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MUI ANGLING
FOH YALE’S BEST
BALL PLAYER
By Damon Runyon.
NEW YORK', .Tune s.—Manager
McGraw, of the Giants, was
talking about the Yale baseball
club the other day
“You’ll find mo nn record 1n the
Yale News of an early spring Issue
as declaring It the best college club
I ever saw, - ’ mid the Ross of the
Polo Grounds. "I made the state
itient the daj’ the Yale lads held my
first and second teams to close
scores, and I’ve watched their course
with considerable Interest during the
past few weeks. I have encountered
a raft of college teams In my time,
but the Yale bynch of this year tops
them all ”
The Giant lender spoke highly of
the Blue's catchers, but there is one
Yale player that he Is particular
ly sweet on. and he has spoken of
him frequently since seeing him in
action The player is Re’lley, third
baseman of the Blue.
"He took my eye right away.”
said McGraw. "I haven’t seen such
a likely looking kid In many a day.
Ho has a great physical build for a
third baseman. with a wonderful
reach, and he handled himself In a
way that indicated remarkabh nat
ural talent. Somehow he reminded
me of Bill Bradley In the way he
went about hi® work.”
Which boost naturally Jed to a i
question.
"Why don’t you try to land him?” ,
“Oh, well, those boys up there us- |
ually don’t care to play profession <1
ball,” said McGraw. •‘Besides, they j
generally have at least a year or so i
of college work before them, and I i
never like to gratuitously bother a :
bny In his college career.”
\VHILE McGraw Is ven* partial to;
the collet
he makes no particular play for them,
taking his athletes where he finds
them It so happens, however, that
he has about a dozen men on his
payroll at the present time who have
had college experience, with two more
to report this month and with thr*<*
planted In the bushes.
Mathewson, McCormick, Wilson,
Fletcher, Shafer, Herzog, Snodgrass,
Murray. Me-kb* and Thorpe ar»- col
legians White and Mullaney the
i( • batt men ■ho hav< fust • •
ported, left college within the list
few weeks Douglass, a Baltimore
boy. and i’oMelh». both recruit in
fielders. will land fresh from educa
tional halls, while Jefferson Davit
Robertson and Theodore Goulait rep
resent the ‘plnnta”
STALLINGS optimist,
team builder and chief of the
Boston Braves, says:
”1 don’t have the faintest Idea
where I'm going to wind up with this
ball club, but i’ll till you one thing
I’m going to boat SOME ONE. 1
don’t even know who It It. but it'll
be SOME ONE. I’m not going to
finish last In this man’s league.”
Not many fans are. aware that th-*
pertevering George Is spending as
mu<'h money as any man In the coun
try ’n grabbing new players, while
experimenting with those he has :n
stock, and the suspicion la taking
root that the chief will eventually
cause his rivals a lot of trouble.
Atlanta, Mon., June 9
New Show Grounds. Brishine Park
raw
free
J|MW^ /P TO ALL MANKIND
. Followed by a Program of
f ASTOUNDING MAGNITUDE
»."J BIGGER, BETTER
THAN EVER
More Men. More Horaea, M<»rw
ra Animal*, and a Greater Display
® k’l I Than Ever Before.
Htl 2 THE NATION’S OWN AND ONLY
AMUSEMENT INSTITUTION
ISE
I wX. Culmin.tin. in • GREAT ARENA
.TWCwt. FItXED WITH GREAT EVENT S
AND novel features.
Including for lhe Fir.t Tim.
f|KL®S AUTO POLO -1.000 THRILI.S.
fZ/Srl football on horseback.
jW >V. Bucking and Racing BUFFALO.
> »JL V THE WORLD S CAVALRY.
• jWz AUSTRALIAN WHIP CRACKERS
and Boomerang Th rower a
Prof. Gruber'. Remarkable
>1 ANIMAL PERFORMERS.
Elf JjM EVERY NATION'S NATIVES in
Mf(| New and Noeel Portrag al. of the
111 FAR EAST *“** WILD WEST.
V TWO PERFORMANCES DAILY
I * RAIN OR SHINE
AdtMUM ■« (including seat). 50
cents. Children underOvearr. half
. price. All Scaia Protected from Sun
R&xn by immenae Uat -* - •
■>r s *.r Can py. Gru* 4 1
. bt.gadn.i-:
on A X
■ nHr
Ludden 4 Bates Piano Store,
63 Peachtree Street.
MOTOR RACES
Grand opening June
6. Ten ra<*es. Start
8:30 p. in. Admission
25c. Grandstand 25c
extra.
Old Circus Grounds
FORSYTH * , Vi"n’.: T h ?a?l 2 3 ; o 3o
LILLIAN SHAW *
MH HUMD eeias i« Place
MNlf--WAAC A CBMM--Mini & s o
MTBOI and Others. Keep
KJrTH VAUDEVILLE C ° ol
♦ GBOIMAM raw '
and Her Pa Gets a Present That s at Least Ornamental
I’M honor. 0 FIJ^T'/SIKTe f f TmiS HERE. "I ]— —= r 1
Silver moum'Ted dumcW . -£• Chatter. /41l PiGmt . is * _
_ 3 Cotter? j me 6r/tiTvde im r ferget [ T J
1 7 IT/ J I I n ,
« IMf ? I 1 ’ rOl i
: if to >Jk wWI „< , |pj,J
i’T*" 'k* (pv-/reRDtrfTT
RIDERS TONE
IIP FDR MEET
FRIDAY NIGHT
THIS will be A day of feverish ac
tivity at Jack Prince’s Motor
drome at the old show grounds.
For the opining is j*»t for Friday
night and the list finishing touches
must he plant. r< d on the plant and
the nintorcy. |< s.
Despite the hent of the broiling
sun the riders worked rx< Itodlj' nil
dnv W* Inesfiay on their machine®
1; s. •no .; that every man had a lit
tle work to do and thoae who didn't
were helping out the others Henry
Lewis’ engine was put on the blink
Tuesday and he has not been abb* to
get It to suit him since then In nn
effort to get It right nearly the whole
force of riders has been working with
him He has changed carbureters,
made adjustments here and there and
tinkered unceasingly. After each
change of part or adjustment one of
the other riders would circle the
track a f. \v times with it, while
’’Jack” McNeil would listen
'Phis McN.ll is the “man with the
educated car.” With his eyes blind
folded h. can tell you exactly what
is the matter with a motor, entirely
by the sound. To the ordinary ob
server it Is Impossible to tell anything
about a motor by sound ex. opt that
It Is running But not McNeil. He
kneels by the side of the track and
Ji»tens The motor circles a coup!**
of times ami comes back to the pad
dock Then “Jack” passes hls ver
dict He was never known to be
wrong y*t.
M< Nell Is helping Le wis to get hls
engine right and will have It tune!
to c'orr.et pitch b> Friday night
Harry Swart* Is doctoring up hls new
Excelsior racer The* machine whl~h
has just reached the track has been
used for dirt track racing and will
have to be- .hanged In several re
spects It must ha\e new rims, new
tires, a new sprocket and a few other
things But Harry Swartz will have
them all in place by Friday night—
•in.: the machine running fast. It
Is e-p. of the fastest ’boats” ever
turned out by the Excelsior factory
and will be* heard from.
Marts Graves is getting hls Indian I
right and Re-nol’s machine* Is going
strong. McNeil swears that hls J. ■
\ I*. Is absolutely “right.” but. ne-V
--e-rthelev*. he* sneaks It nut about 11 I
times a day and chases It around, to
be mir»*.
BOXING
News of the Ring Game
Jimmy Walsh, of Boston, has accept- j
< J an offer from the Queen City Club, i
of Cincinnati, to box Johnny Kilbar.e
a that city July 4 Plans are being
made to hold the In.ut in ope of the
baseball parks Kilbane and Walsh
fought to a draw a year ago.
• • •
Gunboat Smith is back in New York
and will proleabh hook up with Jim
Lynn before long, providing Flynn de
feat** Jim Savage at the Auditorium-
Arm.-ry here on June 13 Should Sav
ege manage to down the Pueblo fire
man he will get the match
• • •
Local fans shcuM see a real grudge
• j. \c hen Meyer Pries and Spider
Hrttt clash in one of the bouts at the |
~rmm- \miory The two bantam- '
weights have been exchanging hot words \
f t weeks Both promise a knockout !
. . .
Johnny I’oulor. bantamweight cham- t
plor. wdl * lash with Johnnj Brannigar
n a ten-round bout at Milwaukee on
■ in.- t.♦ Brannigan intends to hand the
.mj i’*n a surprise package, and he
will not lack for admirers on the night
t (he fight
HonC*ar«Der Wells Is through with the
I x.ug game. Wells says he will return
• L’ r.dori and enter business He!
Kames his recent defeats to a poor •
stomach.
• • •
Paidy I'r.y. Lr. manager of Eddie Me- I
- rty. - vrtafn’y gathering in the
gh f«»r h:s protege McGoorty has |
■*n b x'i g >n the average of at least
ree times a mouth He is now
r. atched t«> take on Jimmy Clabby in a
n irn bout at Rutte. Mont . on June 13
BASEBALL
TO-PAY
Chattanoona vs. Atlanta
Ponce DeLeon Park
3:45 o'Clock
1 —i——
City Park Now Open j
! Sporting Food
OBOROI ■. PHAIR—
WALKS.
"The eiirfew trills the knell of part
inn day;
The lowing herd winds slowly o'er
the lea"—
Thus spoke that good old poet,
Thomas (Tray,
M’fto was some poet—take this
huneh from me.
"The plowman homeward plods his
weary way,"
According to the dope that Thomas
wrote.
i .4 nd ns one reads said dope one well
might saji:
"I wonder who has got the plmc
man's goat."
Itut when old Thomas wrote his dole
ful lay.
He had not had the chance to gaze
upon
! A batsman wending on ht« weary
way
ll hm hr hud whiffed thr air with
three men on
Jake Stahl avers that he expects to
win the pennant, demonstrating that
every American citizen has an inalien
able right to kid himself.
One is glad to learn that Devereux
Milburn has recovered after being kick
ed In the head by a horse. At the same
time one is sustained and soothed by
the knowledge that Heine Zim is Im
mune against that form of injury.
When one hears of Inside baseball one
’i« reminded that the only Inside base
ball Is played Inside the box office.
The report that Charlie White has de
veloped a knockout punch reminds us
of a one legged man kicking a goal from
the field.
It Is not surprising to read that Larry
McLean has been rendered hors de com
bat by drinking Ice water. Larry’s
stomach nsver will become accustomed
to water.
Ar we understand It. whenever Evers
looks at lavender he feels blue
We note by the public prints that
Jimmy Walsh Is wild to do battle with
Johnny Coulon. He must be.
We havf It on the word of the press
agent that Adolph Wolgast Is as good
as he sver was. It Is a well-known fact
that a press agent never prevaricates.
One of our motorcycle racers was
scrambled yonder eve, showing that the
game is getting back to Its old-time
i form
Georges Carpentier having whipped
Bombardier Wells, one is led to wonder
whothehel can’t.
BASEBALL 1
Diamond News and Gossip
Ty Cobb, of the Tigers, got two hits
! >ut of four times up yestenlay. and
again leads Joe Jackson in the race for
hatting honors in the American League
• •
The Red Sox sent three pitchers
against the White Sox yesterday in a
vain effort to win the game
• • •
Hal Chase, the first baseman traded
by the Yankees to the White Sox. is ex-
I pec ted to report to hls new owners to
day. and no doubt will tyrrak into the
game at once
• • •
Manager Jimmy Callahan, of the
I White Sox has exuded the opinion, in
joyous tones, that the acquisition of
Chase Insures the pennant for the
Whits So*.
• • •
Incidentally. It might be mentioned ’
that the Sox are Jlf* points l»ehind the*
Athletics and 168 behind the Naps |
The terrific clip at which the Ath- (
I letica and Naps are traveling is shown
by the fact that the Athletics have won
I t**n straight games, while the Naps
have capture*! eleven out of their last
j welve start®.
I Joe Jackson, the Nap slugger, pounded
a ball over the highe*»’ tier of the right
field gransfand In the Polo Grounds yes
erday. the longest hit ever made in
New York
• • •
Cincinnati went Into seventh pla<*e I
yesterday by virtue of a victory over
the Dodgers, pushing the Braves back
Into their old haunt the cellar position 1
DO YOU ITCH?
; ? If e>. Tettertae I‘ -urr« ersrm*. gnnm.t \ ‘
I ? ttch. -bl-j fesfans sort be*; S
’ ' «n*i aU -sher mmbW Re*! sh*t c. E '
( Haus. I- :la. -*>»
fnrl*»ed Sat $1 S»«4 a»e tb.it vatu*
I* Tftt»rl*e Om bet *f Trttcrlne
«9«* f't ee/ere* 1* ay f*«l'y
»*rth »f «tl»er remeSU* | i>**t trkd
Use Tetterine
i !♦ r*h yr - ■ ’t-Hr ie •;.*• ** the
| l best mell.-e. sxtll lx wt” cure you n• ;
I U’ day TrOertr.-
S>c at «'(.««», *r man , ’
SMUPTRIME CO.. iAVAfcHRM, GA.
J.HE. AIIjAMIA OEA/KWIAPi AJNf! IVCWXS.
SPORT AT $26,600 A DAY
POLO!
Three Days of Polo, to
Decide the Interna
tional Championship,
\\ ill Cost a Total of
SBO,OOO, Making It
the Most Expensive
Contest of Its Kind.
IF ra< ing is the sport of kings, polo
Is the sport of millionaires. Any
king, even though he may be an
Insignificant Indian potentate or a
ruler of a Balkan State, with a pock
etbook of slim proportions may own
a racing stable, but only a man of
great wealth can afford to maintain
a big string of polo ponies. For race
horses. If they are fast, can earn their
keep and make a profit for their own
er. But a polo pony Is nothing but
an expense from the day he is bought
until the day df Mb death The «»n!v
thing he can earn Is a modicum of
glory and a few cups which as a
rule do not cost as much as hls sad
dle and bridle From this It may be
gleaned that between racing and polo
there Is a distinction with a differ
ence. Harry Payne Whitney will
spend 120.000 on the International polo
series of games to be played at Mead
ow Brook, L 1 . on June 10 and June
14 The Duke of Westminster’s ex
penses for the polo challenger will
amount to s6o,non All this for the
rake of a silver trophy worth $4,000.
The cost of polo depends largely
upon the inclination and desire of
the pololsts to spend money. Some
men can enjoy the sport at an outlay
of a few hundred dollars a week,
while other« will spend a® many thou
sands H L. Herbert, chairman of
the Polo Association, recently said
In reference to the cost of polo: “It
nil depends on how much a man wish
es to spt nd on the game. One man
may be satisfied to own and main
tain three ponies, while another will
want at least thirty at hls command.
Thr expense is much like that of the
opera, "ne man can enjoy It for a
dollar while it will cost another thou
sands for a box.”
• • •
H’HITNEY and the Duke of West
•• minster each own 30 polo ponies.
They hire trainers to develop the
speed of the ponies and teach them
the elementary parts of the gain*
Th** Milan of these trainers is $4.(»00
• u h In addition to that tliere are a
big corps of stable lads to support,
for the attendant® not only receive
salaries ranging from $25 to S4O a
month, but in addition are allowed
their lodging and board. This, with
the cost of food. saddles, bridle«.
bandages, lotions, medicine and the
attendance of a veterinary costs
many thousands of dollar*’.
Then Is now such a great demand
for polo pontes that they are special
ly bred for that purpose. Tn 1876
when the first games of polo were
playt d in New York, it w-a® possible
to buy ponirs for prices ranging
from $35 to ID'O. Mr Herbert once
bought a pony for $35 that afterward
developed Into a thoroughbred and
his value soared to $2,000. Os course
that was an exception Nowadays
ponies suitable for polo cost from 1500
to $2,000 each
\\ ’ HEN Mr. Whitney prepared sos
’’ his campaign in England in
he spent s'<s,ooo for ponies
Since then he has added many
more to his string and has spent at ’
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An Opportunity
To Make Money
Inventors, men of Ideas and Inventive ability, shonlrt write
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Patents secured or our fee returned. "Why Some Inventors
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RANDOLPH & CO.
PxtrrJ Attororvs
610 ”F” Street. N. W.,
WASHINGTON. D. G
BIG CHANGES IN AMERICAN
TEAM; FRICTION REPORTED
NEW YORK, June 5. —American
polo enthusiasts to-day had not re
covered from the shock experienced
Inst nlKht when the announcement of
the line-up of the American polo team
showed that three of the regulars had
rot been included. Rumor* were cur
rent all day that friction was the
cause of Harry Payne Whitney, L.
Waterbury and J. M. Waterbury being
supplanted by Foxhall Keene, I. E.
Stoddard and Malcolm Stevenson, but
thc.se were denied by all concerned.
Thr only explanations offered were
that the shift was made for the best
Interests of the American team and
also because some of the regulars
were In rather poor health.
Kone, who has been playing polo
for 30 years and Is now an old man
ti:- polo players go, will -aptaln the
Americans. In place of Whitney, and
play position No. 3; Stoddard will
play No. 1; Devereaux Milburn, who
I is recovered from the injuries sus
tained In practice Saturday, will play
No. 2, and Stevenson will play back.
There Is much debate to-day as to
whether the change has strengthened
the American team, but the general
opinion is that It has not.
least $40,000. It will be seen by this
that he has expended tn the neighbor
hood of $125,000 for ponies alone.
One of hjs ponies coat him $15,000.
This was the high water mark paid
for any pony, but many good ponies
have cost $5,000 The Duke of West
minster has spent in the neighbor
hood of $125,000 for hls aggregation
of ponies. The ponies that will be
used In the international matches will
be made up in .arge part of those
owned by Mr. Whitney and the Duke
of Westminster. Several ponies,
however, have been donated for the
use of the players by various Amerl
i ans and Englishmen who are Inter
ested tn the game.
...
COME of the expenses, other than
those of buying and maintaining
the (Htnlea, cost the players many dol
lars. The halls, made of light wil
low. are furnished to the Polo Asso
ciation at ten cents each. One firm
has a contract to supply the polo
KINKY HAIR
STRAIGHT X
EXEDENTO never falls to do what It
claims. It stops falling HAIR, cleans
DANDRUFF at ones, and just feeds
ths SCALP and ROOTS of the HAIR,
and makes HAIR grow so fast that
it is a wonder
Every package to guaranteed
Plain talk: Don’t fool yourself by
using some preparation which claims
to straighten your HAIR Kinky
HAIR can not be made straight YOU
have to have HAIR before you can
straighten It. When you use EXEL
ENTO QUININE POMADE. It will
promote the growth of the HAIR very
fast, and you will soon have nice,
long HAIR, which will be long'
straight, soft and rllky.
PRICE—2S CENTS, by all druggists
or by mall on receipt of stamps or
coin
EXELENTO MEDICINE COMPANY.
ATLANTA. GA
AGENTS wanted everywhere
Write for perticulsrs to-day.
POLO!
In Five Years the Two
Leading Clubs Have
Paid $250,000 for
Ponies Alone. Ponies
for tiie Present Con
test Are Worth $200,-
000.
associations with twenty thousand
balls. The mallets are worth from
$2 to $3.50 each. The heads of the
mallet are frequently broken tn the
game ot during practice. It costs a
dollar to replace the heads. The
helmets the players wear cost from
$4 to $7 each. The riding boots are
worth from sls to $25. The riding
breeches cost from $8 to sl2.
CRACKERS FAIL TO SECURE
ROBERTSON FROM SAVANNAH
The Savannah club of the South
Atlantic league has turned down the
offer by the Atlanta club for Pitcher
Robertson.
They will not part with their star
right-hander until the end of the sea
son. Manager Llpe has the first half
pennant sewed up. and he will want
Robertson when the second half be
gins, some time next month.
Hut the Crackers may be given first
chance at him at the end of the sea
son.
ELBERFELD LANDS MAN
TO REPLACE GILLESPIE
CHATTANOOGA. TENN., June 5.
Third Baseman Hoffman, formerly
with the (’leveland club of the Appa
lachian leeaffuo, was by Elber
feld yesterday afternoon and made
hls debut against the Barons Nego
tiations. which had been under way
for some time, were hastened to ma
turity by Gillespie’s Injury.
e La nd of X t he 5 kyJ
••A’ ■■
* ■ ••.■■.■■l '■
swHhHKW /
Plan your trip to “The Land of the Sky”—America’s most delight
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can compare with this wonderland of the clouds amid the towering
peaks and beautiful mountain lakes of Western North Carolina.
The journey there is a luxurious one. Pullman sleeping and parlor cars; drawing-room,
observation and dining cars have made famous the splendid through train service of the
Southern Railway
I Premier Carrier of the South
Kiit you in “The Land of the Sky,” with
, canoeing by day, and music, dancing
diversion* by night. A few of the
opular resorts are:
rille. Black Mountain, Henderson- L” i
. Brevard, Lake Toxaway,Saluda, '' sk —. w I J J
aynoeville. Tryon. Flat Rock # Wil J '?
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Dtvlalon Peaaenger Agent. s,.
Write for i?hi®tratets booklet on ~ ? /
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Sports and Such
NEW YORK. JUNE S.—THE
loval public of this city has bid
farewell to Hal Chase, the great
est living monument to the futility
of ability without a balance wheel.
Chase is one of the greatest
natural ball players that ever lived.
If he could have gone Into a trance
at 6 o'clock every “evening and
remained unconscious until 3 the
next afternoon he would still be one
of the most valuable players in the
big leagues, instead of being offered
about the circuit for weeks, and no
bidders.
He was ruined by too much lis
tening to the constant chorus of,
"What a wonder you are!” He
acquired a taste for that sort of
music and this Inevitably led to
fatty degeneration of the bump of
self-esteem, a disease which de
velops just before a ball player gets
the gate.
He was only a kid when he came
to the Yankees, and before the end
of the season he was the idol of
the league There were a num
ber of hangers-on about the
Yankee camp whose chief mission
In life was to tell Frank Farrell
how to tell his manager how to
run the team. They .alked to
Chase and convinced him that be
cause he was a good oarstnan he
qualified to command a full-rigged
ship. Immediately hls usefulness
to this or any other team came to
an end The same crowd per
suaded Mr. Farrell to make him
manager, and he ruined a team
that had come within a few games
of winning the pennant.
• • •
REDUCED TO THE RANKS HE
Ignored the example of other great
ball players—l.ajoie. for Instance —
who have failed as managers and
by earnest, steady ball playing kept
their place In the general esteem.
Instead, he sulked. He has jumped
the club once If he couldn't have
hls pet toy he wouldn’t play. This
Is the reason that he was not even
valuable trading property. Nobody
wanted him. A big baseball man
told the writer this spring that he
did not believe a single magnate
In either league would have Chase
as a gift.
• • •
KNOCKING OUT BOMBARDIER
Wells promises to be the new
popular International sport. Car
pentier. a Frenchman, soaked him
last
CRITICS CALL !
JIW FLYNN
BAT NELSON II
THE boxing bout at the Atlanta
Auditorium-Armory on Friday
night, June 13, will bring to
gether In an Atlanta ring the tough
est heavyweight In the world and the
cleverest heavyweight In the world.
Nobody would argue that any
heavyweight was as tough as Jim
Flynn. He Is "the Battling Nelson
of the Heavyweight Division,” which
is an honorable title.
In many ways the careers of Nel
son and Flynn were similar. Both
were tough and scrappers from the
heart. Both have given the public
their best In every bout. Both found
their paths to faitie obstructed by a
dense black cloud. The only differ
ence was that Nelson disposed of hls. •
while Flynn didn’t. At that, Jim has
always said he would have won over
Johnson if the affair had not been
stopped.
Flynn Is one of those weird per
formers who comes right back after
a knockout. He has been given the
K. O. decision, technically or In real
earnest, time and again. Yet, after ,
a dosen years of scrapping he Is to
day at the apex of the pile and going
strong. Perhaps never in hls career
has he shown to better advantage
than he did In hls last bout.
Flynn, like Nelson, seems Immune
from pain. They can hammer htn.
all day In the same and he comes
back for mor*. He Isn't any Joe
Grim at that, for he Is clever enough
and doesn't Intentionally absorb any
punishment. But If he has to take
It he does it without flinching and
if the 'ates decree a knockout against
him it has to be a cold knockout or
Interference by the referee to stop
him, for he hasn’t had "enough” yet
In any scrap.
Jim Flynn Is not any more remark
able for his toughness than Savage Is
for hls cleverness. They all award
the palm to Savage. He is the best
tin the lot. When he and Flynn meet
they will give the spectators ten
j rounds of warin happenings.