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The Gazette from Montreal, Quebec, Canada • 12

Publication:
The Gazettei
Location:
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1L' THE GAZETTE, MONTREAL. WEDNESDAY, JULY 1928. VOL. CLVII. Wo.

171 meeting with Rov. until ha uArm. tunately struck a low blow and was Gazettes to Issue Fight WESTERN OPEN GOLF TITLE TO MCGRATH KID ROY AND FOLEY TO BATTLE TONIGHT umquHiiriea. i-ie win not' nr without followers in his flirht tnnicht HEENEY TRAINS INDOORS Commences Last Eight-Day Spurt of Stiff. Workouts Falrhaven, N.J., July 17.

With a scorching sun burning down on the RESCUE OF MISSING SIX OF ITALIA'S CREW NOW PLANNED Since fighting Roy, Foley made a wonderful Hhowlng sgainst th world's shamplon, Canzoneri, and Ui CANADIAN ATHLETES NEARING ENGLAND Daily Training for Olympic Team During Calm Atlantic Crossing 77's and stamped him as a real threat for the western Canada amateur crown, match 'play, which will get, under way tomorrow morn-lnp. H. Shaw, Kdmonton, was the runner-up for the amateur medal qualifying In par figures for tho greater part of the round todny for a 75. Joe Land, Winnipeg, professional, shared fifth place in the open championship standing with Shaw. His total of 155 was boosted materially by a failure to capitalize his opportunities around the greens.

Stanley Thompson, ff Toronto, the anxious io get anotner chance at th Italian lad. The third mnn In iha tHo- t. old barn housing the Indoor ring, Tom Heeney launched his Intensive right has not been announced by training drive today for his world's Extra Tonight The Gazette will issue a fight extra immediately after the result of the Roy-Foley bout is known tonight. The fighters are scheduled to enter the ring about 10.30, and the result should be known by 11.30. Moose Jaw Professional Had Total of 150 Tie for Runner-up Position heavyweight championship match Champion and Challenger Will Go Into Ring Equal Choices; Sanstol Boxes Holliday mo Montreal Hoxlng Commission, but it was rumored around town with Gene Tunney in New York week from Thursday night.

yesterday that Rert Light, one time fin amateur champion, would re- The challenger started his last eight days of training by working only far eastern competitor in the' Such a choice wnnld a Icebreaker Krassin to Establish Bases for Scouting Aviators SEARCH FOR AMUNDSEN" lar one with the local fight enthu incioors, in the heat of mid-afternoon, after boxing four nights in his outdoor ring. He traded punches siasts, as Light is well thought as an offlc'al. He has a. nice style in the ring and trond mmmi wan. two new sparring partners, James J.

Braddock, a Jersey City 170-pounder, and James J. Lawless, tourney, was around In a steady 78 for a total of 159. From the other extreme of the Dominion, C. H. Perkins, of Vancouver, met with much grief and blasted his hopes of championship.

LIKES TUNNEY'S FORM 4 the boxers. The judges will not be a Harrison, is.j., heavyweight. Heeney's handlers imparted the might care to comment, on the tenor of the British not is not Not much time is available for such observations, however, it is pointed DECREASE IN SEIZURES announced until just before tho fighters enter the ring. An effcr will he made to have the principals in the feature event start by 10 o'clock, whlnh information that he was starting to neeome a little cranky and irritable. the old-timers always regard this as cua uir the public to get away from the a sure sign that a fighter le getting Maligin Delayed by Ice and Storm Feeling Against Nobile Grows in Norway on edge.

The objective of the uiuiu aL a mucn eailer hour than usual. training from now on will be to de (Canadian Press Cable) London, July I7.r-The Canadian athletes now on board the Steamer Albertio en route to Southampton and the Olympic games at Amsterdam, are all-well, Prof. T. R. Loudon, of Toronto, associate manager of the team, says in a wli'eless message received by the Canadian Press today.

Thanks to a smooth voyage, the athletes are able to train hard every day. Prof. Loudon saya. The athletes include the seven girls who will participate in the women's section of the games, as well as the track and field team and the Argonaut eight from Toronto, who will be in the rowing contests, The Canadians will be engaged in competition by the end of the month. They are due to arrive at Southampton Thursday.

SAMMY BAKER WINNER Customs-Excise xPreventive velop speed. A good list of preliminaries has N.B.A. President Declares Champion Has Improved Speculator, N.Y., July 17. will be an Improved Gene Tunney who defends his world's heavyweight title Edmonton, July 17. Tom McOrath, professional, Moose Jaw.

won the western Canada open golf title here today with a 86-hole score of 150, defeating a field of more than sixty leading professionals and amateurs. The newly crowned champion played superb golf In the final round today over the Mayfair links, going out In par 38 and returning in 33, for a r.teady 75. He turned in the same score in the first round yesterday, three over par. Gordon Mc. Williams, the Calgary youngster, who set pace yesterday with 73, suffered a complete reversal of form and when the scores were tabulated he had slumped far down the list with a total of 157.

He required an 88 today. Close behind the winner cafne Jimmy Rimmer, professional of Jasper Park, and J. Pryke, professional of the Edymonton Country Club. They had a 36-hole card of 153. Rimmer entered the final round only one stroke behind McGrath, but a series of mishaps on the Incoming iournev Efforts are being made to enlist the services of a welterweight and perhaps a lightweight for the final arranged, each bout set at six rounds.

The reduction in the number of rounds for the preliminaries Report for April-May Ottawa, July 17. A substantial increase In-proceeds of seizures ef nays. i luiuming out tne plans of the against Tom Heeney on July 26, new iorK commission. fected by the customs-excise preven tthtnks T. E.

Donahue, president of With the Canadian featherweight championship as the prize, Vie Foley, of Vancouver, and Leo, Kid, Roy, the local fighter, will meet at the Forum tonight In a title encounter. This will be the fourth meeting between these boxers, Roy having won two of the bouts, one on a foul and the other on a decision, while one was given as a draw. Uoy and Foley are contenders for the world title, and the winner of tonight's bout will be matched with Canzoneri, the fight to til; place at the Baseball Stadium as soon as arrangements can be made for the battle. Roy has never worked harder for any bout than for the one tonight. He did not retire from training after a fast go against Bobby Garcia, In Hartford, and the pat week has boxed each day with three or four sparring partners.

On the other hand, Foley, who came to Montreal with Injured ears, was forced to take a short rest. He resumed training a yopI ago, and has kept hard at it ever since, Hr worked out in a local gymnasium with Holliday, who is under the same management, and will rete Sanstol In the semi-windup tonight. Foley, in the opinion of many. HULBERT VICTOR IN Atwater Park Baseball ONTARIO OPEN GOLF Tonight at 6.30 o'clock at AtwatT Park, L'Epiphanie will play the Ste. Cunegonde team in the second game of a series of Wednesday evening tive service is shown for April ana May of the present fiscal year.

For the two months under review, proceeds of seizures totalled $123,270, according to the Department of National Revenue. This sum is made up of customs excise $25,538. For April and May. 1927. the total was ns follows: customs $70,711, excise nALure-s scnenuiea on the central diamond L'Epiphanie are' the (Associated Tress Cable.) Moscow, July comprehensive plans were under way tonight for one last great attempt to rescue the six missing members of the Italia's crew, if they are still alive, and the members of Amundsen searching party lost for more than a month, somewhere off the Spitzbergen coast.

The Soviet Rescue Commission instructed the ice-breaker Kriasin to establish now bases from which aviators can hop off to search thoroughly every square mile of ice on the south, east and northeast shores VnrtvMt Land. One of these rnampions or the independent hase- Andy Kay's Sensational 66 on accounted for a score of 77 today. the National Boxing Association. He arrived here today in time to watch Tunney take his first workout since Sunday. The champion made an exceptionally good showing.

The champion concentrated on his left Jab, which stood him In such good stead in his two title battles with Jack Dempsey, during his three-round bouts with Harold Mays and Billy Viriaherk. the Bayonenne, N.J., vywejghts. After the workout. Mays said that the champion's punches had a new sting which the big gloves could not absorb. There were several clinches during the training hout and Tunney each one to his advantage.

nan teams of the province of Que Contender for Welter Crown Defeated Gorilla Jones Pryke, shared the low scoring honors with a 7S today, hut his card nf 7S bec, having won the title In the tnurnamen held here last fall. The Second Round Fell One In May of this year 337 seizures were1 made, with proceeds of $03,185. In May. 1927, 225 peismres were made. yesterday proved too bl? a hurdle to Cleveland, July Serst.

Sammy oattenes ror this evening: L'Eplp- overcome. Baker, of Mitchel Field, rerog nized by the. New York Boxing Com nanie i'crron and Pucas: Ste .1 T.PKllr Rf.ll. nf C-ilsrsrv. with a Cunegonde Rollin, Cutler and La- commendable total of 154, led the rivierp.

mission as the leading contender for Joe Dundee's world's welterweight with proceeds of effected. Montrealer Killed in Smash Port Hope, Julv 1 7. William Harvey, Montreal, died In Cobourg nmatpnrs and inrinentallv wnn thp amateur qualifying medal. His ag The largest Industry in the United gregate was a combination of two had much the better of the last I states is tne automobile Industry Short of Tying Winner Ancaster, July 17. After knocking at the door in major championships la the last few years, Arthur Hulbert, of ThornhlU Club, Toronto, won the Ontario open championship here today when he turned In two consistent 71's, each round one under par, for 142 to capture the title held for the last two years by Andy Kay, the Lamb-ton professional.

But in order to win Hulbert had to ward off a determined challenge from the defending titleholder who, win' be at King Carl Island, where it is believed possible Captain Amundsen may have been forced down. Another base will be established farther north. If possible, so that the sea northeast of Foyne Island may be thoroughly combed. It was near Foyne Island that six of the Italia's men, headed by Gen. Umberto Nobile, were marooned, and it is thought possible that the "balloon party" of six may have forced to the ice somewhere In that vicinity.

Officials here were surprised at the reported decision of the Italian rescue chiefs to terminate further searches for the" lost men. It was last night of injuries received in an accident five miles east of Cobourg, when a motorcycle, which he was riding, collided with an automobile driven by Ray Simpson, Rochester. Fire Damages Church Sydney, N.S., July 17 About $500 damage was caused in St. George's Anglican church when fire broke out in the vestry section of the church at midnight, tonight. The cause of the blaze is unknown.

Call to Rev. E. B. Wylie Sudbury, July 17 Knox Presbyterian Church. Sudbury, has crown, took a ten-round decision from "Gorilla" Jones, Akron negro, tonight.

Both men weighed 148 pounds. Jack McKenna, North Sydney, N.S., middleweight, earned a technical knockout over Stubby Noble, of Wilkes-Barre, when the referee slopped the bout in the third round, Noble having suffered several knockdowns. Eddie Ruttman, Akron lightweight, stopped Steve McDonald, of Glace Bay, N.S., in the first round after he had taken four floorings. Phil Kaplan Beat McVey New York, July 17. K.

O. Phil Kaplan, New York contender for Mickey Walker's middleweight title, won the decision over Jack McVey, New York negro, in the feature bout at the Queensboro stadium tonight. after apparently being knocked out of the running in the morning with 77, came back in the afternoon with a record-breaking 66 which gave him 143 and placed him temporarily in the lead. To many It seemed as if Kay was extended a call to Rev. Ernest B.

Wylie, L.L.B., formerly of Erskine Church, Ottawa. The Moderator of the Presbytery will formally attend to the call in the near future. The going to make it three champion Harbor Breakwaters ships In a row and four out of six, but Hulbert, who was advised of It is very seldom nowadays that an engineer is free to eelect an entirely suitable site on a Coast-line to build a harbor. The coastal trade centres are, as a rule, already established, pulpit here has been vacant since Flight Around Africa After an extra flight of approximately 2,000 miles, during which he visited the principal ports of the British Isles, Sir' Alan Cobham finally returned to Rochester on Monday, June 11, thus bringing his round-Africa survey flight to a successful conclusion. Sir Alan and Lady Cob-ham, Captain H.

V. Wan-all. the re either In open roadsteads, estuaries, or partially-sheltered bays, and further protection by breakwaters has paid definitely that notwithstanding fuch a decision, the Krassin and her companion ship, the Maligin. would not retire until the last hope had been exhausted. Stress was placed on the Importance of the King Carl Island base, as it was considered most likely that it any stragglers escaped from either of the missing groups they would head for that point.

The Maligin today was forty miles east of King Carl Island, but her progress was slow, because of extensive ice fields and a heavy storm that' seriously impeded navigation. The Maligin is expected to skirt the southeastern shore of Spitzbergen and to land somewhere along that roast and the aviator Babushkin, will engage in reconnaissance flights. After further searches the Maligin will make a course for Archangel, keeping a sharp lookout for traces of the Amundsen party en route. The Krassin, now en route to Advent Bay for fuel and to establish A flying base, will return to Northeast Land as "quickly as possible. The aviator Chukhnovsky will fly in every direction from the base to be established there and perhaps other planes will be used in the searches.

to be added irrespective of the natural facilities for such work. Frequently, therefore, only a limited choice of serve ftilot, two mechanics and a eine- alignment Is left, but where possible the direction of the breakwaters should be such that the heaviest seas strike them obliquely, and, in particular, re-entering angles on the eea-ward face should, wherever possible. Kay's score at the thirteenth tee In the second round, was able to keep out of trouble and, with his putter working perfectly, he turned in his socond better-than-par score of the ana took the lead. Hulbert, who was second In the Canadian Professional Golfers' Tournament in 1926 and third last year, as well as finishing two strokes behind the nlayers In the four-cornered tie for the Ontario open last year, has been threatening for several years and il was only just that he t-hould come down in front of the largest and one of the strongest rUids "that has competed for the provincial title since it was Inaugurated six years ago. He has not been going well In the recent Invitation tourneys, but today found all departments of his game at their best and or.

a result he Is the champion. Jlmmie Johnstone, of the Canadian profersional champion, who had a 75 at the end of the first eighteen holes, came through with a 71 in the afternoon to holt Hulbert on even terms and outfoot the Test of the challengers, with the exception of Kay, to finish third with 146, one stroke ahead of Ross Somerville. of be avoided. Though attempts have matographer, left England in a Short Rolls-Royce flying boat on November 17 last year, the flight thus occupying nearly seven months, but it must be remembered that, owing to damage sustained during an exceptionally severe storm at Malta, the flight was delayed there ior many weeks. The principal objects of the flight were to define the course of a future commercial air route through Africa, to gain experience about the most been made from time to time to measure the force of the waves, and though very heavy masses of concrete have been slued bodily or over turned by heavy seas, insufficient data are available of the character.

Feeling Against Nobile satisfactory type of aircraft for that service, and to return along the west coast of Africa, a route hitherto unexplored from the air. The flight may be considered quite successful, in every way, as. in addition to conferences. held with the governments of the principal territories, the final survey of the air route between Alexandria and Mwanza, Tanganyika, which will form the first section of the through service to Cape Town, was made. The experimental Oslo, Norway, July 17.

Feeling against Gen. Umberto Nobile leadei of the Italia expedition, is making itself felt in Oslo. The newspaper Aftenposten removed a picture of the general from a 6howcase during the day as threats had been made to break the window end destroy it. Yesterday, the anniversary of Roald Amundsen's birthday, the Dagbladet, organ 01 tne present cabinet. DubllRh ed without comment an article by Nohlle in an American magazine in London, provincial amateur title-holder, who was the only simon-pure to break into the prize list.

Four pros. Nicol Thompson and George Cumming, veterans both, and Dave Spittal and Willie Lamh, tied for fifth place, and four others, Fred Hunt. Bob Cunningham. Lex Robson and Ned McKenna, former western Canada open champion and now of Erie Downs, divided ninth and last prize. In the assistants' event, Willie Cunnnigham; of Mississauga, won first1 prize, while W.

Sanways, ot London Hunt; Les Franks, of Mississauga, and Gordie Brydson, ot Toronto, tied for second place. which the Italian dirigible expert be- inuea Lincoln Ellsworth and Amund sen, Arctic explorers, and told of the work of himself and his Italian rrew size, and force of the waves that did the damage to enable reliable formulas to be deduced which might be a guide in calculation. All that is known in most cases is that a certain section and type of breakwater has failed, or partially' failed, In a storm, and that an increased section or different type of breakwater has withstood subsequent storms. The width of a breakwater has therefore to be determined by experience, due allowance being made for difference of conditions. Broadly speaking, there are only two classes of breakwaters, those whose stability depends partly on their mass and partly on breaking up the force of the waves by the configuration of their exposed faces, and those that depend entirely on their mass to resist the waves.

Mound breakwaters are perhaps the simplest in form, and vary from those with a hearting of sand protected by rubble laid on mattresses as at the entrance to the waterway leading to Rotterdam from the North Sea to mounds composed entirely of large concrete blocks, with or without capping, a common form of breakwater 'in the Mediterranean. The great drawback to mound breakwaters, especially when they are constructed with a large quantity of small stone, is that they require constant replenishing. At Plymouth, Table Bay, and Fishguard there are examples of such breakwaters; the last was seriously damaged by heavy seas, and protection of the sea slope by means of heavy pell-mell concrete In comparison with the Norwegians of the Polar expedition with the Norge in the flight from Spitzbergen flights from Khartoum to for the Colonial Office, arranged by Messrs. Cobham-Blackburn Air Lines, Limited, were completed, and an entirely new air route was prospected from Cape Town to Nigeria up the west coast of Africa. A complete report was kept on the behavior of the machine, engines and equipment under tropical conditions, with recom- me'ndatlons for the future.

Moreover, nearly fifty flying-boat harbors and anchorage were charted, and a report was made on the potential air traffic through Africa, divided into official, commercial and tourist passengers, goods, mails and gold. The Short Singapore flying-boat used for the flight is, we believe, the first all-metal flying-boat to be built. The principal dimensions are as follows: Span overall. 93 feet; length overall, 64 feet; and height overall, 24 feet. The weight, empty, is 12,890 Here's a recipe for coolness: At breakfast, take a bowl and fill it full of crisp Kellogg's Corn Flakes, Pour in cool milk and add some fruit for extra flavor.

Next a spoon then, just enjoy yourself! Repeat at lunch, if you like (and of course you surely will). GOVERNOR-GENERAL DONATES GOLF CUP His Excellency to Present Some days ago Foreign Minister Nowlnckel, in the press, begged the newspapers and the public to re-fnJn from Judging and criticizing Nobiit. and the Italians on the fatal Arctic expedition. Several Ornish explorers have proposed Fridtjof Nansen as chairman of a court of honor to investigate Nobile'e leadership of the expedition. Nansen declined this, but said he thought thee was several events in Nobile's expedition that need closer investigation.

85 D0UKH0B0RSARRIVE Say Conditions in Russia Are Intolerable 'Halifax, N.S., July 17. Eighty-five and a new-born infant were included among the 238 passengers landed here this morning from the French Line, steamer fioussillon which arrived last night from RnrJ Trophy at Interprovincial Match Here August 11 blocks was rendered necessary. The north-east breakwater at Colombo, and the rubble breakwaters at Lagos, West Africa, and Timaru, New Zealand, are examples of mounds constructed of large stones faced with stones up to eight or ten tons in the Toronto, July 17. Officials of the and the weight, fully loaded, is 20,430 the useful load is thus 7.540 lbs, The petrol and oil capacities are 616 and 36 gallons, respectively, which give a range of 1,050 miles at 90 m.p.h. The maximum speed at.

ground level is 121 m.p.h., while the landing speed is 57 m.p.h. The engines fitttrl were two 12-cyl-inder Rolls-Royce "Condor" Series 111A engines of the high-compression type, with the following particulars: bore, 5V4 inches; stroke, inches; normal brake horse-power at ground level, 665; normal propeller speed with a 1:0.477 reduction gear, 90T r.p.m.; fuel the normal power and speed, 41 gallons per hour; and oil consumption, 1.3 gallons per hour. The weight of the complete engine, without radiator, airscrew, water, or fuel, is 1.364 lbs. Engineering (London). deaux.

A nice question of the baby's Royal Canadian Golf Association have eomipleited arrangements for the inter-iprovinclal championohip of Canada to be held on the course of itbe Royal Montreal Club on August 11. His Excellency Viscount Willingdon has do-naited a trophy to known as the Interprovincial Challenge Oup, which will be presented to the winning team. His Excellency has consented to attend and present the cup personally. Teams of four players from each province are expected to compete, and the match will consist iof 36 holes CO FLAK tJ- Kellogg's are the original The world's most popular corn flakes! No imitations have ever equaled their wonderful flavor and crispness. Serve Kellogg's for lunch and dinner as well as breakfast.

For the kiddies' supper. Never tough, thick but extra crisp. Always easy to digest. Delicious with milk or cream -with fruits or honey added. Order at hotels, restaurants, cafeterias.

On dining-cars. Sold by all grocers. Made by Kellogg in London, Ont. Always oven-fresh Look for the famous red-and-green package! case of the first two, and la or 20 tons In the case of the last. Such large stones stand at a deep slope, economize material, and require very little replenishing.

Rubble mounds with solid superstructure constitute a common type of breakwater. On the Peterhead south breakwater the foundation of the solid superstructure is 43 feet below low, water, protected by an apron of 50-ton concrete blocks 54 feet wide, but in heavy storms some of the 60-ton blocks have been lifted off their beds. south-weBt breakwater at Colombo and the breakwaters at Madras consist of a solid superstructure on a rubble mound, but in these rases the seaward face of the. breakwater is protected by a wave-breaker formed of 30-ton to 33-ton concrete blocks drbpped pell mell. This form of protection is effective and Requires very little upkeep.

There are various forms of superstructure. A usual form is the sloping-rbond type, where each slice of blockwork isjfree-to settle independently of the adjacent being held laterally the adjacent sjices by keys or jog-ies running from the top to the bot medai play. The, team having the aoweet aggregate score will be the winner. For ithe purposes of the competition the Manitlmes will be considered a CHEVRIER FOR OLYMPICS uauuuouijf aiuae una nas yet to be decided. He was born six days ago, off the Spanish coast, aboard a French ship, and will live in Canada His parents, Andrej and Mary Pic-thine, are Russian.

They are bound for Kamsack, Saskatchewan. The father' was in Canada previously The party of 'Doukhobors, returning from Russia after periods from one and a half to three and a half years, are going to Kamsack and Verigin, and Brandon, Man. Their return to Canada, they said, was made owing to conditions in Russia, which they declared were intolerable and beyond description. Members of the party said that red tape end the excessive cost of Soviet passports, amounting in most cases to about $150, made it extremely difficult to get into Canada. Some ten families of this party are ktill being held at Riga, it was stated.

DOMINIONS NOTIFIED British Eeply to Kellogg Note Is Cabled (Canadian Press Cable.) London, July 17. It was learned this afternoon that the draft of the British reply to the latest United States note regarding the proposed anti-war treaty has been cabled to the dominion governments fur their information. The dominions being free to reply to the United States themselves, there is no question of obtaining i-. 1 A Ottawa Boxer, Who Won 160-Pound Class, Added to Team Honore Chevrier, clever Ottawa boxer at 160 pounds, who -won his way through the Olympic boxing trials, but was not chosen by the Selection Committee, will go to Amsterdam after all. Funds were provided yesterday to defray his expenses overseas by popular auhscrln- Record of Inscriptions London (By mail).

The Kent Archaeological Society publish a record of monumental inscriptions in the churchyard and church of Lydd, by the late Leland L. Duncan, This useful piece of work, by an antiquary who gave a great deal of time and trouble to copying; out such inscriptions, is an example of xhat can be done to rescue records from oblivion before they are destroyed, for many of the existing gravestones in Lydd Churchyard are becoming indecipherable. Some of the ancient monuments in the church have already disappeared, but we'are fortunate In possessing an, account of them and their Inscriptions by an eighteenth'-century curate, Thomas Cobb, whose notes are here transcribed. There are many quaint inscriptions In this list, including one of a smuggler who was taken by the Preventive men, one of whom stabbed him; his "stone records that "A bace man took my life away." good Instance of the survival in one place of an ancient name that of the Godfrey family, whose memorials range from a brass In the nave, dated 1430, to the War memorial. Roosevelt and Coolidge were the only vice-presidents io attain Presidency by another's death and then be honored by a re-slecUcn.

i i tom jof the work. Blocks weighing up to 30 tons or 40 tons are for such work, usually set over-end by a Titan crane, whose weight on top of the structure causes it to settle and helps to consolidate tne underlying CORN mound. The blockwork is capped with mass concrete after settlement has ceased. Sometimes coursed blockwork is used, tout the author suggests that slice blockwork 1 better. Another method Is to use tion amongst friends in the Capital.

Chevrier, a good-looking youngster, seems little like the fighter, but in this case appearances prove deceiving. Ha Is a hard-hitting, fast and aggressive boxer, who with little more attention to the defence should be among the best In his class. The faith, however, put in him by friend3 is not without justification, for his performances here have made a goml impression. He will sail today with the rest of the boxing team, the cyclists, the added wrestler and the lacrosse team. blocks weighing as.

much as 300 tons or 400 tons each, eet in place bv floating cranes, or caissons floated out and sunk on a prepared bed on the mound and subsequentlv fillod. H. H. Mitchell In Engineering (London). tut too possibility, that any dominion.

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