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=/13 3) HO on Condition of Leonard's Right Fist. - HB much talked of Benny Leon- ard-Charley White champion- ship match isn't on March 17. Weither is it off. It all depends on Leonard's right hand. He hurt it @lightly on Rocky Kansas when they met recently at the Garden, and while St was still soft, he jammed it against Pal Moran's hard head in their ten- found bout at New Orleans Saturday Right. This happened in the Grst round, and Benny had to lef hook Ihis way to the decision. Leonard and Manager Billy Gibson got in from New Orleans yesterday afternoon, and to-day Gibson | @waiting the result of Dr. Rothen- erg’s examination of the champion’s @hief weapon before deciding on the bout with White. Leonard may have | @ays in gymnasiam work before it can | be determined whether or not it will stand the wear and tear of an assault n White. This will leave not any foo much time for hard training, be- ®@ause meanwhile March 17 is bearing own on us. Leonardi knows, and Gibson is sure | of it, that Benny needs besides good hands, something more than a hair ut and shave preparation for the _ Chicago lightweight. Gibson didn't ~ gee the methodical Chicagoan wear | flown Willie Jackson very scientifically | two weeks ago and then flop him | twice, but he has read all about it. He aso remembers Leonard's tough eession with White at Benton Harbor, ‘thifg he had in a wallop to subdue him at a very critical stage of the battle. ie | N_ view “of these things Gibson can't be fairly criticized for not jumping at the March 17 date. though it means something like to the championship bank ac- what is a paltry Presidential , even if earned in a single eve- compared to the hands of a chdinpion? A patched up mitt might go out of Championship Match Depends to try out the hand for a couple of | Mich., when Benny had to put every-' | feated in Municipal Meet | at Garden. By Robert Boyd. ITH a strong, well balanced team, the lithe limbed ath- letes of the W other departments In the first indoor ties at Madison Square Garden be FIREMEN ATHLETES AT THE MUNICIPA CARRY OFF HONORS “INBIG CTY GAMES McAllister, Flying Cop, De- New York Fire Department demonstrated their su- | periority over teams representing the | meet of the Municipal Athletic Activi- fore *n enthustastic gathering of dbo Father Knickerbocker's “‘smoke eaters" had amassed a total of forty- two points, winning the Willlam A. Cohen challenge trophy and a silk banner emblematic of the all-around athletic championship of Greater New York, The challenge trophy must be defended semi-annually and won three times to become the property of either department, while the municipal ban- ner becomes the permanent property of the Fire Department. The Police Department captured second place with a total of seventeen points, while the Department of Edu- cation finished third with a total of ten and the Department of Docks fourth with nine, Bob McAllister of the Police De- partment, and latest athlete to shat- ter the 160-yard world’s indoor record, also establishing new times for the intermediate distances, was the most conspicuous figure of the evening. i The “Flyiiig Cop,” starting from scratch in the 60-yard dash handicap, gave a large and fast fleld liberal al- lowances and just came within a frac- tion of an inch of breasting the worst- ed ahead of FE. F. Kingsley of the Fire Department, the winner. Kings- ley had a handicap of eighteen feet, but the cyclonic sprinting sensation was just getting under way when the finish was reached, Had the distance been a few more yards McAllister would have been an easy winner. The winner's time was 6 and 4-6 seconds, In the 50-yard running event for women employees, ‘Blanche A. Dixon of the Health Department bounded over the boards like a seasoned sprint- er, defeating Sally Twohill of the Board of Education and Anna Mul- heren of the Dock Department, who finished in the order named. The 50-yard sack race went to James McCahill of the Park Depart- ment. C. E, Maddox of the Fire De- partment was second and James Mc- Cue of the Fire Department third. The time was 8 and 1-5 seconds, Thomas Downey of the Board of Education won the high jump with 5 fect 8 inches. Louis Leznesvsky of the Police Department was second with 5 feet 6 and Frank Lauterborn of the Police was third with 6 feet 5 inches. commission the first time Leonard} Dan Shea, with fourteen seconds shot with it, and depending on a single|#!lowance, won the 300-yard handj- Bf hooked straight or otherwise, | C#P. Eb. F. Kingsley of the Fire De- «woild: be taking altogether too big a guthble, especially with Charley White e hooking artist himself. 4 leanwhile White is at » awaiting the all important home in word which will mean eithef one more of his many chances to win a ‘itié or months of waiting. Ike Dor- #am, who recently jumped into the ‘Teague managerial class when he med charge of White's ring business, is in New York, camped on Gibson's doorstep, hoping that the ohysician's O. K. will be put on Leon- ord’s right fist. Chances like this match don't come Dorgan’s way often. we also mavages Fay Keiserg the Cumberland fighting glutton, but Fay can't draw any such big money matches as White, particularly since the Willie Jackson affair | | pagtment was second and John Sweeney of the Dock Department was third. Chris Schreifer of the Police De- partment won the half-mile novice walk, P. O'Conner of the Fire De- partment was second and A. B, Litch- man of the Fire Deparment was third. In a closely contested 1,000-yard handicap David Lilley of the Dock Department won in 2.29 4-5. Joseph Sankeep of the Fire Department was second and H. Loben of the Finance Department was third. Joseph Tiedeman of the Fire De- partment won the mile run handicap. Sol Silverstein of Publle Welfare, starting from scratch, ran a great race and finished second, with Walter Van Bergen of the Fire Department third. aoe ARO A UOT a THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MAROH 1, ME-RUN KING COMES TO AGREEMENT WITH YANKEE. CLUB : By Thornton Fisher THE FIRE DEPT SPEED MANIACS Were Rest AchOSS THE WPS IN THE 500 ND. GALLOP SO Nd. RUN WOMEN - THE BuRGAU OF PEPAIRS AND supe” DOWATED A PRIZE- SOME OF THE | GIRLS NEEDED IT. THREE OF THEM SkIO0ED L GAMES ‘ 1922, Copyright (The New York Evneing World) by Press Publishing Company, 1922. POLICE CEPT- Won THE HALE-MILE WALIC- OH, WELG, T JHE PRACTICE — HE oEeTSs proun WIFE AND SON OF FATHER WHO 1S ENTERED In THE Sack RACE 3) » uy CLP i SLEY (WOM WAKDICAP- THE FINING CoP 08 MtaLLISTER Boe START ONE OF THE WAUGRS WENT ROUND nN HIS OVER. A Pair OF WINTER TUNDIES ” LIVE WIRE By Neal R. O’ Hara. Copyright, 1924, (New Yor’: Evening World) by Press Publishing Co. If hold-out statistics are correct, there will be more sport wr! than ball players reporting at training camps this spring every nickel that comes in to them, oe Hymie Gold is latest boxing sensation. drops to the floor. iters * 6 @ Despatches state ball players are crazy over ancient Scot! pastime. They are also addicted to the old Scotch game of salting Jingles every time he oes “Billiardist Has Run of 902."—Headline Looks like a fielding averago. ee le Braves will train this year at St. Petersburg, Fla. Climate there may not do ‘em much good, but horseshoes will help ‘em out stake Takes all kinds of people to make up the human race. ‘The citizens of Leesburg, Fla., are proud that the Phillies are training in their mi oe The New York clubs haven't got the pennants cinched, but you don’t notice any ticket scalpers planning vacations for next October, do you? i ) In going to Eagle Pass, Tex., Connie Mack is going as far Sout west as he can and still stay in America. When season opens A’s will drop as far South as possible and still remain in the American League. Yale’s Latest Track Marvel _— co ‘o Run Here in Junior Games William Comins Will Toe Mark in Sixty-Yard Event tan championship medals awarded to the winning clubs w time surprised the athletic world a few days ago by defeating Bob McAllister, Ber- nie Wefers and Jackson Scholz. ‘This youngster, William A. Comins of Yale, will represent the Blue in the 60-yard championship of the Nafional Junior RESULTS OF GAMES IN WOMEN'S MET CHAMPIONSHIY § ill be n Title ‘ in its forty-oad tor National Title. y ganization, the Inter. | ad Sa giate AL A A. will award title | Local followers of athletics will have ee ny, te sie college pe te ames that are to be held at the another chance to see the sprinter who| Regiment Armory on March 1 | WOMEN’S TENNIS TOURNEY. \ gins h Question of Winning Games Is Now Up to Managers With Training Season On Jack Hendricks got some important money. Also the nts have ‘‘Ike"’ Boone, an outfielder from New Or- leans, who was known there as ‘the Holdouts and , Winter Stuff Accordingly Go Into Base- Sailor Maxted knoc Fistic News and Gossip By John Pollock FIGHT RESULTS. , fourt round. sixth round, Frankie Jerome beat Sammy Nable— Tarzan Larkin knocked ed out Wolf Lar- AFTER CONFERENCE WH OL HUSTON 1922 Salary and Is Not An- nounced, HOT SPRINGS, March 1.—Babe Ruth is showing something new im smiles. The Home-Run King, ‘after a three-hour conference with Col Huston, came to terms for 1922. ‘The size of salary and bonus was not an- nounced, but the money involved is so. great that Col. Ruppert’s O. K. of Bonus Size shipshape, Ruth came out of the conference room smiling broadly, and he's been that way ever since. Col. Huston savs: “Ruth, Huggins and myseli came to a tentative agree- ment, although we didn’t actually sign, Our understanding was agree- able and as a Ruth contract is soms contract we decided to wait & little while and communicate with Col. |Ruppert in New York.” . | The Colonel arrived from Dover Hall,’ Ga., yesterday morning. The Carl Mays situation Is still steeped im deepest mystery. Huggins looked thoughtfully from his window and said that if the rain stopped, he would run up to the Majestic and have a talk with the underhand flinger. Mave made no advance on the big Colonel and the tiny manager. Frank Baker, not given to golf, wanted to warm up yesterday, so he didn’t have to coax Al Devormer! into the alley at the side of the Yankee headquarters for an hour's flipping of the ball back and forth. Baker says, his injured leg has come around to splendid in great style. All the athletes grumbled over this beastly day. Pain fell all night and with never a letup, finally turning into an icy sleet that made walking dangerous, and covering the sur- rounding trees with a brilliant net- work of icicles Ruth, Bush, Schang, Hoyt, Shawkey and Scott glared’ from the big lobby windows and could see no beauty ip Jack Frost's amazing hindiwork. Cheated of their beloved golf, they were blind to nature's frozen charms.) Huggins sent for Bob Shawkey th! fe lies etevareen - 12 rounds, decision, morning and handed over the ring- ball Discard. Hecate t Boos is said to Be a) iiladelphia—Tommy Loughran out- | Master's whip temporarily. Bob Is now; Ee ees But any weakness that may be suf. [Pointed Bryan Downey, ten rounds. boss of the squad, fered: ta Ms Buta eT Ute ar prennsylvania—Danny aor’ vs. ae thito Keep the Paha sare a zema bs ” 3 jobby WilKams, ten rounds, draw the end of next week. Ruth iT By Bozeman Bulger. will be more than offset by added} lewa—Navy Restan beat Fritz Knipp. | only exception. Yuggins, whe hopes PCH money frown of the player|strength in the infield. That's why|ten rounds to leave for New Orleans sonio tim! and the beetled brow of the out-|the trade was ma The addition of} Ohio — Johnny Klesch outpointed |} to-morrow, said that he would as’ raged magnate a’ ratched. | Heinie Groh giv McGraw the best|Harry Krohn, 12 rounds. Kuth to report at the training cam: The winter stuff is off. John MeGraw, | infield in either league and one that] Youngstown—Danny Frush knocked | oy March 11 or 12, ax he would be ¢ Miller Huggins and Wilbert Robinson | ought to show up the famous $100,000 }0Ut Dick Loadmna, fourth round. are inteested right now far more concern to t fan, They've got to win | real ones. McGraw, already ut San Antonio with his champs, must develop a suc- or to George Burns—some one who can keep that outfield from fal- te New of York games-- infield of the old Athleti and Frisch around second at first will add much smug look this summer. Bancroft nd Kelley to McGraw’ lin, Ki The outfield porary, Yanks are also beset with an problem, but it will be tem- Until Ruth and Meusel serve Boston—; ¥ Jack O'Brien, Ohlo—Don Baxter knocked out Jack ate ten rounds, decision. ‘oungstown—Mike Moran decision. edy, elghth round, Jack Dempsey, heavyweight cham- pion, will occupy a ringside seat when jegel beat Eddie Shev: defeated big attraction in the first two exhibi- tion games in New Orleans. aor Giants at San Antonio Anxious to Get Busy. SAN ANTONIO, March 1.—After a night of sleep in regular beds, thor- ling apart in the middle. Also he must! out their terms of penal servitude for} "” y oughly rested from the fatiguing tighten up his string with a couple barnstorming Huggins will be ner-|Kid Norfolk and Harry Wills, the Col- | crogs-country train ride, the world’s of eurve-ball pitchers at's bis vous. He has made no serious at- | ored vattlers, meet in the star bout of | champion Giants are to-day ready to worry. . _ tempt to fill those ga nd wisely so. | fifteen rounds at the Garden to-mor-| eet into the harness and begin thelr If either MeGraw or Huggins ever When Ruth and Meu get back | row nignt. Wills has been clamoring T has had any misgivings about hold- what would he do with the expensive | ¢ ou tre uid cane spring training grind. The whole outs th have not said so. These newcomer? a bout with Dempsey and will en |ioum, with exception of a few play- fellows always have signed ahead of — Huggins will gamble on his won-|deavor to show his worth. The colored]ers who are expected to reach here the gong, they say. There is no rea- derful pitching staff pulling the club| Sporting fraternity will turn out in|to.day from the Pacific Coast, is jere, son for the belief that a demon ath- along the first six weeks. He could force for the contest and all members are displaying an lete's nature will change over one use a fill-in. outfielder very handily} ena anxiety to get out on the field. winter. but good outfielders are not beine| , 7¥° nae aid Posies at Madison} ‘The only drawback now is the local Huggins’s problem is to find out sold nor are they being signed at big nia BSP Gdn incest ba weather, It has rained for a week, about Frank Baker's legs. Unless salaries for fill-in jobs of six weeks — | $! u ase and added to that the weather Is not those legs can carry the infield for six In the mean time there is always | 1) Per cont. The Labreaeineainng mplod / at “all what the Southwest is famous weeks the Yanks will be in a jam. hope of a pardon from Judge Landis. | | °y henry baat earn goo ee the] for. It is colder here to-day than it Baker must play at third so as take a 8 Nae ee irtwecn tee Menten et emu. | Was in New York when the team em- up the slack in hitting. The war Col, Huston, who went to Dover Ys *-! barked on its journey. Hall last week, is on his way over to Hot Springs to have a talk with Ruth and Mays about their contracts. They both say there will be no dif- ficulty about it, ‘‘Cap'’ says the same | all thing. That ought to make it easy. | "8! ‘The correspondents as well as the | natives at Hot Springs expressed sur- | clubs of Meusel and Ruth are going to be missed at the start. Also Hug- got to find out if Mike Me- | Nally can play second, Uncle Robbie writes that much of | bis worry ended when Zach Whea signed. But he has still to solve bis infield problem. A lot of dead woos deiphia and ured up $29,730. signed up Joe Tiplitz, “Philly,” ly For the main bout at the next show of the Olympia A. A. of Philadelphia on Monday ht, Matchmaker Scotty the Montieth Gold of California, tig- has lightweight of to go against Joe Benjamin of California in an elght-round go The natives, however, are very optimistic and promise that the sun will be blazing hot in a day or so, and that once the sun does come out the fleld will be dried up well engugh fur hard prac- tice Catcher M ee iia wate : achlina, Ceres, Baker an te be cut out and new stuft|Prise at Babe Ruth playing golf in| iller Reports : anaes In the 1,600-yard Public School re-| Indoor Track and Field games at the | Scharmann, O15. | nas go! Y and ‘ne Lee scis aemeetae Shue ts ether ’ IBSON brings back a sud story |lay, Dewitt Clinton won, with Com-|92q Regiment Armory Saturday night, | defvsted Miss Bran Marine Berard} added, That infield hea wiven ROvbie | cavers stuck to thelr hotels. Thet| Deve Hoesnbers of Brooklyn, who ts teat To Dodgers’ Camp. y 0 conditions at New Orleans. |merce second and Stuyvesant third. | 074 wit be pitted ugainst a field a ii,| more sleepless nights than the Brook. | PMS StNGh to Aes Ruth the most | Yecoming one of the contenders for the mid ‘Special to The World.) * Hesays nearly everybody there} In a medley relay race of elght,|&0¢ Will Pe Pi bid Lie wilt:| tym fan might imagine, Without | Yuitapie’ in all baseball, He would | “welgnt title, will have @ hard time in hls! JaCKSONVILLE, Fla., March 1.— 4s broke or worse off, And most of |three and five laps handicap, Boys’ high class as any entered for a sprint i yMitt| some new life in it Uncle Wilbert }be valuable even if he could not POP in q twelve-round go at the Broadway Ex-|Among the arrivals in the Dodgers them are New Yorkers who went to|Club won, Columbia was second andj special this year. Bob McAllister, Al ae-| fears he won't be in the running. 1" | iose circuit clouts. He loves to play | inition Association of Brooklyn Monday|camp to-day was Otto “Moonie” the Crescent City for business and| Loughlin Lyceum third. The time|fred Laconey, Lafayette, Middle States A Sadia ! 86.) ts ot the infield that your Brooklyn |). cenail, has never lost. the thrill | ‘ot! ee ee peaeenre this winter, The races have / was 6.28 2-5, sprint champion; Victor Graeb of Co- | Janet Robertwon, Won 1" i's vey | manager $8 pointing, as our footfall yar goes with his trade, There 1s no |" ie Miller, the veteran backstop of the hard to beat. Very few players| The Inter-Departmental scratch re-|lumbia, Burt Haycock of Princeton | SPO | bjt; | sharps would say boy in America right now more eager} 4 match nas been practically clinched be-|*¢#™: Who has como here to talk winners, and most of the layers |iay race of 1,600 yards was won byjnd many others of national reputa : he winter league sessions have /4, play ball than Ruth and he will be | tween Mel Coogan, the clever lightweight of (¢'™S with President Charles H. Eb- are out. Others, Gibson says, who|tns Fire Departrient, composing the|tion will participate in the 60-yard | NOMEAS. | officially rom now on just ea full of it to the end of the |sreokiyn, and Ritchie Mitchell” the nere,| bets Miller, who 1s in good condition, gawt lay their misfortunes to the | team of Shea, Lichtman, Seaman and levent. Thus will Comins have i) “Siva. targer W inmond elute jseuson, The Babe's personal enthu- | niting ghtwolght of Sivaukee, oe | came from Mami, where he sojouned jorses, are terribly up against Jeagan, The Police Department was|chance to prove the assertion of | Willams defeat i |Siasm ‘was the largest contributing | woodman, mannger of Cooatm mes ciresey | ince his return from the barnstorm- 1 D Mis. Arthur vunean, gu ieorge D jan, has salready | i Hie ; Bill doesn't claim to be a good Samar-| second anc the Department of Hants|Johnny Mack, Yale's track coach, | [liv Auer Be buncan. a In finding 2 successor to George |PiMum Wat vanke winning the pen-|sicned erticive of sarcomere airee4y ling trip in Cuba, Wallace Hood, out {tam or a philanthropist, bue he con-|anq structures third. that he is one of the greatest sprint: | defeated Mra. CC. Parsons x nae | Buran: MOBY Gite i kine nant last season, He told moe once} ang it is expected that Mitchell's brother, | ‘elder, also reported. ‘ femmes he was glad he could answer) ‘The runners experienced great dif-|ers in the gume Hiriaeec anal Meee Lavi tt ace FPO NO ee ae te eeknE \that he would rather play ball for| Billy, who ts his manager, will also accept| Jt 18 the gener..| belief that Miller some of the appeals which found their |roujty in taking the sharp Garden| The entries received for the Junior | Miss Ethel Hays ar ) some handy elec iat Jo matter who |othing than to sit on the bench the match. They will box ten rounds at| Will be signed soon The hitch, it yas Way into his letter box at the hotel. |turns, Spikes were not allowed and|meet number more than 200, according | #1. pe aon aN tanaka Job he | In sizing up Yank possibilities this | Grand napids, aMich., on March 29 learned from a pcrson intimate with Ree oe with an cndinacny guoie [the slippery floor caused many spills, jto Frederies AW. | Hubler, ef | the) and oe ie ities rit tee Ase lin |Spring fans and dopesters alike ap- lah the relations of thg Brooklyn club, hag to do with an ordinarily # This is the first time in the history |Amateur Athletic Union, the largest knows the shoes will be . Chap! Beas to have overlooked a good bet,| On account of the death a few days ago| WAS On anvount of & bonus. Ebbetts eee =r Cloner for nome lot tha elty thatthe Gepartmanta have (And) bast entry ever received [6 {108i eet tA ene eres Ae Jivs going to be pretty hard to Keep |of Barnest Relch, the well known. basket-| fered Miller a bonus and a xalary =. ec in flag aging come together in an athletic meet of |Eames. Yule, Columbia, Princeton und | UV ILL. ‘ Bow-{ ‘The boys McGraw has 41 mind are} johnny Mitchell out of that infield. | pati player, and aiso brother of Al Retch,| DUE the catcher refused, demanding @ am ee cee eee te ene thle Wind. 3 ND mowement ty gine | taremnits Love pot (he maloriy °f) dole end Gaby tie sume of Hill Cunnin¢ham, a nifty youth, at | tere is one of the fastest Inds in the] the heavyweight pugilist, Al ties asked | SUSI stlary WEEE) Guitare io the crowd. No ace city, departments recreation and will |itercollegiate meet a woek luier, Pho | 9b + the American Associations for whom | 11,1, in trades tho past winter. | lease him from his contract to meet Farmer | O4ll left, he is not us reliable, as he }nows on what to blame conditions, |be followed by semi-annual games in Dene Avaling i ape aca | rere |Johnny is likely to make McNally, | Lodge of Minneapolis in one of the three| Was some ve Hales A Fs) auth oa OO bits, wat they ete thee cee | und outdoors : ROREr MAUL ONDE oe ccail ® SS Baker, Ward or any of them hustle | cight-round bouts to-morrow night, Mateh- | cateh but bis throwing a8 Bi cnn te han e seen then uny.| The heads of each of the different mip” entered. fey Melanin to hang ‘on as regulars. maker Flournoy has released Al, and has|DA0k on him and the opposing run- the MY" | sey departments attended. the meet, [mem including such stare as Maicoim | S t t Gl Ls Z sceured Capt, Bob oper of Chicago to take) DeFs take many liberties whilo he is gl winner of ne o-m ine 1 5 ‘ an | Mra, Hylun and Bre. John Sinnott auples winner of We, tNoupl 6 In por ws A a ance Pee ES 5 2 eR for soem | N¥ dlace agains Lodge HM an Robbie nada tee eee WsiERE is tam around that Kid | Were seen in boxes close to the track. | nin Robert G. Page, R. Amen aml! o Victory. mn ,|use Miller chiefly as a coach and t PP Norfolk iy likely to make Harry {Among the other noted city’ oficlals [ann Jordan, Princeton will send Te i Frankie Jerome scored bis thirty: | cunt mest aidoct Souths the crack ieeat| haekstop whenever Burleigh Grimes == Wills look as silly to-morrow |Were John Sinnott, William Cohen. !yy “weKim, W. M. Hitzrot, KE L. A. Servatius, New York State three-cushion billiard champion, ae eit Te SIEht at the Btar| Cries 2 inert ident Bmitn, the crack local] | oed on the hill, but the failure of G wil, |Chairman of the Committee; Murray | " G Wayior, S.C. Conger| 48 eliminated in the second round of play for the antateur champion- |*!xth victory las : . bantamwelent, (9 s twelye-round go at ‘hel ats irueger, who Wi tl : eee ne area 68 Wid Burt rulbert, Anaing 8. Pra! and godge| loi ec, Taylors & ONBEE) Ship tournament at Chieigo. Sporting Club, winning the two Judges} Pioneer Sporting Club~boxing show on next| HUMie Irucee ino was recently die ‘ny did with Frank Moran one pert, s 8. Prall s and many other stars iergo, ; eye eres sea pe Peareog wa|Bosed of, and Zack Taylor to show worrorable night in Jersey. When| Jeremiah Mahoney The armory track will be treated W. K. Vanderbilt has purchased a!1,400-ton motor yacht in Eng- |and referee decision. Jerome's superior | T. day might, Matchmaker Charley Poet yi league form made it necessary for ‘Wills licked Fred Fulton, Moran went nore = with a special non-slip preparation land, the Ara. A voyage to New York is being arranged, |knowledge of the game proved too much | serick has signed up Frankie Daly of Sten} Miller to bear the burden again. ir the ring with the clownish| ENGLISH STAR LOSES has been the custom for the \. A. U The finals of the New Jersey basketball tournament will be played {for Sammy Nable of Harlem, the lad] tslanl t | mest Siuithy 4 meee Pastas we Kenny expecting to annihilate him | ON SOUTHERN COURTS |” umpionship meets held in y . Recaatal for the first time in history, The play will start on whom Jerome eliminated, It was great] "eves Jack tle ie other twelve | tarry = Leona Prom wth his famous Mary Ann, but he . n the past, and spiked shoes will be arol competition, clean, clever and fast ioe oe Baul Ddimself was made to look the more - vohibited in all events except the Bowdoin and Colby played a tie game at hockey at Waterville, Me. biggest crowd ever at this clu wit mae —_— PHILADELPHIA, Mareh ‘Harry foglish of the pair before their bout! PALM BEACH, Fla, Mar. 1.—Fish! | jash and hurdies The score was 1 to 1 FR aaah ear yihooghran se Liatttiog? ard defeated ‘Battling was over. Norfolk is a Walcott in| men reached the round before the semi- Newark and Jersey City will open the International League pennant na bouts —— wney Alagh: in rd_ tnd fast elshterging etature compared to Wills, and has |*"a) yesterday in the annual men's} mye Metropolitan Association \\, face on April 19 at their home grounds. .Newark will play against rae WCW | PHILADELPHIA, Mare Tee oe a etuen Bene Teena maby frotesque movements in tt Westmacott of the Britich Army |U: Wrestling championship: \ Syracuse, while Jersey C+y will entertain Buffalo, nds maintained ft, until he was|loughran, nineteen-ve Vigateno Maoh ino weahataane i ving. If big Harry 8 chasing b = siminutea ih ‘ir ta by +i [held at the N York AL Eight - round before the se final in the annual - SerAlai a met with [continued dis winning streak here last @s Moran waded after Kenny, h Shafer therebs| iminary bouts on Mareh 16 et) ile ' nament at Pa Capt. Guy West ft t / to | ‘oring @ decisive victory eV ehémolonship aspirations may suffer ae eR MnaliCen UGA ET BULMIFAVcLceeenh. UteaccihaBeie® BetAN Aatee Peek EIMINALRHT Ine MiCALLS KALA TREC AG Gen eco IN nneahe bre Tinta PH PORERRIUAC RDA reer" Mian ton ti pelinouar "Og Qemeparably, by # balive born pluyer, March 1), Phe regulwtien Metiyyols Garieten Shafer of Philudsiphiay boul Of ais bouude, MANS eA by 4 eset. | ® . a SN ES | a A es seme TT a ! ’ ‘ j RUTH SATISFIED must be received before everything ts ~ 4 Oe: ‘hh