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THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1919 = BEST SPORTING P JIMMY WILDE ARRIVES Copyright, 1 , by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Fvening World.) SaAip— _ ““Governor-Elect Edwards and Y Mayor Hague Among Thou- m sands Crushed in Jam at} Jersey City’s Boxing Show. HEN the Governor of the State and the Mayor of the City their way THE FIRST THING AIMEY INQURED Gufs may be considered as being bf- O. Kd. Last night, and in City, Governor-elect Ed Mayor Frank Hague in a jam along with 16,000 or 20,000 ordinary mor- tried to get inside the 4th Armory, where Promoter B. Driscoll put on a boxing , Becauso this great thro: to crowd themselves into that hardly accommodated ExPLains THE Flour perween BECKETT AND ME GOORTY tar card didnt’ some up DAWD HUGHES, Wio IS to, expecta’ mations at aii; In fact, the Jimny ACTING AS WILDE'S MGR ‘oogan ut was faved the show from a well- ‘WILOE , WHILE OS AMERICA J booing. Tho Leonard-| Hil FAMOUS was jus at, wWeL Leonard didn't knock out Bartfeld, Froeprov Fiver he appeared to be hitting| * FIGHTER sro) $s bard throughout. Bartfeld did but tako o pasting that at seemed 5 with mercy, At other intervals the going savored Yery much of tho burlesque: Bernt. couldn't do a thing ines Garry Herrmann Also Hort. UN PERIOS English Champion Wilde © reo tine sa ot sa] Makes a Good Impression Once or twice the Soldier VERN E fm an awkward swing at close| 102 Pound Ring Sensation Has Joo Jeanette, the veteran colored Jackie Sanders of California. In the other, Radio heavyweight of Hoboken, N. J. has fn important task to perform to- night. He is to mect Bartley Madden, the local heavyweight, in the main go of eight rounds af the Bayonne A. A. boxing show at Greenville Schuetzen Park and he must beat Paid Money Due Finishing Third. and the bout didn’t start until 9.30. ‘I wouldn't want to say which was the better man, but perhaps Moore is, at the lighter weight. Lynch never wor a round from me up to the tenth, because he wouldn't open up, and Moore never showed to ad- vantage, except in the eleventh and twelfth rounds, because I was festing up then. They both seemed afraid of getting hit, Moore kept his chin down on his chest, danced around and slapped rather thay hit, Lynch would ; be fought at the Royal A, fight away back, holding me with bis | sda, last night bi long left around the shoulder blade, | Monday night, Levins while he tried to dig into my body | 4iaxey wiuemeon, the with his right.” Intelligence and Self-Satis- fied Air—Interested in All Sports and Has Brought His Golf Clubs With Him, By Vincent Treanor. E got our first glimpse of Jimmy Wilde, the sensational Eng- lish flyweight, yesterday, Un- cut loose spasmodically. be did he raincd lefts and on Bartfleld until it seemed knock him out, At those however, Benny would step without pressing his advantage ers thelr share of the There is no particular a city, clash in the main go of eight rounds at the Amboy Sporting Club of Perth Amboy Im the wemifinal six rounds rough Leo locks. @hout all the real damage ho to Benny throughout the rest of ard back on the ropes, Bartfield then pee at the Imperial, shore? te little hardest fight. He couldn't say, Ho he cared to hit. Bartfield pre- not to hear the bell in. this and continued a fruitless as- it on Benny while Referee Danny ivan was trying to pull him away, the sixth, Bartfleld did a Leach stall, appearing a bit groggy receiving two hard lefts to the but the crowd evidently didn't his act seriously. played oie th State bout ft re] 0 80) ie lani pune! started, but they Giant seem we the business-like to them that Benny can attach to his wallops. HE Dundee-Coogan go war the real thing. It was full of ac- tion from start to finish and in the coal mines from the time he — Jimmy dnswei was tw.lve years old until he was eckett, twenty-two, and began to: fight at weighing only eighty-four the champion, and questions about Joo lish heavyweight ved he was a very good man, strong and willing—~but he es to be on top. He hooks well with his right and left, but he doesn't like to have the other fellow winning. “Could he beat Dempsey?” Wilde shook his head. ‘He may think he can,” he said, “and so may his manager, but I don't beljeve the majorfty of Englishmen think so.” Then Wilde explained that he didn't want to be put down as—"what do you call it?” Knocking?—"Yes, that's it, All the boxers are my pala, Why when Billy Wells, fought Beckett I had to tell both I liked their chances, but would have to bet have asked that the Ame: settle the matter first them to act. eighteen, pounds, In appearance Wilde looks more like jockey than the fighter who has been the sensation of England's rings because of his ability to beat up men bigger and heavier than him~ self. Only five feet two inches high, he hag soundly whipped men as much as six inches tal and he says, from two to five stone heavier, A yn be it understood, is fourteen! om Wilde sat around the dinner tabk for an hour or more, discussed fights and fighters and answered questions about himself and his career fired at Bowling Alley By Chatter tacx Another week hes passed and Glenn Riddell, the young representative of the Metropolitan Bowling Academy, Is still leading the competitors in the Eastern Individual Bowling Championship a merry pace. Glenn has won seven series without a defeat and aside from this he is the leading average man and the high score man as well. Next in line is Alex Dunbar, known to the fans of the United Hi ‘HOOKS 3 SLICES CHICAGO, Nov, 11,—Wilbur H. Brooks of the Mayfield Country Club, Cleveland, will succeed Charles F, Thompson of| Chicago as the President of the Western Golf Association next if the Nom- ination Committee's Focommendal ns, announced last night, carried out at ‘association in ting: ad ous opposition, ‘Thompson, who ie finishing is third term, was compelled to refuse rectors, but Johnson does can League, it seems. a very small part. It 48 understood that to taking he couldn't do much with Coogan. done that and me pounds y: he knew them all his life- “Wo lose nds, don’t | Skokie Country Club, Chicago; f ‘a lot on our pou ‘The latest standing of the American National nn and Mr, Heydler. Thes nie Drummie. 2296 THIRD AVE.|2835 THIRD AVE, | sf Instead, Coogan did plenty to him. | what pale face noemed lit up we?, Why i's about three bob to a). Reuben Ws Newton. Glen View | nontna, Routan, ie, twrnnal4.t| two members of tie. comininalOn are | PrILADELPHIA, Nov. 11.—At_ the | a 1250h St Ham [at Lah, Bron He stole Johnny's own stuff and beat | uously with a smile and his pound. Can't I get some gold bere?” |Grexg, Blue Mound Club, ‘Milwaukee! tat the ‘roa’ Church Howe Voniae ere leading | now put in the position of either hav- olympi A.C. last’ night Joe “Benjam\n | 460 NASSAU ST. |201 W. 125TH eyes 8] ' ; lot of bowl in the Inter-Oity, Move irec- | of ‘alifornia easily defeates lohnnie fame with It, He mate Johnny mise | $780 sPattye other thing. HAS BROUGHT HI8 GOLF CLUBS! sireclrg, John, W. Hughes, Omaha: | 3c Wale iiepnant, Crotona, Ferdbam Areais, | (ng to turn down the Board of Direc.) OF Daten sam founds. Benjamin | Tanase Belling * 7h Ave | What seemed a hundred different f j Huthertord Mosk of Rutherford, Nv de Tue,wi| tors or President Johnson, wi Dramanie, in ait Pounds. | meniemin! 9658 BROADWAY va'tearetce noticeable dropping of his b's and the WITH HIM . Paine, Atlanta; James EB. Nugent, bese ane Non ot his OWD ot Sh Sout leads by wide margins, while he| suggestion of an accent, he might y Kansas City, and Edward B, Tutts, | “0% fdas" uam,cho last erason won the latter accepts the action of with a right-hand punch on. the Jaw ee} @tabbed in lefts to Johnny’ 48] pass for an American anywhere. He| Wilde, unlike most American boxers, | 108 Angeles. A board, pinoy ee and again In th tanh round. the pons : ip i or e a Me * * — . PI ann wig re. col n't 4 e LIN) _ Many |e nine times without a return. | Affects Yankee waya and even aa |takes a lively Interest In other kinds| gw, poinsetta “winner of the wer gieremann sae (Mccmoney to|ing.on Drummic managed to last the | HUM kexgie. 4D Atgtanp 4 Coo mastered some of the American #! of sports, nstance he talked | Cooper Trophy a year ago, will at-| 2 clubs finishing second and third |final two! rounds. — = — ie He frankly admitted ‘hat he has Ph come here for pleasure and for dough, He liked to use the latter word and ‘4.20 frequently. He said that, being in the army for two and a half years, he didn't Ret much chance to get an: jumping jack stunt im at close quarter: ‘outfought him. ‘Coogan also knew a way of spoil- dng Johnny's. favorite trick of bouna- off the ropes. Whenever Johnny utied him, beay Blibly of the recent defeat of the scull- and generally ing champion Barry and attributed it to Barry's age—forty years, He inquired of Jack Donalson, the Eng- lish professional sprinter, who sat near, how.fast he was running now. tempt to secure another leg on this eted prize at Van Cortlandt Park to-day. will meet Hiram Serine in the final round, the event being one of @ number under the direction of the New York Newspaper Golf Club, which will end. its competitive sea: 3, Blue, of the Ag a i the most nutnber of spares and J, Glasser, of Rochelle, has the most number of clea frames, aeading in the New York ‘2 mann’s the money to Cleveland ‘The Inter-City team is cam Bowling "Tourn ked. I'll go round in 90," he snapped right back, “and if there's a bet or two I might Qo better. I always do| better when there's a bet down, s 1 1 pted this, instead of stepping | dough, He fOweht once in that tim a1 to-day, Poinsétte, who is the Ni . baving won four games without | finish of Cleveland, That club's final ack and out of the way of the re-| but gat only a few'auld. Sobe dasa abrien tor ae entre paper Club’ jampion, will have comma, Pastime. Fordham! standing was also effected by the bound, Coogan would walk in and| “They didn't seem fa:think that a @ hundred | concede Serine four strokes in Lamb is the hi pitching of Mays for the Yanks. As Igt a right drive for the body, He| soldier should have anydou CO ey oe ae ; elghteen-hole round. of Na: he kes pimatter of fact, the final standing reached the mark so often that| said. “They gave It all to bom lays” he je A speed gloss vis. > Individual "score with & total of 252, or the White Sox, who yon the pen: Jebnay had to twist his body pecu- | pitals, and I had a hospitable tin . " i prize winners for the month of Ocldher at|Nant, might be changed a Uarly in getting out of range of | my own home,”" iy Tite te pean urate and) JOHNNY MURRAY MAKES icp far tne ten. huge Soares | games in which Mays appeared were ‘8 body punches. Jimmy was referring td his wife ; . i Ms the duck plu coniest’ | (rown ont. Beatty Montieth, who once managed | and two youngsters, one cight and a tow well do you play golf?’ we} HIT ON WESTERN DEBUT. | 27! Ja Rouen, 2230 iy the due pi conta eee “Herrmann would not discnas Dundee, handled Coogan agaipst him Jast night avd gloated in his corner throughout the bout. Towa end he tried to get Johnny's goat by him he, was running half rs old, David James Wilde, nd the other, ag Jimmy puts it, hree and a ‘alf, named Verdun, fter the great battle of the world's the possibility of a new se with | mi win was next in li it and ‘George Bierce taint with 1307.2» 18Tt Gixty.third Sereet Branch aid of the of the DETROIT, Mich., Nov, 11.—Johnny Murray of New York, making his Weet- ern debut before the National Sporting ibied Street Branciy did ile beet towling|the first time. Hniekerbocker Ira Co. ‘Teagun at Louie, Inning to show signs of tiring, Rock Island, Il, that proved all the about a week or ten days. Then he pumped his left into Until dt bore th it for himself in his bout with | with King George's sons; he had bis O'Dowd, the ex-amateur, from share of bayonet drilling and at an-jary to train for his big bout that is e Italian's face | total of S35, against (25 for the \Metropolitans, This bout the limit | other “a Tommy on the carded for Feb. 8 at the much talked it on r " 7 for most of the distance O'Dowd | square.” + aanen|huneernationai Sporting Club, Tourcaaea Seu Wile avant “tice it | Pon EOes, ue Ener is own. Roberts's strength and Vilde talked abou! recent fights} Wilde was accompanied on his tri ° bom bn a, cowning series the White Klewhant | inquiries ft finally turned the tide In his | with the Americans Pal Moore and Joe | here by his wifo, Bonny Williams, hin that’ the Rectory lad ound ate ate | aerated names mth seore, of NG ta, peed Daa oe Club could be bought wor. Roberts showed little knowl. | Lynch, He said that he was never|trainer, and David Hughes, who |body, Galen be 172" rane, tallzing O40 to. "in the | for, thanked everybody on behalf of Wilde dae woo ou hy*the nave margin Ss ‘two time" | there. Charlie Ebbetts for thelr very, fine reception, Thia| Mike O'Dowd Defeats O'Hagan. DETRO! Mich, Nov, i1—-Mike ted Jimmy O' Haga: ol row fa i din nila shades ean et with s wore of BSI to ACD, curtly that the Robins sale. Still another group Outpoints Mason, have been trying to Red Ro KALAMAZOO, Mich., Nov. 11.—John | the feneue” there might @S ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON HAS Before This Pair of Baseball Rulers Leave Yanks May Be By Bozeman Bulger. EMBERS of the National Com- mission are in town attempting to ‘hold a more or less secret :| meeting for the purpose of deciding the questign of paying the Yank play- for finishing in third place. the matter so far as Garry Herrmann and John Heydler are concerned but the movements of Ban are, as usual, veiled by a great air of mystery. Mr. and Mr. Heydler are forced, The American League bas done so through its Board of Di- these directors a part of the Amerl- At any rate, consult his attorneys, first in regard appeal from Justice Wagner's decision, which made per- manent the injunction restraining him from interferitfg with Carl Mays. it is decided not to take an appeal Tees. “Chief.” 5 lo—obey the {Pleased the crowd thoroughly. Dun-| He" never font his composure for &| "To show that Wilde has a noodie |sominaiion for @ fourth year becuse of| Ginter he Chic sck that'ne tus com: | Were ore ee oe ‘and declare dee, as fast as over, fought with alt! second, and all his answers came|for dough and its value he men-| ‘The men nominated for next year are: siee 1) He, Ie oesond in the average, the Yanks entitled to third money. customary speed and energy, but 8, snappily. tioned the cost of exchange of English | President, Wilbur H. Brooks (Cleye- | 2°! = : Board of Directors have bis ¥ 0 L} peered ie Rey i pely mepipgt ed Rnd). Vice Preawent, Aber R. Gate, | Hew comer in the tournament, Already the Board of Directors hve in the National League and have paid second in the American, Having done that, they are now wondering why there wasn't a protest put in over the because he had just heard of it for He admitted, how~ ever, that he would like to see all the baseball people get together and have secona | war.” The Iatter youngster was bor Oh, | 1 Stein's Brosd=, Arcade } ike War ‘Mask, the racehorso, | just about the time this fight was| yes I know all the golfing ‘pros’ at |b here last night, In @ ten-round sree wan Tune within coe wane Ndey Tit beaces as next year promises to be asa rule, Dundee owns War | being waged, the jeontest that went the'limit, dealt out’ a) the Frankia Stve:"firind,e iis "winning team. pugh a great season fOr In the last round Cooxan Wa» NEVER IN DANGER WITH MOORE |.,‘V!lde will bo around New York for|tWo-handed lacing to Mike Dundeo of | % Quis; tournament that ie being rolled ia game, get the Colonels to put a price on But there isn't a chance Thoy also ran against a stump from. x SRY NNT, 0 AGE IN NEW YORK By Thornton Fisher HR. HUGHES: TALIS LITERATURE - THE STOKERS’ BAND GREETED JIMMY ar THE Piep Ban Johnson’s Visit Here Is Veiled in Deep Mystery Here, and mittee making changes that Them for through the eye of a needle is not a shine ball games, ccna JOE FOGLER IS SELECTED Joe Fogler, the veteran rider, prize money ing six-day race at Garden starting Nov. 30, ret about fled to personally conduct race than any his admirers. Fogler is x ot Phila the leading riders here and abroad, an ME. After that the soldier |1es8 outward appearances are mis-/ W!iN hin rikMty a pea wattan | of eMac, wil ot Chatter Betton ot New Wruumick, N, J., will] Ye OF SUNY Oe ON response tol distinguished himself. by winning the ee his efforts to trying to look |Jeading, he js all that has been |). 4 started some jazz music and Wilde bers go against ‘Tummy Murty of Staten Island, aki yc 2 New York race five times. Ho is the E. ise and terrible. " VE Pyrogen ge 1u ble out with Patery a telegram from Johnson, but con-|only American to win a. European. six- | quipo' | , | ¢laimed for him by England's sports-| began to shrug his shoulders and snap | on last Priday night thot Mickey Rumetl, the Jeney City fighter, and fay face. ‘Teamed with. Goulet, ‘the | | Sm CR y oN Re 2 men, Mentally alert, with a goodly) his fingers jn unison as he sat on his jt after the eleventh round « Marry Mentell, « lol ficter of Nemort, R, 1.,|fessed last night he had not seen the | jay race. Teamod with Coullet, the It’s some stunt to keep your in tho fifth Bartheld’s aim-| supply ot wit and unmistakable sense r. | eesieton, hare teen matchal to mat in a twelveround| President of the American League. |éleaned up the gneatest riderson the | head when you're balanced high | Jess tactics seemed about to get! of humor, this 102-pound bit of fight- Do you dance?” bout, toe deciion, at the Rollo Rink of New| Like the ostrich with his head buried |German, and Italian tracks. | Fomler's | im mid-air, H him somewhere, He caught] ing man made a more than favorable] “Not much. Mrs. Wilde doe: part, B. 1. on Fnday night. Russell is bos |in the sand, Ban probably bas a notion|Dest ‘of any rider’ in the past Siteen We know. \ Bemny on Yho side of tho face with] impression on those who attended a| ‘here's no jazz, and, nay, that d (elf emt seg et galas that nobody is “on” to the rest of |yeare. We've been such stants » “lastuft is just work’ any’ow. interest D ating Man The Brooklyn flyer has never been @ wild right swing which drove Leon-| reception tendered in ht Honor ves. Some one wanted to kacw gimmny's| “urs a Ca a Ee caer [oom - ees us walle | him, but the veil was pried open by! out of the money in twelve starts on; £08 four the this side and won the They rican League in order for not familiar with, manager in the Garden race for he Balti 1 demfnd now than they were, Tharsda: it the |has been offered @ fiftecn-round bout against] prying sporting slueths early yester- y hs | f@ushed in pellmell. Benny encour- Beioa aie oop as being a@ very many of them, in his 300 odd, but he City A. C.. Jersey City, will prevascifh gyllre Kid Koster of Now Oriearm, Phil Bornstein. | gq y, prec ay ire oars with Clarke, price—even through the war. j ‘aged him to keep on coming and then| self-satisfied young man—he is remembered one fellow 9 stone 7-133 | weekly show with two star eight-round bantam- of Deeber, was offered $780, but wired | oy aan was loth to discuss and. 1908 Fogler prs down. the. long Always the full measure of | fed tum on a variety of lefts and| twenty-seven and a half, thoroughly pougds, with six inches in reach and) weight matches, In one Patay Johnson ot Tren. | the Crescent City promoter to incresse the . Herrmi : $hd 6th Powter rem, Gown the oe) iC Meelty et atantaed erica of , t6 the faco and every other| Wise and up to snuff; more so than nine in height that he beat on points ton, Jersey's promler 116 pounder, will clash with amount €0 $1,000, whic wonld be acaxtable, | the case of the Yank’s money because | Root the most popular team ‘ever ene i hinge ry one would expect of one who worked in twelve rounds at Pontypridd. of the delicate position in which he tered in the New York contest. There ot bits en pecsmonst Sect } 50 and $2.00 bear the same | selecting him to conduct the race, Benny Value Micha SYRACUSE, Nov. 11. not consider Johnson will pion, the ‘Arena A, A., sensational type and the French ‘Flash’ It that was spectaculn rifle rights and mid-section, rounds scored knockdowns Central New York champion, —— 3 into Michaels’ over Joe Benjamin Ei for finishing | after six hard rounds of fighting. | doing in the way of big sales, but not now. The betting against the Rules Com- will abolish the spitter und the shine bali is now 10 to 1. Getting that camel ing to prying a manager loose from artist who can win AS THE TRACK MANAGER. has been selected by promoters Young and Hanson as track’ manager for the com- Madison Square succeeding John, M. Chapman of the Newark Velo- dronic, ‘Fogler is probably better quall- a six-day other cycle enthusiaat, and his appointment will be pleasing to popular with annual classic is no trick in the game that Fogler is and being assistant years the promoters can be congratulated in the largest crowds that has ever wit- nessed a boxing contest in this part of the country, Benny Valger, the French featherweight champion, scored a de- cisive victory over Young Michaels, the Central New York featherweight cham- In.the feature ten-round bout of the bout was of the won every round. The sensational little Frenchman displayed a brand of boxing He pumped ter- nd In the fifth and seventh the ly Whips John- In the semi-final Frankie Jerome, the Harlem spider, won from Tommy Cleary RED GROSS SHOW POSTVELY TO BE STAED TONIGHT Major Dunseith to Put On Bouts Scheduled Last Friday, When Police Interfered. Major J. Franktin Dunseith, com manding officer of the 1st Field Hoe+ pital, N. Y. G., announced last night that the big boxing carnival which .was originally scheduled to be pre- sented at the armory of the Ist Field Hospital, No, 56 West 66th Street, last Friday evening, will positively be staged to-night for the benefit of the Red Cross. Already armed with an order forcing the Commissioner of Police to show cause to-morrow morning why he should not be restrained from inter- fering with the bouts, Major Dunseith plans to put on the same show as was scheduled‘for last Friday night. The order will be made final to-day, In the main event Paddy Burns, lightweight champion of the 84 Divi- sion overseas, will tackle Busby Gra~ ham of the 2d DfVision, A. E. F. Sev- era! other contests will also be staged, with no exhibitions, every bout being f real battle, No admission fee will be charged, except that several Red Cross nurses who have seen overseas service will request the fans to be- come members of the American Red Cross. ' Burns apd Graham are expected to furnish @ thrilling encounter, in fact, to repeat their sensational battle of the A. H, F. tournament, which was the most spectaeular of the entire series of bouts held in Paris. Billy Roche, who is diligently work~ ing for the success of this show, has @ programme of bouts lined up which will prove to be one of the most re- markable boxing shows ever staged in this city. He will use mostly A. E. F. boxers, the boys who really fight when tiey get in the ring. a Binte Defeats Sullivan. TRENTON. Nov. 11.—Jimmy Blute of Yorkville outpointed Jimmy S of Jersey City in eight fast round! last night. van here even balance of quality and uncompromisin; between ity and po bs that they've lways borne. That's why we've grown from | one tiny shop to seven big ones— | —That and the Par-amownt | of satistaction ee | your meaey back, Cordially, SHIRT. 2 om FER AVE amo ave BT BOXER woul ‘Address “aa 4 ike to Wat sik, JACK FROST will nip you if you don’t look out—better freeze onto this offer. Your suit or overcoat made to your measure at $50. Fine all wool fast dye fabrics. Your pick from over 100 third league, the national Dundee, although wild as could OR LYNCH, will go West and possibly fight at|good things that were said of him prior oe = : ‘That the financial side of the sport with many of his long-range | During the war Wilde says he was| Milwaukee with a local boy named |to the Easterners, appearance here. | part itis Simimmeuntemlanting on’ sitter the is beginning to appeal to a lot of men] patterns, . hes, was sili] going at top|engiged in different occupations, | Vogel on Thanksgiving Day. He may |what the ahifty hard-hitting New York- " © teas, the Man. | possessed of wealth is frequently in- \ Once he was a bo} instructor at| stop off at St, Paul too, and then will jer didn't do to rugged Itallan from |! ‘ompany | dicated these days by efforts to pur- | “AL Roberts didn't get any great | Sandhurst, and there boxed | go on to the Pacific Coast. He will |the Illinois town never was printed in t fumese at the White Enthane {chase the several clubs. It is well wet back to New York early in Janu- |Marquis of Queensberry rules. Murray |alips lat erecing ‘The Manafactuees voles | known that one group is trying to coats at $100 and over, Others have as to what replied very were not for of financiers price on Frazee. a RET RES This price eliminates profiteering, Which is evident in the advertisements of ready-made Suits and Over- Arnhrim P.S. A life of action is nobler than a life of thought. i fi th {| TWO STORES Broadway and Ninth St.; 30 East 42nd St,