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— 8 THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, ‘1911. TIGER CLASHES HOGAN DEFEATS BROWN IN FURIOUS ENCOUNTER Despite Disadvantage of Having His| Right Eye Completely Closed in Fourth Round, K. O. Puts Up Desperate Contest to End. Copyright, 1911, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World.) “O*: ROUND” HOGAN didn't show his “one round” form last night, but he gave Knockout Brown the worst beating of his varied experience in ten rounds of as flerce fighting as any fan could wish to.see. Any other lightweight but little K. 0. would bave wilted and flopped under the crush- ing punishment that Hogan dealt out. As it was, Brown had his good right eye closed tight in the fourth round by a single right hand punch, Al- though at a disadvantage after that, K. O. was anything but an easy mark, for he rushed and slugged con- tinuously. Especially in the last three rounds, when he realized that only a knockout could win for him, he fought with the fury of despair. Ho was outboxed and defeated, but in @pite of that he deserves a world of credit for his aggressive courage. Hogan made a very pretty fight of it. He started with cool delibera- tion, taking care to block Brown's left awings and hooks, or to render them ineffective by stepping in with a right hand drive or uppercut that landed first. Through the whole ten rounds he kept his head and used all of his skill. He knows much more about the game than he did a year ago. Now and then, suddenly taking the aggressive, he rushed K. 0. around the ring and jammed him against the ropes, outfighting him at close quarters until Brown was forced) but he showed no distr Instead, he te clinch and hold on. slugged willingly. Brown landed another Referee Charlie White was inclined to| crusher, and Hogan, mixing, outfought give K. ©. all the best of it When|him and forced him to clinch again. Brown was holding White eautioned| By the end of the round it was evident Hogan instead of Brown. K. O. devel-|that Brown's eye had closed for the oped a trick of catching Hogan in alevening, It didn't add much to his bearltke hug and rolling his own head | beauty. , where-| In the fifth, although punohed back in Beck as if ho were boing butted. Where | ovat eushes, Brown finally langed are Be es c| BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK TO-DAY’S YALE-PRINC 'How the Teams Comp on a Man for Man Basis. ——. CAPT. ROWER —_-_— pon White reprimanded Homan ane ; “butting.” Brown often caught Hogan Sien teats ~ ioe rere eel KICKING A FIELD Goau atound the neck with his right and| and threw more rights acroce, Meee and hammered away with the left and/ sixth, with half the fight already tallied got away with it. 4eainst him, Brown wae in a Berserker In the sixth round, when Brown had |rage. He fought furiously. Hogan fousa Howe, Yale’s Hope To-Day, landed a low left and was clinching | him with steady aki! and cro and fighting with his free hand, White po ga dal ‘ane bay we ie to His ‘Sh h Wi h Hi T eaationnd hon sherty, but Inter 1,080] Settee Swan ‘Now "ete ita, Baten arpshooter With His Loe tenth, ho favored Brown aga could take auch punishment and stay on fighting was desperate then. Hogan! hia feet. fore a: Brown with a furMus rusi landing right after right on his ebtn. HE eighth round was a whtriwind,| Eli’s Captain and Quarterback Has Booted Ball Over T eatin nh ieaeeune Cross Bars for Total of 21 Points. He battered K. 0. to the ropes and glammsd him against them hard. @ cru Brown, with both feet on the floor and) Brow: Jeaning back aginst the ropes @ few | rose tral corner, was badly | lifted K. O. from hia feet with an upper- to-day, is one of the most versa dazed. cut and crossed a right that landed on tile men playing football, Asid his advantage White eaught him by | Knockout's nose and didn't improve ite! from his duties as captain and quarter. the arm and dragKed him away, giving | appearance. Then he “got funny" for! back, Howe is the best all-around Brown time to recover and escape. In|once, bent over and posed Ike Jeck| kicker on the gridiron, with tho possl- the Hogan-Wolgast match Hogan was | O'Brien before the camera, and waited! pie exception of ‘Thorpe, the Indian ‘against tho ropes in the same fix, and| Brown Instantly hooked @ resounding| marvel, The record of the Bluo leader on that occasion the referee stood back | left over to Hogan's head. Hogan cam and let Wolgast lam away. out of the crouch hastily. ast taltatimaat Howe dae wcoted tts There was anxiety, to put it mIlAty, 19 | yan seven times over the cross bars for TT was no sensation in the]. 0.'s corner in the last two rounds.|, total of 21 points. He ts tied with on Hogan's chin. adherents all over the house first round as there was in the Attell jumped up and down and] putter of Cornell for the honor of kick- firet “logan-Brown gcrap, Hog ed. Morgan yelled advice, Danling the moat goals. Stopped Hrown's rushes by shooting| McKetrick tried to tell Brown by mo-! “Howe gave the best demonstration of rights to his chin until K, O. was will- | tions just how to knock Hogan out, but/ nis art in the recent Brown game, fag to clinch, In the clinches he out-jas K. 0. bad his back turned and was! when, within the #-yard line, he sent fought the Boys’ Club champion, using | busily engaged in stopping punches with Mailing over the posts three a fight upper-cut that kept Brown’a| his chin, he didn't pay much attention. Boks cs te head going Uke a bobbin, In the sec- |The tenth was @ furious atruggle—halt him the “toe sharp- a dozen rounds of fighting cramped into ond he cut loose a ttle more and on. in apite of the punishment he took, The Tigers must be wary fought Frown to the ropes. In the! 9, a strong and furious fourth he :nissed a right and, etarting | at the end, Hogan wae tiring Hi ch force that K. O.'s eye » vel ne few alert o¥* | tact, he seemed Well enough aatistied with what he had done, and willing hear the bell. Brown was badly brui Infuriated, Brown tore at Hogan and lifornian had been in anything | not even puffing after all ‘his exertio ut the finest possible condition that) didn't show so much as a scratch or a Plow would have brought alm down, ! red spot on his sun-browned hide. Gil Boag Says His Charge Wolverton Won’t Manage Will Challenge Wolgast- : Welsh Winner. Hilliop Team Next Season pa ye and play bie Albany team of the y " Mew Vor Neate Tengue next gear , ay JOUN POLLO Be ; . — Gil Boag, manager of “One-Hound Frank Farrell Denies Report The Jan Angeles Cob of the Pattie Coast | Hogan,” told the writer early tomday Teague has bought pitcher Charles Chech from ¢ jati: St, Paul Americ soctation team, Chee that he has decided to take Hogan to That He Is Negotiating |... Amereap Amectstlon feat, {patil | california to. challenge : ’ Foahs tnd ithed gio Yai, the Ad Wolgast-Freddie Welsh fight an’ With This Player. A.final staiement of the recelpta of the benefit | that they will leave in a few days fo for Pred Knowles, former secretary of the Giants, | tha cous expects Hogan to fight| hae Been, pre the chats awe ei K FARRELL, owner of the) smuust mid to Me Kuowler var #2808, 000 ‘Tig that t Knoch RAN! z! staid fo Mes Kowa a i that he will Kive Knock F New York American League club, wget wh overt’ 1. 'Wreng, sad Ol aad out Brown a return fi On gays there is no truth in the atory | Rneblock are blancing to raise $260 ‘more among Wall street brokers, before "Ky sent from San Antonio, to the ef- me feot that he haw engaged Harry Wolver-| ©, Tifft of the West Side Young Men's Chrts: | thelt ton, magnaer of one of the clubs in the | tian Association, holder Crom, got California Lei ta be leader of hie; 9, tae eae take ‘place club next vear. “IT cannot imagi how such ab urd story could pM eee Sires Vs id,’ —_——_— Mr. Fi HM; “and another thing 1 Mish to, say te that tT inye not_ been | BRITAINS? “FLY-WEIGHT” negotiating with Wolverton and have not an engagement with him in Phtla- | CHAMPION HAS ARRIVED. delphia next week for a conference.” " Alex Lafferty, fly-welght champion of] } ‘om baseball games next year will be | Great Britain and bantam champion of rented if the baschall moguls are succesful ia |! . 7 Lae Piling the Atioruey-iencral of tie Valued States Sotland, arrived here to-day with 1 authorities of the States t0| hopes of getting bouts with the best Pee aten ts ‘Sing way tus’ this. erly At | pope 4 ‘ R ee eS brotes|Pantams in town. He 1s a stockily estat" pues, ian Antonio, built young man about twenty-two]! “ay Machen ear 4 if development coun! wuggestion to peut ‘the authorities t0 execise | YOars old, and er to stop Shane sss for anything he could xo out to-n oo " fetes row and claim the champtonship Jockey Allen, who "was reported to have ben | America, billed by being throwe, treat Blatt eM ajwes | Lafferty hails from Scotland, where facies, ce, Newel Nona? i ware lhe made a record that any fight EN Be By hs eepotalile | would de proud of; out of fort Realmedia g \Aghte he won thirty-two by knockouts, wot the decision in fourteen and the } other three ended even. At present he 1s stopping with Tom Sharp of No. 417| 2 Fitty-elghth street, Brooklyn, He will) Nick Hayes, ty 1 remain with him until he can get some | '@! be matched han wily Moris 3: ing who sa at ent f nog Princeton Eleven Collectively 1s individually the Ell Forces Shape! Heavier by an Average of Five Pounds. Pwo of former victories makes the Bulldog favorite over the Tiger Up Better in Most of the since 18%, against all opponents, Yale hae lost but fifteen games. Princeton, | with a record of six games won, has been the Blue's most formidable opponent, Harvard wrenched four games, while the Army got three and Columbia end) Brown each one HE scale of comparison bends slightly in favor of Yale when a man for made of the rival elevens that figure in to-day's big con- Football, unlike many of sports, is almost impossible to forecast The only index to the strength of the teams com- bating to-day 1s @ comparison of the men, their records and characteristics, has amassed a grand total of 9,211 points, while the opposition has scored’ but 462, From this wonderful record tt 1s seen that the Tigers must bite deeply into the Bulldog to-~lay in order to get away with a victory. man anaylsis many vagaries. CORNELL ELEVEN . __PLAYS AT CHICAGG ETON GAME A QUESTION OF KICKING HOWE HAS KU 7 FIELD GOALS THIS SEASON Dvewirr ONE COMPARISON OF HOwe'S. ANO + DEWITT DROP KICKING ; ary Why Yale Ruled Favorite |. Over. Tiger Team To-Day in to-day’s game. Yale has established the most remarkable record en the gridiron of any college that ever played football. Just think of ft, || me. m In the space of twenty-seven years Yale has played 318 contests. Old Bi) they line up man vs. man, Princeton's team collectively is heavier than Ya! Statistica of both teams follow: | YALE AND TIGER SCORES WHITE, 8. 8. Hero of the Harvard game, White from inside of their 40-yard line, for it doesn't make much difference to the Yale captain whether the ball is in the centre or away off to one side--he 1s rea- sonably sure of booting the leather over the bars when called upon. Howe does most of Yale's punting, In respect he 1s probably 3B. ¥. AVERY. 's left end, is exceed ingly fast in getting down the field besides being a hard because of lack of G@isplays a tendency to overplay his man because of over- In the Brown game he sometimes betrived hie own team by etarting to box his man before the & whoop. But Hogan nearly H's who leads the Yale forces |indeed to keep this kicking artist away mi With @ natural instinot to follow the and a faculty plays, White makes an {deal wing- He tackles hard and is a dit ficult man to “box” in by opposin White fs heavier than Aver beside: having experience in his f under punts, for diagnosin, in kicking field goals ranks with the ‘ of @ pecuilar knack he has of making the ball land at one particular place, His kicks are of the low, twisting kind, them very diMcult for the ckfleld to handle. effort was a drive of fifty-five yards, DUNLAP, C. C.. Playing instead of Wight, the other regular end, Dunlap ie @ fitting mate Harvard and games he showed good form in getting down under punt 've and a hard p's only Weakness is In ove running his man due te overanxtoui ness. The Tiger, however, may be overshadowed by Bomeisler. Princeton has the edge at ends over Yale. 200 5.11 84 LEFT TACKLE. pt. Hart is a whole team himself One of the strongest 165 6.00 21 BIGHTEND. 164 5.10 80 D, BOMBISLER. end of the Sheviin type, Bomeisler is a handy man for any ind. Despite his Yale's end ie remark- at in covering kicks. Lage in getting in the game because of in- juries, Bometsler has come with a rush in the last two weeks, and ie apt to be a danger potnt for Prince- t team to have about forty-five yards. Camp Jr. gets more distance out of his kicks than How team’s chief relia While Walter aptain is the » when thelr goal- because his kicks 168 6,00 91 J. W. SCULLY. Scully should prove @ big factor in An all-American tackle last year, Scully has eagged a little this year becguse of injuries, but he appears to be primed to-day, 169 6.00 19 BIGHT TACKLE. 195 6.02 Phillips, not as prominent as his running mate, is strong, aggressive and willing. Princeton's left tackle makes up for loss of weight by his speediness, Phillips, to be putclassed by Scully, a tremendous opponent. Yale « little stronger at tack! WILSON,T.A. 200 6,00 22 LEFT GUARD. 167 5.10 83 ¥.T. FRANCIS Francis, shifted from end to guard, must be on the alert to atop the mad rushes of J. M. Duff, ‘slackened a little near the end and WEST ned on Brown In the cliches, In at left tackle. ‘Total men that ever played the Hart is exceedingly fast for BOXING SHOWS TO-NIGHT. At Olymple A. C.—Phil Cross vs. Benny Franklin, ten rounds, At Fairmont A, ©. Young Riley, ten rounds, Bert Keyes vs. it to pit against his opponent, star tackle last yea fortunate this season because of in- He hasn't had much chance to show thie year, but tf he plays up to his standard of should easily outshine Phillips, At Long Acre A. A.—Twelve bouts arts the game, which 4s doubtful because of an injury, he 1s apt to find @ tough customer in Staten Island— . Bert Bapp, ten At Brown Gymnasium A, A.—John- It’ toss-up at the guards, DUFF,3.M. 202 5.10 22 RIGHT GUARD. 195 5.08 23 2B. Ww. MeDevitt, built close to the ground, {s a rough and ready guard, very minute of the time, | BLUZTHENTHAL, A, 190 5.09 19 CENTRE. 173 6.00 20 ¥. m. ETOMAM, played a ster! game at Now Haven this year Mae gressive and exceedingly fast In get- ting over the field, the Yale entre 1s one of the best playing the pivotal position, but appears to be shaded by Bluenthenthal, Jack Welsh wil be the referee, as the| articies name him, or there will be no|ley, of Kenosha, Wis., announced they! fight It ia understood there will be a big conference of all parties interested this| he figures that he will practically havg afternoon, and that any conclugion | wiped out the knockout he received gg, the Harvard if he plays up to his best form, will bo menacing .o the Blue y Carroll Vs, Charley Law- player on the defensive, 1s an All-American posst- Bluethenthal 1s an all-over- the-fleld piayer, making tackles out in the after kicks, + Maspeth—Iimmy Joe Shears, ten rounds. 8 follr-round go at Dreamland Ritchie won the decision over Jerry | obtain a fight with Kitban Murphy of Indianapolis. Ritchle had all . the best of the bout from the start. The| Gallant and Jasper Box Draw, receipts of the contest will go to Frank | LOWELL, McConnell, was crippled in the ring several years] the twelve-round contest between: Johns Slight advantage for Princeton. 7. 155 6.11 20 QUARTERBACK. 152 6.10 21 a. mown. 1 halfback, 18 PENDLETON, T. quarter in the country, with the pos- one brought against him, Cool, resourceful and a great picker of plays, Howe dlvplays all the re- quirements of @ great quarter, Yale ts weakened per cent. without their captain, » nan most feared Decided advantage for Yale. BAKER, H.A. 160 5,10 92 LEFT HALFBAOK. 183 6.02 00 W. CAMP, JR. ‘amp 18 a son of the famous Yale and oki football player, and sure ts a chip off the old block, et-Looted runner 1 i 22 RIGHT HALFBACK. 175 6.08 31 SPAULDING. lie has coine along at @ great clip recently, and his friends think he'll ehine in to-day's great contest, DE WITT, W. en a Nassau sensa- and is a powers FULLBACK. &. 8, DUMM.| Dunn, over 16 pounds ignter than y very aggreasive runner, stiff arm to good advan- ¢ showed up we! Brown game, and Yale coa pect him to reveal a by against the Tigers, manner, | t abit > runners coming although he has displayed considerable skill in break- ing Une smashing, body to handle his @tairs and untit he| | Johany Calon. the cian ion, bantamuelaht [tis Marae been ve-engaged to man. secures training quarters, who Las Deen fighting tu the West aud South fop Thursday uight Kennedy Works « SO FAR THIS SEASON. || Like Trojan for. YALE. Pailzer Contest Sept. 1—Wesleyan .... 0 21 Sept. 8—Holy Cross.. 0 26 Oct. 7 0 12 |) Oct. 14—Virginia Poly. 0 33 Tom Kennedy's training camp a} Oct. 21—Army 6 0 ]| West Hoboken 1s a busy spot these Oct. %—Colgate ...... 0 23} days. Since “Big Tom" started werk Nov. 4—N. ¥. Univ... 3 28 | for the contest with Al Palser at the Nov. il—Brown .. ® 18 || Clermont Rink, Brooklyn, on Nov. ®) = Tm [he has been working like a Trojan, Totals... 19 svreeelB8 1)" "Upon his return from. the Adiren- ‘ON. ton.or {| 28Cks several weeks ago, he took up O princeton 27 |i quarters, with Joe Jeanette, and now, © Princetonai || 2100s with Jeanette, he has Wiliia 6 Pringeton, ¢ | Lewis, Jack Denning, Connie Schmidi, 0 Princeton.i1 || Ray Simon and a new White Hop Oct. 2l—Navy . © Princeton, 0]/ of Johnny Oliver's. All these bays Oct. 28—-Holy Cross... Princeton.20 || are doing their best to round Kennedy Nov. -4—Harvard 6 Princeton. 8 || into grand form for the Palser bout, Nov. 11—Dartmouth .. 0 Princeton. 3 This troupe leaves the quarters at TT || 7 o'clock every morning, accompanied : by Trainer Dan Sullivan, for a alx-mfle road work. After they have thelr down {t's a Iny-of until after lumch, Jury May Decide | irartsir aor nite, trees a that Kennedy {s put through the ge- Wolgasi- Welsh Go verest kind of a test. He spends fift minutes at the punching bag, “fit minutes jumping the rope, gocs throt some bending exercises and gets r¢ for his boxing. (Special to The Evening World.) 108 ANGELES, Noy. 18.— Baron Long's suggestion, according + WEDS AL wien Freddie BOTH RIVERS AND CONLEY FIT FOR TO-DAY’S BATTLE, then eit as a jury on his dastsion ts (Special to The Kvening World.) the jatest pase of the situation. LOS ANGELES, Nov. 18, — Realising Marager Jones doclared to-day that| fully what victory means, voth Joe) Rivers of Los Angeles and Frankie Cofs! are ready for a twenty-round bout afi Vernon this afternoon. If Rivers wing, reached will be final, the hands of Johnny Kilbane. Cone: chee hopes to win in order that he maj Ritehte Defe again open the way to another fight N FRANCIS! with the Cleveland boxer. Each figusg, on meeting Abe Attell before ¢rying ta ee 18.—At the local middleweigh stello declared t, who} Lowell A. C, ny Gallant of Chelsea and Young J ago. James Coffroth left for Los Angeles|of Boston a draw. In the ninth, . last night to try to secure Wolgast for | lant, with a straight-arm blow, knocked @ New Year's Day card, Jasper off his feet. Sir Robt, BURNETT € Co's London DRY Gin The Bottle with ie edhapel) Famous .singe 1740 Sir Robert Burnett & Company GSK-OS% WEST 34 LHS TREBT, KRW VORK-