The evening world. Newspaper, February 17, 1921, Page 16

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ee vex Nee eg ee yee oe, mango seestintnise a. arias be a ates Se about time for e9me one to rise up and tell our jegiplators to “iay off” the sport world and its pleas- Dre giving activities, Up in Albany! are considering the mom mtous | of armiooks, toe holds, head | Weck and the scissom in connection the night riding elim- entirely. ‘And it is wp to the) Welfare Committees. Can eat it? You'd think that our | n ‘would find something else | to while.away their valu- Tegistation which would of. @ome genuine interest to constituents, eomething which ‘etir up our waning civic pride. thet would be too much io ex- ads mm John F. McCourt is the of this etimuiating ordinance. mays his object is todo away with bratality of the six-day bicycle Be would make it-undawful for coupled as they are these te ride more than twelve hours | | twenty-four. ‘Nhe City Father | have heelth inmpectors and po- amigned to the races, the mnt tho use of drugs 0: ders and the latter to sq pers keep within the ri Again we ask, con you ew é day race, as at prevent icled, ig anything but a exhibition, as Mr. Mc- d easily find out by asking gayepey who ever competed in one. Tawthed, it is o great source of amuse- ‘meept to thousands of the pablic and (more thun a joy ride on two for the riders. competitors Mve more regu- during the Week of a race than protably do all the rest of the They are {ed on the best of which iom't always the case ‘them. Instead of being physi- Bally weakened by the so-called! - ped pine out of every ten bikers on it. ‘Wonder if Mr. MoCourt ever saw Particularly on the wind-up If not the spectacle would’ Bim, He would bebold the collection of athletes he gazed at, tearing around the as i they were racing in quar- ter-mile sprints. Dxbausted? Nout a All hands are of course glad it is over, eo that they can hr- to Boston to start in another rw » folowing Monday night and the: for the next one. inp gat ecen old Fioyd MbFarland, prime, dismount after winning @ dozen different week-long ag a. then prepare to ime during the rest of Bracaitty? Tt is a joke, bgt OWEVER, it seems as if sports must be picked on, and if so, why confine the picking to Se and six-day bike racing. ‘Mr. McCourt ought tdl go after base- _ ball and place a limit of seven in- mings on each gume on the ground What the excessive base running and the chasing of batted balls are too x _ Butt in on the Jockey Club and have | it cut out all 1 lonmiaivtance racing | ¥ tire Pp. reagons; he might tivo ut a ate to the annual walk City Hall to Coney Islami to youth and vigor and the ‘that are held from time to in New York each year, The! rizome trips around a 36-hole _ might engage his atten- pete bike race is more or of a public institution, Mr. Mc- "@ opinion to the contrary, not- WALLY SCHANG OP Whe L EGISLATING OUR SPORTS NOW COMES A PROPOSED CRONANCE TO FORCE 6 Dre Bike RIDERS TO KNOCK OFF WORK AT {1 PM. WITH MOTHING TO DO TIL Copyright, 1931, by the Press Publiwhing Oo. THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1921. By Thornton Fisher (The New York Bvening World.) war ME HAVE ‘ONE ~ MORE LOOK AT THE Book ~ ye jaylvanin, 19; ‘exhausting on the players. He might! SOK THENLA BE MAKING MISDEMEANOR FOR. ‘BARE "RUTH TO knock. a Week Penn Five Win ‘Win Most Exciting, Game by Score of 19 to 18. N one of the most exciting basket- ball games staged in this city in the past ten years the quintet representing Columbia University were defeated by the Univeralty of Pennsylvania Five in an intercol- legiate league game staged at the Morningside Heights court. The local boys put up @ hard mame and white defeated, were far from being dis- graced. The final score was Ponn- ‘olumbia, 18. Due to the fact the contest would send Columbia into the Jend in the in- teroollegiate race, providing a victory was registered for the Heights stu- dents, a capacity crowd attended the game. The first hat ended by Penn j leading 8 to 3, hut the New York rooters, knowing the rallying powers of the quintet, "Sid not by any means lose heart. When the whistle blew for the final period and the Columbia voys staged the expected rally th acene reminded one of e Harvard-Yale football match. The settimak was a costly one for Columbia. When the team scored six points and were heading the Penn- syivania quintet 9 to 8 it cartain the Blue and White aggresa- tion could not be stopped. The points were made as the result of two clean basket shots by Johnson and one from the side of the court ty Watson. Last Minute Basketball Play Defeats Columbia TAH. NEXE Day Here MUST BE SOME OTHER VIOLATIONS We FORGOT TO CHARGE Sou Mur O14 es, Nene $ eet 1S THEYRE NEVER. SO WE LL TREATED AS WHE THENRE RACING A short time Jater the Penn boys | were awarded a foul shot and Capt. MeNichol, who made nine successful attempts from the penalty Hine out of eleven free tries, sent the ball into the net and evened the score, Columbia again went into the lead when John- son made a goal from foul. The vantage did not last long, however, as McNichol sent Pennsylvania ahead by making good on a double foul. Johnson again was given a free shot at the basket and sent the ball in, When Reilly and Tynan of the focal quintet sent two into the net from the floor it gave Columbia a 16 to 12 lead and what appeared like a winning one. lead was short- lived, however, as McNichol of the Visiting five shot a foul and Graves sent in a brace of goals from the floor, giving Penn the lead by one point. The match was once again! evened up when Johnson made a suc- ceasful shot from the foul iine. ‘With but two minutes to play Penn | called time and when the contest was resumed, after about a minute had gone by, Huntsinger, a substi- tute who had taken Mitler’s place at right forwant for Penn, ahot a field goal from the ceutre of the floor for the winning point. The accurate shooting of fouls by Capt. McNichol decided the !saue for Pennsylvania. As stated before, be made good on nine out of eleven chances, while Johnson of the Colum- bia team only sent six out of twelve free tries into the basket. Pennsylvania with three dames won and one lost leads tn the race for the championship. Dartmnouth ‘rails with four wins and two defeats while Cornell with three victories and a tke amount of losses is third. Co- lumbia and Princeton are tied for fourth and fifth place, and Yale is in last position, + The Original Celtics will their championship titie in two pes Sunday when they cross nets against Perth Amboy at Central Opera House in the afternoon and meet the strong Naticoke Five on thé Tlst Regiment Armory courts in the evening, The latter team won the championship of the Penn State League last year, de- feating Scranton, in the world series three out of four games. They have | been playing sensutional basketball | this season, and are expected to give | the Celtics a bard rub, The Milo A, & 8. Club defeated the Holy Name Independents on P, 8. 51 courte by 23 to 13. ‘The winuers have open dates for amateur teams, Ad- dress Jack Kushner, No. 778 Trinity Avenue, City, New York Rovers of the 92d Street Young Men's Hebrew Association ding. It may not be sport in sense, but it provides he ever witnessed the Garden while event which necessitates as it © presence of platoons of po- 4o keep within regulatory bounds | Stowds that wish to get in to see of oe, email interest to New ee Denese. Bg gs its of racing it wo: a very uninteresting affair. been have @ few open dates for home teams The Rovers have won seven- teen and Jost four games this season yed such teains as Trin- ty Lyceum, Aseumption Caseys, Col- |ilege Settiement and Metro Five. Ad- jdress J. Klearpner, 92d Street and | Lexington Avenue. St. Paul's Five, recognized 130- poun,! champions of Hudson County, ‘have open dates for loca! teams of gimila ‘weight. The Five are unde- leated this season, coming out on nn aatee ‘twenty contests, Address E. Brown, 37 Van Nostrand Avenue, Jersey City. The Marietta College basketball five of Ohio left last night on ite Eastern invasion, The quintette hes games scheduled with Navy, George: | With the Basketball Players resulted in a victory for the Knioker- bocker Big Five over Unity Council by 51 to 20. ‘The contest was played at Manhattan Casino and was fea. tured by the all around playing of "Swede" Grimstead for the winners. The Unitys played a close game in the first baif, but were swanyped in the closing period. The Manhattan Laasies, one of the loading female teams of Greater New York, kept up its vod record by sending the St. Monica Girls down to defeat by 6 to 5. ‘Lamy Comes | Backand Is Tied With M’Gowan (Special to ‘The Evening World.) SARANAC LAKE, N. Y., Feb. 17. —The Saranac Lake gpeedster, Hd- mund Lamy, finished in a tle with Everett McGowan of St. Paul at the end of the second day of their match races. McGowan won the 220-yard | dash and the one-mile Tuesday, Lamy gesting the three-quarters. The Sar- anac man reversed the decision yes- terday when he beat the St. Paul flyer in the quarter-mile dash and the three-eighths of a iile sprint, McGowan having to content himself with winning the half Lamy set the pace in the 440-yvard | dash all the way, beating the St. Paul jhe to the wire by about ten yards, MoGowan falling as they neared the finish, Ih the half-mile Lamy again} wet the pace. As they entered the buckstretch for the last time around MbGowan caught Lamy sleeping, sprinting past him and going. on to viotory. It was decided by the officials, with the sanction of the two skaters, thal the event which was to have been skated as a twd-mile race should be shortened into a three-elghths of a mile, as the condition of the track Was such that it would have been impossible for them tq have gone the longer distance. Lamy took the lead with the crack of the gun. ‘The pace was siow until on the last turn MeGowan shot sud- denly forward, eating up Lamy’s ad- vantage inch by inch, The Saranac boy, réalizing the danger, gathered himself together for the final dash to the wire to win by about four yards, The Franklin County amateur championships, which were included in the programme, resulted in a tie for first pluce between three men— McWhorter and Buendgen of Ohi- cago and Ai Leitch of Lake Placid. The 230-yard dagh went to Me- Whorter, William Steinmetz of Chi- ¢ago was second and Leitch third. The next event, the haif-mile, was won by Fred Buendgen, with Leslie Boyd of the Tremont Rink Club sec- ond and Young Julian Steinmetz of Chicago thind. Close Matches Mark Progress |° of Women’s Golf Champion- Ship at Palm Beach, Lianes BEACH, Fla, Feb, 11,.—Close matches. marked the progress of th women's golf championship tourna: ment here. Mrs. Ernest Byfield, whi wou the medal round, was pushed to the limit by Mrs. A." Rossin of New York and won only after nineteen holes of play, Miss Louine Branch of Rich- mond, who is practically a newcomer to tournament play chia being her sec- ond, gave Miss Rosenthal a worthy “tattle, even tho lont Band 2, Mra Quentin Puitner and Mrs, L. Q. White also had an interest t for an & on fye victims of this classy golf wer A sd of Poughkee; ad Rob rt Reilly of Rochester: Acceptances have heen received from the four men recently appointed extra memoers of the United States Golf As- sociation Kxecutive Committee. meurbers indude Roger D. San Francloco, President ‘ot Association: Joba R. Lemist President of the Trans-Mis- yoif, Association; Wilbur H. land, President gf the and A. L. Walker fr, of New York. ‘esident of the Intereol- legiate Golf Association. ‘This is in seco of the constr with Article V. nded to read in} Hi | an Executive Com: | metas consisting of tho five officers of ton ind eight others, thell Dp tmeunberehio teprenent thiness ust RECENTLY IT WAS PROPOSED AT ALBANY TO LEGISLATE AGAINST OTHER HOLDS in WRESTLING BESIDES THE HEADLOSK fiom ton sco~ ‘The Speaker of the Hovee will almost as much es the Speaker of politics is picking up. Heretofore has been more or less on the raz: Senators never made very much, ‘em hope. With Coolidge getting Collins, it looks like merit will soon be rewarded. oe A Congressman gets $7,500 a year and his fare part ‘That's on a Par with a bail playing guy, except when a ball gamer gets crippied he's still @ ball gamer so far as the pay roll goes. But when a Congresser sustains some fractured election returns he'e a lame duck for at least two years. And he gets no pay except for indorsing the jatest and best patent medicines. . ‘Whe bali and the bull tossers aren't 0 different. their jobs on account of their records, but a Congresser often makes only one error and finds himself released. One error never cost 1 bal gamer his job unless he mistook iodine for coffee and forgot the anti- dote. ‘There are.dmany natty lessons we con learn from Congress, but beware of some of their tricis. One custom that's foliowed in Wash- ington almost cost two ball gamers their posish. Phitty-St. Louis series, when the boys were fighting at red-hot heat for posseasion of seventh place. A St. out toward lefi-centre. fuy that played centre. back—and then they pulled off ‘The Philly two of ‘am agreed to pair and Si. Loo copped the dlosely con! game by a margin of 13 runs! any more. mathematics, LIVE WIRES By Neat R. O'Hara. Comreteet, 1981, by The Prams Publidiing Oo, (rhe New York Mrewing Worth) One was going to catch it and the other hung EXxeept it took a Federal Grand Jury and Cushing's Manual | 10 prove the boys were innocent and too much fed up on Congressional | soon be grabbing $15,000 a year, or the Cleveland club, It proves that any kind of playing tn Washington % Gillett’s Congressmen or Griff's but the new Administration ives almost the same dough as Hddie ‘They woth hold oe Tt was in the great looey siugger pushed a long fly left-fielder chased tt and so did the ome parliamentary procedure. ‘The | ted bak | That's the whole story—tMere tsm’t Jack Sharkey, the iecal bantam- weight, is at present at Hot Springs, where he expects to get himself in shape for important fights within the next few months. Sharkey has made @ wise move in getting away from Broadway and engaging in the right ‘kind of training. He has bepn work- | ing out with Johnny Dundee, who is also at the Springs. His manager Joe Wagner, has matched him for two fights. He meets Bobby Hughes of Fort Worth, Tex,, at Hot Springs on March 4, and Pal Moore for eight rounds at Billy Haaok’s club at Mem-| phis, Tenn, on March 11. After these two bouts Sharkey will return ¢o New York, A match was mrranged? to-day betwen Johnny Gummers, the A. BH. ¥. welterweight chaspion and’ Jack MeWariend, the local fighter. ‘They will have out in & fifteen-round bout at tho Wood: | haven Sporting Club of Brooklyn on the night of eb, 32, They ought te put vp am interesting foray, as Ueey aro gene willing Datiters and, be widee, are scureenive, For the nat boxing show of the Freeport (1. 1) Sporting Club, on Monday night, Franke Carpen- wr will take oo Harry Lewis for twelve rounds Mlaroks Abbots ya. Tddle Canovan for elght rounds, Al Tetcball r% ‘"Ted oldman for six roonde, and foldiec Jones m Harry Kally for six rounds Moy Moore and Dansy Kremar are going in mee tn © return battle of eight roundy at the Olympia A. A. of Philadelphia on Feb, 28. Moore was Giequaiitied by Referee Slim frenven in the third round of thelr bout at (be same club for supposed fouling tactics on Monday night. The fight fans af Villy wore so enraged over Brennan's ruling In disqualifying Moore that uney domanded of the chw ffletals to put the Tada on again, which | Matchmaker ‘Taylor bas done. Jomnny Summers of’ Brooklm, che A FF, Higheweiut champion, and Iriah Patey Cline, the Harlem Vighoweight, Reve Deen matched to mest to ea elgtt-vand bout at the Obmpis A a of Tal. adelphia od next Monday night. ‘This go will be ing encounter, and exe the thirteenth Mrs, ite, although she 3 and 1, made a strong show- ing against hor “opponent, ORMOND BEACH, Fie, Feb. 17.— Some fancy shooting was done in the first match round of the Ormond Beach golf championship. N. B. Perkins of Williamsburg, Ky., made an cagie on town, Loyola College of Baltimore, Juniata and Cornell. jicnlekaxbockare will cross nete with Perth next the par four second hole when he shot it in two, He carried {he aren #26 Rahat t's the Ww. the tight ho hale, « the i Je ‘made ‘un Me. { Aifferent active clubs in the aaociation, hey all be olected by ballot at the “annual meeting of the association each year and chal) hold omeo tor one year and until their successors are cho- sen. {on is now more ‘The, representat wide: eprend Cran at any paariogs eee Ik ihe organization's history, ax other cam- mitteemen are identified ingland, Pennaylvania and well as th New South, | we. Premio the Chicago and New Yo ar mene wees, Rene Ua Gabe oe teed copnerenbing. th the ye Fon. | the smnl-final to the Abe Goldstein-Kid Williams eight-round mate aitrection. John Welamantel bas ranged ancther sttree- tive card af bouts for the next boxing show of tho Ridgewood Grove Spertizg Crab of Teookiye on Sacardey night. ‘There will be three ton-round bouts betwen “the following tigbiers: Eddie Gora: aiing PRitbin ya, Joe Webbe: lar fighter of Brooktye, Imunediaiey efter (he mosttiona! conten. i Madina 5 ty Inches anil ia banked 10 meet Jimmy Kelle snother oon@ Star Sporting Chub on Wednesday night. Im the thor (walve-round comes Vie Melauphlio of Can- sca wilt meet Jack ‘Tomeshek. the former amatour taiddlowelght. Gm the smt-finat Harry Tendon who has str straight Imookoute to kis oredit, will meet Willie Connor’ who has not lost & decision since entering the profmtousl reoks, Sosmmm O'irien, Jack Jones's aggresive Irth ste malate, will be seen tn action again to-night, Me tacos Young Yddy of Greenwich at. Yonimen | omer the ffteon-romud moate. In the semi-final, Al Norton, = mos promising welterweight who ts {sot Goveloping tuto mm of the leaders of his clase, will box Young Solty, Red Allen of Brooklyn to-dey wind wp bis taain- ing for hie twetvo-round bout with Louts Bogssh, | the crack Bridgeport |. which will featur the all-ter card st the Olympte Club of Pstorscn to-morrow nigh. If Allen mabe & good showing | Me will be matched to box Al Norton at Paterson. | gua Jobany Kepex manager of Witte Spencer, who boxes Sammy Nabie in the @ar erent of fittemn | the former Red Sox star ENS BASEBALL PLAYERS’ HOLD-OUT SEASON \Star Catcher Secured From Red Sox by Yanks Refuses to Sign Contract en | Crack "Backstop Gives Novel Reason for Not Accepting Terms | Offered Him, Saying It Costs More to Live in New York Than in His Home Town and Consequently He Must Have | Increase Over Last Year's Salary. | NUbody ever starts living unt they | come to New York ‘ | By Alex Sullivan. ALLY SCHANG has let the! M cat out of the bag. The} Vernon Spencer, the likely looking real reason for his not) outflelder that came to the Giants last year, when Benny Kauff was sent to Toronto, has signed his contrast, He started off like a demon hitter, bud toward the end of the geason she bad a dad slump. going with the vanguard of Yanks to Hot Springs, Ark., as he was sup- posed to do, has just come to light. Wally says that he is a holdout, He doesnt like the contract that the owners of the New York American Josh Devore, the former Giant oute fel now manager of the Grand | Rapids team, writes that the Giants club have sent him to his home {9/ have procured a wonder Lanow Philadelphia. Richbourg, the chap who played | base for him jast season, batting over “It takes more money to live in = a 400 and fielding like a wizard ow York than in Philadelphia.” say Conse- | quently I've got to get more salary than offered me.” ‘Wally must have been around to some of the lobster pataces where they charge $1.50 ¢o sit down amd no’ telling haw much to get up. More- over, he must have been breezing about pricing the rent of apartments hereabouts since he learned that he had been traded. | Outfielder Billy Lamar hat settee signed contract to President Ebbets of the Dodgers. ‘The White Sox ee thetr“seo—, ond Babe Ruth” in ian. as Everett Yaryen (what a name!), who cauzht for Wichita, making forty-two home runs and leading the Western League, has sent in his signed contract, Manager Huggins intends to- stay : ‘i hete until Feb. 25, when he wil head Schang's stand against the Yank| for the camp at Shreveport, La. In owners officially opens the holdout the meantime rumors are” floating season for baseball players. From | around thick and fast to tho effect that the little manager is figuring om now until the regular season opens | aking one or two big trades, early in April you can look to see al- most daily reports of this or that player holding out. Many of them will go so far as to eay that they'll) never elip on a pair of spiked shoes again because thetr demands have not been met, but.they’ll all be doing business at the old stand when the umpires let loose their old familiar ery, "Play ball!" aes Manager Huggine O& the Yanks is not worried about the failure of Wally to sign. He'll probably jump to Philly | in the next few days to straighten | out matters with the balky catcher. | ‘The Yanks, when they consum- mated the big trade with the Red Sox some time ago, assumed the con- | tract that ho ‘Wad ‘with the Boston | Po hore beige cares ee Borraee seeing the players of clubs n eee Nd aka oe American Tae riding to and Last year Gchany was a real dyed-|from the parks in buses, as in the in-the-wool hold-ow. Ho said he'd| closing day of the two days’ meeting Connie Mack of the dithietios tthe | first big league owner to have his en- |tire team signed up for the season. Will it be a case of “Bizst to eign. dast in line?” Dixie Walker, we was tried-as = pitcher by both the Cabs and Indians End found wanting, ut who was a sensation in the Southern League, where he won twenty-six games and lost eleven with a poor club, will be given another chance by Manager Rickey of the Cards, / If Harvert and Yale break even tn their two games booked for this spring, the third game will be played ‘here, presumably at the Polo Grounds. not until he was given what he|of that league the magnates voted weit 00.” Lie gidut do any |agaibet the suggestion to revive the training with ihe club, but during the | old custom. ‘Toe Pirates have signed Jack Tol- Ttiegeworth, a young pficher from the Georgia-Alstama League, fret, week of the seaso® he and Presi- dent Frazet had a conference, after which he signed a two-yeur contract at & salary Said toppe $10,000 ut ye reagon for not signing now sets a precedent—that it costs} The Akron club owners declare they more to live in New York than in| are determined to stick in the [nter~ Philadelphia. ‘Tp no denying| national League and won't sell their that, but, as Milk i Meo says, framotiine 49 gnybory, Twenty-Seven New York Teams To Bowl in Title Tournament eee contanta,_ rec ‘Championship Alley Matches! te ges both yemmeseanne of hat mond Will Be ‘Held in Buffalo - — —— NON-ACOHOTAG Next Month. There are twenty-seven teams go- ing to Buffalo from Greater New York to bowl in the American Bowl- ing Congress tournament in March. ‘The dates on which the teams are to bow] follow: Mareh 4, Bronx Centra! Srench Vermouth March J0, Hudson Blues, Spartan No ND now in the 1, University No. 1, Fidelia, Westing- FRENCH flavor house Manufacturing Company, Met- also! Just as good asthat ropolitan, Recreation Selects, Inter- other populas preserver of cy, Spartan No. 2, University No. 2, | “private stocks Mobewk, Saginaw, Standard Light Mouguin’s non-alcoholic and Knights of Columbus; March 12, Italian — Vermouth—but made for those who like the French flavor ‘better, It tastes just like the old time stuff. American Locomotive, Otis Elevator Co.; March 14, Orpheum, Broadway, Grand Central and Broadway Ar- cade; March 21, Prudential Insurance March %, Cortelyou; March 24, Hudson Blacks, No dates fave been awarded to the Masonic aod Newark Eagles as yet His Excottency, Mowe quin’s Ginger Ale, hay “that Brenchy taste’ Tounda at the Pioneer Sporting Cub Saturday imbt, says that if ble bantam te victor be expects {0 seoure ® match for bim in the Garden wita one | f the headiiners. | Benny Comer, eax side bantamwdeht. bas ben matched (0 weet Ray Moore in a fifteen round | | contest at ihe Pioneer Club on Wasbiugton’s Binh: | day afermcon, A victory over Moore means that | plan, sa Fitdle Mead, manager of Lnch. has Coster 1s succesful in the Moore match Je will Billy Muwghs, the ramed Staion Ietand fzhter, 9 booked up for tree fgbts by his manager, Eddie Harvey, Feb. 31 Murphy meets Sammy Waits ai | of Catiforia for te rounds a the Carien. and | on Feb, 28 be will swap punches with Bobby Jonepis of Howton a: New Haven, Camm | Willie Rywn, the agaremive 14$-pound fetter of New Brunewick, N. J, who hes fought Jouis Bogasa, Vincent Coffey. Champion Jack Britton | and olher good beitlon, was waned up to-day by John Welamantel (0 meet Soldier Lamon, the Brookive fighter, ins len-eovnd bout’ at the Tide | wood Grove Sporting gi of Brovkim for tem round» om Saturday evening, Feb, 26. ‘Abe Gottetstn the omeational Joral fexthey- weight, and Georgie Thompson, who has dane some great Qghting in California and bas won a fow fights since ho came era wore booked up to-day te tmeet tn the somul-final of ten rounds to the fit. | teen-round’ go betwoon Dutch Fyandt and Harvey | Bright st tae opening boxing show of the Pla: | mush Sporting Club of Brooiiyn om Match Andy O'Noyle of Harlem, who is fat developing foto & promising woiterweisist, av Haring won many bowls at he Mariom clubs the last etx monuna, ae iB Whe Mar bout of After copads at, Bruny wit oppmee Joe Touch, tantaumwalctt chasn- | teal promised Jimmy Marsh. Coster’s manager, tha: it | Hartford, Coon; Web, 25 he tackios Fddie James | stipe. , fives are te mis it up rb, and is good for what aries ALES you, Smoke our Cigares Boniface Dieouquity Restaurant & Wine Co, 132 Prince St., N. Y. tn order to put on the fini American’ Bowling Congress [oc "are “considered our of mbes teary in rooklyn. wide the ‘are known froin Maine | tof Calls “called for 818 FM. ual coutsoted’ uod'r the suis of te New Borwling “Amsoriatton of the American Row!ing fon ‘Eres, which is to open af the Rational Recreation Ailers. Brooke, Ane A look, Uke a eeord | reaier in, ou ring: 981% |with ine 3 YB Gemmiien aned Joma J. Bits ie Mart Lindsey 19 to represent te Hergman By aulers in the Basteen tndtriduat, bowing ‘aucun ie of ine opinion that be Wad na action! ‘hago of copping fica prise. Miltle Cordes of the prnea Central alleys, Brook. | Tom, strata to hare “hfsd-time ‘enpin iar rrp resent him in Ceioblonisioe. welte. arate pn Yon various alleys In Greater New York Defeats Faulkner at Bitjards, FB. Raynolds, present holder of the title, defested W. J. Faulkner by a | || score of 100 to 61 last sight, in the New York State amateur pocket bil- championship tourmanent at the Rational Recreation Academy in Brook- Raynolds J a | GREYLOCK Just OUT~A SMALL lyn. ‘The champion made a high run ot 2. ceipeseacate | Colletti and Genare Rox Draw. | POUGHKEEPS rankie Genaro of New York, former Oiymple | O I I AR fiyweight champion, and Joe Colletti of thie elty, fought fifteen rounds: to FOR G N - t was = Pansations

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