Show rf:-K - ’ - ”’ ’ ' " -- ' ' ' "’ ''i1 O : "i'V ' ' - ' t v im' a ? ji-- ' - i - V w ?" - a '' V V t - v Vii VV-- 2- - ' i’A : s T - ' ji “ W '"' 4 s flj 2 'V' v '' "v‘ 4-- INDIANTINCUP IS - f r won to - - isr- r 5 S '' ' - i flfariy Hopeful RingsterslVHo Appeared Like Victors in a v Hot 9 Close Bout but WereFinally Defeated Decisive -of the Tide Against Them ly by the Sudden Turn ' ' BT JACK IKEB1T kNew Tork Anr SC —Hoir iteanentlr Bave we all seen a clever boxer In the grasp of victory ln some period:1 of a close hard contested combat his brlKRt prosThen by some effort on the part of his opponent masterly Mshot to pieceaf' and he has either been have been rather pects suddenly' knocked out or defeated decisively in the end of the bout the first few rounds Many aggressive fighters often appear like winners in so long as tbey can keep up a fast ellpplng pacew But when their steam and fire begins to die away the other fellow who has probably coolly: and reserved his strength comes 'to the front ““wisely -slashing that many of the young modernrjbokers start I have noticed bombarding from t the clang of the first gong'are They keep 'away wildly s almost exhausted If r until they away’ in this ' most terrific manner fellow he coolly waits un-- -': a clever brainy happens til the slasher has pumped himself out and then starts in to do some skilly ' ful execution How often do we hear the admirers of certain -boxers say after a bout chap "He almost win the fifth cor sixth round Why he had the other real sure 'but 'in the next round or so he went to the 'bad ' c in atimes "going finish-fighthe tide may turn in favor of one man or the 'other many ’ al-m- oit -- - - - - ? to-b- t their-antagonis- - e j : - - - ? t count lt 'is the real winner who carries off honors "Almost to ’a ringster and the toin -- I always believe however' in giving greathecredit In is defeated a game scientific battle even though whocputs- up seen more fact i have mills where the beaten man really deserved a haymaker at sideration than the victor who' was tPlucky enough to land and laurelsBut the cheers crowdsman 'the right- "or psychological matdefeated the victor t no the 'with go forget usually Theyhe 'always how cleverly and fought gallantly ' gome Classy-BoxerWho Almost 'Won TThen John I Sullivan fought "Professor” John M s Laflin at Madl-ada- ’ went wild the immense crowd Garden' on November 10 Bissr tincuf Square roundsecond ' in Laflln the the pound had Sullivan ropes up against whgn‘the ‘ Ben s He got himl ' lie i - champion in the most desperate manner Tlncup the Indian pitcher foxy lng hinl bigsure! hundreds of exoited Tans merly with the Phillies' has been seshouted la Sullivan licked" got lr arousd the: ringside "John I dashed at But in 'thefrom Little by' theheCardinals to the floor battered and - bleed-- : cured" like ' a mad bull and beat- i bim Rock : where on a trade ''opponent was sent referee of the Ho had and 1 That settled the "Professor" enough ing ' should in win ' Tincup fast com- games ’count declared Sullivan the winner if he will behave Phillies pany waa The beaten How often have old “fane" Imagined that game Jack Dempsey When the Nonpareil fought 'johnny7 Rea--1 declare they still hava a claim on him in some of "his iong Yinish ffghts rounds: even thought Reagan had him beaten in the early gan Jack’s friends of pretending to be weak and - all in just Dempsey had a wonderful' hbit He played the trick on Reagan who "rushed soon found he had struck 'a- - hornets’nest for 16ved to have a fellow come to him In the mill with his time and ' certainly ' cut Johnny to ‘ ribbons " ' w' : ''''ii'" knuckles- skin " f sharpy - Several gloved ' Ji of Jack McAullffe’s antagonists within the ropes "almost won' When he battled Jimmy Fleming Ckrroll of different the at' game stages of Bngland before the old California club in Ban Francisco inliiO he was his training- Carroll in very poor physical form having greatly neglected Most everybody was in fine form and forced the pace for many rounds Dick T-McAullffe was beaten Bven hie 'old backer around the ring thought was some 854)00 bet on the lightweight champion who Roche had greatly ’ rwv:- 'alarmedand weary- he was after Many of Xthe Boys ijFrom tired McAullffe himself has often told me how round-after v ithe twenty-fift- h round to get round How ho stalled ULUinois University Get V two to one andtrying three to one Jils second wind In fact beta were freely ofmade In the the: win during this :that Carroll wouldMcAullffe fight Finally period - decided to tako a chance and finding session desperate on his opponent’s f' with1 all the force across a JawBut-Jacsent ’an opening he right some took' could concentrate and down and out went Carroll r ' dangerous chances’1 in many other battles-- by being out- of condi-awfully — Many of the lead- and had some very narrow escapes from defeat Indeed Oxlcago'AugaS tion ( Mysterlous Billy Smith knocked Tommy Ryan out in about the tenth round I ina athletes - of - Illinois won om?11 Lt' Coney Island in 1895 when Ryan was complaining to Referee TimHurstl new - army: Among the I ions in ' who rude tactics He - shot 'the K O over Hurst's shoulder about Smith's The referee refused to give the ’ fight to II names announced from the Fort Sheri had his back turned to Smith- men to their corners for ten minutes: At however and ordered the 'Hilly end of this rest Ryan was himself again and the lacing he gave Smith II n camP were the was very fierce Indeed It was a terrific fight and at the end of the eighteenth i Gene Schoblnger who wss-- member the referee decided it was best to stop the round bloody combat and M- de-- 1 I the University of Illinois basketball elded it wa a draw "will recall how Charles (Rid) McCoy knocked I quintet and ’also' played on the foot-To- m Many of the oldreroff"fans” his feet in their mill In New York on January 10 Sharkey heavy The Kid eleven Ho waa awarded a corn- looked like a sure winner for a while but when 1899 Tom it his superior weight began to tell and1 In the tenth- - round - he I mission as first "lieutenant' inthe-In-senToughing audacious v? I the middleweight Into dregmland fantry O R c 9IeGoveras Narrow Terry Hsespe On March 9 1900 Terry McGovern and Oscar Gardner met In ' the tfrena j Hans W Norgren who played foot- of the old Broadway A CL in New York In the first round Oecar flopped II ball on the University of Chicago eleven floor and foolishly stood over the fallen boxer Instead of stepping and who is a Drouier of Nelson Nor Terry to theMcGovern came to ho grabbed Gardner’s legs and climbed away to As he got his bearings - Many of the this his feet He held oh until old way "fans’ imagined the featherweight championship would change hands that McGovern settled matters by ' knocking Gard night but in tbc third round Tier out fair and square But "Terrible Terry" had a very narrow" escape wall right that eventful fistic evening At the old Greenwood A C over in one' real old fighting-nighseven times in the first four rounds I In the infantry: O R C v Kid Carter flooredJlm Judge of Scranton Brooklyn: r the next I J James'-Hand every Brooklynite saw Carter twinning In a walk But in Linn of Winifetka another I round (the fifth) Judge whipped over a haymaker that-puhis drew fn the lands of dreama That was some battle boys— a fight we rarely seel tennis expert Afield a IUen captalnthe In the JvS’ Vv nowadays “e srolfer also of’WIn-siinmoWe nearly allring remember how Jim Corbett "almost won" from 'Bob Fitz-- 1 tI?aP:Hale Oornlshman got in that solar plexus I netKa was made a 'first lieu tenant in the at Carson City-untifield round All the other O R C handed kick In the fourteenthlanky rounds were Cor-- 1 I lift Laurenceartillery bett's and he appeared like a sure winner up to' the last K O punch? Whiting I Jack O’Brien cut the late Stanley Ketchel to pieces for varsity of Chicago captaln of the in tail ' the first six or seven rounds when they met In New York on March 26 1908 I won a caPtain in the caJalv r It looked like an easy victory for Jack But brave Stanley was a glutton c? Schafer' also a former mem and he tore Into O'Brien like a cyclone and had him almost barWalter for of the University' of Chicago' footout punishment of the tenth round In fact about 'four months at the end In did he later ball eleven- - was appointed Jack away three rounds over in Philadelphia'''a second put Bombardier Wells of England made a "grand-starlieutenant of the Billy against" Infantry 1912A1 Palzer at Madison Square Garden in In the first two rounds late Pete Russell' former captain of the floored his huSky opponent but he outboxed him he not only in great style football team and noted quarChicago A1 came back In the third session and knocked But clever terback was made a flat out Wells is certainly a wonderful flashy boxerthebut ho laBritisher big not lieutenant in the: a for battler army regular yugged Mason- probably the best run mill after mill where defeated Bnt enough I could go ongruelling reciting appeared I nerMike ever produced the rounds You can: never: judge themen' like winners ain some of at tbe University of real sterling In ten or even twenty round bouta of The only abso-- 1 1 nflnols also was commissioned flghlw qualities Is In the Ainlsli comDAti old lut® a lo in ins vy i srniv I ' Briton Ted and Lewis they are so evenly Take for example Jack th® T n“ caf1tfln reaulrel J' iiphiIlT?i7a? man It rounds might not prove who is the better that thirty - of Illinois 1914 championship fashioned fight to prove this And there are a real old other rinntersl versy-team: Woods' basketball player de-Bay besides who constantly are boxing ten round affairs somany often 1 no withx I and Bill Krebs : former third' baseman elded results th® that Produced battlers and I on the University of Illinois baseball greatest the realoli flTI1?to tbo ringside MTie old“the attracted followers of fist!ana 1 nine: olso vsrs" svArlsdeominiaRiAii there would bo an absolute winner and loser and the contestants badtolensw and would fight to the bitter end without any ballyhoolng stalling J wins-doesn’t - - v -- I -- - -- - 4:-- s '- - - i - - r -- - - next-roun- hla-large- r " - - - 3 - - - ! - - - ? - J'2Commi6sibri3 “'W$ forty-seven- th - - 1 -- v-e rZ- - k: i T : - -- - - v-- 1 'oau - - ! - - 7 1 - - - 1 v t : - -- t a ns - l Unl-Philadelp- hla - - - - - t -- s - v -- - or-favor- r t f a - CHINESE PLAYERS ' ‘ SCATTERED NOWl j1 ‘v G i V ‘ : 7 ‘ j - - ’ - - - Pi-ra- te -- -- - ' - v ath-sout- h" : : of-th- at-th- e - - - as-Doth- ' foot-winne- " It-'l- a - ' ‘v an 0 Plenty of practice against the slde of a house or "a board fence'' or similar object Is the way to get perfection of stroke and the effectiveness of shots according ' to Williams The national champion advocates the club practice board which he has given a skyhlgh boost as the proper kindergarten for all players seeking to lift their game above the' rut of the ordinary wlelder of the racquet As the story Is repeated by admirers of Williams ho IS credited with saying that it is all a mistake to suppose that lie: was tutored for the lawn tennis andTbat championship at a tender AND THAT ISN’T ALL - Farmer’s Gridiron Right Now Is Also - Yielding Crop of Fine Spuds approach of LOGAN' Avg will The flzd swie eathrya football artists along with use of the - w' leekleg rural tract fields ef em petetees ’ - - - - - - - NORRIS WILLIAMS ' “ s - - A1HLEHCS AT PURDUE - - - Army and Navy HaW Taken Nlany Stars but Interest i Is Still Keen : - ' - are-Incline- - - 1 : - - a "Ketchel - floored middleweight v SECOND GAME FOR ’Johnson beat Jeffries but should od iii two rounds Jeffries was - have a shelL- - - - - ’ ' ‘ -- - L -- -- ’ - - Lafayette - - - Ind 'Aug -- nt - - - - 25— --Athletics will go forward with undlmlnlshed In- terest and support at Purdue university' this coming college year Wlille the army and navy have claimed many of the Boiler Makers most brilliant athletes there will bo many younger men to take their places and the coaches will work with a will to develop winning teams President Stone ' and the entire faculty ' approve the plan to proceed with athletics and keep ’ alive the athletic spirit It Is felt that physical education Is best administered by means of competitive sports and that every effort should be made to prevent a loss of interest In the various college games All of Purdue’s coaches have been retained and will begin work as soon as college opena Cleo F O’Donnell will return from his ’home In Everett Mass to take charge of the football squad1 Work on the gridiron will betho third week in September Purgin due’s- schedule will be carried out as announced Tho Boiler Makoriginally ers have lost many of their stars but there are many promising candidates who are below military age Who will strive to ’fill the places left vacant' by the young men who have been called to the colora Stuart field Is being put Into condition for tbe fall work Coach Edward J O’Connor will again have charge of the track squad and will also act as head trainer He will have considerable Indoor track material this fall' but all his star performers have either been graduated or have gone into military service Tbe basketball prospects are tbe brightest-oany branch of sport as Coach Lambert will have most of last year’s stars with which to form a nucleus for a 'new team More attention than usual will bo paid to freshman athletes by the varsity- coaches as it win bo necessary to use them In developing new athletes to take the plaices of the older men' who have gone to war - : SCORERS CALI HEAD - OF SOUTHERN LEAGUE - : - Flynn lost standing - on his feet stopped through the ' overzealousness of 1TILE NEXT WEDNESDAY of police who never before captain X saw Johnson witnessed a ring' match in: a! state of collapse for three hours after the railL The second game for the champion"Therefore' you can see at a glance between 1 had no high- opinion of Johnson and ship of the Commercial league nine of the winners Studebaker the when1 X1 saw Willard stall through ton Arthe division and Sunday morning rounds with- Carl1 Morris in New York row Press champions of the Twilight ' I : made "up' my mind that either' one division has been postponed until could beat 'Johnson If either did any Wednesday evening Tbe game will more than clinch him Lucas field': at be played '"Of - course I am not In the gams as took the first Studebaker The 1 a philanthropist and proceeded toX game last Sunday’ boys morning by a doss look1 up the fighter to teat Johnson1 score"-'found 'Morris making money' tied upj with the managers and not likely to take’ a ch&Aco’of wasting any time to PRACTICAL JOKER chase Johnson for a match I found Willard broke to this last IS THROUGH JOKING cent: Jones his manager broke both and no work WITH JIM JEFFERIES helpless financially In sight-- H-Frszee and Lring L Webber offered' to' finance mo in anything Los Angeles Aug 25—Bringing with good and wa took up Willard him buck that was bonded a four-poi"First it was 8600 to bring Willard for 81000 Pusey of Bakersfield Sidney east another 600 to keep himself and arrived In Los Angeles today from Family 81000 to send me to Europe to Bakersfield The buck belonged to Jim advance to' Johnson Jeffries' former champion boxer ' see Johnson-8100£eel th? f° Jeffries killed the deer on’ the Tajon Ine flOOO more to get Johnson to £enyCl ranch H( topped at Bakersfield to America 81000 to rush me to Cuba to II " Johnson to come to Mexitry to Induce "A oil man named Elmer co etc i Besides a 832000 guarantee Jones wealthy ho and Jeffries knew lad to be furnished Johnson before he would play a Joke on thought said him" would ‘Step into the ring at the Pusey "He told a hanger-o- n place that ho would get 8100 if someone would steal the deer Tbo fellow SOCCER SERIES walked outside grabbed the deer and aTled it to a cold storage plant He FOR "RED CROSS! skinned It and cut off the head finished eating he "When United States Football association missed theJeffries He became so angry deer soccer football of the governing body swore out ' he that complaint and will stage six International contests then returned to Losa Angeles After teams Canada in Canadian with picked police-aidea the search few days and the United States this fall for the Jones found the deer' Jones had by to beneiflt of the ‘Red Cross fund In bonds the 81000 deer and for up put Philadelphia New England andInper- he asked me to return it" the players haps Chicago will see V " -- - him- : j of such great players of other years as John A Allen one of the greatest of Yale stars Holeombe Ward and William A XAirned This trio stood as masters of service” "They spent hours at a time aiming at a hat placed in the opposite service court ward Invented the famous American twist service while engaged in practice of this de- : scription Anyway-Williamhas added greatly to the renown of lessons mastered through study of strokes against a dead wall It la another Illustration of "practice makes perfect" s - miliar farm produce Aocordlng to the farmers' staunch supporters this Is a good sign of results on the gridiron aa the tall eorj stalks in this farmer’s parable rooters while their secondary ntlll is none other than the fine crop thAt will be harvested The latter mask a good luck with the football endeavor s according to Jatk Coburn manager o the Aggie athletics Now this Is the source ef good' and laugh Incidentally with giggle some of the ffns bnt the Farmers promises that the same shall magistrate come to be a reality The Aggies will have sons fast men to start the ball rolling with soma ambitious ones along to help out the older ones Captain Twltehel leads the Aggjes this i fall playing possibly at fullback or alternating at a line position Ted Bennlon Percy Hanson Elner Olson Mose Stlefel Stnbby Peterson Lea Jarvis’ Ed Smith and others who have gone through the preliminary school of football will line up for backfield positions Lyle Judd Swede LlndqsliL Del Gardner Andy Mohr Hugh Sutton Vie Hendricks Glen XTolt Sid and Lolo Spencer W Bennlon and a host of linemen of similar type will help form Watson’s defense These men are only a few who will be candidates according to the present list produced by Coburn There will bo a lively contest for positions says the Aggie manager but Coach Watson Is silent on the matter and this Is taken to mean that there will be no favorites among the different ones and each will have to be recognised on his merits The Aggies are viewing the situation this fall with much seriousness and determination although the mobilization of armies over the land has reduced interest everywhere While athletics shall receive their full share of attention tho national crisis will be first in tho mind of everyone st tho college aocordlng to President E G Peterson who Is a booster for the welfare of the school’s athletics as well as the productive agriculturist much aided by tho Influence of the state’s agricultural school - -- 1 S5-- 1 cd type st work field whleh la new the ! - r : " - - - t According to Dope Goacli Watson Will Have All ' Men He Can Use 6-f- oot - - ’ - : - f - -- WGRAW’ OF SOUTH For many years no man fn major league baseball has been discovered who could bo rated as a suitable running mate for John McGraw ' Tbe baseball scribes of the south He Is no have made the dfsoovejry less a personage than R H Baugh president of tbe Southern league The umpires In that league had been accustomed to giving some of the dabs and the critics said so- a raw deal Then - President Baugh began to swing his dub Ho made tbo official scorers hts first target Each of tbe comprise the league eightanclubs which official scorer Of course they had are paid for their services but tbs paltry sum does not buy their opinions Iresldent Baugh however thought different and in a drastic letter he demanded them to "color" their opinions It is to the credit of them all that rather than be influenced or coerced they would resign their official scorer Jobs and they were backed up by their newspapers f Now President Baugh a la McGraw says his letter was mlnlnterpreted He did not deny the Interview because It was over his own signature but he scored the scribes If he doesn’t make a public retraction the scorers league will be without eight official ' -- r 3 - a 1 1 ac-tlox- 't'- : - IN CIRCUS BUSINESS The little bird says that' Jess Willard is having his mumps with his circus Since taking over the concern for himself Jess has not been making money Circus going is rough going when they don’t troop up to the big tent A clreus can sat np & world of money in expenses and If the bird tells the truth Jess ' has bean Jotting down a dally loss for some time While nobody would wish Jess any financial hard luck the heavyweight ereur will welcome this bit of news : - - with three shrieking boorahs' for only a box office disaster will force Jess into the ring again’ Without him1' the big money will only-- re- -' V main a dream ' - Voi v uV a ' ’ S' - BOX ELDER COUNTY OPEN FOR SAGE HEN SHOOTING SEPT 1 TO 15 ' r - —So Says Commissioner Siddoway WE CARRY BEST GUNS AND AMMUNITION SAYS DORMAN C ’ JESS FINDS SAD DAYS f - a right-hande- - - game- - - °he con-sclentl- ous ' FOR GRID SPORT number of friends at Plattsburg nst how ha acquired his skill at tennis and how any ambitious youngster with the hie right spirit can develop and perfect ' - L BIG SQUAD OUT sin- -- MEAN UTTIE TRICK f 1 Norris Williams national tennis gles champ recently explained to ‘ 1 - 3 1 have - 1 AGGIES EXPECT S CHAMP 'r-- - - - JIM® - Members of the University of Hawaii nine of Honolulu' all clever Chlnese players who daring the" lastf our or ON ‘SHERRY’ MAGE five years toured the country meeting U-s ! “Al Orth has umpired his last game in college and dub team are somewhat the National league The veteran’s use- scattered 'but 'many are playing” in Boston ' Mass fulness as an arbitrator was ended in a eastern cities Lai and Mark are mem- - Magee one - of theAug picturesque' 'figures game In Brooklyn recently when he bers of the Upland team of the Dels-- 1 I of the game and always awagof more i?aCue’ n8t outslde of I or less eccentric' moods was detailing Slipped in following a play and threw Philadelphia - The league plays overy I some- of his troubles and woes Mac his right knee out of Joint'' ’ was In f unusually good form drawing Saturday acetThis was the third time ' an U first baseman on the Bothle--1 forth peals of laughter by his witty dent has happened to Orth Ho first hemon (Pa) Steel company team Apsn I exposition of some funny situations he a Philadelphia department store I had experienced since play in Boston hurt his knee two years ago when Js the th of ontflelder’s enclm“ into" Phillies’ ®Jt“eider ?n the In he ‘slipped going SLvsburpi was tertalnment a story league concerning the that team frrJ Hugout and so dislocated his knee hostrials all in experience players C ho was confined in : the Episcopal under the managership of Georgsplaying Stall Dr At time month that a for ' "He’s as as pital ‘A a colonial Ings captious GIANTS TO TRY John Bcger the Phillies physician dame and aa overbearing as a drill sercautioned Orth that If ho suffered ansaid Magee "It’s an utter imFORMER PROSPECTTl geant" other severe dislocation that It would to please hlm'or come up to possibility end his career as an umpire his ’of perfection Last sum- standard I Dr Boger devised a brace which Orth who mer FaJJ an he had pitcher automobile he iwanted y®?1? out by the Cubs early In the to sell in the worst used for a long timet but finally dis- was but could find suffered another and turned over to Newark of no one to take it offway year he i carded Last was spring his hands alight But the last the International league will be given I agreed to buy the machine' Finally hurt but It v was as serious as the first and Orth a tryout with ’the New York Giants ’As Stallings needed the money for Va soon and f Is - expected to finish the an investment X made a Is now at him home in Lynchburg big payment season with them 'with his leg In a plaster cast' down 'and squared it up a few days "Orth is well remembered by National Burry formerly pitched for Du later Then what do think he did? major league experience In Pittsburgh where Why he - only posted you fans His firstwas quasne university a notice In the Philadelobtained in he and A1 Mam&ux the suspended M a pitcher he Joined clubhouse forbidding all members of the twlrlev-wer- e Later Washington teammateo He waa tbe team from riding In or driving au phia of rho American league but his club flrstdiscovered Cbnnie Mack bnt tomobiles and I paid garage storage by spent in the Quaker turned back and next was taken over best days were on the car for the entire season" He has been umpiring for about by Joe Tinker then Cnb manager 'He ' 'v Cltyr among is twenty years old weighs 160 pounds ten years While not considered the highest class umpires in the and stands 5 feet 11 inches in his socka TO CUT DOWN for ‘leagues Orth was reliable and Impartial and respected ON FOOTBALL un- WELL- KNOWNMINOR next His year plaos the players by by? a young doubtedly will bo taken Philadelphia' Pa Aug 25—In a LEAGUE BOSS DEADl statement1 nan with promize from the minor issued recently MaJ M J ' Pickering' graduate manager of ath- Dothan Ala Aug 25—Jack Reldy I letlcs of the University of Pcnnsyl-on- e I vania said that tbs recommendations FAMOUS BACH CAR NOW TRUCK of the best known baseball J in the report from California of the and managers in minor leagues players in the II made by the national collegiate Is dead here after five weeks letlc association at its recent meeting Mercedes final destination of theDefine I In ' illness drove Palma of typhoid fever' which car Ralph Washington have been unanimously racing ' 1910 and 1911 there is was a Unlver-Indorsed- - by the university authorities 1 Reldy in of the to victory graduate crack racing slty of ‘Alabama where he' won fame I There will be no preliminary football found a reminder state asa football and once found Michigan horse player and I training and the football coach will a milk cart John CL when he left college he took up prolmeet the candidates for the team for fair ground pullingand newspaper man fesslonal baseball as a career1 His first II tbs- first ' time - on September 38 - the Wray sportsman came across the famous old engagement waa : with Chattanooga ' in day the university opens There will recently it was being 1909 and then v after several minor I be no training table either for football ear in Inyo county where from league engagements he was made man-- 1 or any other sport while the present concentrates ore and haul used to sold ager of the Rome team In the Georgia- - I conditions exist and coaching expenses mines In Death valley De Palma who Alabama league In 1913 He had great I will be cut to the minimum through the millionaire to a car Chicago the was secured to manage the! enlistment of a corps of volunteer raced it in Callfornla:1n 1913 and 1914 success and team : to Harold in the Georgia and Dixie I ststants: him 'it passed nnd from Mo--- 1 I klkown Captain Miller will league- - He held this position as So' for three far Robinson a miner of Panamint-anrs who fitted a truck seasons an his team - always ? were I be the only veteran member of the ' doo mining districts also raoed I ball team who will return to college He won is and survived his who and to mother by it body ' ' ' v sister and a brother races ovsrthe desert' ' this fall with ASWMNN NATIONAC of all shortstops but made' a clerical error in the spelling of the name and drafted a man named Dolan who wasn’t worth a hoot reV PrChala a reared with a racquet Instead ?Jn' Lafayette a pvtCer- fnblew Q awas willlame says he actually rattle Tacoma of the exploded North- - I started on golf which ho confesses to western league to Join the Cincinnati well and that nis yielding mighty Pillctt proved tobe as adver- - 0 of lawn tennis at which charms d tiaed a huge pitcher but he has won the highest honors was Joke Lafayette seems to be a on Matty :or Garry Herrmann or the purely accidental Rainy Days Prove HelpfaL famous Cincinnati board of directors ' consecutive rainy days were Several was In slave the Lafayette bought out mart as a catcherand was welcomed as I responsible for Williams' finding such He knocked Matty flat by saying I the value of practice against ' a walL he never csinght a professional game In I Suffering from "ennui caused by his of the his life but was an inflelder and mostr I being kept in the house because an old found ly a first baseman' A first baseman II stormy weather Williams' on a' team that has Hal Chase going lawn tennis racquet and going out bethe clubhouse at which he was at his very best would have a fat II i' chance —not!' staying the future national champion There was a Raymand playing second I amused himself by batting the ball house and short for Thoomv and he seems to against the aide of theaccount he soon to his be the man Matt got1 Matty was busy According I found ' that It' was no easy matter to out to how find catcher that trying the mnddy spot thought originated in his head 'and !nj land a second time on ball which the original bound of the tarthose of the other Cincinnati officials had made Using that spot as a get ho soon demonstrated that greatly accomplished might: be cut CURLEY DEFENDS ACTION varied results the and chop varied by Imparting strokes to the ball ynillams has never fully recovered from the fascinations of that first? solitary practice against the side of the clubhouse in Switzerland To it he attributes the beginning of his career on the courts' and he is belief unstinting in his praises and his in ? the bo as to what accomplished may Deserves 40 PerlI way of getting strokes in smooth order Says- He 1 ' means of side wall practice Cent of me Champion s byThe most surprising thing about the ' V :V'V of Williams as to the source revelations Earnings of his accuracy for his long drives1 and court is his amazing1 game from-deethe late "Jack Curley deposed manager of tbe that he told his friends thatsuccessful F Wilding ’of the Jess Willard in Anthony heavyweight champion' ' Dsvls cup team of 1914 Australasian whereby--Willard’the systemdefending the American chamOllie and Campbell 40 managers got per cent of the pion of 1890 1891 and 1892 both admitboxer’s receipts- ‘ quoted tbe following found the dead had him to ted that they precedents: them-betteresults than afforded wall John L Sullivan paid Billy Madden A1 Smith and J Dunn each as he was anything else they knew of- Campbell Is reported to have said that he gave handled by them In turn 50 per cent bat James J Corbett paid Billy Brady 50 full credit to the hours he spent inAdel-40 I a tbe side of old ball against per cent’ XAter George ' Concidlne ting got r to final his in earn-1 Phi cent his Brooklyn of academy and cafe per ring victory In' the national chiunpionshlp Inga : Bob Fitzsimmons paid Martin "Julian singles Z 50 per cent' i Williams Theories Held Sound James J Jeffries paid Billy Delaney who have learned of the amazThose and 'Billy Brady 50 per cent ‘advanced by Williams arguments ing Jack Johnson' paid S&m Fitzpatrick 40 per cent- and in the Jeffries fight aa to the advantages of dead wall practo "give considerable tice paid George Little 30 per cent-All of the leadto theories his my associations with weight men for declare that accuracy' and ing Willard 'I "will go back to Jack Johnthe at driving game there son’s days when the big black fought proficiency no than may be had is better schooling Choynskl George Gardner Marvin by proper use of the practice board too Hart Stanley Ketchel Tommy Burns often a despised part of the equipment Jim 'Jeffries Jim Flynn and then Wil- - of many of the dubs Studious players lard' sald Curley ’Hera Ta my sum- -' have ably demonstrated that the playI’ve to held thereand this up always of certain out shots to the hoard fore my association with Willard or my ing an opponent' to make the recompels to do trouble has with present nothing a in definite and certain manner turn' it All I said at the time of offering! the return may be my excuse ’for 'matching Willard with! With thlskowledge so to as pave the way for was anticipated Johnson' along this line the aclng shot to follow "Klondike mads Johnson quit Williams’ advocacy of solitary pracGardner then - sick went twenty tice has resulted in recalling the work rounds with Johnson'1 ‘Hart' beat 'him (referee’s decision) - - SPORTING SECTION ' ‘ - V-- ‘ SUNDAY AUGUST 26 1917 ' - 1 the vfetlas mt m mt the M whleh has halls ia hasehali hat her at The VeU coasMe la haylag m chattel whea aaether fa lateai Charley Bbbets once had a chance to draft Mika Doolaa one of the greatest - -- nw UTAH Christy Math : " '' '' Purchases One Human Chattel When Another Is r Intended Gets Laugh W y ? KORlHTOTERf t2 n ' 1 LETMmrj IT-- s - : n “ BACKTN BIG8 SHOW v ’ tAktb f— f T - - V--- ' ' f T v - ' V - EOBSEXEIGFlSlXn9B6tRi-r'- rr V ' t ''- L--i r TO SPRING NEW KIND OF SERIES little Rock Ask Aug 25 —The Pennant winning team of the Southern assersociation Is to play a ies of games with a team composed of the best players from clubs that finish third and fourth according to second an ' announcement ’by R G ? Baugh league' president of the will be selected from Five players each of the clubs to oppose the leaders he s&ld and games will be played In each of the four oltiss whoso players post-seas- on Rich and Summit counties are now open for sage hens tracks f as well as Juab west of Rio Grande ' v - NOW IS THE TIME THE HEAL FLY FISHERMAN IS IN HIS GLORY— STREAMS ARE PERFECT— SO IS SALT LAKE HARDWARE TACKLE 1 take part r? ’: - - "v ALL WILL TAKE EXERCISE Military v exercises will be held In connection with all the football games played by- colleges enrolled In the recent conference of Illinois Institutions In all nineteen colleges were represented by delegates and the motto will be w "Every student an 'athlcteb - -- ' 'if L k i - J |