The evening world. Newspaper, August 19, 1922, Page 7

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E.R. BRADLEY'S COLORS AT LAST IN FRONT AT SPA After at Least 100 Attempts Past Three Years Blos- | som Time Chases Jinx. | | CANS WOULD HAVE KNOCKED THE GREATEST OF LIGHTWEIGHT CHAMPIONS TENOLER OUT WITHA PUNCH ass Old MasteiNever Drew $400,- 000 Gat, and in That Re- spect Lonard Has It On @ Him. By Rbert Edgren. By very little, He was no fancy dancer like modern boxers, wasting all his force in foolish and unnecessary foot- work, GANS, THE JAPANESE NOBLE- MAN. Joe reminded me of the story about a Japanese nobleman long ago who SARATOGA, Aug. 19.—After at Gans nesr drew a $400,000 gate] had no skill in sword play and who him, least a hundred attempts to win a . at uny of ils great championship | offended te fag Latins csi se tha Toe Gans > kK race here during the last three years oy fights, Ti that ‘one particular| nee" cement knew he would te Gres tus Derenede bP ee WtTH A WIDE OPENING E. R. Bradley's silks flashed home in | ‘ 5 \ : Benny Leonar has it over Joe. And] killed, but an old uncle, who was a WHEN His OPPONENT LED A LEFT Bo elunw pint - . front in the third race this afternoon Benny Leonariis a first class fighter}cunning fencer, gave him good ad- ok CUFFED THE BLOW ASIDE - - ° POSWALL LIGHTWEIGHT CHAMPION, The horse which chased the jinx ts @ real chmpion, although all ha] ¥ice. FOR, By WHOEKGUT « bial Be ae econ his sturdy brown filly Blossom Time ‘4 “ 1 ” Rom GANS’ FIRST+FEINT 4 , Gould commanéin his late fight with Lad “anatn GAHer What SAtaSeD : ~ = Joe's RIGHT FoLtowep.: | °Y North Star 84 and Valin, Tendler was a lose “newspaper deci-] you must not move hand or foot or ERNE NEVER KNEW Blossom Time ran an exceptionally ston." even blink an eye. Stare straight at es WHAT HIT HIM fine race, but she was compelled to do your enemy and wait, even if you are being killed. It 1s your only chance." The nobleman followed instructions. The master swordsman fenced dex- terously, felnted, made tentative cuts and thrusts, but the nobleman never moved an inch or showed the quiver of an eyelash. He was cut on fore- arms and slashed on face and neck until blood streamed down, but he didn't stir, Suddenly the master swordsman drew back, laid his sword on the ground and bent his knee, “I surrender to your mercy," he said, ‘You are a far greater master than Tam. I know that you have de- termined not to move until you end my Ife with a single blow, and that when you move I die.” That was Joe Gans's way In the ring, except that Joe was the real master. In his poised, motionless way he waited for an attack, brushed aside blows and when he saw his sure opening he drove crashing home the wihning blow. her very best every step of the jour- ney, for Montford Jones's recent pur- chase, Resting Time, displayed a good burst of speed and fought it out with the Bradley filly all the way. For half a mile the two fillies raced head and head. Then Blossom Timo, which had some racing experience began to draw away from the untried tilly and at the end she was half a” length in front. Mr. Bradley 1s popular with the horsemen, owners and racegoers here and when his silks were returned in front they were greeted with a round of applause. , But the mordienny fights the more @pparent it is hat Benny never was and never wi be “another Joe Gans."" The be Gans who is ow enly a shadow tradition of the ring ever woud ave fought an uphill fight half the ay against Lew Tend- ler, and worki his way painfully to the front in th latter end of a twelve Found battle. Especially so if Joe Gans had the ame reasons for want- ing to put Tenler aside. Leonard is jever and he can hit hard. He 1s catious, sometimes, and sometimes he hrows caution to the winds. He haja fighting brain. He fs a student, Vhen he fights a man the second tim he always knows how to beat him. If he fights Tendler again—as of cause he will while $400,000 gates re in prospect—he will pemock Tendiecrout if he wants to. Early in hi career Benny's ambi- jon was to vn all fights with clean knockouts, ad usually he made good. Perhaps liket number of other very Dav HAWKINS , WITH THE HARDEST LEFT EVER KNown IN THE FUNG , LITERALLY “KNoaeD GANS on HIS EAR” major league batting honors, with the advantage still elightly in G SORGE SISLER and Ty Cobb continue their merry battle for the favor of the Browns’ star. Sisler is batting .408 and Cobb .405. A ANUTE LATERN : ’ Liornaby, the pace setter of the regulars in the National League, ts hittin; HAWKINS WAS OUT! 487. Sisler holds the lead in banging out th leat number of safe hits — nd is Ged with Max Carey, the Pittaburg se stealing hous each leading thelr respective ‘ven etolen assoc Am x the local clubs, the Giants boast no less than nine .300 hitters, hom Nehf and Snyder alone are battery + The Yankees have seven batting In the se t circle, with Hush, the heavy hitting mound put in front, Seven of the Robins are also .300 swatters. Cadore an among the seven GIANTS YANKS Player Thunderclap won the Glens Falix Handicap, the feature of the pro gramme. He ran as well as he eve: did, He picked up 128 pounds ani beat some fair horses in a driving finish by a length and a half. He covered the one mile route in the rei good time of 1.371-5, “Tue ONLY MAN WHO CouLD LEAN AGAINST Joe's RIGHT WAS BAT NELSON = AND THAT ANAS WHEN Jog WAS ABOUT THROUGH - - Player. Kirklevington didn’t bleed as he did in his last race, but it seems as if he hus lost his punch. He used to be a gre stretch runner, Yesterday he hun as if weak, = = New Orleans, Av <irkle clever boxers he has se@n the com-|" No other fighter has ever perfected SA N FIRST F Stengel esse. Bum lhetent fintohed Bene” Aceeshenti mercial advatage attached to a s thatatyle of fighting. Snyder . Bchang Aft LAGe SH CRE ORE uaa tte bard: butitidecisive: battles, Gans could fight uphill. In two - Pipp the closest finish of the day and with a bigpurse. Perhaps he has|renis Dal Hawkins, who had the W 66 ” ’ : Hotmani prousaa (tlie crowdite, K RGR pike ot found himse’ so shy of real opponents} greatest left hand knockout punch A PRO , wit excitement. So close together wer: that he migt be satisfied with merely i've ever seen, dropped Gans for a Dugan the trio that hundreds in the crowd sponUner nd ise and saving nist nine count. Each time Joe got up, Beott | were unable to tell the winner until ike away lite pe ole tcar steadied himself and knocked Haw- LE IN AME YEAR the judges rendered their decision kins out. If Gans had been in Leonard's place against Tendler, and Tendler had hammered at his body with the left But the hances a Benny found Tendler darterous, and that he'll use what he leaned of Tendler’ le to Polish him @ in a workmanlike man- J. Barnes Jonen ip tie OTOR PAGED RACE) Gene Easily Depeats Emmet | CORNELL ELEVEN STARTS py ee age Ber next tie they meet and dropped a constant string of ‘ * PRACTICE ON SEPT. 11 King... De Vormer Dut if itwad keen Joo Gans in thejoverhand rights across, Gans would) French in Finals at Oak- - MeQuttlan ... Shawkey Mie wernviin whieh used tal quit : ae cor baw - : r jonhard. scesssess inner e vlan, wl 0 quit | : . erent. Jo stion, Gi or eal all squad will be called together for its we KG 0 eld + Gans fougt and beat men with whom|cott and many great fighters, who first practice on Sept. 11. ‘The coaching | tended Event of This Kind HURTS ASE To PINSHINGERECOR DS: pe eet es oo anentone fendier nver classed. Joe Gans|were blege™ and stronger. Langford] oaKMONT COUNTRY CLUB, PITTS-| staff will be the same as it was last Pltshere Wee RS eitenes: Ws were asked by the stewards. kmocked ot Frank Erne, one of the}won a decision over him—but whol puRGH, Aug. 19.—Gene Sarazen, the [¥e#" When the Ithacans went through Here at Velodrome. pete He eR ing ous Ag y : verest lightweigh ldn't Langford beat when he was g ene 4 4 the season without a defeat. ae ee Nene 5 ray, : , Paeeees. Slovan ee ea ar aiteie nee e former Apawamis caddie, added the} Gilmour Dobie again will be head BAAS 1 Burree is Aiea rare Whitney uncovered « ever 5 as ? Professional Golfers!) Aasociatiol 5 h with Ray Hunt 2 an JSAND cy iyan nee M10 Jone 3 in the last race that isa real run punch. Gas had fought Erne years] A few days ago I met Dick Tay | ee ee ne tc ating. See ee oetaie GaAlarAna: Buatiwree ike Ean E IGHTERN THOUBAND orcliel] tequvien 6 Maye 10 nar; Bhaja Untldy, ty Bweep, he before, andhad lost when accidental-| the dramatist, and he told me a stery| 2's 10it cellection by Aetcouthe Hiimet ented Gloom's chief Teutenant out at enthusiasts, the largest crowd ROBINS atapnad) away cron the batreritike w ly blinded y a wide cut over his eye, | about Gans. . inent, 4 up and 3 to play, Sarazen 1s] Washington, and Mayer was captain of that ever saw a series of bike Jack rabbit, quickly opened up a gay supposed t have resulted from a] "I was going eastward on theSanta| the first golfer to win both the Amer-|the first Cornell team Doble handled. | races in New York, attended the Bitver. OnMthe 10 of half a dozen lengths and then Dutt. Buthe knew all about Erne.| Fe,” said Tully, “and away out inthe] {can open and P, G. A. champtonships| Paul Eckley, one of the stars of Chuck |" y ae Boneling: « 4 eteatedl C6) an eaay victory, Dewelta They were natched to fight six rounds] hot Arizona desert the train stopped.|in the same year. Rarrett’s 1918 championship team, will| Velodrome last night. They saw|{ Johnston Smith : : the Gaby. Wee: one Won aie covered later in PHadelphia, Gans was there.]1 got out. There were half a dozen} Sarazen 1s probably getting more fun again have charge of the freshmen, with| several thrilling finishes and ap-|] Whent .. Deektir seat a the five and a half furlong route in Eme went :o Philadelphia the day of]men with a stretcher, On the /out of his championships t cs treed welter will continue to preside over what| Plauded long and loud the victory of BEYER he caneveiinaees 48) 1,05 2-5, the fastest time made at the the bout ami took the next train back| stretcher was a man who was either}/Who has won the big titles. The}? B a 4 — 7 4 Hal ace twenty-onesear-old champion is still mmeyn Berry, graduate manager, has} George Chapman, thrice American meeting. to New York. I was with him dead or dying. He looked like|twenty-one-year-old champion Js sill | gesignated the “casualty ward.” eee. Pitcher. w. —_ fd he vas tipped off in Philadelphia] mummy—yellow parchment skin{t or ciion of the honors he has won|, Sixteen men won thelr varsity "Cc" champlon, ln itwo: straight ‘heats ob) ll) ‘Debssry Rusther:: 16 Morty Murphy put over an 8 tp 1 t he ws to be “tricked" out of his| grawn tight over his bones. He didn't|? "tre wrent kinsdom of sport. When|it the Pennsylvania game last year.|the special ten miles motor-paced |} tam Grime 2 shot when his Royal Charlie won thw ti Jater the two met at Fort|move. 1 couldn't even see him|he won the Southern winter open|Seven of theso will be available this| race, over Clarence Carman and Vin-}} Grimes Sees Cadare IT 5 firat race. But it didn't profit hit Erle. breathe championship at New Orleans last win- | yeah, 8 follows, Cape. Kew at left alg’ cont Madonna, Chapman lapped his }] scnmandi : Bocstar H imuehy coe in (ia next event tile; fool 5, " 4 a wi “|back, Ramsey at right half, Pfann at 01 0 e antere Decatur ] Bi eR ae ne be seuss GANS, \ STUDENT, WINS CHAM- Must be a rich Negro," I said to|tet Sarazen grinned as he was pre-| Net.) “Hansen and Sundstrom in the | eee eee and cantored Shriver 2 Scott sulked all the way and was one of the men, “to have you fellows |sented with the championship cup. At} quarter, Hansen and Stndatrom in the! home in the deciding heat in the time Sinith 2. 2 Neatena ott 4 MOrio cwteb ewe { PIONSHIP. 5 Skokie he grinned aguin when he was Q sh . of 14.411-5. In the first trial Chap- Mitchell 0 yeaten 0} y was sweet on rying him." ‘He's not rich—he's poor,’ said man, ‘Don't you know him? Joe Gans. He wants to die at and we're putting him on the dozen or so others who were ineligible last year, or who played on the second |™an was the whole show. He lapped or third string tearna also will be ayail-| Carman at six miles and two laps able, as well as four freshmen of un-|and defeated Madonna handily in usual promise, 14.12 3-6 ———__ It remained for Willie Spencer, re- JOHNNY KILBANE INVITED| cently crowned = American sprint Royal Charlie and he though old Jocis 8 the best bet of the meeting. eos WELL KNOWN JUDGE OF HORSES PASSES AWAY lifted to the shoulders of the shouting mob In front of the clubhouse and yes- terday, after fighting a bitter battle to win his third championship within a year, he could only grin some more shen @ gallery of 2,000 strong cheered is victory in front of the Oakmont Afterthe fight Gans told me that he kner Erne had a trick of feinting and drawing quickly back just about twelve inches, where would stop core in again with a blow. The tine Erne feinted Gans hooked the train,’ éxt morning I heard that Gans his righ with all his power at a spot|yaq died during the night.” Tabi Hotline: champion, to give the huge assem- uive mohes back of Kmnea ohio jee pSB2 ah: When the crowd yelled for a speech, HERE TO DISCUSS BOUT} }y.¢0 0 thrill when he came from be NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE William Shanahan, for many years ut Erne’s quick pull-back brought his} THE CRUEL TERMS NELSON |Gene ran: for the cluby house. hind to win first honors in the five -300 HITTERS. .300 HITTERS. authoritative Judge of horses at county chin to hut spot just as Gans’s gloved INFOS paper men, who found him. _In @ final effort to induce Johnny| mites open. Reggie MgNamara fin PSA CHI GAGs Le ORC tavern co mee Filta ahiiosie ahowartala eb aruelis Mit arviod. A clean tnockoul! Gans 5 ceker room and asked for a statement Kilbane to make an attempt to retrieve | isned second and Goullet third. Spen-|] Barfont, St, Lula... 10 Sisier, St. Loula.....,489 179 404 | wich, Conn.; Monmouth County, No J It’s. champic¢ e short- ave little do : were rewarded only with another grin, Matchmake: journoy | tare time we The fire swell, Pittsburgh cobb, Detrol ‘ : was wold’s champion in the short-| 1 have little doubt Joe Gans had a Tee ee eran ee Weldon Seneiey [cers tine: Wau! 40:18 The first Pittaburgh.. Cobb, Detroit +300 s, N. ¥., dled this he grin of a twenty-on who six years ago was a poor caddie nd who to-day ts a champion who will earn several thousand dollars before 922 passes into history. Sarazen's grin {s probably the most boyishly Mhuppy grin to be observed on American and Richfield Sprin morning in St. Francts's Hospital in the Bronx from a complication of dise He was sixty-two years of g been {Il for seven months, He e: this country forty-five years ago, fron est chaapionship fight on record. That was Joe Gans--a_ student, When Je began fighting in Baltimore he once went to a theatre to see Bob Fitzsimmons box. He was so fas- cinated by Fitzsimmons's skill that for tuberculosis when his manager let him go. He wanted to make a stake to leave his family. He knocked out a few fighters before he met Battling Nelson, claimant of the lightweight title Gans held. Gans had a cruel Speaker, Cleveland... 3sT Woodall, Detroit... joslin, Washington Hanslor, Detroit Haney, Detroit Stephenson, Bt. Louls | Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Chi wired the Cleveland veteran an invita- | Upset of the ble evening's cycling en- tion to come to this city on Monday |tertainment was the defeat of the un ard discuss plans for a match. Flour-| beaten Madden and Kaiser combina noy has submitted a Mberal offer to] tion by Francisco Verri and Orlando Kilbane for a match in which the feath-] piani, the famous Italian stars in erweight title would be at atake, but toltwo straight heats of the one-mile Yellowhorss weeks hi followed Bob from town to} geal in that match. Nolan and Nel-|solf links to-day. date Kilbane has ignored offers for #| match team race. The wearers of Miller, Chicago. 0 Tobin, St. Ls Tipperary, Ireland town, witching y performance | ion haagled over welght and money, | Both Sarazen and French felt the|match in this State. The State Athletic |i. nite, red and green triumphed " Cincinnati. Hollman, Mr. Shanahan (s survived by his / Bene via tBeuey anton rarsiballeee strain of thelr rpevious matches yester-|Commission, which declared Kilbar eure dene Piteshurgh 0. 444 Witie E ; baste : creed the champion to take a small] O00" oy OM wr played his best golf.) title vacated upon his refusal to recog-| in decisive style and left no doubt of iker, Philadelphia. 3 widow, two sons and two daughte VNelll, Keefe, Cleveland Miller, Philadelphia... 9) lug, Detroit Galloway, Phila... Harria, Bonton down uner the actual physical move- ments ofthe great champion'’s body and legsand arms to learn the im- pelling motive in his mind ‘At last he believed that he knew what Fitzimmons was thinking while end of the big purse, and on the last uperiority. Mann, St. Tout day, finding Gans had nmde 183 pounds «tripped, as agreed, insisted he must weigh in at 133 ringside in full fighting togs. That last drying out must have nize a challenge from Johnny Dundee, | their has notified the Cleveland veteran that| Pilani did the pulling in the first he will have his license restored If he| heat, und when the bell lap came he consents to battle Dundee for the title, | allowed his gritty partner to do. the To this proposition, too, Kilbane has| sprinting. Verrl was more than sched a deaf ear, His oldest son, William F. Shana fs assistant manager of the Hot ‘ou modore. The funeral will be held Tues day morning at 10. o'clock from his residence, No. 340 East 154th Street, the Bronx, A requiem will be sun Their match play was so close, how- ever, that they finished all even at the end of the morning round. Sarazen had a medal score of 74 for that round to match against a 76 for French, but the Youngstown man fought hardest when ch equal to the task, shoving his wheel Cineinnatl .., 5 ae chy Pittsbur Veach, Detroit i ; Hin action, although, like Kid McCoy,| nearty finished Gans, but the courage|Sarazen had the advantage, and by by inches in front of Kaiser. He[] (ooch. Pittsburgh i Z in the chureh of the Immaculate Co: IB be told m he believed Fitz held much|o¢ the black champion never showed] some spectacular putting ninaetl & |GEORGE DUNCAN WINS jualled the track record for the last]| Duncan, tt oars ed NG i eer pyar ame ery: nish all square a\ end of ¢ . a ; he area: Barber, oper, Chicago ment will be in St, Raymo eme fighting |nowledge in reserve, ene more strongly than in the terrific MEht| holes in spite of Sarazen's lead in the WESTERN N. Y. TITLE|"!* He alle: tural in the great Williama, z Pratt, Boston tery. ffhat Fits vas the master strategist of that followed. Metal aserne i! time of 12 seconds. Pian! happened] smith, St. Louie Burns, Hosion = to be himself last night and h BUFFALO, N. ¥Y., Aug. 19.—George} tought he would show that he was a Duncan of England, with a card of 79| considerable sprinter, and he did the and a two-day gross of 281 for the 72[ tion's share of work in the second holes, won the Western Now York £0l{)¢)i4) with the result that he led home championship. Walter Hagen of sartnen With the ces : York was second, with a total of 285, F 4 land Clarence Hackney of Atlintie third, with a toth! of 287, Abe mitc lof England was fourtt ring, deeper and more cunning n any dther. At anyrate, having learned all he could of “itzsimmons's mental proc- esses, Gas went out to fight, und his success ws immediate, For several years he yas king of them all, There Were son black marks against Joe Gans's reord, but if some of his iInuser. Uhuladelphia. 191 MeManus, St. Louts. 439 Robertson, St. Loula 10 Wood, Clevelandy .... 407 Link, St Nunamaker, iardner, Chi For over forty rounds Battling Nel- son, tough, tireless, punch-proof, hurled himself against Gans's hardest blows and hammered at Joe's body until between rounds Joe lald across the ropes to vomit. Yet Gans pound- ed Nelson back until Nelson, blinded and infuriated beyond control, grow- ing weak too, fouled and lost. —~—__——_ LOUIS CHIAPETTA SETS RECORD AT GREENWICH VERNON AND SAKMAN IN HANDBALL FINAL mittaburgh Bt. Loui, Philadelphia cans in the Pinelll, Ctneinnath Powell, Boston...) oH Honling, Philadelphia The first final decided of the varis McHenry, St. Louis cuted programme was the amateu Meadows, Phila. A handball match that ts attracting the attention of all local exponents wi be played this afternoon on the new courts at Brighton Beach, It oring GREENWICH, Conn., Aus. 19.—By @ wonderful display of a putting, Louis Chiape proaching and professtonal fights lo«ed a bit shady—and were] (ans stopped Jimmy Britt, at the Woodway Country Club, broke all ie f mile handicap which was won by ag India, ¢ together two of the greate. i wdy—hv had a reason that the pub-|iignemeight, in many ways tetter [amateur and professtoual records on the! 7 EA DING HITTERS Mollies, of Jersey City, aided hy |] LEADING BASE STEALERS. : hls eounthy—Aturay New didn'tknow. than Nelson. In a year or so he|course ef the Greenwich Country Club. agro BERS 70 yards. Apparently the handicaps |} Carey. Pittsburgh LEADING BASE STEALERS. York State champion, and W Sak Late inhis career Gans came to me] fought Nelson again. By this time|Playing with Frank Heckerman and NATIONAL LEAG' were too stiff for Elmer Bundt, the Pee Sete! Bieler. St. toute man, former national title-holder, The @me day and said: “Mr. Edgren.|tyberculosis had laid a heavy hand|Sylvid Binis local pro assistants, IWtayer, Club, ffalo Kid, who was. seratcl, for a Tae Ee eine best two out of three games will decic you've witten that certain fights of]on him, Yet for eighteen rounds he|Chiapetta started out to better the pa Hormaby, St. Jouls. dn't finish among the tirst f i "Bt. Loule ii Washington Vernon and Sakman were to have falne wer fakes." stood toe to toe with Nelson ana|°% 70 for the 6,300-yard course. His first | (itt pea { idi of t he Unione Sportiva Wades, flttabaraen Wambeganse Nevelan played in the farsi anal ae the Tecent “Yes, Lthink they were." drove him back with perfectly driven [Trung Was covered in thn rel hark ble | teenes, Pittsburgh ‘uno, with 10*yards, managed t Smith, Bt, Louts tournament at Brighton. but the State “You Ind it right," said Joe. “But} piows that with Gans’s old stamina|re yore iaar estas Std Mie secone Snyder, New werk get Into) thw aelecy Guintet: Pls Sppear, A’ replay waa decided upon, from now on I'm my own man and|hehind them would have stopped any-|' pis first round shatters the profes. AMERICAN dams, Joe Bexel and Sam Gastman and should Vernon win from Sakma I'll never fight another crooked fight} thing human, Nelson knocked him|sional record for the course of 69, made] Player, Club, econd, third and fourth, The the Creacent Club star would. then Siler, St. Louly .... 10i Cobb,” Detroit 103 vent in which three embryo riders) pursult race. It took Tony only 3) oppose Sam Huxbaum, who pinyed Sak ‘obb,” Detroi e for the hard race was collided and were tossed around the} niles and 514 laps to cateh th while I liv. I just want you to know] out, and knocked him out again alby both Jim Burnes and Walter Hagen seconds how it wai I was always In debt to] month later. in the metropolitan open champlonship 107 393 82 Alt Goullet and the Spencer ro Beebe dh Met Rael o ar New- [man in the Anal match several weeks ag man wi> was handling my busi-} Gane fought once more=a pitiful, {0% thls course three years go. His gt geo 30 1 Willle and Arthur, fuiled to} Mat of the track on their heads ker in the ixpod) tims af 838 4-5.]ago, ie the frat hn ; ness. No hatter how many fights I] qo-decision bout with Spike Robson {Vo round totwk of 187 is also Four Or | BAN Tent, ios, by AL Munro Bilas), faualify in thelr respective | of | waa no need for & doctor, | The otha | weeks with the score even untileTony [year berween Skman « had I alwas owed him money, and|in New York—and all of us who re-[evee rokes better than has ever | th (othirds mife handieap, a round |{¥med up in John Desimone, a ciothain | weeks with the score even untilyony | ¥s gen Bain he had me ted up #0 that i had to do| membered the invincible Old Master one Deron: OTHER LEADERS. doa hates te SM at Une Bey eS eee ae ve + MEME GA the Cant Oras Deven to CANADIAN GOLFERS what he orered me to. I've broken] thou’ taken Keni Z Manian lo cue taal Te saan eoviiiue (Secs as George jeron jr. the Plas and the result ‘ away. I’m ree and from-now on I AE Hoos a, etre GORDON BOXES DRAW Lad be om start to Anish and on the|S0R Of the one-time famous x-ray Jdoubt from t he start. Spencer lacked AMATEUR TOUR :NT. give you my word my fights will be} (ne desire to take care of his family WITH DANNY LEE Cineln i t developed into a duel be-| star. This was young Cameron's u little ginger and, try as he might, he shall straight and l'll win every, one as} as long as he could kept him on his Pace Srnec acer. EIamerRe: taeen Hatry Horan, Morence Der-ond race, and accofding ould not shake off repeated challenges! yyonTREAL, Aug. 19.—Geoffrey Tur long as I can.’ teat stay Gord hho has rapiily forged | * Won, Ido lont 3: nd Alf Grenda, and this is the |@mong the veterans he bids fir f his rival pin, trovinciat amateur’ golf chanplo Joe made iis word good, Unfor-| perhaps if Benny Leonard had thel to the trot ander Jou Washer’ mane ICAN 1 y they finished jump into the shoes made vacant Previous to the purmult race Spen-| 20 ty. arier, former Canadian cham. tunately, he had only a few years} creat lightweights of Gans's time to Be PORE MEER Be AY el F nner had 115 yards start: | 08 dad. cer accounted for first honors in the | eee iy leer the United States Rraore, Tut ty fought like a cham-| iene he might be “another Joe Gana] Metment: having been n “#60 fighter Me ew Nore clerek 195, and Grenda was ny Beckman came all the way famateur two-mile open, with Roy Mo. | Plom Will enter tlw Uihied Sisite & plon every tine. Rut, after seeing them all, I'll say] When, Wagner, took hol of hi Ue Detroit Horan was clocked in| from Secaucus, N. J., the town of Chicago, second; Ed, Bondi, | Sur Holt (enrnment vas announe F'qens had + peculiar style. He} there never has been another since| Wun Dante Lenin the tenture bout. at eecoan: bead nany great trotting races were held|third, and John Annibite, fourth: | ineday "Cc. c. Fraser, present Domit ‘eepally stood with both forearms! Joe passed along. the Surf A. A. of Coney Island 1 Wen Muneataih. New fark, 1981 mane Was a nasty spill on the last} years back, to show the class over|Pelix Patt, fifth. The time was ttlehoider, and Norman Scott, runner eed in frat of him, and moved (Copyright, 1922, by Robert Edgren,) night, Home HuutcHuth, New Yerk, igee.... 25 lup of the amateur one-mile novice! reddy Spencer, tm the Australian’ 3,09 4-6 up this year may also play, Pee 0 a ee

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