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Show oo 1 GEORGES CARPENTIER Gerges Curpcntler, among other things, has convinced Jack Curley that he Is a great thinker. This is wha: he told Curley . I take every fighting man as a new problem just as a chess player goes it t bch gams he plays. I work furiously, furious-ly, but I work sanely to find out what the other fellow has. Many of my feints, all of my misses, in fact, are deliberate, that I may find out what this follow in front of me has in the. way ol following up an advantage. The .sooner 1 find out the sooner I know mv work. A sparring partner is a dif-fercnt dif-fercnt thing. He Is as a clothes dummy. You put the clothes on him and place htm that way or this. You can't do a man in a fight that way. i that Is. not until y ou have him under I the same control you have over a sparring partner. My fifht always de-ponds de-ponds upon what the other fellow has or hasn't. The best wa- is the effective effec-tive way . I have no set scheme. I fight a boxer and I box a fighter.'" Will I iU EL M C I ROT l V BelnK president of the Coast league has been a man-sized affair during the p i season and William H McCarthy isn't particular about doing the honors hon-ors again' He says: ' The presidency of the league is a good Job for a fellow- who needs it. but I can make more money in my shoe business than in baseball, and With fSj less worry and trouble. When 'I took the presidency a friend came to nee me and said: "Bill vou have a tewt II Jot It practically runs itself and you'll have to work but about ten I minutes a day." Nice encouraging words they were, hut 1 feel as though I I had been sitting on a Ti d hot stove or a kc-K of T. N. T. ever since I wa;-Inducted wa;-Inducted into office." on |