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i i i ' TRICKEST OF RING FIGHTERS TELLS SOME “INSIDE STORIES” Kid MoCoy Explains Reasons for Use of Craft and Cunning in Fights—He Always Fought Men Bigger Than Himself—His Famous New Year’s Day Fight With Peter Maher at ‘ ‘ | Coney Island—tnvented Other Things Besides u the Corkscrew Punch, By Robert Edgren, rd ‘Ooprright, 1918, by The | “om Publishing Oo. (The New York Evening World.) A ALES of the craft auu cunning of Kid McCoy are woven through all ] the history of ‘ho ring for the past twenty-five years. So when I mot MoCoy « [ow days ago I told him that a few inside stories of the tricks he “pulled” would make interesting reading. And Mocoy and agreed with me. “The reason I used so mikhy tricks,” he explained, “was tat 1 fought men much bigger ‘was, and I had to match my head against their superior brawn. “My first fight was in St Paul, back in 1491. I wos working in Me- Fadden’s restaurant, next door to Pat Kiliian's place, where bouts ° were held. I had been riding the brake beams ano the ‘tops, knocking eatound@he country as a kid, and 1 bad found myself a mateh for the railroad ‘men in rough and tumble fights. I told Killian that I'd like to take on a “bout. He asked me if I could fight, and I told him I thought I could trim pny of the dubs I'd seen around there. | “Bo he put me on with a big lanky @——— fellow known as ‘Chi Yellow.’ I didn't know what a left jab was, and “through the first round ‘Yellow’ Dunched my head off and I couldn't dodge a single punch, In the second jrouna Pat Killian told me to shut fight hand tight and hit ‘Yellow’ tea tas chin, and I did it. ‘Yellow’ “stayed down. | got $ for winning t fight. acy first time I ever used a trick in @ fight was not long ufter, when i ‘fought Shadow Maber of Austra- @ig in Memphis. Bob Lee was re yeree, Maber was clever, like all the Australians then. 1 couldn't get him “open for a punch and had to try }Swomething new. We were in aclinch. ‘Lahoved fim away and suid: ‘What's ithe matter with you; can't you hear B14 belli?” Then I turned on my heel as if to start to my corner, Maber ‘bt. He dropped his bands and eturned, and I turned back and swung ‘qfor bis jaw. Bob Lee yelled ‘Look » pout!” and Maber ducked just in time. fPaian't got him, but the trick had a "psychological effect. It shook bis «confidence, and I gave him a beating. a fight- Bob Lee Yplay, but T always figured it ‘er’s business to fool the other fellow and keep from being fooled himself. “Here's one I never told any one before. It happened when | was ‘Gown in South Africa. I went up into Basutoland. Tho Kame there are oe magnificently built men t learned in the McCormick fight. I didn't want Peter to get up. I want. ed him to stay down, so I leaned over and said: ‘I've got you licked now, Peter, If you get up I'll mur- der you.” Peter gave me one look, and his head flopped down, and he took the count “I've invented fighting tricks in the ring. In my last fight in Nice, not long age, with Petty Officer Curran of England, | was up against a tough proposition. Curran was a tough fel- low with a long record of knockouts, When I feinted he'd only push both bands straight out to block and I couldn't make him do anything else. After a while [thought of a new one. Instead of feinting at him feinted at a spot three feet to his right. Sure enough, he pushed his hands out tn that di jon, and I crowsed my right and nailed’ him on the jaw when he was wide open, I call that the ‘outside felnt’ “Another time Curran kept" pros testing t , saying that 1 was holdin pd hitting kim in the | ' — fF “‘see what you'r® doing yourself,’ 1 said, pointing at his knee, He looked down, and I nailed him on the chin, 1 couldn't knock him out but the tricks helped me even the seore for a hard twenty-round draw, It was hol, and the timekeeper got a long whiskey and soda and put it on the edge of the ring tn front of 1. ve me a lecture about fair { THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1918. BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK IMRIESNS KID M’COY TRICKIEST FIGHTER IN RING'S HISTORY "HE WON'T RETURN i TO COLUMBIA GREW Former Coach Will Go Where Rowing Material Isn't So Limited. 4 Convrivnt, 1918, be the Press Publishing Co Columbia University is not dikely to have the opportunity t re-engimge, James C. Rice to coach tte Rice authorized a denial, yesterday. that he was contemplating returning to Columbia, and went so far as to, say that while he thought @ great deal of Columbia he believed he owed it to himself to get a berth at in- stitution where material wo be so lmited as on Morningside Heights. a 1H CURRAN Flent ‘Tore a KUoKDOWN So HE CouLo GRAB WE TME KEEPERS A WANDPUL OF TACKS “It is not true,” said Jim, “that I bigest Baa Tue, BAREFOST expect to return to Columbia ag @ THe RG SO 4 copy rowing coach, At my own request the Columbia authoritics rcicased me last June from the contract £ with them ‘under the terms of whieh 1 could have continued to coach row= {ing there until 1921, 1 theucht that | under the circumstances it would got | be for my own hest interests to re main longer on Mornincside Helgits, especially as war conditions made the future of rowing there uncertain, “I spent ten years at Columbia, they were among the most pleasapt years of my life. T made mo friends and I want to keep (hom, It was hard for me to break with Co- ; Jumbia last spring, \lthough I fretted the atop, it had to be, Go- umbla hax always treated me right, but I think my future demande that T coach at a university where the ma- terial is not so limited in quantity aa it proved to be at Col but, Baastep out 4 PRETTY Ginn To THe FRENGA SANATE CHAMPION, “Tn all franknes: “say that ml AND KNOCKED HIM OUT I have received thr to comeh WHEN HE TORNED To at other Institutions sre from the West and ‘9 in the F efer to remain h of the country. one | Loor. » colle ein thix section: Tam not at liber! to name the Eastern wine a“ — |} hax made me the offer, to giving the most serious but As soon as any 1 an announcemr the co cially, but unl an John on Here Again | satinfn 41 find “Seu wit You'Re Done Yourst.r", Sain MCo¥, : jake arrangements » sta esp a om reget Ar commas exeievetoen | In Order to Win Support i) /)si sess Se x Tue BELL, AND ’ ‘4 | there wilt be a bes ning in \nteneebe r=. rs ree For Next Week’s Meeting JEarhec exeeet tS ece'e revival EPR nd him the throne of the major bodies on hand, so that it would difficult. matter he eges and universities are oo. American League President] {e, pan MAE He's egos bante, cat sigalg j Fistic NewS }} anxious to tave Three-Men |. tie National League magnates are pot expect, o have their “ull ‘Nugent | heading for this city for the annual meeting at the Biltmore on Monday. | difficult mattor, in CG, F. Jones, leader of the Cards, is! ““RRo was coac! due here to-day. h |ciub at Harvard It will probably be announced here | Columbia, and. be: By Alex. Sullivan. neat Weak that fie Gattney tae de- | the Detroit Boat Club, HHESB are busy days for Ban|Cided to take back the Braves, who! @sked to coach at Ya i) Johnson, President of the| had rather stormy financial voyage | {itcc iim, “e* © American League. The cor- last season, | : Commission Continued. + and Gossip By John Pollock Judging by the way the boxing clubs throughout the country are staging weekly shows the sport will the & Curran had knocked my be soon in as flourishing a condition pulent head of the younger major) Miller Huggins, manager of the . { ever saw—big fellows like Jim Jef-|front teeth out and I couldn't make as it was before the war started, league is now making his second trip peor te Mg oon a aye t athletes, and my seconds understand that I wanted 4 t days. The first time he| S4me se le and also agains ' . oo Pie scleet tricu, They were |a drink. Within the last few weeks promoters here in hs ee - than reduction of the player limit. Here 1s in pel M, ow : 7 etly was W ; 1 2 rjects steht in boxing and wanted m When I saw the timekeeper put| Rural Express Service for F*rmers and Return Load Bureaus | in the aitrerent cities in the West as Gules y 8 she A 0 oyay wea sbasi wht he ways on the yubjects | iat ito fight one of their big men. Ho bis drink on the edge of the ring us for C Additi ISt in the Development of Motor |e! as the East and South have the announcement was HIM Ee Wale cave ceknase enne must haye welghed nearly 200 pounds, /he rang the bell 1 made & play for or Cities Are Additional Steps in the Developm started holding boxing boute again. former President Taft had been asked| limit. T would never consent to, che held me out | that drink. around near sh " . , aseball. Ban | the questio: e ould not be s0| ‘Throug Charle ‘and he picked me Be weaihed at the bell and took a punch and dropped to Transport. The cities where the game has opened to be the dig chief of baseball, Ban | th: RUpeon. mwenty, would Bol be. $0 ‘Thkough the efforts of Charley Badan- gsern® hone we weighed only|m) knees, As L hit the Moor I -_ | up are as follows: Providence, R, Ly Wa worried then and came here for | Pitues carry mea | berger of No, 406 Wes ) Street, the ‘idea of fix 1 ‘ ow bed the drink and swallowed It | r Orleans, Cleve -| hurried conferences, but said nothing | after the ‘irst of May? y Unity, Nut and Charles Smith bowling § ims pounds, then. He didn Kinet ifn about three, guipe and poe the HE New York Automobile Chamber of Commene {s redoubling ts) Detroit, New Orleans, Cleveland, Mil-| hurried contere of them'go down to that pr close |clubs staged tournaments at his alliiye aes apout me with his forearm |) 48 back, Curran was dancing efforts to make motor cafe a universal medium of transportation | Waukee, Pittsfield, Es Nester, Serane| Now Ban is with us once again|'? “ty our teague we have a limit of | fF Victory medals during the past few , kely to break my back, I /uvout yelling ‘foull" but I jumped up for foodstuffs. Rural express service in the farm sections and| Buffalo, Syracuse, Rochester, Scran-| > was before, 3t| ty: five men. [do not think) Weeks. In the Un lub tournament od Pe My ie of omething in ahurry.jand fought him all over the ring. pad i" ton, Wilmington, Del. Atlantic City, and is as silent us ho was before, It) horas? a"club in the American | William Baurenschmidt won the medal. jc boar thr Sey ype te » Kaffirs | That drink just about saved me from| return load bureaus in towns and cities are only two factors of a compre- bhai Ripiaipe N. is understood that he is conterring| League last season that carried’ mote | yee noes : “{ noticed that when the K hat 4 bal hwav,| lancaster, Pa. and Portsmouth, } con eague last garried more |The Nut Club affair went to Jack boxed they always went barefoot, and | @ beating. hensive plan to line the country with motor deliveries. The Highways] i Gener cities which shortly will with Jake Ruppert, Clark Griffith and/ thun twenty-one mex The National! cosier atter a spirited contest. ‘The they jumped all over the place) | "Once I fought # savate fighter in| committee of the Council of National Defense hus been active in the devei- bupiness'in that ine are Bal-| Connie Maok, sounding them as to|HeeMu® HiME, Wad twentyctwo, and) ce ein Club held two temieme ' that they jumped ‘wore heavy solld | Paris, Ho was to be allowed to kick | Committee of the resume business in that lin Natl hae tdur-| men. Some were under that Iimit| he f w Charity ‘ike a a vot a package of carpet/@s well \s to hit with the gloves | opment of highways as a means of relieving the hard pressed railroad). timore, New Haven, Conn. Bridge- Whether he'll have their support dur-| men. Some wore Palit Seaee ee ments; aie he st was K, ‘ byioes hd Nases and just be.ore the fight start Beg ieee sie ry faue peters pe The local Automobile Chamber of Commerce has added its facilites to tue port, Conn, Waterbury, Conn, Den-, ins ine ATarionn Taeagye meeting in | announced. Then all of us were under, hive end the second by George Game e ne ha jocat | " NinGinie Sincago nex 5 “One thin’ the Work or fight order | sher. *“ed my second went over to look Ailopponent’s hip with a kick. Tdidn't| plan, which already 1s showing fine results, ver, Col, Akron, O., and Cincinna, O. ““"T"Would not be surprising to sce| did for bascbail last year was it ; - e ( the gloves, Sep A front of the big|iMtend to let him kick me, As We| Auiamobile Bditar: ae the Av Ly magnates adopt a resolu-| showed that the pitchers could’ do |, Trommen’ vomiiie allow on Ihninick Avauma over the ground in nt start. /Stood up for the referee's instru On my Ford car I have to hold out Another new boxing club has just teen organized tion, indorsing the continuation of a|@ lot more pitching than they have! : | Kaftir's corner, When the fight sat 'tiong 1 was looking all over the ine rod and epin tea or twelve | Seer Sele assembly Je out of linc, tn ‘Viladelpbla, which will make the fifth club three-men basebull commission, and | Pern RCUtne: Th also proved that the ed be took a couple of steps DIN house and thinking fast for some. | >iming AGS Sree when can Lt tell? The ¢ Sol that ts holding shows there, This club i the alxy to record a vote of contidence in| tnent. in- their work. let out a yelp and bent; before starting. Have had car-| months old H. M. | Kuicnerbocker A. C., which bias secured lease 00 their ny leadee-Ban |e eve, ton, the manage « suddenly 1 got| ting to put over on him. 1 saw a| times their first and only believe, too, the managers dis Qover to look at his foot, ane oy | row of opera seats filled with ludies—-|bon removed and valves ground, Your . oul'e is no doubt due to a! Knicherbocker Theatre, Jack H. Johnson. covered that they can do with as there just in time to crack him pippins, too, Aw the fight started I H. TT, W. [dragging band. If the bands drag on | iho matehwaker of the Olympla A. A. of Harry Frazee, the Boston club] few as six pitchers if necessary. They with all my might and drop | gropped m Pr the drums, the internal gears are Une | for many years, ts to be the matchmaker, yner, who is leading the fight| certainly learned they can get wlong the jaw pped my hands and stepped back rt quickly is no doubt owner, W Eat ya eG ae t him. I guess they never found OUt) ang said in French: ‘Wait a moment,| Failure rere q sat y Gasoline |e? & Working strain and will ease |exncte to mage his fint act of tale tolabt.j against Johnson's domination of] Mah Only, Seven: , Tile thing of cnr appe . "t yo . ty mixture, Gasoline | an unnecessary noise. Would advo- | the building will accommodate 3,500 pervons } baseball pulitics, is not likely to be on | Slgnt, ter ‘ ere t ghow it happened, fe Is thet your girl up there? The)due to a faul 0 Advi yaseball p a has gone. Personally IT would like “You may remember the time Jack | Frenchman turned to look, and he will not vaporize well in cold weathe: | cate the use of a good gear oll in the - deck in Chicago, He and Man are on! to have only four pitchers, but they McCormick knocked me out. McCor- | never knew what hit him. The French uires a heavy mixture to drums. Grease, if too heavy, will also | jycrman Taylor, boxing promoter of Philadetphia! the outs because of Frazeo's attempt | would have to be good ones." mick was a big tough amateur. He fight fans never forgot that. Next and it req {1 sssary to} Cause a di Tf the bands are prov | aod atlantic City and also manager of Johnny ty force Johnson out and put Taft in. | "is? Gidn't know anything, but he could|tine I fought over there, years at. |atart the motor, at 5 neeeeee Fag ety adjusted, the noise will no doubt | Tiiman, ue Pau wuterwatt, ta Hat] “othe fight now is a contest between | | Heinle Zimmerman, the Glant ine |i ked him down in the first |terward, they were all cailing to my |close the air valves, Pull on th stop. od Tillman to meet Bryan Dowuey, the crack | the Johason and Frazee forces—if the | fielder, has told some of his friends |'it*!s : oT Ameo Bite. S'knecked him ind begged [opponent to Watch McCoy. = . to disengage the | nbile Réltor olumius fighter, ine ten-round bout at Columbus, || any force. Johnson is|that he will quit the diamond rather jin Vightoayth . round, and stood over him a 6) pope h McCoy. brake far enough Pars Automobile Kai 4; | latte ) | " be a k shim mot to ‘quit’, He got up and) “There was a funny one back in '9?]1ow and high speed pedal and the{ Does It mako any difference if a. om dhe night of Dec. 10, Tillman has rounded seeing to it. that he will go into! t an cover the difficult position of |x ‘ook i +yswung one, and I was so sure he) when I fought Dick O'Brien of Maine. operation of the other reverse will be spark appears at the spark plug when Raeal copilltion oiase De tunes Oe aie ME | THMTMUAy Ss moeHne assured of enough | third baseman again, “He wants to f was all in that I didn't duck in time. |T had hiny cut up and covered with | QPCrauen of jthe crank is past the exhaust and serials: Oe | backing to defeat any attempt to de- | be a fi aseman, ' He knocked me cold. My pext fight| blood, but couldn't knock him out {the Intake stroke? 1 have a thr ing Downey |throne him, If his organi vo = : for } ® w with Peter Maher pt the old| Every time he went to his corner} Avtamoblle Editor: jeylinder four-eyelo im and this oo t abeency | tO. Maintain the three-men mix-) Ig Al Demar e the first player to be Coney Island Athletic tify, New | they washed him and sent him| Will adding distilled water to stor-| happens every time one of the eranks | If Matting Hevinky can get a teavo of abreney | nde iw a cinch that the Natlonal | disciplined for jwuping to the “ship "Years Day, 1900. Billy Br ran| out again fresh and clean, He didn't;age battery when car js laid up fer json top centre. Can 1 inc 2 | frum his work at Hridgeport, Conn, be will Pe) tougue will second the motion, league ast season? ‘The { that fight. It was to be for a $20,000] scem to be getting any weaker, and {ithe Winter preserve the plates, or 1s it Done ere a a Tn StT Are | waeed vb Uy tl dag fa wees | emul will second Fhe molien, m nave teleused nity at any: mith | t 6 @, winner take «!!, Before the |! Was anxious to bh it ove So| necessary to run the engine every two r of one, two, three, im | dack Fisan, a Western heyy we has Jt) nounced that he has decided for g fans wre wondering if all the fer | Mant Brady ‘came around and told! at the beginning of the fourteenth E| weeks to keep the battery charged? | Aina: gocher arved to Vaseline Yo arch ot boule, Nuck| POUMETT Oe Ne Nave no other con- | piasers that jumped to the shipyards f we Ff have to fight for $16,000, ax|told my second to “Buffato’ at WILL FOOTH. | JOHN RANKIN, | Mayes of Mhiadtuhie ty toking after Faas lo-/ Nocrion with baseball than us a tan. and steel leagues will be released and ni ‘that was ull there was in the house, /Me ten seconds bi the end of]. The general practice is to discharge nould fire only on the | Mt gna Nick eyed to ld dss ae This will prevent all further moves kept from seturning to the pastime. it Vi taaisted upon Brady's making up|!he round. 1 kept the fight Injand then charge the battery, bein. | stroke, 1 time aby Oh ie 2 fis t os rote = ‘a sini as ‘ rs "the full amouht of the purse, and| OQ Brien’s corner, and w T fot thelsure that the fuel Ix of specific gray. on reaches the | day wight he foe tan roa - ‘ " i AL} told me Maher was waiting) Word T hit hin a couple on the noase|ity, 1.250. I would, however, give the | ‘The exact time of fring depends upon canin ot tokaad Chia | = ‘a ther cl jand then when ‘they “put hin water | pattory @ good discharge: empty ithe the ‘advanen of the ignition ineight, Clinton asked Dan | re ée ey in ospt a - : on ow how stiff and slow aj /Uese on the ex of the ring|fuel and fill the jar with distille neto should be timed to ass s affairs, and ay Morgan thinks) =} ECTINNG Cold.” T didn't care how long. Peter |f0F his seconds to got more water to| warm place where It Could NOt feCZ | As mie pulior him up for soveral fiahis. | As Result oF a a yi sAUPERAON PARK Waited for me, I was over in Cohen's | ;Ponde him off with, and he came.out) \ epobile Mditor What is the cause of backfire aid y mart Olintoa boxing at one! ¢ ARK. ‘Hotel, and I stayed in my room and | beaten up that the ne etapa! Five weeks ago I put new bands in Jengine missing Ww I tet my ear te adil, pisces ° i Eiret en Dahinds, Clayiaday “put my feet in a tub of hot water|ine ent? Stopped my Ford car and had my differen-) stand for an hour or und then try | | cond Ben Hain Me- And covered myself with a big bath: | McCoy is still full of tricks, A few tial fixed, as it was noisy; since then |to start It? PHILLIP NI Mee tla een ere Ne Ment for Se weuet oo nty. Blaven Teams Lett in| SCORE AT 12187 HOUR, Stalwart robe #o the steain would warm me all weeks ago he started on a vaudeville | there has been a grind in the tran Due to the motor getting cold. Sta Mary gh lbs kame Dotelial Ut, Rated, Laan Le | | S é i | John Tu ireew pup. “At last they said I'd have tol circuit with Willie Me vitle | Tssion, When I put my foot on the with a rich mixture an WILL Not | pight. ‘The entertainment which was put on for : Micisae re Miles: Lac Peter had been waiting an hour. and jin a San Francisco four-round bout.| the car moves forward every morn | ii.» that the y Morssn to toses To-Night. 7 ‘ ' ntuorte "there was no steam in the club and | Meehan quit in less than a week. [éng. 1 called the Ford Company's Auumurs fev 4,000 | ‘raetber am for she sak sl00ee 8 McNamara and Magin a] “ everybody was half frozen, Sol hure| “What was your trouble. with {attention to the grind when I took | My Overland has kate polly fill) scidier suet aged yaoi - — Madden and Corry ried out to my corner and got the| Meehan?” | usked Mot |the car out and they told me it was | I Oth | oigy turner, Jack Landon, Willie Myau and others q f | fight started ay soon as I dould, | The Kid laughed for’ the high ends of the bands. I cleaned |ing long grades of not very steer Ma= |e iicar in foursround bouts HBRH are only eleven teams l't| Lawrence and Hanley. . 7) ‘was all warmed up and limber, and |minutes. | “USshed fer about five) CX Gh" the old oll from the trans. | ture. fod! cian aepomta ana cue | in the gix-day bike race in the) Chapman and Halsted, 7 “when Peter walked out 1 could see! “It w Sedans) ' mission and still it grinds. T used a! amount of carl nha vas Jounny 0 and bis manager, Hootty Mon Garden, which winds up to-| Coburn and Kopsky 7 . was Meehan's trouble—not sf lobile Oil.) I jacked up| necessity of grinding the Valves, | i. here decided to trip to New| J | 7 he was pretty stiff. | mine sald, “Meehan called hime | eet ol (Mobile Of bein tov P| wilt you kindly inform me as . ogg hae ken of. night, | Grimm and Thomas 7 1 “He loaned back and wiped bis| cuit ‘i n= |'the two hind wheels with ¢h n Oriana in af ms Ray Helge Gee teh hy / q SRGae a trick he” bedend oe « on,” and f thought Wd) in neutral. I turned the outside {this should be hroperly fend ou there an, the New! ough riding tha f "°) Carmay and De Baetes 6 ear 8 trick ad—and | seo wh ind « champion he was.|wheel and the inside wheel and it ne how hi Oricans Highiwelst, who reeeutly defeated Joo! wild and woolly in the sixth point | i" 4 efentice ma before he could move and|t n ed hi ! swings and bit) went around as if in speed continu - grinding the what Mandot tn 9 fiftern-round bout at the Tulane AC: print ast night drove a dangerous| Lang and Byron... 6 st Nicholas Sink, n through the ropes him on the right ear every time he bea Do poNs no Tubricating oi shou'd be use dee iy a great favorite in that city and avbout | SPTRE te sy peas dey 5 7 66th St, near ad _ Mways did a lot of thinking in al rushed at Attap'the Views any fea| Cues’ One | be possibile teat tho ines CHARLES JACOBUS oe Un array faveriie’ in that city and bout’ pair of point getters out of the race.| Bello and Dupuy.. 6 roadway sBpaeaag faed ateuaat |le ah h |e aac eke eerie + Rvs Desa Masts Carveaa] Benker and bowice™. itt | Sleate. A while ; od go bret ateeeee eat ing A SRR 0 Pc ne ° h eald| round toyed wr th sti ox ing anton this work yourse f f a that | the men were straightening out for Corry leading. The record is > 4 an ocked | Td have » Mz him on thelishment, “MoeCoy must have been! gue to your lack mechanical knowl | ‘ ca Rami 2. ¥ “ 4 3 Jog out with the first wallop |head, because he wan getting awful| some bird in hin t inp Are! day | chee’ tha tesuity wants te Leal ictavs Libre catabemier the final rush for the tape, brought| 2,867 miles and 7 laps, made by D nc os | edge, the ri | . 2 4 I knew he was dangerous that | be adache and he couldn't stand it he worked with Willie they did five|tory, It would be b to take the | deiphia, is vow trying to Fred Weber, Fred Hill and tonyle | Moran and MeNamara in 1914, F a *way. Go I feinted and jumped bi ek} “Al right! Laatd, ‘L won't hit you| turns, three two-minute rounds each & good shop or the Overland | aod Jobony Duudee fer @ six-round bout at bis! McNamara down in a tangle of|- - < All Skaters Admitted to Ae Poter wot up, and he ininsed me, /on the head! Next time 1 didn't hit| time on=-fifteen rounds a day. I! Servieo Station. “lise. medium. gr on Chriaunas afteenyon, Frapk Hlagty, | hoy one hag = the Dancing Carnival Free Then 1 kept bobbing from wide to] him on the head. 1 hit him a Tif sked MeCoy if Willie was hitting 1a light gra r | a fof Jackson, bas already accevted Hnge'n) PFOken wheels. money at tho finish yMide to keep him from rushing me. | punch on the edge of the floating rite |too hard, and he laughed at me, tial {summer and a Tene wre forms, eand it tn, ‘at Dumee's manager| Weber was the one to suffer the| They were officially de iL knocked Peter down twice in the {drives th wether, you know, asked him if} he wanted the rounds] _ ~ i The men have not fowsht ini most, His nose was broken and he | thy Ment te eae Twinn Peraend. once in the second, and jand hurte . {ght punch, cut, and he said: "No, make ‘em an Goes Further \hend. at city sings Jackon stopped Dundes on J4”./ way yo badly bruised and shaken UPlfoliows; | | PUNE UP te ' I once in the third, In the fourth 1| W quit i went hom " 4 lon, He went through the fi 10, HT, IMeN. dM. —_e \ | Wille quit and we 01 e said lo e went through the vf ad nohrin fe sakiher Ahi nT botive egy aa © Bellevue | McNamara an agin ° “ea A determined to rest, and stuck close {1} hix rib. I'm forty-five now, rounds as if it was a joke—and you| Welker Cochran forged further ahead [otherwise thet he was sent to Bellevue erate Dorey | Madison Square Garden to him and let him do all the hitting, | bu: 1 only wish Jess Willard was! ougnt to see Willle, Te beat Willio of Ora Morningstar tn th WM | Waster 1) Hospital, ( and Hill ' #o ‘his friends kept yelling to him and | Willie Meehan und would give me a up every day and Willie couldn't lay {tine billiard ae at nay @ Academy | tieiter, 4 rai yam agy.| Ray Katon, his partner, one of the kaw nee and ; | % y him to finish me. He got |fight. I'd be champion of the world|a glove on him, Willie has a 1-2-8-4 | yesterday, winning & ternoon gome | |. artiey Ma the loow! hewry ers developed during the|Qnapman and (fired trying. When we started the |in lexs than four rounda” | punch that puzzles ‘em all, McCoy |by a score of 800 to 47 and the evening | weir expects to aot sereral matches for | Meat pte rs faye ne ¢ during te sand. Kops 4 Gifth I pushed uround with Peter to| Down in the street | happened to! would let him start the Arsi one and| game by a count of 300 to 3, Cochran's | Meudew shortly and * om om dim Martiier Was went Aying. to tho bard | With, 22 points added "io their” tot see how strong he was, and found he|meet Mr. MoClusky, who managed then step in and nail Willie on the high run in the afternoon was 136 and | Cofles, the Inet heavyweight, at the Quewmaberry |B Rd ah tha [after the afternoon sprints of yeaterda Willie Meehan on ‘hiy) abbreviated, ear. In each gare hia| A: + o% Baltaio in the near fulure, Cromoter|floor, but was forved to ° eNamara and Magi 1 asked him abput MoCoy, MoClusky, wore you know,” And the other fellows suy they Y 88. can't hit Meehaa, What do vot think ‘nyerage wae $0, ot that?” } fei Socaram, Roees ere sen ancanesmnltmetee CRM ah sand rasa : M ne abo) sein, ror | els aay erhhne: to tok wee fave Med bes Cntr, partner, as his only hope ta be in the ‘21, Just 62 aces vod gt Madan ddan and ‘eraingias ‘Lifh tte i cies Gorey, “thelr wearest vel RTI 5 eA IE areas