Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1922 NEW YORK COMES FROM BEHIND AND WINS BOXING HONORS % |LOWELU'S FOOTBALL THRIFT WEEK IN SPORTS: >: _:, By Thornton Fisher| New York Boy | Copyright, 1922 (The New York Hivening World), by the Press Publishing Co. Wins Ca ' ian TI STAND CAUSES Skating Title | MUCH DISCUSSION cine rat Moore, ninetéen-year-old speed king, is the champion outdoor skater of Opinion Divided Among Lead- ing Colleges Regarding Har- Canada. Moore won the title by win- ning the 880-yard event and finishing vard President’s Views of Gridiron Sport. second in the {wo mile race. Mi has now accounted for seven skating titles and one world's record. This is one of the greatest records ever com- piled by competitors of the steel blades. Moore tsarted his skating ac- tivities six. years-ago. In his first contest he was pitted against the leading skaters of the time. He sur- prised the spectators by his speed and finished in third place. His next start was a handicap affair, which he easily ‘won, In winning the Canadian title Moore scored 70 points. Jewtraw of Lake Placid, national champion, trailed with 60 points; MoWhirter of Chie cago finished third with 60; Stein mets of Chicago, fourth with 403 Boyd of Brooklyn and Donovan of St. GY fy President Lowell of Harvard cer- yf tainly has started @ lot of discussion Uy all over the country in criticising college eports, football especially, declaring that they get too much publicity and advocating abolishing oters Warring Over Boxing| a1 cames but the Yale mame and 4 yt season to internati in Armories Should Forget | competition. Itere's what some of the leading col authoritl fi Subject Now. the leading ootlege es think Columtia. OW that Gov. Miller has come)” president Lowell's statement re: out flat-footed as being op-| garding current football practices in Posed to the use of rt grey the Penge yt a are not likely boxing shows, everybody with the| to be receiv: any too great ‘ of the sport at heart should rmth and enthusiasm at Colum- Paul tied with 80; Forsman of New ‘wrangling on the subject. Fur-| ie. In view of the recent acquist- York, 10 and Hearn of New York 10. bickering and wire pulling wiii| {on by the New York institution of ‘Moore will meet Jewtraw again the no good. Instead, continued ef- we bacterin bn ad hat ah rh gai VE purcmaned with tha idea, ot pj s bs y Ma y bk pa of next Gorn We the Rett r eps ath : Lz k plonship events at Lake Placid. on the part of those who have the grounds f 1 th- ‘en ; Vy exerting all kinds of political | jetics and the erection of stadiums j Y : Y his showing in the Canadian meet th te New York youngster has a good ce toward throwing open the} for athletic purposes, ft can be structures to professional pro-| safely sald. that the’ Morningside chance to take the title from Jew- may do the game irreparable | Helghts university te in no position cules . Gov. Miller has been to sympathize with President Low- Patient in the matter 90 far. He has| *'# views ven it’ more time than some of his Bcwdccessors would under similar con. | Princeton. It therefore behooves those PR vehi 0 aes et chia wou Prest of hen Seaar op bay colct not to] Princeton “University refused to ANOTHER BLP WHO MIGHT GET A SAVING STREAK. omment I ight Chief Executive might decide that reat mr Galan vy f thong game isn’t worth the candie and} dent Lowell of Harvard to the effect —— Record Basketball Score. TOLEDO, 0., Jan. 20.—The record baeketball score for the season was meade at Swanton, O., 1ast night when the Archbold High School five defeated the home team, 151 to 11, It was the Bat game ever played by Swanton I ll | i lu ( in sntertument ‘to thovmant, a] Ny SP ay Sos Good Showing Winnin 9° Johnny Reisler Here To-Night seat eer a oes ee ee 1 756 P oun d Boxin g Tit le L | V E VV | R E S Clonie Tate and Tim Droney|CARPENTIER {S SIGNED ' PRacTICE THRIFT” $pss it all into the scrap heap. that intercollegiate football ig loom- THiS WEEK— ° ° [Sate ico enn pet ote] Meuemaommane, |Charles McKenna Makes Babe Herman of California Boxes Madison Square Garden. It pro- at eieeate bag Proiaent G whe woud weep and wail Ae the Pia pS ont total em: Appear in Other Twelve- TO FIGHT LEWIS ABROAD fll hands ought to get together now | ‘et ne Final Night’s Bouts of Intercity) ALL AROUND ATHLETE BY NEAL R. O'HARA. Round Bout, , SOME TIME IN APRIL, bulid up rather than try to tear aN 4 Copyright, 1922 (The New York Evening World), by the Press Publishing Co. TO | what should be a popular anq|Perm State College. =|. | «= Tourney Result in Ex- IS FIGHTING PARSON Johnny Wilson 1s barred in seventeen States, but so is John Barleycorn. By John Pollock. PARIS, Jan. 20—Francole Des- Fmanent sporting natitton, ab tae antares oni hast ° citing Battles. K. 0ED AT GARDEN, | 424 John B. seoms to be getting along fairly well, at that. Built Gotieel BAS SCAreteRy aratinen cafe GHEE for Georges oa fighters will be staged by Tex Rick- hi iT igned articl r State College in the persons of . The light heavyweight champlon—Gene Tunney. The heavy lightweight champion, signed artic! ye fj HE fight to open armories in| president John M. Thomas and Ath- \ By Robert Boyd. Clair Broad, of Pittsburgh, who \ rd 8a arden’ (o-| da bet i Hae rate mere or Powerful) etic Director Hugo Besdek. They, GMD great fenune iocaurhtt| ane. nemeree clei Wy, meron chaniion weay en ee apne OS Rates me i Slate Ted (Kia) Lewis, in at fig! . * fq , sy ereitical {stereets was enlisted) togviter with other members of the “S RRSP pare dea adel ler Hon catch srpaiC Fact that Tunney comes from Greenwich Village explains why he is|twelve rounds Babe Herman of Calt-| Lendon early In April, according to the Paria editi the New n to Tex Rickard. Promoters| undoubtedly be made in conducting 0 the Paris jon of ‘ _ : fornia meets Johnny Reisler of New “ Rickard, a sl: the inter-city amateur boxing |® hard nut to crack. us of his success sought to cre-' the sport, but it is generally be- | oo ¥ 4 ab antl a hae Pig | tourname : at Madison Square deed York. In the semi-final of twelve the impression that he was “hog-| lieved here that the matter is not of me y Garden, is a student at Bethany Newclastle, England, offers 80,000 pouads for a Carp-Dempsey fight, |rounds, Clonie Tait, the Canadian Wk neat Seay tight by #0 much importance as the criticlam | Madison Square Garden after the] © iebeeha: iertakl 4 ‘spo! y ave! made by President A. Lawrence {tinal bout ot the | ; jollege, where he is taking a {but neglects to state whether the pounds mean coal or darby, champion, will meet Tim Droney of ded in doing so with any but| Lowell of Harvard in his annual 4 out of the Intercity A. A. U.| course as medical missionary. He ears Pennsylvania. In the two eight- : fair-minded commission on the| report would indicate. eer eas ban aval igs ceventy 5 arent vonane in Golf tournaments will charge admission fees hereafter, but there 1s one raved bouts Battling Leonard of —— words appropriately de- consolation, at that. Ticket scalpers can never hold out the best seats at|‘‘Philly” mocts ly Marlowe of : the Garden no opposition to nim would | Val€s teribe the tignting of the last night] Beg Seiden “at, Fort Worth, | &,f0le tournament, weer + [Chicago will take on Fredale Jacks | y fist Jehnsy (Corin of, Jer city. and EW HAVEN, Jan, 20.—The gen- |of the intersectional s! sat e jacks | Bobb; ford, 5 arisen. But because thd pro-| N! aN Eh ten re i ‘ Bregeuer eon PMee he is known as the Home Run Baker denies he has quit baseball. He has only quit making |of England. Toe ee wees on a oter stepped in, as others with fore-| Statements of President Lowell of |S/ve wielders that was won by New !n addition to | home runs. — in thelr second dectoion ‘bout at the Casino ht might have done before him,| Harvard, to the effect that the uni- |York with four bouts. Pittsburgh] his pugilistic abilities Broad is an | eee Wille Jackson, the crack local itght-| A. C. of Fall River, Mass, on the night 4 assumed the unheard-of burden| versities consider afresh the prover | won two and Boston and Philadelphia| al! around athlete. He plrys { Once there was a football hero that visited Los Angeles without having | We'sht, who has been laid up with an in-| of Jan 27. In their previous bout, which leasing the Garden for ten years| place of public intercollegiate ath- | 01) oy, ckle on Bethany College foot- his picture taken with a beautiful movie vamp. It was in 1893, before the | ured hand since hp fought Johnny Dundee| was fought several weeks ago, Curtin nd made a “go” of it, rivals not so| [etic contests in the acheme of edu- 3 : ball team; throws thi over . movies settled in Los Angeles. at the Garden, is ready to fieht again. He| knocked out Dyson tn the fifth round. ute set up a howl, Fighters and cation ly adverse ey that of the Cam- Madison Square Garden has quaked 140 feet and competes in the shot } ewe has been matched by Frank agley to meet — Pheir managers joined in.\ They over-| ever preferred to, ; and trembled under the stress and! put ae well. | marciinatene, nie Blas conth, Weise daily stories of the tournaments’ nom, 574. sigrt-round tovt at (asthe estams of sears time Cpr Hary Wile, and Kea 4 Fadetheats a — — oul a * d the fact that Rickard from the| comment, uniil, President James |atrain of the masses of humanity that } § eee Philadelphia on Jan, 81, It ought to be a| Norfolk for @ fifteen-round bout for the began showing them more money | fia Whhan Interviewed Premdent |Attend the professional fistic matches, | gett, a game and hard-hitting little In burglary, as in sport, the that has the breaks comes out ahead, | ‘*"” ‘teresting e Aree benrrwerent charartenship title et n they arse dreamed ot Eucting for Argent said he had read press acy |but never in the long existence of the| fed-baired youngster from Boston, . » the say é ‘Mudiaon Square Garden Pheir pugilistic efforts. ey fa a mn the night of counts of Dr, Lowell's revort but Referee Casper Kirschner stopped) Harry Neary is no longer the manager of| Feb. 17. Leo Flynn, manager of Norfolk, appreciate that the general tone| did not care to make anv comment |!d brown structure has such a small/ the fight between William Antrobus Terry Martin, the fest little bantamweight | ie willing to clinch the bout for Norfolk. the game was improved and al on the matter, crowd displayed greater enthusiasm.|of New York and Jack Rowe of NO WOMEN AT BOUTS JAMES THOMPSON NOW PRO [ot Prov R. 1. Nearysquit Martin ———_—.—_— era in the promotron of boxing — ‘And the enthusiasm was warranted, | Pittsburgh inthe final of the ae WITH MEN, MAYOR ORDERS. AT APAWAMIS GOLF CLUB Becanee RET? es “etueee to) do. (eeaiae DENIES PURDUE OFFERED hows started. Pennsylvania. lfor no four hours were ever filled | Pound Class. After 2 minutes and 27 on Jan, 27. It looks if Martin has lost ft Instead of being a mecca for rough- seconds of hard fighting in the second CLEVELAND, Jan. 20.—Boxing| James M. Thompson lv the vew golt|® Sod manager in Neary, as the latter has| STARS FOOTBALL SALARIES. tks and general undesirables, the PHILADELPHIA, Jan, 20.—The /with greater action in glove combat| poung the referee intervened to save made plenty of money for Martin and, be- at the Garden began to attract Albiatied Res ecuiee 8k ‘the Univers: ‘than the last evening of the intercity ine dtteburgh fighter from further| POUt# 18 Cleveland. under « new rul-|professiona! at the Apewamls Club. He| sides, has kept him busy fighting. people. a y 2 eceeds th t ill Potts, who over the statement of President |championships. punithment, declaring’ Antrobus the; ioe Y Mayer Ered Kohlcr will be Ms 6 vorecen: 2 PENDLETON, Ore., Jan. 20.—Rich< for men only, or for women only left the club at Ryo last autumn.| ye gonnny Dundee le matched to fight at {#7 Hanley, coach of the Pendleton Lowell of Harvard, who contends 5 " _ victor. i, A, re fs ata Kin ae lee 1» matched to fight a Fa 6, To quote that ‘New York City won . ‘In no case,” the Mayor said, “wil!|Thompson is best known for his the Olympia A. A. of Philadelphia on ‘High Schol fotball team and who was (\ Keates te lireven dacend collene, football Rue loneen mould hevehe acutwavealiant teatareel | wei etree omen wren thie 185-| a bout be permitted ‘before a crowd) !N& ability, While not @ sensational | 59° oy with Joe Bei recently reported to be negotiating und class championship from Joo! of both men and women, Violation|Pltyer the ‘new Apawamis pro gen- on the sport for a living, :ran-| Manager of Athletics E.R. Bus! jot the account of the “four hours of|Brackney of Phi‘adelphia, Refers; of the rule will mean revoking the|¢?slly manages to fare quite well in with Coach William (Lone Star) Diets them instead. Rickard trod ail} clin & statement last night anid: to go to Purdue University, as assistant Brooklyn at the Broadway Exhibition Asso-|coach, denied reports lustenight thet ciation of Brooklyn on Feb. 6. It looks as| salaries had been offered to Western if Dundee will have to call off his go with |athletes to go to Purdue. Reese, Prof. Leslie J. Dyer, Chairman of the Faculty Athletic Committee of the Uni- fl ” ¥ . important tournaments. ‘Thompson “L'see ho reason to be disturbed action, The impressive showing of | <irschner properly stopped this uem- license of the club. = e the oriticiam, but when attemptn to] over the interest which the public is lcharies McKenna, a fast two-tisted | teresting fight after 2 minutes and 3t| |, “If women must see boxing bouts,”|comes from Overbrook. where Hedge pen up the armories as opposition| showing in intercollegiate football. : seconds of fighting in the first round, | the Mayor said, “let them arrange to) Younes LA , drew to a head he began to fight At Pennsylvania the interest has |fighter, who won the 115-pound Brackney injured his right hand andj) have them witnessed entirely by mem-| . xe k. grown very steadily in the last few |championship frem Al Johnson, rock- bers of their own sex.” Apawamis is one of the best known He pointed out that permitting fi be 4 4 was unable to make the battle inter- clubs in the United States. It has been Btate buildings to be used for box-| Year*, but since @ vast majority of |ing the latter to sleep with a right to —_ : While there were many successful boxing|versity of Washington, and Pacific wae beca Ac ates stecsete ies Perna bye a \ ; the scene of numerous notable cham- | siows staged in the State of Massachusetts |Coast representative of the National ing wae untair to nim because he paid | aluimnt or atudenta, their interests the jaw in Ppinbiegiana'1® pecnts Charles Kuay of {he Clark House | Baseball Federation Takes — fv'cnships, expecially the national ama in "par a ona tne romans ee | Caen athe Aaaotain eid h reas ne . ~ . . F Judge’ 5 hy plenty of money, two of those which ight @ a would have no such obligations to ee! be mentioned asa feature of the tour-! rank Koobell of the National A. C. Up New York Questions | inland defeated Fred Herresnont in pieniy <e aacear- Avo. ot Uien _anien | Ee aes Fe and unleareny ae an Dartmouth. nament. But the°most singular sight|in the 1/5-pound open class after pEmn ee an extra-hole match for the title rom tests between Nate Stegel and Paddy n|dro-Woolley and Pendleton, had been ix second shot hit a boulder ott the |\**,turmeen, Nave Stegel snd Paddy Flynn |Offered flat salaries of $100 a month to Federation {oe 1aing_ hole and bounded ‘clear over | 429,402.31, and Nate Btegel and Ted Kid|play fotball et Purdue, that travelling tion, | to ie gre i Com of all was the titanic struggle be- ithe Athietic Commission, headed by | saNovmR, N. H. Jan, 20.—The |tween the heavyweights in the final William Muldoon, sided with Rickard| atutty of Dartmouth Collone i the controversy. Charges that the is" three slashing rounds of close fig! CLEVELAND, ing. f the National in which Gordon Munce of New York Frank Fasano of the Paulist A. ©. ,3 . 20.—Directors. a tirely 1 i controlling body of sand tot nascball Lewis on April 8, which drew down §21,- Gane bad pase went one slaves, Shay rely in sympathy with th >| a > 653.88. sclos 1080 leogatiol a . den promoter was being favored | taken by President Lowell of Har- |Knocwed out Clale Broad of Pitts-| won the 118-pound special class final |in America, met here (0-day in annual Red Monroe Is Winner. Marshall, acting President of Purdue by the powers that be were heard,| vard that college football should not |DUrN and the latter lay in the cen-| over Adam Hill, another New Yor | session. A number of important ques-| fed Monroe, the Yonkers “hearcat.” | Pnit Lewis, manager of Bartley Madden, |Univeraliy, and that as a result ind the general bellef in some quar-| be considered as {mportant in schol- |tre of the roped Inclqsure while six] Aghter. Mona wate lated: for’ settlement. “iasliae laceen Por etioin: elites over Billy lune sacs Universtiy, nd eh t as a rom t Coach rs was that Rickard exerted an in-| astic activities, men made an unsucc®ssful attempt ee ing a Gotiston in Mew York’ frafiontoe Murphy of Staten Island at the Colum- | offered jwence in all the deliberations of t! _— to remove\him to his corner, mixup now claimed by two rival Man-|bus Sporting Club of Yonkers in a sen- al oy ls 4 ™*| Annapolis. Broud was a. stalwart, amateor PADDOCK WILL BE POINTED |hattan sroups. tational, twelverround™ bout. last ‘night. ed it up. Lewit ‘This was ridiculous, of course. As ANNAPOLIS, Md., 20a. | Welwhing close to $00 pounds and tow. | FOR QUARTER MILE WORK. ASE lt sire tea Pa onan ee ay aaa cra at Prypieekt lag lig ney cep mig cy FLESH REDUCING matter of fact, Rickard had no pull| miral Henry B. Wilson's ald, Lieut, |CTD& 6 feet 6 inches in height. He 1 —— post to’ cover public welfare and educa: | Buller “of | Hngland focelved” a| prosecte fm teeta with IR Bean et ’ any kind, anywhere. He didn't] M. 8. Tisdale, stated the senerai | had won his preliminary bouts in mas-) saueM, Jan, 20,—Charlie| onal work ihocough anion Cee te make Le emela cat MEN’S-CLASSES-WOMEN S eed any. He simply’ran his Garden| view of the Naval Academy on the | terly fashion i | Paddock, ersity of Southern z Sn strictly bucinessiiie basis ana | football situation linst night when he | Sid Terris of New York flashed | Californot sprinter ‘who. holds| —— ried Sammy Vogel, the Harlem Mahtweight, who is PHILA. JACK 0’ BRIEN standard which the commission i Guha re academy is not likely |some clever boxing, winning the 118-| world’s reoords in the 100 and 200-yarid rapidly fighting bis way to the top of the light- . aked. | pound champtonship f | dashes, probably will go after the weight division, will meet Charile Pilkington, the MADIQON SQUARE 7540-7883-1712, ty nee | 44-yard Fecord of 47 2-5 seconds On hearing of the Governor's dis- held by Ted Meredith sometime the onal of the armory question, Rickard ’ + coming season, according to an an- jd simply, “That's fine." He added a eyre Sa ing O- ay houncement by Dean Cromwell, Pa3- : hat he had no desire to fight honest @ock's trainer and track ec Frank Frisch, star second baseman of the New York Giants, has mpetition. “If any one wants to run — the University of Southern Ca’ signed a two-year contract with i lone of the world. in opposition to me, let him build an fornia. . the Glantememnlsns ° aeramaae ie riche: "x bolt my on “The State armories are primarily for the use of the National Guard | °°Cromwell has left Salem for Los Harvard and Yale were the winners in the continuation of the HHERE’S a money saving Sian tn dérecy, didn't J. and at Tol.| > 0"* showld be used for milltery purposss,”—Governor Miller, Angeles to commence spring training| Metropolitan championship equash tennis series, the former defeating too? I could have had ball parks lathing has. been seid about the ealary farbe paid Feoveh, but the ane verity it tenow it yat{ the Crescent Athletic Club team while Yale was conquering Princeton. incentive in our revised pares else for the purpose In) gemands that he makes in the form of @ contract are impossible of ap. | but I may allow him to try for a “Earl (Greasy) Neale, W. and J. football coach, has signed a con- ‘prices on men’s Winter = proval.’’—August Herrmann, President of the Cincinnati Reds | resend jn the Ae during th Test! tract to play with the Cincinnati Rede next of ponranateand suits—forty <4 ‘VEN admitting that George “x. ier — f Cromwell. Pasq Natalie won the opening match in the ew York State ©." Chaney didn’t foul Alex as received a substantial increase over last year's contract —_——_—_— pocket billiard championship by defeating Arthur Church by 125 to 34. dollars affords a liberal choice of either. Hart ft mht and is now one of the highest paid players in the game.”"—The Manager W. R. Brooks of Columbia, 8. C., won the preliminary, handicap th Pee (Gree ae moneeniphin Ue of the New York Giants, SIGNING $75,000 O'CONNELL | ot the Pinehurst Gun Club target tournament, ‘breaking 95 targets th a boxer whose punches are al- = FOR NEXT YEAR ON COAST| > out of 100. v8 questionable no matter whom he “The Yankees have never For the first time ade wy kind of @ proposition to the ince Deo 30, Lang, the star jockey of the wine fights. Chaney’s record is punctuatei| Salt Lake Club for Duffy Lewis."’—Ed Barrow, Business Manager of the SAN FRANCISCO, Golf, Jan. 20.—| ter meet at New Orleans, failed to ride even one winner. tf x z New York rhe b fouls. He lost to Johnny Dundee| New York Americans. George Futnam, Mecreiary ‘ofthe, Bap The Riding Club Junior polo trio defeated the Manhattan Clul 1 -Reliable materials, dependable the Garden through the delivery of aie. erie Francisco Club of the Pacific Coast| Juniérs at Durland’s Riding Academy by a score of 9 to 7. He * * P, low punch, just as he has in other Erik Hagenlacher, the German billiard champion, 4s @ good player, Baseball League, is in Sacramento to J. H. Van Tassel won from 8, Schoen, 35 to 31, in the three- ! tailoring and assured value. ttles before and since. In the (hil-| dut he fiddies too much and lacks syatem.”’—Maurice Daly. obtain the signature of Jimmy O'Con-| gyshion billiard tournament at Thum's Billiard Academy. fi pli nell, an, to a new con- j rae ; i in eer coeme wie. mart ae Soh. Np “We look for 1,000 contestants to enter the Clay Target Ch tract, O'Connell's old contract having Gperges Sarpentien, world’s light heavyweight champion, 'e 2 ne snsseisna| "We 00k for 1.000 eater the Clay ainnion- |e tal pont. “Grooanlnast pod | bad of nfuenae at hie home in Pa Inghen High Bebe! ROKAW BROTHERS i a seeees, eridenice of a foul ad ree et | Amarin: —Stony McLean, retary of the American recently by San Fi They fe mbia Freshmen deferted the Washington Hig choo! Hart, loesn't necessarily Association. Vork Giants fo intet a score of 47 to 16. that Chaney didn't deliver one. Ema “ae APT mets Reenoh of Youngtown, end John Galveniel Tunede. det 1457-1463 BROADWAY lart couldn't continue the battle, und | “Please accept my thanks for the many kind things vou have seid Sele ‘on feated Tom Boyd of Fox Hills and Cyril Walker of Englewood in a AT FORTY-SECOND STREET he has never been accused of being| about Harry Greb, 1 don't want to fll your mail with bunk, a ta jor oP ime professional match staged at Pinehurst, N. C. | thing but game, his claim thut he| Jacobs, but | do want you to «now that 1 aw deeply grateful to r ee. Bas The De La Salle Prep team reyitered ite twelfth ste ight basket- fouled is worth some consiJera- your kindness.”"—Goorge Enge!, Manager of Greb to the Sporting Editor | saiary for the 1932 season during’ wxich ball vietory Of the season at the home court, outclassing Maputo J of The Evening World, A be will remain with San Franciaco. \ jehool by, a score of 32 to 19, 4 MS /