4S THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MARCH ill, 1915. MICHAEL GIBBONS IS CHAMP St Paul Phantom It Leading Light in Middleweight Circlet, Says Expert Bingsid. AX M COY HAS NARY A 'CLAIM Br mwGamrc. NEW TOHK, March SO. TIn.IT, fight fan. the new middleweight champion of the worl.l Michael Gibbons of St. Paul. Minn. Oibbors la hereby award by ec tlsmallen the title which ha been In ibo ranee ever since dashing Stanley Ketrhel met lila untimely end atthe hands of an assassin. There have been claimant! and coun ter claimant of the much abused mid dleweight championship, but none ha the rlvrt hold on the diadem that Michael . Gibbons possesses. Without the aid of a voluble manager, Glbbona ha managed to flaht hi way to the apes of the mid dleweight ladder: and now he la the soli tary ocenj-ant of the topmoat runs;. tesplt piotestatlons from Al (Rudolph) McCoy, or hia loquacious manager. Dan Morgsn. we herewith award the palm to Glhhons; and It will take an elastic Imagination tn show cause why Olbboaa should not be proclaimed king of the middleweight. The division has been In muddle since Kotchel' demise, and for the first time a clear, unobstructed path la risible with Mike Glbbona alone promenading down that path. Pcveral month ago there were quite a number of joung men' eligible for the l.V-poiiod championship, although even at that time Gibbon appeared to have 4 sinecure on that honor. Jimmy Clabby, i;Klle .McGoorty. Jack Dillon. YoUntf Ahearn. George Chip, and even poor mis guided Al McCoy were loud In their de nunciation of those who dared look upon Mike Gibbon a the peer of middle weights. Now we will proceed to unravel the skein of event that has earned for Olb bon an undisputed hold on the title. First we shall eliminate Al MoCoy, who by stetdfastly refusing to fight auto matically put himself out of ths running, although he has to his credit a one-punch knockout of George Chip. Fight fans were willing enough to uphold McCoy tn his contention that he should be acknowl edged the legitimate champion, but Me Coy gave hia adherents no support or basis for argument as he was unwilling to rngnge -In a real battle. lias W Claim. On past performance, aside from the Chip Incident, McCoy has no" claim to prestige. He takes an unmerciful lacing for ten ' rounds at the hands of Mlks Gibbons, who could have put out McCoy at any moment had he been so Inclined. o' exit, 'Mr. McCoy. Jack Dillon and yoursg Ahearn must next he considered, and they can be dis missed In a few simple words. Both have outgrown the middleweight poundage of 1JS pounds ringside, and thus end their pretention to the title. It Is doubtful If either could make the scales quiver at US pounds at any time, of the day of cham pionship fight '. True. Dillon and Ahearn were seriously considered as middleweight championship icib!ittins, but that was a few months back, before they graduated Into the light havywe!ght class. That leave Chip, Clabby and MoOoorty and Gibbons. When the field was left open to thla formidable trio It wa aug gested that a round robin of bout be arranged, the ultimata winner to be ad' Judged the champion. At the time thla movement was In the Incubation stage. c tabby was believed to have the best claim to the 'middle" crown. , flo a battle was clinched between ' Oibbons and Clabby. Clabby ' ray. Ring loro tells us that Gibons "took" flabby over the ten-round rout at a pace tl.at made even the ailt-o'-the-wUp Jimmy gasp for breath. Glbbona held nothing In reserve and trounced Clabby so severely that there was no discussion over the winner. - Kddie MtOoorty was nowthe only ob . alacle t;i Gibbons' headlong rush toward the championship goal. Besides ' being icerely an opponent In the tlnaOnalch of the elimination. McQoorty was an arch enemy to the phantom Gibbons. For two year a newspaper defeat by McOoorty right hereln New Tork rankled In Mike' mind. The latter claimed he was li at the time of his Gotham meeting, and here was his long-awaited opportunity to prove to a fickle populace that he was telling the truth. Huff loo it to ssy that Mike vindicated Mmself In a manner that left no doubt In the minds of even the skeptics. He whaled the "Oshkoh Whale" In very on of the ten round they battled at Hudson. Wis., a fortnight ago. Mot one man at the ringside could even claim a draw for McGoorty, so complete was Mike's revenge. Now, gentle reader, can you suggest snyone le Gibbons must defeat in or der to have a clear,' undisputed riitht to the middleweight championship of the world? We trust this explicit explanation settle the middleweight problem that has been perturbing rutlo followers for these many years. Rube Marquard andr Perritt in Mutual Admiration Society Poll Perritt went to Marlln Springs a stranger, but already h ha been able to make common cause with oae of the Giants. Some well wisher sent Poll a flipping from a tit. Louis paper la which richuyier Brtttoa, owner of tb Cardinals, aa quoted as saying: "J would not havs Perritt on my tear gain under any circumstances. Me made more trouble for me than any player J mity of opinion today among physician 1 ever owned Moreover. I wish to deny who hav had long experience In ex the tumor that the Bt. Louis club has amlnlng college athletes seems to be that " an ner ior ituo Marquard. We do not aant Marquard.' He Is a 'nut.'" Perritt and Marqunrd, oa reading the flipping, framed a set or resolutions oon- emlng the life of Schuyler Brtttoa, past present and future, his character, ability and disposition, nd passed It uaaui inoualy. ALEXANDEffsiGNST HEAVE FOR P1TTSFIELD . Raymond J. Alexander, brother of Clover C. .Alexander, lias signed to beavs for the PittsfWid club of the Eastern stsorlatloB this year. Raymond tried out with Omaha last year, tut failed te de liver the guods. and the same acourred Grand Island. Grover. howevar. took i:e kid to Philadelphia, and be was sent to Fyrai'use, wlter he did lalrly well, and I'iiisfkld AXiKict him to b a star. Ray iiKr.d is at present at Bt. Paul, Neb., the buiite (f te Alexander family.' jMENKE WRITES OF GOLF GAME Bate Ball Expert's Thought Tarn to the Links and He Relate, a Few Incident!. RETIYXS PUTTING AEGUMUJT RyYflAWK a. ME.1KK, Alma Whltaker. a Los Angeles golfing expert, favors looking at the cup Instead of the ball when putting on the green. "When one throws a brick at a yowling cat one looks at the cat not the brick," remarks Miss Whltaker. High to! Continuing In her argument that folks mho look at the ball when putting are doing things backward. Mis. Whltaker ays: "When you p'ay croquet you look at the hoop not the ball. When you sew a but ton on a shirt you don't look at the needle. Tou look at the hole In the but ton. When you bowl you look at the pin not the hall. "o why?" ask Miss Whttakev. "should one reverse the general order In golfing? Why should one do the backward thing In golfing? The thing to look at Is the goal not the Instrument that la to take you to the goal." Mis Whltaker' logic seems to u the best that ever has been offered as an en swer to the mooted ' question In golf: "Should one look at the ball or ths hole when putting?" The Worat Ciolf goo re. The worst golf score? Well, three fel lows played a match game on the Garden City iN. Y.) links last year during a tournament of the 'Carpet Trade Oolf association and If the score's they turned In aren't of a record nature, show' ua worse ones. The "best'' golfer of the three nego tiated the eighteen holes In 178; the next best toiik Ul swats at the ball while the third "blew" himself to 2M swings. Mere Is the record of golfer No. 1. tha fellow who hung up the record: . I11 ---l-fl-n-l-l7-1.1o-1!S In , -W-22-21-IA-1IUu'm!-i When the trio of player turned In their score to the secretary that official looked at the cards, gasped, and then exclaimed: nay, tell tna. how were vnu . faiim able to keep track of all your shots?" Oh, there wasn't anvthlna- har .h.t that." answered the B man. "We didn't have to count any higher than thlrtwna at any one hole." One on the Preside. A golfer, writing to th Golfers' Ma.. xlne say that once un i. w golfing with several member of the house of representatives when President Wilson caught up with the congressional foursome. The congressmen Invited tv-laon through ploase." whereupon Wilson said I feel some diffidence m driving through so many members of ths house." un oi the. eongresmen retorted: "Mr. President, aren't yon accustomed to driving through the House?" Wilson looked sharply at hia ques- mn- addressed Ms ball. But nis snouiaera hook with laughter. How to Treat a. FmAA-m. Oeorg Maxey, a veteran caddy, writ ing a pertinent article concerning ths re lationship of golfer to caddy In the Ool fer' Magaxlne, ssy n part: "In eight year' experience a a caddy Z have, noticed on thing which often pussies club members. One man will wae a rmnav ana alter tha vama win, renort him -a .... v. . . ' " . day on. of hi. f.Mo; m.mbrwTa Zl the am boy and report blm as being . - .. '"Jrv oini a lng wm ior nomuig. "Tha reason Is that the flr-a- man treated the boy well, took him Into tha game, as It were, asked hi advice and did not abuse him If b carried It out badly. The second man . started out wrong, exTluded the boy tjym the game, blamed blm for bad shots, etc. The first man may have started out with Oood morning, son. The second prob ably started out with "Where' my kid?' "The caddy I human and nothing hi employer says or doe escapee, hint. The lrat man had the caddy tm his side from the start. ' The second man aroused hi antagonism with hi opening remark. The best golf is secured only with the whole hesrted assistance of the caddy. "Th caddy can do more to Injure your game than any one other' cause. If he I against you, it were' better not to play, for the thing he can devise,, to annoy you are many." Hard Training of College Athlete is Not Detrimental ITHACA. N. T.. March la-Assuming' that the college student who enters ath letic makes a proper selection of the sport In which he wishes to engage, fol low rational method of training and la subjected to adequate medical super vision there Is no reason to fear for tha effects of college sports on the average student, according to Director CV V. P. Toung, head of the department of physi cal training at Cornell university. He "Widespread discussion Is aroused Just now won th question:' What are the ef fects of training on the college athlete In after Ufa? And a multitude of men with practical experience In this line differ widely tn their opinion on the sub ject. : Dr. Sargent of Harvard says the number of distinguished athletes, who die from th Infectlou diseases will al ways raise the question as to whether the prolonged strain to which they have frequently been subjected has not les sened la soms measure their powers of resistance galnt disease, while on the other hand Dr. Anderson of Yale submit data covering fifty years, which show that tha Tale athlete does not die young, but on tha contrary is pronounced by actuaries of tnsuranoe compantea who have examined th data a safer risk than the nonathlete. The general una.nl under proper condition 'and with proper training, participation tn college athlete 1 of benefit to th college man." , Another Mob Enters Army of Unemployed . The dissolution at tha Atlantlo league mean that about . 11$ player will be turned loos oa . ths . base ball market Tb organUattofi developed several play era last aeaaea who showed promise. Auong these were Beatty of Pough keep!,' who Is now' at Marlln with the -a ho I also with McGraw. HIU Tan.in of Neaburg -has gons south with tue Yankees, and also Aragon of Long rtranch, abo led the.kague la hitting with an average of .441 RomanaLii, the Cuban shortstop, who once signed with th Hrooklyn club, aaa a member of th Long branch club, Roger Bresnahan and Jimmy Lavender at - f vBRESNAHAN J I I fit ' t:''' i- 4'" - -til 'rp-'i'v . .i Ill -:l-:$m?r v TAMPA, Fla.. March 20. The Chicago National league base ball club Is here for spring practice and all the regulars and a flook of recruits are working out daily. As usual the Cub are chock full of optimism and feel aura they will give the Bsave a run for the pennant. Neither JUMPING KOTjA NEW SPORT Most Reliable Figure in Base Ball Were Leapen in War Fif- teen Tears Ago FEDERAL RAIDS ARE MILD NEW T0RK. March Jtt.-In these days of spirited controversy between Organ ised Ball and the Federal league over th supposedly unpardonable, crime of Jumping contracts. It Is only neceaaary to I hark back fifteen years to learn that r " " . - afima Af tha IMAat Mnllfihla SniMa In tha some oi me mosx r f0rCM 0t ""'"J Venr Be' Wh -W BOt fOW,, OB Mr Uch nracnttMna at hnt lima. Tha nanaltv al. proceeding at that time. The penalty at tached to deserting I heavily dwelt, upon In the present day wrangle, but, never theless, many of ths biggest stars In the National and American leagues showed no backwardness aboilt leaping to the American league when It waa formed. Those who Jumped the National league and landed very safely Include Nap La- Jole. new with the Athletic; Bobby .Wal lace of th Browns; VBIII Donovan, now manager of th Yankee ; Jimmy Calla han, formerly manager of the White Box; Jimmy Collin of th old Boston Amer icana; Bill Plneen. who Is now an umpire; Doc White, formerly the southpaw of the White Sox, and msny others. The presont raid of the Federal on Organised Ball I not nearly so sweeping us the raid which weakened the ranks of the National league la 1901, 190S and 1903. In those three years, the National league lost no less than 133 of their players. In cluding ths greatest of their stare. Tha Brooklyn club was the heaviest loeer, . twenty-three players deserting. Prominent among the Jumpers from Brooklyn 'waa Pave Fults, the present hesd of tse Players' fraternity, who waa recalled from Milwaukee during the bas ball war. but Ignored the call and Jumped to I ha Philadelphia Athletics. Willie Keeler was another and ao was Fielder Jones, 'who ts managing the St " Louis Feds. The Plilllloa suffered a severe blow In 1901 when "Kd" Delehenty, Klmer Flick, Monte Cross. "Red" Donahue and "Al" Orth all made the leap. Harry Wolverton', a former manager of the Yankees, also Jumped at this time. Quite a bunch also Jumped the Giants at that time Including Mlk ' Grady. "Vruile"' Mercer.' ' "CV" fieymour and' "Kid ", Gleason. ' George Davis, the manager, also skipped out, but Jumped back the following year. " l Ne less a 'figure than Christy Mathew son also took' the Jiunsx In May of 1903, "Matty" and Dummy Taylor. 8ammy Strang' and: Frank: Bowsrman, who had Jumped 'the ' OlanU, 'ail returned Th Yankee la 'the' war - got two 'of Pitts- j hurgh'a best player when Jimmy Wil liam :and Jack t'neabro . Jumped the , Pirates. ; J I : i . ' . i , ' So It can readily be seen that tumrtng contracts Is ne ' new accomplishment of i ball players, including the beat and the worst of them.' " ' ' ' li - TWO, HAWAIIAN TEAMS ARE TO INVADEJJNITED STATES Turn about 1 fair play 'and ball team from th mainland, having ' visited .the Hawaiian Island !aM winter, now the Hawaiian are going to do. a bit of tour ing themselves. a letter from .J,.' D. Iastoa or it Ho, Hawaii, state that , a team of Chines player will make a trip to th Philippine and Japan, leaving Honolulu oa April 1 Another team of part Chines and part Hawaiian already has left Honolulu for a tour of th state and Cuba It sailed from Honolulu on March i. Baca team, one going wt aad th et.hr coming ast,' will hav traveled something like 0.oo miles , before th completion of Its tour. . . , i ,s Mr. Esston gives a tip t Pitch A ten Desha, on th team that will tur the state and Cuba. II ' this t wirier la all to th good and that th major leagus i ,,,uk ,n,t ia not hln whUa-h U lu th tate will be missing an oppor tunity to land something worth while. olltaa Slaas.. . Jim 8l,ertdan. who was captain J ths Niagara utitvrrsilv ball trii it, at year mi, a It s'.a- tlli lit r. has br-ii l,nixl by ti New Haves tiuU of lha llaaUra aaao- l claUoo. tha Cub nor th Braves seem to fear McGraw's team, according to statement of th player. The photograph shows Roger Bresna han, on time manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, now the chief recolver for the Cub. He 1 coaching youngster In TRIPLE ALLIANCE IS FORMED Tale, Harvard and Princeton Enter . Into Athletic Understanding Between Themselves. . DECIDE Ali CHAMPIONSHIPS NEW HAVBN. March 20.-A triple un derstanding In allVhranchcs of sport by Tale, Harvard and VPrlneeton la at hand. The signing of a formal agreement by the three for a series of nine games to settle the triple bsse ball championship and the continued conferences of the captains of the three elevens of the universities are surface Indications of the movement that has been quietly In progress for several years.-furthered by Yale, 'for at least, a general understanding between the three In VII branches of the sport. In track athletics snd rowing th trlpl entente I not in operation. Yale meet both It rival cn the track and would be glad for them to meet each other, but Harvard and Princeton have no arrange ment for- such contests. Princeton has not yet come in to the Tale-Harvard an nual rowing regatta on the T"VYes, hut may do so at any tlmo. Yale meet Princeton and Harvard both on the water annually, out there la no movement or the part of Princeton to arrange a dual tnw race with. Harvard. Officials of the Princeton Navy and Athletic association have assured Yale rowing men that the Tigers were likely before long to come into the Yale-Harvard annual raeea at New London. When the results of the series of in formal foot ball conference between Yale, Harvard and Princeton are an nounced It I expected that progress to ward a much more complete understand ing of gridiron matters of mutual interest will be shown. The Informal talks of Captain Wilson of Yale, Mahan of Har vard and Ollck of Princeton wilt be pro jected Into the business of the general athletlo committees of the three uni versities during the remainder of the school year. . The agreement for a definite aerie of nine base, ball gamea has completed an other project suggested by Yale, similar to that proposed by Coach Frank Wulnby of the Ell bas ball team last year, which ha resulted in a formal agreement of the three universale for the cqacbe of their. base ball nine to remain off th player' benches during a game, for th piirpoae of proving th. contest to be a .genuine, battle of- the undergraduate players and captains.' The agreement for playing nine definite games, without regard to the results of ne -inaitiauaj - series, between sny two of the three university teams, is regarded mm inw mow radical step that hae been taken, la 'college sport In the east this year.- Yale.- Harvard and Princeton call their games, played against one another. their "championship" matches. Tbara will be a genuine Vhatnpioh''- chosen this year for the first time smong the three rivals, for . the percentage leader In the series of nine game played will be' the x-rca ui nun iKnei Finyea win oe the holder? of a clean title to champlonahip .For years Yale, Harvard and Princeton have played base ball w ltnout ' a wiMin to championship hohora ' Last year, tor Instanoe. Yal defeated 'Harvard,. Har vard easily beat Princeton, yet Princeton neatly, trimmed Yale. leaving honors easy all around. Although eaeh of th three old rivals-may win' three of th scheduled games of. th sextos this year snd a championship may be ag.in' Im possible, ehaucea are against, any such outcome 'of the -advent of the', new triangular entente of Yale, 'Harvard and Princeton. - ., , . Irish Champ and ; . Turk Terrier to ' Battle at Krug . Pat Conlay. one of th several slU-ged irlah champions who hav hit thae parts, la carded to. wrestle Youslff llussan at th Krug theater Wednesday night. Ooa ley t under th management of Tommy Dixon and Tommy wear Pat la the oa jnitliial Hibernian champ. Pat wrestled Coniey in "Kansas City earlier in th inter and a dumped. Cubs' TrainingCamp the Cub camp In the art cf catching and base running. Jimmy lavender, the Cub pitcher who twirled the day Chicago broke Rube Mar iuard' winning streak a couple of years sgo. Is with the team, and feeling fit for a good season. PLAYERS PAY INCOME TAX Estimated that 300 Players Will Pay Into the Revenue Office " , Some $5,000- v SPEAKER IS HARDEST HIT ... s NEW TORK, March 30. Though the government U having a tough time get ting at th facta, professional ball player will pay Into the Internal revenue depart ment this year something like $5,000 tn I? come tax. But for the fact that (0 per cent of th players in the American, National and Federal leagues are married and i are thereby permitted to claim an exemption of 14.006 in salary, the sum exacted by the government would be considerably larger. From the best Information the experts. have been able to obtain there are In the three league mentioned about 300 play ers who receive more than' 13,000 a year. This really means six months, as that Is the length of th contracts. What they earn during the other six months also has to ba accounted for, but In most esses It ts nothing. . , Of these 300 there are about 200 who earn more than $4,000. There are close to 100 who draw more than tS.000 and fifty whose , contracts call for amounts ranging between 16,000 and $10,000. . There are leas than a dosen who make more than ..that The notable ones . are Ty Cobb, Trls Speaker, Eddie Collins, Wal ter Johnson and a few managers. Mo raw Is reputed to make 128,000 In salary. The playr who take part In a world' aerie are required to put that amount in with their salaries, whloh make it cer tain that every man on a championship club has to pay Income tax. . In making out'thelr statements the ball players,' or the club secretaries who do the work for them, have raised an Inter esting question that may require a de cision by ths government before It can be settled definitely. Instead of a reserve clause th con tracts now hare one. which declares that one-fourth of the salary- stipulated shall be considered payment .fqr. an option on their services for the following year. For Instance, a player whose contract calls for $1,000 doe not get that, amount In actual salary. One thousand ' dollar of it I an option on his. future service. Th player,' therefore wants to know whether . he shall turn , in a statement aaylng that hi salary la K000 or $3,000. If he puts In the latter figure Is he to include 'the option price as a part of his Income T "I- The married players are congratulating theenaelve In that they have $4,000 ex- empt, while the single, men hav to pay a ti on all they make aver $3,000. of th'-ee bachelor Trls Speaker Is th hard est, hit . He earns a aalary of $lt.Ooa and must pay tax on $12,000, which amount to. rtjo. . ; :. rn t TM ' V j J, QQniS JTlayerS HI Sioux City.Reyive ' Tri-Statb Toiirney OwJg to. the fact that the Omaha Field club ha announced .no big,. tennis tour naments will be held on the -courts hsre. Bloux City, tenol: enthusiast hav de cided to revive the .Trt-State Tennis as sociation, j which held tournaments at -Wioux city several year age.. Th Tri- Stat association weut to. . pieces four years ago .when Omaha . went after the national ciay court .event. - t . . Already eloux City man hav reorgan ised the association and hav applied to th rotted. 8tates Lawn Tennis associa te for date during th first or second eC In Augjuat. , The 'siame wU be changed at the nest meeting- Ttanie club la Iowa, Nebraska aad Ho nth Dakota will form the association. Hn vital ions to the competition . hv al ready been sent out and. received by th promluen tennis playes ( Omaba. Uet BIt Heeralta, Washington has aooi big men among t's ret-ruita. Maaeey and Hrowaa. the ynuasstera from Texas. tts tha beam at h aad Imi pounds, respectively. The. Hypodermic Needle ( tmr r. X.UCI as we . When we take our little mill In lmnd' to batter out a line. Which we think Is to the mustard snd would be considered fine. We are sure to find we bungled, that we pulled an awful bone. For some nut Is sure to holler thst we're made of solid stone. If We say the Rourkes are rotten, or If we say they're swell. We stilr surely have some rookie' say go ring the other bell; ' I 1 If we put a knock to boxing, or give the game a boost, ' You can 'gamble that they'll tell ua to take another roost. ' If we" kid the game of billiards, or bang a wreetllnar bout. ' Or speak of golf or tennis, or give chess a hammer clout, s Or If We ssy some nice thing about any ono of those. There Is always some bright chappie who , will call them boner blows. L'Cnvol. So you see why we're so happy when they carv us with a knife; Oh, Uere always will be someone to take the Joy fill ont of life. One . would take It that the war In Eu rope has so turned the world around that those southern ,base ball training camps have taken the place of Alaska In this world. ' r Connie Mack say he wants young men on .his. team. Probably the reason he sold Collins snd took Lajole. But at thst we think Connie said Iron men, not young men.J South Omsha and Hastings are fighting over who should IKs given third honors in the recent state basket ball tourney, showing bow easy It Is to .start a fight lit mused a ft'ny h'de putt, And only hollered $hu kt! H viili neur muAr a golfer. That, vx'U bet a tAowtand bvek$. Mr. ' Eddie Collin I teaching the White Sox to hesitate. Rowland had bet ter be careful or the Ho will become o proficient they will hesitate around last place even after th dance change again. v It seems that Judge Landlshas a rival for th honor of being tb slowest man in base ball. Judge Baldwin ha entered the race. . ( . If. la Mr. Barnum aald, there . Is one born every minute in the United State, how. . many are born every minute In Cuba? Bob Fltxsimmon says he Is going to Home Run King Is Only After More of Coin in Base Ball NEW YORK, March 20. When Connie Mack several weeks ago announced that J. Frank Baker would not play , with th Athletics again ha showed a letter tram tha home run king, who wrote that ha had grown tired of traveling with tha ball club and had decided to remain In retire ment ' on his Maryland farm. Mack de clared that Baker waa not trying to se cure a rats In aalary and that tha big batsman was under 'an Ironclad contract for two year more. It now appears, however, that Baker Is not really tired of the game, for he openly admits that be wants more money. - ' "I will play with any club in Organised Base Ball that meet' my demands, pro vided, of course,' my release from the Athletic can be purchased," says Baker. "If Mack will raise my salary I will re turn to the Athletic at onoa, for I would rather play for Mack than for any other manager I know. I'd' be glad to sign with the Yankees if Mack vould let . me go, for I believe ' I ' could get a salary tn New York that would make It worth' while to keep in the gome. If Mack refuses to raise jsy pay and will not sell my release I will remain Idle all season.' Offers from the Federal league will not Induce me to jump my contract for 1915 and 1S1 with tha Athletics." In spite of atatementa to the- contrary, tha Yankee have not given up th Idea of purchasing Baker's release. -Colonel Ruppert and Captain Huston stand ready to pay $26,000 In cash for the horn run king. Mack still demands $0,000, but thee figure. are prohibitive. HAMILTON EXPECTS TO , LEAD SOUTHPAWS AGAIN ' Pitcher Earl Hamilton of tha St Louis Browns has been playing hand ball to oopvlnoa himself and Manager Rickey that the shoulder ha broke last fall is all right There appears to be nothing wrong with It and If Hamilton's disposition Im proves, aa he says) it will, tha Kansaa southpaw may again take his ' place among th stars of ths American league. The a ' Made In For 79 years NT) nas oeen aistmea in me oia- fashioned way it s acknorw lodged to be the only method by which highest duality ' can be . tttiaea. ii hi ' ii in in i i hi arrfirm: marry again. We take It Robert k gain to enter the fight game again. There is unquestionably a shortage t4 kale In these parts at this time, and yet ordinarily normal ginks pay real money to see a wrestling match. IW DETROIT. Whene'er ve need a hit wis, We know that Tyrwe Cobb Is Jnst the little boy to da I That tender little Job. Bat even thoasrh he fnlleth da And falleth with m slam. We merely take another diilk, , And wait for Wahoo Bam. Top' : , '? A subscriber write to inqulr If wd know any remedy for a blind pig. ' W4 refer him to Chief Dunn or Steve- Ma4 loney. ' - t Chicago scribes soem to think Ed WalsB will come back. Yeh, come, back to ChU cago. . , ; Pa Rourke Is said to have a line out fot! Injunction nd Habeas Corpus, th stai battery. j - "All that we must do," says a Missouri gent trying to revive horse racing, "U eliminate the gambling element." The, Missouri gent might Just as well try td eliminate C. Webb Murphy from' base; ball or the hole from the well knows doughnut 'I wonldn't'don a base ball salt," Quoth merry Johnay Kilns;, "Unless I'd get five thousand hark Or some such little, thing." Bat we have rot a hssch, old top, 1 That yoa will mis your halt, For if yea wait for that anach colaj Toa're la for a helava wait. Willie Beecher accuses John th Barbe.Y his manager, of holding out SO per cent of the gross earnings. We take It that fight managars, like base bail and trust magnates, are in the game for thelg health. They are framing a match between Freddie Welsh and Battling Nelson at Havana, but we think the proper plac would be-in Forest Lawn. Boxing critics throughout the east &r panning Freddie Welsh for fighting ten round no-decision fights. But why not pan the public which attends and encour ages 'em by so doing? ' sad Words "The government ha hit m aa awful tilling blow, It's ruined mer supremely, and I am iovi and out; I am a poor press agent for th newest big white hope. But I can write no more of him, they've copped away my dope." A!! Germs Ordered : To Beat i Gitl ' . ' , v ' . . - Searching Influence : cf q Remedy That Work i Wonders. , Th Introduction of B. 8. 8. la at one a command to blood Impurities to fin a wsy out And what are blood Impurities? The may be the hypersecretions found In th mucous linings of the body: they ma be acid accumulations known aa rhsu mat Ism; they may be bolls, pimples, ee sema, aons and stubborn. Indolent sorsi But examined closely, they ar al germs that hav gotten tha upner ban and It requires the flushing Influence oi b. b. 8. to drive tbem out And out the go when 8. 8. & begin to circulat I: the blood. It only require five minute to begin thl Influence, for It la a fa that lir-Jhla limited time a 8. 8. may ba traced I iv th urine, in the perspiration In the effloresenc from th lungs to) snow max u is at wora. uernm, mind you, are of various kinds, but all art foreign to health and & 8, & ts no re specter of destructive germs. It drivel them all out cf whatsoever name the) go by. Just get a bottl of 8. 8. ?. al any druggist and aoon you will obaarvh a decided change. And if yours 1 i stubborn case, write to the Medical Ail vtaer, car of Th 8wlft Bpeclflo Co.. 10T Bwlft Bldg., Atlanta, Oa. Ha is a rrulail physician, proud of his nam by virtu oi his distinguished family and la reog3 nixed as- a foremost physician on bis) own merit I 1 Whiskey of , a-.-- -.J ft.... 11 the Heart of te Blue Grass Country this famous Bottled in Bond whiskey in small tub. "Quality Tells" It's hand made, sour mash Kentucky whiskey. Men of critical taste have always pre- lerrea ii me QUBiity Has been t supreme for three genera- U j is sold everywhere, because demanded everywhere. BOND tiLLARD . DISTRIBUTING CO. Pi"- UwrasaMlajra, Kg. ... Wm CHfic 4'S-41T Mm StrmmL. ' Csv.sia, 111 i r f 1 ill! Wm