Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ANENT THE BOXING BILL AMENDMENT 1919, by the Press Publishing Co. Copyright (The New York Evening World.) NOT A CENT YA GET Ye POOR STALLER— YOU FOUGHT Likt A" PEACE -AT-ANY- PRICE GUM _TONIEH T= WELL, IN THE CASE OF Kio MEZIPP VS- MOUNG JOHNSON IH ~ NES, BUT TONIGHT BATTLING BLACK LANDED WHICH ONE OF US GETS Notables Going to Albany’ Wednesday to Help Boost the’ “Sunday Baseball Bill. Goprrignt, 1919, by the row Myptinhing Co. | Fie New York trening World 6 N athletic cocktail" will be ACCORDING TO the real stimulant of the| ) — THe NEW AHENDMENT nation, starting July 1. With ° “ Pay” @e country bone-dry, many Ameri-| NO FIGHT-NO @an people will need stimulants, and| What greater stimulant than the in-| a @ulgence in all kinds of sport or the] Sae=SC«MtteMding of baseball, boxing and} Omer contests that cause axcitement?| W, @ such notables as Acting Mayor Robert L. Moran, Judge Cornelius F be Collins of the Court of Special Bes- THIS woud ps @ions and United States Marsh BE ELIMINATED P Thomas McCarthy have their way.) UNOER THE \T 3S PROPOSED THAT” — thefe wil) be Sunday baseball in this} PROPOSED TWO JUDGES ASSIST THE REFEREE <—F Blake this year. Those gentlemen will | Fucenton head a deiegation that will go to Al AMENOHE NT \N boccoeeapairl ceo ee 5 Dany Wednesday to make a plea for! Megalized rasedall on the first dey of | Pete: week. 4 ‘The above-named trio it is under @tood will not only endeavor to help > ALL BouTs | Wounded Heroes. IF YOU WANTA. . WALK WHY DONT EW YORK (COLLINS AND By Thornton Fisher) IN CASE OF & DRAW (T 1S PROPOSED THAT THE REFEREE PE EMPOWERED NO ORDER ANcTHER ROLKD TO PECIDE ‘THE BouT 4 ANDLESS LEAD W182 TOURNEY Corwin Huston, the Holder of the Title, Gets Into Action CHICAGO, March %.—Percy N. Collins, the representative of the Tii- nois Athlotic Club, and David MeAnd- less of the Chicago Athletic Assoeli tion, are the leaders so far in the National Class A 18.2 balk Ip championship tournament. Corwin Huston of the Detroit Athletic Club, the holder of the title; H. C. Allison of tho Detroit Athletic Club, and Robert M. Lord of the Elks, Chicago, will get into the game at the Chicago Athletic Association during the week. None of the star amateurs hit his real form in the nine matches which opened the tourney last week. The table and equipment is considerably superior to what they have been practising upon. The table is the same one on which Kieckhefer seven times successfully defended his three- cushion carom championship. Another table was used when De Oro recently beat him. This superiority of equipment has had the effect of throwing the men off a |triffe. Huston was not expected to be troubled by this he gone to considerable expense to have it dupli~ cated as nearly as possible for practice Jin Detroit. Huston declared to officers of the National Association his intention o| gees’ e \e be held ill S of suggesting at the meeting to Beem the bill by their presence, but Ox U 8 ee usual and oft, eee ec wwipment be Mt is likely that they will speak in Th illi. Be t | It is the opinion of the champion that favor of It, slong with Johnny rucing Bours) he bowing fans of the ofiy wit TER folie MIS sla at Beis, Christy Mathewson and other | pack the White Elephant alleys again | ures which he hag re at y re ved e : wy is "I from Paris 4s to the performances 0 @x-stars of the diamond. Matty, who| ted by Major Gillette, the famous, this evening to the various bowling | French amateurs, showing runs of @8@ Bervico on the other side as @| Red Cross worker, Dan Morgan and clubs that ore scheduled to roll above 200 and uverages up to sixty, as Captain in the Chemical Division, Jacobs, the Boxers’ Loyalty in the Evening World Head Pin| supporting his contention ie is also and Evers, who was at the front 48 4] Teague travelled down to the largest Tournament venteen good, teams |OC the opinion that the gume should be Kaighis of Coluinbus secretary, are | (7 pe vsbetias: a a! " . | are scheduled to roll in the tourna. | wens A Batol the onl; pall men who will attend | ¥ase ‘bospital in the country, No. | vent Co-night, and aa their ability to| ; the public hearing at Albany | 2, located at Fox Hills, Staten Island, | aeoek se OO te Ped wea MARTY M’HALE MAY GO These will advocate Sunday base-|where they staged a splendid set of = |of the pin topplers will be wearing ABROAD FOR K. OF Ball largely on the ground that it will lone of the much coveted World He . fe Be jbeneht those who served their coun- |0x!ns bouts for several thousand | Vin medals when they leave for the = ee is ‘try here and abroad. They argue}of Uncle Sam's wounded warriors ° e 66€ O 33 if N. Y. A. C. POLO VETERANS | Feppective pomes Good games are; Marty McHale, the baseball pitcher, Geet if it is all right for men to die|who have just arrived back from Fy Ni OloW r ug 0 0 Jacheduieg for the while weeke ana Sab ike Wiese: and: (he ial wrong for them to either watoh or | Ver seas : ° ——— of the Byenings Wo I tee alt | apatlon hts puch a harmtess game as base. | Knockdowns featured the dest bout | and Gossip | A lied to Ball Pla ers | ih Wasa tacwalab bale adie of the Evenings World will top all| application to go abrond as a Knights on Sunday. of the evening, in which Tommy Shea, eocthe ewe tens auuade: GIN willie re ot Columbus secretary if he doesn 4, For the first time too there are|the hard hitting east side feather- | By John Pollock | ‘ Aiea Nd tal Sd TA toa cle Tale | Unter ofits Vovting coat apracted. qeat| laud the job as coach of the Giants to jen among those supporting | weight, and Young Lore endeavored jJourney to New Haven to tackle Yale | (isis Sestentayakemoon. end erening tim | Succeed George Gibson, who was re jay basebull bill. Twenty-five | VCENt and Piss eed a es em ar ul ENG | University ina match game of polo un- | al eevions of ie tourtry He te ee | cect signed up af Manager Of ihe 1 tr will be in the big delegation |? K. ©. one another. In the rst) Jim Coffey, the big Irish heav | der the intéreollegiate rules. This game | declared’ the ees Geet piles Meine "et | ronto Club, yt eayea here Wodrtesday morning, | round Shea, who carries a terrific| weight, who is idolized by his coun- | Ae rs should be @ thriller, as the Yale team Brostirn., flniabed ercond; Ht. M. Menioh tin.) McHale has Jataty Nae BS og tp Bagg J a Strongly in favor of| wallop in his southpaw, sent Lore to|trymen here, will get another chance |, i can be done and be will develop a| ie the intercollegiate champions and) towers wore ‘tit forthe ‘first four ‘peiaw sed | reat work that is being done by the f the canvas for the count, Lore arose,|to-night to show the Sons of rin| “Babe” Ruth, Always Pow-| great team considered one of the strongest teams) fintum! fis sernnant mith “heny aerstie: | Ke Of C. im the matter of entertatning . ¥ " mv " “ : : ‘ ag . » at represented versity. A. Morria englitt aetke ninth Seat | the be on the . r EX RICKARD, the promoter, |2%4 for the next five rounds these | that he is still the great fighter they erful in His Swing, Ac- A few years ago Prof. Lansing Per tae oer oe J re universit ae |e Mg Cighih: Engelke ninth ne at caveral months abroad af a K, of who has the $127,500 Willard. |tWo boys put up « whirlwind of a/have always claimed him to be. Jim é kins, now doud, came to me wit all he New York line-up will tnchude | fet Gatlin wae win by i apne Savers) saer ely came homelss hea } ty ‘etd ‘ ta CRY d yerkins Was > io best e y, y, | ile of aie h Dempsey match still on his|Dattle. will meet Larry Williams, the heavy- quired Additional Driving | (fee tere Wee Asarce i Aumere vee pee | ——— rg rae ict vo liked. to have, holed Danas, is due to arrive hore any day| 1 the fnai and sixth round Lore|weight of Bridgeport, Conn, in th -e WI % anoad|ica. Ho had trained and developed | ice natrbe a Sahn Anne Tumpler was the trenton etar'in tel the ol C. during. the war, Dube @ J , sted ‘with Ti ty Oh f | orce hen He Changed‘ , ; dimer half-back of the famous Chicago | pmetellatior ew ork bowlers that rolled! Jor, know, I waa in the Naval Aviatlay MOW from the Texas of! fields, The | connected w. ‘ommy's chin and) star bout of cight rounds at the} § scores of the best billlardists in the| A. a, team the fimt of a eence of exhibition gatbeg io this | YOU Know, Naval d imeto bi hort \ . : country, his last and p ps_greit- |" On M 12 at New York Ath-| White Dienhant Acaiwps, | eervice. T came out with tho rank of Bellet is erowing that he may go«|droPped himPto his knees for a short! Armory A. A. of Jersey City Heights., Batting Style. 5 ee toe Path’ Welrar|selic Mec ibe tiear acitded Gruans | a eacaitat y iched “Yeamect | Second Lieutenant. | 1 have already Jeot New Jersey as tho at count. The boys left the spacious! Comey jot a decision to Battling | _ . cd : 2 S Univers Senne | York Be Hist come ‘ate sme ‘ poken to Manager McCraw for the Do y as the state in which | arena amid the wild cheers of the | “°'°) ’ attlings —— nran. H p the University of Penne | York 13 Use fae game “ Shion of conch of the Giants and T to Bold the big championship bout. | wounded heroos. vinsky at Boston several weeks By Hugh S. Fullerton The professor knew nothing about |#¥ivania, oo are unc ‘agreement not to do anything ‘Théte area few other St Smoke Kelly, the ponderous colored! ago, but states he was not in con- | os le baseball, but he proposed to me that | voliner and. Leo. LF pAb dys wi set his decisic if er Btates that allow |. cavywolght, had his hands full with rh igi esibgg ea | KE were aking of hard hittera|he arrange with the weakest hitting | Vollmer, and Leo Geibel are to swim m sure th uid do a whole let Boxing under police supervision, but | hy ¢ Hraekitas- ta dition for that bout. He is right for | club in the major leagues to teach the | brenk. th Naat Hein he ike of good in} 1 Germany pro Mt ie believed that they would all|peing one of the fastest witn thie go and expects to defeat Williams, | 4) Sn ene pirated nl players how to bat. Naturall Duke nthe pools Noral Bue PE gf rn ae threw up their hands if a champion- | this hospital since boxing was install-| "rnough Mfibe Gibbon defeated G on § hte hits @ baseball harder than| grinned, ‘Then Perkins took me to | will also swim 50 yards. Ie is ulso night 1 could ns BUMIS Aight of this nature were sched. (ed by the Loyalty League anklthouah Mike Gibbon defeated George Chio| any player that ever lived. Immedi-|Diiliard table, set up A ball and told | swimming close to the record. |tertain them w it uled. What proved to be the biggest hit iO ke ed he cathe eo in the | ately there was an argument and in-|me to nit it as ha 4 . rssible i the Une of the fastest in 1 don't sand tha ante 2 " ‘a enta é | ls he bas en in wince ho waa mus see how far I could drive it r he country ould look for me in a uniform Itt reported that the Now Jergey | Of the night's entertainment was th xd out of the army, he will figure in anotarr |S1¢¢ of five minutes nine different bat. | {Pe Nom tert eee tn nt ee ball ae a ME ORE a i Commission will sanction the holding |MPPearance of the two greatest JUVe- | patie tonight that not eapcted to be an easy | ters were Named as the “harde nd watched it n he gave in Brady Benten, : Of the bout in the Skeeter State and | Mle boxers, little Johnny Daly Jr. and) for him. ponent will be Soldier Hartfield | ters,” practice in following through vHTS, Fla, March 3. eee Gaiat all Tex will have fo do in to| Miss Helen Daly, und their pratt at tookion, whom he faced for ten munis st | Personally, 1 think Ruth appllea/ itt ke with the Th two rnea of Sunset Hill, teamed Two Pebbles Colts Fonted. Mention he'd like to stage the bout | father, Johnny Daly, one he best | the Auditorium at St, Paul, Bartfield outpointed babel he Ue TT aepve the’ E seaana ine sy bt es peryh bred fe there (so handy to the Metropolia) | Bantams ever turned out around the | Mite in 1018 more { his B that he i8ltnres more times than T had bec psi shee pooner Boekel titan ¢ reported at end he will be told to go ahead. Jast, was the official arbiter, perhaps the most powerful batter we fa to do when hitting it with finll Wremere) Ghote fee Tepe arte OFT Aiiks ag, The ‘Of course eight rounds acems too}, Walter Laurette engaged in a hard) Frankio Burne of Jemey City, who added more FENG Re ee oe Lae Pemtae Onatne AINDR BASS“ BY, 8 We (anal Here weer ite Brmtaive tomer a Te Riot for stich c bie nec ay et, 12° | tought contest with Billy Walker, the| fb laurels to his log fltle recon by beating | CVF Knew, but Jdo not think that he|foree | fe to pls Bur four lene. honda ‘alloye. in Ne hl fair, but the chances are that it you {Welterweight champion of Panama, hott, Young Chaney and Dave Aetey, |hits a ball as hard as other players, | qin. nen toe 4 Rammer Mid A tet low put tiem t to the sood, Brady ‘gon hea ak either Willard or Dempsey about | Billy Grupp, owner of the famous tay days, will probably te matched o- some of whom were small and weak | hail, counting the strokes. He took | em a special prize for the low, score ter way remen Wy each will) declare himself cap-|Grupp's gyninasium, had his work cut N Frankie Brown, the focal feather! by comparison, have done. t think|the second Malle showed tne how te | ie won this with » 74 taking. away aivaniace {are colts, one of winning by a knockout im. (Out for him when he boxed two | ¥elght, for twelve rounds at Portland, Me., on PA ga sei libata eh that Lin hat of being | Fratlot and the aide cight rounds. It only took |Tounds aplece with Freddie Sprague) Mart Brown fights Johony Kilbane at| rank Schulte hit a ball harder dur- | (700% (iro ei ot Moar tow |terved' Ya main lor fara trom: New | Deter Fan, The bee sey one round to stop the big |4nd Kid Carter of Jersey City Phitadetphia on March ing two seasons; that Buckey Free eee ene nod a ee eee ttaet | has been officially pronounced guilt=| York # Xo, New Haven to ocr. th ago contender, Fred Fulton, in Newark,| The final bout of the ‘evening! ‘tro more prominent American fightem stitt| man did, that Kd Delehanty, Dan!" During the next few days [tried | (ee that the fans accept that ver- ai hig teal int with in ag ieee Biants, Jeas and Juck, | brought together Kid Carter and Bill! over in Prance liave boon matched to box Lualish | Brouthers, Klmer Smith and Honuslout that follow through ‘with the | thirty games for 9 rf a Fall their big shells from | Oats, an old-timer who persisted in | pattie dou this month, Eddie Me | Wagner all hit the ball harder. wrist In fly-casting, in eracking ] SouNsoN also we ss Fimtale suit tor the world's. chame , | Greentent-Con: on Match Opens: start, a knockout ought to be|/s0INK on for the amusement of the | Gunny Win, has bean migned up to | > whip, and in half a dozen other wuys § also wants the commis- ‘Two of the foremost contenders for din an cight-round Willard-|men who have done their bit | meet Seaman Arthur ‘Townley for fifteen rounds THE difference between Ruth and lyon T adapted it to hitting a bas sion empowered to punish own-| ,,70pighte play inthe Late iMG iether |the world's pocket billiard champlon- y inateh |. The oMclal referee for the night's | at London, March 13, and Augio Ratner, the; some of these hitters is the same as}ba:l, T found ‘myself hitting the ball ers of club which allow gambling | tars " feo tacks atthe Grand | hin, by Frank Taberski, will meet course all boxing fans aro in| hostilities was Young Neil the welter-| ironx middleweight, will hook up with Roy Mac- | between me and Jerry Travers at golf, {much further and with much *!in their grounds, This, of ce | 1h idan Chiesa Mantat: | i a’special match this week at Maurtoe ~ 6f. 4 real championship match | welght champion of Pennsylvania | Cormick for fifteen mmnds on March I can swing a club harder out he hits|effort Me he nit OF course, 16 Net accion | Daly's Academy, Broadway and 0th a @ distance of at least twenty | | SWINE © . kt “it is useless to try | Tap at the Boston Red Sox, . | The contestants are Ralph 7 == —— | Tod Lewin will be a busy fighter this month, | the ball harder is s r Pere mm ™ 5 B Pounds, with 4 referee on tho job em | at Aare pill he & busy ighier thie month, | t Valter Johnson, at times, hits a ball|to tell can teach However, it is high time that the| Rayos trom Ruttale, N.Y.. ar (0, thecane't | Greenleaf of Wilmington. Del. and Jo- leah e Phookont Le he tee | Will be dangerous because of the Zor- | a Neseitle, Tene., Friday wight: dobuay Gnit-| Ruth does and, with one | players think you're club owners, in their own interests, Ai" rat hat oof the olen y begins Relay neon eke 3 Eien ¢ © poe pak insiae & he sont, midable looking pitching staff, Tika att femmes AG Sean Tah Gk Marek on, 1 think he made the long-| crazy a she play re will only Kid | take drastic ateps 10 stop gambling in ontemt for $1,000 by, & 40 will continue up to and including Satur- % ri ) 80) oreign | 5 10; dack Britton, twelve rounds, he McKinney | e8t drive J ever saw in a ball game.| you. he thing ta do is to get one . the *tcount’ beat his, man, by pins: |day night. The men are playing 1,200 ins ions match they would OME time ago wo revived the | 4 over can. ty ma, af the Me Kinney | ite oxception wis a ball ait hy Hddic| player, the worst hitter you can find, |e parks before the authorities are inseam ight ie won hy TAS InAs and | points | point blocks each afternoon aig gt on Sea old question of the color line in| Downey af Columbus. © rounds, at the| Doheny, a pitcher, on the Chicago|take him away privately and try it | compelled to step in and stop it for Wolke Friday might, Ca gj and evening Sex has hint boxing. Now comes a reader | Tulsa (Okla) A, C, on March 2 | ground in the way way back, wher on him. If you can teach one and he| them, The evil is growtng very rap- Coretof “hoo, after’ making the tweittt {UR <a i %, as hinted in the South that] é Hit the ball entirely” over the club] really shows Improvement, the ers|idiy, The other day { met a friend Be soit aind ade it fifteen, wtraighs Show at Lakewood Friday, Bey Re & likely to stage the bout in the) Who declares that if the Glants ar Chari Jum taken another fighter| Houses in centre field. will be begging you to teach the whose business is gambling, He pre- ithe 'rotntn series mtil be roited-on the Than | Heavyweights will appear in the main 4 and Jersey looks like the only | weak in the pitching staff, as was | 'nder hie management, He ie Tommy Ma . * . About a week later I met Perkins | dicted that the coming season will not all hicago, Hl, on the Sth. 01h AN) | attraction at the Armory, Lakewood, N | Spot where he can stage iY and not | stated on thi » iast week, M | (he Haht heavyweight of Hrooklyn, Chai and he was sad | be a prosperous one in baseball, and of The’ reason of this is that the | \ > Fun afoul of the law. ate on js page lust week, Man-| 1° coinion that Madden is atill able to give UTH had @ great year last year. [4M 4 Me rie ae ne said, “I couldn't | remarked? all, ph ne, No. fH Tihinol, Bee m, | J. Fr day night oa Meyers has signed : —— [ager McGraw can strengthen bis | of the big fellows a stilt argument, and he If you watched him closely you] yen get one of them to listen, let}. “The interest isn't here, Usually | Uhicags to eo to Buffalo, rh om |ter Monohan'a protege, ‘Young. Carcite WH competent judges as Kid \COrps by signing Up some Of the | pects to mateh him to fight ¢ would have observed that he lalone try it out." |by the Ist of March T have from | {he Rand b alleya, but nots » wil lof Lakewood, for eight rounds. The Gleason, manager of the White |"a among the negroes, Here's | Chip and the other tight bea oatol-| hanged his swing radic after he This is a tip to manag 1 know | seven to eight hundred bets, ranging | \\y ‘ne ena. sembtinal will bring forth Jack Bile Sen, ana WA Marrow, tender of |" ter 4 fast | town elute in the future, | tarted hitting hard, Ho hit frecly |{t Will work, for one’ spring I tried {from $10 to $5,000 or more, on the re- —_—>- |the crack bant am of the fant side, who he Red Sox, deci ding Alex. Sullivan's article Of | gorsier Martfield of Brooklyn and Ted Yewis, | Sareed hitting hard i Y Jit out with a crowd of boys, twelve | sults of the league races. This year I Record Entry at Pineha has been making such Sedita le show she, X, declare that they think |last week I see that the Glants need | Solin Martel, of Hewklrn and Ted Lows. ung without that tightening of che [tp fifteen years old,and every one of |have, only booked about two dozen} piNGHURST, N.C. March, j.—The ings in Philadelphia, and Willie Spencer, Tankees have as good a chance [some Nigh-class pitch Now, You] st "wo Veldnmue A.C. of Intiao, N. ¥,, on {Muscles which marked his batting up|them got the idea in a few minutes | bets.” largest, field that has ‘ever taken part |Cl#imant of the amp ip y club for the American League |#N tell John McGraw he can win a| {cy 17, but aa Lewin was matched to moet [to that time, In other words, Iuth,|@Md every one showed improvement| His remarks are interesting as|in a tournament here will tee of Of 1e | ou = = t this season. They both ac. |Pennant and the world’s champion- | ieitton on that date at Canton, U., hie manager ‘ : ‘Jin batting almost immediately showing the magnitude of the gam-|qualifying round of the annual spring | ledge that Mil Tussina's b slip for hix team and city if he uses | ie manager, | perhaps unconsciously, commenced to bling on baseball tournament at Pinehurst to-day ev TRUM D BILLIARy: DOYE | the judgment of Markhal: Boch, Gen, | (arly Harvey, has ben fore to dak the match: |fottow through” with hia” bat, and — a, ' foo players have ed 1i41 broadway, Cor.” Bist tk |Foch won the biggest championship | MM of the club Dan Roger, to wit the bout | started to get the udditional drive at AN JOHNSON oa of & N@-l» arways have made It a rule nev- = lever won, and he used on his big which ‘he bee agreed to dc tho instant of contact which makes tional Commission of three men ff " “ . i | jonal ¢ inate ire to wager even a penny on bal ~ ean a lot of colored ball players, | Mike McGowan, who is the matchmaker of the ball travel harder | Fi 7 bala 2 ‘Remember the first battle of the | the Summit A. ©, also been made New | he year Schulte ade his wonders | not interested financially in ONY] games or races, save that each spring : \- rho? ‘Phe bases were full, with | York moreentaiin of ite Halifax A. ©, and be| ful tecord for home runs he was | league or club is getting somewhere) 1 solemnly bet a hat Cincinnati will | MUMIA UU UIA 9 nobody out, and Hindenburg and the | is looking around f me axxl middleweight to| Swinging that same way—following | near the point. His idea appears to| win, ‘Ti ; Wee Crown Prince coming to bat, [rap puns MoDonaid, who is the| through, While he kept hitting lid in, That bet started twenty-four What did the I hedo?” Well, Vil mot N Mike ha nea fit with every swing, ‘Then a batting make the commission purely ju- ago when a friend and | ma j What did ¢ i do el, ampion yo ua has matehe with . # c) ’ ah 5 e| the wager, and I'm out just twenty- tell you. They sent the blacks In to | Eedie Walsh of Yorkwill Johnny Yama for|slump came, he commenced to get | dicial, which it should be, and hi » 5 t | | 7 four ha But once L violated the| oO Ollars pitch, and Hindenburg and the Crown | We semi-final at Summit A, ©, on Friday, anxious, Ughtened up his wrist and | wants all baseball cases brought be-| ye and’) | i < t } AY alia le and lost perhaps the toughest i Prince went out in the order named wrearm mu and, although he bit] ene i¢ Ho pe . rey’ O'Brien of he t ol ' luck wage ‘ecord The day the so 1 would like to see the basen full | | Prank Brien of Philadeiohia will (he ball seemingly as hard as ever, " ron recor - of ho twelve round bout between Ralph Heady : she's idea evidently is to take axon opened, the Chicago was play BY ORDERING NOW ainst the Giants, with McGraw |the home runs did not materialize " . nding Big Joe Williams, Redding | 01 *?Tarue and Frat Young‘) Britt of New he fuct i# that every great batter, | wallop at the way the National in ti and T jokingly ¢ , . .e as, rmory of Boston ; to bet that Johnny Kvers would but jor Withworth, or some other good | a t the A A. A, of Boston} that ix, a long distance driver, follows | yeague handled the Chase case. He ’ ‘ 1 : on March 1 anager of Brady demanded ot 4 ake ¥ cinemher | L@asue handle " as " 300 or more on the season, The sharp rc ¢ colored. pitcher to the mound, “wad |o%, Match 1. The mange of Brady demande |through his stroke, You minember | Maye that such cases tat Hal Of CHU | shooters’ jumped at ae unde I cove Your suit or overcoat made to t db x th Wa rs sweeping swir After hv i v CX Relne the bacon home. op | tot take the match, The club officals were fored Hit a. ball hin bat swung entirely | SNould be brought before the commis | ered several small wagers. ‘The offl- nd pitohere, for ‘theme are’ mane | scent O'Brien around o his shoulder. You can | Sion for Atle a not before the] cia) figures were to rule. Then we measure, correct at every ot colored twirlers L a F . ell by the way @ batter throws awe ia Oe Pe ee decided that, as the Chicago Club was a colored twirlers, as good as can | Wont was ruin hore. trom France to the {tA by the way & batten Mirows parhy ai nd & lot of bitter eriticism over /to be in Cincinnati three days before point. gay * at re . . owed ug r he Chase decigion, and hare a da i d of the season, we would 4 DAVE Y NC an athens veher | fOllowed through or n ‘ , t ni t asOn, ul 1 A : 2 “ 7 | . ner "About one in ten players do it. ‘The | Passes without three or four bitter at-| tie at the end of that Evers No, 2102 Fifth Avenue, |store momtiy ty ian, | ,AbOUL one in ten players do It. The) Teys upon the National League, upon | never had iit of that game, Bvers Absolute satisfaction is the strong point. Many } ew York City the tamer Meche Cheek the motion of the bat when they | Rresident Meydler, ‘the Giants and) He started off at a 00 clip and. W attractive patterns. Suits or Overcoats $25 to $50, “71 ie tam, Ia, A eae to the taw | hit a bill ase himself, ‘The fans do net ap-| above the 300 mark every gume | New Spring Suitings are now ready. RACING SELECTIONS. | keuxked ‘Norton through tne svi. ack 8 pear to take the wequittal of Chase] tie season, His rage was 303 —= J may of the charges preferred by the Cin-] when he got into Cincinnati the third ne | @ MONG players and managers " when he got into Cincinnati the thir NEW ORLEANS. Ichuaie Drommie, the conn athvowiatht lA hate a ree 1d tradition | CARati Club as a final decision, | | day before the end of the season. If vd | Tiret Re Hello Pi of Jeremy Oty, and Artie O'Leary of thin aty | ‘ So far as I can learn that ‘evi-| he went to bat four times and failed Crk Vile etce Hello Pardner, Boone- | who was a goo! figitor many yeam ago, hare | that ball players cannot be taught to o” brought against Chase in the! to get a hit he still would be above 49k GNY RY i cea een twokal to meet in an emt round bout at] hat—that batting is a natural gift ring was not convincing at all and| 300. Ho failed in his first fou! Meat, M ite Poverna, Ina Kling Armory A. A, of J Heist y od If) not nearly as strong as the gossip| forts, ‘Then Cl tit th Z ty he Arm of Janey Clo Heikhe onl a fan wa im ; oe lays | NOL Ne 8_ stro i osatD | for Then Cincinnati up the eater Third Race—Sylvano, Little Mau- | Monday evening, March 10. Fakie Hume of | & fan wants to get disliked by play-| that circulated among players and| score in the ninth and forced wa ex: TWO STORES die, Legot Jerey City mors mime goat boy at use mune | CFS, About the easiest way for him to] others last fall. It 8 rather unfor-/tra inning game. Evers got to bat GROAOWAY & NINTH STREET AND = enourth Race — Bolster, Frederick | lub on the night of fant 24 accomplish it is to argue that play-|tunate that Christy Mathewson was| the fifth time, filed out, and his aver- 00 E. 420 ST., BET. FIFTH & MADISON AVES, he Grea seume: : ors can learn to hit, They simply re-|not given a chance to appear and t th 4 of the game 2978. Fifth Race-—Alhe " Pote Terman of New Orleans, holder of the | OFS Cf pl Ts age at the end o: © game was .22978. ° , : Abii Mace Albena, Hank O'Day, |i tang chomuootie te, wilde wer | se to stand for It and brand every | testify. But on the evidence present-| ‘Tho next day in Chicago ho got|P, S.—The most agreeable word in the English language— Sixth piace — Bophie Gatewood, in snother no-decision taille to-nigtk, He will ot Mite_eusacele such a possibility od Jt ie bard te see now Prosiddns three bite and he got two the final tisfacts ry 1 ne, go ‘eminet Jock "Kid" “Wolfe, the got tuo 5 eydler could have made any other| day, closing up a percentage of about | satisfaction, rihein Axtome, Hie He featherweight of Chiveland. for ten rounds ai! Yet tt canbe done, Some day there gocision. Wl, # the Cleveland A, 0, of Cleveland. 0, will arise 4 manager who believes it ‘ Tt la only fair to Chase, mow that be! “(Comyrisht, 1910, wr The Bell \ S 2,