Hammond Times, Volume 16, Number 144, Hammond, Lake County, 8 December 1922 — Page 22
LYNCH BEATS
SANGGR AT
MILWAUKEE Champion Successfully Defends His Title Last Night
MILWAUKEE. WIS.. Dec. S Joe lyrsch, bantamweight champion, suc-w-on the first three round, the fourth was even, and the champion had the better of the milling' In the remaining sessions. The champion's superior ring-craft va.s the main factor in determining the result. Sangor was willing and aggressive at times, but the xray Lynch slipper punches and ducked out of harm's way was too much for the game local fighter, who did well to stay the ten rounds. Joey doled out same damage and in the sfxth round cut the chaiaplon's left eye with a ring swing. As early as the second round Lynch drew the claret from the challenger's nose by Jabbing him continually with his left hand as many as three times without returns. The g-lood flowed freely throughout the fight and at times Joe looked like a badly beaten fighter. Sangor surprised his friends by taking the first three rounds handily. The local boy forced the milling and had a wide bargln In each. He used his left to good advantage to Jab and hook. In the fourth round the champion hit his stride and honors were even at the bell.
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SOUTH BEND, INT., Dec. 8 A A committee of business men headed by Ell F. Siebert, mayor of this city has been appointed to work out a p'an to finance a r.ew football stad
ium for Notre Dame university, it was announced here yesterday. The bowl, which will be planned to accommodate between 35,000 and 40.000 persons, will be completed in two years, if the plans go through.
Coach Knute K. Rockne stated that Georgia Tech will play the homecoming contest here Oct. 27, 1923, and that efforts are being made to bring or.e of the big eastern teams west for a game in this city.
BOUTS AT HID. HARBOR
Tonight will bring together two of the best mitt sl!ngrs in the west. Oeorgle Verner, who hails from the Twin Cities and who has the honor of being the champion of
Indiana, in the lightweight division, and Morris Johnson, of Koseland. Manager of Verner, being the well known Joe Perntcka, who has been affiliated with boxers for the past several years, says he has a world champion. He announces that Verner is in the pink of condition and ready to go at a minutes notice. Man
ager Pernicka not over two weeks ago pitted his charge against the well known Eddie Raynor, and carried the honors after ten fierce
rounds of mauling. If Verner gets the popular decision he will be ready to take on the hard hitting Patsy Ilocco, of East Chicago. Morris Johnson, who needs no introduction is in good condition and he always gives the fans a good run for their money. Frank Hiplock, well known in pugilistio circles will referee the main bout. All buases, street cars and trains stop at the door. The first bout will go on at 3:30 sharp.
SIMPLEX
MEETS
ILLINOIS BELL NEXT
SATURDAY
EVENING
Canon for a day of sight seeing and to reach Pasadena Christmas eve. About twenty-five players will make the trip. They will take In the Pittsburgh-Stanford contest at Palo Alto on Dec. 30. The squad will arrive home about January 7th.
Array and Notre Dame Teams to Clash, Oct. 13 WEST POINT, N. T., Dec. 8. A gridiron battle between Army and Notre Dame for next season Is an assured fact. It was announced hero yesterday, the fast Hoosler eleven coming to play the cadets Oct. 1. Army will play Tale in the howl at New Haven again next year on Nov. 3.
Breeding new types of forest trees that would crow faster and produce more and better wood was the Idea of an Irish university p-ofessor.
It has been said thj Koreans used ironclad warships against the Japan's a en.rlv p.s 159 7.
The total trade done in Kus3ia last year reprssetits only about 1.' pe" cent of the tra.de in 1913.
The Simplex basket ball team will meet the Illinois Bell Telephone five at the Lafayette gymnasium, corner of Calumet avenue and Sibley
street, next Saturday at 8 o'clock. 1
The Simplex five lias played in a number of games this season and have made a creditable record. The one contest in which the local telephone employes have played resulted In a defeat for them at the hands of the Auburn Parks. Two girl's teams from the Bets Co. will play the preOlminary. Kvery contest which the girls have played this year has been well attended and their addition to the program for next Saturday evening has proved popular.
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M 1
PENN STATE TO LEAVE DEC. 19 STATE COLLEGE, PA., Dec 8 Penn State's football team, which will meet Southern California In Pasadena on New Tear's Day, will leave for the Pacific coist December 19. It is planned to stop at Grand
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What chance has Benny LeonarJ to win the welterweight title, now that it is held by a young, strong youngster instead of time worn veteran? Mickey Walker, tha new champion, and Leonard are sure to meet over in Tex Rickard's big arena in New Jersey next summer. It will be one of the big bouts of the year and probably will attract as large a gate as the LeonardTendler affair of last summer.' It is argued that sinco Leoaard was made to look foolish by the veteran Britton, the lightweight champion would nave no ch"nce apainst a man who in turn made Britton look like a second rater. But that kind of figuring never has been accurate. Leonard is having so much trouble making weight in his own class that he may be forced into the welterweight class to preserve hi health if for no other reason. The dread specter of the white plapu ever hovers over those who contin ually weaken themselves by fight inp at too low a weight, and Leon ard is too sensible a person to sac rifice his health. By the time next summer coin around Leonard luay really want to win the welterweight title. H( is not the kind of a man to be sati3 fied with anything less than a championship and if forced into the higher class it is reasonable to sup pose that he will bend every effort toward winning tl. highest hono sv That will make a great deal of difference in his plan of battle and he can be expected to make a much better Fight against the young and inexperienced Walker th- he iid against the crafty Britton. Accidentally or otherwise. Leo: ard made a terrible mistake when he met Britton in the Velodrome last summer. For ten rounds of that bout he fought entirely for the head. Not once did 1- ma'., i.
play for the body. Several times Leonard landed solid shots to the jaw, but the veteran shook thera off without much trouble. Any hardened ringstrr can withstand a wallop on the jaw fairly well despite advanced years, but no veteran, can take it in the body and survive. Walker knew that flinch, and he beat Britton in the very first round by slugging tha veteran In the body. If Leonard h-" followed similar tactics thee is : dou ': whatever that he would have scored a knockout. Near the close of the bout he hooked his left to the body for the first time during the battle and the blow put Britton down and almost out. If Leonard had started that way it would have been a walkover for him. n-i i . t -
i iucic ii obo u ge o remembers how it felt to be unable to ittend a football game when he was i boy. Judge Eller of the Englevood Court, Chicago, sounded a lopular note a few days ago when nstead of dealing harshly with two youngsters who had been caught neeking through knotholes at the Chicago-Princeton game he scathingly expressed his clsapproval f he action of Geo. O. Fairweather, the university bunii ess manager, in having the youngsters arrested.
The spirit of the day, according to the Judge, was to see the game at any cost. Joie Ray, the great runner, is getting to be just as dangerous a proposition in the ring as ee is oa the track. His first two appearances in Chicago amateur boxing circles have resulted in victories as decisive as any he ever turned in in the harrier branch of sport Satisfied that his legs have fe equals Ray ia developing r. pair of arms that are just as exceptions in their defeat dealing qualities.
I .rue
JhialJleinige olr Eootieggers
1
A saturnalia of bootlegging seems to be no exaggerated phrase to describe the startling state of affairs to which the Administration calls the nation's attention. Inspired Washington dispatches tell us that the present Prohibition enforcement methods are "debauching and debasing the entire country"; that the President is "deeply concerned over a belief that the moral fiber of the American people is deteriorating through the open disrespect shown' for the effort to enforce Prohibition"; and that "the growth of bootlegging, the temerity of rum-runners, and the serious insinuations against Federal enforcement officers have been worrying the Administration for some months," until finally "With Prohibition enforcement "recognized as on the verge of absolute collapse in four States and in a condition of serious demoralization elsewhere in the country, President Harding considered to-day the issuance of a solemn public appeal to all good citizens to discourage bootlegging as a last resort to administer the law." "One way to make Prohibition prohibit," declares the New York Evening Post, 'would be to arrest some of the prominent and respectable people who buy what the bootleggers sell." The leading article in The Literary D:gest this week takes up the subject of the enforcement of the Prohibition laws and presents the opinions of leading newspapers as to ways and means. Other news-features of current interest and importance are:
Democratic Plans to Win Next Time How the French-American Romance May Be Renewed To Curb Reckless Aviators Whence Comes the Virtue of Cod-liver Oil? Hearing Two Thousand Miles With a Home-made Radio Set An Anglican Move Toward Rome A Neighborly View of Woodrow Wilson Personal Glimpses
Loves and Hates of the Circus Elephant Governor Allen's Court Threatened The Test of the Irish Free State How Not to Catch Cold Mr. Hoxie's Talking Film Stories That Reveal Bernhardt Eastern Culture Draining the West of Ministers Anarchism and Cruelty The Soul of the Russian Peasant Topics of the Day
Many Interesting Illustrations, Including the Best of the Humorous Cartoons
The Season's Screen Novelty
Over one thousand leading theaters are now showing the humorous motion picture, "Fun From the Press." New bookings are being signed as fast as salesmen can cover their territory. And this real Iaughmaker is just three months old. But no wonder! "Produced by The Literary Digest" has been an assurance to millions of photoplay fans of a superior product. For more than thirty years The Digest has been an accurate barometer of the public pulse. So, "Fun From the Press" is the happiest, jolliest collection of rapid-fire mirth presented on any screen. There's a laugh in every flicker of the film. It's the cream of clean humor. If you've missed the first releases, surely see the next. Watch for it every week at your favorite motion-picture haunt. "Fun From the Press" is Produced by The Literary Digest; W. W. Hodkinson Corporation, Distributors.
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