The evening world. Newspaper, December 14, 1921, Page 22

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on! y Novelty in Present Day Is a Chinese Basketball ties W'VE seen Japanese bai ers, billiardists, golfers¥- tennis stars, all surprisii adept at each particular game. 0: recently a Chinese boxer appeares at Madison Square Garden, and had al) the tricks of the trade at his glove Ups, all of which goes to show the desire on the part of the Far East- erners to imitate American habits, /) particularly in the world of sport. "| Now we are to be treated to some- thing brand new in the shape of Chi- nese athletes, a team of professional basketball players. They are known as the All-Chinese Collegians of Shanghai. They are here on a tour of the United States and from what we gather have done well so far. The _, Mongolians played at Atlantic City + @ few weeks ago and put up a genu- > inely flashy game. They are sched- uled for a New York debut at Madi- gon Square Garden next Sunday af- , ternoon but you will have to guess at “how auspiciously it will turn utt. They are to meet the Original Celtics. The Chinamen play in regulation bas- ketball costumes, the finst time so ar. course {e what do they to with it al see wi ott: Montieth the 4 lave earned He has bs: tively little to show for it. ry which would foot-up perhaps to $20,000, but it doesn't seem possible that be has Gitted $360,000 away. Wilson Collects $35,000 From Tex Rickard. it Champion Middleweigh' _ Wulsen bag been hooked finally. accounts between i erday afternoo! idm and Tex Rickard were squared handed johnny Yes- ‘his | Was forced to withdraw, owing to an ‘gmmission, which charged that Wil- .ob hadn't done his best against the eg te Pe eeeet “7 ‘ne payment of money pavi for some matchmaking by Wilson is under at the Gar- Et _ contract, but according to its terms Michard has until Jan. 5 to name the man he wants Wilson to tackle, in fairness to the champion it should | be made clear that he isn’t picking his wan. He will meet anybody recognized + 48 o contender with one proviso, that + 3€9 pounds be the weight limit at the 1bga) weighing-in hour. Wilson volun- teered the information that Jack Brit- top wanted to fight him, but Rickard doclined {0 consider that match. He id there were other men in Britton’s for bim to meet, if he wants to, 9) ab the Garden. |) Rickard has Harry Greb in mind +) vAepponent for Wilson. Greb has ex- 1) pessed a desire for a bout with the {/ champion and unless he jumps the +) taces at the last minute will proba- / ply get the chance, It is the general » opinion that he can beat Wilson. He probably would be favorite or at least jan even money shot in the betting on the match, and any fight In which a » ebampion is on the long end is bound . w be an interesting affair. One of these days Benny Leonard wal out of his shell as a genuine high ht, as he did once before, © when everybody had about concluded ‘he had outgrown the class. It will be remembered that about a year ago ail! the lightweights were challenging Henny, feeling safe in the belief that Teonard couldn't do 185 pounds at 2 eelock in the afternoon, Willie Jack- em used to have himself introduced Yefore ail his bouts as the challenger «f Renny Leonard. \ Finally Leonard asserted himself. Aig said he would make welght for any if the contenders What happened? 2 one but Joe Welling would fight iim at the time. Now that Leonard is _ Migning up for matches around the country the lightweights and their ue it that he is no lon; ight) it and is dodging taeney in New York for smal) chang a re where making weight isn't canrpulsory. | 2Thts apparently has started Lou , ler and Soldier Friedman on mard’s trail e i > ? t the winner wil! meet nard, So nat polinee Benny nor manager, y m, can have kick on the size of the purse, they THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY THE NATIONAL LEAGUE GATHERING ‘Only Gameness Carried Ex-|ondition ana the only, thini Football Star Through With Frank Adams. RAINK ADAM) of the Police Club of New York retained his Ne York’ State heavyweight A.A. it year, U. boxing title that he won | when he won the judges’ decisio over Jesso H. ball star of Yale University, before large crowd at Madison Square Gar. den last night. Adams did not have as much diffi culty winning the title this year as He was forced tu meet only one opponent in the tour- nament and that was the former Yao football star. Al Johnson, the only he did in 1920, other entry in the heavyweight class, injured eye. Philbin proved a weak opponent for the experienced New York police- man. He displayed Ijttle kno-vledge uf He was hopelessly out of boxing, Crescent A. C. Five Easily Defeats Philadelphians Brooklyn Lads Triumph Over the St. Josephs Team, 58 to 24. The Cresecnt Athletic Club o: Brooklyn easily defeated the 6t. Joseph's quintet of Philadelphia a the Crescent court last night. ous this season thus far over Prince. ton, Cooper Union, Pratt, 8t. Francia, and Brooklyn Law Fives, had no diffi culty in subduing their opponents to the score of 68 to 24. At the end o: the first half the home combination was in the lead by a score of 25 to 15. Immediately upon engaging in the fray for the second session, the victors started a fast series of offensive plays, and by the good work of Capt, Par Oakes starred for the visitors, New York Untversity will continue to hold its practice sessions for the basketball game this Friday night with Yale at the 22d Regiment Arm ory. think it best to allow the members o the quintet to practice on the court whereon they tackle their fast op ponents, are working diligently to cor. rect the faults which were in evidence in the contest against the alumnj Jas‘ week. The Violet rooters regard the game with Yale as the most importan one on the schedule. “Doc” Jordan, Yale's sensation: back and Captain-elect of the 1922 cleven, will probably line up with the New Haven five at one of the guard positions. J The University of Toronto baske ball team wii tour Nek two in this city, the title of the Canadian Inter © arranged articles so that Tex sive the champion the entire 50 of the gate, the limit acco te, having defeated Montreal and McGill Quesn ua Dy OLd TIMER — SAT ANDO WATCHED Cop Boxe Beats Yale Man For Heavyweight Honors In Amateur Tournament Philbin, former foot- This was the only State final reached, the other seven classes will be decided to-night in the finals of the present tournament. The 8} New Mooners, who have been victor: meli and Barker, they obtained a lead over their opponents by fifteen points. Frank Duff, Dick Cream and Johnay Coaches Thorpe and Cann, who begin a tour of New York State commencing Dec, 17, Nine games have been arranged, including | 1"! The Toronto team Copyright (The New York Evening W orld) by the Press Publishing\Co., 1931, Par Just ‘em Pass BY > KUMAGAE IS NOW ON HIS WAY TO EUROPE. Japan's Davi and for five years one of the highest ranking players in his country, sailed for England & the Aquitania yesterday, ex- P%ing to spend about two mote in Europe before sailing © TX native country. Though to return here next umagae said that he ther he would be able me to participate in ding tournaments Shimidzu, Kuma- gae’s Davis et apa who has Nthat Cerjed him through the three rOqqs wih Adams was his gamencss. agreed unanimously on Adi Seitz of the Clark House A. dettatea James Croll of the Ken- nedy’s ‘Boys’ Club in three slashin= rounds, \The judges disagreed here and Referee Eddie Forbes awarded TE devtelOpH te Hchem. What looked like a great bout in thé Nghtweight class was brought to a close early in the first round, when Art Wiegand of Buffalo fouled M. J. Smith of Now York in the first round, Smith fell to the floor and Wiegand struck him while he was on his knees. As far as the bout pro- gressed Smith had much the better ot it, iw a Charles McKenna of New York stopped Joseph Maloney in the third round of an Interesting bout in thy 175-pound class. Sydney Smith of Yale University defeated Joe Banaski of Albany in three uninteresting rounds. Willie Singer, Metropolitan feather . weight title-holder, stopped Thomas O'Kay in the second round. already returned y japan expects to do a great dea of missionary work in i , DECEMBER 14, 1921, MAJOR LEAGUE CLUBS MAY BOYCOTT THE CLASS AA SS 4282S BASEBALL MEN, EX-GASEGALL MEK ANO BAT BONS CLUTTERED THE LOBBY DOING NOTHING LIVE WIRES BY NEAL R. OHARA. | By Thornton Fisher WITHA GEO. STALLINGS IN THE LOBBY TSPECIAL EXITS FOR YHRIRES YO KEEP THEM VeROM COMING In CONTACT” S with THE PLAYERS AFTER RECOMMENDED \"WEGISLATION OR UNCLE ACTION LOOKING WilBeERT TO THE ageesr ROBERTSON AND CONVICTION VISITED OF POP BorTLe THROWERS * ALSO ’ nbiRes raga exit GAMES Beeps WALD ORF-ASTORIA Lopyright (he New York Evening World) by tho Press Publishing Co. Old 1921 hasn’t been such a bad year when you consider it had 353 Cays in which there was no six-day race going on. . This is the season of the year when football refuses to be dead and can be buried only by a blizzard of snow. oo. University of California footballers promise to make Washington and Jeff look like Mutt and Jeff in that Pasadena game. oo. Some college coaches use the concealed pass in slipping pay en- velopes to their amateur footballers. Baseball 1s now an all-year-'round sport. months. and then hold out during the . . The boys play for six other six. . fants and Yanks are certainly going to show the folks an all-star, first-class Broadway cast when they go on the road next season. > (e It's a good thing for Landis that Federal judges aren't elected by a popular vote. Frank Fasano, a sturdy little ban- tamweight, stopped a tartar in Fran cis Lottimer, after fighting two even rounds, Fasano looms up as one of the most promising of the present- day crop of amateur fighters, and last night he performed creditably in stopping the sturdy Lottimer. Tex Rickard has finally comNeted his card of bouts for his boxing at Madison Square Garden on Fri night. There will be one main bo! of fifteen rounds between Sailor\, Friedman of Chicago and Lew Tend- | ler of Philadelphia BY JOH) POLLOCK and three good | % and Gossip the former crack amateur bi ug several fights in Madison Square Gj; ge in another contest oy Monday ni Rae will take on Bert Spencer and Happy Gorman will go against Joe Iyder. | Now that Gene Tunney is matched to fight Eddie | O'Hare of Yorkville In the sem{-final bout to the fifteen-round scrap between Midget Smith and Pete | N,| Dominick Tortorich to-day wired Al Lippe. man- | ager of Jeff Smith of Bayonne, terms for a Smith. | preliminary contests as follows: / ji, wy go agains Young Pa..uo, the Wenern - Bobby Michaels vs, Red Cap Wilson, colored \attier, in a twelve-round bout at Chium- Tony Lyons vs. Young and ms. 0. \Gans recently knocked out Young Hicks Graham, Stewart and Duffil, were] Vincent “Pepper” Martin vs. Harvey, “! * St Hartson, N. J. ' with the the team last year. Brighteot Brsaulen: Tho retu match between Sallor Martin and The basketball schedule of Niagara ok Sailor Tomm) Billiard, who fought » sensational University includes St. John’s of| 4), Roberts, the hearywelgbt, of Staten Island, | "*eNe-TOUNd Wut at the Walker Sporting Club, Brooklyn, Crescent A. C., Cathedral] and Capt. Bob Roper of Chicago, have just been | Astoria Casino, wo weeks ago, will be staged at College of New York, St. Francis Col-| matched to meet {n the main bout of twelve rounds | {at rene Friyy evening. Matchmaker Oscar lege of Brooklyn. at the opening boxing show of the Brighton Box: | Bie eee Woked Jack Tomashek and Sailor t} The Ori; rive Ing Club of Staten Island on next Monday night. | Maher for tho sechd twelve, with Willie Gilltzen| ginal Spartan Big Five of oD " toe muue's the ‘Bronx argues the right of the| i Gitwon accurted terms for Nobers yesterday | and Young Zaccone Naired for s ten-rounder, t| Bronx Hacs to claim the champion. | #4 Mover secepted the match by telegraph. ship of Hebrew organizations. ager Warsch of th Ma © Spartans co: -|alders it an Injustice to Mis quintet | lem, with the Jong lst of victories to his credit so | _|that the Bronx Hacs should. clatm | far this year, will try to add another win to his the title without presenting the Ori-| record to-night. Me will go against Tommy Lynch | ginals with an opportunity to offer| of the west side tu @ twelse-round go at the -lopposition, Other things being equal, | Hunts Point Sporting Club. Manny Wexler meets it seems only ‘right that the Hacs| Willie Farley in the other twelve-rounder and Spartans should get together for — | a contest, if for no other reason than to demonstrate that spirit which 1s based upon the idea of clean com- bat to show their stuff. At St. Agnes’s Hall, Manhattan, the Morning ‘3 Caseys tackle | the Casey All Stars of Flatbush to-night. The Home Insurance Company Five t Charley Weinert, the Newark heavyweight, will get married on Dec, 15. Two weeks after the event | he will eat! for Havana, where he expects to engage in three fights and two more at Mexico City. | Mammy Kelly, wha has been staging shows in Cubs | for» few weeks, has engaged Weinert for these bouts. Weluert ought to make a big tmpression here by bis clever fighting = meet two strong quintets at the| arl France of California, who showed great | Twenty-Second Regiment Armory| form to his Eastem debut last Saturday night, | when they take the court against the | when he knocked out K. 0. Jobnny Smith of American Express Company Five and | nidgewood in five rounds, meets Willie Pfelfer of | the Maryland Casualty Company | itariem at the Star on Monday night. France) Quintet. Montana Cubs play the | came Kast with the reputation of having beaten | Xavier Cubs at St. Agnes'’s Hall in| tho pest lightwelghts on the Coast, Brooklyn, oo Howl, Four tnteresting bouts will be staged at the Lex- =| Musa Pies feo cham-| gion Avene Opera House on Mcrniay aight which | + | lansela, of, Wenahester should furnish plenty of real slugging. Arcte No. 41 fth M N.Y.’ Telephone ilitlerest nt’ Vernon, “‘Mets’’ Amateur t | Street. | 8133-W. Five, 115 pounds. Dreavan, JG) eer, J, Polsenskt, No. ‘Telephone Kingsbridge Blue Vall rt Composed of Gt} ick, Kiernan and BAOR Halley sum. it t the Address the manag New York All Stars, 130 pounds. Fricdelbaum, “Nv. 102 Suffolk Stre at the Faith With church quintet. Manag: ‘ No. 99) Fort Washington Avenue, city wishes to arrange gsi Beriingh decided late 110 pounds, Ing. Address No. 157 East !15th Street, clty jem 4872 apy evening betw ait association, submitted the resolution to clubs of New Jerse: According to the announceme: President of the Metropolitan, a oe son to encourage the junior g»™ aia eciad ad Ea tem aaanigey Brooklya Celtics, heavyweights, Manager, A Kelly, "No. 415424 Street, rvokdyn. Assumption Aarrows, 115 pounds, travelling. Jos, Frankie Jerome, the good little fighter of Har- | ™* ght at the Racquet and Tennis Club. 7P . A. BC. Five of Flushing. 159 pounds crave] this consideration in view of its lorig a 7 | akinighsdtete FSM. Sunlth, “Quecusbore “Hil, | ropolitan championshi Johnny Dundee has\zecetved $500 from Match- MoGuinness of Fysey City for training ex- penses beeause the lat did not bring off the twelve-round bout Detweed him and Sailor Fried man at the armory in Jerdy City, Friedman pald McGulnness because he coul\ not go through with the mateh and Dundes deaanded $500 for his training expenses, which MoGYnness gave him. Irish Jobnny Curtain of Jersq City, who bested Yoo Nelson in an eight-round bow et A. C. of Philadelphia on Saturday night, for which se recelved $642, has been matchey to meet Hoy Moore of St. Paul for ten rounds at (ne Casino a. ©, of Fall River, Mass, on Friday nfyp, To-morrow aight st the Broadway. F:rnibition (ub, Brooklyn, the proceeds of the shew will go to the Hebrew. Behool of Williamsburg, In the feature bout Bert Spencer of Brooklyn wh tackle ‘AL Morea, tho Ridgewood bearcat. In the ten- round semI-final Joo Ryder and Happy German will Rave it out for the bantain champlonmaly of South Brooklyn. A special axing show, te nev receipts of which will be turned over to the Hebrew Orphan Asylum of Brooklyn, will be staged at the Broadway Ex- hibition Association of Brooklyn to-morrow nist. In the two twelre-round bouts to De fought A! Me- Golf Tourney To Be Decided in New Jersey For the firat time since 1914 the amateur ohamplonship of the Metropolitan Golf Association will be held in the State of New Jersey. ing of the organization last The scene of this event will be Charles V. Benton of Hudson River, the new Vice President of the that the bidding be confined solely on the grounds that that State was entitled to nce from the conduct of Met- of Findlay 8. Dougl the new ipd effort is to be made next sea- the district to take yp tourna- 1 | i} (serra Bryan Downey st bls club in New Orleaas Downey tnulats on 188. pounds ringside, asks the welght be 160 pounds, Downey mac big hit down there by knoeking out Happy Littietot | Matty Herbert, who was ® good amateur fighter several years 0 has fought all ot the 00d Little fellor ir sucess, is now f*ght ing in the featherweight class, Ho has placed bi self under the management of Tom Messenger of No. 19 Locust Street, Flushing, L. 1., and would like to take on Harold Farese, Marty Collins end other featherweights. In connection with the amateur boxing tourna ment to be held at the New York A. C., tho pre liminary boute to-morrow night, and the final bouts on Saturday night, a series of four inter-city bouts was been booked for Saturday evening when the best boxers in New York will tackle the best ama: teur champions from Pittsburgh. ‘Trere Ww)! he other importamt bouts, Al Lippe has matched K. 0. Loughlin, champion welterwelght of Pennsylvania, to box Pete Latzo Dec. 23, and Frankie Murray to box Indian Russell at Harrisburgh, Dec, 19, and Kid Fredricks at Reading Deo. 20. Loughlin is wanted for Cham- pion Leonard at New Orleans. Pete “Red” MaDonald, the promising festher; welght of Greenwich Village, has been matohed to meet Freddie Boorde, the AUlanta featherweight, tn & ten-round decision bout at Eldorado, Ark, on the night of Deo, 23. McDonald is under tbe management of John Cox, formerly of New Jrieans. Tony Palazolo’s crack welterwetyat, Paul Doyle of the east side, and Eddie Shevlin will box for the New England welterweight tiie in @ ten-round decision contest to be maged by the Armory A. A, Mechanics Building, Boston, Mass, on Deo #0, pe ROY THOMAS ADDED ‘TO CAR- DINALS’ COACHING STAPF, ST. LOUIS, Dec. 14,—Branea Rickey, manager of the St, Louis Nationals, is bolstering up his coaching staff in prep- aration for next year's championship race, Announcement was made to-day that Roy Thomas, formerly outfelder for the Philadelphia Nationals and later e LEAGUES —— oo MAGNATES WON'T CUT PRICES AS JUDGE LANDIS ADVISES Club Owners Also Opposed to Reducing World’s Series Games From Nine to Seven—All Ideas of Baseball’s High Commis- sioner Upset. 3 4 ad | By Bozeman Bulger. UDGE LANDIS arrives in town to-day to find things right smartiy-up- set. All the suggestion he has made for the good of the old pastime have met with pointblank opposition. The boys are beginning to get a little rough. The High Commissioner will have to do some sharp pointing with that emphatic forefinger of his or there won't be a tail feather left in the old dove of peace by the time he opens fire in the joint meeting between the majors and the minors. Already the minors have declared they don’t know anything about this business of restoring the draft “and they ain’t going to take it up neither.” Hither openly or secretly, National League clubs, in answer to that, are considering a boycott on the Class AA minors who refuse to accept the draft. It’s a hundred to one that the American League to-day strings along with them. That's harsh medicine and may draw the Judge's fire. This means that big leaguers will@—————————————————————— refuse to eell or buy a single ball-; active conversing and then re- i from a minor league that won't} tired early with armful of potne in out of the wet. Directly this papers, "Robbie ii ule eeiee rather rough work would hit the) he hasn't pe jon _buy!ng. bankroll of club owners in the Inter- “Sure, Zach Wheat ie on the national, the American Association, the Pacific Coast League, the West- ern Association and the Three I guring en another pen- League. It will put a crimp in high] pant. I'll trade or sell Wheat to finance. All of those leagues refused! anybody who can show me a good to agree to the draft and also Lave! outfielder and infielder. I'd like refused to reconsider, them both to be better than If that boycott goes through many a $75,000 bird from mow on will re- main in the sticks. Wheat. Well, good night.” Miller Huggins had a long confer- | all The big leaguers say that as long as the minors refuse to listen to rea- son they’ve got a high-powered blast coming to them. The big leaguers also have refused to shorten the World's Series to seven games, Likewise they fail to see any reason why they should cut the rices. i Therefore, as you will observe, the vote so far on the Judge's reco: mendations are a unanimous “No! But the high commissioner is not a fighter who gives up without wast- ing at least one round of ammuni- tion. He'll talk to the boys at length to-night and to-morrow. To-night he'll do it nice at the dinner given by the Nationa! League. To-morrow he'll do it agai: at the joint meeting, but it may not ve nice then. Efforts are on foot by some of the American Learue club owners to have the high commissioner let up a little on his punishment in the case of George Herman Ruth et als. The Yan!.ees, however, will not be a party to this because of their personal in- terest. There {s a little justice in the plaint of the ball clubs in the Ruth matter. They point out that the owners and the public will have to suffer a pun- ishment that Was really aimed at Ruth. His six weeks’ suspension, in other words, hurts nobody but the New York club and the teams they oppose. The clubs must pay a pen- alty for Ruth's misdeeds. It is un- derstood that Ruth, realizing this, has written to the Judge asking that the punishment be meted out to him. He does not want the owners, who tried to dissyade him from the course, to suffer a penalty. be Joint introduced and adopted at the meeting revoking the rule Le eo Genar | yhi embers of cham- Oem) Grande” tess charky | Hema of New Oech at the Garden on De. | Nonghis eama, from engaging In ex Chiarley Meceher goes against “Dutch’* | TY [Ha fan'on the west side is ail worked UP! hibition games after the World's bhava of over the bout. ‘This is the u Tunney apie Biegae: 12 tig: fenisry) Raut, | yett fought and the Greenwich Villagers will tum| Series. This is the rule that vies) Vanama Joo Gans. the colored middleweight | out in droves to sep hin battle O'Hare. violated. It always was @ no uinplon who won the colored title and belt by stupid rule, of no benefit to either the leagues or the players. Ruth's violation of it was the result of a deliberate attempt on the part of the players to smash it by showing It up. Ruth was selected as the leader and went through with it. ‘Though it was an assinine rule the players were not wise in ignoring it as they did. The bad part of Ruth's act was that he told the Judge to his face that he was going to break it. He has since apologized, but the Judge could not see his way clear to condone open rebellion, Minor league club owners are still trying to point out the justice of their cause in declining to reconsider the draft. Capt. Neale of the Louisville club, last night informed us that he had just been offered $12,500 for Jay Kirke, his first baseman, and that the offer had been made by Jack Dunn of the Baltimore club, So you | see the bushers are beginning to get the big spending bug themselves. “We've got to buy and sell at big prices ourselves,” said Capt. Neale. “You see we cannot draft from the clubs below us no more than the big leagues can draft from us. Kirke, by the way, is the fellow who broke all world's’ records last season by making 282 hits. I did not agree to se}l him. I need him. 7 “Now let me tell you something,” he went on. “Do you know that we are paying bigger salaries to former big leaguers than they got while in the big league? Yes, sir, I have never signed a big leaguer that I didn’t have to pay him a bigger sal- ary. I won't mention the clubs, but I pay bigger salaries right now to a half dozen men than certain big league clubs ever paid them.” In the midst of Capt. Neale's talk Al Schacht, pitcher and funny man of the Senators, came up. “It's right,” he said. “I am about to be traded by Washington now, and the Toronto Club has offered me more money than I have been get- coach of the University of Pennayl- . y Vania baseball team has beon added to] UME I don't, know where T'll_ be the Cardinal ur sent, but I'd like to go out to Sal Lake or Los Angeles. I think I'd —_———~e— D-L-E-E YSZKO, KNOXVILLE, Tenn,, Dec. 14 -Hisses and catcalls greeted Stanislaus Zbyszko, world champion wrestler, in his match here last night with Jess Westergard of Chicago, Zbyszko won in straigat falls, but whenever Ty sate: rd got Pole wong ey ted in prefer to go with Duffy Lewis out in Salt Lake, But I'll go anywhere, pro- vided it is not in the far South.” Al spoke warmly of one major league manager who he said was 80 tight he could go up and down a lad- der with an armful of eels and never let one slip out of his hands, Wilbert Rebineen did nome It is certain that a resolution will | ence with the Yank owners, and whether he has signed his contract or not by this time it is pretty cer- im that he and the Colonels have agreed on terms. So far Miller hae not been able to spend the bankroll he has for some new player, ‘The Cincinnati club, which recently got Gonzales in the trade with George Burns for Hiente Groh, is looking for @ good spot to place the celebrated Gonzales will likely go to 3t. Louls if Branch Rickey can show Moran something worth while. Jack Hendricks confided last evening that he had sold Shin- ners, the greatest outfielder in the world, to the Giants, but that it will not be a question of a bank vault full of money. George Wiltse says he isn't buying or selling anything, but he's having a dandy time talking to New York fans about the old days. The Amerfoan League goes at it If blue ment and leave it where mere man will just pencil this advertise- wife, mother, aunt or daughter will see it, all will be merry for Christmas! Dressing gowns — t he sort men wear. Housecoats with a put- me-on-for - comfort’s - sake alr. Neckwear that won’t be worn in the bureau drawer. Slippers, canes, umbrel- las, brief cases, bags, silk mufflers, shaving sets, belt buckles. Fur caps, fur gloves, fur overcoats. Scotch knit jackets and waistcoats. Scotch and English golf Sporting goods. Of personal interest to }mere man himself! Revisions in men’s suits —price - scale - down all through the stock! * RoGERs PEET ComPANy Broadway Broadway at 13th St. “Four at 34th St. Convenient Broadway Corners” Fifth Ave. at Warren at 41st St. T

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