The evening world. Newspaper, June 12, 1920, Page 8

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ae fe Beal ins Bey yer ‘Pacific Coast Is Rich in Athleti fornia’s Marvellous Sprinte in Kirksey and Jack Merch Around Athiete—Advance i Training in Army Camps. By Robert Edgren, Copyright, 1990, by Tho Press Publishing Co, (The Now York Byening World). HARLES PADDOCK of Californ him a world beater at both tl and America’ goes to Amsterdam: Kelly and Drow ran, establishing th: " weconds, ‘Two timers caught Paddock in 9 3- 94-5, ‘One timer caught him in which prevented his performance be- ing accepted as a “world's best.” All five of these timers were experi- enced wWatch-bolders and had timed hundreds of races, That one man was & bit slow was a pure accident, With- out @ doubt Paddock should have ‘deen credited with 94-5 seconds, a world mark, and it is quite possible he shaded 98-6. He bas run con- wistently in 94-5 through the early part of the season and on tracks not nearly as fast as the splendid tracks at Bastern colleges. Paddock is a stockily built, power- ful fellow, He runs the sprints in miuch the same style as Meredith uses in longer races, with a powerful, stride, Hi ES: strength eccounts for his speed on poor tracks. ‘Old timers may remember Johnny » Crum, who went Past from Nebraska im 1895 and won both the 100 and thé 220 yard events in the intercollegiate championships, making record time. Paddock js of the same type, a can- . fident, cool man on the mark and a runner who tears up the ground and goes pa gy ad with a tremendous rush tape. » from gun + ‘The Pacific Coast strong . in Jumpers this year. alg and Morne irkeey, of ‘Stamford has been ig the 100-yard sprint im 94-6 and the 200-yard dash in 248-5 seo-| eee rid rec- oO both on the edge of form. Henry Williams of Spokane has done 94-5 and 214-5 seconds—good enough for Olympic ar the jumpers Jack Mereh: mong the jack Merchant of U, C. hats cleared 23 feet 11% Inch this year—the best American per- formance in years. Merchant in the est all around athlete ay. He throws the 16-pound hammer over 165 feet and in said to have reached 186 feet in recent prac- tice, He throws the discus and the Javelin and puts the shot well, and is remarkably fast sprinter. In fact, when Paddock ran his fastest race this year Merchant was only a yard or so behind at the tape, a close sec- ond, Carl Johnson of Michigan js the | only broad jumper who might beat Merchant at that specialty, and Trainer Walter Christie says that Merchant 1s likely to break Peter O'Connor's world's record of 24 feet + 11% inches, and Pat Ryan's hammer record as well, Merchant is ° built | lke George Hackenschmidt, the «reat wrestler, “The amazing advance In amatour Athletic sports this year is largely * Fdue to our athletic war work, Thou- sands of athletes were developed in the army camps, and the Interest atoused by army sports and athletic training has made thousands of col tege boys devote more time to sport Not many years ago a college ath- leto, was looked upon as something Lod loafer and time waster, (hut pivilization has awakened to the need for athletic gports in developing « race of mon, Athletics In the future will be given the some place in edu oation and progress that the Greeks gave to manly sport competition in the ancient days of {ireciun glory. GREATEST ATHLETES THE WORLD EVER SAW. The coming Olympte eo at Amsterdam will be the greatest ever held, Scores of world's records will be broken. No champion ever was so great that a greater might not . uppear in another year, and this looks like the year for amazing perform~- ances. ‘The United States will not have the easy task of former year: ond yet the U. 8. A. team will be powerful that we can expect the same clean sweep in a majority of events, Wustralia, South Africa, Japan, Chin the Philippines and other far away places will send strong jteams to Amsterdam, and there-will be cham- pions among thelr number, Bweden and Finland, both strong in the last Olympic meet, have been developing new men and quietly working to “put something over." They will hive record men in distance running, javelin and discus throwing and shot “putting. But America never made auch a concerted effort to dig out our best material before, and Ame ~jea's team will be invinetble. \ all golleges and ¢lubs training ti) star athletes-and sending them to the | great try-outs in the Far West, Mic @le West and East, the champions to gather for “one tremendous final try- out in New York before final sele tions are made, we will for the livst tine in American history have a te | idl will truly represent ’ country, With the natura vance in athletic class brought four rs of intensive training, this | ‘bo far beyond anything we ever had before. It is to he hopad A. A. U. will lay local pol- ride for a while and as conch PADDOGK STRONG CANDIDATE FOR OLYMPIG TEAM, TIMED 92-5 SECONDS IN “HUNDRED” strongest candidate for the Olympic team that| th ” \¢ Material for in Addition to Cali- rf, Stanford Has Great Jumper and Is the World’s Greatest All in Amateur Athletics Due to ia has rounded into form that makes) he 100-yard and the 220-yard sprints, | It will not be at all surprising it| Paddock breaks the existing world's sprint records this year, Here ts a/ little inside dope on the University of Southern California's youngster's speed: In @ recent college meet between | the U. 6 C. and the U. C, Paddock won both sprint races in record time. | In the 100-yard race two of the five timeps caught him in 92-5 second: a fifth faster than Arthur Duffey, | e present recognized record of 93-6 . : , equalling the record. Murphy, who handled our men in| London,» Robertaon won. Olympic honors at Athens in 1906, was a splendid sprinter, jumper and. all around athlete, and has been a very successful coach since he retired from the amateur ranks, FROM ATHENS TO AMSTERDAM. The original Olympic Games were held at Olympus, in Greece, when lit- tle Greece wus the world’s most ad- vanced nation, first in science, urt, architecture, government, civilization, und even war, For fifteen years the Olympics were held every fourth year. Other Greek cities had ‘their athleuc stadiums and sent weil trained men to the championship meets, An ath- letic champion was a great man in) Greece. No doubt many wonderful eats were performed, but as they nad no stop watches and few records of measurements exist, we can’t com- pare their athletes with ourt ancient Gréek jumped fifty. That was probably in a running hop, step and jump, or triple leap. Still it is several feet beyond any modern Mark, The running records may not have been up to ours, as the Greeks ran on loose, soft ground and not on hard-rolled cinder paths, No doubt their discus and javelin throwers were better. ‘They had wrestling ing champions who must | berculean in build, judging by ancient statues, and who must have been remarkably, skilful, The boxing was done with hands encased in dried rawhide thongs, often studded with iron or bronze, and only the inost skilful boxers could survive tho tournament test, The Romans stopped athletic sporte in Greece about 200 A. D,, because they had conquered Greece and were trying to keep down the Greek war- like spirit, The guines were not held again until 1896, The ancient Athens stadium having been un- earthed, the Greeks rebuilt it and held a renewal of the Olympic Games there, inviting the world to partici- pate every four years. The ancient Olympic meet entries were open only to Greeks of pure Greek blood. We sent a small team to Athens in 1996, made up of New York and Bos- ton clubmen, and ily won the meet. Olympics were held at St. Louis, in Paris, and at Athens agafh jin 1906, I was with the team at \Athens, It way « 1 team in those days, but only a little bit of a team beside what we have to-day, it won, of course, as An ica won at St. Louls and Paris, America won as easily at London and Stockholm, with larger and better teams, Yet ‘these teams, record breaking in their day, were not to be compared with the cdllection of champions we will have after the June tryouts, to select from for the Amsterdam meet. I have seen the greatest interna- tional yacht raves, boat races, college, foot 1 games, horse races, fights, | ® head, and yesterday-we witnessed basketball championships, "sporting another of the get of the new admit- ents of all “inds through the past * 1 f quorter century, But none of past Peay Leinart epg ny pvents ever held the tremendous In- | mstakable fashion that.we are half yoo to Americ: i our next inclined to pronounce him the merican effort in the Olympics at] suv v ye Armsterniom. ‘That. will ve an cvent | Uvecle We lave seen ao far this year, Socth deals! ‘The latter colt was Dimmesdale, an A Olambaln out of the speedy Hester Prynne of other days. He came down that stretch like a champion, swerv- STANDING OF ing once or twice, but finally straight- ening out and winning by much’ fur- THE CLUBS ther than was necessury. He bent NATIONAL LEAGUE, AND BROAD JUMP Famous Horse Is Certainly! Making Good as a Sire, Judg-| “ing by Success of His Get on the Turf. — By Vincent Treanor. Olambala, the sire, is making @ name for himself these days on the turf, His colts and fillies are winning with such regularity that we are be- | ginning to string along with Trainer | ‘Tom Healy: Tom insists that Olam- | bala was one of the best horses he ever trained, and he probably was, but as a sire we had our doubts about Olambala, in fact we didn't believe that his get would amount to much. ‘This season, as far as !t has gone, | has pulled us up with a jerk, The | Olambalas are winning regularly, not by hairline decisions or through the proverbial racing luck, but by unmis- takable lengths, and through the ad- mirable gameness of the noted race horse which produced them, Early this week we saw an Olam- bala, Kirk Levington, run the best that Whitney has shown, Tryster, to | best some good ones too, including the Glen ‘Riddle’s Farm Tottie, among others. When Healey aent Kirk Levington Club, = Wek, PO.) Clube, W. bk. PO] to the r | y 2 post against Whitney's unbeat- roekive +87 18 80 | Sesteg 21 2% 498) on Tryster he did so because My, Wil- Lagrired fe at Eittsbarah 20 2 476) gon Wanted representation in the : ‘ \e f 40| Keene Memorial rather 4 eee 2S “40 | Phitadeiphia..i8 27) 419 penn Memon as renee ey, Win aby idea of winning, The Whit named after his stock farm, a re- markable race and was beaten only a short head by Tryster, “He's the best Wileon has,” was the limmediate comment, and go It seemed until Dimmesdale was trotted out yes- terday, He did more than Kirk Lev- ington could have done and we are glad for Jimmy Rowe's sake. We do not like to expose a prospective cham- pion without actually knowing where- of we speak, but we want to go on record as saying that if Dimmesdale “stands up,” Whitney has no cinch in ey colt, GAMES YESTERDAY, GAMES TO-DAY, St, Louly at New York, Cincinnati Brooklyn, Pittsburgh at Phitadetehia, Chicago at Boston, AMERICAN LEAGUE, Olubs, We LPC. | Clube, the stakes to come. Dimmersdale beat Cleveland ...32 16 687 | Washington, what he met yesterday like @ Colin, Wow York. ..33 17 669 | St Louie, ..t9 27.443 and that's good enough. | Boston 25.19 S68 | Phitadetphia,.t6 33.327 Lgpsige Chicnge ...:.26 22.842 | Detrot ....014 33 .298| Entries for the Saratoga Spectal for the two-year-olds will close with Rac- GAMES YESTERDAY, ore Sarlocker 5 eis omen » | ing Secretary EKarlocker on June ‘THE EVENING Wo Sans oolen MEREHANT 15 CLITTELY To CRACK WORLD'S RECORD. 1S OMe | gret, at Belmont Park to-day, there being PLovaneD Olambala’s Colts and Fillies Winning With Great Regularity ¢. BELMONT SELECTIONS. First Race—Flibbertysibhet, Sugar- mint, Basillers. Second Race—No selections. 4 ‘Third Kace—Cleopatra, Occanna, La Rablee. Fourth Race—Man O' cona, David Harum, Fifth Race — Thrift, ‘The Decision, Super. Sixth Race—Our Flag, Chevalier, Ten Buttons. Ness War, Donna- which is among the most highly prized of*the awards given to the winners of our best races on Eastern courses. ‘Phe race was framed in 1901 to pro- mote the highest type of sportsman- ship. It was won on that occasion by W. €. Whitney's Goldsmith, by Medd- ler, and ever since then it has been productive of the greatest interest and ‘ulmost invariably has produced a | first class contest. Among other win- ners were Irish Lad, Sysonby, Salvi- dere, Colin, Sir Martin, Novelty, Re- Roamer, Campfire, Sun . Briar, Hannibal and Golden Broom, Arrangements have been made for the entertainment of the great throng | the greatest interest in the reappear- ance of Man O' War, the horse of the hour, which will make his second start on the New York tracks this spring in the historic Belmont Stakes at one mile and three furlongs. While he will be opposed by only Donna- cona and David Harum, the race will be well worth while, as it wil} serve to show Man 0° War in action, if nothing else. There is no better bred or finer individual in the three year old ranks than Donnacona, which cost Geo. W. Loft $10,000 as a yearling, and the son of Prince Palatine has won hig last two starts in command- ing style, It 1s no secret that Mr. Sanford, who bred Donnacona, was loath to part with him. ‘The Coaching Club American Oaks will give the public another oppor- tunity to admire the lovely filly Cleo- patra. ‘The Amateur Cup, @ heavy- weight handicap with gentlemen riders in the® saddle, should be a potent attraction for society. Fitesimmons Works Brady Bo Fxldig ‘Fitzsimmons, the Yorkville southpaw with the knockout kick, Is working like a Trojan at Grupp's Gym- nasium for his twelve-round setto with Ralph Brady of Syracuse at the Arm- ory A. A. in Jersey City on Monday night, Fitz, who is conedded by the experts to be the closest contender for Benny Leonard's title, is anxious to be Hard at his best when he appears before his fellow townies for his Yorkville (ad mirers will all turn out to see the favorite in action against the sturdy Syracuse battler. Brady, unlike a good many mitt artists, has no fear of a |man with a reputation, as he demon- strated when he tackled Lew Tendler, Johnny Dundee, Billy DeFoe, Willie Jackson, Rocky ‘Kansas, Benny Valgar and other rformens, Richte Ryan Scores Another K, 0, This is one of the best of the two- No race for juveniles « its sportamantike appe conditions three horse for the $500 nominating fee, but only one can start, Nhe Saratoga Aswoci- ation for the Improvement of the Breed of Horses offers a gold cup of Tue of $1,000 and the monetary of the prize is Jost sight of to the| desire w possess « testimonial pproay 1 es it in 1 ington at Chiei ita Rgston at St w At Detroit, aan, 180°R ARR asada: year-old events of the entire season. | Under the | can be named | LONG BRANOH, June 1€.—Richte Ryan continues winning iby the knock- jout route. Last night he added another victim to his list, it being Jimmy Rey dé of Philadelpiia, whom he knocked ;@ in five rounds of the star event scheduled to go twelve. in another bout billed for twelve rounds Mike MoCai \stopped Eddie Fitagerald in sev here CHARLES Papnoac. 1b So STRONG THET CUAIM HE Can* Do AINE AND FouR. FIFTHS Wh A 7 i 5 BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YOR UNCLE SAM AGAIN LOOKS LIKE OLYMPIC CHAMPION Copyright, 1920, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Byening World.) BD P\SLD - Collins Blanks Tigers in 4th Yank. Victory 7 - DETROIT, June 12.—Rip Collins, the Yankees’ Texas colt, outpitched “Dutch” Leonard, Detroit's southpaw Collins had the Tiger Cats rolling over and playing dead. He limited them to five scattered hits, didn't give a base on balls, and fielded his posi- tion like a veteran, Most of the time the Tigers wére popping up high flies, so much “stuff and speed did the youngster display. The Yankee hitters didn't give him much of a lead till the sixth, but the “two-gun man” had his nerye with him at all times, and it was the veteran Leonard who "cracked" first. Bob Meuse! did his best for h young playmate, Second man to face @ mammoth homerun ing the centre field grandstand, just Ruth hit his sixteenth homer Thurs- day. This was Bob's fourth four-base clout bf the season, and the thirty- fourth for the Yank team. \Un the fifth Bodle led off w:th a triple to right. Lewis was thrown out by Bush, holding Bodle on third. Hannah singled to ntre, bunt by fast sprinting. He used to be a great broken field runner in Tootball, Here came the etar play of the ame. Weck lined a terrific drive t perate run and then by a superb t doubled Hannah at second. back strong in the sixth. doubled to left and Pipp was safe first on hisfintended sacrifice bunt. ny day in Cleveland, and th will leave there next Tuesday in firs' place. Quinn 1s ready for to-da game, Shaw!.ey will be ready on Sun. day, and Moys, Thormahlen and Mog and Tuesday After his fine possible that Collins may get a chi too, With their pitchers all in shape and ‘the hitters still the ball, there {s ground for the con: fidence of the Huggins men, >_ Kerry and Kilkenny to Clash. Kerry and Kilkenny will clash at Col struggles. me to be the best Gaelic football ever yed at the grounds, ‘The Kerrmen P. and B, Asso ciation will stage the game and in addi contest in @ hurling match. There will also a two-mile relay championship — foi Parochial school boys for @ handsom silver loving cup. Standing of the Clubs. Syracuse ae Jeneey City jrounds and Frankie Maxwell and Phil Lundy boxed @ twelve-roupd draw, Baltimore at Reading ‘Akron at ‘Toronte, ot Buttle Leonard im the first inning, he flung | ff where Babe scoring Bodie,’ and then Collins beat out a eft centre, and Veach made a hair- raising bate hand catch after, a, des. rr N, daunted, the Yanks came Nothing dau eet Meuse) slid home in safety on Ruth's chop to Ellison, and @ moment later Pipp. did the same thing ‘on Bodle's rap to Young. Tmne big series of the early summer t 0-¢ Yankees are confident that they ridge will take care of the Monday showing yesterday {t is nee clouting tic Park to-morrow in what is expected famous stamping tion have matched Galway and Limerick NEW INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE i “1990. “We Poe NAUCTERS Witt Reds Beaten Three Games Out New York Team, Losing Las By ‘Charles WORLD CHAMPS, HEY! O, listen to the mocking bird! justice demands that I begin spel Go AWAY UP! Giants Make Champions Look Like World’s Chumps of Four by the Now Fast-Going t Time by Wide Margin. Somerville. AT MORAN and his gang of rowdy: Reds looked 68 per cent. more like WORLD CHUMPS when they finished the seriés with OUR GIANTS— ling GIANTS in capital letters now— yesterday, making it a three to one proposition, to the glory of MéGraw, and in the k 6 to 2 triumph. Leaving town last night these Re- @- nowned Reds looked fit only to be boxed for shipment, Ole Sheruff Sallee couldn't do a thing with the Boy Bandits of Coo- gan's Bluff, Two homers, a triple, three two baggers figured in the shots they took at him. And finally it was the beanpole |Sheruff himself who broke the law and got pinched for it by Ump Har- rison, ef “Of the fleld for you!” called the | aco, and the New York team/Ump to the Sheriff suddenly in the left in triumph for Cleveland last] eighth. night, winners of four straight) “Huh?” demanded the Long One games here. The score was 5 to 0. | stalking in.. “Whaffer?” “Repeatedly putting your hang in your pocket. No” use talking back I'm a fortune teller and I'm saying you are going to leave this field soon —right now!” Of course the supposition#is when a pitcher is caught at this little trick | he is dipping for rosin to smear on| the@ball, Harrison didn’t exactly know perhaps whether the Sheriff | had a book of poetry, a plug o' to- bacco or a brick of ice cream in the) pocket. But he was under no neces- sity of investigating, The act of a \tcher jabbing a claw into the re- work in the box And for that he ceptacle while at broke a rigid rule. went, Messy bunch these Reds, anyway. There was Eddie Rousch, the hot hit- ter, chucked out for laying down in field and kicking up his legs in deri- sion of the mighty Ump, Wingo fined fifty smackers for disorderly behavior at the game and yesterday Neale was throwing such a ine of tainted chat- | ter‘at Harrison from the hut that the| Ump gave him the razoo as well. If they keep the stuff up the Reds'll be traded to the Police League. Didn't look like a good day for us in the beginning. In the third See got a single and stole second, Kell made a beaut of a catch of Sallee's foul off the right box rails, See bolted for third after the catch. Kell's throw was a bad one and when it went through Bancroft See scored, But with a single by Bancroft and a double to the right field wall by King we copped one for ourselves in the fourth. ‘The Reds got their second and last tally in the second, Crane who got into the play after Neale's dismissal, dropped a short fly right in the cen~ tre of a running group composed of Bancroft, Burns and King, See sin- gled to centre, Crane passed second determined to stretch his advance to third. King made a wonder of a throw but Sicking dropped it. Crane scored on Wingo's out, Bancroft to Kelly, And now to speak of Toney. Not merely to tell you he was doing the pitching and doing it darned well, But have a peek at this: Kid Wool- worth Kelly smashed out a two-bag- ger. Smith's bunt.seemed to come as such @ surprise to Heinle Groh and Kopf they stared at like wax men un- 4 t rt e r e it battle slashing our way through, the Moran Marvels for a single to left centre. And that's how we got two more. Mr. King supplied our other run all by his royal self. Sallee had been chased for personal pickpocketing. Red Fisher was for- mally introduced by the Tittle An- nouncer with the Big Megaphone. The |, first thing the big fis got a kick all the way down the field to left centre. King made a gi around the bags and was home to spare when Wingo tried to wifick the ball on him. And to-day the Giants take up the case of the desperate Missourians those Cards that hav our cousins across the spans and tubes like th ere dying rubber plants. Are jiants that have just rapped Reds dizzy going to ) threw at King the been treating | jand Stock pulled CARON ROME AWAY WAT FNAL CANE WITH OBI Brooklyn, Twirlers Hammer All Over Ebbets Field by St. Louis Team. By Richard Freyer. ~\ CILAMMING th» offerings of Pi ers Sherry Smith, Clareneo chell and Miljus all over Mr, bets’s field, the S'Looie Cardi romped off with the final game of] series by a 10 to score, Cardinal fellers sure can hit apple. In Thursday's game nected safely for eleven wallops, wi ths termination of yesterday's showed sixteen bingles for the vi itors, included in which were thi les and one very healthy tri rdinals, by winning yest three victor! inst one loss. the full amount of games played the Dodgers and Branch Rickey’ gregation this season the score sta at three all, Thera is not a semblance of do but that the Missouri players hay good ball club and when they op their series against the Giants afternoon McGraw, Matty Johnny Evers will have some hi thinking te do in order to stop Cardinals’ hitting and winning st Smith started onthe mound for t Dodgers and was opposed by Go win, The latter was in several tig] holes but clever fielding by Horn him -out. Sher allowed nine hits, four runs and one batsman before he was derric! in the sixth stanza. Mitchell th jentered the twirler’s box and he | was sent to the showers in the enth after three of the first four to face him produced safe hits, Jus then assured the pitching b den and held his opponents safs q til the last inning, when the S'Lo| heavy artillery connected with slants for three hits and two run Konetehy occupied his first ; sition for the first time ance ieee rendered hors de combat by F the former Philly shortstop. ‘T@iay affect Kone; off did not seem to playing, as he handled ten chai without a slipup. He was cbi with three times at bat and made 9 hit, a three-bagger to the tem stands in feft field. is The fans want to know what's wre with Olson, but we dunno. Ivy s to have gone stale. He has not b playing up to his usual standard di ing the past three or four da the pep which he has alway be noted for has been lacking. ‘The fi It was just after! right alon; |from the gave Olson the well-known razz du ing the closing innings of yesterda fray, but the Dodger shortstop wi trying. A few kind wo) rowd will do more tows nging Olson around than jeerg Tommie Mullen, considered the b t sacker in semi-professional bas attended the game and scored Tommie caught a foul ball s'g bat. Incideytally he retu . Mullen plfys with the New York team and has been giv the once over by several big leagd scou ' OUR OWN STOCK EXCHANGE NOTE. the feature, was quoted Hornsby, let|the opening at $125,000, but later tthose Mississippi catfish snap up any-| lied 00 points to a new high le thing along the shores of the Hudson?| A trader named McGraw wag said !be responsfble for the boost. G'wan! Jackson and Dundee Meet Agai Monday Night at Boston Contest, Scheduled For 12 Rounds to a Decision, Ex- pects a $20,000 Gate. By John Pollock. That top-notchers will always draw a big house, especially when | they are boxing for a decision, is again shown in the coming bout be- tween Willie Jackson of this city and Johnny Dundee, the fast Italian light weight, who are to fight a twelve: round verdict at biz Mechanics Building at Boston on Monday Roy Green. staging the contest, declared to-day, In a letter to the writer, that the ad- vance sale is far bigger than he had looked for and that he expects thi receipts to go over $20,000, Kid M Partland of this clty will referee the go for a the nicht who contest. Jackson is“to refeive a guarantee of $5,000. Mel Coogan, the fuse Brooklyn lightweight, and Ritchie Mitchell, the crack Milwaukee light- weight, bavé just heun eigmed up to meet in a twelre-round tattle at Mike Stambangh’s club at Youngmown, 0,, on June 38, This ought to be an. intererting eorep, “aa both mea are ever boxers ard. Aggrennive, K, 0, Joe Daly the welterweight of Brooktyn ts another flanter who bas gone and left his mi er, Eddie Pollock and placed himself in hands of Jack Doherty of Brooklyn. Pollock worked hard 10 bring Daly to the front but de tite this Daly bas gone and done the samo thing numerous ‘ther bettlers have done, by fay- ing bis manag Jobn Jennings declared to-day that he will not stago a boxing show at his Armory A. A. ot Jermy City on Monday evening, July 5, but will stago Mt tho following night. Jenoings had such ‘© small crowd on Memorial Day that he has do. clded to dodge July 5, as be figures half of the fight fans will still be in the country on qhat day. ‘Tommy Smith, who has been appointed match. maker and official referee of the White Plains (N. ¥.) A. C. has matched Bert Spencer o Brooklyn to meet Bobby Lyons of the Bronx in the star bout and Willie Nelson of Newark to meet Red Moproe of Youkers in the seml-tinal at the club's nekt boxing show on Monday night Both bouts will be for ten rounds A bout bas been arranged between Frank Car bone, the rugued Itelian middleweight of Throok Iv, amd George Chip, the former mildieweigh: Cn». BC. Club, & Pe. |til too late to do anything, Smith hala #4 4% was safe and so was Kell on third, Toronto i Toney up. Only a three-bagger far ae Dea) Eeremee.. 18 into centre—that's all! Two runs. & i men SS gR OF: Won his own game then and there joeweg CA ia Teckaner, but by way of rubbing it in up comes Butalos Tadiae St 8th 3 Kell in the seventh and brings it into Aron S"Feroato, 3. the left bleaghers, Smith lashed a Gamen To-Day. two-bagger over third. Toney-—good ‘Toney—bunted Smith along to Bax No, 3. Georgie Burns banged th» first one out of Sallee’s fipper for a j atepion of New Castle, Pa, They vill away tandhes in a telre-round bout ai Youngstows, ©.. ay next Monday night, Catvone oughi io fake Chip extend bimself in order (o beat him es he cap (ake punsfaneot and iy aggromive, i | George Papin, the French Mehbwoight pion, who fights Joo ‘Tinlitz, the Philadey | fighter, in one of the four eight-round - bouf | | Phinney Boyle, the Now ngland be staged by Battling Mevinsky in Philade} on Wednewday night, was matched to-day to Reheweletst Boston on June 19, Papin 4) twelre rounds to receive £1,000, Mike O'Dowd, the former middlewelght pion, lisa jum been signed up to fight Battli Ortega, the California fighter, for ten during @ fig convention at Portland, Ore., on ‘git June 4. , ‘This go will follow 1 ‘Leonyd-Johnny Sheppard fight which is uled to be staged there on June 22, ae De cy Whips Stmier tn Spirital Battle, Mickey Donley, the clever Newa lightweight, credited with victorge ov stars and Joe over Chics ‘a. spirited such as Joe Dunder winner ton in Benjamin, John! Welling, ‘wae Simler of Bera! twelve-round bo! at the Bayonne A. A, last. ngit Donley, who. had fought @° he twelye-round bout at Providence « Wednesday night, was rather etift the earlier rounds, Simler for. abo rounds gave Donley tit. for. t« arting with ‘the eighth’ Donley. l Wp and score: Simler, who round ‘bout ‘with Champion Leone on his record. Donley finished fre and strong and had Simler hleed!! from the mouth and from a cut ov the right eye at the close, For no) Friday night's card there’ will be tween Vic Moran of New Ori double twelve-round — wind-@ Shamus O'Brien and Johnny of Bayonne and Frank'> Staten Island. jeming ON MONDAY JAMAICA LONG ISLAND The $6,000 | NDI as AND 4 OTHER SUPERB CO! BEGINNING 24 SE Penn, 0 TAL nd Teh Brooklyn 9 10. BO to “1 8otn Loltey Laadion Bi! AVe., inter BOWLING AND BU AGADEMY, B'w AM! Lat THUM

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