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THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1922. 27 a KARDOS IN EUROPE, CREDITORS WORRY Bankrupt Left U. S. With- out Notice—Gov. Burke Returns to Law. Creditors of Kardos & Burke, whith failed for more than $2,000,000, learned to-day that Louls Montgomery Kardow ir. has gone to Europe without permis- sion of the court. He had been nego- tlating with his father in Budapest for the $200,000 necessary to start the plan OTHER SPORTING NEWS) tute and Mite Under Knits | tare Clever But False Move LIVE WIRES By Butwell at Home Turn ea aca. Cost Careful Stake Race Guys that claim World Series will By the way, has any umpire had ° Two-vear-olds; selling: furlones.—*Sovtet, 1 116; ‘Trueman, 108; Tank, 112; It SECOND RACE oma Bteeples fouryenr-olds and upward; two 1 Bryan, O'Lynn, +. 189, Frank B., 144; (a) Phoenix, 138; Eequimau, Ami ark entry F three-year-olds; one Ol Man, 120; Cham- 115; Maryland Belle, 44. (8) Men. THIRD RACE- mile.—Superiative, 115 plain, 115; Doublecros 110; Hea, 115, four and be played between New York and]@ no-kick game this year? *Jomephine Oak, 1013 it, ul » wrong. Cincinnati is 5 1/9) SS hiasteateebginb esd Charley Paddock did 100 yards in Trying to Forestall Sennings costly as it was to Owner Walter ‘ OUR ACE—Two-yent-ol ea; | for reorganization, oe Salmon and Trainer Tom Healey. | between New York and St. Louls. | 19 seconds flat at the Harvard Sta- aAIBInT four tO 4 ball ReteoomesButy toe] VRE SM Bay setae ik the Same Park, He Sacrificed by Lengths} Some folks who watched the running Ue dium. He did the 100 in 98-6 sec- dy Boss, 110; Faith W., 113; Patch: - of the Paumonok carefully believe| Jack Dempsey will discover thére]onds in Hawail, Proving that work, 100; Our Tellie, 100; Ineulate, 215, | 1 Marcow Goss not come back with tae to Tryster and Smoke Screen. | that smoke Screen was the best horse. |are moro marks in England for him| Horace Greoley was right. FIFTH RACE—The Btattord Handicap, | Money the recelver will have to sell the poi He certainly showed a great perform-| than there are in Berlin, : er three-yeur-olda and up; one mite—Slippery | aaneta on hand, which probably would - By Vincent Treanor. ance after being away badly and ie Oe jie Can't blame guys for wearing give creditors only 10 centa on the dol- trailing his fleld to the far turn, Still he wasn't racing in the early part, as was Careful. He was under restraint, |!$ ® n0-hit, no-run, no-reach-first- which sometimes is tiresome, but he|base game. But a fan's tdea of a ae really wasn’t called upon fo stretch] perfect game is five homers in five] Mary Garden has resigned as boss Himself until well into the stretch.|times up by Babe Ruth. : of the Chicago prima donnas, but ‘Theoretically, a perfect ball game| dress clothes at boxing arenas these i days. A lot of these bouts look like dances, at that. . lar. John Burke, former Treasurer of the United States, who was partner of young Kardos and lost all he had, has gone to Fargo, N. D., to practise law, In response to a cable he sent Kardos everything. In boxing it is called cleverness. In baseball it is “inside stuff.” In racing it comes undey the head of skill. Of course the old wallop, the home run, and Severs is half the battle in SIXTH RAC year-olds and Bromelia, 95; Due D M; bDr, Charles Welln, 9 ms ol April 24, he recetved: “Will return as By this time Careful had given up se 8 Miller Huggins {s still managing the 105; *aMax Gold, 87: Perixourdine, 100; sheer speed will knock science awr/| nearly everything she had, and Try- ; F Y a 0, GmDAnY. . 100; Dantzic, 08; *Sagamore, 113; | soon as I can settle everything. Be con- in all instances and make its kpplica-| ster, too, had iittle left. Had the Se ae di ha LAM eased BE ied Nha Ei nail ec cots p OEE! RE) is) MRtaner Mays; Ws fident." Kardoa did not tell his own lawyer he was going to Europe. game is 60,000 spectators in the ef © trio ag head and head, from the|stands and the free list positively] Looks like this year’s Yale crew race a different story might be told| suspended. is rowing with a paralytic stroke. tion worthless. But all in all science, head work and generaiship are qual- ities not to be sneered in any com- 8, Murray entry SEVENTH RACE—The. Woodbuty Claim- Ing Handicap; three-year-olds and bat of a sporting nature. Very often they are misapplied and then one's faith is ruinéd in brain exercise, as pitted against dumb luck or the ordi- nary run of things. Down at Jamaica yesterfay Jockey Jimmy Butwell lost the opening stake tace of the year by trying to be “too heady,” too clever, tooscientific. He rode the speedy mare Careful and had the race well in hand until he felt coed upon to pull a trick considered clever. He was menaced dy fennings Park coming to the home turn, and figuring probably, that everything else was well beaten be- fund him, decided to take care of Sennings Park. He swung wide, knowing that his pressing opponent would be put at the disadvantage of coming even wider to head him, Butwell was right to that extent. The wide turn settled Sennings Park, but {t opened up a gate for two speed merchants directly in Careful's wake Tryster and Smoke Screen. Stalli off Sennings Park cost Careful at least three lengths, and meant a concession of that much distance to Tryster and Smoke Screen. Butwell couldn't help noticing this after he had disposed of Sennings Park, but when he tried to make amends for what proved a false move on his part, it was asking Care- ful the impossible. Tryster and Smoke Screen were al- most on even terms with her and pointed straight toward the wire while Careful needed more than ordinary steering in being set down for the drive home. The whole thing was a matter of seconds, yet in that flash of time, Butwell had let the race slip through the fingers that held Care- ful's reins. The race developed into a blood tingling battle from the eighth pole and only heads separated the four at the finish. Butwell'’s pardonable judgment made it a race worth while, to-day. The coughing epidemic at Belmont Park, which has put so many of the good two-year olds on the shelf, is suid to have hit the Hildreth barn now. Three of his juveniles were in the Suffolk Selling Stakes yesterday and all were scratched. They had been going along nicely and probably would have had a lot to do with the splitting of the purse. Every trainer stabling at Belmont Park thought Galantman was @ sure thing in the opening event. The break spoiled whatever chance he may have had. Before the field had gone a sixteenth he was back fifth and in tight quarters from which Penman didn't seem able to extricate him, Meanwhile George Odom's Beeswax, free of interference, was sailing along safely in front. St. Henry was hemmed. in on the rail too and never really got to running until well into the Stretch. With racing luck, St. Henry probably would have won, but Galantman did nothing about which one might rave. At that he probably is a lot better than his race showed. Morvich’s work of six furlongs in 1.12 flat, eased up in the last six~ teenth, was a remarkable trial. Right ufter It Tryster, whipped and extended to the limit, won the Paumonok in 1,11 2-5. Allowed to finish fast, Mor- vich might have equalled this time, but as it was McAtee had him pulled to a gallop within fifty yards of the finish. Good judges’ who have been following the training of the unbeaten Kentucky Derby favorite are not so sure he will carry his extraordinary speed more than a mile. He looked yesterday as if he could have gone on indefinitely. With Frisch in Line-Up, Is Johnny Rawlings ‘o Pass From Big League? History of Baseball Shows There Has Ever Been a Lemon in the Limelight for Each and Every Unheralded World’s Series Star. By Ed Van Every. When Frank Frisch returns to the line-up of the Giants it will probably _ fortunate time in the Yigl He gazed far out over the pine bordere@ ‘ . . mean the passing of a player who ac- Number | Reve fousnt in shin sielnity aa well ax in| links and ‘eeemed boylahly afraid to Pews for Courting During Services. - of Teams. | priadeiphia. Hymle Gold was knocked out] show the little group of friends gathe| Complished more for the good of base-} Dog 2 Peete eeesw. ‘endler and Bobby Barrett, | ered to congratulate him on hia victory| Should church pews be turned tnto my opinion. it ball than the home run hitting of the TO-N.GHT’S SCHEDULE = IN HEADPIN TOURNEY. Barring of Dangerous Punches Credit to Jersey Commission Rabbit and Kidney Blows Will Not Be Allowed in Future Bouts, By John Pollock. Boxing Commissioner Charles Mc- Nair of the New Jersey Boxing Board is responsible for the kidney punch and the rabbit punch being barred from future bouts at boxing clubs in the State of New Jersey. The commissioner told the writer to- day that both of these blows are dan- gerous ohes, and for that reason he asked the other members of the com- mission at its meeting at Trenton, N. J., on Tuesday, to bar them, which they promptly agreed to do. Jack Dempsey used the “rabbit punch" on Georges Carpentier in their battle at Boyle's Acres on July 2, 1921. At the same meeting all of the clubs in New Jersey as well as the referees and inspectors were granted new l- censes by the commission for 1922. A match has practically been arranged by Matchmaker Flourney between Tay Pryal, the welterweight of Homestead, Pa, and Jimmy Hanlon of Denver, Col. They will clash in a ten-round go preceding the fif- teen-round bout between Jim ‘Tracey of Australia and Bill Brennan at the Garden, on May 16. While the fifteen-round bout between Lew Tendler. of Philadelphia and Johnny Dundee is still only two nights away at the Garden on Friday night, the advance sale of tickets has alrendy passed the $20,000 mark. ‘The local fight fans are all worked over this go. Tendler will be the favorite in the meeting. Midget Smith, who has not fought tn several weeks, hax been matched up for two more fights. On May 9 he will take on Frankie Daly of Staten Island in a round go at the Hudson County A. C. of Jersey City, and on May 15 he battles Danny Edwards, the colored fighter of the West, for ten rounds at the Arena A. C. of Boston. Luts Firpo, the heavyweight champion of South America, who has won the two fights which he has so far fought tn this country, and who will make his first ap: pearance in a bout in Brooklyn with Jack Herman of Newark in a twelve-round go Ebbets Field on Saturday afternoon, 48, has started training for the con- test. The Dan MoKetrick-Jack Kearns stable of fighters from California hi while Babe Herman's quick knockout by feat Johnny Dundee when they meet in thelr fifteen-round bout at’ Madison Square Gar- den on Friday night, as every sporting man in “Philly”? intends to wager heavily that he wins the decision over the fast little Italian battler, Tender will be the favorite in the betting at odds of from 9 to 6 or 2 to 1. FINALLY REALIZES AMBITION 10 WIN FRIEND'S TROPHY L. G. Gallagher Captures Shanley Memorial Golf Cup After Trying Ten Years. L. G. Gallagher of Lakewood won the Shanley Memorial Cup for seniors over fifty-five years of age, with a total net score of 144 at the end of two days of medal play over thirty-six holes at the Lakewood Country Club. Mr. Gallagher, as much given to the sentiment of loyalty as his name im- plies, was the life long “‘pal’ of the John F, Shanley to whose memory the cup is dedicated. They played together many times over the Lakewood course and fought each other hard for the friendly victories that mean #0 much to the knickered, gray-haired children of the links wh have found again on pleasant fairways and velvet greens the magic play spirit of youth. Since death took his “‘pal’ of the links from ‘him ten years ago Mr. Gallagher has played every year to win the mod- est silver cup that perpetuates Mr. Shanley’s memory at the Lakewood Club, Twice has he been close to vic- tory, but yesterday he finished five strokes ahead of his nearest competitor and the happy ending that fiction would put on such @ story of lifelong friend- ship was made possible by fact. ‘When the cup’ was presented to Mr. Gallagher he stroked its curved silver surface for a moment without sycaking. he depths of his emotion, but finally he se oO | Morny, Skinner entry. HARDING TO GO AS U.S.FEDERAL RESERVE HEAD Eugene Meyer Jr. Said to Be Slated for Post When Vacant. WASHINGTON, May 4.—It is asserted on high authority that President Harding has definitely stated privately that he will not reappoint William P. G, Harding as Governor of the Federal Re- serve Board in August. Eugene Meyer jr., head of the War Finance Corporation, said to be in training for the Gov. Harding was ap- pointed by President Wilson, but Southern Democrats have protested from time to time against lis alleged unfairness to the farming element. Church “Cozy Corner Sparking” Is Advocated by Four Ministers)" "cry" esti, cw One Goes So Far as to Reserve Two Rows of hyve Re oFtebaeweoo- courtship chairs? there is to be a chaperon, it should ward; one mil da sixteenth Boy, 97; ‘Kentish Roy, 80; 105; *Super, *Comm! Cl, John, 107; Sedgefield, 113; *aThe Lamb, 100; "Gain De Cause, 99; aPastoral Swain, 113; Serapin, 111, aG. C. Winfrey-8, Loule entry. ‘Apprentice allowance of five pounds claimed. Weather rainy. Track sloppy. hee PIMLICO SELECTIONS, RACE TRACK, PIMLICO, Md., May ‘The Evening World selections for FL Bowsprit, SESCOND RACE—Clark entry, Frank B., Esquimau. THIRD RAC Superlative, FOURTH RACE—Lady Boss, Faith W., Ray L. FIFTH RACE—Lunetta, Sedgefield, Slippery Elm. ‘ SIXTH RACE—Sagamore, Due De Oil Man, Champlain, SEVENTH RACE-—Super, Sedgefield, Gain De Cause. ————— IN NEW YORK TO-DAY. St, Andrew's Society, meeting, Wal- dorf-Astoria, § P. M. Southland Club meeting, Waldorf-As- toria, 2 P. M. Men's Club of R, H. Macy & Co., en- tertainment and dance, Waldorf-Astoria, 8s P.M. International Federation of Catholic Alumnae, bridge, Waldorf-Astoria, 2 P, M. Rotary Club, luncheon, McAtpin, 12.30 M. P. Ceres Union, entertainment and dance, McAlpin, 8 P. M. Glass Distributors’ Association, lun- cheon, McAlpin, 1 P. M. National Federation Day Nurseries, meeting-luncheon, Pennsylvania, and dance, Pennsylvania, evening. Concordia Chapter, dance, Pennsyl- vania, evening. \ Umbrella Maufacturers' Association, meeting, Pennsylvania, 8 P. M. Eastern Dental Soclety, dance, Penn- sylvania, evening. ‘i Morris Welsen Lodge, meeting, Penn- sylvania, 8 P.M. Railway Accounting Officers, meet- ing, Pennsylvania, Thursday Club, luncheon, Pennsyi- vania. New York Aetna Club, dance, Com- modore, 8.30 P. M. Barge Cand! Week, luncheon and M. W. R. Grace & Co., entertainment When pajamas fit the rest is easy! Longfelo *Shortfelo *Bigfelo Pajamas built specially for men of unusual build. Exclusive with us. The more usual sizes, of course. A, B, C, D. Like to lounge around before retiring? Then you'll like our “lounging pajamas.” Three-quarter length jacket finished off with half | belt that ties in front to give a dressing gown look —has collar that buttons up fairly close, or rolls back. Nightshirts? Surest thing you know. Herald Sq, at 13th St, at 35th St. (Convenient Broadway Fifth Ava at Warren, bis: at 41st St ae ee in P. R. R. Co., Meadow Shop... 2 | pepper Martin last night was @ terribi | urned to them and said quietly: be one who knows 4 couple is com- mighty Ruth or the daring on the} 'schaels Catholic Club,.., 4 | shocks to MeKetrick and Kearns, “I've wanted this cup more than I've} Seeing that the church is the house) jany and three a crowd.” bases of Ty Cobb. RAE Nights ‘Houck 7 — ever wanted nything in my life.” at the end of the rose-colored path} Dr, ‘THompson has been called the } “Johnny Rawlings,” commented one pease ha ra Pees Rodgers: wis peat ghaeedee| Ue ot Glee layed good golf tl down which Cupid dances his merry] “marryin’ parson” of Chicago. It is ; of the Yankee pitching stars, ‘is just : seesseress B [Hogans the Mimibetrolt, hae just taken {in 44, He waa at his best on the drive| way with his two happy lovers in close] 08 Opinion that the ‘angels of the sy Astoria, No. 5 1 7 hureh busy by an ordinary ballplayer, He'd prob- » No. Frafies figuvcr under hie tanagement. ‘This | and approaches with the irons. The fast,| iow ian't it fitting that the chureh| Churches are so busy setting up bare If the Tariff ‘ blysnever bat 30f as a regular, nor] Booblar ... 1 |Xtrapper ix Sammy Walts, the Hartford] hard greens bothered him a little and f is at the exit from marriage that th pbive M Hunts Point.. 2 | featherweight. Rodgers signed Waltz to a] did more to add to his score than any should discuss the problem as to] have neglected the entrance—and so thr ape races cece i nue aan bags cir epee [contract to-day and expects to have him| other factor. He had one fine par 8 on! whether the church pews be converted] the cozy corners of the church will goes u of an entire season, And yet, he did Sp zh or. 2 | tighting in this vicinity shortly, the short fifteenth, however, when he fats sd Gas con which lovers Gnas help to decrease the evils of divorce. the game a great service last October. paisa . ; Peon Giamin mAnsese ot, Terini Mater | eoaces ee ees ea tal tne pia i xa aout? In Kansas City, the pastor of the tailors and clothiers will have two No one seems to realize just what} Claremont 1 | the “east side fiywelant, nas signed his bat: and: then holed oUt a short two-fo0ter |e ase sons on this question have (a Sh tae a dS alternatives. One—to raise prices, \ y in the , . tlor for another fight. Miller meets Sammy | for his par. E ; ; . a \ dobnny's great stop'cn Baker tn pa 1. | Goken ivan elght-round bout at the Queens: re recently been submitted—and from|He has reserved the two back rows The other—to lower quality, last World’s Series really meant,’ yet boro Club to-morrow night. os i of his church for young folk and tIn- : rt While it may be news to the xen | Southera Pacific 5 = Dundee Refuses \°“°r"" Gf the United Statens ites them to attend service and It will be a serious day for clothes- ) N. Y. & Queens Electric Light As Mel Coogan, the clever Brooklyn light- Nichols t Me- ” . eral fan, the history of the game Queei ctrl ie! weed hae eetitied, Jos Woodman, thet he 4 Bishop Thomas Nicholson at Me-| “spark. makers, and precarious for proves there has ever been a lemon], ‘a Power Company, wit mae Eco To Heed Advice \"*".“"" “Af our younger ren‘ration is going clothes-buyers in the limelight for each and every] T00CS ++-++++ tion in another ten da: The Rev. John Thompson at Chi-!to spark,” he declared, “it is better : up to fight Joe WV rounds at Indianapolls on May 29, which ts and the famous muff of Snodgrass. |tne night before the Important automobile Henriksen just about managed to| race in that city. hang on with the champions the fol- lowing year and is now coaching a Having badly injured bis right arm while cago, Til, that they do it in church than in ‘ ; motor cars along country roads where The Rev. Dr. C. A. French @\/ their elders have no means of know- Kansas City, Kan ing what they do. I hope to eee the Dr. Owen C. Brown at Los Angeles, | back rows filled at next Sunduy's ser- ‘unheralded World's Series star. It has been the fate of every ‘‘weak’’ player of a championship machine who rode through to unexpected glory, that AndCancel Bout When Johnny Duniflee signed to box As for us—For 45 years, we have f never sold a piece of shoddy or cotton-filled goods—and we never Lew Tendler for their 15-round en- * will | with Babe Herman of Callfotia a vice. . within a short period of the hour of|°llege team. boxing wit! i i counter at Madison Square Garden to-| Cal. pick few days ago, Pete Herman has been foreed : Dr. Thompson suggested courting thelr acclaim, each has passed trom], Tomer? iru taliplecr an ois, his bout with. Tommy yan ai | Morrow night many frlends of the) sishop Nicholson, in addressing] in the churches. Dr._ French came For 45 years, we have never the centre of the stage into the shad-|the year of the work or fight ellict, | Lovlevile 1 Relay eet a catiiee where he is conditioning himself for| the New York East Conference of the ae ior Seen ON, Ones o: skimped a measurement, a lining, [ ows of the bench or the exile of the| minor leaguers and old-timers were|92, Herman is £0 k to his home at} the fray saying he had made a serious Methodist Episcopal € rehy de- Brawa Gf Lon Anesies lst coe be oa trimming—and we never will. j a inate: in demand. In the Worldis Series of | New Orleans. Talatake in consenting to box the| plored the change that has come tn] {5F coupe tm ae favored @poene } that curtailed season he was a terror ' Philadelphia southpaw. They pointed| courting, bi Me RT ORRS For 45 years, we have held that Billy Gilbert, back in the year of! with the stick and on the defense; a} That good middiewelsht fighter of Gah thai the aide: whonlar or] ‘In the old days," he said, “young | Ing. é ( . ense; ould enter p . the ine all | fabrics, cut with the Giants’ first World's Series ap-| dropped fly from his bat decided the| Wet. Jock Malone of St. Pauly the ring seven or eight pounds heavier] People did their courting on the way ‘ourting’ is one of the most fine all-wool . with art pearance, was the weakest hitter of} tussle, The next year he was back | *ened up for anole’ t pole Geert than he, that he was now boxing ut|to church or prayer meeting. It's passed sxoressioha in | fe, tut npgees and sewed with care—are the only j the team. That particular fall, 1905,] with the minors. Bryan Downey, the Columbus middleweight, his best, and the all important fact] different with the present generation Fs es Le iteg a & r pep pet ce € omy, and they always will ’ ittle Billy,"" helped to put the} All of which sounds like the base-|in a ten-round go st Aurora, Ii, on the} that Tendler was anxious to score i ‘They are inclined to adopt the way] he hes . 4 regs Phy pe 6 true econ ’ tL ‘Svengula’”’ on the Athletics’ gonfalon| pall obituary of Johnny R&wlings—| night of May 2! knockout to convince the boxing pub-|of Fatty Arbuckle and Peasy Joyce] m#tches made in the midst of © hris- be. hopes by some very timely hitting.| he was an unexpected World's Series — tian influences rather than with our lic he was entitled to box Benny] and attend resorts and places Leonard in a decision contest, the chureh is a joke and the Figh- Dundee listened attentively, When|teenth Amendment is a laughing they were all through with their sym-|stock, ® ® * ‘The church nowadays , . J pathy stuff Dundee turned to his pals|ghould clean up cities and help to],,Acconding = to the | dictionaly, and said: - tee ‘spoon’ means to be sentimentally keep the morals of its particular . . a i pa foolishly in love with some one ‘Sounds all right; what of it? He'll] community sound.” Gr fomisnly tp lave wish some one, knock me out; he'll outweigh Although Bishop Nicholson has not ° m Gilbert, the following year, passed from the big show and was practically lost sight of until this spring when he bobbed up as a minor league manager. George Rohe, one year later, in the first private World's Series, was the softest spot in the weak-hitting at- tack of the “hitless wonders." Yet, lightweight champion some young people outside, which often have a@ tendency to lead away from We pledge that, as long as our the church.” : : present stock of woolens holds out, the prices will be hero sure enough. And yet on thc] Ad Wolgast, 18th of last October, the honesty of | years ao, and who made over $460,000 out World's Series baseball and even the} of the fighting # game itself was on trial against ev\- dence culminating in one vital play. when he was at the using out in Caltforni at Vernon, Oal., re- 00 for him, Jack b contly which realized § Doyle of California conducted the show, Olaf Henriksen, in 1912, for the Boston Red Sox, stuck in one hit in That's tough, I knew what I was do-| ., . r pose of marriage. 4 f that fall, against the Cubs, the White Goerars. wora has ‘ust reached here from Aus-{ ing when f signed to box Tendler and|"¢_ he favors the courting In the} But, woo, court, spoon, spark oF ( Sox third-sacker was a willow wielding| LONDON, May 4,—Georges Carpon-| tralia to the effect that Bud Ridley, thel rm going in that Garden ring deter-| UUrC” he has suggested that he Pe-| what not—we have the opinion of demon and counted strong in the cap-| tler, European heavyweight champion,| Western featherwolght, who arrived In that] mined to show upaTendier, They| “‘°* in the good old ays when the] gour clergymen from four parts of ture of the baseball crown. One year| who i training here for his bout with | country several weeks oa won Bie ML Dickeq Joe Benjamin to knock the| ;urun® ‘Was done on the way fo) the United States—and they all favor ; later he was relegated to the minors.|'Ted Lewis on May 1, has made no Pattie In that county ir Bie i] daylights out of me and they shoved] °")\"°", the church as 4 happy hunting | Or. on, however * Charley White to attempt to repeat| D%, Thompson, how 8 more] ground for lovers. i plans for a bout in America, his man-| pino, in a twenty-round bout at Sydney, ; ' i What he did to Willie Jackson, What|2##¢rtlve in his opinions. He sug- ager, Francois Descamps, informed the | Australia. ——————_—— his one time at bat and cost the = " et|sests that every church and parish ' Gtanta the big title, in spite of| *mocsted Press to-day. a putiaaic ae Clases wl festa ta Goa ee er do? I'll answer it. They 6t| Fo hise ave one, or two or three "cozy Pamonron wavons Wan RITE, & the Hon-hearted pitching of Christy| TB? statement was prompted by re-} guy next week. On sionday night he bate] I'm going to give Lew a boxins| comers” for the girls who live in hall] | 3p Keeping with the proctunt curd’: thewson. In the seventh inning of | Ports from the United States, called to] tics Stewart Mclean, © 004 youngster of I tegson, I beat him in Philly once atii| b°drooms, lished by Columbia and followed by the eighth game of the series, with| Descamps's attention, that Carpentier] St. Paul, | round go at Minneapolis, 11 ynow I can beat him again. Hi For young people have never made] other American coll the trustees the score 1—0 in favor of New York, | was planning to go to the United States| *Hle o» an he eit Tee der an are] 4nd faculty of Princeton University body punching? He'll be lucky to land|!0%e and never will, \ He a twelve-round ‘oted favorably upon the question ‘AILOR SINCE 1877 _ find fled the game with a hit, The! ner of the coming bout for the Ange:l-| Pete Herman, who has 9 ved shoulder,| pering him all over the place, I’m ng people a cozy) corner | tenn in the Inte war to plament | 4 Broadway at Ninth Street Red, won the game and the series ‘can championship between Gene ‘fya- going to win, win sure and then the) yes where they may be-| the present entrance examinations, This : a f. tenth after @ misjudged foul ney and Harry Greb, Ley Tendler will be well backed to de’ can prot oul Benay, fos me,” ome acquainted, Comess ace Veli announgement was made yesterday. =i yy ‘ il a