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at alin THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JUNE 7, 1919. TZ A SIPERMAN OF RNG, |BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK/@D 0 G00 INVINCIBLE TD ALL UNTIL HOW FITZ USED TO KNocK THEM our | NTHESBIRBAL HE FOUGHT GIANT JEFFRIES Bec : | | it Campion, Lanky Bob Could Have Given Willard One Hundred Pounds and Terrific Fight and Would Have Been Winner Over the Dempsey of To-Day—His Sensational De- feat of Corbett, by Which He Won Heavyweight Title—His ATBELNONTTODAK Open Contest Is Promised, and, Winner of Annual Feature Is Hard to Select, THE SUBURBAN FIELD. Beme arrarent Dexter ih THe 6TH AT oaeen. FiTZ RAN ACROSS Peg “Comeback” After Jeff Beat Him. AR MEAL Cane in HIS ConnER, (MCA) a0 nee ped temeeee (Motan) os cess * By Robert Edgren. Copyright, 119, Wy The Prem Pubtishing On. (The Now Tort Brening World). FT®R Jobn L, Sullivan there was a break in the line of great fighti champions. Jim Corbett was « very fast and clever boxer, a master boxer, but never to be classed with Sullivan, Fitzsimmons and Jefft- ries as a fighter. For a time his vic- tory over Sullivan made deft footwork and the jab and get away style of box- ing popular, He had imitators by the thousand. He knocked out Charlie Mitchell, who weighed 142 pounds at the time, in three rounds at Jackson- ville, and that was the end of Corbett as a figure among the champions. Ho fought Tom Sharkey, an almost un- known sallor, in San Francisco, and the police had to interfere before the ‘of the fourth round to save the champion. In the next year, March 17, | 4897, be met Bob Fitzsimmons at Carson City and was knocked out and _eprived of his title in fourteen rounds. This was one of the most sensu-@————————___ of all championbrip battles. ons was middleweight cham- pt Fa @ tall, Jean fellow who barat 158 pounds, yet had the n srouldere of a hearyweight.| bett's jinecs would reach” the tor ao mons ® fighting freak-|the punch landed, and with extreme was the jest hitter of his heey Benn oR ee ow in mié- Gt any weight. Ho wass't 8! mons's right and the moving picture Ava tapping boxer like Corbect,| cameras, the tographs made it . N & marvelously skilful fighter, #9] appear that he had been struck as he We tasesiPvenes woncn ee Re] placing a|renched the floor, but from a differ- Serwenen Oy Boe PiTLeWeNeNS, ent ang ean The \aiten THe * _ Nd o RACING SELECTIONS. # BELMONT PARK. First Race—Hildreth entry, Wd cient, Torchbearer. Second Race—No selections. Third Race—Clark | entry, Born Lady, Passing Shower. Fourth Race—War Cloud, Laniua, Exterminator, % Fifth Race-Gex, Red Sox, The F Decision. Sixth Race — Copyright, | Black Home, Hampden. ik Fitz vse To Sup in cose MATH AIS FRET AND Be IW HITTING ince: RANGE WHEN HE SEEMED A TARO AWAY, By Me we hcp ‘ HE Suburban Handicap, the second of the season's big turf classics, is run to-day at Bel-* mont Park. With fair weather @ big crowd doubtless will turn out to see it, and on a fast track, a race worthy of the best traditions of the annual feature should result.. Fields which ) looked classier on paper have been named for the rich event in years ast, but none ever promised a@ more open contest than that named to face the barrier this afternoon, There is not one of the eleven ¢ which stands out on dope, so past Hempel Also Lands Frequently 01 | pertormances win vo of ittie aid to the public in its efforts to select a . 4p ° ee Stes : cre _nothing, in, the belated Jess in Training Exhibitions im|provavie winner. tere ts vindex Sof c's Skull Practice Makes Yanks \(Fistic News )| “i? Title Holder “Cuts Loose.” it i atm and Gossip atocn'ss| MEE to Face Chicago White nd Goss was geut to Churchill Downs to wim tried to pull himself up, fell back By Robert Fdgren. the Kentucky Derby, and when the a) Sat by nereeans, wie ornns| SOX In Second Game of Series prohabl: y it when “he looked a sure loser. Hf Witz usep To Sav Copyright, 191 by The Frese Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World), Poked ee Mr Eat nab He Corbett rushed at Fi be jtzsimmons when was seen he didn’t like the going. } TOLEDO, O., June 7. He came right back to Pimlico to ‘The first open air boxing show of 74 4 thant would redeem himself on a fast recovered a minute later, and __s the season in Philadelphia, which was Each boxed three hard rounds, Willard “cut loose” more than In @n¥;track. Ho was left at the post, #0 reaching over the heads of men’ who OTH Jack Hempel and Walter Monahan finished their boxing seance| start ig the Preakness, it oeing' B with the champion yesterday afternoon sportiyg discolored optics,| the hope of Trainer Rowe that he han oon give rriving at Toledo, There were tinfes when it looked| you see there is no real line for the oh will it fo us? 1 him |4taged by Phil Glassman at Shido | other workout since a ; ese. ehampion's beatae i now | With Cicotte Out of the Way 72th Ser having fSnea ‘a wise stunt | Park on Wednesday night, drew a gate | ay if the big fellow was bent on scoring a couple of quick knockouts, but eens ee eaine Bee siltiaee ee face rled suck bim in the of some kind and kept it to himself.”"| of $9,609, Even with these big re- | 4: Sat the. erition moment, Jées mackened ‘bis effort, erinsed | day. jabbed repeatedly ands. | face and tried to renew the pattie, is| Locals Are Confident of | yi e"Suly noticeable «Wn aiways, jus! f ay. A ‘Th Ing about tho | cel; ha lost several hun- The others have shown fairly well mouth were bleeding. His wife taste ett was over Turning Tables ball when Cidotte is pitohing is that | pes, bee piestygt Bey = eral hun- | yroadly, and wrestled about long enough to let his opponent recover.| , Ths others have, shi! y vot ile, eotmer, and sailed. 90 vrwelghe ; it Is prominently discolored, and it Is |@re3 Sollars Deca; Me Willard took @ lot of punches too. Sometimes he took them smiling.|none of them can be regarded as & 4 7 “through- the fight, and every cham- Possible that the webbi color | fighters a big guarantee to battle for. Y ai hi 9,500, John- | sometimes with a quick movement of the head that broke their force, and Fitzherbert or Whiskbroom, a Friar ned to give her a reassur;| I've often heard it anid that Pits- By Bozeman Bulger. Scheme of white and dark Drown my | eo a ey obb Mart Brock, ¥600, | sometimes he Just took them, Monahan espechully seemed to be able to| Rock. or a Jobeen, of the equal of , “mg Nt ey a mmons was badly punished in that AVING had a day in which to| marked that way to prevent subma-|Joe Tipiitz $600 and Harry Pierce|reach the champion’s chin, Monahan, a two hundred and fifteen pounder, | ave won the stake. Steep On, Pee Ae fgg t and won a fluky victory, Noth- Test and think over the tricks|fines from knowing the exact course | $302, Chaney demanded the ruaran- | was as quick as a featherweight, He fuirly leaped at Willard with sudden | ‘nicely weighted, won’ his last race’ Sea meat attoped to his veces ing, of the sort. Bob's lips were cut the White Sox played on them| they are following. tee which he got before he would con- | plows into which he put every ounce of force he possessed. {Very handily, but it 1s questionable » im clinch and deliberately took Ol tho ring mite eect put he went intolin the opening encounter of tho se-| Bob Shawkey, a sailor by the way,| sent to take on Lew Tendler, Whitt Willard didn't use any of his favorite countering rights on Monahan! if ho is a ‘route traveller; Corn ond count, using the time to}eye received in catia es Bleck | tea, the Yanks romime Chely hie, (On72, Chat ¢ tha ‘camouflage would | {= $1000 more then Dundes & yesterday, but fed him with every kind of a left-hand punch there js, It|Tassel is of near stake calibre; “4 aoe oe throat ee woos As for Corbet: 6 rose he reeled an Franc! low. “Corbett went after him, | been sono, wed, hy at! grain that had |ager Huggins, we are informed, gave| Which @ vessel 1s moving, the same Fran over the soporific short right. Hawing only two men to work with he| was wary. He may have thought | newspaper to take him home, ered his outht @ little session of “skull|i2e4 would apply to a batter in jud- lng gout with Johnny Dundes at Milwankes rv h bigger ; Renatlta. Minhe . affect the estimating eye of a navi-| though Johnny is a much pi was a left-hand day in camp.- The champion worked his left overtime. He | L#nius, the Metropolitan winner, has t, 1 took him to San| ting to-day much refreshed. Man-| gator in determining the direction in| VoFite in Philadelphia than Chaney is | Too & Ue lal” Cott 1 htt ie uppercut viciously. But he never tossed Peon kar Ua ald hig Rae Richie MitaheM, who broke Ma left hand fn fF n ably fust trial for to-day’s stake to the nolenasl cas cant otremtiod ata ut "| can't afford to cripple any one. Manager Archer is East trying to get al recommend Lim. Willis Sharp Kile ee & Matrices rg uipposition that he would surely win| practice” in the clubhouse, pointing baboned eee Cee ert te able to tmx dam) good heavywelght for the camp, A 200-pounder is coming from Chicago. | mer's EXtorin! is an honest ‘at the end of the round Fits fell | nder whe was merely lout with great care tho difference in| '“iut," he adds with a pussled 100%, |Siwacnee on June 16 ae be rebmis toa rad| And there is a rumor that Clay Turner, the famous Sloux Indian, will be| horse and may, have a decided bis chair and bung his arms) vr We had a ‘doctar an that | result when @ ball club thinks and|“Why can't other pitchers do the 846 | wile toring ‘with his qarring partner on | here in a day or two. When all this happens the big fellow can cut loose. chance, but Over There and Princeps t 2 seem over their heads. The writers over the ropes, while his hand~ I heli “lwhen it does not. The first game :2ins? Or, rather, why have they NOt irhartay which complied him to ask for & The snappy way Willard shot his punches over yesterday, coupled | *@t!, over Vorked frantically through the| bet into tpe Goofor take Car t KAM been able to do it in the past?” | selection for the race is War Cloud, postponement of the contest, ith the rather sneering smile he wore while doing it, brought up a lot of | 8 Y rawing room. There the| With the Sox was used as tho point of "The paraffin de. ther old one Ed ba sit, Pp which will be ridden by Willie minute to bring himi up egainr!ex-champion was 0 DAMES 4 Te discussion around the ringside, Many of the spectators were wonderin; i oxtermina- latices a? Ay or | trod the penian io faen Sistress reference. too, was to rub that composition on| Bartley Madde, the local heavrweight, who | Knapp, with Lanius and Extermina 1d |'@ mow boxing under the management of Hany| Just how hard WiNard could hit if he wanted to. tor furnishing the contention, Loftus, nis |—a fate swollen out of shape from| THe fact that Wddle Cleotte will not \one, wide of a Dall a CM ng make |New, Vie Prelit of the Down foniy| I saw Willard hit a few hard punches in Havana and I am fairly well| who is in great form just now, will one of Fitaslinmons's left handers qn | pitch to-day has refreshed the Yanks|fho' hail heavier on one side, ‘Tals leave, bas teen siguat w for another tattle ty| convinced that he can put over a punch. In that Havana fight Jess was| ride Lanius and Butwell has ‘been phant, He thought the fight) the cheek and the terrific punch in|almost as much as the day’s rest.| gives a peculiar wabbling motion to|Neay. He will take on Hary Greb cf Pite|cold as ice, deliberate and unhurrying. He forced Johnson to come to| engaged to pilot lxterminator, ‘won. the body and the acute agony of Lav- fMficulty is in con. burgh in & twelve-round bout at an indoor bet! him, Johnson had always played that trick himself, but at 1 Ing been stripped of thee tide in wits, | There is something uncanny about] the ball, but the di i ys play b SUN Ot WEN Daneel ws, neck inocpenssctd efi ” - wi thi thi as trolling it and also in preventing the |ine show to be hed by the McKinsey A. ©. of] witiard reach: t it hi ‘h yea t iz Was “Stalling. por poate oo rane pride "thas Mt was ppeha Gs Wlusea cone an ee ty ‘etntt | layers from rubbing it off from time |Caoton, 0., on the night of June 19, jard reached out and hit him on the nose with his great long left and] year still bolus ahown. oF ie ne fe seams to dlsconcert. oppdetug, teams | Pitas bead aian't follow the biow in and give Johnson a chance to counter. So| mont Park. ithe latest best is Man nim a quicting drug, By the time he| before 8 not th ae Lanta tsdas Gd dace Damhie on (ODTECD o take the aggressivg, and it wasn't his way of fighting. |o'War, the Glenridgie Farm's young- Feached ‘Ban Francisco he had en.|Zame tbat he stared in this season, | | Rome Fee es ee baseball |orobetly not be abla t meet champion Benoy | He floundered, fought desperately, and in twenty rounds or 80 wore himself Start trained by Loule Feustéy which, {rely recovered his self-control, and | Sad, wien & man can do that the Now| Mat ihe White Sox players go out isan at the open air boring show of the| out. Of course the wearing out was hastened by a number of heavy| fan away with the last race, | This a en champion made a very piston Gat he has up’ bis ‘sleeve|of thelr way 0 prevent ax , |Otympla A, A. of Philadelphia in the National! blows Willard sunk into Johnson's thick body. ybOoY. | agee a one was highly touted and may be al rance, PY od hjng said of him, but he didn aides Pomethine taore than ordinary hye: | ther thea thempalve. from euune |e Mem Ta Tost 20%"! Yes, Jack Johnson Was Knooked Out. sverrining suid of hin. but no dans " stre and cleverness. ands 0 ‘ trieve is , above the Origin of the “Solar Plexus.” eure. wes Tern, nce fen nee qaoeted bie ohyeiclan will votity him to lar] After the twentieth, then Johnson stalled, boxed cleverly, blocked,| ceuinars Man o'War iv toon oe grinned and talked, and Willard wasn't sure but that the crafty black| Fair Play and a fine looker, Ho was fooling, to some extent, and holding himself in reserve to shoot’ went to the post nicely enough, but everything he had left in a desperate last attempt to deliver a clean| when he got there he kicked and knockout if Willard was tricked into leaving a sure opening. In the| fussed so much that it was feared twenty-sixth round Willard decided that it was time to take the aggressive, | "& Would leave his race there. = When He leaped from his corner, fairl t "| the break finally came he got away was a punch in the solar| They have tried to find paraffin on the # corner, fairly ran at Johnson, and hit him a terrific! ying and was never caught, At tho plexus,” said the doctor, “a blow that | pail and have even stolen balls out of| ‘The trouble with the Yanks, Jeckaon im Philadelphia, right hook over the heart, That blow wus practically the finishing punob.| end he was casily four lengihs in struck over the nerve centre of the| the game and had them dimected, but | struck me, was that they had been —_ Johnson reeled around jalf the ring and came against the ropes in| front of Retrieve and not > od, body and caused a temporary pare nothing has been discovered that is] playing with bed bail clube for ten | By Ofeon, manage of Benny Teoart, Willard’s corner, where he :tood at bay, both arms lifted t ‘d hi not permissible under the rules of the|days and had been facing sloppy |rmning a qpecial train ag lady Ne the Willert-Demeser | chin. Willard was following closely. To pull Johnson’ Sam Hildreth trotted out Purchase I used that description in my stories sport. They have even sought for| pitching. When they suddenly rqn |feht. "The trxin will teare the fabbed him in the body, aaa the tnetant te Prk ost aerslll ah yg fees Snare Afar ae, ue ae ve the a ot of the fight, which was, I resin, but there is nothing in evidence | up against the smartest ball 1D | Station . tered and scratched too often to count, origination of the “solar plexus|on which to convict the culprit. the league led by a pitcher as steady | morning downward J@ss drove over a short, straight right-hander, the same blow him he hag discovered some way of doc-| Whether there is anything in this |™! + sorers! wookm until they have bem On the train, when the doctor came toring the ball and thie "belief is| mystery or not, it is certainly int ett out of Corbett’s drawing room, 1| gaining ground throughout the Ameri-|esting to try and figure it out. Bo: ~— body 2 molentibe acorn can League. as they will, though, | sides, Leave oy Looted on always manager, won the | the diainond strategists cannot get} good subjects of conversation when lolol "i plonship for Freckied Bob. At the secret of his legerdemain. | rain breaks up a game. Sees Dae a Ror eo fi af fi ane ity fr ease tree 5 and both won, which shows that Bass always thereafter couple’| “Oh, I know he’s got something,” |as a clock the change was so sudden |made immediately after the championship he accidentally knocked Monahan out with « couple of days ago. Hildreth knows how to pick spots, with the name of Bob Fitzsimmons, |one of them said last night. “But as|for them that they didn't know how | cided, ‘as Johnson knocked out? Thousands of people have asked me that|It has been said that this pair might T've said Corbett was @ remar! long as we can’t hang anything on him, ‘to act. — question. I should say he was. He fell at full length, struck the floor on| have won long ago, but that Hildreth boxer, but never a great fighting Ove of the bouts so far sienet up by Phi) his side and rolled over flat on his back, his arms still rigidly extended | had decided to make it ire thing weakening under the hot pace| champion, His record is the proof. Graeeman ot bey rng lll Urge rlpagy lcd in the guard position, He didn't move even when the count was over,| With, each of them. Poacher was pees at a After losing to Fitzsimmons he was ’ f bye te pgs lato eon Me) and his seconds dragged him to the corner and propped him up in the|*4°4 bY a fying br } s ond he was Waren u Boe Gainey a ae oe & cher, I was sitting within ten feet of Johnson's corner, Before the fight,| won his tace like a pood horse, aie Cj soft ewan tye 4 vinaky, the clover Hebrow heavyweight, who is| D©Cause of the well-known repute, or lack of repute, of some of the men | the there was considerable play Reality, Mo was ho aa eest th oe Sorcery I Ree ronade tn i What Ha pens Every Day now making Philadephia logan | Connected with arranging It, I strongly suspected that it might be a frame-up.|on Thunderclap to beat him, food im thac ever lived. te faced, | picion that it tleally killed bo: lane’ artictes So I stood up and watched while he was being brought back to con- | chase won practica)ly all the way in te, he tried his level by bj in New York State, and was 1 neaeg BASEBALL. . whe Bi v Spee en Wertnentay night, scionandes: Pilaf and his triumphant followers leaped out of the ring im-.| the ‘#900 Hime of Ha 5, and didn't the tide of defeat by using all of | out by Jeffries again in ten rounds, rown Universit; =| gee Leach of the mediately after the knockout, and hustled toward the new champion’ it. | S00 0 be extended at any stage, * He ‘clean boxing skill, by sl at-| "A, for Bob Fitzsimmons, whom [| The Giants lost their first game of Vent Ofer Woreay, nf Wit DIBYCD | ena the leading coptendes for the worki's taa-| ing car, Cuban poldiers crowded the ring and ordered every one else ie eeve. yas jnelined fe bore out, however, in eke ond quick evasions of Bob's |nelieve to be the greatest fighter of | the 1919 Western trip at Pittsburgh, famwoight title, wi box once or twice before] But it must have been five minutes before Johnson could even stand up, | Cee ens Bs) fecrinsnth vousd the oné his weight in all +] long history of | 7 to 1, the Pirates hitting the Giant| TENNIS. | ao oe bg gan) a, Then he was dazed and stupid, His legs were shaking. Feeling his way nah i the ring, he found one man he | pitchers and the Giants not belng ablo| Rain agatn cuf into the local tennis | Juve maneger, moet) along the ropes, he tried to crawl through them, but lurched he: crowded Corbett over to |couidn't beat, in the Giant Jeffries, | to hit the Pirate pitchers, Babe Adams | tournaments yesterday, and all play | him up to box Mickey Delmont r¢ Bayonne next | wouig have fallen th H 5 b adiong and middie of the ring nearest the |but was invincible to all others, Be-| pave them five hits and one run,|had to be abandoned for the afters | Friday might, would have fallen through and to the ground below if McVey hadn't caught R A G ng picture cam |fore winning the heavywoght title| while the four Giant huriers—Ben-|noon, if clear weather returns, it 18 |* whether Ine had knocked out Jack psey,|ton, Ragan, Perritt and Winters—| planned to finish the women’s metro- middleweight champion, in 13 rounds, | had little to puzsle the Pittsburgh| politan tournament to-day and to- war pvol and deliberate enourh | Joe Godfrey in 1 round, Jim Hall in 4 | eluggers. morrow, ‘anything, at any stage of any lrounds, Dan Creedon in. 2, Peter | Herzog celebrated “Gowdy Day” at AT BEAUTIFUL BELMONT PARK him and pulled him back, He tried again, and McVey held him until he wa tae ba a cay te Casee ot Sm ton) through and standing on the edge of the platform. Some one threw a bath | ead feck “Britton cand Waiter| TODS over his shoulders and he reached down with one foot to go down the | both of which wore to ba} Wooden steps in his corner, The moment he had all his weight on onc yy if told mé, two days before, he |freckied fist dri z S, Howard Voshell and Major G. B.| jeida at Canada, ‘The LeonaniPitts| Shaking, quivering leg, both legs gave way entirely, and if McVey hadn't hi Maher in 1 and Tom Sharkey in 8.| Chicago by driving out a home run to| Harran of the British Army will meet | go win bo*bedd on June 9 and the Britton.| caught him again and held him up he would have fallen down the pe MONDAY : Pressed nearly to the ropes, Cor. Officially he lost that Sharkey fight | centre, which gave Boston @ 1 to 0|in tho final of the invitation singles | Nate toot on June 12, They wa to tare or-| Even at the bottom he was hardly able to walk, and his seconds held him | $5,000 KEENE ME! tt took wm formrand, aiep nd jombes on an alleged “foul, but where ref- victory, ver Chicago in the first tournament at fhe Country Club of} jostiy bean staged on June 4 and June 11, on either side while they plunged into the crowd and disappeared, 2-MILE STEEPLEC A Ae | Pite’s grinn eree Wya' Ww a for spec- | came 0 © es, ‘estchester to-day, —— 4 J 5 4 E i the punch that Fitssimmons|tators around the ring saw only a| The Brooklyn Kobins got away to ee ees lati of aso rac | Dempsey Makes Most of His D ays of Rest. wriat-deop into |@ weak start in opening thelr West- | GOLF. HYDE PARK HANDICAP cool ‘championship— ughty #a | d rh oa Hi nee ©| Sn ‘invasion when they lost to the| Charles (Chick) Evans of Exige-|anterins thet Valecr will be on hand to meet Knocked out? I should say he was knocked out, And big 250-ppund Joss || AND 3 OTHE! i ne tise, . . 0 Se y ial Cincinnati Reds, 7 to 6. water, the’ national open and amateur | Frankie Britt, the New Bedford lightweight, tn «| is likely to knock out any man he hits in the way he hit Johnson, | . CONTESTS LIANE Htmsimmons, whose advance was!” arter eating Corbett he stayea| A slnale by Henthcote, with two| olf champion, played a practice | waiveround bout to # decision, at the boxing show bh, nd fi ti fi th a by the Ath pe Mi The only thing that makes the coming match keenly interesting is the. in shuffling steps that car- f wo out in the ninth, drove across two | rou: in preparation for © OPEN | to be het ine a wrenee, Mass, | fact that the gigantic Kansan is going to meet the hardest hitter who hag! Trin closer than he appeered [cet Of the ring, for, two years ead) Figg which the Louis Cardinals] championship that will begin on the |at ie abel srk tn thal civ oa te sit of gown In the ring since the days of Hob Fitzsimmons and big Jim Jeffries because his feet were slipped|a¢ the age of thirty-six, to fight | ™ 0 de jade! in the c . june 14. ‘There are two men with a punch in this fight, And Deinpsey makes up in Bd while his shoulders wore bal-|young Jim Jeffries. THe youngster | where wus gta gn 8S | Ever, but was off with nis putter, He | eae orn bulldog aggressiveness and clean hitting power what he lacks in helght and \ : weight. | tly arrived bome from the other side, sare “ . hoot ove! his shoulder, At (pear a ee aan he might Mane Tad Howard Hhmie of | Detroit was] fornia professional, came in with the | wa! ! go" amidey tision tot | 4g After seein Willard box his six rounds and go through a little footwork | Re he shifted the rgbtlthe champion away in less time, for "Washington won the second game|- The New York women, golfers de- |b* M¥ i stion while abroad wus Geos Tunney, | 9nd % fow other IiENE oxercigcs T Wwent over to ae ets each oma | tlhe knocked Fits flat with hard left | ty the West Sido fisher who won the light hoary. | JACK wa air of , t ch enjoying +, polwed. left|iab in the chin in the second, and of, the webie from Bt, LOU Oy a) TR thie nat atthe ert eet | eit ttle in the big Allied boxing tournament | tite, ‘This ts the last of his days of rest on the De Forest schedule, At least \" le force into Be of/Fits was groggy and fighting a des- ~ Holy Cross won ita aixteenth game,| for the Griscom Cup over the Ape. | Pers Roche states that Tunney ts fast, clever) It is the last for this week, ky 83.00, War tus, } BOWLING AND BILLIARDS, los.ng fight from that time defeating Syracuse, 4 to 2, in the mis links, This te the thi rT aod has & Uerriflc punch. The lay-off has done him a world of good. His drawn appearance has pacpin howliNe Vile - to the end. There was no limit to , ¢astest "zane over played om the| since 1909 that New York wee, aise MALL TO-DAY, ° ¥. gone, and he confided to me that he gained four pounds in weight in the four , Baturiayy ice oon ae ‘Bob Vitasimmons's gameness, | Worcester diamond, ROS having bees held, Fag Sa A ARG A vl OP s ' “ieeaer so ruby