MY STORY OF MY LMfE (Copyright, 1911). by McClurs Newipaper Syndicate. CopyrlKht In Canada and Great Britain. All rights reserved.) CIlArTER III. I BECOME AN IRONWORKER ' AND BEER THE HARDEST JOBS. ( SQUIT school when I was four teen years old and went to the Los Angeles Business college for year. But that was too light work to suit me. I wanted to do something that would take strength. So I went to work as an apprentice for Ironworkers, to learn the trade. Here my strength came in very good. I mastered the work In no time, and In five months I could handle any thing that any man In the shop could work on, so that I was earning, piece work, from S5 to $12 a day, as much as any man there, except the boss. Now, in my seventeenth year I stood six feet or over and weighed fully 220 pounds. The boss had a saying that any man who worked in iron should I'D ASK THE BOSS TO GIVE MX THE HARDEST WORK BE HAD. scale at least 200, and my size took his eye. Whenever a job required un usual strength 1 was picked out for it Where a lot of men work together there is always more or less rivalry. We had our wrestling bouts and rough ed around a little at noon and when the day's work was over. When I first began working I thought several of the men were as strong as Her cules, but by this time I could more than hold my own with them. X didn't care to make much of a boast of my strength, and 1 don't now. It was natural for me to be strong, and I suppose I'd have been a strong man even if I hadn't worked so hard. It was In me.' I credited It all to my out of door life and thought that when other men as big as myself lacked the same quality of strength and quick' ness it was because they hadn't grown up out where the sun would sink Into their bones and muscles and the moun tain air expand their lungs- Later, when I was champion, doc tors examined me wherever I went and told me that I had "a marvelous reserve of nerve force," which, it ' seems to me. was lust a way of string ing words together to explain some thing they didn't understand any more than I understand It myself. One thing Is certain. I did have a peculiar kind of strength that came to me only In an emergency. I had two kinds of strength. At ordinary times I was a strong manstronger for a steady lift or a hard effort of any kind than any of the other men I worked with. But on a few occasions came a different kind of strength coupled with quickness that always amazed me when 1 sat down afterward to think it over and study out a reason that would satisfy my curiosity. In the course of my fighting career I have taaet many strong men who rose to the top of their profession by whlp- ping scores of others only a little less able. To the best of my recollection Bob Fltzslmmons was the only one who had this knack or trick I speak of highly developed. Fltzslmmons 'was a lanky fellow with thin legs and a thin body, but I found when I fought him that when he was almost , out he could draw on some hidden re serve of strength and for a few min utes fight with double his ordinary force. Fltzslmmons was a trained fighting man, a veteran, at that time, and of course be may have developed this.. But to me It was entirely natural When I have been badly battered in a fight It hasn't worried me at all, be cause I know 1 am In no danger. When it comes to a showdown I al ways have that spurt, drawn from some reserve force I don t understand.' . It has come to me In a way two or. three times, although, to tell you the absolute truth. I've never really need' ed it In the ring, for I've never yet been dated by .a blow or arm weary from fighting. The first time that this unexplained power ever came suddenly to me was before I took up fighting at all and when I was still working In iron. The company sent a big gangof menjout to toe Punta oil wells to tould oil tanks. Thaf s a mao's worn, and youngsters aren't needed on tbe Job. But I could do a man's work, and 1 liked the rough lite In the hills. Building an oil tank Is no play. First the structural Ironwork goes up. and then the big Iron plates are raised Into place and riveted one to another tc build the sides. Each sheet of iron. like tbe steel plates on the side of a battleship, is rolled Into shape in the works before it Is shipped. When you remember that each plate weighs from 800 to 900 pounds and that it has to be fitted so that every rivet slides into its bole like your foot into a tight shoe you can see that putting up an oil tank Isn't schoolboy's play. At tbe tank 1 was working on that day we bad a big derrick to lift the plates into position. It was made up of a mast CO feet long and. 12 by 12 iuches square, supporting a boom of Just the same size. The mast was held erect by long guy ropes of twist ed steel wire fastened to long Iron pegs driven into the ground. Most of the men were working around the mast and boom, but 1 was on a staging on the other side heading rivets. 1 had just finished one and straightened up for a moment waiting For a not ner rednot rivet to be placed. saw one of tbe long iron pegs hold ing the guy ropes of tbe derrick pull out of tbe sand with a Jerk and go whirling nigh In tbe air. the wire guy rope twisting and squirming like a snake. Instantly I knew that the mast and boom were falling. There was no time to run to tbe ladder. 1 leaped down to the ground, went to my knees. Jumped up like a flash and ran around the tank. As I ran I heard tbe crash of timbers and the grinding of Iron and felt the shock of a heavy concus sion. On the other side it took only a glance to see what had happened. The great mast and boom, folded to gether, had fallen straight over on tbe half completed tank. The men were standing stock still, staring up at tbe wreckage. My eyes followed theirs, and then for about a tenth of a sec ond I felt sick. There on tbe scaffold ing right over my head lay one of tbe workmen pinned under the heavy mast and boom a friend of mine. His name was Kelly. He was bent half way across an Iron plate that had been raised nearly to its position. His head and shoulders and body were on the side toward me. Everybody, as I said, was stock still snd staring. But I didn't even think. I don't know to this day how ,1 ever moved so quickly. The next thing I remember I was at the top of tbe lad der and stepping on the platform. There was the man pinned under the timbers. In another instant I had my shoulders under them and was strain ing for the heave. They came up slowly as I straightened my back and legs, up and clear, and then with a final effort I threw them out and side ways to fall crashing on the ground. I fairly tossed them away from me. Kelly's body slid from the edge of the iron plate and dropped to the ground. As I came down slowly the men gathered around to look at him. They rolled him over to see how near cut in two he was. and to their sur prise be groaned. We poured water on blm. and after awhile be sat up. It was one of the queerest things that ever happened. He was hurt more by the fall to the ground than by tbe tim bers dropping on him. The tumble nearly broke bis neck, while tbe tim bers only squeezed blm a little. When the mast fell Kelly was leaning across the edge of the Iron plate, looking down. The timbers came right across his back, bat just as they reached hint WB ROUGHED ABOUND A LITTLE AT NOON. they lodged against the framework of the tank and stopped short. If they bad gone a few Inches more my friend Kelly would have been cut in two. As soon as I saw be was still alive I called four of the men to help me slide the timbers along tbe ground and get them into position to be up ended again. A tank builder leads a rough life and hasn't much time to waste on seuti- ment Kelly wasn't killed, and tbe work was lagging. ;To my surprise, five of us couldn't budge tbe timbers. It took eight men, myself Included, to move them one at a time, and as far as effort is con cerned I'm sure I lifted with as much good will as when I tossed them both off of Kelly single handed. Eight of us did shift them around, and soon they were up again, securely guyed this time, and the work -went on. Mr. Smalley. our boss, was quiet for awhile. Then he took hold of my arm and said: "Well. Jim. you're a pretty husky boy. I've known some strong men in my time, but none that could do what you did. Some of them were as big as you. so it isn't Just the mus cle. Where do you get It?" I didn't know, so I didn't answer. CHAPTER IV. i I JUST HAPPENED TO BECOME A PROFES SIONAL FIGHTER. 1JTJST happened to become a fight er. That's the only way to ex plain it. There had always been some sort of an Idea back In my mind that I'd like to be a cham pion. 1 guess every boy has that no tion. But I hadn't followed the Idea up. Working and hunting took all of my time now. There was a welter weight fighter named Billy Gallagher at tbe works. He was a good one in bis day a good clever fighter. Billy was always after me. He said 1 had the making of a great heavyweight and that I could get a pile of easy money for fighting instead of pulling down a few dollars a day by hard work. Billy was enthusiastic over it. but 1 myself couldn't see where fight ing in a ring could touch hunting deer or mountain Hons as a sporting proposi tion, and I didn't seem to care much for getting money by punching other people on tbe nose. 1 guess I was too good natured. and. for .that matter, I never have gone Into a fight with much spite toward the other man. Some of my best friends today are the men who have fought me In the ring and been knocked out. One night a heavyweight fighter who lived In Los Angeles, a big. lanky ne gro named Hank Griffin, wandered In to a saloon where some of tbe boys spent their evenings when the day's work was over. He leaned on the bar and began to talk about fighting, as all these fellows do. Griffin was a very good man In those days and had fought and beaten a lot of big fellows all AS I BAN IN I BEGAN PULLING OFF M COAT. through the west. Our fellows knew bis reputation, but when he began to boast. t bey didn't like it, and when he threw a handful of gold twenties on the bar and said he'd back himself to knock out any man in tbe town they got together In a corner and talked it over. They decided that young Jef fries was about the only man within reach equal to the negro In size and strength. In a few minutes they sent a man running to my bouse to call me out to fight. It didn't take long to explain things. In about a minute 1 was tearing back wltb them. As 1 ran In through the door I began pulling my coat off. ready to tight him there on tbe spot. But he explained that there was a slight mis understanding. He didn't want to tight offhand like that. He meant that be could whip any man in town in a ring with ; gloves on his hands and with a referee. That was what he meant. He'd like to fight me that way and we might as well both make a little money out of it. That was a new uotion to me, but it sounded good. The boys offered to back me with a bet which suited Griffin well enough, judging from tbe way he grinned. Gallagher wanted me to tight too. In short, we fixed up a match on the spot, and I went home and slept like a log until the alarm clock rang in tbe morning. There wasn't anything to worry over about tbe idea of fighting a professional. He didn't look so terrible, and besides that I never did credit negroes with much fighting ability and gameness. Billy Gallagher wanted me to go into training! for the fight, which was to be held in a hall In town. But I wouldn't do It I went right along with my work and let Griffin go Into training. On tbe night of the fight 1 went straight home from work a little early and ate a good dinner. Then I walked down to tbe hull The boys were there already, wltb a lot of other people that I never saw before. All tbe lights wcro lit, and In tbe middle of the hall t l egulatlon boxing ring had been put ip on an elevated platform. We both got stripped for action with out much delay. Before I went out to Ihe ring they pulled the gloves over my hands and tied them on. 1 can remember just how funny boxing gloves felt to me. I never had a pair un before In my life. My hands felt o big and clumsy that I didn't know what to do with them. We, got into the ring. Griffin was a tall . fellow, all sinewy muscles from head to heels. He wore a wide smile like hungry man sitting down to a good dinner. But he didn't look very langerous. I'd seen stronger and big ger men In the shops. The lights and tbe people Interested me more than he did. At last time was called, and we walked together and shook hands. Then I got the surprise of my life. Al most before I bad my hands up he hit me an awful smash on the nose. You tan talk about being bit on the chin or m tbe stomach or on tbe ear, but let me tell you that a blow on the nose hurts more than any of them. It makes your eyes fill and blur, and you wonder If your nose Ti flat.' A "blow" on the nose either makes a man want to stop fighting or it makes him mad. It made me mad. I forgot all about the boxing gloves on my hands for a mo ment and tore after that coon to break alui in two. I went for him Just the way I've seen the bulls rush at the matadors In the Mexican bull rings. That was Just what Griffln wanted. He was a boxer, and I was a novice. A boxer can play with a novice, as a rule, and uever take a chance. What that negro did to me during the next four or five rounds was a shame. He punched me all over the ring. He land ed on my nose and my eyes and my cblu as he pleased. He just walloped away as fast as he could hit, and I surely did see stars. As for landing on blm. I couldn't hare hit him with a whip. But after a few rounds I recovered from my surprise. I took stock and began to figure. Here was a man han dling me in a way I'd never dreamed of. This must be the boxing skill that Gallagher bad told me about. Griffln was hitting me where he pleased, but he couldn't either daze me or knock me down, and I wasn't tiring at all. The thing for me to do was to find out bow be did it to get the combination and then pay him back in his own coin. And I felt sure that if I could ever land on him he'd drop. I cooled off as I began to think. I stopped rushing at blm In blind bull fashion. Griffin thought I was tiring, and be began coming to me Instead. For awhile he peppered me as hard as he could, trying to put me down. As each blow started I studied out the way he delivered it Now and then I tried one of bis blows in return; but, as a rule, be either blocked or ducked cleverly or stepped aside a little bit and countered me on the chin. The way he could land on me made me feel foolish It made me feel helpless. And yet all the time 1 knew that in the end I'd knock him out. I felt sure of that, I was learning uow In every round. In fact I think more knowledge of the fighting game came to me that nlgbt than In a year's boxing that followed. In eight or ten rounds the negro be gan to show signs of growing tired He was wearing himself out trying to beat me down, and bis blows didn't hurt I could feel the difference now There didn't seem to be the same weight and sting behind tbe punches when they landed on me. I began walking into him slowly without at tempting to strike a blow. Just bolding my bead forward, crouching a little. with my right hand up uear my chin and the left stuck straight out in front ' 1 learned that trick In my first fight and afterward it won the chitmpiouBbip of the world for me. Tommy Ryan never showed me that "crouch." It was my natural way of fighting. , Now that he was tiring the big ne gro baffled me by sticking his left hand into my face with light Jabs, holding me off. 1 used my right hand nearly all the time, only Jabbing at bis bond uow and then with tbe left, for as he battered me 1 bad learned something and bad planned a way to win I wanted to settle blm with one sure punch. I've always liked to win my tights that way. It was hard to get the opening 1 waited for. Griffin was still fHst on his feet. His cleverness puzzled me. When 1 saw a chance It bad passed before I could get iuto action. In my corner after the thirteenth round my seeoud said: "Jioi. it's 11:30 The lights go out at 12. Go after him now or you'll lose your chance and he'll get the decision on points." "I'll get him." I said. We came up for the fourteenth. Griffin was weary, but unmarked. I was cut and bruised and battered, but Just as strong and fresh as at the start. Moreover. I had begun' that tight without any idea of what glove fighting in a ring meant.' and by this time I had learned something. I be gan forcing my way In. walking stead ily toward Griffin and making him back away as be jabbed at me. 1 straightened up a little and let him have a good opening for my cbin. It was a chance for the right. Griffln. grinning a little, shot the right over I bobbed In enough to let the blow Slip around my neck and Jammed my left fist into his stomach. He Just dropped in a heap and curled up like a lenf. The flgbt was over The ref otim1 counted his ten: he 'onld have counted a hundred All the boys were slapping me on the back and telling 'me 1 was a wonder Proof Against Wasp Stings. A Scottish naturalist in a paper on the habits of wasps tells how a black bird will stand at the side of a hang ing wasps' nest and deliberately tear It In pieces In order to get at the lar vae, apparently undisturbed by the swarm of angry Insects, whose vicious stings instantly put to flight the hu man curiosity seeker who ventures Bar to wnteh the demolition. Manchuria. Manchuria's area is slightly greatei than' that of the combined states of Iowa, Minnesota, North. Oakota, South Dakota and .. Nebraska, or tbe total area devoted annually to corn, wheat cotton, oats and barley in the Unite? States. . , ( Industry. It Is not nougb to be industrious. So are tbe ants. What are you indus trious about v Thoreau. Evening Up. "Were you ever in a holdup?" "No, but I've taken part in a show down." New York Journal. AXTEL HEIGHTS SALE! Choice Sightly Lots..... Easy Terms :: :: Bed Rock Prices Now on Sale on grounds, 17th and Van Dorn streets, 6 blocks South of 17th and South streets. These lots are only four blocks from some of the best homes in the city where lots are selling f.iom $1500 to $1800. A high sightly spot overlooking the entire city and in direct line of development of the very best part of the same. i TERMS : $10 down and $1.00 per week. No interest, no payment when sick or out , of work free deed, free abstract title guaranteed. , PRICES -The prices on these beautiful lota will range from $50 to $350. A few highr. Come to our office and we will take you to the grounds and show you some bargains. Free car tickets at our office. Salesmen on grounds during day and evening. For full particulars call on or phone STAR REAL ESTATE COMPANY 'a s s 303 FUNKE BUILDING ARE A HEN . Get wise, Mr. Business Man, and do your cackling in THE WAGEWORKER 1705 O Street Auto Phone 2748 BOILERMAKERS STILL STICK. The Burlington's Bluffy Didn't 8 tart a ' Rivet in Strikers' Ranks The iBujrlington management has another guess coming. It guessed that if it issued notice that all strikers who failed to report for work .before June 6 would be forever barred, It would be rushed toy strikers anxious to get back. It didn't phase the strik ers, for not a man went back. "What's more, none of us are going back," said President Jonas in dis cussing the notice. "We are out to stay out unless our demands for sim ple Justice are recognized." The "scabs" continue to come ind go, and despite the most strenuous of forts the management can not keep a full sized force at work. As a result men in other department are being laid off at intervals, waiting for the boilr.r shop force to catch up. Tha strikers meet every day, and the bene fits are paid with pleasing regularity. Nor is the international bearing ad the burden. The local is giving a ser ies of social functions and makes good money while enjoying pleasant hours with their ...many friends. , THE ELECTRICAL WORKERS. District Council Meeting at Cedar Rapids a Successful Affair. O. M. Rudy was in Cedar Rapids last week representing the Llncnn Electrical Workers ' in the district council convention held there. He reports the meeting a splendid suc cess, and he can not say too much in praise of the entertainment put up by the local Electrical Workers, and the other unionists of that city. The mayor and city council took a big part in the entertainment, taking the delegates and visitors on an auto ride about town and giving them the freedom of the municipality. The vol ume of business transacted" was large. The district Jurisdiction was extend ed by taking in four other states heretofore controlled by the McNulty Colllns bunch of skates, and the whole situation cleared up in a highly satis factory manner. General Secretary Murphy attended the meeting and told an interestng story of the progress made by the "Reid's." A. L. ' UrIc'K, president of the Iowa State Federa tion of Labor and "Reld" representa tive on the arbitration board,' ex 00 OR A DUCK? ,TTA duck which stuck faithfully to busi yJI ness during the Summer and 'laid TU - several dozens of large fawn-colored eggs, complained that she wasn't appreciated. "See that Hen over there?" said the Duck. "She hasn't laid as many eggs as I have, nor as big, but she has books written about her and verses-composed in her honor, while nobody is saying a word about me." , TT n The trouble with you is, " said the J J wise old Rooster standing near, that JJ you don't tell the public what you have done. You lay an egg and waddle off without saying a word, but that sister of mine never lays one without letting everyone in the neighborhood know about it If you want to cut any ice in the com munity, you must learn to Advertise." plained in detail the progress of t'.e work to date. The Cedar Rapids Tri bune has this to say of - Lincoln's delegate, Mr. Rudy: ! "O. M. Rudy of Lincoln, Neb., told us of the methods adopted in raising $20,000 to purchase the labor temple in that city. He is most enthusiastic in the advocacy of such affairs r,nd gave good, logical reasons as to why they should be attempted in every city of twenty thousand and upwards." W. L. Mayer pf Lincoln, secretary treasurer of the district council, also attended the meeting; ; , - SQUARED THE BALL TEAM. Cincinnati Unionists Won By 8tlcklng to Their Little Fight. : From the beginning of the Ameri can League season the union men of Cincinnati have had the boycott on the Cincinnati team because the man agement failed to play square with organized labor. The managemen'ttrled to make it appear that tbe boycott was benefit, just as Jim" VanCleave of the Buck outfit did. But the Cincin nati unionists called that bluff. Cin cinnati unionists love baseball as much, perhaps, as the unionists of other cities, but they didn't love it well enough to. sidetrack, their union ism, and they put up a fight that .won. Last Tuesday tbe Cincinnati manage ment capitulated and signed an agree ment that shows a signal victory for the unionists. The. agreement provides ; that all contracts for tearing down construc tion, or repairs of parks shall contain a elapse requiring the employment of union labor exclusively and all print ed matter shall bear the union label. All cigars and tobacco sold within tha park must also bear the union label. Further, the agreement, . provides that on some Sunday duriqg the sea son the Cleveland club most play an exhibition game , with another Ameri can league club and the proceeds to be devoted to a charity to be desig nated by the Cleveland building trades council. r t ' Cincinnati Typographical Union did not back up .on Its boycott, and as a result even the Cincinnati score cards will bear the label of the Allied Printing Trades hereafter. Always on Tap. While there's life there's dope. Chi cago Record-Herald. t