The evening world. Newspaper, December 29, 1919, Page 14

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\ THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1919. ee EW FOOTBALL STRATEGY AFTER YEAR'S PLANNING BY COACHERS AND PLAYERS * Hugo Bezdek, Surprise Man of Sport World, and Penn State Team Developed Daring Campaign That Took Pittsburgh , by Surprise—Coach Warner's Famous Methots Closely Studied and Checkmated When Bezdek’s Players Upset Gridiron Tradition by Punting Instead of Kicking When Near Their Goal Line. HISTORY-MAKING FOOTBALL PENN STATE ON FAKE Kicks ut REALLY _— Cups DOWNAF ‘ FuLL BACK PENN STATI ~ HESS OF FENN STATE Ou Dears BEHIND. His GOA LIME ON KICK FORMATION = A MICH 1S ALWAYS EXPECTED MEN A TEAM 1S IN SUCH A By Hugh S, Fullerton. 1919, by Hugh Fullerten,) SITUATION AS THIS Hugo Bezdek Be surprised ue “Back of the Yards tation of uaving boxed seve Good, not valy om the football fleld but in ela be entered the University of Chic preliminary bouts in the r eet football men he had handled. ato the Northwest a ave us a bigger surp ger of the Pittsburgh B: pial) man and had played ball only @ little food with his men, with his rivals gnd with eve in Chicago there was a big one cailed on Bezdek and he gave us anothe made one of the best and moet eloquent talks ever made at such a : This fall he took the Penn State team and ibove average material, swept the dope tn afl directions and winning any team to the title of Fastern ch a He surprise wo corking foot 1 Barney Dre to cateh up with th 'y one he me} baseball dinn played off the overturning Now he bas given us another surprise that game with Pitt and told it in a manner that leaver could write about the best analytical football of any writer in the His story is one of the wonder yarns of football and gives a new insight to the generalship and hard work of a college football has told the no doubt he vation enty ir STRATEGY OF GREAT FOOTBALL GAMES. Alugo Bezdek, Leader of Penn State, Claiman! of the Eastern Championship, Tells of Defeat of Pit As Told by Hugo Bezdek, lo Liugh S. Fuilerton. INNING a football game is not a matter of a © game, unless the teams are so evenly matched that nothing save accident will decide between then. {a a matter of study of your wn teain and, even more of the opposing team. For important contests scouts, aerial observers and alt as complicated an information de- partment ag is used in war. gtudy of men and methods used by opposing teams is more important than the development of the team iteelf. One in possession of facts gomcerning the style and the plays of am opponent, !t is the job of a coach and his helpers to figure out a way t@ nullify the superior strength of | el the opponent in one position and to use his own strength “weakest point in the opposing de- plunge or a tb during the wa ae sawing wood in Holland. tes bate tao Whielt [ome eat ten Winning a game | pi important, the study UT favored in 1919 by having we Payne hoped; when 1 kept the boy and lining up in driving downy it was some’ and unheard ¢ some criticism. hing rather Naturally there was | 8 I was not in a posi- ain without betraying t Renjamin Segreto ot the 3 proved of by Hows themsely+ and by thos wn held’ by the hes, asa rule, blackboard work | spend their time land diagrams 0} against the that We could not carry door work, ‘No coach, however, dares calculate | fie upon the weakness of an opponent. ‘The finer strategy ouumanoeuvrir No much in= esul’ was that when | the was nearing The Penn State-Pittsburch 6 i on through that kind pnguna’ Shle fall was Tor the eI cor grounds and victory delongs to the board of strat- outa hye @gists who helped me in planning the Wattle against Pittsburgh qu much as tt does to the boys Urilliantly carried out gampaign down to the small tail aud who had the nervy try a preconceived plan of . attaok at exactly the right game was one of the finest example planning IL this seems a modest permit me to say that 1am leaving myself out of the thing en- of strategy- hout the long |,'"! b OLD OREGON METHODS USED | ‘he rine of AT PENN STATE, snditions, @ close | The game with Pittdburgh is, important one the schedule of the Penn State team | w¢ when 1 took charge at Penn State as coach the fact that was impressed my mind ws that we must lick ning, but we were ability on a rt guins, We had used | ttack during the entire | Tackle: gourse the lying upon our every year, a wet bull helped, Be |fully during the AYIN Season prior cracked the Warner instead of Folwell or | felt certain w the others was not then clear to my mind. Of course there is the natural rivalry between the in- stitutions, but there was something At’ was not long before I be- came acquainted with conditions at Penn State and throughout the Haai and discovered that to of almost all coaches in the East. The work of winning the game of late November, T bad an ex: @uring the 8. A. T. C. period in i918 to figure out 4 pro; if Warner was to be be that entire season I made a study of Warner's style of defense tle characteristics that go to make up his style of play. conditions stood wefore their defense } huif Warner's style ' touchdowns and ast us when we were on the three A penalty of fifteen barred another g of play the y problem had not cha Pittsburgh kicked off to use We at this junetur In the ‘second half we attack and us 1 anott ad obscrved that whenever Pitt ex- | Ly mime to follow wenken eat little quarter- Up to receive Ay the entire and each tim 1 found oa or our game with plenty of intert rained steadily, The pla sole| resulted in a touchdown in Hess! few minutes of the second halt and of athletic was little use to figure on any weakness in his team or to attempt to discover some upon which purpose of blocking t to concentrate 1 gathered all the informa- tion porsible regarding We men and his methods, during the season of 1918, and com- | smashing throued meneed to game 4 year later, the training Keason of menced to point both the the defense tow nto a Kicking & ind there on either side. Fou n to block p Hess forward passed, | who 88 of th h the help of our scouts and) ery, Toddler. At the atart of) e's ByALEM «new the condition I knew from experience that it was a very slushy. iry developed the fact that condi- | (0) ns in the (all were about the same | every year. was natural pitt 8 of the tield Higgins, the Pitt had thrown all Part of the ground filled in and becomes soft quic I worked for an offensiv sort of a field first of all Was extremely fortunite spect because T have had considerate dence with te in the Northwent eoaching up there; unprepared. zo down the fleld the two Pitt would make or by Meld, and finally ! wD minutes of play, The moral cifect of to stop Pitt's plays, 1 was further SPORTING PAGE IN ye (Penn State’s Clever Scoring Trick That Made Gridiron H Ld vey PEN STATE IN A TIGHT HOLE THAT ALWAYS CALLS FOR A WICK, CITTSOURG PUL Nine Pere THE Biocn tra Foote ty THe FACT THAT HESS WAS NOT A pee DEFENSIVE To DRAWN UP FRO THROUGH AND ql CLIPS DEFENSIVE. @uarTers © i 2. END PREPARES LK o— ‘To RUN DOWN INSTBAD OF IKICRING HESS SIDE-STERS. Na 1S FORWARD PASS = YO HIGGINS WHO HAS STARTED DOWN ON PAKE IKICHK LOOKING FoR AN END RUN es PITYSBURG SECONDARY DEFENSE a PENN STATE LAY BACK WHEN WAY OF PENN State. me INTERFERENCE LINED UP TO (hed rnc Recerve Bare 6S BRERA > y were behind b¢ Friday morning. scraps rp WAY, INSTEAD OF FOLLOWING INTERFERENCE Prowae “Tratouger TH et © LINE FOR SHORT GAINS the College the rooms of the lub late Saturday | Won by a seore of Into second tly beat | vumnpions. owing. tc bar topping core was nt finish was in called the 1 replay. LIVE WIRES * By Neal R. O’Hara beew re- y th Hi the off Jackson, Julian 8, Myrick. Copsrighi, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) tiem Valent ai ittee, which tn No J, on Jan, Louis Bender Jack Kearns has received sixteen offers for the Dempsey fight. Total}. arrow oie none hens | amount of the sixtcen offers is $3.12 in telegraph tolls. Sims here janble to ¢ ‘ae who hi World's greatest fight promoter hasn't put in his bid yet. He's busy —Among ber two fourse Crees ass: Dempsey’s wearing a straw hat in Los Angeles this winter. proves Jack didn’t hear the bell ring Sept. 15 any more than Willard heard | st ring on July 4. nang, Sar ars Looks like the Hed Sox may try Ruthless warfare next se : 8. 6 Jan, 7 WELL, THE TRADING STAMPS ON THE BABE RUTH DEAL OUGHTA BE WORTH SOMETHING. leur ose Fog days Pye ato prningside . 7 After the 5 Scie, aeorninesiae Frazee’s got a great show on Broadway, which is more than he'll have \ou iiss, comm, re-running of the in Boston next summe. puntry Gc20 hase 1 4 iy etic Club ‘ : War Paulas ub ,,, arvard team went to California on a Railroad Administration train. and alo vox the limit aliow- Players got plenty of practice in kicking. Ye one al bis poole On the night of the conte minutes and led all the . . . | and i for the six m YALE FOOTBALL, TEAM TOOK IN $130,000 *ROFIT LAST WHICH PROVES THAT THE GOLI GATE AID IPORNTA, Tom the night of Jan, 8. i wa announced f Brooklyn scored c 6) 8 (today, W menalded victory, over And Dartmouth took in $40,000, We'll say it was the long Green team. | 1 League cham- am : Lad if ¢ that the Amy Kast Yale's going to play Cornell next year. One team Al Sharpe knows will be aeked he can lick, | | to etticiate in rendering the decision in the bout beuween, Benny Levmant af Jainny Dundes at | ‘The jnutgen are to find and if they dittgree then tle jed the fleld at} mont Yacht Club oN Sar ten Phil Lewis opens ils new bexing lub im the the high aeratch| CENTRE TEAM WILL HAVE A KICK IN IT. Grand Opera House With a card of $6 out of a possible | iS eisai psepretih No one's accused the Cornell t m of playing professional football Ail eatin eae SIE Adolph Zukor’s team ain't the only bunch of famous players in Cali- take son the | fornia this week. Fenen Se ' SUP) o) Ridin Miaimmone, wt Wend awe be : X YZ of footbaii—texen Jine, Yost, pice. the Oanatian lightwengrt Msi egy ot Me a ° e rund tout a the Tonto A, C, on Friday night, Our staff expert picks his All-America teeth as follows: Ends, Mola: ha ; $ T t raniee for Fitzsimmons just to show him axon and the practice on the wet Bicuspids; Guards, Canine Teeth; Centre, Incisors. ne (es Timon 1s ‘ oanacis sundest unexpected anove that re- Harvard placed twenty-three players on this season's All-Over-America| 70™ ! touchdown had | team. of the Pitt team ae awe ab them for another! MIGHT GAM THE ONLY BUSID ullind | OF AGRERMENT BTART A 2W. just been matched by Dis manes: ae ° box Jaber White in Lorton befor We scored two should have had break of luck | ett that hangs ide of Wells. ards val RACING SELECTIONS, hanged the th Nays veer eee clu affiniale are Knowledae. of Warnes * HAVANA, The Original Celties seored their] After this go Jackson with Way is known as Vinee Race—Old Red, Steve, Hor- | thirty-cighth consecutive vict at] Harry Cerleon field runner, We ane Lerch, Anetralia at the A 1ce—Dione, The Gleamer, | tae Central ‘Opera House yesterday Jan, 19. fleld pli the tear The Race— ckhand, Blanchita, Realy rai Rete ehey Gefeated the Pitt a chance to] Healy, Plantarede 0° the ae ee a HOON TTIRB AGO | ennai Chuckie Way Lined Fifth Rave—Ruby, Skiles Knob, mck om the jt “pitt team ehitted DeLer tad orang. Gully Raains Brooklyn's representatives in the| ite cub to ture C sent Way stra nt NEW ORLEANS. Interstate League won their first con- First Raoe—Triumphant, Summer |'*st Yesterday afternoon at Arcadia eo fivat Second Race-Little Maudie, Tom- my Wae, Thos. F, McMahon, Ansonia team into camp, 39 to 34 : t christmas me resolved itaeil | "nird’ Raco—Vailey” Park” Maid [Owing to the fact that Brooklyn took| 3, {wing arached by Tuck MeAulitte, who me with a spurt here} Sweet Liberty, Penelope. over the Jersey City franchise of tho | und the undefesied Lightweight champion, is sch th Raee — Mather, Trusty, ms ‘ box at the Peekskill A. U New Yea e mame wes not | Obolus. league and were credited with the] ued lMietty 1s also matched to weet Pout | a anatter of hap hazard playing bit | .,PHfth Bace—Duchess Lace, Ballet | Skeeters’ wins the rubber plant boya | sermon Oulu \ tee melted wel Peal x of study, vit | Dancer, Panaman, a8 responsible | yittie String. Irish Mald: Paterson. plays, It was) Seventh Race—Capt. Hedge, Rook- very. \ eet The Chaplain Duffy basketball team the officials n Pinte © of the) oN. ¥. As C. Mewthers Enjoy Bow triumphed over Delmar Lyceum at] Ny" an i's dofenes {he | Members of the New York Athletic] Loesser's Casino in the Bronx by 88] vaiton # much money for their eaiteomd bout n dif. were treated to on the pest] to 87, ond, using boxing shows witness Foot Club in mar night. Willie Herm Paterson and Willie Dabney of asved In any 400 a8 A pase Dluy, third the ft Harry Robb over the Parson's Big Five at F lings Bronx turnished the freworks in the] within the first [final bout of six rounds, the former} © game when iL|wienine. the other xtround| Ray Kennedy for the winners fea-| wae wh Bamey t Fi Teiver | tired TONS. ne end) phe Holy N ts, Frankie Olaen of Pe von frm Jack Sheldon of t nile duck ‘Traevy of B Morale of ng Charlie Way runner wut hile is ne Hive made their | prank M ‘i Pireninie:” SepOn\e: haxid «ws | win reeord eloven straight when they | yor tat hoxed Iiiny {defeated the Copperheads at Man Mac ne of New York and Ray Doyel! tan Casino yesterday afternoon, ‘Lhe iw ialimed defense NEW YOR PLAYS—No. 2 tory.) WHY YANKS CANT RENEW. 6. LEASE American League President Says Giants’ Owners Are Resenting Huston’s War Collegiate Athletic Association Discusses Adoption of Boxing Its Session Here This From Hess HE annual session of the National Collegiate Association, which 1s on in this city this week, will he notable for several reasons, partic- ularly because adoption of boxing as an collegiate sport, just as football ind baseball are now, The athletic au- thorities of the University of Penn- sylvania are already on record as urg- ing the sport and Yale has taken up Unless powerful objec: tion is made to the project by repre- sentatives of other colleges, it 1s likely that a boxing association will be or- ganized and intercollegiate meets held has Bddie Eagan, i, middleweight xing tournament in Paris, and he Probably will be chosen head of the proposed organization at New Haven, haif back on St fall and is also a ieading candidate for the track team the com- ' Fistic News and Gossip By John Pollock the idea too, Boxing fans will have a chance to- night of seeing four good bouts’ be- tween evenly matched fighters. the Fourth Regiment Armory in Jersey City un- der the auspices of the Arena A. C., | which has brought off so many im- | portant bouts in the last few months. | The men who will t | plow Johnny | Chaney of Baltimore, Tom Cowler of Reich of this city, and Harry winner of the Major Pickering, graduate manager | f athletics at Pennsylvania, has his among college boys. | found bouts of two minutes e | two judges and a referee, the latter to and Gene | deciue the winner if the judges can't agree, or otherwise the referee might 1 four | Order an extra round, All four! desire on the part of the colleges who | England, and & Augie Ratner Bob Pea | Tunney, legitimate Light hea champion of th bouts will be for eight rounds, There is no The nus tatked about between Willie Jacieon and Benny Valger, both uf this city, ie Frank Bagley, manager han simad article tor Jackson to | a'8 Clud in Newark, manager of Valger is ive Valgwr moet Jackwm as be vis chance to clinch the match by ring the articles of agreement, recognize the an ideal form of exervise. about to eons iE M'DONALD, who is hy ehran to induc to sign up for a f Carpentier, gathered around the fistic board with Billy Gibson, Dan Cassidy and other sport followers. | cussed fistle men and things of past the Wa-round teat between nd Adie Fitzsimmons, the . have finally been at wae clinched today by Dan Pitzrimmons, accepting a gu? remarked Me at the recent Carpentier Monges, nana antee of $1,000 for ten roma at 142 jounds at the Detroit Hoxing Clib of Derzvit, Mish, on the night of held in Albert Hall drawn at least 40,000 people. small building, with a ing capacity of 4,000, it drew a of £28,000, or $116,000." “Why wasn't asked G.bson. it would have been too much of a risk for the promoter,” | answered McDonald It would bay ‘Lemard-Dundee fight om Jan. Benjamin will beky Leonant Ww et inte contiti will go to Lakeword and work 0 him evwy day. on George, is peculiarly situated be- 5 Knglinb flywaight damon YEAR, | ane” aster, bantam champion of the A. EK, ALWAYS IN CAL wii fight an eigit-round no derision bout in St. dimyay Wi ors might have entered a vigor- the King might @ been forced to call it off. ‘This| never do at the last minute,| ted. 80 it) Ide will train in Milwaukee, ided to take ace was selected, ts were sold for as high as priced went for tough, wasn't it, to] Wek Balke Collender Company Bowt-* Jem Driscoll beaten?" inter. |/!8 the omlers for seate already amwant are. point th ib scenery atouaks MOOHAItD. toile Hares cte velit get ay tow Neen ialie encanto Mat erence oe ee MeO Gnuue clu | ue Nilea. with iory nese yen Sor ae ; Centre College team is the only hard stuff that'll come out of Ken-|!t is mid Um! tucky next year. Lis $20,000, ‘the bowlers competing in the Had he agreed to a fifteen-{Col. Co. League. wil ya ten round bout instead af one of twenty | Prize in the form of a N.Y. BA al he would hay a Le Doux wna a 10 to 1 shot up to the #clation gives a medal to each tose or bowling association rey to-night with Jack : the gnestional ban:am, boxing Marty i} Coiling af this city ta the feature bout of gteht | mae 1 ois 6 rounds, The new dub Is called the Onondmes. | Tho semi-final of eisbt rounds brings together | Happy Smith and Kid Julien He couldn't put @ Jem until he blew up. ympathy was expressed | I sides for Driscoll in the gym- | {core and Fr defeated Frankie Bull, | uid patted on the back and soon a fund for him was started. | In no time ft had reached 1,600 pounds | » and is still being added to.” reorived §400 for bia eo! Dan Mongan acoepted ELL,” reminisced Gibson, thought there Was any use looking fur- ther than Driseoll for the best fighter He could do any- thing and everything with the gloves. And at the time we first aaw him he was about five years beyond his best “Yes, Jem was & good man,” agreed | McDonald, “but your man Attell must 1_understand nd Driscoll was ‘oldies, and the management made over $4,000 ‘All boxing dhaws at Towomto are for ho crippled soldiers, a ‘s for may have 2» THERE 1 TICLE ternational bar mar, has) Telrtee 288 WHERE THE ARTICLES! Joe Lynch, the Internat pineet the Spagiane are mtoatiled fy Un {tie “eames Eddie Mead, ta | Lynch bores Louisiana in Philsdel- The old oaken Beckett, the iron-bound Beckett, the moss-covered Beck- oe ee = ate ake Wilkie Jaciaon wilt mom likoly figlt his fim ~ | fight after bis ong layott at the Treaton af Trenton, N. J., on Jan, 5. BASKETBALL NOTES, — | Tsien. Xi 2- on dan ~ walect his qaoner ¥ pins wo the wood at the end of the Prank Hagley ar =~ 7 wee oy Tae ma fo “eel, sataog” eo very close thing. 4 it was, and in looking fight recalled that Attell waa the aggressor and the punisher | up to the time Driscoll ped Abe and made him look veriest of novices. stage Jem seemed in deadly fear of Attell’s hook to the body, but when drew Attell into a fe nat tlle etanding ae Boor, me: pain honship rout ‘lier ine the 2th and” och heres S85 The Jody Cinte Ta jof the fight die 100s Cine Ladies Bowing ce have toon Aemerved for the Pay in the Knight League will be resumed Cy a ae ee fie taumey should be koe after | ae eters much work for him and he ton will wwe te face In his Louta lve make a succeam with hin abom, : pride more than @ hard smaah on the Jaw might have donc was too wi Tt looked @ & Sigh, Cavaleadour. Hall, Brooklyn, when they took the} Yous Twrford writes as follows bs po cd es reports, Paokey O'Gatty did not box Jack Winette Day at Poekskill, > look of feigned vicionsness dup hig at-|f on his od draw to us. rh has made a r anid MeDon- lala at this stage of the conversation. “When I was here before he looked the coming champion to me and I tried hard to induce him to return to England with me,” ibson agreed that Reich had come pack, but said he never thought much f him as a prospective cham jacks something,” eaten Jim Coffey he didn’t, and I remember the night he MeKay, the well known diver. hands pushed out in front Ginn an? of him in fights in England, when Pal Sixth’ Race — Thursday Nighter, |9Pe now tied for first place with| cer New Bedford, Mas, mme tIme in Jan the winners. anid MoDonald, “was. tl Criqui by Moore, me, defeat of had all the looks of a cham but maybe he isn't the sane since came back from the war, You leson he was shot through the Jaw, and the Tt was learond from a reliable source toslay that | {tho Sportamen’s lub of Newark, forced) ay Prank Maran and Post The winners emerged victori-| ot tbs club's show on Jen. 12 that they can afford ed at the} OUs during the last minute of play. | co put on oply one other elght-roGind bout and three axon affaim, Annunciation Club scored a win| testherwe#it and Freddlo Reew of Brooklyn wil! qeeet in aor of the thie sa-rounder, Lisi dk press table and ino by 2% to 18 ‘The playing of | pervey Madden, the loral hearyweigh:, han gone Lidbtenstein, the Chi up and into the ring jwith ine.” Mac answered, laughingty. the Chicago hearywelght. here 1 to him and said ne party finally broke up. bused @ draw, final score was 26 to La ‘ And, oo Now Your's aftaruooa, Fred’ sald Gtb, and, with time Criticism. CHICAGO, Dec, 29—Ban Johnson, Who has been charged in New York With striving to oust from the Ameri« cun League Jabob Ruppert and T, L. Huston, owners of the Yankees, em= phatically denied to-day the accusa« tion and added the statement that .a r of so ago the Yankee owners sought to get out of baseball by af- fering their club for sale to him, for the sum of $600,000 when they be- lieved the war in Europe would con= tinue for several, yeurs and that the hationai game was aoomed to suffer almost unbearable losses. Not only did Johnson d had endeavored to get th league, but he said he had mado sirenuous efforts to obtain for them a long on the Polo Grounds after it had been retused by Charles A. Stoncham and Jona McGraw, Berore Ruppert made his ‘offer to Jobnson he aeciared that his club woul hot spend anotige cen®on baseball that Johnson could wave the stock five minutes’ notice. ‘hia. offer a Kupperts determination not to. in nother penny in the Kame caused th American Leas ecutive to send te iis ‘ciub own @ texte that was re cently read in court by Charles ‘Tutt! ¢ the New York Club's attorney, in. Tou) pert’s suit to obtain the right ‘to inves Ugate Johnson's inte he Cleve laud team, ieee ohare eny that ho out of his from the lett owners were ball park of thelr owa rue. if is said, b decli to do, and as iit d Johnson, who then ne club ow that effec ep to App on. Ne vt that the don tte 4 no had no At that t tion beeau foo uncertain mid been decided not to spend an Johnson says he realt: was the plight of the vert appeals to mater nt of the National Leaeue, to secure a long-term leave on tho Pc Bane nthe Pole and John_ Me nts with Cha i] RDA: ae A to be bitter a ther decided th t ae lone as anything to do with the Yankor Peat ee to giving 2 tons Hence the to the marion n tenn? to vaca! after the season « * Following the good example sct by the Wail Paper League, the Bruns- s League has joined the New York * Bowling Association in a body. Tia Will wean at in Udition many valuable prizes already ‘lis ® have ut Id medal to ¢ nPeto for, as the ved ter > Bm one of the ™ rolling at the ny in Brook. a a Dwyer, President of t any that runs the Rational B.A. that ho will do his hese to every club and league rollin his alleys enroll under the banner et the governing body in this city, Matowy, the forty or more mer 0 embers. 'T Col. Co. Beane score tan bowler, hae left (oem athe Srartain cantnin sem mitetittite: in dm tutte gee to nse : The Van Resite Sika were th eet Ratna natn at aaa Le, mt, dameene ot tte, amers si Renter, er Fete, mesa So Oar ote, Searety Alex Donter ‘berwiin i Palacyaileom om “tha 0th Of Tammy hy atten onan, that McKay clambered back with a ee, Reich, instead of teari: 0 m, began ‘to back away, with no The talk then went on to the Fecent Moore, Ted Lewis and Johnny Grittiths wera “The surprise of that night, to me," rench boy Pion to me, hones on the left side of hig fare agee That may have burt he ‘ou going back asked Gibson, “° 28+ “Not until Lbring you and Léonard MeDonald and the part: SORE mingly bndlens aubjects tafe ma | re THUM $ ®084ING anv aruan ACADEMY, Bivay & Pim o,

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