easy job, and he went out to nd decided ne pires have been jarbitrate in the Central. ‘Things hap- CH sat ea upen (Pf, the, thre ; med almost at once. At Grand { shar. | pened almost at onc Ga den’ City and Garden C men of high char-)Pibida Le took the outiteld fence In —ralsed “s8 000 for the” 1a acter and daunt-|yis stride to escape a mob. At Terre last Saturday, : ’9rdy less courage. ute he was under bombardment tre Hau I have no quar-/and withstood a ge under the will have championship tourn uring out the mind's workings | eithou: stooees room, talks to the boys, has a word|No, 18 East 23d Street ye OTT oie, munitions s | to say here and there to the owners of others. For instance, a letter jus Yesterday Regan dropped the geld- and trainers, looks at the horses E received contains a man-sized wallo | ing into a mile and a quarter race O4 they file through the paddock gate at George Foster Sanford and his against three other buggy horses, and 09 the way to the post and in a gen- Fi. ic Ni football methods. We don't care *) x4 ; aeee eral way oversees everything pe istic ews to the surprive of Regan and almost elty nts in her places where was © busy nizations W ave banded se are tha wills | principal cities, | four-ball professional match ts. tr oung Me) f ae olay’ played over the publi take sides in the matter, but this let- taining to the day's sport, includ'ng aire nds until after dark. Players Forest Park Bundi’ Qube links Jewish We z ter is of sufficient importance to prini. | eYerybody else be came home in front the actual running of the ‘races, He and Gossi rel with major league umpire ‘}Mtepped. on. his instep with spiked Da E neyman erehecaee {nm whieh | ee eat Ave Tlere it is with all the dignity of a stake horse, doesn’t wear horns, he doesn't intimi- rather I consider them exceptional) ices. they stepped aside and let Fe reat Hilt Field Club, and Teddy Wy | fare ‘ier bodies which @& To the Sporting RAitor: Off in front, he was never headed, and “te anybody, but all hands concerned By John Pollock men and men of exceptional hones*y | fast pails batter his ribs, but he stuck Gorgon “Emith: Bees: Wil play against | 4nd 0 work among the @ Dake Hine? can Dears gou. re cron es BA wes , * in the various races of the day have mark. “Another case of the green. |D&asins the Judges at the Anish he/g feeling that a man who knows his yehtmonster’ At any rate, what. | bad several lengths to spare to beat business is supervising things, No onel Jimmy Dunn of Cleveland, who was / area ae Ror rare er Tam going-to say tx a pretty |R. T. Wilson's Woodthrush and) will ote ie gene and no dhe | responsible for Johnny Kilbane becom- MRRE LORD CNOLAyeLAR OF 20 There and Abe felt he bad escaped the general opinion, Wndoubledly, G. | Chester II, The latter was favorite, | ieee te po eae the Dookey, Club| ine th6 featherweight champion, now Umps should be the merit sus lk worst, Foster & dis a first-class | but he was never in the hunt, ‘ape eas abet tory ig |comes forward with a statement to the @f¢ scores and scores of valuable and) ‘That afternoon the trouble starte: football coach, but he is a far | >Ut ought to employ at every track, in the | Come . ep ei ate Rr career eee Ha a prea better press agent. As a result There was weeping and gnashing of! same position he is go creditably fill-| fect that Kilbane will never fight efficient men who bave served ii the saree plished eee eta of the latted qualification, by some | teeth in some quarters, when Puts and | ing at Yonkers |again. Jimmy further states that the terms in the minors with never a) pottles and stones Hurtiod Srakt means or other he has been able |Catiy galioped home, and there was sans little champion intends to go Into bus!- chance for advancement and without | (ii, Ane Sone Mal oe ot up fe keep Ble Rutgers Team ence: | jubliation in others, | |The layers and players who gather] ness after the war. and bealdes bas an incentive for harder work. PO Pe co CRU at LT Hg ~ . he 0 on ene! sr je fe be sarie . _ every college in the United States “Gee whis.” said one well-known| noon nave a rea! kick coming on the|to allow him to jive pelea fae Baseball will not come back tn ‘a the stand, ‘ arcying a bulldox In a played only freshmen football, | turf character, “I've played that horse |dust. It flies all over and before the |the remainder of his life. Dunn ia now 4 form. I have an idea that it will) thaw! wrap. fhe bow mates Te with one or two exceptions. where | for four years, and to-day 1 stayed| day i# done ono might write his grooming Kid Wolfe, the Cleveland) become a district affair, OTA LIES SCN Noe seots ph aA g Sab Aree year, sligibilky rule w off him.” Another said: “quit him Name on the clothes and headgear Of | hoxer, ter the featherwelght ttle, whieh Boston teams choosing thelr pla t eene not in force. With the other thres “ th. hi rompelled \ 4 4 e years ago, but to-day Lf went, those who are compelled to walk ot x a tihan thahel? a Sew Eng! the New York 83 © quit. leges taking more interest in the | yack to him and feel repaid for every {around there, A little sprinkling of {ns now n to the other “feathers” (9 from New England, the Then Abe quit war than football, Rutgers made | Cent he has cost me.” Jwater before the day's sport beging|D8ttle for. Jimmy says he will match teams recruiting from the metropoll- * . 8 ys! *; doing and squareness, However, when|until he landed at Fort Wayne and gna John tanyaam ite Country Club, | 201g baseball js resumed, no matter ‘n|breathed much easier, Fort Wayne quahic. | diers 9 | Eos ‘best abowing 15 lie: aisvory In In racing circles a horse that is still] might do away with this, Wolfe against any legitimate feather-|tan district, and so forth, The best Phil naam Interc F clcsne same team ar iast year, with two [i the maiden ranks ax a alx-year-oid | eee weight who can make 122 pounds at the| scheme would be a system patternad lference championship team, — who Albi offered for |/* BO horse and that is the reawona) Georgio Walls saved the day for ringside, pas |somewhat after the English systam/managed the Boston Red Sox for a * 4. exceptions, The albb! F othe presence of at least four vet- why Puts and Calls was so ge ” erally} many when he brought War Zone! gerry Martin, the leerne ‘ erans is that they are members ignored yesterday, ‘The fact that uv/from the proverbal Nowhere to win | welterweigit, is the latest victim of ime uteated uf ‘ vlaeed Le umpires, however, of the Naval Reserve and have pad little to {didn't matter. Any |the sixth race, Coming to the stretch maiady, Spanish influenza. He diet at Elizabeth, | The qu » tent Permission to play football, Is it one Who tried to hand out a tip on|turn War Zone wag fifth or sixth InN, J., on Monday night from pocamonia, which |/8 More Vital than thas of players. et strange how Rutgers ia able |!uts and Calls waa derided. “What! |the procession but once straighten | fottowed an attack of influenza, Martin, who had |The umpiring during the last tw fo maintain ita usual football | Bet on a six-year-old maiden? It's a/out for the run home, Walls and War teen In the fahting ame for over tmive ser. | years has been worse than in many k or two once, played in the ott estern Association after he got nuh being one of Dartmoutn's atest athletic heroes and before he ame couch at the University of well known Phitatei ndard while ocher colleges dov't | JOKe” was ail one got for even suy- | Zone came Iike the wind to win Soins fought many of the good gre! BS Ss There was a Fence Climber working bg lg fer gly Prenton, ist ating that he had a chan Jaway, There was a vwell intended | maa employed at a ahinyaA at seasons, and the effect of earelessns%] in that league, and he umpad a zame alone get any kind of a team to- The old saying that “it is never too|long shot in this race, Tiger Rose ‘1 land indifference was greater even }down at Quincy, The score was tied gether? It is thus that G. Foster | late tO mend” never was better -| She had a world of speed in the early ‘alter Laurette, the west side {than that shown by tho play: in the el nth inning, a runner on takes advantage of conditions to | ¢mplified than in the race run by Puts | part but stopped badly in the final | PO" under the gorment of Leo Virae wes) ' 1 third, one out and the infleld drawn maiched today by Flynn to meet Tomny Hobeon,, After the war a candidate for an ‘the husky middleweight of Malder, Mam, tor) umpire's job should start with ths (ifteen rounds at a show to be brought off by s lengues and be build up a reputation. In normal | and Calls, He went to the front like jeighth, Tab her times Rutgers never could beat a |& Roamer when the barrier went veal good team. In 1916, for ex- | Salled along in front, round the ft Jin to cut off the runner at the plate. ve ball was hit to the shortstop, who le a momentary fumble, recovered The officially correct uniform for an officer of the United States Army or Navy is sold at ter opened favorite In the anced |i \lower ¢ : n ‘ 4 Layton Gymnastic Clad of Dayion, O on ¢ pa AG Be theratnts mple, Rutgers defeated Holy | turn, into the back streteh and finally | Bond handicap, but_ clo: J ‘experience and merit as the|2Nd shot the ball to the plate just Cross 13 to 7, and peice de- |rounded the home turn well in the choice to Borrow, The old |Msht of Vet 90. The scrap ought to be a har heaperiance 4 | the visiting runner slid desperately, yuRnt one, ae both men are game and oesid: h Safe!" yelled the ump, ‘sare, and sent back for further | feated Holy ‘Croas by 40 to 0, Whitney horse was well played oa 0 aa a 1 1 | hand ont punishment | 4 . his would * > crow. 1 . Rutgers refused to meet Fordham |the strength of a fast workout, but , seasoning if he slips, 7 For an instant the crowd sat dazed ’ : Maite Bay tha Hol Croan cane, the present, and the burning quos- | Hollister had {t on him all the way| Joe Monts, the beavyweight, who a stit! at.| ake for much better umpiring in the] then with a roar it came swarming Best 8, made in our own shop Prior to this game they were ap- Uon, but not a very serious one, | when it came to racing. taobal to the U, 8. 8, Granite state “(minor leagues as well as in -the/down onto the field, The ump saw Tatantly keen tor (0 Last yaer, is, how in off years when other ——— retumed from a furlough to Tacs | majors, for the minor umps would]}the crowd coming, hesitated an in * however, with the Rutgers 1918 coll teams are shot to pieces | Harry Pay Whitney's Cirrns|he is getting into condition by plaving footie! | have the Incentive and their ambition nt and turned and fled. Ie reached It is sound economy to have | team intact, they were anxious to Rutgers can keep its team to- [equalled the track record of 1,05 4-5) wit) the Granite State team, and » anzions to] WOuld be kept rib aarataon eho line gate a few jumps ahead of th if d f th play Fordham, use the latter wether for several years? If the |in winning the opening De, It's Mi get on bouts with some of the other ig fellow Umps are ittle understood rac aders and turned into the pike » did not have a varsity team but a Other colleges are not able to do | good thing for the reputation ot Pur- | iis? aa noon as the bin on boxing, whicd aa:/ Of human beings, ay ine bpirs Sean nding to town, The crowd was in your uniform made 0 e pure and simple freshmen team, this, or prefer something clse | chase that he was scratched. een placed the sport oo accoumt of eo all human association and searcely|wild pursuit, hurling stones and x H Their 1916 team had all gone into mount to it, then the adver. | ai suflueuea, t6 It "| Caring to mingle with players, or/bricks and intent upon catching him best quality cloth, which can service. In all the games played ng and glory Rutgers gets out | ee | —— | with fans or owners, for fear of 'n-l He w out of breath, the crowd was é with Princeton, Rutgers, in spite ‘| of beating inf Another championship fight, between eneiis) | viting eriticism. During the recent} gaining and was almost upon be depended on to stand the Ls ® P | Daitlers, tor t ms does not | Athlettc Revival on Went stde, ot G. Foster's boasting, has alwtys | reflect any credit on Rutgers, It | In an effort to revive athletics and| PP fought at the’ National sport ur! World's Champlonship fiasco an un.j!when he overtook a de " been outclassed: It’s been the same | tn not a case of jealousy—only an [competitions on the west skle the uds| tae’ Culee ar the took “Temas tatiana | Me a. eee ae iD ater arith | oped inte Jb, grabbed the reins from hardest wear. may with any reat good teams in | Ghjecion to fanm'preitnaat™? "Soraya." yinn toenail tata cumming waksconnpated to, trayel with] ie” startca Giver and larvoped the am P aling with ERGAMORE. !atntetic and Patriotic Service League. | wits Jue Conn, who was recently knocked i: hs | wasoe he anid, dropping into n sear} corse into @ run Army officers’ uniforms The organization will be launched on |dimmy Wilde, the flywetitit cha of | with me, some of those players are made to measure at reasonable prices. to World, Lee aed Coun will baitle for Hud. | ail @ punve offered by the club vecasion of a Patrlotle Smok be held in the symnaalum of t son Guild to-morrow night “Oa sds | protty decent fellows after al | T learned that it was the first tae » he had been at work as an um Dick Loadman, the Locknort iN. Y.) fighter 18 oz. Whipcord Uniforms to measure , $45.00 RACING UNION gramme tneludes the follow! who lating he i the tatamy eight ‘chat a that he aver conve reed with ball ea on Whiorard Uaiarmalta mantura tt aan ea sure Sep ante grag tae ea ced pag Me joi fice bee, |change greetings, and he was as Naval officers’ uniforms just as reasonably priced. tonished to find the men jolly anc nd perhaps they we 1 to discover that he Hor okiier Kearns, Red MeDonald and] Young Fitzimmons. Lieutenant Yugi Lefiing, of the Irish Guard, just b good-natured 1 {dust as surpris Empire City Track Men’s Nettleton Shoes, $11.00 up. from the front will deliver ‘a’ patriotic | his bout with Nile, Leal 18 @ likable and fine fellow (YONKERS & MOUNT VERNON) mat : Adress, Dr, John L. Elliot of the Huds was recently deleated id Wolfe in a tx J The confidence of millions of people in Serpe i Seeaea TULA aR Seetete (et tata ne RM ORIN AE. chicago we have ap cre||| A OPmORORERaROn WY Munsingwenadiartey their satisfaction in zation, West Siders are welcome, ant Hil eeeee ares aaa O ganization known as the THE LIBERTY BOND Sf unsingwear itself, their continued and tars me cificlated at 818 conmcutive bos: |"Fence Climbers,” composed entiraly | ’ Peneacad Hubina af Plunsicawear thelr dally proof oanh Imeotm Giamen, EF is leorie “Shanklin. ho ke of umpires. Bach spring they meet HARTSDALE HANDICAP ji of its superiority in actual u jetta n fOVeR) YORTS | oe vurid 8 the world’ 1 iy figs i Chicago before reporting to and 4 Other Mich Clasy Contests, Men’s Shop—Fifth Floor —these are the things that make necessary a Uiymple Weld, 136) Btreme end igen (hae, om at ne RORaUA TE tee ays oecetata| Hiri Entrance, 1 West 35th Street production of milhons of garments to supply the popuar Avenue last The yo ae smokers for more ud al eoting place N ump re r trains to M demand for Munsingwear annually. inent Immediately airanged to have. the | ‘The tentound , aiteton; [ik ottglbta tar metaberanin unlose he | ata AN traloa pee Army and Nav + unis Sold at the better department stores, men's clothing stores, haber- same tw 8 play on Sunday next. | the crack Milwaukee lightweight, y Fra has climbed one or more fences du | ached via Lexin army ane Navy officers’ uniforms ‘and general dry goods stores. jp the opening game “| 190 VM. the | man, the promising lightweight of Chicago, wh 5 career, Subway. or W est Custom-made at $45.00 and up ‘i a‘ +1 gh A am | Ve*| was to have been fought at the big ..uditorin » President of the Fence Climb PUEDE AN Let Munsingwear cover you with satisfaction. ming befor again |i” isiwaubee last Friday vight, but vad to ve era 18 Fee eee ae eli naiintinita Gi Si Feroite ‘ayes on Sik Hew [postponed 02 account e epread ot infiueaca who who swamped the colored cham |in that city, will be fyuiht the first weed last Sunday, will again oppose the! November, acconting ty fight promot a record of having oven » chased over more outileld fences than in the business, | The Ett conde ~~" ne To any umpi teluevig Glew Giewe OF ALWaUaeR, } Vice 8 Jeng dvauinwes, Who viaune

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