Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 311, 30 December 1922 — Page 11

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SAUTER'S FOUL GOAL

WINS FOR RICHMOND OH HAMILTON COURT HAMILTON. Ohio, Dec. 30. A foul goal made by Rex Sauter a minute befort the final whistle sounded, enabled Richmond to win over Hamilton hi?h school here Friday night 19 to 18. With the score standing at 18 all a Hamilton player fouled and Sauter took care that he made the point from the foul line. Play was resumed from center and Hamilton was going down the floor for a field goal when the time was called for the end of the game. Score at half time was 11 to 11, Ham ilton coming up on the visitors anl overcoming a six point lead. At no time was the Hamilton quintet in ths lead. Coach Little met the team and had a short talk with the players shortly before the game. It was the first time that he had been vith the athletes since the Rushville game at Richmond last .Friday. The regular quintet took the floor to start the game, but the style of play was seriously handicapped' on ac count of the narrowness of the floor. Hamilton used the five man defense , to good advantage and held Richmond to a few shots at the hoop. Muey Closely Guarded. Muey had been heralded as the main scorer for the Red and White and he was closely guarded throughout the entire time which he was !in the game. He was unable to make a basket. Four personal fouls called ; on him put him out, of the game soon after the Btart of the second half. i "Kenedy, who has been out of the ' rwne with a lame knee, went in for I Mney and played a creditable game, i teaming with "Ken" Price at forward. Jack Mattox played his usual, if Lbt better, game at backguard and ihowed signs of being able to told Ibis berth in the future. : : Andrews and Hafler proved the Bcorinfc stars for the Buckeye quintet, while Mancoes put up a good guarding game. Richmond plays at Eaton Saturday night. Summary: Richmond (19) Hamilton (18) Price F Andrews Muey F DuBois Sauter C Crawford Kessler G Hasler Mancos G Mattox Field goals: Price 3, Kennedy, Sauter 2, Mattox, Andrews 2, DuBois 3, Plipps. Foul goals: Price, Sauter 4, Andrews 6. Substitutions: (Richmond) Kennedy for Price, Price for Muey. (Hamilton) Plipps for Hasler. Referee: Motzer (Miami). GREENFIELD TROUNCES CAMBRIDGE CITY TEAM GREENFIELD, Ind., Dec. 30. The local net team trounced the fast Cambridge City high school team here Friday nigiit in a clean and fast game by a 27 to 17 score. The home team led throughout the contest, but the visit-

ors played a much better game during r the last half than the first. The Camibridce team had hard luck on their

f chances for baskets, missing many easy snois inrougnout ine cuniesu Chapman was the whole show for the visitors, making three goal3 from the field and one foul goal and playing a very clever floor game. Sexson and Cook were the outstanding individuals for Greenfield, although the whole team gave everything it had to win the game. Sexson made seven field goalsand dribbled time and again through the entire Cambridge City defense for a marker. The score attheead of the first half was 17 to 7 in favor of Greenfield. Summary : Cambridge C. (17) Greenfield (27) . ...F...... Ferris F Webb ....C. Sexson . ...G Cook Huddleston . Chapman , ... Brumfield . . . Kutter Bertsch G , Nicely Field goals Huddleston 3, Chapman 3, Kutter, Sexson 7, Webb 3, Ferris 2. Foul goals Brumfield 2, Chapman, Webb 3. Substitutions Greenfield: Carsof for Webb, Brumlieimauer for Ferris, Fink for Sexson. Referee Cassidy. (Anderson Y Y. M. C. A.) SERVICE WILL STAGE BASKET TOURNAMENT Community Service win stage a

b basketball tournament for independent basketball teams of Wayne county it was announced Saturday by P. II.

The tournament will be held some time in February and will be open to any independent teams in the county; This will be the first time that the Community Service has attempted to stage a basketball tourney of this nature. Such teams as Boston, Whitewater, Fountain City, Economy, Centerville, Cambridge City and local independent teams will be eligible to enter the tourny. A team composed of flayers of Richmond and Fountain City defeated the Cambridge ex-hish five Friday night on the Cambridge City floor. 39 to 36. Hatfield, Brehm and Townsend were high scorers for the winners and Winston Huff played a good floor game, while Chase and Dairy led the attack for Cambridge. SPECIAL SALE Brazil .Tires ...$2.00 ELMER S. SMITH 426 Main St. MITCHELL Touring CAR C-N$rq $1690 rSVfj Delivered Jfei '?j Choice of several LJSi colors. Steve Worley Garage 211-213 N. W. 7th St. '1

THE

Frank Chance Faces

In Management of Boston Red Sox

By FRANK O. METKB If you have any tears to shed, let 'em fall upon the silvering dome of Frank Chance. For there Is the man who is to be tested as to his greatness as a baseball leader without a seem ing earthly chance for success. Through more than 15 years Chance has been termed the "peerless leader." And through just so long a stretch of time, while his admirers termed him truly great, there were others who maintained that he- is infinitely lacking in real leadership ability, and that what transpired while he was at the helm of the Chicago Cubs was not of his making. "The worst dub in the world could have managed the Cubs of 1906, 1907 and 1908 into championships," declare the critics of Chance. "When he assumed management of the club he fell heir to one of the greatest collections of ball players that ever fought under one standard. This gathering of such wonderful talent was due to Frank Selee, who preceded Chance, and who had spent several years In building it up to pennant heights. Deposed Near Success. "Unfortunately for Selee he was deposed just at a time when success was to crown his efforts. And to Chance came the fruits of victory and the glory of triumph. They have given Chance credit for what the Cubs performed, but it wasn't Chance who did it. It was Selee who, first of all, welded together the Cub machine, and it was the machine itself, smooth running, tremendously powerful, and with-an irresistiblvi force that steamrolled the opposition." Chance retired from the management of The Cub3 in 1912. A year later he took the helm of the New York Yankees. Great things were expected from him by the club owners and by the admirers of Chance. They insisted that he would prove to the world there and then that he wa3 a genius in the matter of club leadership. But Chance was a "bust". The Yankees could do no better than a terrible seventh in the race of 1913, and in midseason of 1914 were floundering around so badly that Chance quit In disgust. He declared that he did not have decent material to work with, and that his efforts to build up a ball club were severely handicapped by criticism of an unkind and unwarranted nature from many sources. Good, Then Bad So that made things about 50-50 in relation to Frank Chance. He was a wonder with the Cubs took rank among the greatest team pilots of all time. He was a fearful flivver at the helm of the .Yankees, 'which failure might have been due to his lack of natural leadership, ability; or it might have been due to many other causes beyond his control. Chance faded from the big league picture after 1914 and has been out of baseball for eight years. Through all that onrush of time there has ever been within hi mthe ambition to get one more chance as a team leader so that he could demonstrate to the skeptics that, given . fair break, he could lift even a mediocre outfit to lofty heights in the baseball world. - The opportunity has come to Chance but what a terrible opportunity it is! He is to manage the Boston Red Sox in 1923. No more hopeless task ever confronted any team leader. It is 1,000 to 1 against Chance winning a pennant and it is 100 to 1 that his team will do anything beyond the pathetic. If, by some seeming miracle, the Red Sox should put on a spurt in 1923, upset the dope bucket, and become either a menace or a factor in the penant race, then Frank Chance surely will have earned a claim not merely as a "peerless leader," but as a superman of baseball. Backed by Club For he is backed up now with a club owned by a man whose prime purpose in baseball seems to be to dispose of every good ball player that he gets on the auction block.. This Harry Frazee, through sales covering a period of years, has -so completely wrecked and demoralized a once great baseball club that it is prac CARNEGIE DEFEATED BY BUTLER, 42 T0 1 5 INDIANAPOLIS, Dec. 30. Carnegie Tech basketball athletes, from Pittsburgh, were handed another lacing by a Hoosier team here Friday night, when the Butler college squad romped away with a 42 to 15 win, using sub stitutes in the game most of the time. Score at half time was 23 to 6, with Butler in front. Anderson, Carnegie forward, con nected for five field goals and threw two foul goals during the game.Summary: Butler (42) Carnegie Tech (15) Hooker F Anderson Griggs F Motter Leslie C Metford Middlesworth G Gibson Colway O Newman Substitutions: Butler Paul for Hooker, Blessing for Leslie, Jones for Griggs, Mpper for Middleworth, HarK er for Colway Hooker for Paul, Leslie for Blessing, Griggs for Jones, Middleworth for Nipper, Colway for Harker, Paul for Colway, Nipper for Hooker. Carnegie Tech Goodwin for Newman. Field goals: Leslie 6, Hooker 5, Middlesworth 3, Nipper 2, Griggs, Paul, Anderson o, Motter. Griggs, 3 out of 4 : Anderson, 2 out of 6; Motter 1 out of 3. Foul goals: Hooker, 2 out of 3; Referee: Feezle. Umpire Patton. MmmnmnnmimtumntutnwimiiiiiimtmnttRniiiiitiintimtmitmininnmr I Trunks, Traveling Bags and I Suit Cases I SAM S. VIGRAN 617 Main St. ti nmmtmn ummt mmmnmimmti i niimtiimniimtmmiwffimuftmmimiii Odd Trousers for Men, special values at $3.00 to $6.00

RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND

Hopeless Task tically, an untruth to refer to it as "a big league outfit." Frank Chance Blidesinto Boston in 1923 possessed of a most terrible outlook. He goes there to head an aggregation of misfits and baseball riffraff. And he goes with the full knowledge that if he should develop any player to a point of stardom, there is the likelihood that he will wake up some morning to find that the owner has sold him to the highest bidder. It is really too bad for Frank Chance, who for years has nursed the hope of redeeming himself for the Yankee failure and proving his greatness as a leader, that he should be sentenced to serve a term as manager of a team where the chances of success are so remote that they are not discernible by the naked eye or even imaginabla by all encompassing brains. CopyrIcht 1021 By King Feature Syndicate. Inc.) OFFICER OTLYNN A roHiBg (torn father no root, bat wkat doe it get a fellow te bo mou back, anyway? VILLA ADDS BANTAM SCALP TO HIS BELT (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, Dec. 30. Pancho Villa, the fighting Filipino who holds the American flyweight boxing title, had another bantamweig!-t scalp added to his belt today. His last victory was scored last night over Terry Martin of Providence in a slashing fifteen round' bout at Madison Square Garder . Villa, who' has done most of hi fighting out of his class eince winning the flyweight crown from Johnny"Buff is ambitious to take on Joe Lynch, the 116 pound title holder. The Fili pino's showing in his recent bouts in which he has shown remarkable box ing and punching anility, apparently has paved the way for a meeting wits Lynch. If victorious he would dup'n cate Buff's feat of nolding both fly weight and bantamweight titles. Townsend Basket Players Stage Three Court Games In Coliseum Friday Night Three good games were played in the, Coliseum Friday night by teams of the Townsend Branch of Community Service. The games were played to the public a chance to see the progress may by the local lads in basketball circles. ' Condors, Eagles and Canaries emerg ed victoriousin Friday night's games. Summary: . Larks (4) Condors (17) Maupin F Hill Schools F Saines Carter C Arnold Garrett G Thompson Walker q R0gs Field goals Maupin, Hill, Saines, Arnold, Thompson, Ross. Foul goals Carter 2, Hill 7. Substitutions Scott for Garrett. Referee Eades, (Richmond). Sea Gulls (5) Eagles (15) Foster F... Sampson Wynn F Floyd Nickens C Burden Spears G Goens VanLandingham .G Garrett Field goals Spears. SamDson Floyd. Burden 2, Goens. Foul goals Foster 2, Spears, Goens 2, Garrett. Referee Eades, (Richmond). Hawks (4) Canaries (22) McConnell F Schools Sampson F Gilmer Floyd C Delaney! Hayes g Kelly Fox G Hamilton Field goals McConnel, Schools 5, Kelly 3, Delaney, Hamilton. Foul goals Sampson, Floyd, Schools, Delaney. Referee Eadea, (Richmond). MwnitimratiimnimiiimrmHMiiwtiminuttn mi h wiwmmmiuBHmmtH ti I Bicycle Tires and Repairing 1 a Specialty. I MEYERS & KEMPER I I 405. Main St. I riionmniimiiuimnniiiuiuniiiiiitimmnniiniimmmiiiimimiiiiuinniiittiii Clearing, Pressing, Repairing Ladies' Jacket Suits, cleaned and pressed, Men's Suits or Overcoats cleaned and (j-f fyf pressed pX0 THE VALET SHOPPE 710 Main St Phone 6280

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SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND,

MAKER MEAT PIN MEN WIN HONORS Maher Meats, Webb-Colemaa and Feltman Tramps of the City league won their respective games from the Shoe Fitters, Home Laundry and Dodge Brothers. Maher of the Maher Meats took high score for the evening with 231, and Nick, also of the Maher Meats, took high average with 191 Scores: , Shoe Fitters.

Player 1st , 2nd 3rd Tl. Av. Brockmaa 176 134 150 460 153 Beckman .... 163 155 142 460 153 Klehfoth 126 104 126 356 119 Kriemeier ... 156 111 129 396 132 Hackman ... 129 164 188 481 160 Handicap ... 261 261 261 Totals 1011 929 996 Maher Meats. Player . 1st 2nd 3rd Tl. Av. Cox 134 134 134 Johnson 137 148 151 436 145 Fitzgibbons . 160 168 214 542 181 Eubanks .... 190 180 182 552 184 Nick 178 173 222 573 191 Maher 231' 178 409 205 Handicap ... 119 122 122 Totals 918 1023 1069

High average Nick, 191. High score Maher, 231. Maher Meats win 2 and lose 1 Heme Laundry. Player 1st 2nd 3rd Tl. 496 546 503 548 503 Av. 165 m 168 183 168 Sherer . 135 Ray 179 Smith 157 Bennett 192 King 183 Handicap ... 67 192 169 178 ' 189 189 157 177 179 158 162 67 67 Totals..... 913 961 923 Webb-Coleman. 1st 2nd 3rd Player Tl. 474 396 478 467 453 Av. 158 132 159 156 151 Crawford ... 149 161 164 157 127 156 147 173 169 151 151 185 185 James 112 Gaible 175 Gard 125 Coleman .... 151 Handicap . .. 185 Totals 897 983 943 High average Bennett, 183. High score Sherer and Bennett, 192 Webb-Coleman win 2, lose 1.

Feltman Tramps. Plaver 1st 2nd 3rd Tl. Av. Youngflesh .. 211 178 143 532 177 Hill 220 155 180 555 185 Meyers 210 180 159 549 183 Connlin 172 175 175 522 174 Kellev 154 172 168 494 165 Handicap ... 118 118 118 Totals 1085 978 943

Dodge Bros. Flaver 1st 2nd 3rd Haner 189 194 144 Evans 137 147 126 Dykeman ... 120 139 134 Bethard 116 113 167 Lynn 130 130 139 Handicap ... 225 225 225 Totals 917 948 935 Totals 917 948 935 High average Hill, 185. High score Hill, 220. Feltman Tramps win 3. Tl. 527 410 393 396 399 Av. 176 137 131 132 133 CITY LEAGUE STANDING Won Lost Pet. T'l P. Feltman Tramps. 27 18 .fiOO 43.523 Webb-Coleman .. 22 23 .4SS 42,601 Foot Fitters 21 24 .466 42,440 Maher Meats 20 25 .44 1 43,285 Dodge Brothers.. 17 28 .377 42,193 Home Laundrys.. 28 17 .622 43,631 INDIVIDUAL AVERAGES Following are the individual averages for the players in the City Bowling league for 45 games, which is the half-way mark in the schedule of games: Name Games King 45 Sherer 45 Bennett 45 T'l Pins 8,530 S.235 8.0S6 7,995 5.2S7 7.822 7.277 7.713 6.504 7,654 6.645 6,624 5.624 7.104 3,372 5,685 6,447 989 5,897 3,090 6,693 6.216 6,459 5,896 6.690 6,139 5,S:;9 5.725 2,020 6,029 6,027 3.17S 3,571 Av. 190 183 180 178 176 174 173 171 171 170 170 170 170 169 169 167 165 165 164 163 159 159 158 151 149 147 1.19 136 135 134 134 127 112 smita 4,1 Ray 30 Castelluccio 45 Meyers 42 Hill 45 Fitzgibbons : 38 Youngflesh 45 Kelly 39 Eubanks 39 Crawford 33 Conklin 4... 42 Maher .. 20 Johnson 34 Cox 39 Reese 6 Hackman 36 Haner 19 Eggleston 42 Lahrman 39 Coleman 41 Gaible 39 Gard 45 Lynn 42 Evans 42 James 42 Bethard 15 Beckman .'. 45 Dykeman V. 45 Kremeir 25 Klefoth 32 Coach Little will revamp the team next w.ek in preparation for the game with Connersville here Wednesday night.

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IND., SATURDAY, DEC. 30,

Hoosier Courtship BASKET BALL RESULTS CoKege. Butler, 42; Carnegie Tech, 15. 1 Wittenberg, 28; Vanderbilt, 14. High School. North Salem. 40; Plainfield, 12. West Newton, 35; Shortridse, 26. Newcastle,, 22: RuEhville, 21. West Point. 55; Buck Creek, 6. Monitor, 22; Wea, 4. Montmorenci, 26 ; Jackson , township, 9 Sbarpsville, 23; Prairie township (Tippton county, 16. Emerson (Gary), 29; Jefferson (Lafayette, 26. . Kokomo, 23; Martinsville, 17. Atlanta, 15; Kokomo Seconds, 14. Marion, 25; Muncie, 20. Vincennes, 47; . Franklin, 29. Shadeland, 24; New Augusta, 15. Shadeland Seconds, 17; New Augusta Seconds. 16. Anderson, 50; Eaton. 18. Tipton, 24; Greentown, 22. v Lebanon, 21; Connersville, 15. Sweetser, 18; Jonesboro, 17. Van Buren, 31; Converse, 9. Attica, 27; Pine Village, 12. Independent., Omars, 56; Shelby ville Elks, IS. Nash-Elwood, 69; Illinois Coaching school, 17. Richmond had a close call at Hamilton Friday night. The opposition which the Buckeye live gave the Red and White Y.-as not expected, and the game resulted into a nip and tuck battle all the way. Sauter, Kessler, and Mattox figured in the Richmond win, which was never certain until the final gun. ..... Numerous Richmond fans are expected to journey to Eaton Saturday night to see the Red and White in action agaiinst the high school f that place. The Richmond players will come directly to Eaton from Hamilton; Indiananolis Omars had little diffi culty winning from the Shelby villa Elks at Shelbyville. Friday night. Hennessey and Hinkle, of the Omars. stood out for the winning quintet wild six field coals each. White shot 10 out ef 16 foul goals he attempted He also connected for five field goals Carnegie Tech basket five received further rouah treatment from the Hoosier state when Butler dropped the team, 42 to 15. DePauw drubbed the Tech five at Greencastle Thursday night, 67 to 25. Tech goes on to meet thP Michigan Aeaies on the latter's court. Butler college net men play Chicago university at Indianapolis haturaay nisht. A eood exhibition of the court sranip is exnected between the two 1 schools. It was a lurid British melodrama, snd one of the characters, a king, was haranguing his son. "Come," said the king, "let us go into the 'ouse." "Did you hear that?" said a man in the stallsto his companion. "He said 'ouse." Overhearing the remark, and fixing the interrupter with his eye, the King advanced to the footlights and ex claimed: ' "Yus. 1 said 'ouse! Do you think as Tit:"Bits (London). Teams of the Townsend branch of Community Service basketball league staged their first basketball carnival in the Coliseum Friday nighL Although the games were one-sided, the teams put up a fairly good exhibition of basketball. Fans at Hamilton were so hilarious after Sauter had mad the foul goal making the score 19 to 18 in fayor of Richmond, that the timekeeper's whistle was not heard by the referee, who allowed the game to proceed fully 30 seconds overtime. A Richmond rooter, sitting by the side of the timekeeper, hearing the whistle, raced out onto the middle of the playing space and began throwing his coat high in the air. The referee proceeded to put the supposed intruder off the floor, but finally understood that the game was over. Foul shooting is an absolute necessity in Bome basketball games. In a real tight court game, accuracy in Cleaning:, Pressing and Alterations Prices Reasonable

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1922

TO FIGHT IN LONDON. It It la settled that Jack Dempsey will defend his world's heavyweight laurels for the fir.st time In nearly two years not inAmerica but on English soil. His opponent will be the well known Joe Beckett and the contest wiL be staged in Albert Hall. London, la February, BENTON'S COMEBACK IS PROBLEMATICAL CHICAGO, Dec. 30. Return of Rube Benton, former Giant pitcher, reported to have been purchased from the St. Paul American association club by the Cincinnati Reds, to major baseball, today was regarded as prob lematical, hinging upon investigations by K. M. Landis, commissioner of baseball, of his alleged connection with the 1919 world's series scandal. Reports from New York quoting John Heydler, president of the National league, as indicating Benton wou'd be barred from that circuit, brought a new turn to the situation yesterday. President B. B. Johnson, of the American league, previously had stated Benton would not be permitted to play in that organization. shooting the free attempts is the thing which any team must be able to fall back upon. One man should he drilled the season, unless that one player becomes incapacitated to such an extent that he can no longer be depended upon, Fountain City Hi meets Mooreland on the Fountain court Saturday night. Mooreland holds a 31 to 20 win over the Fountain City lads, which took place early in the season on the Mooreland floor. A good game is. predicted. Hi Seconds will get into action again Wednesday night against the Union City Seconds, whjch team defeated the Red and White yearlings on the Union floor recently by the narrow margin of 11 to 10. The local lads are out for a marginal win. "Y" Industrial league teams will not get into action on the association floor Saturday night. Games will be resumed Saturday night, Jan.- 6, with the following schedule: Harvesters vs. K.-D., Atlas vs. Wayne Dairy, Piston Rings Vs. Starr, Natco vs. Pennsy F. Hamilton had made extensive prep arations for the invasion of Richmond. The stage was all eet for a hard battle on the court nd the Red and White had to extend to win the game from the Buckeye five. . - .

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PAGE THIRTEEN

SPORT KINGS: REMAIN CROWNED DURING 1922 NEW YORK, Dec. 20. With the exception of golf and boxing, leaders in most sport remained In possession of their honors through 1922. , There was practically a new list of champions in football, but that is, such an. unstable game ' that many annual change? are forced by natural conditions, j- - Professional baseball retained most of its leading clubs and tennis had no important changes. - In the college field, rowing and track and field, two major sports found the same powers in command. Winning of the two major league pennants by New York clubs on successive years established a new record for baseball. The Giants, in winning their second successive world's championship, also accomplished a feat that hadn't been equalled in several years. BaUtmore ran away with the International league pennant and won the "little .world's , series" from St. , Paul, the pennant -winners of the American Association. Football had its greatest year and the outstanding sectional teams, if they are disputed as champions, were: East Princeton. Middlewest Iowa and Michigan. South Vanderbilt. Missouri Valley Nebraska, . Pacific Coast California. Tennis Successful. Familiar faces were all found in familiar places after a most successful year of tennis. The list of championa below found only one change and that was because William T. Tilden did not defend his British title: - Davis Cup Champion United States. World's Singles Champion William T. Tilden. World's Woman Champion Mile. Suzanne Lenglen. American Woman's Champion Mrs. Molla Mallory. . British Singles Champion Gerald L. Patterson. ; All the golf crowns changed hands during a spectacular and most interesting season which saw the rapid rise of young players and the decline of the "old guard." The close of the season found: World's Champion Gene Sarazen. British Open Champion Walter Hagen. American Open Champion Gene Sarazen. P. G. A. Champion Gene Sarazen. Amateur Champion Jess Sweetser. Amateur Woman Champion Miss Glena Collett. - - - - - California won the national and -the eastern intercollegiate track and field championship for the second time and the rowing eight of the Umited States " naval academy won its third title. . Rings Champs Vary. Passage of Georges Carpentier, Johniny isun ana uene Tuney as ring ampions were unusual developments

of the year, in puglism. Cjrpentier dropped all his title when he was knocked out by Battling Siki; Johnny Buff lost his flyweight title, to Pancho Villa an Harry Greb beat Gene-Tunney for the light heayweight title. The present champions are: . World's Heavyweight Jack Dempsey. European Heavyweight Battling SikL American Light Heavyweight Harry Greb. - World's- Middleweight Johnny Wilson. New York's World's MiddleweightMike OTDowd. . . World's Welterweight Mickey Walker, v.- '.- World's Junior Welterweight Pinkey Mitchell. eWorld's Lightweight Benny Leonard.'; . . . World's Junior Lightweight Johnny Dnndee. ' World's Featherweight Johnny Kil-;-bane.' . '-v ; World's Bantamweight Joe Lynch. World's Flyweight Jimmy Wflde, , American Flyweight Pancho Villa.' The titles bestowed on Mike O'Dowd and Johnny Dundee are trick gifts of the New York Boxing commission, and Mitchell was elected to his crown-by a public vote. . ,

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