The evening world. Newspaper, March 4, 1922, Page 6

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ata THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MARCH 4, 1922, “WHY NOT WILLS?” ASKS DEMPSEY, SEEKING MON CHAMPION WANTS TO FIGHT |* 8! OF BASEBALL BUT CAN'T FIND PROMOTER EY-MAKING MATCH: By Thornton Fisher Copyright, 1922, (The New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Company. / HE DODGERS HAVE A NEW SLUGEING OUTFIELDER: NAMED ROSEBERRY- (TLL ONIN BE A STEP TO RASPBERRY TRAINING (N te He Paice To PO WIS THE HoTreL : LOBBIES out Rickard? He or the Madison Square Garden Club owns the big arena and has a jease on the ground, but as I understand it Rickard won't handle the fight. He doesn't like it. ‘Things may change, however, before summer.” | Dempsey’s Astute Manager Trying to “Smoke Up” Big Match With Negro Rival—Rickard Declines to Have Anything to Do With It, Saying It Would Kill Boxing Alt Over — Promoter Murray of Buffalo Wants Titleholder for Brennan but Would Not Touch Bout With Wills. By Vincent Treanor. EEMINGLY anxious as Jack Dempsey is to defend his heavyweight S championship against Harry Wills, the best of the Negro crop of heavyweights, and astute and all as Manager Jack Kearns may be Neve himself in “smoking” up a big public desire for such a match, the combination is already up against the proposition of finding somebody to promote such a contest at the all-important profit. It is one thing to arrange a match: but quite another to see it through and get the money into the box office in big enough bundles to make the affair the success championship con- tests must be these days to make them worth while to the principals. Be it understood that the principals, the fighters and their managers, come EGARDLESS of how Kearns first, and after them the public. A R and Dempsey feel about a bix ASKED ABOUT IIS CONTRACT WITH match may look most attractive to money-making match with “(me site ADLY said public as a test of strength and) wilis, there seems to be less demand US Oe ree le beso ing of a Dempsey-Wills match. : Comins)” Yale =Sensation) to eve ui sichance to/show thal Ris) Wal vna\raartt cena imepneeilaeee cee te ale eee a cee Te oe chow of anybody more capahte | [QECAUSE about 25,000 people want i ’ previous) victory wasinot due to an| ‘ere ine Foust) sae AGL In Approal: |ESy: A ; pall Hey a gaa biadTA) Epes boom ict anybody, méreicneanis rf Ir eiigebose tial ae vmpdigbernd Try for Records Here abnormal burats of speed, Lut that he | Mately 1.000 matehes, and marked the | Vincent Powers, who will have charge} are being taught to sway to and Merete detaay gt neiding @ieanten next week's six-day race, com- | To-Nigh Won Gn pure) tent) as. his) frlenday pene te Mer RES” Beeb Ceteel all | o€ the) Jumpers ot thal Greentree table, | (ro in thelse: érel, part) Stee between them is concerned, I'll say 1|Plaints are numerous of alleged o-Night. claim. Frank Go inned him years age | received a trainer's license and also per-| Stroke to the beat of phonograph | wouldn't ‘touch it with a fork. The|S0Using of the public by the Garten —— Other prominent stars who will par- | When Zbyszko. new to the American !mission to ride, but only the horses] MUNG. th 1 Ruthorities wouldn't permit it. 1 am |™&nagement. ‘These seats were placed O-NIGHT’S events at the 22a tcipate in to-night’s games are Vic-|S4Me. was seized in an unbreakable /trained by himself. uredi beatiiuasese itivack andith | after Dempsey for either Bill Brennun |" Sale last Monday and there was a —_— Bp Regiment Armory, where the tor G-aeb of Columbia, Burt H. May- | te-hold as he came to scratch in hls | the applications of the following] oarsmen keep in timer M i or the winner of the Greb-Gibbons|!!n¢ almost around the Garden ready Metropolitan Champion National Junior Indoor Track ¢0CK of Princeton, Harry Troup of the|™atch with the then world’s cham-|+ iors were approved: Anthon Allen, The funical idea Welked “aie 1 pout, and Tam satisfied that Dempsey |t0 buy them up. Needless to say, wil porte aan and Field Championships will be held, New York A. C., Gilbert W. Chap-|Pion. More resently Earl Caddock. |Max Hirsch, John Colford, James J.| weil in ite first trial, it wee one i could make as much out of itaa he aid |*Y Went fast. The box oMee men) “Phan Encounters Defeat | should prove among the moet trapor, {M42 of Yale, Maicolm K. Dougias of former champion, took @ rolling fall |Healy, ©. C. Pierce, ‘'. 0. Moore, silas] Well in ite first trial, it, was H in the Carpentier fight.” ¥ say they have no means of knowing ¥ s por | Yale, Walter Von Bargen of the|in a New York match, and the Fin- | Veitch, Matt Brady, Vincent Powers, , soar cA A SRSA skill, but unless it insures fabulous returns ‘t doesn’t interest the men who go through the three minutes of boxing and the minute rest. The day has long since passed when fighters and the managers put up their own side.stakes and then fought for the honor and glory of victory. The Carpentier-Dempsey fight, shunted here and there, until {t finally landed in New Jersey, had Tex Rict- ard its promoter, which fact, more than anything else, assured its suc- cess. The Willard-Dempsey bout also had Rickard at the helm, and so did the famous Jack Johnson-Jim Jeffries battle at Reno. But with a ‘Wills and Dempsey clash “on the fire” steaming up, there is no Rickard staking fortunes in advance to create public interest and attract world wide attention. Rickard is still in the pro- moting business, but not for a Demp- sey-Wills affair. We sought him out to find how he stood on the matter. “Not for me,” he said calmly. for it among the sporting men to-day than there was previous to Wills's fight with Norfolk at the Garden Thursday night. The unsatisfactory ending of the bout took the edge off Wills’s reputation, and the suspicion that it was a fake didn't do either of the principals any good. It is the consensus of opinion that Willa should have beaten the comparatively little Norfolk in a cleaner and more workmanlike manner, removing ull doubt as to the honesty of the bout. Kid McPartland, who refereed it, tells us that he agreed with our de- scription of what happened. That Norfolk went down under two appar: ently chugging and light blows as he was about to break them, and that he was a badly scared fighter from the start. Almost any one could have beaten him under the circumstances, McParland thinks that Norfolk's head hitting the floor had as much to do with dazing him as the punch or punches Wills sneaked in while they ODAY- | MUST BE OFF MY GAME” The first and varsity on the water. Horace Mann High School defeated Poly Prep by a score of 30 to 28 at basketball on the latetr’s court. Columbia plays its last game of basketball at home against, the Princeton five. The Amherst College track schedule for th meets, according to an announcement. Columbia will engage Williams College i the local institution’ cond Yale freshman crews have now joined the spring calls for seven the final hockey game of season at the 181st Street Ice Palace to-night. entered teams in the junior indoor swimming mmers defvated the Erasmus Hall mermen in a tank by a score of 29 to 15. The Princeton Clu will hold its annual interschol at the 22d Regiment Armory on March 18. The national indoor polo championship starts to- ic athletic meet ight at the Strangler Lewis Regains World’s Wrestling Title In Match With Zbyszko the match, and with it the champton- ship of the grappling world with the diamond belt as the coveted trophy. | Lewis regained his title from the |same wrestler who had taken it away {from him almost a year before and |had retained it by an indecisive match in New York later. The turning point ot the match and the strategy that gave Lewis the ad- | Vantage of the Pole came after seven- Head Lock Specialist Twice Throws Veteran Pole in Dra- matic Finish at Wichita. WICHITA, Mareh 4,—Ed. (Strang- ler) Lewis regained the heavyweight wrestling title here last night, win- ning the second and third falls from By Neal R. O’ Hara. Copyright, 1922 (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Co. Bill Klem claims umpires should go South for training. And certain ball players claim they should go South for lynching. . eee | Some holdouts could make a living in some other line of endeavor, But they'd never make a living working for Flo Ziegfeld. a ea Landis's last act as a Judge was fining one guy $5,000 and his partner one cent. Which was about the same as fining Bill Piercey his World Series dough and Babe Ruth the same amount car ag ie The Jedge quit the bench because. his nerves couldn't stand it. So | now he’s hopping around to sixteen training camps to sooth the threat- ened neurasthenia. , such a bout for any- Squadron A Armory. the former champion, Stanislaus|tcen minutes of wrestling in the sec- hye era ee ne bmipies first place, I doubt | Were locked so close that little if any M4 A membership in the San Francisco Golf and Country Club was |Zbyszko. The Strangler got the sec-|ond fall. Zbyszko had eee pressing Box scores from the training camps don't mean anything except to whether it could be successfully staged | ight showed between their bodies. sold for $1,300, a record price. ond fall in eighteen minutes with a| Lewis, hoping to get the hold that] the telegraph compantes: | anywhere. I don't want to kill box-| Wills impressed everybody with his The Veitin School b tball team defeated the St. Agatha five by j|headlock that so dazed Zhyszko that|would give him a fall and end the ne ehth Viet? ing, and, take it from me, a Demp-| Wonderful physique and his apparent| 9 score of 21 to 2. he was an easy victim in the third| match. Since he became an actor, Jack Dempsey is punching the time clock. trength, but through no fault of his sey-Wills match would kill boxing all over.” ‘What do you think of Wills?” we iked. ‘A great man, great fighter, and so is Dempsey.” ‘That's as far as the promoter would \go on the subject. 8 own he was up against a decidedly in- ferior man, physically speaking at i jeast. pe ILLS isn't a blatant challenger other time. Nor is his man- The Stevens Institute and C.C.N. Y. wrestlers will meet in a return match this afternoon in the C The Lehigh University Athletic A hman baseball team this year because of the lack of space. tling tournament at the Boys’ Club will be held rday evening. Collegiate School's basketball team def to 20. ited the Cutler quintet 48 fall, which came with a headlock in three minutes time. Zbyszko took the first fall with a body scissors 2 armlock in 41 minutes and 30 seconds. Lewis’ victory was sudden and dra- matic. After being outwrestied and outgeneraled in the first full, he came back in the next two foils and won} The sole secured a wing-lock and arm-hold on Lev Lewis around and countered with a shove which sent Zbyszko across the ring. The champion sanded on his back, and Lewis, quick as a flash, was on top of him. He applied the head-lock twisted | And after delivering the punch, he waits ten seconds from force of habit. * 8 8 “And who is Babe Ruth?’ said Margot Asquith, which makes it 50-50. Babe Ruth never heard of Margot Asquith, eithe: Vincent Powers |SWAYING To AND FR0, Reet Gat iatsereaate AlGiiuar en | sales Sams Wa ty | and within a few seconds he had won A ° , AS UP THE RIVER THEY ROW, HARLIE. MURRAY, a promoter |™an' of few words, Paddy just’ nods Tuniee Ten h 3 : eth ey ctive on Tur fi WITH MUSIC TO MAKE ’EM GO ( ‘been in| When ask if he is anxious for a After ten minutes rest the grap- ished. (“trom tat, tat oem in |", La seat peat unior Indoor Championship piers were called together’ foF the | Licenses were eranted to & number ot Gawppipae. ams, March ‘ words, he say br ° ° third fall, This was brief. Lewis | jock kta t ting of ; » Mass., Maro! ne a eee eee ration | “Wills will ght Dempsey any aws Big List of Notables ‘ies vso'nearivcse ine second tae. | eee and einer at % esting of] 4.—Rowing to music ie the Tate ecole Day, was just as vehement as Rickard in declining to even consider the hold- fess to be anxious for a crack at the Negro. ‘Sure,"’ said the champion, “Why not?" He pulled one of his trousers pockets inside out. ‘See. 1 need some money, Nothing in the kick."* B's Kearns and Dempsey pro- place, any time, in a short or long bout. whether or not the buyers are specu- lators, but anyhow have been careful to limit the sale of but twe tickets to each purchaser. There are any num- ber of tler seats and those at either end of the Garden to be sold, but it seems, according to Manager Chap- man, that no one is satisfied with any FROM MISS BAYARD tant meets of the athletic season. | | Aside from the fact that many rec- jords are almost sure to be broken, the athletes who win in to-night’s games will be looked upon as prob- ble candidates in the selection of | representatives for thp Olympic games in Doubles. ‘The skilfully played cross courts of Miss Marie Wagner contributed to her victory in winning the women's metro- | politan indoor lawn tennis singles champlonship on the courts of the 7th ing: effect. Morningside A. C., A. W. Haskel) of! nish wrestler Laitinien, recently toot Columbia and many others one fall, although losing the match. Bastian Wins (Bowling News) Tennis Trophy the Executive Committee of the Board innovation at Harvard of Stewards of tho National Steeple- 1 ae aes under te coaching regime instituted by Dr. R. G. Helder, Tim Donohue, Lew William: J. Howard Lewis, Dan Kearney, J. Dee- gan, J. T. Kermath and W. M. Carter. Jockey's lcenses were granted to James F. Doyle, Joseph Clement, L. Cheyne, Vincent Powers, A. Sims, W. Hunt, W. Mahoney, W. Howard, Sidne¥ Veitch and Barret Haynes. The appli- cation for a jockey license from A. Fitz- men, who, not having musical were hopelessly ‘out of oe HORACE MANN QUINTET DEFEATS POLY PREP, aati ; rald was denied. Horace Mann High School defeated , |except those on either side of the serene ch . | at Paris ; vitie be sus cc eates “What difeference should it make,"’ |iong stretches “| Regiment Armory yesterday. She e-|"mne field entered for the eleven in- ~ Bowling activities Age ', Beis: ‘The applications of R. H. R. Toland | poly Prep by.a score of 30 to 48 at he asked, ‘whether it's Wills or ANY- | Corsnin patches of tickets have been | {ested Mise Martha Bayard. the na /aividunl events are such that keen PALM BEACH, March 4.—Frits|‘or the night at many of the bowling jand Hersey ©. Keats ge, tom save basketball on the latter's court yester- body else? Fighting’s my business | a sriicd “among. ticenaed thehet | tional girl champion, by s score of 6-3 | competition for the high honors are | Bastian, the rangy youth from Indi academies in Greater New York so as Ce day in a game that required three It's what I earn money at. There's | eeacien and hotels forthe bike rece | &—% sure to result, Yale, Princeton, |apolia, won the singles lawn to allow the bowling fans an oppor- FIGHT RESULTS extra five-minute periods. 4 Doc Gisorns), vs mp.to BIR ‘does | they are for every other event at| Youth had its fling in the final round Ree aD es oolunnie Ne te Ma championship of Florida yesterd| tunity of attending the annual re- g The score stood 20 to 20 at the end | ~ goye. Sent, shi, it the Garden. They apparently have|of the championship doubles, The for- ae ee . catia | temoon by defeating G, Carlton union of the United Bowling Clubs of of the two regular periods, each team set first crack at the dough. been snapped up quickly, In y Je holders lost their crowns, aa | Colleges have nent their best material! 7 a ti setphia by: : i Grand Rapids, Mich.—Gene Tunney| scored two field goals In the fret conn ‘The champion was particularly jolly Be sigenss Pp quickly, many | mer title hol ' * 8 | to compete in the contests, besides | °! Philadelphia by a score of 6—1, 6. this city at New York Mannerchor tly defeated Fay Keiser—ten rounds.| period and they were tied again ot ut the prospect of fighting some one. other instances they have come back | ytiss Ceres Baker and Miss Lillian! many of the important clubs, both|—3. in the final round of the ann Hall easily Hee ale tarde creer thn eevota Pode, nas | “What did you think of the Wills. |{0 the box office, We questioned M. | gcharmann defeated Miss Wagner and | jocal and out of town, tournament on the Poinciana courts. iceldent Weanicisiltertr asainted by | Veuene ee cmmre mar. RPOTEED | ion ended: : j Norfolk fight?” he was asked ge plod eaninde a Eonar agency, [yirg, Bernal F. Sten at 3-6, 8-6,| Perhaps the most important event] In the semi-final round of the mixea] Pes! Chuivias of ane Gaol Eddie Civil—two rounds. : Shortly after the third extra period | “Fine, but I didn't see it. It was) age vg og nag fo thes wee —4, In this encounter, regarded as|of the evening will be the 60-yard |Goubles, one match was sebcduled, ana | Joseph Ruff, ye 4 a Holyoke, Mass.--Bobby Reimer was been Loeb, left forward for Horace | too quick. I couldn't get down from | gi or Fyrung of M ald } hae ti ae the second reversal of the day, the dar- | race—at least it will be looked for- | here Mins lare Caxsel of New York and | Affairs of the United Bowling Clubs, |awarded decision over Bobby Keene—| Mann, Saeed 6 arectaguiar abot, There- ] the Hippodrome in time to get @ flash | O10°r.). the race to sell Heresies ing net play. Of Miss Bakor furnished ay oi ih shir ae thea te Bastian defeated Mrs. John Phipps and|and a score or mofe of assistants will | ten rounds. In a. preliminary game the Horace : Hypo sfors = er contests, he displ : ; ; ' , | ae iG they ware through before 1/1.) cealixed advanced rates, which hia | the thrille \vorest inthis event is das to the| William A, Larned, the famous oh in-|be on hand to welcome the bowlers) Detrolt—Fredikle mason defeated Jim Mann second team bent Poly Prop'a ras. 3 Hehe woomne i 5 9. | ve “Unel <atg—ten rounds. juniors by a score o! 0 12, f | “Don't you think Norfolk was wo |®™Ployees bought through the box! phe defeat of Miss Bayard, ranked at] fact thar William A. Coming of Yale, | ermationalist, by a score of 6—0, 11—9 |When they arrive at the chauleiUnclg ies Katy une, 2 Darcy won twelve-| Horace Mann was the individual ver o } small for him?” some one interrupted, | Mee window very tediously. As it! no, 16 on the nations! by her un- | the star who a week ago defeated Bob| The fine! round match in the men’s| Joe” Thums will be there swapping| Syracuse—Jimm y | hoth games, He is on the sesomn } “No, not at all, A 170-pound man [yis' mune they sold Sea thee RARER ae fron: tis crentis servis ERLE eee ete ee fee ee Wile. Dlaved Af fi slelecke to- | atorige. with 1 Phil. debebach, Bulle ound \Oalean Oras Nyce eee sear) regular Une-up and aubstity } ybody,"" . - | as e. 1 the opening service | world by winning three heats from a} morrow afte ie Shapley. i e — le y team, scors } is big enough to fight anybody,” he | strical successes do. “Let Mr. Freund| Misa Wagner moved to tho attack. |} MARCHA Aken cn ea Im S| morrow afternoon, and the asl round | comes, Louis Stein, Charley King, Fat pia a inner el fleld goals In each game. The victory answered promptly, |) make 180 if “i ~COr she brought off drives | °° oe Ree + OTUnT of the mixed doubles, between Miss : ry “ae pringfiel r Manni go to any one of th Broadway | From mid-court ps A; Charley Dersch, Charley Niglutsch, . kept Horace Mann's undefeated record { tie Pct) y one of thes roadway me against the flying cop. This race will |. a harley Erie, Pa.—Bernle Hahn beat K. 0 ! I have to hits’ (which he mentioned), aaid|at such sharply played angles that Miss Cassel and Bastian and Mr. and Mrs. : dais Pathe, and cen , intact and marked its seventh straight in the crowd got to kigding Jacobs, “and try to get seats less| Bayard was always rucing and extend- _ ———| Frank #1. Godfrey of Boston will be} A! Schnable, Jake Vesely. identitiea {CEUs Johnny Vascher won from | victory ill you fight Johnny Buff, Jac’ : , 1 od for her returns of others who were closely identified] George perrotts. than ten weeks in advance, It can't 4 : dvelded in the morning jeorge —_—.- -- } “Sure. I'll be ready to-morrow i Mise Wagner from her side of the net ’ Sara UATIOROP a am Ap pullpeconesied bs i The iaraping ooh that work | 0 done, but you don't hear any loud | exhibited cool and deliterate Judgment, : . - tO ar Bastian deserved to win yesterday | With the Lapis Li i q ARrDAOHIE, Coedohany ae vs Ben-| pom sh Encounters the New agreed with him, seeing that he stood, |COMPlaints about this. What does) So cleverly did she conduct game Di All his shots were going remarkably |century or more ago. ny Beeker—twelve-round draw. 7 Orleans Law i erect as an Indian with no suggestion | 2° ©*Pect of a onc week long bicycle | that ee) mu shem pion, fers galiant tamon or. well and inis speed in covering his cour: searly all of the reforms in the] Portsmouth, 0.—Nig Blair got decision] NEW ORLE March 4. — Tom } of fat, and an absolutely straight Pe ‘ ‘only lapsed into errors that tossed made it very difficult for Shafer to keep | bowling games are traced directly to} over Kid Layman, te Say, Hany Gardner, Remy Dore ani |) : acol ’ © busi wifes ‘ : ; a ‘ fla y Fred-| Mark Boasberg, identife 1 front. | : ane be. save it Hed the business a away critical points, noe : New York University's bageball{he ball out of the new champion's|the United Bowling Clubs of New| Detroit—Sammy Hess outpointed Prag : re ia ntified also in sporty : cwWork! You don’t call this stage | Producers in any line to get the tic Mer and Miss Scharmann dis: il gat can reach, Pastian forsook nis erratic play | yo,j;, and the old timers who will be | ie Hammond—ten rounds; Sammy ing circles as “Jack Sheehan,” all veuh 4 stuf? work, do you?” he replied. Then /@t# out of their box office for guar-| played speed And skill of a truly re-| season will get under way Monday s araeinin miaiahes tule we fen mrp ‘i ,|€o outpointed Jimmy Russo—ten rounds.| known “oralizers who operated at th anteed sales if they ick~ | markable order in winning the doubles. of his pre matches ti When | on hand to-night fraternizing with the % he began stretching bis powerful arms | Stiee” alee Af they cap, IE the Boks | on tue aide of the former title holders] Stvernan When the candidates will re-t. sc04 aharer ana actually outsteadied | (7 tee 5 of to-day were in al LITTLE ROCK, Ark.—"Red” Herring, | Fair Grounds racing mect just closed, out and upward as if he were just | & ont get out of the box office, | via, Wagner moved close up to the| port to Coach McCarthy in the Uni-|,,, “| bowling stars of to-day locked out Jeff Gaffney, New York.|were convicted yesterday by a jury ia longing for something that would call |they, as a rule, stay there to bel barrier while Mrs. Slenz protected the] versity Heights gymnasium, ‘The first} ? “eT” great measure responsible for these Hi bekad a IBY ARS Criminal Court of having violated ail : ; ersity Heights gymnasi ——>___ 18 A a na E to guysical eitort cashed, or Uy reach the place} ghote that came into deep court, Mina | Vern ; A NN casinos ame cdiime\i) VTS Grima Raust ior violated al whe o ia at Sat ep held the net position on her} actual practice soasion y eforms as ume ocke Anti-Gambling Law and were aieey [a ae fee fue BE oe Dar Rahs pase hn aiiae Por soos t king the It ee Oval as ae bar COLUMBIA IN FINAL ara iG Bunnie SVE Aue BY, Ma PEEP KENTUCKY SCHOOL, FIVE SCORES| Sentenced to seven months’ imprison-4 EARNS chipped in with a re “4 er shots or bringing off the swift ? % the sport. fe rf bt. 3 c } K mark or two after the opening | pregrmuer Chapman insists that Mr. Gries for pasess. bakes permits, GAME WITH PRINCETON. been selected to 116 POINTS. ment and fined §400 cach. volley of questions as to Wills| {ion BE ORY DOSY (eleP watt Ba ey By fairly easy plaxing stios Wagner] Prospects for a successful season Ne ener a ee urgaie Rhee match game between the Ma-| OWENSBORO, Ky., March 4—Fol- BASY VICTORY, le . Sten » the first set an 4 et- fe ve an e. Inter dl % . " > a fas und a probable match had been @x-|sinsie day, but he regrets he can't | sntced io a lead of b-4 on same ang | on the diamond at N. ¥. U. are not a uaee Pee Lea Begs ty sonle Select at Recreation Ailey Took: | lowers of the Utica Basketball Team ar Mareh 4. Hob] usted. ss hy J RHA. ee nsidered rosy. Most of thi : ‘on | iyn, this evenil ‘The teams represent the! no: questioning the victory of the Ow- . champion, scored a! e promise the choice of locations or sell | 30—0 on points In the second, Right | C0 of the regu - wahnia | Ute nIMEeasonic and. Inter-Church ~ He extolled Willlam A. Brady as @)six"to any one pervon, Mr. Freund | there Miss Baker started (o step into| irs from last year's nine graduated | 98 !t8 opponent this evening. Hill Zahn’s| pick of the -Masenie, 8M, Det Catied at | enshoro High School Team, which de-| sensational knockout over Eddie Civil good sport and a friend of boxing, but| yc nted nix seats for the finish, So| the rallies for effective smashes that] in June, while the material from last] men won their previous encounter by a ope feated the Uticans 116 to 16 here last} of Ashland in the ond round of al said the purse he offered some time | docs every one cine, It would appear, | turned things, topayturyy. In cyclonic} year's freshmen team has yet to prove | decisive score and stand to-day as the Rowling Academy, Flatbush |night. It is believed to be a record fer] scheduled twelve-round bout before| AsO, $200,000, for @ Wills-Dempsey more aren't enough of them to go| te iar cverhead shots, Mian Grog | iacle only obstacle in the path of the flying Kare Ailey’ Gwnere’ ‘aa: [Tee PeRoo! beam he Aaland. A Cs CUAAe eas Match might do for the preliminaries. | rung, yrely being able to Ket the ball tora | ThE heaviest blow to the Violet] Quakers ent which isto, open | rarer : Arena last nigh | “However, it started things,"’ sail rarey alt Sa squad came With the « v tavis. proprietor of the| MIDDLE DISTANCE MIEN eat | te ' ooo recovery. ie \ the graduation Joe Deering, the Columbia coach has not announced his RECOR 'S. Kei Wins Bout, | Kearns. That's how all matches! see stanley Increnses K. 0. 5 Miss Wagner and Mrs. Stenz led at| Capt. Jack Weinheimer last’ month, sided wenleraay at his ¢ thing that both Sa reetare ot nar i 6. : t srow into really big things.’” AUGUSTA, & March %&4.—Phiia- | 4—3 on games in tho third set. Once| ft had been expected that Weinheimer | W* Undecided yesterday about his fin rge Rovachlaa; ITHACA, N. Y., Ma 4—Several of[ HOLYOKE, March 6.—Bobby Reimer He didn’t think Gov. Edwards had! acc, soe staniey scorea are thir | more Misa Baker put hor smashing to} would be av this nearon, but Pulleyn and Reilly at wun He Beam middle © itbhee maser Spe: BSCS a of Detroit. eae heen correctly quoted us saying thut|%°#% Joe Stanley scorea ®- ne test, “he wis Wwe denied. 80] {he nesent al presen “Sut DaNat tent Race Taturer ent | + score) th® Bast will meet tn competition from of Detroit, eaatt New Jersey would wélcome the match, |eenth. straight kno shows by stonpina| ably aid the st overhend | fl Ona he , © Bin ' on Cannel aed au ; hare night. ‘Reimes but he hoped it was true. As if 4Ninight. Eddie O'Hare, light heavy-' ce opposing pair | © accounted | Yarsity \ Institue Waite te ' k i R ‘\ College. Prediction was made that sev-'held the upper hand in every round af @fter-thoughi, Kearns asked; weight from New York, who is working four games in & row to stand as a met-' Lon Will prevent the popular leader kder taking either Spiiaghorn’s or | bowling ta "eval indoor tack records might full ac ter the second and on several occ; “What good would Jersey be with- in a jumber camp here, was the referee, repolitan title Winner in doubles, from filling bis old post in left @eld, Mullen's place at forward, eee the.mect. had the Detrnlter in hot-water, il paistianehiticn a vy to me TESTI I ct llth, Pome aa ae eae eee me

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