GENTLEMANLY BANTAMWEIGHT CHAMPION Jonmiy Coulon. Vit—B a U-r ill aay r-:rt of family :«*t» »*# «*m- |»ro!. visional fighting *-'mc • there i* a >ail from onf or boih W* li;f' -t.t- »ti.!. ran Ik- lit aid .ur (it'hsa ar- end Uhuy a i:;r.v; has 1-1 t-aa- 1a rujitier or *tf.*r fetched but t!;e f .iU’f ol • imt) Uruu. tfc • tK.at^n. weight -am* fata. sal otiy ja-iiait* the gou If lfle Cfc-p to battle. but •-adtr* I - mitd-o, a. d .*• .us bis • t.*el sertmd. says a writer in the Mfinf ..i» («Bii!Mr< Ui Ap'wal. le fact, i*aj« rouUa is the ihuU »«rh» »ben »t COCK'S lo lilt- business - .d trf U.i. unu< making and egt.tir.g 1 *-»» te J»! twent* -one. bat arriv ng Mi bis iiu.oritjr hasn't given him be j J+.Ojet)- r In try to run his own “lietteg see it<- old man." t. Joimey t answer »h» n J< !.ni:y is tp|mikrh<4 ntardlM terms fur a fetch '*«*» Owdon is mighty j rood of the • utlemai.ly Johnny. ami when he through Me-mphis fast winter b> made on mild remarks to the ef fee* that his boy was the greatest Uttle man that ever lived. Tie- only u'her ring daddy was Jim | X ii i»l Sun Francisco, wlio guided '••' •sii • • "f his son. lYankie. Neil i» r.- wj s a turfman, hut he loved * ting well th: * when Frankie i’..rn. d professional l;e left his horses n o! er hands and pnx-eeded to he manager. adviser, chit f second and i rt > agent ft'r his kid lie saved i'n eke . too. in his first professional fight. As amateurs there was a most rivalry hi :w, ■ i Kddie llanlon ■ r.d Frankie Neil. They met twice ’n amateur tourneys, and. although Ion obtained ''••■cisi ins hath times, he re: i s.-d to admit that Hanlon could ; tick him. l'nder the pressure of hack- | und-f irth ta!k factions formed for each ' tmd the wrangle finally resulted in ' Frankie and Kddie being matched for | fifteen rounds in Oakland. Both were j about eighteen years old at the time of th - bout and both were out to nuir-1 d* r the other fellow if he could. The Hanlon gang challenged the X'eil ad herents to a few fights al fresco, while the Netl suaporters kicked a few well ’lai.-d kicks into the countenances of the Hanlon tribe. It was one of the greatest fights ever set n on the coast. "BULL" ROBERTS IS CHIEF AtSreti.ve Full Baer Selected as llli- ' "o s' Feett:ll Leader—Popular With Students. — Hull' (lab*•’ll. Illinois* fighting full) bu**. ku t»»i. I*- t» d < a plain of the il-uti dev** fur lilt, a ad the tradi tMMsal doi* of }u-«e«- is tarfonniiiK its il»rfc«iwrfd stunt in the orange ; atsd t»W < *»., It is a*.r*-ed that Hot* r f “CvU" Robert*. rttf.im ■■ i!l aat'* ail th»- warring (mIIom dm) is-jre jietfeti lursiasy fa*r B»-*i jut i -oa'^ » a t iriic annals UIBBT f-> it Os* r»a£KUb« for Ihs •»• f» O'!<* S-ril-r. Mar ».* W-t - a-jB tfcnar «ifh bis 0trji t*gM !wl. and U Lyons Tom Lynch surely is in pood stand ing in the Come-Back club. Oliver Drew. the handball rham t 'on. i- ing soccer football in St. Louis. Culture Billy Kvans is much im r».-.-d with the bail playing of the Cubans No a President .Murphy says Chance ' * iuldn'1 Pave Pitcher McQuillen at any price. Prank Gotch shows all the symp • of .t cl ampion who is beginning so prepare to "come back.” Christy Mathew -on is being touted ..s i likely Candidate for the presi de!). y of the New York Checker club. ct risiy Mathew son's younger broth er Henry. l as sign-d to pitch next season v ith the Oklahoma City nine of the Texas league. I1*- way the lightweight fighters are a 1 ’or matches with Moran puz zh s on- a- times to remember who is light w< ight champion. Kddic < oDins has turned journalist : ::-l advises boys aspiring to success on the diamond to fight, hustle, work at :1 nab every opportunity. Owen Moran may become an Ameri -’tiled . :nd Pght between Battling Nelson i s: d 'ay I.ritt would be a goed card ■n San Francisco about February. The •" ;:g instinct, more or less : shiv d. velop -d in all goed pugs, is •i l tt- rn , * prominent characteris tic "Sjie*hied Bob" the Cornish man. No. tley are peddling a story in Iowa that Frink Gotch really fears Mai itioct Ti:e Turk's n:anager. how • v* is willing to believe that Gotch has retired for keeps. On' •* more "a Princetoa-Harvard ff.-whall game is to be arranged.” v*'‘ ’1 1 i . it w en v.e see Chicago r ’ ’-i i . -u on *he ft.tno gridiron. - | ‘ !. . :o it. .crd-Herald. j CHASE iN CLASS BY HIMSELF Followers of Baseball Game Argue All Winter Regarding Relative Merits of Leaders. It’s a tough job picking the star of stars for every position in baseball, but fans are at it all winter long. When it conies to first basemen it is hard to see how there can be snv argu ment. Chase is in a class by himself, but there are many National league: who argue that Chance is a more valuable man. Second base is the position that produces more arguments than any other on the diamond. There are sev eral great players iu this position. Johnny Evers. Eddie Collins and big •Nap" Lajoie all have a following. The Frenchman on account of his hit ting and graceful fielding should be given the preference over the first two. Devlin. Baker. Moriarty. Grant and Byrne are the men usually picked iu the argument on the third base jiosi tion. Several years ago when Jimmy Collins was in his prime there would have been no argument. The rightful successor to Collin’s laurels seems to be Byrne of Pittsburg. His speed and general all-around work should \v in him all arguments. At shortstop Wagner and Bush give rise for argument. Since Bonus has gone back many insist the crown should be passed to Dome. Catchers? The National league seems to have it on the American in this position. Kling has always been regarded as the king pin, but he has a teammate. Archer, who is not far behind. On' the work this year it seems as though Gibson of Pittsburg has it on both of them. Sullivan. Street and Criger are about the best in the American league, but they don't class with the National's stars. In the outfield there may be room for argument in left and right, but Tv Cobb is surely the greatest center fielder. Speaker of Boston is also a star of the first magnitude, and with him in right and Magee of the Phillies in left any manager would have an ideal outfield. Who is the best pitcher In either league? That is a great question, and at a quick conclusion most people would pick Walter Johnson of Wash Bobby Byrne. ington. But there is a man on the Athletic team who is pitching about as well as any pitcher in the country this year. His name is .tack Coombs. And “Chief" Bender is not far be hind. The National league stars are .Miner Brown. Matbewson and Moore. It seems that a team composed of Chase, LaJoie, Wagner. Byrne, Magee, Cobb. Speaker. Gibson and Coombs or Johnson would be almost invinc ible. and still there would be days that an ordinary team would beat them. The all-star aggregations are not. as a rule, as good as a well balanced nine which displays great team work. The best All-National team would be composed of Chance, first base; Evers, second base; Wagner, short step; Byrne, third base; Magee, cen ter field; Wheat, left field; Hofman. 1 right field; Gibson and Kling. catch ers; Brown. Mathewson and Moore, pitchers. The ali-star American nine1 should be composed of Chase, first base; 1-a Joie, second base: Bush, shortstop; j Moriartv. third base; Milan, left field; Cobb, center field; Speaker, right field; Sullivan and Street, catchers; Johnson. Coombs and Walsh, pitchers. Two teams of this sort in a post- ; season series could take in the big c ities and draw enormous crows and would furnish some interesting con tests. Penn Loses on 1910 Football. Football at the University of Penn sylvania during the season just closed was not as profitable as in former years, and the balance appears to be on the wrong side of the ledger. At a meeting of the board of directors of the Athletic association. Treasurer John C. Gilpin reported that the de crease for the season of 1910 from that of the previous year was about fJO.OOO. Last year the eleven is sup posed to have broken just about even on the season. De Oro Wins Championship. Alfred De Oro broke his own world's record of seventy-nine balls for a con- ! flnitous run at pool the other night in winning the world's championship from Jerome Kecgh in New York. He ran five straight frames and part of the sixth for an 81. The match for the world's title was in three blocks j of 200 points each, making a total of 600 points. Fish's Mouth as Incubator SfitKi of rnciy Trite in Palestine Whew C98» Are Hatched in CPeesa of the Male. t>A.t» A jew : it. during bis journey up tbe Ajnarsw. tbntcnrd a specie* that Urf-utnit'd Its eggs is «Le tr.cu:h. sso Ur. Lastet relates some very interest lM dsernU'iM on (be similar props Charter street. Salem. Louis I'«*bofsky has transferred the prop er^ to Jennie I. Linsky. The house was erected about 150 years ago. Within the dwelling Miss Sophia Amelia Peabody, daughter of Dr. Nathaniel Peabody, was born. Sep tember 21.1S69. Miss Peabody wedded Nathaniel Hawthorne, and it appears singular to readers of the great Amer ican romancer's works that, charming as his associations must have been with the house, he should have re called its situation in the unpleasant "Dolliver Romance." and later in the depictions made in “Dr. Grimshawe's Secret" Tr.at he did so is shown in the open ing chapter of “Dr. Grimshawe's Se cret.'' which reads, “Cornered on a graveyard with which the house com municated by a back door." while the house itself was “A three-story wood en structure, perhaps a century old. low studded with a square front, stand ing right upon the street, and a small [ inclosed porch containing the train entrance, affording a glimpse up and down the thoroughfare through an oval window on each side." Hawthorne in his writings referred at considerable length to the cemetery on the east side of the “Grimshawe" house. In fact, in the corner of the cemetery adjoining the house are the most ancient headstones remaining in the graveyard. Hawthorne once said: “It gives us strange ideas, to think how convenient to Dr. Peabody's fam ily this burial ground is, the monu ments standing almost within arm's reach of the side windows cf the par lor." The cemetery and bouse are practi cally as described by Hawthorne 72 years ago. with the exception of the gate, which has been destroyed The exterior of the house will be changed in appearance, yet the muta tions will not destroy the history of the old landmark, or diminish interest on the part of people visiting Salem for the purpose of viewing buildings associated with Hawthorne. He was ! not wedded to Miss Peabody in the “Dr. Grimshawe house.” as has been claimed, but in a dwelling that num bered IS West street. Boston, then the home cf Dr. Peabody. Start Leopard With Smoke — : Bronx Keeper’s “Old Reliable” Moves Snow White Beast From Crate Xew York.—A snow leopard, the Bronx roo's latest acquisition, had his ! coming-out party at the menagerie. The debut was not accomplished with i out great difficulty. And if it hadn't j been for a pipe—and this is no pipe— j Mr. Leopard's public appearance | might have been deferred indefinitely. The animal irrived in New York from Bremen. Having been in a crate since he left Monwolia, where he was trapped, his temper was not exactly sugar coated When he got to the zoo his wooden home was backed up to an empty lion cage and he was invited to walk in. But be was a most ungracious ana unresponsive guest. He sulked in the corner of the crate, growled his disap proval and wouldn't go out" Then persuasive methods were tried A bucket of gaoline was brought, and with a bellows the vapor was blown at the leopard. This is usually condu cive to agility even in the most stub born. but the effect this time was sur prising. The animal inhaled the gas like a carburetor in a marine engine; he even switched his tail as though he was trying to crank up the machine. Then ammonia was tried; the leo pard never budged. The keeper even threw lighted papers into his cage; he just stamped out the blaze. Then some one thought of Keeper Greevy and “Old Reliable.” “Old Reliable" Is a meerschaum pipe the keeper has been industriously engaged in coloring for four years and is said to have a strength of fully 40 horsepower. When Greevy was summoned to the leopard's crate and told the circum stances he at once lighted the pipe. At the first pufT the leopard quailed; the second started him around the crate But the time the fourth hit him he sprang mto the waiting lion cage. ' ‘ each color alike the bird is vividly | portrayed. W sth the peacock petticoat the pea cock stocking may be worn. The lio ! stery has a large silk peacock em broidered half way up the leg in the bird's gorgeous coloring. The stork | stocking is another freak article of j women's dress. The snake hat has bee-: sold re . cently in London, and the wearer can don a pair of snake stockings to har □ionize with her headgear. A specimen of the snake stocking in black silk is ornamented with a large red snake of sequins. This | could be worn also for evenings with ; the glittering snake hair bandeau which is being shown considerably. Many fans are exhibited which ap pear as a large peacock or fowl, with ; a head and beak finish, whilst others are painted with numbers of birds. j The butterfly lady, who wears a but- ! terfly hat. brooch or shiny butterflies 1 in her hair, can have butterfly hand i kerchiefs. These are sold at from $1 j a half dozen, and the pretty embroid ! ered wings are detached from the j ground work of the handkerchief. Not inappropriately, the snake mai i den might carry one of the new beetle I handkerchiefs. These have tropical I i beetles embroidered in bright colors. Deer to Have Monument. Katahdin, Mass.—A subscription 1'eadod by New York sportsmen is being taken to raise funds with which to buy a monument to mark the burial place of Ethel, the pet deer shot through the mistake of Bernard Mor ris of New York a few days ago. Morris saw Ethel running about the Silver Lake hotel, a large bow of rib- i bon adorning her neck. Morris evi dentiy thought it nothing unusual to see a'deer running about beribboned and brought down the beast at the i first shot. Mary Conners, pastry ccok at the ! hotel, rescued Ethel from the bears ! when the deer was young. Largest Stalactite Cave. The largest stalactite cave in Eu ' rope recently was discovered in the ! Daehstein mountains of Upper Aus- ! tria. whining as if to say: "Take it away. I lake it away. I m only a leopard, not a smoke consumer." So they let him alone and took the ! pipe and its owner away. Not until then did the leopard breathe freely once mere. The animal is six months old and a rare specimen. It is pure white. Passion Play Earnings. Berlin. This year's gross receipt® i of the passion play at Oberammergau ! are officially reported to have been $126,000. After defraying expenses $324,000 remains to be distributed of which $195,000 will be divided among S60 performers, the principals receiv ing $625 apiece and the others in pro portion. A liberal sum will be given to the poor and a balance of $ios 750 i will remain in the village treasury’for commercial purivses. Marconi at Work. London.—Mr. Marconi wants to solve tw o problems—an aeroplane which will rise directly from any spot, and the adaptation of wireless teleg raphy to aeroplanes. i Are You / or Ailing? curative powers, peculiarly restore health and streag such a condition as you are It has been doing this for a third of a century. Its benefited friends telling of stored, sufferings ended, everywhe-e. Give it a cha you out by getting a bo "J2SSSSi Thompssa's Nebraska Dirt RUBBER~GI by nail at cut prices. Sccfi for t MY ERS-DILLON DRUG CO., ( TAFT’S BEHTA! 151? Douglas St., 0! Reliable Dentistry at ISi RUPTURE 5™“^ fecal cperatioa. So pay until cu literature. Dr.Wray,3Q7 Boo Bldg.,Or FISTULA, Pay A!i Rectal Difeca: out a surgical • guaranteed to last a lifetime. ? oegeuerai ana-sthetiesused. Exa DR. E. R. TARRY. 223 Bee Building AGENTS 8» Built by a machine. Works bett n: achi *.i --s. Se 1! s on si ght. SC ~A) machine. Men and women sell 5 uay. People want them, why in part of your time. It's a money a: once. Territory will betaken for description and’special clfer no AA.MlAi'IlKl.KS Ab.WI, ibis f GOT HIS SOBRIQUE “Honest John” Kelly Prove* to the Title Long B Manhood. There have been many s the manner in which “Hi Kelly, the ex-umpire, first t name. Mr. Kelly himseli to a New York letter, hi came to him naturally. fo> small boy the purity of his through his face. “I thii time i was ever called 'll was when I was quite a said Kelly. “A man eng ambulatory salesman of served the ingenious cou presented to the world am ‘You took honest, boy,” sai might your name be?' ‘Ji quite simply. ‘John-—just ‘Then hold my horse wh the saloon and get a drir And so I held his horse wl in the saloon and got a this was on lower Ninth i day when the avenue’s I to the man who could cle: cops in a given time. By gang came along and u wagon full of tinware. was detained within by a and they took the tinware they came back and too ions off the wagon. Eve coming daring, they uni wagon and took it away, trust. I stood there, holdlD And by and by the pedd) of the saloon and sized u tion. ‘Well,' said he war Honest John, all right. Y. horse.-" Ended the Controvi On the stejple of an ol is church in Bath. Me.. wooden figure of an ange a remarkably fine specime has always been somewh about, especially because heeled shoes. The Bath calls the story that a font the North Congregational accosted a devoted Univc the question: “Mr. Raym ever see an angel with shoes on it* feet?” “Wb swered Mr. Raymond, “I c I ever did; but did you e without them?” Had Eeen In a Worse Damocles saw the susps “That's nothing,” he cri between two women with Thus they saw he coi, scared. The test of piety come pov.s hut in the press of GOT IT. Got Something Eis "I liked my coffee s’ drank it strong,” says a woman, telling a good st though I had headaches day I just would not 1 was any connection betw I had weak and heavy si pitation of the heart, t| though husband told me 1 was the coffee that made ly. and did not drink it h said it did not agree wit loved my coffee and th couldn’t do without it. “One day a friend c home—that was a year about how well she was sh9 said: “ ‘Yes, and I feel wall, cause I am drinking Pos of ordinary coffee.’ • I said. ‘What is Postui “Then she told me h food-dr:nk and how muc felt since using it in plan tea, so I sent to the stor a package and when it t cording to directions It I have never bought a pc since. 1 began to irnpror ly. “I cannot begin to t much better I feel since > and leaving coffee alone is better than ft has ber and I cannot say enougtw this delicious food drinkL Take away the destri£ a rebuilder to work and do the rest. That’s what"1 Postum takes coffee’s pm. diet. “There’s a Reason^ Read the little book, ‘ - We’.lville,” In pkgs. “ Ever rend the above li »ne appear* from time tr «re genuine, true, and t Interest,