The evening world. Newspaper, March 5, 1919, Page 14

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“ “wayat “SEE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MAROH 8, 1919,” rs Along Rhine Are Trying ‘d to Develop Champions Take Back Home, Accord- to Billy Roche. it, 19. the Prem Pyhiishing Oo, we Tay Evening Worn 5 XY ROCHE, the well known who is how acting as @ Knights of Columbus Secretary tn Burope, writes to tell what is on in sports on the other side big pond, Here's what billy INZ, Germany, Feb. 13. it Treanor, Sporting Editor ing World: riend Vince—I suppo lke to know what I am out here on the banks of shine, It's a constant grind, on boxing shows in tau tournament and referee- every night in the week. re between 100 and 200 ination bouts pulled off every in the different camps. itaide of the bouts mentioned are fights of ten and twenty ads in the clubs here. Of there are no gate receipts is a uniform of Uncle Sam Annie Oakley. seems as though the whole of occupation has gone mad the desire to develop cham- to bring back to the United slacker to remove the champions Tam not ‘eel, hought that I had good times ¢ past, but never have I en- like [ am while ig On bouts for the soldiers. now been here three and day that | arrived, ‘eat to referee fights when fighters are trying every a win—and at the end of ‘bout a decision is rendered. ‘8 no stalling, as those false did during the Frawley It is more iike the Horton days, for when a fellow he is in the discard. to tell me that I am to go to referee a fight between How'd ional copies have reached part of the world. Give my ds to Danny Morgan, Billy and all the old mob. BILLY ROCHE, K. of C. Secretary. “are going to Albany to endea- vor to boost for the bill lesal- who have no direct In- « our returning soldiers, both | “Whe Wounded and the sound in limb. ‘the boys started arriving the has been putting on shows at ‘the enjoyment of many adish. To make a rump ‘@teak taste more like a | tenderloin use LEA«PERRINS SAUCE He ONLY ORIGINAL WORCESTERSHIRE ie has been the leading relish for generations. ts the day that the rooters the sport, are expected to hand and by their presences, ‘ will undoubtedly cause the bill te be reported favorably. Boxers’ Loyalty League is doing great work tn behalf of hospitals and needless to _' FTINSURES col | SPARE - THE UUTTL ABOUT No, BUT You MARKEO ME & WEEKLY ARGUMENT ¢ Score ME on \’ FATHEAD- YOURE CRABBIN’ THE GAamMeE~ X' SHOULO 0° OWE ME A STRIKE, THE WAITING FOR THE WHOS KEEPIN THIS SCORE |, anwar tI! YOURE THINKING ABOUT THE STRIKE; ANI MADE LAST ——————=—) WEE te ~ enjoyed by the Next week, when more boxing bouts before in any city. Dan M league, has sent out be put on mories. in eight Retween xception of Larry of those casy going kick up muoh of tracts, the walvor process. situation well will be legalized have passed. biggest boom in its chosen President of and Civilian Board trol, recently incorp: it is the plan ‘wan, the head of boxers all over the country. 160 men will be needed as shows will Major Gen, Leonar' say these entertainments have been A. heroes, the big celebra- tions are taking place for the 27th Division, the league is going to stage than ever given a hurried call to een different ar- seven and OW that Hal Chase has signed his contract for the season the Giants have practically all their veterans signed up, with the Doyle. chaps who never a fuss F the new worthy leaders keep the hand and the riff-raff are kept out of it there in boxing in every State in the Union before many years With such notables as are now taking up the sport's cudgels the fistic game is coming in for the | story. the Army, Navy of Boxing Con- orated at Albany, of this body to) eventually supervise all the country’s the About ten bouts will be decided in each bulld- Ho ts one over con- Pitcher Slim Sallee will be it to Cincinnatl, his old club, by Wood has been | § and Gossip By John Pollock Jim Coffey, the Irish heavyweight who beat Larry Williams, the heavyweight of Bridgeport, Conn, in a ten-round bout at the Armory A. A. of Jersey City Helghts on Monday night, was matched to-fay by John Jennings, manager of tha same club, to meet Battling Levin- sky for ten rounds at the club's show to be staged on either March 18 or 19. On account of the regular show falling on 6t. Patrick's Day, Jennings decided to put the bout back one or two nights. Clay Turner, the Indian, and Larry Williams, the sturdy Bridgeport fighter, were booked up to-day to battle ten rounds at che next boxing show of the Veledrome A. 0. of Buffalo, N. ¥., on March 17, Williams gave Tom Gibbons « groat baie at the same club several weeks ago and Matchmaker Rogers decided to have him meet the clever Lndian, ‘The gross receipts of the Jim Coffey-Larry Will tams bout in Jersey City on Monday night amount- 4 to $1,700. After the State tax of 10 per cent. had been deducted, Coffey received 30 per cent. of what was left, which made his end $450, while Williams drew down $382.50, which was 25 per cent. of the receipts, Dave Mackey, manager of the Sportamen’s Club ts now one of the owners of the Broad ‘Also of Newark. The officials of the latter club came to the conclusion recently that they needed » man Ike Mackey to help them out tm arranging their shows, and they made ® proposi- tod to him which was #0 satisfactory that Mackey auilekly sccepted tt, boxing. ‘The purpose of this organization 1s | Charley Harvey, manager of ‘Ted Lewis, the to elevate boxing, which cut such i | Welterweigat champion, Just accepted terns big figure in rounding our men into | from the officials of the Sportamen's Club of the form that enabled them so whip the Germans so handily, The organization hopes to conduct State tourneys in year and to award ship belts, with a classes to be held tional titles. The all classes each State champion- tourney in all later for the na- body won't stop there, bdt will try to promote inter- national tournamen championships of navies of the world. The collegians wo: either, for events will be held. Efforts will be m intercollegiate ts to decide the the armies and n't be overlooked, titular ade to, have uni- Newark fo San Francis Lewis to meet Wille Ritchie, welterweight, in an elght-ror bout at the club's mext show, on March 24 fhe officials of the club are now trying to induce Litehie to come cast end tox Lewis, the Within the last fow days two prominent flahters have gone and got married. Lew Tendier of Pllledelphia went and did the trick tn Vhiladel plla, and Willie Titehte of San Francisco did (hy same thing in San Francisco on Monday nl Ritdfie 14 coming vast on his honeymoon and may take part tu at least one fight elther in Whiladel hia or Newark. Ralph redy, the Syrucupe Lightweight, who ts rapidty forging to the front, will box Frankie form boxing lawa passed ip every | iritt to a decision in ® twelve-round bout at State of the Union. aston next Tuesday night. Pop O'Brien of Philly ie Pee will referee, Ou March 17 Brady will hook up Bjorstedt and Whitman Capture | wits Johony Dundee at Syrcuse. ‘Tithe. — PALM BEACH, Fila., March §,—In the | Joey Fox, the English featherweight champton, final round of the wor an's double, Miss Molla Bjurstedt, paired with Mrs. H. H. Whitman of Eleanora Sears Bosto: of Rawson Wood of New York, 8—6, 6—2, of thus winning Florida. the eren n, defeated Miss Boston and Mrs champlonship Ok any Mealer got $885 for testing Young Mobidesu, the Quaker City fighter, in thelr six-round bout at the » fonal A. ©. of Philadelphia last daturday Kobideau drew down « guarantee of $400, bout proved such an attractive ope that the gros recelpta amounted to $3,540, which la big money for little fellows there, ‘Tommy Walsh, who looks after the affairs of Jobnny Griffiths, the Akron, O., welterweight, tt le feported from Maltimore, ts demanding an ad ditional 5 per cont. of the arom receipts fithe's end w box K. 0. Loughlin of Sous Beth lebem, Pa, at the American A. A. of Ball on March 21, Judging from his demands, would like to have the match fall through. Joe Burman of Chicago, who bad no trouble tn outpotnting K. ©. O'Donnell of Lancaster at Olympia A. A. of Philadelphia several woeks le matebed to fight him a A&G, of “Whilly’ on March 2 will probably beat O'Donnell is nother one of those one-sided affairs which Bur ranges for him. always Apoter new boxing club bas bean onganieed at Penns Grove, N, J, It will hold ite opening ow 00 March 14, with @ main bout and eoreral preliminaries, In the eter event Hxlle Moy the @ood lightweight of Allentown, Pa, will hook up with Tommy Carey, the veteran fighter of Phisdelpbia, for eight rounds, Eddie Mead, manager of Joe Lynch, the American bantamweight, hee just received an: letter from Lynch, who ta still in England, thet be is to receive @ guarentee of Dries, the Tallan lghtwelgbt who apap seem WHO IS ALWANS ABSENT WHEN HIS TURN COME s ROUND -|There are sixteen firms manufacturing ous. down BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK THE TUESDAY NIGHT BOWLING CLUB Copyright, 1919, by the Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) No-( O1IOWT GET THAT LAST WORD -WHarT-? WHarTr? SANIT Acain- EovIE, | HEARO A&A CORKER LAST NIGHT- IT SBEMS OLD FOOLISH PHIL WHO'S WIFE €@LLS Him UP (HE HEARS ONE HALE OF WHAT SHE SENS ANDO GUESSES THE REST) BIRO ‘Thousands of ‘‘Kid’’ Stars | Innocent Victims of Tax | Put on Baseball Goods Raising Revenue Tax From 3] tgttui'pigS Wins Sait of 8 shoes | to 10 Per Cent. on Sport] tht s.crupe ot bets, She tax tl et Equipment Will Work | Great Hardship on Young cinch the tax will not hit the manu- facturera, because they will simply in, America. That Loves to , Play Ball. crease the price. More than 70 per cent. of the busi- ness of sporting goods makers is with kids under eighteen years o ‘The bulk of the sales are of articles that coat less than 50 cents, The cheap By Thornton Fisher LAST MINUTE STUFF JUST” BEFORE GOING HONG | Benny Valgar land Fitzsimmons a Hit With Heroes Several thousand wounded heroes of the Rainbow Division, who have Just arrived on this side of tho At- lantic, were treated to a high class boxing show last night at the Base | Hospital No, 5, Grand Central Palace, by Dan Morgan, ‘Tom Cassidy and joe Jacobs of the Boxers’ Loyalty League, Benny Valgar, who is Johnny Kilbane’s most persistent challenger, Appeared in the best bout of the even- ing when he clashed with Maxey |Green of Harlem. Valgar’s style re- | minded one of Jem Driscoll in action, When Green came tearing in the little Frenchman stood in one spot and re- | peatedly made him miss, » Eddie Fitzsimmons, the new light- weight star around these parts, then WELL SOME= Boov's TRYIN TO KiD ME,! |} hooked up with Billy Walkor of Panama. itzsimmons’s southpaw sleep producer made Walker wince on several occasions and, like Valgar, made a big hit with the wounded soldiers, Jack Britton, the welterweight champion of America, a strong favor- ite with Uncle San's warriors, ap- peared in a rattling battle with | Young Neil, the hard-hitting welter- weight of Allentown, Pa. Britton and Neil slammed each other all over the | ring. Ralph Brady, Syracuse's in the lightweight class. | pleased the Sammies with h of boxing, when he hooked jabbee Willie Herman of the side. | ‘The other bouts brought together the following: Johnny Burt, the K. 0). Jartist of Harlem, and, Bert Sanger, |Johnny Clinton and Frankie Tay, Walter Laurette and Sailor Volk, jYoung Driscoll and Young Davis Frankie Butch and Billy Maloy, Eddie Facarors Eimer — oe shining greatly brand and east | Summers and Willie Schaeffer, Crawford, Bender and Hendricks, the west side vaudeville artists, mode a big hit with their singing and danc- ing act, the feature of which was their rendition of “I Can't See the Good in Good-Bye!” a kong which made a tremchdous hit with the men in khaki. |_ ‘The official announcer was Peter | Prunty, while the official timek we orgie Conroy of th York Giants and Bill Oates, th | Yorkville sportsman, sheepskin covered balls, the 50-cent gloves, and the average price of uni- forms for kid teams now runs about $30 for ten uniforms. ‘These are the boys the United States Government is trying to develop physically, The Government itself has been for two years the biggest purchaser of sporting goods. In fact last year the sporting goods makers were limited to 15 per cent. produc- tion outside of army and navy con- tracts. The Government declared tho making of sporting goods next in essential work to fighting and making ships and munitions. By Hugh 8S. Fullerton. |FODASEBALL has received @ lot of B hard wallops in the last two years, but baseball, tennis, basketball, football and other of the commoner athletic games have re- ceived a knock recently whioh will affect them for the next ten years. The United States Government, which has fos- tered and helped build us up into 5 the greatest f athletic Nation in AY Ze the history of the j Pains world, has handed the wallap out to the kids and, I ve- lieve, has done it unintentionally. Seventeen teams are carded to per- form in The Evening World Head Pin leys this evening. “Silent Billie’ Heins will come down from Harlem with 2% bowlers, members of the well known Harlem Palace Bowling Club, and it will HE army leaders of England, France and America regard athletic training as one of the most important branches of the service, ‘The reconstruction Jeaders urge ath- letic training as part of the prepared- ness programme, yet they tax the kids out of their gloves and balls. I wish I had known about it and been down there to tell those high- brows about when they were kids, I wearing a medal denoting that he rolled one hundred or more, when be leaves for home. The G three teams on hand; Polanta of New- ark, N. J., 2 leans; Nesco, 1; Plymouth Institute of Brooklyn, 3 teams; Hunts Point, 1 team; Arlington, Glendale, L. 1 3 teams; E. 24th Street, 1 te of the bowlers have already been to the alleys getting practice for the affair, So Watch out for vig scores. Congress has taken the balls and] don't care how much they tax @ BUY! ie mutom individim bowling contest, fast nig bats away from tens of thousands of] who buys a $50 casting rod and $100 ad Gelenied Walter Haruay. | the k ‘Deven ina 2! ES ne kids in this country. The kfds are} reel and a $30 enametied line. That’s| n alleye. ‘ok averagal 210 for the raising a big kick, but can't make] sporting goods. What we kids kick on ee Bares Seana” cedac na terwuan themselves heard, ©» I'm going to try|!8 having athletic goods classed 88/ Frm allen, Lenvx Avenus and 116th Street, sporting goods. Maybe it 1s all right Sioy ‘wow five‘Gut of the alx Gammon rolled, aver: to shove up the tax on goods used by| “The rich sportsmen. They can afford it, but we kids can't. to speak for them. I'm not trying to start any Boston) Tea arty or trying to pose as an cx- ax mories at the White Baephant allem, be: tween Sebeeler and Texner was 4 joug drawn Tevalting ina viciry fot schaeder, 1M for Romer, fellers, and we've got a kick comins:|/teen years get their uniforms? I'll hgubs hace ck Mes. ea Congress hasn't treated us kids) tel) them, They have invented # ples . average 218: Hartley 100, 161, 204, and most them use 4 loze! Nerage — Iide get together and scratch up $10. Oe as astm deh Hrettente Among the hundreds of items OP| Ti 0."they go to the bank and get a Me 14b isd GON. ateraze Vid ee. the nastily passed tax bill there 18/§19 gold piece and Ox up a raffle, al..at ye Wwe & ight teat hundred and fifty tickets at a quarter apiece. The first kid takes the gold | 20. plece and a committee of two 18] ist [if Ramed to see that he don’t abscond | sifu “iz. ih, 1 rane ia unt porting goods (excepting play: ing cards, children’s toys and gam 10 per cent.” It never occurred to me that sporting goods, excepting play- ing cards, &c., meant that the kid/or lose it. He takes it home, shows it teams of baseball players will have to|all over the neighborhood and sells . a cles and Erwich, proprietor of the @ark Row Bow! pay 60 cents for a if-dollar dead” |chances to his dad, his unc pLrrich. peppeistor r ball, or $2.75 for @ $2.60 uniform this|their friends. Then the next kid) hie jtesdmuy. ho. Ah, fark, lune Deller that | season, |takes it, and so on until the $30 ts But that is exactly what it means.| raised. ‘Then a committee of twelve It means that we kids who are learn-|!8 appointed to go shopping for unt ing to play the game and are devel-| forms, and they visit Svery sport ng oping future ball players and future | 80ods store In town before they buy, jathletes are going to do without uni-|,, If they don’t work it that way they ‘orms and bi dba ° “gang” on some good natured shop- forms and bats and balls this season pr Oi Romne. one HATE buy the Pine cout noenuehy to got tn the fimt. three in the big “individual tournament that ie to. atart at the White Elephant alleyw in be near future. the Motive Power The retaro game betwee Department Howling Amociation of the Inter: boroug: Rapid’ Tramit Company and the Audit ing Dorartmen te fame company was at the Omi ‘The game started. prom) t! 2.30 9M. with’ a large crowd ah | unless we can scrape up more money | kee Nees the opening, "The motive Po partment wo ‘can atford.” “Pho ‘prices |aiforms for them, and, in. returnd 35 sectors, hing tno oul't us gate ready have gono up so high that al they call the tive Power Dep £9 S87, 910; quarter of the kid teams have quit, Ayaiting Derurtment,. tl a1. (and with this tax on, the Junior Stars, ing ‘for the Motive Power De. 41H first uniformed team I ever Justlers.” FRment team was done ty Zima, Huber and wan, | the Little Potatoes and the Bush Street Battlers might as well quit. belonged to was the * ; ; Mov ary, cantata, of the New | ogi clan't know, anything about taxes,|We were at an age where 25 cents | radi whoa goine ached. the ae except that ¢ ernment needs like Rockefellers. You of this mont to take part in the Woman’ | money and e to dig and|mace Us feel like nt, which ie ed know, if you've ever been a kid, that #! male m you can't have team work and team| tion"game with stra” off tng ots spirit without a green and yellow or | Palace alleys this evening white and blue uniform just alike on cach kid, We had to have uniforms, and not one of us had any money left, as the circus had been to town. We swarmed on “Buddy” Dean, who op- y it. I don't know whether 10 per At, tax on baseballs, gloves, caps, ts and uniforms is too much or too |little, But I do know that the propor- tion isn't right, Last year they taxed sporting goods 3 per cent. and raised it to 10 this r, Last year they |taxed automobiles, — phonographs, |cameras, guns, diamonds and a lot of . ‘exhib tham Dan Kales is to stage a twelve-bour endnrance gontest at his Lenox alleys, March 23. starting at 2?P. and continiing for: twelre hours, ren feamia ‘of the best bowlem in the city are to com pete in the contest, Academy No, Jother things 3 per cent, and this year|erated the huckster business and | fy nig mo in the Rastera Pataed hemi 'e il Lal eggs and poultry, seeking | Kahrs, slem “in Otte gaan ans Under this year's tax a fellow can jadvice and consolation, ie offe tem, edividual prises are offered the ladies to buy a $175 shotgun, cartridges, alto finance us to extent 0 —— yacht, a motor boat, a canoe, hunting |!£ we would promise to bring him in| ,,T Onetelyou and Inrincite Club are stil! ted for the lead in the [oter-Ohurch Touma Thee two teame will clash clothes and all that sort of junk and |$25 worth of eggs and poultry in the |he is taxed only 6 per cent, but us|hext month. — i Text week on the telyon drives and it is Iklds have got to pay 10 per cent. more|. There wasn't a hen's nest in Hiils- | Men (hat the big fireworks will be set off, |for our baseball suits and shoes and |bore safe for weeks. Sharphead | Tt. Harlem Palace Rowling Club, who roll at everything we use, It ain't right, fel. |Wiped out the last of the debt Ly | the Harte, Palace Tewling alleys hae increased }lers, and let's don't stand for it. swiping Haildeday, his dad's best | tem dunn the past few mont ; | a rooster, and our white cotton uni- | Gor Ras Otto inert Th ary a ; _|forms with red strines down tho leg: ern Mee. De, cha A | Y ty know what T think? T think/and red and white caps and stocking se mark le ian ene eee those Senators down in Wask-|made us a ball team. We licked the - - ington pulled a boner. They sat|town team twice that summer. tearmament, which in to Ne role eit ete wwnits around and read about _| Our kick is that vernment | Flevhant alleys commencing Mamh 17, Alex be 1 $4 Anan 4 aney Alexander Ket-lmoant to tax big leagues and the leven “Chad he can take he momaure of some of ng $18,000 a year, and Comiskey pay-|"sportsmen” and hit us kids, We|{2%mrcel Mone iti teria es en Oe oe ing $50,000 for Collins, and Speaker getting a fortune every scason, and ain't “sporting goods,” we're athletic goods, and necessities. The Govern- ; ment has said it wants us kids to|to be 22,000 uniformed amateur an¢ they figured, “We'll just soak those|iake part in athletics and deveiop| semi-pro teams in the United Betas guys.” So they increased the tax on/and then hands us a 10 per cent, wail-|'Their uniforms and bats ‘and. balls | “sporting goods” from 8 to 10 per|lop, must have averaged at least $50 a | cent, thinking they were hitting the) A big majority of us laid off base-| team each season, That is over | rich club owners and players — In- ball ‘and tennis, football, basketball and other games during the war, We couldn't have bought the stuff if w had had time to play. The factories were too busy making stuff for the troops to make much for us, and be- sides we weren't allowed to play, Even yet the Government itself will pay to Itself thé big part of the tax. Just last week there was a shipment of million dollars. Pr 3 have advanced at least 20 per cent., and on top of that they want to tax us 10 per cenr more Don't think we're kicking on hety Ing Uncle Sam if he needs our heip You know us kids better than that But it ain't fair to soak us so hard wi aseballs, bats and uniforms it to any kid in the crow? stead of that they the ki Let me tell you fellows something: rting goods in the United States. Tuns about $14,000,000 @ year, All of them combined sell to | the clubs in organized baseball about $25,000 worth of stuff. That means that i than one-half of 1 per cent. of tl porting goods is bought by §300,000 worth of athletic equipment professional teams and players. The! to the soldiers, who either got $270,000 by the Reil Syndicate, Ine.) Lae is Sat Bae of that Is Ad tol worth or pald $330,000 for $300,000 | (eeee=e—eemenneeeenenernneennennns play: rung rms worth. ‘Tournament at the White Elephant al-/of public improvements he itemized be the ambition of every bowler to be|the Bronx, @ Pot Club will have | parks of the Bronx, the sum of $5,000, | > | | Before a cro: | Meyers journey night and stage: pices of the the boys \Jack Elle, the J e bantam, who clashed with Young Lippy for four slazling rounds. Jac! who came out of his jong retirement and faced Bobby Gardner; Jackie Moore, a lclever colored featherweight of thia who crossed arms with Young in his request to the Board of Esti-|Reisler; Al. Warner and Young Burn | Young Goldie and Joo Lerner, and Tom: mate for an appropriation of $437,090, | Fi" Stnith and Young Dillon.’ A fifteen for the improvement of the parks in| minute wrestling contest between Young While the largest items | Muldoon and Mike Willard and the Kurtzo twins in their juvenile boxing contained in the requisition age for|tontest completed the programme, the repaving of roads in the “public Joseph P. Hennessy, Park Commis: sioner of the Bronx, has issued a list for irrigating the golf links at Pel- ham Bay, and $2,000, for draining the links in Van Cortlandt Park, are among the other items mentioned in the list of desired public improve- ments, To remove rock from the Mosholu golf links the sum of $5,000 \is asked. BOCA GRANDE, Fla., March 5,—In the annual Boca Grande open golf ampionship Monday Walter Hagen, Palma Ceia, with 73 and 14 forged into a tie with Jock Hutchinson, Glenview, who after a beautiful game Monday slowed up to a 77, with a 73 in the afternoon PINEHURST, N. C., March 5.—The !qualifying round of the annual spring |golf tournament was brought to a con- lusion in a blaze of glory. Edward yles of Philadelphia, a member of the orth Hills and Washington Golf and |Country Clubs, who finished in 85 on Monday, with eight players ahead of him in the race for the medal, went over the championship course in 69, the | best that haa been done here in’ the past two years. He tied Dwight L. Armstrong of Oakmont for the lead at 154 for the thirty-six holes pbb bibadha a * i WILLIAMS AND WASHBURN WIN TOURNEY ABROAD. CANNES, March 5.—Capts. R. Norris Williams of Boston and Watson M. Washburn of New York were the win- ners of the American Army lawn tennis tournament completed here under the direction of the Y. M. C. A, Williams defeated Washburn final round A short name for a long- wearing sock! *“Solo” ! Sold solely by us, and, as with everything else we sell, must either give com- plete satisfaction or — moneyback, Silk *‘Solos” for Spring. in the of the gle: 6. —! 6—2, and : Retake pares with anbarh, won ithe Navy, gray, white, Rus- foubles chgmnlonsnP. Pus and bis|Sia calf, champagne, cordo- partner, Dell, 6—1, 6—0, MIKE GIBBONS OUTPOINTS BARTFIELD IN 10 ROUNDS. ST. PAUL, Minn., March 5—Mike Gibbons was victor over Soldier Bart- van, black—some with lisle tops, heels and toes, *Registered Trademark, RoGERS PEET COMPANY field to-day only ause he fought the | Broadway a Br eat fight of bis car Bt, Paul | at 13th St. Four at 34th St. “phantom” outpointed the New Yorker Convenient all the way. Bartfield’s vicious slash- Broadway Corners” Fifth Ave. ing and his famed backhand kept G bons working, but inflicted no serious | at Warren at 41st St. damage until the tenth lap. Then he caught Gibbons against the ropes and ut a few more kinks in Mike's nos CASCO | 2% in. CLYDE 2% in. ARROW COLLARS Starched or soft the Arrow is a depend- able indicator of a satisfactory collar. Civerr, Panopy8Co., Ine.

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