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b; 4 8 es ~ALONZO AMOS a) ooeamennemesetie 4 tctanannnne FAMOUS ChICAGO COACH HAS HAD BRILLIANT CAREER + Leader of the Eleven That Facs-Tigers To- Day Was the Best College tcher of : His Day and,a Brilliant — nd. By Charlie Brickley. (Harvard's Greatest Captain and AlleAmerican Back of 1012-13-14) LONZO AMOS STAGG, coach of the Chicago Univ A team, is one of the most illustrious names in the of American athletics : A name a elebrated as Walter Camp at Yale, as Percy Haughton at Harvard, as Bill Edwards of Princeton What are the accomplishments of Stagg that en- title him to everlasting in the admira- tion of all true sportsmen? In 1892 Stagg was the most widely known athlete in the country As pitcher on the Yale University baseball team he football Hail of Fane sity permanence won the Bive five chanipionships between 1886-1891 He was the greatest college pit of his day, striking out seveateen Harvard batsmen in one game He refused the yearly salary of $4,000 to pitch pro- fessional baseball for New York, a princely offer in those days. He was a great football player, starring at end on the famous Yale teams bf 1889-1890 He won many honors at Yale, be- 4 sides those on the athletic fleld—was editor of his school paper; active in BRICKLEY TO GWE religious work, earning the title of} | EXPERT ACCOUNT OF “Phe Muscular Christian.” CHICAGO-TIGERS GAME. He has the longest record as a di pas yale reetor and coach of athletics, in point Football is like me of checkers with each eleven trying to win through skilfully manoeu vering. of continuous service for one institu. a tion—having coached football, ba ie | yall, track and all branches of ¢ } athletics at the University of Chi o} since John D. Rockefeller's money ga- | tablished the Baptist school, In 189: down by the old Midway Plaisance of the Chicago World's Fair Grounds, His skill in generalship and capac- ity in developing well disciplined and formidable teams from raw material over a span of thirty years have hardly been equalled. Christianity and athletics have gons hand in hand with Stagg’s coaching, nevertheless he Is called “The Old Fox.” He has developed some of th» greatest athletes in the country in football, baseball and track. His Charles Brickley, famous Harvard Captain and kicking star, will watch Chicago and Prince- ton in their battle this afternoon and in Monday's Evening World will give an expert description of the game, the strategy of the rival teams, the execution of of- fense and defense, and tho indi- vidual feats of various players. . The Brickley article will be ac- companied by instructive dia- grams that will easily reveal the progress of the game to football fans who could not see the two teams in action. Do not miss this feature on these pages in Monday's issue. pupils have become great} Hugo Hezdek is etill another star coaches. pupil of the system. Hugo us ‘ w{a halfback was gh-powgred shell He daveloped tho fret “spiral” |. football, and a baseball player of Punt used in footuall. skill. Bezdek managed the Ditts- As a leading member of the foot-| burgh National League team for a ball Rules Committee he advocated | #eason, and created quite ‘eee ey va | {8 now the Staeg of Penn ; he new open game, and as far back liege, turning oul foottull teame cl a3 1906 predicted the development of | haye been coneeded Eastern the forward pass, tirst perfected in| pions. His Penn State warrior the Middle West, and which has peen | ®t Harvard today, with a team th 4 _ wil! test the best the Crimson wi #dopted and usod by the East, South | pie to offe and Far West to day—a epectacular — Walter Steffen, Leo De Tray, Pat feature that has revolutionized lin and Kennedy a few the Fa lof the many great athletes the “Old Fox" brought to fame in the middle game He has advocated 1 vegetarian dict ya training athletes, urging his erd-) Stagg’s success on heroes to put aside tempting to his thorough knowledge of every roasts and juidy chops in favor of |‘Ietall of the game he teaches, tt b 7 |Instilling of fair, square, hard fight Sagetables, bread, nuts and milk, $008} ing qualities that he himself pos 10 more easily undergo severe muscu-| sessed as an athlete, quickness to lar strains. |take advantage of every opportunity “Old Fox" Stagg brings his football {224 above all, Judgment and coolness Hupils of 1921 to play Princeton 'to- | as a coach ts due every eritical point Stage’s courage and dete nination lay, the first time the University of | weee exemplified when, incapacitated Ohi o> has engaged a member of the |by rheumatism once, he coached his Bi ree on the gridiron. m using a motorcycle to follow soach Roper, Capt. Keck, Lourie | “nd Garrity of Princeton will re- ceive the loyal support of the speo- vators In heading the defense against | the Western invaders at Palmer | Stadium this afternoon, but tntere will centre around the short, bur! tigure of wily Coach Stagg This is not the first time Stagg | has brought @ Chicago team to battle in the Eust. In 1904 the Maroon mixed with West Point up on the Plain. Back in the old days of ‘football, | round 1895, when a team only had to go five yards in three downs to keep the ball, Stagg sprung the first big {nnovation in foothall kicking, namely, the “spiral” punt. Before this (frequently now) the ball was booted end over end or “floating” in aimless orbits. Under Stagg, Clarence Herschberger, a great kicking half-back, discovered a foot technique whereby, swinging his instep obliquely across the ball, he would impart to it the spinning mo- his pupils up and down the field. Stage’s first aim on the gridiron is to “make men.” Football is a glorious game,” says Stagg. “It calls for the highest in courage and sacrifice, for the good of the school and to win. It is a vigor- ous game, and ina certain sense It {8 to the glory of football that men will play the game in spite of Injuries. It also curbs the temper and makes men forbearing and patient “One of the chief developments of the Inst thirty years is are tion of the value of football and athletica The war helped to make e worth while physically, mentally and moral! Stagg \s a coach of Idenis, and be- Neves that the way the best grade of coaches |s to make the nt etic director a member of the college ‘aculty. Stagg is a member of the faculty of the University of Chicago Watch Stagg at Princeton to-day. to get HE EVENTING WORLD, so PLAYED ON YALE im 1291 HEY, You RIGHT GUARD THERE GET INTO “thar GUY- HeY sae! shoot THE STAGo COACHED HIS TEAM FROH A MOTORCNCLE WHEN HE WAS INCAPACITATED Hit -FED, CORN: BY RHEUHATISH - Kansas Gets Decision From . Tendler on a Knock Down, | BigMoney Changing Hands & | ; + changes complaining to xteferee Mc- Did Cleaner |(ittiang about Rocky's butting. Right after that a trickle of biow flowed down his cheek bone and tad Philadelphian Hitting and Verdict Was a SATURDAY Copyright, 1921, by WHEN STAGG WAS A PLANING YOUNESTE? THE CENTER. KICKED THE BALL Back TO QUARTER WHO SOMETIME > CAUGHT It —— AND HE Was CHAMPION PITCHER ON YALES TEAM — IM ONE GAME STRIKING OUT AND HUT-PED SYSTEt) OOTOBER 22, STAGG A NAME TO CONJ 1yai. the Press Publish} » (hae METIMES DIDNT. IT BARVARD PLAYERS HE ADOCATES THE bs fei fice - &e TO-DAY’S FEATURE FOOTBALL GAMES + Princeton .. Yale . Harvard Dartmouth Pittsbureh y. ¥. Unity, | 5 ise ingesiders. him look bad. He had a nasty cut | \!favette | Surprise to Ringsiders. on che eyelid of his left eye. Before | .M | “5 the end of this round encler’s right eftela re. eye was also rimmed in black. | Moss By Vincent Treanor. | Wrought up by this, Tendler went | Middiebury CLEAN knockdown scored by |at Rocky savagely in'tne eighth and | Koch : A ocky Kansas over Lew Tend- | battered bim with his right jab and | }}; & J. 4 oe ay pate w Tend- | right hook until he became arin | pushy Anni ler ta all that could have in-|weary. after “he had ianded his | HoBart, te ito Auenced the judges in their award of |ehoice collection of blows, Wansas |&t “Bueno moat! Fi: deetslon' to) Mi © Garden |!aughed unhurt. Pilla” Nova volie Univ ie halen lg ae ey wo rden| "The elvveuch and twelfth were of | Frank ene Unie st night, Big money changed bunds iyo "giyecand-iake order and about | ttysuurg on the But for the sudden flopping of Philadelphia light- weight at the beginning of the ninth result W even, Tendler’s long range k being offset by the roughing tactics whi Kansas employed while in close the | endler came with a great spurt in Jrouad the verdict might have been|ine fourteenth, or sorteof a delayed versed. As it was, the dec.sion|run, and for the first time caused the d unfair, to say the least, for}robust Kansas to show some effects of the milling. swapping the ler. Tendler continued forcing the battle n the fifteenth round and outclassed Kansas. He landed rights and lefts cleanly every time he started, Rocky landed one good straight left to the face and a solid drive with his right to the body and there tne fight ended The majority of those around the ringside had decided in advance that Tendler, even though he started late, would get the decision. When it went to Kansas they were dumfounded, The verdict, following others a bit off color, will probably have the effect of curing the betting evil, especially as It relates to 2 to 1 shots. The evening started with a genuine old-fashioned slugfest between Joe Tiplitz of Philadelphia ahd Johnny Darcy of New York. They fought toe to toe throughout, first one in front and then the other, At the end of eight rounds the decision went to Tip- Utz. hobby Michags waa awarded the decision over EaM Baird in the second eight-round bout. Baird, willing enough, couldn't solve Michael's awk- ward style and was outpointed almost thronghout the contest, Carl Tremaine, the Cleveland ban- looked n cur tabulation o points scored in cur tabulation of the points scored SipEAaalett from the first to the the score stood 6 for Tendler, 8 for Kansas and 6 even |scasions. However, {n these days of secret balloting by the ringside off- cials ng ene knows how decisions are arrived at. The judges last night.were Johnny Rankin and Billy Smith, compara- tively unknown to ring followers. No loud protest came from the crowd when Joe Humphries announced the result of their findings, and as Tend- ler took the reverse apparently in good part, no one else has any rea- son to complain, Tendler originally |was a 2 to 1 favorite, but Kansas money, mysteriously plentiful, had the effcet of forcing the odds to £ to 6 at ring time. The fight itself, which attracted a cnjacity crowd and an overflow out- side the Garden which necessitated the calling of reserves from six pre- eincts, was far from sensational ‘Tendler was the better boxer and landed the most clean punches, He seldom missed with his right jab, fol- |lewed by a left hook, one-two fash- ion, He landed flush on Rocky’s jaw and body dozens of times, but with- each man round, t y out an ayparent effect on Kansas. ye | quarte where he belted Tendler's A boy has plenty of class and style, but he seems to lack the wallop, He has everything else in a boxing way and made a big hit with the Garden crowd Colling stood up manfully under about red, and shifted right-hand chugs and overhand punches to the Jaw In the seventh round Tendler came out of one of these close quarter ex tion of a shell in flight. This motion kept the ball pointed into the wind, reducing resistance, gaining di tance, aiding direction and making the ball more difficult to judge and catch, | Incidentally, the only time Stage’s orders were ever disoheyed on the! field. was when Herschberger, then) captain, disregarding sitive orders (Cecil Leitch Mak — Foreign Star Hits Ball 309 | In Winning Belleclaire Tourney a thousand widely scattered punches and never was discouraged at any stage of the battle. Just before the final bell Referee Kid MoPartland stopped the bout, Collins was too far yutclassed, The crowd protested with hoots and howls. —_—»—__—— SCHOOLBOY ATHLETES IN es Record Drive | hereafter can beat her. She won by of his physician and coach, rusted on . tein freo and casy margin of 11 up SUNDAY WORLD MEET. the field from a sick bed and won a, Yards, Scoring Easy Victory emt 10. 00 piew = — inst Michigan in « regular . ; ncoutatenton’s tremendous driving and] cose to 2,400 youngsters from the \ ast-minute “nish! OVer Mrs. Hucknall. ate tron play were a revelation {0 | mublle schools of the five boroughs will Adeking and shing his team to — the foretgn champion's work forlerrive for champtonship honors in the victory. Laltat ea © frst tine, The rest bave become | inal titular games of The Sunday Walter Eckersall, who Wu Camp - Fe eee AT eT otter ce | World, which will be conducted by the selected for his Al r c Qreat Britain, France Ay ut has seen Miss Leitch tak a a Ta eae ‘ts ; 5 than $2 strokes !n any of her] Public Schools Athletic League tn the greatest football pl : : wan seored yesterday morne | 224, Restment Armory on Washington ever brought out, 3 fe Ha P ‘4 ning wind. the round being tl afternoon. kersall was another “ ai pun f t jl the more remarkable for successive | ¢ ter, but more famous as 4 lek b in the tov mt on tho Vand ditrd | vhot-putting In 1908 “Eckie beat W 1Y tos n t t Bel re yesterday, | i © vitstied up 11, booting thre: field therthines, that shel : chink : games will mark ¢ when his teammates were outrusied ® Re prouch was four feat away. [teenth consecutive year that, and in the hole two touchdowns and) “"? dive a ball further than the male) mye winning fist that lone TPR SE PEM Meeps one goal. “Eckie" kicked five goals we ality and far] fa BEAR AUER. OO ONE NA. TE ne youth, Sas provided the school tro. from the field in 1906, a bis game) as many men in the champlonship|{}\: Mee Mackoall was 8 daw Mi [piles and individual medats toy “SA team without a good kicker in| Cis In driv had axe PE hounaanalenase hen } finals lke @ fish without fins" is 4 Stagg | Miss Leitch drove the ball for to Inst. Bhe only | = motto, and carry of 300 yards down the niy~six holes played, and one of the: | “Tiny” Maxwell, a celebrated fuot-| way, undoubtedly the t drive | ony peeent Sine Tallon ineurres 8 Readers desiring buck cop, ball otis of to-day, Is another Stagg | ever made by a woinar scoun-|ball as the was about to putt on the|| The Evening World containing product. ny” came to Stagg from twenty-first green. , ‘ the Englewood High Schoo! of Chi- Gsksailse f her-eil anal ec™ Hucknall got away to @ runnin Brickley's descriptions and illu cago, and learned to play guani on . ucKEnal #8 ut ; ene a Aye the opening trations of football plays should the Maroon before he went to gather|!t was by no ineans bad at tha be So af new laurels at Swarthmore. ‘Tri Ceell Leitch was at at Yale, tenet east 2 mek ae ape her magnificent best, and when she achieves that state of being, no woman this ’ of the again. 4, but after she turned tn pars on the next two, only to see them beaten, she was never in a dangerous position forward a two-cent stamp for each copy. Address Circulation Manager. Boston Unly Norwich . Dickinson Trinity < Tufts nua Mirine Boste: Morti: Wore : Yal Harvari -Drexel Ins Michizan Milinots «Minneapolis Notre Dame sourt Kansas Aggies Kansas slowa State ‘ornell Goll Drake higan Kainmazoo Oberlin ‘i Sto Louis | SOUTH. | Rutgers . -Ot......Georgla Tach Oglethorpe at Georgia Unity. Transylvania . at. Centre Georgetown Col... ientucky florida ., 5 Tennessee Miss. Aggie at. : Tulane *At Polo Grounds. EVENING WORLD'S OWN SPORT HISTORY Tilden Wins tn Straight sets. Willfam T, Tilden 2d defeated Watson M, Washburn in straight sets by a wore of 6—3, 6—¥, in an exhibition mateh for the American Committee of Devastated France at the Morristown Field Ciub, Morristown, N. J.. yesterday. in another singles match Mrs, Molla Bjurstedt Mallory defeated Miss Leslie Bancroft of 1 oston at 6—1. Miss Bancroft was oil form ahd could not continue the second set Washburn and Mrs, Mallory won the doubles match {rom the champion and Miss Bancroft at 6—4, 6 = — Montclair Academy Winn, MONTCLAIR, N. J.. Oct. clair Academy defeated High School, to 7 yesterday. Bare W Wadsworth for Ridgewood, und Abbott and Sulli- an ior Montclair, “Talg was # par- teularly Important game, Inamuch as and Montelair are old ri- wood defeated Montclair ust yeer | ee Bowdoin Takes Up BRUNSWIC 4 doin xe 4 are going in f geif on vrganized basis, A team, toe’ wii hedule with ia being arra ege oon surnament ts bringing ald In — LEXINGTON, Ky,, Oot. 2 Unt- |versity of Kentucky defeated George- wn Coleg fday by @ score of 33 to 10 In a slow and listless game, The Georgetown Tigers resorted to « ntinual punting game and lost mueb «round. an players, The acore was § to THE OLD FOX OF CHICAGO UNIVERSITY - - By Thorton Fisher Pij]Hf New York Kveulng World) URE WITH IN SPORTS VES UP “BARNSTORMING ON HUSTON APPEAL Yankee Owners to Intercede | With “Judge” Landis in Babe’s Behalf. k RIENDS of Babe Ruth and well F wishers of the Yankee club are to-day rejoicing over the home run king’s decision to give up his barnstorming tour and his willing- ness to make peace with Judge Lan- dis, High Commissioner of Baseball. Col. Huston, part owner of the Yan- kees, returned from Scranton, Pa, last night, where he had a long con- ference with Ruth end the other| members of his club who have been defying the laws of baseball concern- ing the playing of exhibition gam by members of clubs who partici- | pated in World's Series games. \ Col. Huston 4 | “Ruth has had @ change of heart |and feels that he was badly advised jin ying exhibition games in face | of a rule which Judge Landis, as High | Commissioner of baseball, was bound |to ent * “Lam one of those who consider the rule a bad one and unfalr to piayers ike Ruth. In talking with him to-day at Scranton I promised to use ay it efforts to have the rule rescinded, 1 also promised to Intercede tn hia behalf with Judge Landis to have th punishment made as light a8 pos: in view of the fact that he feels Da, that he made a mistake. - “Tuith expressed regret to me that’ he had n@ given more consideration to the New York club, which, he ad- ALONZO A. STAGG 10, the New York treated him with | “THE OLD Fox bd the utmost fairness. | was glad to see him take this attitude aad natur- ly urged him to givs up the bara. ming trip in the hope Judge Lan- is would not feel the necessity for imposing a Ic pensio: COACH OF CHICAGOS STURDY OUTFIT Landis-Bam controversy is go: centre for the winter, anyway. . Commish just missed abolishing wr on 96 huve a $5,000 education before you Looks like Landis is now Baseball barnstorming ‘8 cept meagre salaries for the Proying that {t takes all kinds of p State. ¥irst rumor of winter {s that Baltimore. A rumor that Baltimore LIVE WIRE BY NEAL &. O'HARA. In eliminating four of the five wres' Top price for Harvard-Yale tickets !s only $3, but you've got to . of H In the other twelve- O17 ON GAT Order A: AUCRE rounder Tom MeMahon will swap talking cold turkey to the Sultan of Swat, Punches with Willie Priffer This pair Roce 8 are promising Harlem lightweights, what makes {t possible for players to ac- regular major league season, Wiscondin for wererad oe tust pesition, He Pittsburgh football team is out of running for gridiron champton- as Charman and Gor Blaine ship. But the footballers at least gave Pittsburgh fans three months’ ayovinied AL J. Sobaner, a notice that they were going to crack. ALivauke, to fill hie place. Cire py the a for five years, Fred Toney and Shuffiin’ Phil Douglas both live ink, Brooklyn, tonight, Dave > 28 8 6 Harvard, Yale and Princeton coaches are worrying. But you don't <n om to mend ie box ofiice ov rg, Lgnvwegat ttle from out notice any wrinkles on the brows of t cpaxiatics boys beri a RE EOS Baltimore-Loutavitle Little World's Series attracted gate of less U7 Tir sunfnal i} brite setae Bay than $60,000. Which was plenty little enough sae wo ™ Li . . . a Fistic News and Gossip By John Pollock Panama Joe Gans. the colored ing to se Chicago the baseoull hampion, will defend his title In an- ‘ other battle to-night, when he meets ng holds, New York Wrestling | Nero ¢ K, anothcr colored scrapper, restiing’s hold on the public, in the feature bout of twelve rounds * at Cer ath Sporting Club on Charman of that w © populate J Pacific Comat welterweight, ny over Georgie Ward, at the od local start when he, © mixed bouts permiited rent clube in Philadel There will be no me to be staged ty the 4 Philly franchise will be moved to denies, Many Ring George La Blanche Sent Non-) pareil Dempsey to Dream- land With a Lucky Punch. | By Robert Edgren. UEDR thinigs happen in the ring. Nothing is more uncer~ tain than a boxing match in which two good men meet. A fight is never over until the last count or the decision of the referee, Often an ap- parently beaten man wins through landing an unexpected blow, That ls why a good referee is slow to stop & ‘match in whieh one contender {s ap~ parently outclassed but still strong enough to have @ chance to win, The next minute may see defeat turned into victory by @ successful bit of strategy or a turn of luck. Such a thing happened when George la Blanche knocked out the old Jack Dempsey, the Nonparetl, former mid- dleweight champion. The fight was in San Francisco, Aug. 27, 1889. At that time Dempsey was regarded as ‘without a peer in his class. He had met the Marine, as La Blanche was called, in 1886, and had knocked him out in thirteen rounds. After that, La Blanche had beaten a lot of other good men and egrned a right to chal- lenge Dempsey again, still, Demp- ey's backers never thought Jack coul! possibly lose. Dempsey trained at Croll's Gardens, Alameda, where Terry McGovern |trained, years afterward, for the fight in which Young Corbett beat hin a second time. In those days fights were usually to 2 finish, and when good men met,they often went many rounds. There was no rushing in for a quick knockout Each man tried to outgeneral the other, and the finishing blows started only when one was weakened or tricked Into leaving sure openings. Jack Dempsey outfought La Blanche all the way until the thirty-second round. Here he had the Marine al 7 dazed, groggy an: wildered. People Siete ee vo [were ‘starting for the doors, ‘The day by @ baseball fight seemed all over. La Blanche, Odd Knockouts Have Won Championships phia, Director of Cubic Batety Cortalyou of that tty passed a rule in which be will ot allow colored and white men to oppose eadh aver in aw 8 few nighta 860 ‘The now rule went into effect Marty Crom, the ruszed local weltermeight, who ad ‘tune to lose several decialome in the clubs in thls vicinity, ) wart @ winning streak by twelve-rouand go at attack, turned his back, and catching sian the rope with his left hand tried to | As Leach Cross asked for more time to train, his slip aside and escape until he could "Ach with Young Maxwell, eckeduled (0 reopen pl aay ne Biar A. ©, Monday night, bas been postponed Dempsey stepped tn. La Blanche |* Wek pulled himself along the- ropes, whirl- ing completely around to face Demp- sey again, and tn turning swung his right arm at full length as if trying to brush Dempsey back. The side of his fist struck Dempsey east alder, who ts 9 the top tn the Mabtwelght ranks, and knocked out such boys as andy Moriarity, Jack Ellfott, Matty + ls matcued to leat Leon roadway EA. Monday night, on the polnt of the chin. To the ; amazement of ie crowd Dempsey soe ae ve fell in a heap, knocked completely trope Ay, «ve out. aan ment Joe Tiplitagot La Blanche was as startled by this | “Pniuy,” Farese will take op ° unexpected resutt-as any of the spec | paly of for eight manda, and ta‘ors. But when he realized that he |jghany Brown of England ve, Battling Leouand had won he encouraged the lmprese |r “ei.” sion that he had simply used a new | and clever blow. They called it “The |, * = bsoiopple ce aaeionthey yr.) La Blanche Swing."” and for some 20 ti wie ee nettiog et a fh time afterward La Blanche practiaed PBOvkvu at te Broduay Exhibition of EY it, and other fighters tried to use it. | "2 op Thurwiay night, end Dare Rosberg, the | But there was some discussion about {mer suateur a ne ce the fairness of the blow. It might be {ait {tesa mands a Rie Searing ane struck with the heel of the hand, the |% Dre om nest Saturday night wrist or the elbow. It was renamed the pivot blow, as! the fighter using it pivoted on his . 7 heel !n turning, using the pivot to add RACING MONDAY fo: @ to the puneh The pivot blow mpire il 0 e was finally barred, and all boxing | EIT C y Cours rules to-day forbid it as a foul A TERRIFIC BLOW (YONKELS & MT. VERNON) I saw Frankie Nell knock out | Six Attractive Features:— Harry Forbes for the? bantamwelght NE ROUND MILE WANDIORE cham nship San Franclse with THE WIEDBIIAR PURSE an odd punch, Nei! was a machinist, Mit PON EDO PUD keeping the Mergonthaler machines HWY VALIAL La In r air in a San Francisco news RACKE AT 4 paper office. His work developed r Tra remarkable pair of forear Tn his fret enty et Addl- | eigiateen with clean knoe trains etop at Jail in ite. kr re Lesingeas brother, and Harry gave him a match to get rever | Harry Forbes was one of the clev- [i ton erest little ) 1 ever saw, and a WAND STAND, 83.95, Including Tax, \corking fighter, He was rushing Ne: Jand hitting him fast with both hands when Nel! suddenly plunged straight Commonwealth Club—To-Nig! s Eee at him, swayed to the right, and ight Jawung his “stiffened left Ike | PANAMA JOE GANS vs. NERO ONIN f, ‘ail bat, twisting his wrist as his) TOM MeMAHON v. WILLIE PHIFER’ Pet aes on Romban'a Oke Adzalaaton #1, "Thone Harlem $a47% Forbes dropped, wriggled around, _ and couldn't get up. His legs were unable to hold of Dempsey's swift TO-RIGHT--THE RINK “tira gu DAVE, SHAPE ry GEORGE Lavra oF paralyzed for the time, and the ref- e@ree counted him out, ‘(Copyright 1921, by Robert Edgren,) hun ILLY HENAY ya, LEW nici a