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-ATLANTA. GA. 7
You NeverWill Win a Decision If You Use the Punches of the Liquid Variety
by
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By Right Cross.
INVESTIGATING BASEBALL.
District Attorney—Where were you on the afternoon of June 1?
The Witness—I was at the Polo Grounds.
District Attorney—Tell the Court just what you saw there.
Witness—I saw a baseball game.
District Attorney—Be careful now. How do you know that it was
a baseball game?
Witness—Because the men used bats and balls and ran around
the bases.
District Attorney—Then you assume that every aggregation of
men who use bats and balls and run around bases plays baseball?
Witness—With the exception of the Giants, of course.
District Attorney—Are you sure that these men were not assem
bled to engage In a prize fight?
• * •
Witness—not according to Queensberry rules.
District Attorney—Who is this person, Queensberry? We will
have him served with a subpena.
Witness—You can’t. He’s dead.
District Attorney—How do you know he is dead? Did you see
him die? If you did see him die as alleged, how do you know that it
was not a case of suspended animation, and that the Marquis of
Queensberry, commonly purported to be dead, was not in fact buried
alive? Answer the question, sir.
Witness—I read that he was dead.
District Attorney—I move that the answer be stricken out as
hearsay.
The Judge—Do you know what time of the day it was that the
Marquis of Queensberry wsa supposed to have died?
Witness—No, your honor.
The Judge—You should carry a wrist watch, sir. Then you
would have known. Without a wrist watch you are not well quali
fied to follow your profession.
District Attorney—Have you any further evidence to offer in sup
port of the contention that a baseball game was being ^perpetrated on
the Polo Grounds on the afternoon of June 1?
Witness—Tris Speaker crossed the plate with the winning run
for the Red Sox.
District Attorney—How do you know it was a run?
Witness—The umpire called it a run.
District Attorney—Move that the answer be stricken out. That
is hearsay testimony again. The witness will confine himself to facts.
From the mere fact that the umpire called it a run, we can not admit
that a run was scored.
The Judge—What time was it when Tris Speaker was alleged to
have made this run?
Witness—I can not say exactly. I think
The Judge—That will do. Of course, you can not say exactly. You
should carry a wrist watch.
The District Attorney—During the progress of this so-called ball
game, did you see any peanuts sold?
Witness—I saw boys passing bags of peanuts to persons in the
grandstand and receiving money in return.
Ditrict Attorney—But can you swear that these boys were not
giving away the peanuts to personal friends and that the boys were
not collecting the money for the Belgians?
Witness—I do not think they were.
District Attorney—The Court does not care what you think, sir.
How many peanuts were eaten at the Polo Grounds on the afternoon
of June 1?
Witness—I don't know.
District Attorney—You presume to tell this Court that there are
peanuts sold and eaten at the Polo Grounds and yet you can not tell
how many. What do you mean by offering such flimsy testimony?
The Judge— 1 What time was the first peanut eaten, if a peanut
was eaten?
WltnesB—I don't know.
The Judge—That will do. We will hear no more witnesses who
do not carry wrist watches.
• • •
CAN IT BE THAT JIM COFFEY, like the other Irish champion,
Peter Maher, possesses what is technically known as a glass jaw?
It begins to look a little that w r ay. In the second round of hi fights
with Reich and the aged Pueblo fireman, Jim Flynn, Coffey was dazed
by blows on the jaw. Of course he came back, for there is no suspicion
as to Coffey’s gameness. But a “glass jaw” is a physical infirmity
which can not be corrected. For the sake of County Roscommon, Ire
land, and County Bronx, New York, let us hope that Coffey’s lower
maxillary is not made up of glazing material.
• * *
A LONG WAIT.
Still the Hatty boosters mutter:
“Well, he isn't ready quite;
He mill show the gang of doubters
When he gets to going right.”
But it looks as though our whiskers
And our loc ks will all be white,
If we stick around here waiting
’Till he gets to going right.
* * *
BY ACTUAL COUNT Smoky Joe Wood hitched up his trousers
8,482 times in one game. Some philanthropist should present him with
a pair of suspenders or a belt that would hold. In that way the fans
might be able to grab the eats before they frappe
* * *
THE FUNNIEST PART OF THE JOKE is that Soldier Bartfteld
thinks that he beat Mike Gibbons, too. Well, anything for a laugh in
these somber days.
HANK O’DAY SAYS FACE APPEARS GRUMPY
AND CRABBED BY LOOKING THROUGH MASK \
"Mv face may appear grumpy and crabbed; I may have a distant na
ture and a desire to keep to myself, but the dear public does not know
how to analyze an umpire’s face.”
Hank O’Day, who supplanted the late Jack Sheridan as dean of base
ball umpires, and who now is out of a job when much w'orse arbiters are
eating regularly, is the author of this statement.
“A man may have the mobile and gentle features of a schoolboy,”
continued Hank, “but after he has squinted through a mask for a quar-
r ter of a century his features are bound to take on the look of a troubled
man. In an average game of baseball an umpire makes about 300 deci
sions. A decision is called for on every ball pitched. In seventy-seven
games, therefore, he must make about 231,000 decisions.
"When you have stood there in the sun judging balls that come with
blinding speed or with tantalizing curve or slowness, it isn’t any wonder
that in twenty-four years a man’s face will become contorted with an
anxious and sullen look. To tell you the truth, your face almost freezes
that way. I may have looked severe and cross to the crowds, but, really,
while having my hardest trouble with some player I have had to laugh
| quietly. The strain of it will alter an umpire’s facial characteristic, but
i not his disposition, if he is the right kind of a man.”
Silk Hat Harry
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Defeat at Hands of Perry Ruined
Promising Fighter in Eddie Hanlon
Wolverton Hurt by
His Own Automobile
SAN FRANCISCO, June 12.—Henry
Wolverton, manager of the local Pacific
Coaat club, to-day was nursing three
fractured ribs, a broken clavicle, and
possibly a critical injury to hlr lungs,
the result of an accident in which his
automobile dragged him a block down
hill Wolverton cranked his machine
and it started before he could get out
of its path.
F0HL A GREAT DEVELOPER.
Greetings to another “bush league
manager, Lee Fohi. wno will handle the
Cleveland Indians for awhile. Fohl has
had great success, not only In managing
minor league teams, but in developing
pitchers. He Is the man whe won four
straight pennant* *-tth the Akron team.
Tlieo Dupre Captures
Roller Skating Race
Theo Dupre won the one mile and a
half roller skating race at the Teachtree
rink last night and 1s now the claimant
of the Southern skating championship.
Wallace Thomas finished second and
Bert Baker third
Theo Dupre wishes to challenge any
skater in the country.
HAS AS GOOD AS THE NEXT.
In the early days of his career
somebody started the rumor that
Heine Groh had a weak arm. If
Groh’s arm was any stronger, they’d
have to erect a bombproof turret for
the first baseman.
By W. S. Farnsworth.
N EW YORK, June 12.—Benny
Kauff, the hard-hitting out
fielder of the Brooklyn Federal
League club, who jumped to the
Giants one fine May afternoon, only to
find that he had to return to the
campus over on the other side of the
East River, is looking for a $5,000
bonus he alleges Manager McGraw
and President Harry N. Hempstead
promised him the day he signed the
New York contract.
The Ty Cobb of the outlaws has
secured Attorney John M. Ward, a
diamond wizard in the days of Anson,
Sam Crane and others around and
over the Osier limit, to get him the
$5,000. Yesterday Mr. Ward wrote
Mr. Hempstead a letter asking the
Giants’ chief what he had to say
about the matter. Mr. Hempstead,
however, is in the West, traveling
with his team.
Mr. Ward will take the case to court
should Mr. Hempstead refuse to settle
with Benny. Kauff is so sure of win
ning the case that, it is said, he would
not sell out his claim for $4,999.99.
• » •
I T seems that the morning Benny
agreed to jump to the Giants he
was promised a bonus of $5,000. At
least, that is what Benny claims And
he declares that he has it in black
and white, too.
“We will give you $5,000 if you will
sign this contract,” Hempstead and
McGraw are alleged to have told Ben
ny. So Benny affixed his John Han
cock. Then he asked for $5,000. Did
he get it? He did—not.
As a personal friend of Kauff’s told
me last night, the story of the deal
follows:
“Kauff signed a contract for the
seasons of 1915-16-17 at a salary of
$8,000 per. The second he signed this
contract he was to receive a bonus of
$5,000. Before the ink had dried Kauff
asked for the bonus.
“Then started the big Mall. Benny
was told that they wanted to play him
in the game that afternoon: that he
would get the bonus right away, but
that they didn’t have time to bother
with that trivial matter at the time.
So they rushed Benny to the Polo
Grounds, threw him into a uniform
and rushed him onto the field.
“Boston refused to play with Kauff
In the game. Then came the big
squabble. Kauff finally was forced to
return to the Brookfeds. Since that
dav he has been asking for his $5,000.
But asking hasn’t brought it. so yes
terday Attorney Ward stepped into
the limelight.”
...
I NCIDENTALLY. I have learnefl
1 that Kauff promises some verv
excellent reading matter In case he is
forced to go into the courts to get his
bonus. It’s a cinch that he will call
McGraw as a witness against his own
club. Also we will then be able to
learn Just who quit McGraw- when he
made his "steal" of the outlaw- star.
It’s Just possible that the New York
club will settle with Bennv rather
tha’n let the Inside facts of this case
get before the public. It’s a cinch
that the case, if tried, will force or
ganized baseball to show part of its
hand in the warfare being waged on
the Federal League.
AD W0LGAST SCORES K. 0.
MILWAUKEE, WIS., June 12.—Ad
Wolgast, ex-lightweight champion of
the world, knocked out Young White,
of Oshkosh, ir% the seventh round of
their scheduled ten-round bout at the
Appleton A. C.
H 1
The Fight Fireman.
I N the halcyon days of his teaming teens Jim Flynn, born Haynes, but
laboring through the earlier stages of his career under the cognomenal
handicap ol Chiariglion, used to fight for sheer love of conflict.
His was a turbulent soul. He loved violence. He rejoiced,in sanguinary
encounter. The gentle smack of a ounched fist against a flabby facial con
tour and the soft ka-tunk of a human head and torso meeting the adamant
sidewalk or barroom floor were as music to his ear.
Given a range no greater than the limits of the average thirst parlor,
with a beer bottle in either hand, we venture the assertion that, at the
age of 19 or 20, Jim Flynn would nave been practically impregnable to any
assault. In a street of average width and length, and with no holds
barred, he had all the efficacy of a galling spray.
And he loved to fight. He loved disorder. The dust of Main street,
or South Union avenue, in that dear Pueblo, Colo., as it rose in soft gray
clouds above locked forms writhing wrathfully along the thoroughfare n
the rosy dawn, was the breath of life to his nostrils. He fought, in those
days, without any idea of glory or financial reward. It was enough for
him that there was a chance to fignt He fought because some atavistic
instinct bade him fight, and he never asked the size or weight of an oppo
nent. He merely inquired his whereabouts.
In a way. the fits of Flynn was a Hessian fist. It was at the disposal
of any cause that offered a chance for conflict. He asked no particular pay ;
he merely desired to fight. It is not of record that Jim Flynn ever went
out of his way to avoid trouble, but there are numerous historic instances
where he walked a mile or two out of his way to find 1L
* * *
Hf Loves His Strife.
E did not always win; in fact, he often lost, but he never ceased fight
ing. Close On to 36 years of age now, we have no doubt that a couple
of decades hence w r e shall be reading in some Pueblo newspaper where:
Jim Flynn, the venerable prize fighter, was in Police Court yes
terday morning for beating up George Hoozis, 21 years old, of No.
244 North Santa Fe avenue. When confronted with the charge,
Flynn stroked his long, gray whiskers, and, in a quavering voice,
pleaded not guilty. Hoozis is still in the hospital.
For such is the nature of Jim Flynn. He is one of the few men we
have ever seen who fought because he really seemed to enjoy fighting. And
this is perhaps the reason that Jim Flynn is to-day one of the greatest
drawing cards in the land.
Had he been a little taller and twenty pounds heavier when he started
in, it is very likely that the Fighting Fireman—so called because he used
to feed coal to the big Rio Grande ‘hogs” that roll through the Royal
Gorge—would have been champion among the big fellows. As it was, he
was never a champion, but it generally took a champ to beat him, and
whenever that battered bean pushed Through the ropes the spectators knew
they were going to see a battle.
A comparatively little fellow, with a heart of an elephant, Flynn gAve
away weight most of his fighting career, and will probably be found giving
away weight on the day the superintendent of the Old Men’s Home reports
him to the board of directors for squabbling with another inmate
• * •
Urban Faber, Pitcher.
TTRBAN FABER, star of the White Sox staff, was one of the men who
'-J made the tour of the world with John J. McGraw and Charles Comis-
key. He was then a member of the White Sox, but McGraw was short of
pitchers, and so Faber was assigned to the squad that bore the name of
Giants.
Urban -was no great shakes as a hurler when that tour began. He came
under the head of promising youngsters, but there were a lot of things
that he did not know about pitching. In fact, he was more of a thrower,
but he had the natural stuff, and Mike Donlin and Mike Doolan and some
of the other veterans with the touring party took him In hand and showed
him how to use it.
Over in Paris. MBcGraw, commenting on Faber, remarked that he
ought to make Callahan, then manager of the Sox, a great pitcher, and so
he did—for a time. Then he began to suffer from overwork, which was
rather a common affliction u-ith the Sox pitchers of the past few years, and
little was heard of him after one brief spurt.
This season he has been pitching great hall for Rowland, and he Is a
fellow who should get even better as he goes along. He Is a hurler some
what on the order of Leon Ames, and his showing recently is no flash. He
has the real goods.
FED LEAGUERS
KIT BAIL BARD
SITS CJENDER
Former Hurler for Athletics Says
0. B. Batters Have Nothing on
Men in Gilmore’s League.
Lookouts and Barons
Cop in Boys’ League
The Crackers were defeated by the
Lookouts yesterday afternoon In the
Boys’ Club League. The final count
was 19 to 1. The Crackers got only
three hits off of the Lookouts’ fllngers.
Score by innings: R. H. E
Crackers 100 00— 1 3 6
Lookouts 551 8x—19 11 2
Batteries: M. Manes and N. Manes;
R. Davis, Senkbell, W. Davis and Gold
stein.
The second game was a well-plaved
contest, with the Barons on the long
end of a 6-to-4 count with the Turtles.
Score by innings: R H. E.
Barons 050 000 1—6 4 4
Turtles . . ... . .110 110 0—4 5 2
Batteries: Gold and Markeles; Free
man and Hickey.
DRUM AIDS IN HIGH JUMP.
IOWA CITY. IOWA, June 12 —“Psy^
chology and a big bass drum” is the
combination Jack Watson. Iowa’s train
er. is using to develop Rowe, the jumper.
Watson plays a steady roll as Rowe
runs and whacks the drum as the jump
er reaches the bar. Rowe has done six
feet three inches.
BASEBALL GAMBLING BARRED
EAST ST. LOUIS, ILL., June 12.—
The Board of Fire and Police Com
missioners has Issued stringent in
structions to Chief of Police Payne to
prevent commercialized gambling in
baseball handbooks and punchboards.
Every baseball punchboard and lottery
game in East St. Louis must be wiped
out, he was told.
RULES MAY BE ALTERED.
Because of the flood of former big
leaguers and Fed outcasts and whatnots
out ctf jobs, it is said the National Ama
teur Association will revise its eligibility
rules so that these unemployed plavers
can be used in the amateur organization.
Earl Moore already has signed with a
Cleveland amateur team, contingent on
the ban on professional being raised.
CUBAN REDS TO RETURN.
Jose Massageur, manager of the cham
pion Cuban Reds, who canceled his
proposed tour of the States because of
unfavorable weather conditions, has ar
ranged for new bookings In the East on
his way back to Cuba and may yet re
trieve some of the losses incurred in
bringing the Cuban National League
champions to this country.
T HOSE who have been calling the
Federal League a "bread
league” and poking fun at the
class of the teams would do well to
consult one of the game's shrewdest
players, Chief Bender, before becom
ing so positive In their statements.
There Is no brighter bail player In
the game to-day than this same
Bender, and he contends that there is
little or no difference between the
three major leagues.
In fact, Bnder says that the bats
men In the Federal League are
tougher than they are in the National
and American. He believes that the
organized ball leagues may have the
advantage In speed on the bases, but
that the Feds have it on them for
hitters and the fielding is a toss-up.
The pitching that Bender has seen to
date has been Just as good, if not bet
ter, than he saw in the American
League, with stronger batsmen to
face. Bender saye;
Was Badly Fooled.
"I Imagined, like everyone else who
Is not well acquainted with the facts,
that the Federal League was not as
fast as the National and American,
but I never made a worse mistake in
my life I am slow In rounding to
form always; so that the bad start I
have had means nothing to me, but I
want to say that I am in better shape
and had more stuff in the three games
I have pitched for Baltimore than I
have had at this time of the year since
1907, and still they hit me hard. I
have had the best of support and a
mighty good catcher, but I have been
hit. These fellows are making you
pitch all the time, and I have seen
very few batsmen that a fellow can
loaf on.
Equal to O. B. Champs.
The winner of the Federal League
championship has every right to claim
the world’s championship If the ma
jor league winners refuse to meet
them, because It would be a toss-up
who would win. I don't say this be
cause I have gone to the Federals, but
because I know It Is so. I had paid no
attention to the Federal League clubs
last summer, and believed, like many
others, that It was not a very fast or.
ganizatlon, but I have changed my
mind, and without allowing prejudice
or feeling to enter Into my opinion ’
In the above-quoted remarks Bend
er was quite sincere, and those who
know Chief also know that he would
make no such statement unless he
really believed as he said. Bender Is
one of those chaps who would rather
keep quiet than boost If he did not
think It was deserved. Eddie Plank
has said practically the same thing In
regard to the third league.
He says that he Is in wonderful
shape now. after nursing a sore arm.
but that he was surprised at the
strength of the teams.
SCHANG BADLY INJURED.
PITTSBURG. June 12— Bobby
Schang. the Pirate catcher. Is in a
hospital here, suffering from injuries
received during batting practice yes
terday, when a bat slipped from the
hands of Bill Hinchman and struck
him in the face. Schang’s nose was
broken In two places, three teeth were
knocked out, and he was badly
bruised.
J UST about one month over a year
ago Atlanta was singing the
praise of Eddie Hanlon, a local
boy, who seemed almost sure to put
Atlanta on the boxing map, Just as Bat
Nelson did to Hegewich, Ill., and Joe
Mandot did to New Orleans.
Hanlon at that time appeared to
have the makings of a champion. He
had the wallop, ths build, the endur
ance and the gameness of a title hold
er; still he never amounted to much
in the fistic game.
Eddie gained short-lived fame one
May night when he stopped Jimmy
Perry in three rounds at the Orpheum
Theater. It was the first clean knock
out ever handed the Plttsburger, and
the fact that a youngster In Hanlon
delivered the k. o. wallop made things
look pretty bright for Edward.
• • •
B ILLY LOTZ, one of the shrewdest
handlers of fighters in the game,
was managing Hanlon at that time.
Billy thought he surely had the com
ing welterweight champion of the
world, and no one could tell him oth
erwise.
Hanlon was full of confidence In his
fighting ability after his victory over
Terry; in fact, so confident was he
that he could whip Perry or any other
boy of his weight that he agreed to
sign to meet Perry in a return en
counter. when he had no more right to
enter the ring against Perry than a
baby had.
• • •
A FTER the first Perry-Hanlon go,
promoters around these parts at
once sought Hanlon and Lotz for a
return encounter. Perry, the beaten
man, begged and pleaded for a chance
to get revenge. He knew that to go
elsewhere with that defeat hanging at
his belt meant a black mark that
would be hard for him to outlive. Lotz
was making use of Eddie's victory
over Jimmy by press-agenting his
protege as the only boy that ever
stopped Jimmy Perry, and that went
a long way with promoters in other
cities.
But here Is where someone mad©
a bad mistake, although Billy to this
day claims he never wanted to make
the return match, and he is partly up
held in this assertion by the writer.
« • •
B ILLY was wise enough to know
that Perry would use different
tactics against the young and un
schooled Hanlon in a return encoun
ter. He also knew that Hanlon was
a sick boy and not in shape to fight
under any conditions.
Hanlon, however, listened to out
siders. who told him that he could
beat Perry under any conditions. Jini-
my has many friends In this city, and
they took advantage of Eddie s youth
FI nail v these same parties and the
promoter who staged the go won over
Hanlon. The return go was closed.
We have it from a local physician
that Hanlon had no rlffht making
that fight, but he dia. Lotz also told
the writer before gong time that Ed-
die WAS NOT RIGHT, but he was
afraid to tell Hanlon to call off tne
match, for fear that local fans would
accuse Eddie of having cold feet.
• * •
DERRY was sure Hanlon wasn’t
X right HU wise old head worked
wonders the night of that fight. and
fans who saw the battle will never
forget It. Never before did the WT.ter
see a more courageous fight than the
one put up by Hanlon. —
For the first four rounds Eddie
fought like a champion. He , ri > 5h ^
Perrv around the ring, threw him off
in the clinches like a baby, and in the
fourth round floored p «ry with a
glancing right to the Jaw But Pe^y
was fighting the fight of hie life He
used all his skill and ring generalship
that ten years of fighting had taught
him. and It was Jimmy's ring gener
alship that won for him.
D URING the last six rounds of the
fight Perry simply showered
Hanlon with rights and lefts to the
Learn How to Play
Baseball by Reading
Atlanta Georgian
A NOTHER big treat is to bo
given reader* of The Atlan
ta Georgian sporting pages.
Starting in next Thursday*! is-
•ue of The Georgian, a series of
stores will be run by Sam Crane,
baseoall expert of the Hearst news
papers and former big league star,
on “How to Play Baseball.”
Crane has written on baseball
for the past twelve years. He
knows the ins end outs of the
game, and hie advice will prove
valuable to future great* as well
as professional stars.
Don't miss this series. The first
story will be run next Thursday.
Every young aspirant to baseball
honors should read this series.
Jaw. Bleeding and tired, the game
local boy never once stepped back un
til he fell from exhaustion five sec
onds before the gong rang in'the tenth
round.
Perry, the victor, had to be helped
to his comer as he stood over Hanlon
in the final session. Jimmy was all
in. He has not put up a good scrap
since then. After the bout “Jeems”
told us It was the hardest fight of his
life. He won, but the loser in that
bout left the ring with as much honor
as the victor. Eddie also never amount,
ed to much after this go. He gave the
very best he had, and many think he
has not yet outlived that defeat.
• * *
T T was a case of a promising, game
1 lad, who had everything that a
boy of his age should have, losing to
a wise old owl, one who knew the
game from A to Z, and a veteran who
had Just one REAL GOOD FIGHT left
In him.
Poor boys, both of them are now
fighting third-raters around the coun
try, but no one ever gave fans a
more honest and harder fought con
test than they did that night.
• • •
[ T is hard to blame Eddie for that
* defeat, but he let his fighting
bition get the best of him. He didn't
want people to say he had cold feet.
He gave Jimmy the return bout, and
with that fight went Hanlon’s entire
ring future. If ever one scrap ruined
a promising boy, that fight did.
SHAW GOES TO PELICANS.
LITTLE ROCK, June 12.—Hughey
Shew, outfielder, recently released by
Little Rock, will report to the New
Orleans club June 15, according to an
nouncement here to-day.
McLean Starts Fight
With Kinsella; Larry
Must Quit the Giants
wm T ne I v°y I play U wUh 2 N«w^Yo > rk M 2*rrn n
I’m done with him.”
Thus spoke John J. McGraw, manager
of the New York Giants. McGraw s
statement Is the result of ^ J'f]'*
whh-h McLean i« credited with starting
with Dick Kinsella, Giant scout, made
In the lobby of a ho.el last nlint.
The right ended after four °th«r Giant
^^"w^br^n 'and ScLanTuffllU
a «w jMSil. were talking in
fonable^hostelry* Inlhe #2? AT when
Imrrv entf-red He immediately started
a verbal attack on McGraw and KtM|el-
la because of his suspension, and phys
ical violence followed. The divan on
which McGraw and Kinsella. had been
* Th. and enc e o V un?er ° was
transferred to the street In front of the
hotel, and four other n'«" lb ' r d s .. Urn?
Giants appeared and took sides with
^Persons who witnessed ‘Leflfght ®*' d
that as McLean came nto tbe hotel, nan-
sella remarked to McGraw: "I’m going
to bed ™ McLean then Is said to have
remarked: "Not unless you are carried
1 'That started the battle.
KID ALBERTS WINS SLOW GO
BATTLE CREEK, MICH.. June 12.
Johnny (“Kid”) Alberts, of New York
won the popular decision over Ford
Munger of Baltimore, In a slow ten-
round bout last night. Two minutes
of each round was spent In clinches.
NEW ORLEANS BOXER LOSES
NEW ORLEANS, June 12.—Oscar
Williams, of Los Angeles, won from
Red Dolan in the eleventh round of
their scheduled fifteen-round fight at
the Orleans A. C., when Dolan's sec-
! onds threw the sponge Into the ring.
Gents’ Palm 4fi n
Beach Suits “ v 0
Ladies’ Palm 7
Beach Suits ' vu
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ORPHINE
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■24 U. Vlater Sanitarium. Atlanta. Gs.