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THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAY 14, 1921 HIGH PRICE STARS | TO-DAY LACK SKILL OF OLD TIMERS seseliianames Remarkable Exploits of Dixon, Nelson, McGovern and Other Champions of Past Years Are Seldom Seen in Ring Nowadays—Dempsey the Equal of All Heavy- weights, B v i By i.obert Edgren. OXING l enjoying the greatest AMERICA’S GREATEST CHAMPIONS by Robert Bdgren.) (Copyright, 1921, WAS Tee GReesT | Delplews, brought the ountest to a brosperity that the sport ever MONEY . MAKE on the close by tomang a towel into the ring. R knew. Since Tex Rickard set “Temser MeGoNTeTe S| uD Ter UTT Ub meal, | gnnw emi mara master the fashion of pay < i THUR Wl ADO WonDe: Jand he brought strongly home to me URGE esc reeenACous Boxer. the realization that the “child prod boxers have been getting enough for am COW igy” of France after | was only a their services to make the old timers HEAOLONG RUS. ii cess | FaNtaRtie Umeaiy He thade ais: bes come back to life and try it again. eve without quibble that I had a We have some pretty fair champions an ieeant? tae oa oY eats uid row, but the inen who are getting the nb ngreeoe sane is Secret ib he and big money are not in every ouse the ii: the: very: Grat found: je. aided best that ever held the titles, he pleased with me, and in the sec Whe greatest champions Anserioa und he walked delberately ‘about ime tala “pesa ices ' and whot is lett hand. to ry ith such regularity that f was soon Bantamweight, George Dixon. By Neal R. O'Hara. . out and bleeding in pitiful fashion Featherweight, Terry McGovern, (oprrigat, 1921, by The Hees Mubitaniog Oo. (The New York Prening World) jit was a heideous round. Occasion- Lightweight, Joe Gans and Battling Tex Rickard has invited the Prince of Walos to ace the Demprey | auy he would drive bia right hand Nelson. and Carpentier mix. The invitation has beon vised and soconded b¥ jerashing to my ribs. | was slayer Welterweight, Joe Walcott. the Jersey City Board of ‘Trade, ing and sick when tho bell endel the Middleweight, Robert Fitzsimmons. a ee 16 | round, jeavyweight, Jack Dempsey and 2 — | Descampa was in tears and burst dim doifries. That makes It anonymous, | into excited Jathering as 1 sat down orge Dixon, a colored boy from . . He implored me to allow him to Charlestown, Maas, brought out. by The Prince has sean America. Why see Jersey City and spoil it all? | thtuw in, the towel butt protented Tom O'Rourke, was one of the clever- Sipe T hold that tt is not right at any est fighters ever seea in a ring. e The Prince may be absent, but Joo Humphries will be there with | time for a boxer to quit under pun Lithe, wiry, strong, enduring, gaine Lah np dbeosto lean D tad ara the King's English: lahment. "The boxer who does so has hard hitting and clever, “Lito Choc- he Dieaat nag aut Fi ss 6 | eared only contempt, for he has de- Mea Wien arene RERCoo ae ke Che Ger rRIee sIN MS PRIME, How that boy Joa can pour the aweet oll one Tistaning assemblage! | Braded lis profession. Physical pain rode ie dL SSanohtaples obhplaty bleed CoyLd Have MET DEMPSEY = cA. . Every syllable a word picture. The greatest orator since Demosthenes, | st ever ive allvwed to i common as gvoseberrios on @ goose- Hag. with a determination top berry bush CB pe re the pebble swallower, But Joe has nothing in his mouth exoept the | Mil pf aetermination too ane In 1890 Dixon, recognized as van- ers asc we next sentence ; Snowball continued hia. murder fam champion in America, went to joe works harder than the referee. He always announces twice a attack on me in the third round, He Lond ad beat N Ww he ref. ts out Nid not rush matt ithor iid ndon and eat Nunc ce in} bd ef. counts out. did not rush matters; neither «id ec eighteen rounds at 112, pounds ring. | NEW YORK’S LATEST Reds Play Giants 7 O- -Day many guys as the ref. © Adike F dally about his work. He methodic- side, He veat Johnny Murvhy in| OUTDOOR BOXING CLUB Joe makes the $5 seats as good as the $50's while the talking ts [ally pumped punch after punch into Ee ae cane r oe On mbeneey going on. Hia is the only voice that can be thrown to the two-blt |my quivering body until i seemed Of $1,200 a side, winner take all. That TO SEAT 35,000 PEOPLE ¢ ; that I must faint, 1 searcely know was the wily they fought. in those D ° n seats without echoing back favored with tazaberry Dn etree ier mia ge namic need days, To-day, If “Little Qhocolate” ; F fight with all the ardor at my com- were alive and in his sai Tex New York js to have an outdoor oo He's the country’s more promi: ine orator, next to W. J. Bryan, Bill | nand. 1e xeemed impoasible that the | Rickard might be paying him $25.000] boxing club seating %5.000 poopl Sere es x ° t brought a pen-| ean always promise a little more than Joe. | weariness of my arms and logs could for bis end to defend his title g club seating 23.000 people. |The Two Local Clubs Hone gia ca ta W players that brought @ pe eo 6 Jcontinue. 1 hoped that the flim over ‘Among Dixon's greatest fights as a| It will open in a few weeks at : ! nant to Cincinnati in 1919. ewe A ee eS retin cae eeay Dantamweight wus his seventy-| Bronx Oval and will be known as Further Cut Down the |, oP Re earceonr Mae HET pan NTS I suppone I should consider myseit| Found draw write Cal ca So Re the Boxingdrome. Lew Raymond, Pirates’ Lead |should be a great heip to the Giants very, fortunate Indeed shat nonnet ie ae yeur tate, i ¥-| who is regarded one of the most . ‘ jin staying abreast of the Dodgers in| didn rata ie Coe Ha Going into the feather class when| Successful matchmakers in the a the struggle for pecand Pia oer that were hammering Away atime. 1 bantain rivals ran out, George was| East. will manage the new club, &y Robert Boyd \r Araunrd, han ne pitchers who might | toltered into the ting in the fourth feather champion for about eight! Raymond announces he has mike Marquand, haa no pitchers who mish National League Batting. American Leugue Batting. round and tried to fight, but tt waa | years, He won an average of ten . é .. . cause che ante shy rou * +] bayer and Cheb oR Waser and Ont ar no use, and after a few punches had sig up Bob Martin, the A. E, h &, Ne g Mh Paty Fea year, Fe cuban a tne went the invasion of the Western| Rarnes, Net and Iyan are twirling] (Se si0%% ae hasan cae o i landed’ oh ine Gestamar eitn aor? am pio: ‘ ire 4 i seem to grow better | Suit. Itilateiha i : . : edo " MIGOVERN SMASHED DIXON. | Martin ius agreed to mect any: clubs both the Giunta and the| steady ball and sccm to grow Detter | eon.” Now York g } Vile, Clamland oie TO 8 “Little Chocolate” was king of the} body selected. Pete Herman, the Dodgers have gained several points | {\°q) Saupe, Qougias and Benton Wilt) finaren tie 2 4 Wi oes Cece ae feathers unt he moet Terry McGov-| ex-bantam champion, has also jon George Gibson's Pittsburgh Fl-| against the Reds or the Chicago Cubs, putindeislas eee! be ene Coton ae i 4 ee ee aa] Rarmauned up for three bouts. | rates, the Giants taking the series|who follow Cincinnati at the Polo Horner, St ten 22200 a a8 6 < Severe chatice tr maniicr tae championstip fighiae "°°" “MTF® [trom the St. Lowls Cardinals. three Tictr MET be tevenina next week f 6 3 a Y¥ defeat by Piet was not die: iasioil i re 1.3 Ase pede 8: A 4 eful in any sense. it ry’s furious rushes or endure the ter- — vaceeaBbee out of four, and the Dodgers only drop-| a-ryy the Puttenurgh cub finishes Ita aa, ” er ‘ Hiflo body Deating, st teather-| soe 5 = i ng the last game of the series to| four » series with the Dodgers, ; Vata “a fight was spectacular, consid- eaiene apes bho ae rdetione Ee ue ee fest ‘os any purkth and ae Fat Moran's Reds. There ts only two | The ‘ horses of th 5 ational! Mequillan, on ered as a boxing exhibition It was was a great bantamweight fight, grow Weary tn 2 1008 pointy’ difference in the National) /eague have RRC Aea butaing: unt 3 AR ALR LIC ae eel Bion Until Be went sat < heute nae hen ae a Tel ip ww a art Langue standing separating these two|their playing average and incre using: ii of the word. We both w an y a i class, because Were no more] beat, The norma! beat, when a York c! Drentley efeating second divis) Mearih. Conse : and contented ourselves with moving bantams to give lim a fight. Dixon|man is standing stil, is about #0 a Yow York clubs [ruse eo ama erneinie tuee, win come Ain st tania pes ng ouad \tecolnel ta BOR ene defended tha feather title at 118| minute, The Cincinnati Reds move across anon Dinivue Arab and’ Uh Wie” tales rapidly and tapping pi bs Pounds and this was Terry's weight) When he knocked out Gans in gev- to Manhattan to-day to start alGinnta next, ‘The Smoky Clty. playe Mites ae ania? Oli ta Ath es COA BEL tie: tan eUns? when he beat Dixon. smpared | nteen founds doctors were waiting four-game series with the Giants,|ers have not encountered a ball team cane the fudgea believed Plet had won, Other fighters have been compared | to examine hi He ran from the while Branch Rickey ts ng{ tis year quite as formidable eet and L suppose | agree with them. to MoGovern, but there never has|ring to the dressing room, Hie heate oe enon: Tuckey, (kes, Homers | ce the y York clubs, a Sere z ho veen another Terry. The continued | beat was only 85, and in about twenty Hornsby and the remnants of hia bal! before the Buccaneers return ea I remember that Americans w s fury of his attack was amazing, He | seconds it had dropped to 52, where it/ team over the river to. play thal errr mt grounds it la a cortal ria a saw Plot in action that night ane Fe ee valine ties coe ee Dodgers. that they will not be perched so sol ob On subsequent occasions predicted for @ropped, never slackening f see " psc gunay, t el,’ Now Yat Sua here never had a thickened ear ACCIDENTALLY SHOT. The Mound @ity team {s lucking a| !l3 a thi r lofty position in the Na Sone bY bir heydhe SAL EE him @ most brilliant future. It was mark from all his hard fighting. | Joe Walcott 8 undoubtedly the pi ni oi rough | tn . " | mammal Jolnaton, (Chovedae cf . they sald, that he would be- Or raanieaes thie te ‘Tarey cares greatest welter champion. Only & Ptcrh® stiff in shape to last througt Hil Ryan, the youthful Holy Cross Hrovate Haas nan LS gieee shit mplon of the Laughing, he sald, "I hit them su {fect 1 inch tall, built Uke a gorilla & full sume. Haines, Schupp, Doak, pitcher, held down the St. Lauis Car- | knikdinn, (hemes Mite, Detroit Sate 8 NEnkwelghs Soany ; fast they don’t have a cha t for strength, he could fight heavy- Sherdel, Pertica and Dixie Walker) dinals in impressive fashion in the a Itel, 1 world. Of course he never did, for Me, That's why I'm not marked.” | wolihts as easily as welters, He won! were all pounded heavily by the! !ast & LUCE LT ets ed a ie Bhan Wwadiington “ a German bullet put an end to that, ‘ as, in fa eo secre he title by knocking out Rube Fe ; Giants yesterday. BUT was stead " Saale ‘% GAL Mes DERIELOENIE Hate SRIELIM Ave: ode ae: Rube Ferns Giants, and it looks as if Brooklyal pitched like a veteran in tight plac tks penta i He died a hero. four rounds, Among the|When a lightweight, Walcot fo will have a golden opportunity to cut| enabling him to triumph over Dixie York 2 This was jn 1911, the year that I three or is ght, Walcot lost a P nabling My great boxers he beat wore Dixon, |decision to Kid Lavigne at Maspeth down the lead of the Pittsburgh Club! Walker by the score of § to 1 in eripeae considered the most momentous In all Santry, Gardner, Lanny, White, Erne, |in one of the most famous fights in! before they clash with the latter at| SIX Inning contest that was halted by | {ish He my life history. I was fighting as a Bernstein. Broad, Gans, Herrera,|history, As a welter, the only man ‘ s a sudden downpour of rain sate Sib beells Dave Sullivan, Hanlon and Tommy|who ever ve him trouble was) Mpbvets Field next Wednesday, Dixie Walker and. Milton Stock | linn” New York Hightwetht and elimbing very. fas Murphy, He finally lost to Young) Tommy West. Wulcott knocked out; The Reds are a little further up| were the only St, Louis players able | Kaiti, Clneinimtl Inte he, weltanmelant division. 1h Corbett at 126 pounds, the He Not at ioe bp raat and after that chal- than the Cardinals in the standing|to hit the former collegian safely in Harner, ities : ibd en ue SE Nite tae Atak Santiago be orcas ane eis CEN but not ani, Other heavy-! of the clutix, but they have been pity) the aie: none Ww ® Hit. poor mind in those aye that 1 ON ee |tally shot himeolf through tne Wiens ing no better ball than Rickey's team, | Jouble to left, soured Doc Laven : Georges Carpentior, should some dy Joe Gans was a marvel among the|hand. ‘The hand waa never ne wed ran tuo has been confronted with | had been passed. | fi ' : i : be challenging the world's heavy lightwelehts. He was a powerfutly| for punching again, and Hones ano horalized pitching staff since the © Olan \ Bi, o ba cnmlenin ne al penne birilt, cool headed ow, with all the! lody whipped Joe in fifteen rounds the season, and he nos tad | fourth and Bart ith walloped 4 year T ponsider of mu Aportance, a crthe aon Cane atarted uyil od aoe che tele nd slong with the Cards and) homer in in we fifth with Rapp en Y for it Was at this stage that T tes: estyle. He was a de-|of the middieweights, 4 One oF thal Poe a the ag er of the righ ¢ if * vay for future use. al te nter-hitter.and he knocked [greatest boxers Car’ ever feed” We] 4,With, Heinle Grom’ unsigned and| tn the sixth and last Inning Hrisch || airing the twelve montha T rapt bdab abeparemcbey Amen. He knocked | knocked out the original Jack Demp. | Pidie Roush having trouble with h is} walked. and stole second. Young | jie penton ty ran’ my earnings over sev ‘rank Erne with the |sey for the title, wad nding no mia, |Knee HOt to mention the logs of Hod | doubled to left, Kelly was tossed out | vse. Reston | WeoTRRAD teamtaey healers kato. the struck. dleweights to fight, went after the|Dler and Duteh Ruether, the Reds|on an infield hit and Curtis V | Hoattione. St. Lorem LRA PBLUN SIAR BRC MIPRtLTIA: OOM ed Erne and learned that he|heavies, knocking out Peter Maher, | 25.4 team, are only a shell of the once ' tripled to left, when the rain st Lina Ble damit Cena Beoukeat poxeea! ln ihe wor had a habit of felnting and drawing |Gus Kublin, Tom Sharkey and wane | frmdible collection of temperamen- the game. inet yn T uA eTTA TRA RROWA IE IN 1 hia head back about a foot.” Gans others, He was only a mniddtewelght | ‘ T probably would hi told me. “In the first iron Be i eee 165 pounds — ringsid when ened of the future, but the Fan read Wid at where hus read Lanoeeeg ot dim Corbett t rr the | riple by Ru ith Bases Fu a3 Mi 3 1h igplolons the stakes was made asi easy Ought to be, and caught him cleanly | Jim Jefries to heat mit Ritz oe at F D ce a "1 Sr ee araracya tte SNe na fatny ut [peut 220 pounds ind treneninis v| Wins Final Game From Detroit) :").2< ' i A 22] remet triona ‘ord, Fi |fihter, brok ils hands or DETROIT, May 14.--A three -— ——————= men a $ 36 a 7 ) francs Mich, som homen as Bene, Me-| jemrics and was knocked out : y thea) | ne ait ' At ite ' respectable when o MePartland, Tracty.|" "Ag for the heavyweights, Jack ft" bY Ruth with the haves tu another tur a spell. In the giath in- | : § ‘ Mba; a ree and Mike (Twin) |Dempsey, present champicn Sars ir «cond inning, enabled the! ning he knocked down a blazing line ‘ ‘ . " EAE eile a red Dlr biel SMa nught about 200 AeNt®. | most imposing Knockout recor e Yankees to take the final game of fmm Alnsmtth'y bat and fracture fis Fas i cay | ene iM 1 Sam Tangford, Bene, Me- ligt ie fights a little in the shifting, th § with the ‘Tigers hove |the thumb of his r Band ae 1s won the 500-frane fiehta. both of and George MeFadden—all | ritgwimmong style, driving In. tree 7 HY hod 10 retire, ae my } 7 « wen a amy hast, |mendous Dlows when he finds his 2°8tert Howt CO WHO ing his ee. Ferg Hid well cit 6 an) S Weds iat at plunged he fought Battling Ne 50M) openings, but he le lexs tricky and beat the New Yorkers on many the nic when hi wert sige ) : ; H Tent ringside, He won on a foul) nitiing heavyweight, that ever drow Dalle by the Yanks jumped in again did y i " fase arate irs ty nd round, but he WAH) on a glove. His one-round knockouts did. th final tally was | dey and got the last batter, Alnsmit’ ; » Raped a3 PA i Amel Gel duet nif Cart Morris, Fred Rulton and| New ¥ on a ft to short, Harm ean We Mt Tr ae ae cena (the Keven knockdowns Willard in| Harr ning: tie: game ‘ ttle that per i Af the great doe Gana, |the first round show this game'u b National Lengua PI . 4 t A taker We kopeked Kin out in| He !s strong, wiry, weil built anil rape pe s ' © Ane the 1 again In twen- Should have endurance, but none ane at jars who inaniee y that Nelson was! In my opinion Jeffries would have 0 ins’ innin rea roken 4 ; vP nt as Guns.) been | match for Dempsey ny " iu Nehtweight as Gan ; 1 tch G ‘ Woe ane in skh but | Jetrien haa “almost untimited re As Rixey Outpitc es rrimes f ‘ Peinyareiaaatas © had such tremen- | serve n 1 when he was | 3 both: were elicted ig power and tenac-|at Dempsey about the time ho| In a desperate effort to wrest até o aOR uTiG ht hav ate uns | first Witeaimmons. east ono game of the series betWeeN) soring would be un eney matter, and 4 . ‘ evious tot uns we Pr Meter eette | the Cincinnati and the Brook nake it sure Burleigh Grimes wus ’ Loue melt ant " r he foukht so many round flehts in Robins a J, Manager \ n Penaked out Ganole, ir Hy-\stend of finishing his men as Demp-| Moran of the in Tia ata] orm eer owe ad wen ; 4 4 HAD basta “ mie Tand, Hanlon ant Young and jsey doce was that big Jim took nol soutnuaw, ERPA yesterday'| Seetertay, however, and for the ¢ ‘ Mean herari | ered th 1 eng et the hardest hitter in the tnder.a rough exterior be is a friend. {afternoon Hid choice proved to br a] innings that hiv lasted he was { { { : SAUTaAA he wetii busted him onthe chin time|iy, softchearted fallow, and he never|winner, as the Reds. took Fae aera th whan tho: Tada Juwnuie 8 . Sone ‘ after time Mat font in twenty rounds, cared to do more than make sure of ly a scare of to 4 Thy Dodgern|,,/nine Meth, w hed | sinetin, 1 hsou f Can hae WAR ean te Gans hit Nelson and knocked him) winning, Bu fries, in his prime. | KH UAYRA Te AE ae thal acinede apie : ‘ MeQulen, The. iA a Wet C /imack six or ol feet, time and could have t Dempsey in } Hen eon the Atay ane a hninw thet Gear eee es eA ‘ nie PARAL page Magain, only to have the Dane pile In! hoen aroused by Dempses's with alt the ice that uc-|See. His single in the seventh 1 oat . Wlity to beat his oppe Me than ever until Gans collapaed, attack, that would have heen i » ten | ed en at his best Nelson boasted that og the giants worth looking at! ompanies previous success, In fact,| scored See and won game fo iil 1 eg pent i 8 iebeaten man, One o! eR human,” that he didn't (Coperight, 1921, by Robert Kdgres.) they thought that cleaning up the’ Reds, ai : oe ved @ 200 the main pillare of my success bas () Bow rereamras SHAS LUE GHANESPEARE, WAVEN HE LANDED A Pore He DIDNT NEED To REPEAT, Gerat Out, | Tan YEARS © CHAMMON ROBE “RT EDGREN PICKS THE GREATEST AMERICAN RING CHAMPIONS sixteen at this time, He gave | me the beating of my life in a con- test that was scheduled to go ten rounds, but ended in the fourth when Dewcampa, wild with the sight of mé | Staggering about the ting weok and FRANCES WAR HERO CHALLENGER OF DEMPSEY. Oe FOR WORLD'S TITLE Tare OP tet Tn tn a Neen sme 1 I Was the Prodigy Uncrowned CHAPTER {of anguish, toxmed a towel into the MET Young Snowball April ¥| ring and the tight was over. } 1910, 1 had reached the age of] Sick and weary I turned from my conqueror, unable to utter any pro- test at Descanips's action T pare mitted bin to nurse me, [ congrats | lated Snowball as soon as | could teach him, for T considered he had beaten me fairly. Snowball was @ | wonderful fguter, He came to the United States shortly after having [defeated me, bur lis stay in thie country was brief. He has told me he could not get tinsel? acelimatedy so lost heart and returned to Eoge lan a My pride was surely burt by defeat, for [admit that my head hi become affected by the lavish pralaw” heaped on me trom all quarters, did not sit and broed over the futher [ came to the conchiasion thate after all | was an ordinary bomesy one Likely to take a beating at any |veriod, The fact that 1 waa a boy of sixteen and could scarcely hope to win aginst these men 1 was beatin rgbt along did pot strike me at al I resolved never again to let flattery turn my head. L would be done git this vain business I went to Descamps and degeed him to seek a match for ine in Paria, for that gay capital had witnessed my tnominivus defeat and [ wanted to atone If uch a thing were possibie, It turned out that this defeat was th very (hing I nesded to net me harder At work, so when It waa announced that I was to box Paut Til, whom I previously had conquered, ina twenty round bout, [was in the best of cons dition and determined to make the battle « vietory or die in the attempt. I did not defeat TY. He fought too carefully to allow me to register the necessary points, but I did have the satisfaction of coming through the contest unscathed and holding this very clever boxer to a draw if the twenty rounds, 1 do not know why it should be #9, but my two defeats had only quick- ened Parisian's interest in my efforts |to reach fame in the ring, and when j1 drew with Til f was warmly ap~ plauded. My popularity returned and Twas as much sought after for bouts jas ever before. | Victory after victory followed my. footsteps in those days until one day w I met Henri Piet, and he defeated me in is in ten rounds. Poor Piet. ie was slain by the Germans. What grand, sportsmantike fighter he waa, Money Grows More Plentiful. CHAPTER XI. jbeen a deeply founded belief tn my own ability. Without {t I do not be~ Neve [ could “have done what [ have even though I had possessed phenomenal boxing ability, greater courage and powers of endurance. + So 1 had no fear of the conse- quences when [set out to study Loughrey and his methods from every possible point, I was de- \ermined to win this Bout and 1 wane to Impress you with the importance Lattached to it, It seemed to me the ‘greatest thing that ever had hap« pened in my life STANDING OF THE CLUBS | NATIONAL LEAGUE, WL PC.) Clube, WL Pe, 18 5 .783| Boston ....., 914 38 Brooklyn . ‘ . 17 9 .654 | Cincinnati ...10 18 388 New York 18 8 .652| Phitadetpnia.. 616 278 Chien 12 9 .571| St, Loule GAMES YESTERDAY. | At ula Grousidy Walker and Ciemone Ryan a) 13h i me Maes aed Wingo: Getmne At Philadelphia | enioas: Philadelsia Tater! | Bruges teburab and Kiliifer: 020 Marcin Hubbell Bomon game st Boltoa postponed GAMES TO-DAY. ain, Cinctanati at New York. ! Bt. Louis at Brooklyn, 1 Chicage at Boste Pittaburgh at Phitadephite | AMERIC AN LEAGUE. Clubs, WoL. PC.) Clube, Wik. PG. Hand 18 9 40) Detroit AS13500 Ington . 1410 $83! St. Lovie ..10 19 43 New York 12 8 571 Philadelphia, 813 381 Boston 10 8 556 Chicago 614 3 GAMES YESTERDAY. Detroit Re 139000130-610 100010009410 8 Rarteriee Harper Perguwoo, Mays and ead aw 010000. 1009100. Moura: 4020 Mosweeury and ‘and Schaus 4090000 “ Has Barrett, Keete and ary Mayne aud Se GAMES TO-DAY New York at Cleveland, ! Philadelenia at Chicago. Boston at St. Loui Washington at Detroit. INTERNATIONAL LEA WoL. PC.) Clade, WL. Pe 12 600 Syracuse "476 13 9 391) Toromte 0... #4 Jersey City 12 9 971 | Rochester vss. 8 Hy Bultalo 12:10 343 | Ron . 64 300 GAMES YESTERDAY. Jecuey City, 6; Rochester, | (5 innings, rain), Newark, 9: Tore Syracuse, Baltimore, GAMES TO-DAY. Jervey City at Rochester, Newark at Toronte (Twe Games), Baltimore at Buttalo, Reading at Syracummy * ft od fact 8 1 soe : | o §