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CHARACTERISTIC POSES OF THE WELSH WIZARD, JIMMY WILDE, WOR CHAMPION. Jimmy Wilde is the sensation of the English boxing world, and comers—French fly weights, Husson, Bonzonne and others; the American boxer: all English boxers, fly-weights and bantams, and even lightweights—his remar him as an exceptionally clever exponent of the fistic art. His late fights with tam-weight, who has no peer in America in the bantam division, Digger Evans boxer, and Pal Moore (a prominent figure in American boxing circles), have at ring followers. Wilde was in hospital soon after he joined the Army, and he health since. It will be recalled that he had a great disappointment in his m given the verdict, over which there was much contr

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZISDR19190424.2.31.2

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review, Issue 1513, 24 April 1919, Page 23

Word Count
119

CHARACTERISTIC POSES OF THE WELSH WIZARD, JIMMY WILDE, WOR CHAMPION. Jimmy Wilde is the sensation of the English boxing world, and comers—French fly weights, Husson, Bonzonne and others; the American boxer: all English boxers, fly-weights and bantams, and even lightweights—his remar him as an exceptionally clever exponent of the fistic art. His late fights with tam-weight, who has no peer in America in the bantam division, Digger Evans boxer, and Pal Moore (a prominent figure in American boxing circles), have at ring followers. Wilde was in hospital soon after he joined the Army, and he health since. It will be recalled that he had a great disappointment in his m given the verdict, over which there was much contr New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review, Issue 1513, 24 April 1919, Page 23

CHARACTERISTIC POSES OF THE WELSH WIZARD, JIMMY WILDE, WOR CHAMPION. Jimmy Wilde is the sensation of the English boxing world, and comers—French fly weights, Husson, Bonzonne and others; the American boxer: all English boxers, fly-weights and bantams, and even lightweights—his remar him as an exceptionally clever exponent of the fistic art. His late fights with tam-weight, who has no peer in America in the bantam division, Digger Evans boxer, and Pal Moore (a prominent figure in American boxing circles), have at ring followers. Wilde was in hospital soon after he joined the Army, and he health since. It will be recalled that he had a great disappointment in his m given the verdict, over which there was much contr New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review, Issue 1513, 24 April 1919, Page 23