The evening world. Newspaper, October 30, 1918, Page 12

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THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30 BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK |). WPDOUT ALITTLE OF EVERYTHING - - -. +. - By Thornton Fisher BY ELYSIAN'S Copyright, 1918, by the Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World). Too EASY VICTORY MY SOFT HEART FLUTTERED\ —2 | acetal ; THE TROUBLE WAS THING STUTTERED- Interesting Angle to Runniag of the Steeplechase at Laurel. (Spectat to The Evening World.) Willard Will Help Out ’ f oN g EN BALTIMORE, Md,, Oct. 30.— hen Surely—But in Texas In- ZG yslan won the steeplechase from 4 three-year-olds at the Laurel track stead of New York City. : yesterday, he wiped out the last cent * which was contingent on his sale to Georricns, 1018 the Press Publishing Oo, N 4 Mrs. Timothy D. Donohue, For be it New York Bening World) } I known that in addition to the sum of WILLARD d old soul. ‘ ‘He will help eat in the United A Y y money that fair devotee of the turf ‘War Work Campaign Fund— A c laid down for the big imported son of NOT IN NEW YORK. After ' 7 : MacDonald I, she agreed to pay out week of worrying, Jim Coffroth, = E the value of the first purse or stake ee wide eae 2 rast waved \\ o = HOR ‘iy, lati Th the contract of Paik buns fom cs beavys Bik pasrs WONT FIGHT PERHAPS He it ‘ is Z fe 5 sale et a van Meth alle 4 Bippbenives the comaitics in Texas to ] faZZ Has perce ee REMENCACHER — Lnicautmately willbe invested ia on at least two shows there, the 97) Z 2 +o Liberty bonds. iittee to make arrangements tor ’ / j g iz. A CAPTAINCY FOR HIS SiciLu Mra. Timothy J: Donohue'’s husband + oe » {NS PRO SAUSAGE 7 “Bis boxing partner. i . | ty ‘ PPING HAKERS. Tim is a great trainer of “leppers” as Can you beat it? No wonder Dan TO FisHT OR Ai 7 SS ¢ the sons he “ould sod” call the A says that he and all dodger Tr 10 FIGH Z te Ob: Sa by ws Biers should be drafted, even if| <4) NO" \ ee. . Z / LY LAUREL SELECTIONS. stecplechaso horses, ‘Tim developed their bit in a money- THAT (1S THE Ne i - First - haut |The Brook, the best cross-country cause, in New Yor «Willard QUESTION- ; a t iL GE Yy pre Maud Bacon, | horse of the season, and sold him early ar fund; in Recas As +3 pl t = Ai V 4 d ~ omen Be New Haven, Kings- |in the year for $4,000. He then cast ly, Wichita Falls, Texas, lie ; ‘ : Ae J Z GAZ Z Third Raco—Rutledge, Knot, His | his eye around for a likely three-year- Dowaibly be orth $1,000, But y é AA Wp = , Sister ns A es ‘old that could win the Harbor Hill, ou going to do with a cD) - € = — Frankl vi Misa tat mM, the stake event which has been, pion like that? Nothing, of prenengen et, se) = = A . wet Ta o-John I. Day, Tombolo, | thanks to the liberality of Clarence could come to New York and r . GIVING JBSS Sol S< | . 7 - on ‘Sixth Race-—Buckboard, Peerless | Mackey, 90 cagerly sought by owners. ‘anybody, but he won't. He evi- bg METHING, — Z One Celto. } Peerless | irhis event has been regarded by turt- Hy knows that boxing in New 9 TO THINK ABouUT- venth Race—Sandman 24, Bler- | msn as “the Derby over the sticks,” would r THA fs . ‘ an, Starfineh, Boe etasd detting t Ady sen el olla iv NICe IKIND O" BALLED UP, EH. ghth Race--Dolina, Eddie Henry, |for it has been restricted to three- three or four opponents selected year-olds and is the most valuable ‘Wor him would go in and fight ana | event of its kind in the United Stat Rater cieensa"=tet"“* Club Owners Will Have Latest News of the Links )|Duck Shooters, Here’s News; 25:3 arin i @ question whether New York 1s) |1 0 U in the form of a promissory trtenty"e'se tens! Many Problems to Solve Gone ton at oe aa i SE Oil Up the Trusty Guin ices esr. ys ean sent, with something soft at fleld, N. J., performed about the best Elysian made good in his trials T ware Garden. New York- professionals are already laying | consistent’ golf playing of the year over the jumps. He proved to be a very probably would forego it. en t e ar Ss ver their plans to go South for the | when he negotiated the difficult Jersey |__| sure jumper and had so gnuh speed ira pee neshing te recommend winter campaign, ‘The Baitusrol vet- |CoUrse in a Pair of 69s last Saturday | Birds Are Fast Arriving These| shooting down off Long Island has that owners vegi to say. to um 4 poor, slow bout with Frank fe Ta * Will sojourn at St. Augustine, |2%4 Sunday, Any one who has tried by ou ~ n increasingly popular with New “You have the Harbor Hill stakes which he won easily. He has eran will sojourn at St. Augustine, |to get over the hazardous water places Days at Great South York gunners. Week-end parties|in your grasp.” This was music to th else that would make him a The Bo’ cottin f Slacker and in knowledge of their work, in- Alex Smith will exercise his clubs at/}at Shackamaxon knows this is con- 2 mn z have gone down and blazed away at Tim's ears, but a discordant note was 1 he RO edi y' ig Oo *) stead of going buck atendity and fn-| Belleair, while other pros are tigur- siderable of a feat, Bay. the elusive targets with varying de- struck later when, because of the eee tee Players and the Failure to| sl¥y dropping out of baseball when ing out places where golf will bel, Walker's 69 on Sunday was made : Encouragement toy trapencoting | wiped out until the boys come inarcii- \s just one man New York! Return to the Game of Men| Three fellows, oddly enough, use ex- |? ee me ee hole, The record for the course is 69, | #18 time to get down that old fowl- Valsped on derhilly tha 1uee ther bees ing when things looked like thun- ls Georges Carpentier. There Is! — \Who Have Found They C. sotly the same words, saying: "Now| 4 match between Walter J, Travis |inmer’ io equal the record an two I Ing piece, Wild ducks are begin- | sons. ; derclouds for Tim's chances vf win- in glamour connected with him a oun ney Can Tt and Findlay Douglas, two of Amer-|€onsccutive dave over @ course like ning to swarm over Great South| Trap shooting is now so much in ning Elysian out the managers of th Would make him a card against! — [), ‘ * ica's foremost golf veterans, was pro- Juse that practically every golf and| Pimlico track announced a three- 10 Something Besides Base- . r ; Shackamaxon comes about being the | Bay and city gunners who like to take | USC that practically every golf and) : .» He has done things for ig Be: a IM SAFFLE diced the other day in posed as & sort of feature for the | ita performance of the year. ot ghots at these flying targets hed | Country, club within commutting dis- year-old event for jumpers to take the ity and Willard hasn't done a F ; week of golf activity for the United tance of New York has been equipped place of the Harbor Hill. tap. He has instead amassed ball Will Put Magnates in Washington, Possibly few out-|War Workers’ Campaign for $170,- better get busy. with shooting ranges. The crow ot With the prospect of winn‘ng thi. beating Jack Johnson, a Sorry Plight. side of Washington knew Jim, but| 500,000 next month. This meeting] A professional four-ball match of| Long Islanders report the arrival of | this once neglected pastime has been $3,000 event before him, life became flagrace to the colored pop- ° he was an institution thére, and for| WOuld bring out two of the greatest | exceptional interest will be decided at | many broad bills, with a sprinkling of | 4ttibuted to duck shooting and to a one glad, sweet song—until he luoked © country, and has en- i t in| Stars of the time when the game was| the Engineers’ Club to-morrow when |) 10)” , 1 sort of fever that finds an outlet @t the bill of sale. Then the clause himself by 60 doing. Any time By Hugh S. Fullert ¥ years ho has been constant in in its infancy here. Herbert Strong, professional at the | lack duc They are coming from | through a rifle. “value of the first purse or wtake” that he has been asked to do y mugn s. erton. his attendance at baseball. Last sum-! Mr. ‘Travis called this office on the|home club, and Jimmy Singleton of | Southern climates in such large num-| During the sport drive next month hit Tim like a gas shell. What wa sething clse which might benefit} Copyright, 1918, by The Prema Publishing Co, mer was his fiftieth anniversary, and | Phone to state his willingness to| Oakland, line up against Jimmy Don-|bers that the Great South Bay 3s | there will be a tremendous trap shoot- the Good of winning the stake if he the country he has ducked, side- (The New York Evening World.) he managed to get out to just one| Measure his skill with Mr, Douglas Jn aldson, the hard-hitting Norwood pro, | clouded up with their presence. ing convention at the Polo Grounds |had to give it up? soliloquized Tun. lapped and generally passed up tho yey big problem faces the any kind of a match for the drive.}and Carl Anderson. The match wili| Aviators in training at Long Island | with star marksmen from all over | What was ho to do? tunity. owners of baseball clubs when |f*™* Probably no other man 1 Seay American amateur who ever | be at eighteen holes, and quite a slice | stations are coming out in thelr ma- | country competing for varioug|, A Whiff at the good old pipe gave PF HOEVER got the i they make the effort to revive | A™metica, unless it is Joe Hornuns, aieh ak 4 Be ampionship sug-|of Long Island’s wealth has been|chines and generally give the aerial 208, im a happy inspiration. Why, start got the idea that Ban ne the famous old aecond baseman, who] sexted as dates Nov. 10 or 17 as the | placed on the probable winners, CunSts a warm reception, ‘This new | ‘The appearance of ducks in this| Elysian in a race a few days ahead .Jowhson wanted to build ana ine feltage rain Mtie game after! jist summer celebrated the fiftieth Coralie aullivanntnodar ereoce fone of shooting, However 4en't Monts | CRAIG We en eak Ateie Slants pies ef Seana be: deer Pact Aga ‘ o war, Several of them are bu J § , who has charge 0 pe ontinue to be as wild |opportunity to test their sights pre- | the money and the colt could race for eee ore tn cis AAG war Cre ie vey | anniversary of his continuous con-|the golf end of ‘the monster drive,| ‘The annual meeting of the members ie QUcleay whe eRe liminary to the big shoot at the Polo | the stake luter, free of hobbies in the players? It's all wrong. + hOPINE | nection with baseball, has seen as|Would be successful in an effort tolof the Baltusrol Club will be held in} “ro get in carly on the sport duck |Grounds. All of which should make | form of a mortgage on his hide; so Rover had any auch idea, as will that the war will] many games as Jim did. reach Mr. Douglas, the clubhouse this Saturday, shooters should quickly oi up the |it pretty rough for any duck that|Tim went to work. ‘There was a race seen from. the following from end and that they Safffle was a telegraph operator, — shootin’ irons and hop down shows itself to any ambitious marks- |on at Laurel that filled the bill, but 3 Will resume busi. | and he was thé first operator to send ‘or a number of years wild 4uck | man it was so close to the stake feature at Vhe ee eet gar by President ness at the old porte ot hee lather over a fae ~ een eres - | Pimlico that it might injure Elysian's inson of the American e had charge o e wires in the si D;, z iy : 2) cha e in th bi 3 e to establish a hospital for ‘ stand, There ts) Washington Park ever since Wash- Hoppe Wants Big Side Bet War ullcwea taistasnsouitaetericne? tated sailors and soldiers % concerted effort | ington was a major league town, and programme. By the judicious use of Rit funds derived from future on the part of| until lust year he seldom missed al The Spartan Bowling Club team dedicated to the mate and female work- To Play War Fund Game 3:27 02,128 secretary, eli. ; jorid a Berion receipts hawt nome of the om. | ame or a chance to battle with the! proved that they are still there with|€ of Brooklyn. Tho adtraction on the f TNE | ing now much better the race would tween elght of the best known leagues -_ the race moved up ay: “lub. {the dear unsus- | washington ever had, and he reared |P!98 1 @ tourrament by defeating both |in the Borough of Brooklyn, money during the United War Work ing c TERe VA ENC ; plan, which had “ 4 pecting public|all his nineteen children to follow the| the Aurania and Cortelyou fives in the Like Willard, He Refuses {6 Campaign Nov. 11-18, rhoney that is! ‘Then Elysian’ did his part. As if Prone: ‘ a . ing series of games 6 Amer! Sint Ethie pnd sailors “permanently and they are do- | would put in some outrageous slander | Auianla five epposed the Spariins, but | SUF ATi, Neh at he anu is phuvini Rival. champion of the United States, and| pulled Jockey Henderson out of the 4 i ing more than their share toward | upon some player who was Jim's] of the old time Spartan team with a Pe Ciag td with she game in “Chi, — - Willic Hoppe, professional billiard|saddic when he tried to keep him ie to see some rm. |Winning the war, The American perarite fad Riven be Kol 16 thee Bart} score of $48 to 83 “ayn of taeee ane | Howe's catablisnment, Renlon eente aE By Alex. Sullivan. champion, are the pair who have 1¢- ERO OSUINe B ACETY @RHIIOR of his py Porte of the plan,” President Jonn- [League clube wre sending out long storm, tory, bo Would ride UP and | eiruck «snag when the Auranta quintet ten, alleys and fourteen ‘billiard ‘and is fused to take part in matches at=|of the aeteom oot ee itery day. “ome re- {lists of players who are in service plinkety blanked les about the player |0f Spinella's City Hall ulieys, Munhat: ) Porter Billiard tables, be wants to be N° WONDER American athletes | pangea for them, These two men] But the happy part of it to Tim ts (ports it appear that det * er core of} remembered to all his old time friend: a > ta é to ‘e established only and neglecting entirely to give the; and threaten dire things unless 1| {at defeated, them with wn. score Cl TGotham, and. would like to seo any are criticised for their lack of | oo.14 increase the fund by thousands, | that the winnings of the stake will layers wounded in ths | ists of those who are not, changed it. Teasing Jim in this man-|of the evening brought the Cortelyou | one of them that might chance to be in who are fighting humanity's cause, | the last lien on him, he fairly romped one nt chance patriotism! Here are two now Ko to Mrs. ‘Tim for Liberty bonds wer their country. Nothing The te: My ner became part of the daily stunt in|and the Spartan bowlers together, the icago at any time during the winter! 9 14, sing to par- and not to the original owner of 5 OP mper of the soldiers both In | Washington. 2 Dartans Folling 830 against. S17 for | Season, world's champions refusing t0 Par-/iion dollars, if they met opponents | Elysian, e t maybe as high as a quarter of a mil- be further from the thought. $1 . : | b At te our idea to contribute teeny [the United States and in France i8| Clyde Milan is one of my particular| the Cortelyou. | ‘The Spartan Bowling eehcth cndasiean (hese titlen, are of all the hopelessly crippled.” hot against the majority of the play- | friends, and in a manner IT was re-| Clu» Was oranized thirty-seven years Hoppe, who it was announcea| PAPER TRACK MAY BE USED — ers, The ones who have gone into | 8ponsible for his baseball career, Jim | "8° | ii ACK CURLEY was talking the service need have no fear, admired Milan immensely, and one| ver, Pi e y meSuIOLARCeng RIA LUtlOSRRIRIE Tee He FOR SIX-DA 0 and as fo mmensely, and one} Frank Dwyer, President of th ‘ pA othe i Y BIKE @ter day about possible oppo. {the others, they probably are met | Afternoon, to tease Jim, f wrote a| Rational Rec tion’ Comiginyy, Ihe. of istic News _sobn Potiock and Gossi | the Chicago phenom, will BIKE RACE, a : b ulton Stre rooklyn, for Jess Willard in case he | boneheads enor ay most scurrilous yarn about Clyde t cons: not do so, Hoppe was asked to meet| ‘This year's international. six-day re are ie cs i! enough to try to come | and waited for Jim to get mad. After papening of the bie ne% | or he third tlme within the short |Olvmria A A, of Philadelphia on Wednesday) him in a titular match, but right |bicycle race at Madison Square Oneden © box for; back and play after the war is over,| Waiting two or three innings I in- Mes “ a t age yee evening, Nov 6, Dundee will get into con ‘ “4 War Fund Campai ps : omple of Reerea- | period of six weeks Harry Greb, the away Hoppe let the money question | the week of Dec. 1-7 may be held over 4 Campaign There Some owners and managers, how- | wired how the stuff was going, and4 Place has been. referred | Pittsburgh light heavyweight and. also | tition for the battle at Grupp’s Gymnasium, Ue waa dacinved Shae ti ia|@ Paper track. "A well-known manu a malt dosen who would will- ever, appear to think that the public | 2 S#id: “All clear.” He had sent} to, Js the largest institution of its kind) connected with the havy, has deliber-| woe pauretie. wie lw or eT eee ee va emate a ke ng dole (curer fas 4 Proposition to, las eir services to bo we : ‘alter Laurette, who fs now under the man-| ho'd risk his laurels if a thousand dol-|a track su heen In use in Paris 7 one a fore and Lepent an anxiouy event: iter | oastimes of billiards and bowling, It 12|ately flunked out of @ match with Clay ggement of eo P, Visnn, has been signed up py fot . |for severil yea: It Is clalmed thet & champion, but there isn't one of line of r xious evening, fet \ O lar side bet were furnished, To hia 4 that of bunk to restore some good hit- | Ine it would wet into print whieh |e - ng Powe®: _* "| Turner, the Indian light heavywelght.|for three tmore matches; iriday night Laurette | “oT eee se inta| ptpler mache track has more durability, him and kn him for a goal Hut un ev luckily it didn’t, although it ended The bout was to be held at the Armory | meets Walter Butler, of Revere, at Newport, R, | SUPPrise Bis blu ‘as cared, s greater speed and costs mueli who wouldn't iry to double. ters to full fell > jowship. Jeas probably knows this and|confronta th » serious situation | the joke, must have delayed two! 4. a. of Boston on next Tuesday night,|1.; on November 7 he mects Tommy Robson, of | manager wires from Boston that he] {ew (han a wooden, track. | ‘The in a er a) : : ; IE entors promise a. demonstr re but yesterday Jimmy Mason, manager |Howlon, at Dayton, 0., for 13 ronnis to a'de-| must have a side bot of $2,500 INov. 10.” Right now it is only @ wees cision, ‘while on the 14th of November ho mecta real in 5 to| Lon of securing the proper mato Torts Dilts at Ueeoesnscok the eneolog ck cap | caches seve tnRe he: ta) Willing $9) Juires about 40 t ; ; i A tensiap track requires abo 0 any chances, if only half fit—| players declare thet thon eras ue, tee owned the Washington Club, Kip| it in your band and make a hit the go was off, as Grib expects to go] yonnny Dull, of Howton, « play Curwin Huston, an amateur | gait foe mpperiol it ie bulk te ayers declare that they have no in-| Selbach ‘Jim's here. One aftere| As he spoke he deliberately tossed |over seas in a fow duys, om he could defeat with his eyes | see and can ‘be put into shape for with Dempscy He could € jor with Dempsey. He could stand tention of returning to baseball. ‘The| » bull underhanded, straight over pis Jim Dougherty’ of Leirervilie, Ps. who ts| snut and one hand behind his back. | 7#ci"é, in, five hours. “it takes about . r 18 without half|war has shown them that they can| the plate, Selbach was so eager to hit all; to bring off the much postponed | 4 : moni | eoeey erent hours to construct @ board ya evidently the lacks confl-) make a living in other lines, extab-|™X€d up in one of those hair-raising | and the hall was tossed so slowly that] | Jim Cottey. the Irlsh hearyweight will be ready | finally i . | A one d match like that would | and it becomes worthless after mise f lish themscly:s in. st Positions | ames that sometimes occur between| Kip lunged forward, got overbal to fight again in about two wecks, and his| bout between Jack Den 4 Bath 5 wane is just one man who mig id exc na Milly Gibson, has asked Joho Jeo-| insky, at the Olympia A. A. of Philadel not draw a dollar for the fund, Hoppe ¢ P. Chapman, one o! . a o,might|and escape the uncertainties of buse-|tail-end ball clubs. Poor Winnte Mer-| anced, fell to his handy and knees! ‘inns Bill na John | n, one of the be: oy | Wednesday evening, Nov, 6, has a has been making his living from bil- “<i men on eye Having had @ taste of real work 4, k nager of the Armory A, A, of Jerwey| n cyeling his country, man Dempsey knocked out al- | the playe nas work | cor was pitching against Clark Grittith | and was called out on strikes ¢ him with some of the big fellows, The | *° to more sixround Pouls at the seme) iiirdy and the public support of the 4 at the demonstration before he tad hia hands us | he Pavers, or a number of them, find! and the sixteenth inning Jim Saffle was leaning over tho o q y Pr show, Gussie Lewis of Philadelphia, will me Osea the Swiss six~9y nider, i that work has tts pleasures as we aN ¥ : a that Jennings might put him on with | i" 4 wihtete| same, but he docsn't deserve to do|and h th Fulton. He is the man whol its pai y res 48 Well a#) ube score three all and th sfight-| front of the press box, and as the! aiding Lerinsky or Bartley Ma the for. | Johnny Dundee, and Joe Burman, the Ch hand Italian stars who ; itched he : zh pook up with young ‘Terry | g onge »0) atti- | are « ve cabled that everything id be brought here to fight some K Coombs, one fi y for victory, “ ‘ over he pitched hy mer New Jersey heavyweight, for eight rounds, | bantamwelzht, will b up wit z Terry} so any longer, if reports of his atti- | ha Y ything ea, Dempsey. Under dittorent | Vetrcong crus Che of the grandest | juning Jim was getting more and more » desk, grabbed th did | MeGiorern, of Philadelph Pre tua dai tant ates oils ed for them to make the there might be another arcu’ ever has known, almost forgetting his work turned over and we dragged = 1 @ OF the finest fellows, has quit | his rooting for Washington. Chicago | back before he fell on down into the] | Schany Dundee, the Iical lighimeigh. waa de | AI Linge, matchmaker of the National A.C.) f , ¢ is running his store! scored one ia the first half of the sia-| stands, fifty feet below clara the warner of a ten-round bout with! of philadelphia, is trying to arrange a mateh | the yarn about Milan over the wire,|in New York devoted to the wholesome and already are ixsuing a} ¢ owners than the boy- ee ninutes bef he pitched the last bail. ie pare Gia rea reaec on for not colt of w large number of players bY| @ picans : ‘ ae en he laughed out loud and said: {DOE nenarnatacaet Pama Ht nN ¢ 6|the soldiers and others, tea ia ARS ago, when the Wagners|” “po. nu Bie ou can't take jreb, wired the club officials Miia bs wodd me alike nae % This lies in is Here, you big stiff, you can't taki noon Washington and Chicago got Pe ; jdown in Texa the bi at | Frankie Callan at Bestou last migtt \! BELATED story of ate | the sec ore in| teenth and Washington came back | | Frankie Catlain ston last nis between Bamey the Irlah Lightwoight of Les rae tar a te iat Fo pestien, ang nag er fo ba called | ot ong and, with one out, runners wore | (PEAKING of fans, we lost one in — this city, and George Chaney, the Baltiwore sah r aarey wasn't al- | army ¢ soon ter that, back|on second and third and Selbach cago recently whe as t A match between good dig fellows has just kerout, to be fought at the openiag of the a Bh, N | to fight here comes to us from |t?, the store and farewell to bascbul!,| bat. Kip was one of the best bitte Chicago recently who was the) © mtd” The batiler who wil fgure in 1s| . un PERFECT “s U UNION Dor, e premier Colby Jack" has no quarre! aver | oddest, perhaps, of fans, He was ' M6 eae wan, the premier press agent, | game—it has used t stepped to the plate, and a 4 Jare Clay Turner, the Indian light heavy | . met an Australian war veteran |has saved his earning Ue of victory seemed certain to every | & White Sox fan and since Comiskey | ang Bartley Madden, the heavyweight, for ‘ s nflienza has been PITTING EAR SUITS itty who told him Darcy hi them wel one excepting Gritith, who was a pact} entered Chica this fellow seldom | of New Jersey, but who pow. claima New York | 1 r red vd be 4 v ride 3 i | master of the art of defense, He was ’ cae hy over saw tho|*® bis home, ‘They were signed up today to carri in in Ma ew King . d to enlist the day before ho| is Jim Vaughn has quit the game,|{he most tantalizing pitcher the game | missed M Bane and nover saw these we cme sounds at the nest indoor box New Jersey and Philadelphia, the pr jenty-one years old. Instead of | He's Working IN 4 wotor works al lever has known, and With Selbach np | ARIS of a close one, For many yeara| Blt, {oF cit renee at the meet ener city | fad Eislegeloala, fhe. pees i the rest of the boys in the| Racine and learning his trade rap-| he resorted to all his tricks, scufing| he suffered from heart trouble and|on lection night, The men fought a slashing| flourishing condition, — The shows havo al ; . . Darcy skipped away with) ly. The works are situated in the the ball on his snk ling, delaying the doctors warned him that excite- | tenround draw at Beranto ing | ciety ech brought off in Boston, one in New| Munsingwear is true economy in under- O'Bullivan and wasn't heard of |¢!ty In which his w as d,and/and all the time talking to Selbach.| ment might bring death at any time, | ago, Turner bas tmproved greatly since that | Jersey, while “Philly"’ expects to Uiow open wear. emees.§ Then the Australian | (aus) nt ne there. | telling him he was “yellow” and that| Yet he could not remain away from| scrap, Jit doors on Saturday night with & show at : ” lee heard he was on his way | Ho is us enthusiast! r the job 4%] he never could hit 1n/a pinch. the games, He would take his seat and —_— the National A, C, and the Olympia A, A Because of its unusual durability and wearabil- lew York to fight. They there- |)! ° r and says be! Selbach was mad and overan 1#,! watch until the game began to get Johnny Russell, the hard-hitting Yorkville ban. | 00 the following Wednesday night, All the tee ths Bualiey of falele or ee ff (be gabled Gov. Whitman, and the||* happier and more contented than /Grifith deliberately threw two balls exciting. If it was one-sided he would |tamweight who meets Pat Oweus at Portamouth, | porere lw, tin teal farted training at Y, its quality « » perfection of fit and finish, Rete et nie ect ef ae h pre Rath gy be Stuy ing | wide, then dropped a slow one over the ait through to the end, but when the|N, If. tonight, also travels to Philadelphia on | Grupp’s Gymnasium for future bouts fogather with tte moderate price, Munsingwear is x out of busi- ome, regula sand mouls, &| plate for a strike. ‘Then he kidded sel- | Score was close he would retire under| satuniay mlgnt, where ho will meet Joe Tuber — enthusiastically endo ili ; All Kinds of stories have been big day s work and an evening romp! bach some more and threw another | the stands and ain there walking |in one of the six-round bouts, Russell is a| Bill Brennan, the big Irish hearyweight, ota: | _ Beta dorsed by millions of thrifty abeut Darcy and his sad and | wit he Kid to larger salary. He | wide one and shot a fast one across ine up and down while the ushers and| patter of the tearingin Kind and should make | tioned at Pethain May, has been ted to rep patriotic Americans, ending, but this is the very | Will pitch or aturday and Sunday! corner for the second strike others told him what was going on,|a decided bit with the Quaker fa resent the Army and Navy of the United States Made in inany styles and fabrics for men, women, and |*9 Rave. received letters i t | opSelbach and Gre were calling cach He dared not watch the best parte of| teeth Taternational tournsaien sized "SSid at the better starees chiidrea—a — a ommeeienanatae r ee . é vom at) other names, Kip daring him to put the games, as the exciioment might| Johnny Dundee, who fought Frankie Callahan | to be held at I A j ‘ DE * least a dozen players and each has |the ball over and Grimth telling him kill him. He grew exc.ted recently @t| ot Brooklyn in & twelveound bout at Mee ee ctuean the basers ol the allied Let Munsingwear cover you with satisfaction, ERTY BONDS CASHED |Peaettineey Mico tuey | he couldn't hit anything in a pinch, hearing a false report about the| Armory A, A, of Boslon last night, returned | navies likely. th Pa wT fot | can remain at ay ork sand wages, | jim Saffle was ax excited as Sélbach American Army In France, and while| bare today and immediately reused (aisng ir Beth Romardier Welle ot . fs, » and|and was leaning out of the press box, denouncing the fellow who spread the| bie six bout with Gussie Lewis, the Phila | Pal Mc ‘Ot Adesnphie, baatamwelght, ba 6 mt fhe Shay will advance ia carey >| yoling at Grin ad ureing Solbaci, story he succumbed~in « geod eause. cov ey ees Pinata? otha athena,

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