THE SUNDAY 'OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, MAY 3, 1003. 35 BOXlNG AS A FORM OF EXERCISE KS5amm ! ; r Dodfrinp: and delivering: a left-hand string:. Right-hand counter for the short riba. ShoHlderlng-. Left lead for face xrlth left coanter for stomach. Solar plexus blow. jfv NE of the chief values of boxing as Ua higher form of physical culture lies In ther fact that It demands con stant study and improvement of the men tal control of the muscles. Guard, deliv ery, counter, all require speedy action of mind over matter; accurate decision in a second's time. And, if a boxer has failed to guard, the muscles -where the blow is delivered should bo contracted bunched bo that greater resistance trill be offerEd the blow. Perfect control over the facial muscles is highly necessary. A boxer should not let his condition be read in his face by his opponent. If the boxer shows that a cer tain blow has surprised and jarred him, the opponent will rush to follow up his ad vantage. If the body's weariness creeps Into the face, the opponent will see that he will not have to guard so carefully,' and that he can assume an aggressive of fense. On the other hand. If 'the facial muscles are kept free of the state of the body, the boxer will not so readily reveal his condi tion to the opponent, and will thereby save himself from disaster until he can recover himself a few seconds later on in the bout. Don't let your opponent read your mind, but by all means divine your opponent's thoughts, if you want to become efficient in this style of exercise. Keep perfect control of your temper, as well as your facial expressions. A cool head eventually triumphs oxer a hot one; steady judgment overwhelms rash im pulses. Boxing Is a fine training for bridling temper; and because it demands that blows be taken without grumbling, it teaches a healthy disregard for petty physical and mental Inconveniences. In other words, boxing as a physical culture exercise tends to a healthy, optimistic mental state. Boxing reveals a man's true physical state. It shows whether the body is even ly or irregularly developed, whether this part is strong or that weak. If any un developed spots are found. It is the box er's duty to build them up by taking up some simple form of physical culture planned for that purpose. The exercises described below are among the more scientific positions In boxing. To deliver the blows and to guard them will require all the physical and mental inge nuity that the contestants possess. The Left-IIand String:. In learning this peculiar blow, you are already expected to know how to get out of reach of a blow. In simple .words, when the opponent sends out a left-hand swing, draw the head and upper part of the body backward and out of reach. Then, when you feel that his fist is no longer able to do you harm, throw your body in the proper place for a swing and swing the left arm for his jaw, either in a full or a half swing. (Figure 1.) This blow Is rendered doubly effective by the fact that when it is delivered the opponent is coming toward you, since the momentum jot his misspent blow brings him forward. To guard, the opponent puts his left hand on your shoulder and pushes you back or sidewlsc in an effort to destroy your equilibrium and thus keep your left swing from reaching him. This is about the opponent's sole opportunity for guard ing, and it cannot always be guaranteed as effective. Riffht-Hand Counter for Short Ribs. In order properly to deliver a right-hand counter for the short ribs, watch for the opponent to place his body well forward as he leads out with the left. When the blow is about to land on your face, rap idly draw your head to the left and bend slightly at the hips. This will cause the left to pass harmlessly by the side of your head. The second the blow passes by, straight en up and throw the right shoulder, with the right arm, bent, straight for the op ponent's short ribs. (Figure 2.) Then, if you have time and if the blow has not been guarded, also land the left fist In the short ribs, and continue rapidly alter nating the blows until the opponent is able to guard. It is a simple matter to guard. Throw the right forearm in front of the body across the short ribs, catch the opponent's fist in your own, and push it and his aim away to 'the left. If you are too late to grasp the opponent's hand, stiffen the crossed arm and open hand and catch the blow on the back of your glove, which is covering the short ribs. Here is another way to guard: When you realize that you have missed with your left lead, rapidly bend the left arm so that the forearm will press against the opponent's shoulder, and throw him back ward or to his left, and thus destroy his equilibrium. This bracing also allows you to spring backward out of harm's reach. Shouldering-. If, when the opponent leads with the left, you find it too late to counter or to guard in any way. dodge your head to the right enough for the left to pass harm lessly by. At the same time bend your body until the. left shoulder Is in a di rect line with the opponent's short ribs. J The momentum that brings your oppon ent toward you and your own weight will cause a decided jar to the opponent. To guard or to diminish the force of the Jar, throw the left arm around in an endeavor to encircle the opponent's neck. To prevent this, the opponent grabs the forearm with the right hand and throws it back, or keeps it from, pressing against his neck. The entire movement is Illustrated in Figure 3. Left Lead for Face, "With. Left Coun ter for Stomach. This counter, which requires much ac tivity, is employed when the opponent leads straight for your jaw with the left and at the same time steps out to get within close reach. L6wer the body well, dodge to the right, throw the left shoulder well forward, and with the arm bent at the elbow, let go directly for the pit of the opponent's stomach. "(Figure 4.) To guard, open the right hand, slap it on the opponent's glove, and when it is firmly caught, turn the blow oft harm lessly to the right. The Solar PlexHs Blotv. The solar plexus blow can be delivered whether the opponent leads or not, and is generally used when the boxer is getting tired. If the opponent leads with the left for the face, dodge to the right, simultane ously step out with the right foot well forward, and throw the left side along: with the left fist for the pit of the op ponent's stomach. (Figure 5.) When the opponent Is not hitting for you, take a chance, step out with the right leg, swing for his face with the left band, and simultaneously land the solar plexus with the right. Thi3 Is a good blow, as the whole weight of the body goes along. It can be avoided by; stepping back. To guard the solar plexus, catch tho blow on your right fist and turn it away, to the side. (Copyrights 1003.) SE7VRLES' RUMMAGE SALE HOW THE WIFE AND THE HUSBAND EACH PROMISED TO KEEP A SECRET THE house was cold and cheerless. Even the cat howled dismally at the back door, preferring the atmos phere without. The hot air pipes emit ted blasts of cold. The library grate was gray TVithnshes. Mrs. Lilian was ex pending, all her energies in the first story of tho Rogers block, persuading her friends that they could make use of their neighbors' cast-off things. Lemuel pulled his overcoat collar up around his ears, and drew his hat down to meet It. Then he seated himself In his accustomed chair at the dlnlng-table and surveyed the collation of cold scraps spread out before him. In their midst was a note from his wife. Darling. I have the most awful confession to make But It is not my fault, and I know you will forgive me. and get me another. I urn bo sorry that you have not a hot dinner. Do relent and come to the sale. The men are all calling It Searles'a sale. Isn't that absurd? The dinner Is hot and good. Do come for 23 cents. 1 am so sorry, hut I could not help It, and you will forgive me. will you not? "If any one can make head or tall out of that note, he's welcome to it. Searles rale. Indeed. Walt until I get hold of a few facts, and I'll make it hot for "em," was Lemuel's comment Ho set his teeth resolutely Into a piece of yesterday's roast. "I fee myself down there to dinner. Pve said I'd not set foot inside their blooming show, and I won't." The rummage sale was really a case of Searles versus the rest of the church, at a time when rummage sales were yet ex periments in the land. Mr. Searles ate his lunch deliberately, fed the cat, poked at the furnace, and started back to the bank. At the front door he hesitated. There hung Lilian's house key, forgotten. He must get it to her, but how? His dignity forbade his Invasion of the Rogers -block. He walked slowly down Main street, turned to the right and picked his way through the alley. A negro. Sammy by name, aged 11, accordjng to the best of his own reckoning, crossed the alley. "HI, there, Sam!" yelled Searles. Sam returned with a skip when he saw his ofttlme patron's hand disappearing Into his pocket. "Here, Sam, take this dime and this key, and give one of them to Mrs. Searles at the rummage sale." Sam grinned, dropped the dime Into his pocket, and disappeared. Searles was now directly in the rear of the Rogers block. A window was open. He looked cautiously within. Coats, hats. dresses, wrappers and what not, hung on the walls and were heaped on counters. The room was deserted by both sellers and buyers, as the crowd was being fed at that hour. Just as Searles turned to go, a pair of trousers, hanging near the window, caught his eye. They were made of the llnest of broadcloth, not worn in the least. Searles had a weakness for clothes and bargains in tho same. These trousers looked about his length. A gust of wind blew the price tag Into view. "By the great guns," Searles comment ed; "only two dollars." Sam came around the corner. Searles collared the youth, led him Into the recess of tho alley, thrust $5 into his hand, and some pointed directions into his head. He was to keep his mouth shut and bring the bundle straight to the bank. Twenty-five minutes later Searles learned that his bargain was too short in the legs and too tight in the band. He had likewise seen himself standing on tip toe, craning his neck into a back window of the Rogers block. And, even as ,he had seen himself, some one else probably had seen him. There was the rub. Still, those trousers were good and could be made better. If the story of their purchase got out. he could Invite the jok ers to -view a pair of elegant new trousers at least, they would be elegant when overhauled by his tailor. Long, up in the city. He should go tomorrow. Having thus fortified himself against attack, he went home and met a solemn little wife. Searles heart sank .the mo ment he looked at her. The story of his method of attending the sale was prob ably all over town, and this was the way it affected Lilian. Lilian could never take a joke. Lilian sat on his knee and said: "Lemmy, why don't you ask me to con fess?" "Confess!" exclaimed Searles in sur prise. A tear rolled down her cheek. "You didn't even read my note." A light broke in on Searles. He began to laugh. "It's no laughing matter to lose your muff." sobbed Lilian. . Oh, Lemmy, it's awful. I laid it down at the sale it cost 525 and some one made a mistake, and sold It for 25 cents, and we can't find it. Oh. dear! Oh, dear!" Searles forgot the trousers. He threw his head back and roared. "I can't see anything to laugh at," ob served his wife, her tones muffled by his coat front. "You would not laugh if you had to have your fingers freeze all the rest of the Winter, unless," she liberated one eye and surveyed his face, "unless you'll get me another, Lemmy, dear." But Lemuel suddenly hardened his heart now that the trouscr scare was over. "I can't afford to run rummage sales on $25 muffs," he grumbled, and returned to his paper. The next day Searles and his dress suit case repaired to the city, only to find that the way of the transgressor Is hard. Tho tailor shook his head over tho trousers. He feared that when the gar ment was enlarged, the old seams would show.S;. Searles went up the following week, ac cording to instructions, and found a pair of uncomfortably tight trousers, with long, faded streaks conspicuously show ing themselves a quarter of an Inch from every seam. Long advised his customer to allow him to send the garment around the corner to a dyer who would make the entire gar ment one shade darker, and so conceal the streaks. Searles asked the price of the suggested treatment, shut his teeth, and said, "Take 'em." The tailor followed him to the door. "I forgot to tell you that I was obliged to rellno them throughout, as the old lining was so worn," Searles half way down the stairs made a remark. Tho tailor did not hear dis tinctly, but accepted it as a pleasant "Good day," and returned It. One week later Searles was seated In the train, homeward bound. At his feet stood his dress-suit case, containing a pair of elegant dark blue trousers which proved themselves a "close call," the dyeing process having shrunken them. Their weary owner was employed in item izing on the back of an old letter. Searles added the column three times. Then, tearing tip tho envelope, he scat tered it piece by piece, along 18 miles of track. He hoped the distance would ef fectively separate those items. He carried his suit case home, reflecting on his blessings. Three weeks had elapsed since the sale, and ho had not heard one word concerning his share In It. The trousers were so nearly new that he would not have to tell his wife a lie about them, and, after all. they were a bargain. In this amiable frame of mind, he walked Into his library. Lillian had just come in. She was warm ing ten small, plump, red fingers over the grate. She exhibited each chilly digit to him in turn. The muff had not been recovered. "Want to see my new trousers?" asked Searles cheerfully, wishing to change the subject. He shook out the trousers in all thlr freshness and folds, and swung them be fore his wife's eyes. She merely vouch safed them a glance. "How much did they cost?" Lemuel had anticipated this question, hence the figuring on the train. "Just $15 at Long's." he replied glibly. Mrs. Sealers took hold of tho hem ot one leg gingerly. She elevated her nose. "Ugh, how they smell!" Searles knew that the odor was due to the recent dyeing, but all he said was: "Store smell on the cloth, probably." His wife picked up the other trouser leg. She evinced a coming interest She turned the legs over and tried the quality of the cloth. She examined the hems, gazed at the seams with a critical eye. Then she raised her childlike blue eyes to her hus band's face. "Lemmr, how can you tell fJch stories? They were marked just $2. I thought, at the time, it was ridiculously cheap, be cause I remember you paid just $20 for them, and then grew stout so fast that you really never wore them much." Searles reached for a chair, and sat down weakly. The trousers . fell on the floor in a heap. His own old trousers! And he, Lemuel Searles, banker, had he groaned aloud. "Lemmy, what is the matter?" "Lillian, you have one strong point for which I am very thankful! You never see a joke." Lillian looked puzzled, and Lemuel thoughtful. His eyes fell on. her red hands. His face became animated. "Lily, how would you like to go up to the city tomorrow and look at muffs?" "Oh. Lemmy!" "And a collar" "Of seal skin" "You darling!" "You shall have 'em both if you will do me a little favor" 'I'll do anything In the world for you." "But this is something you are not to do you are not to tell." THE SOXG OF THE PIOX'EEIt. The king of mankind Js the pioneer, Lustily, lads, swing lustily. He's lord over all the wide frontier. His heart's ever high, and his spirit's In cheer Lustily, lads, swing lustily. From dawn ot the dar to "the last ot light The Imber e'en shrinks to the ax's. bite; It roars -as iffalls,-and-it-.knows bur-'mlght Oh, lustily, lads, swing lustily. Eing hey for -a life In the open day! Lustily, lads, swing lustily. The ax and the pick and the spade, I say. Are noblest weapons to blaze the way Lustily lads, swing lustilr. Sing hey for'the man that can wield them well! And hey for the soul now in heaven or hell That ever on earth of such labor could tell Oh, lustily, lads, swing lustily. Lute Pesse. Three hundred and twelve American women have married foreign titles. PHgSICAL TRAIN IMG N SCHOOLS IT IS VIGOROUS AND IS TAKEN UNDER THE WATCHFUL EYES OF INSTRUCTORS DVOCATES of the higher education of women and of coeducational institutions may declare that the finishing school belongs to the dark ages of pedagogy, but the fact remains that a score of academies boasting a Nation al reputation will graduate-their full com plement of highly polished young women -this year. The boarding-school, dear to the hearts of our grandmothers and great-grandmothers taught the gentle art of tatting and making wax flowers, and turned out classes of young women noted for their slim waists and a delicacy, amounting almost to fragility. The finishing school of today graduates an entirely different type of girl. She is prepared solely with a view of ornamenting society as it flour ishes at the beginning of the 20th cen- FENCING TRAINS IN SUPPLENESS AND GRACE BASKET BALL GIVES THE POISE SO REQUISITE FOR THE FASHIONABLE . GIRL tury, which happens to be after the correctly strenuous fashion. The young woman who springs, armed and equipped, from such a schoolroom Into the social arena is the product of evolution and environment. She enters the school crude, awkward and self conscious. She leaves it graceful, cul tured In the social code, and with a cer tain poise and assurance which comes only with knowing what is what. She is prepared to meet every social emer gency and is armed for all social de mands. Every study hour and every recreation period has been bent toward the one object social success. A Hard Coarse of Training'. The course of training is long and often arduous on the part of the instruct ors, who must produce the necessary polish without offending the pride. Girls crude In figure and speech and bristling with provincialisms must be taught every thing, from acquiring a proper waist line to the soft Intonations of the high-bred society woman. As all these gifts are founded on health, the physical reforma tion of the growing girl is instituted im mediately upon her arrival at the school. A thorough examination Is made by a graduate nurse, who Is constantly In at tendance upon the members of the school. If no serious defect is discovered, the pupil Is passed on to the gymnasium, where she Is received by a teacher of physical culture, scientifically educated for this work. He lays down the rules for her exercise, both in and outside the gymnasium, according to her condition and strength. The Work Closely Watched. In the gymnasium the Swedish move ments are first taken up, and are es pecially adapted to the requirement of young girls. Even these simple exercises are performed under the watchful eye of the professor. A single false move ment, repeated dally for a week or so. might undo the good results secured from months of patient and careful training. Girls who suffer from exaggerated ail ments or deformities are given special attention. Exercises are fitted to their cases, and, if necessary, massage is ad ministered. Gymnastic work is obligatory in all the better class of schools. The exercises are at first light, and are Increased so gradually that the pupil Is never permitted to feel fatigued. With in a short time drooping shoulders lift, hollow chests fill out and weak spines stiffen. The polishing process Is taking effect. In the gymnasium of a fashionable Hew York school for girls, a motto reads: "The purpose of the gymnasium is, first, to correct the physical Imperfections; second, to exaggerate the exhilaration of health." The chaperon, on the daily walk plays her part in the physical development, insisting upon correct carriage and proper inhalations of air. BasUet-Ball a Fad. Athletics are elective, but desirable. They are encouraged by all progressive teachers, and grounds are provided at the highest-priced schools. If the grounds attached to the school are limited in size a campus is secured at some convenient point. While some girls scorn the idea of great muscular development, the up-to-date girl, as a rule, goes in heavily for school athletics. She has positive ideas on keeping pace with her brothers and some chaps who are not so closely re lated. In vacation days she proves her right to tramp over hlll3 with the sterner sex, to hold her own In a golf game and to give tips on hasket-balL The last-named game is just now much In vogue at fashionable schools, and at least once a day the pupils don their suits, which Include bloomers and sweat ers, for an hour's practice in the court. A feature of the basket-ball team which appeals to the up-to-date girl is the pos session of a mascot. Kivalry between teams for the most Unique mascot is air ways keen. One team in a fashionable school near Philadelphia wearied in turn 6f a goat, a dog- and a cat, and finally settled down to a pickaninny wearing the team's colors. The , mascot- Is always in evidence at the annual tournament. Fencing is taught as a means of ac quiring agility and grace. As this exer cise brings Into play nearly every muscle of the body, it is- practically obligatory In all finishing schools. Archery cultivates accuracy of vision and steadiness S-f bM rb& limb. Fine records are made by some students. Bowling-alleys are provided in connec tion with all first-class gymnasiums, and for schools located in the suburbs there are tennis-courts and golf links. All these sugar-coated forms of physical training are administered for the purpose of developing the all-round athletic girl. A knowledge of up-to-date games Is as essentlal to the modern girl as was a smattering of French to her great-grandmother. The girl who lays a good physical foun dation never slouches or lounges Indoors. She acquires that poise and carriage which makes her sure of foot and bear ing when she enters a room, as well as when she dashes across the links. She is sure of herself and fears no criticism. When the muscles are made strong and pliable, Delsarte is taken up to add grace and ease. The pupil is taught the grace and beauty of repose. She learns that it is not well-bred to flourish her arms, to fidget or to arrange nervously her hair or attire. She may not play with her handkerchief. It Is the nervous, unbal anced girl who breaks these rules, not because she does not know what Is what, but because she lacks control of herself. Once her health Is established, the proper things become second nature. "The Harmonious Pose." The foundation of good manners Is. known to instructors of such, schools as the harmonious pose. This pose, which, by long cultivation, becomes habitual, is based, first, upon hygiene and then upon beauty. The body is properly balanced, with the chest held high, so that a plumb line, dropped from chest to floor, would fall slightly in front of the toes. The weight of the -body Is thrown upon the balls of the feet. The heels, when placed together, should be turned out at an angle of 45 degrees. There should be no con cave curve at the waist in the profile outline. The weight of the arms should hang from the shoulder blades and not from the chest. The student is also taught to hold the spine erect when sitting. If support is necessary, she must sit well back in the chair, and a footstool should be placed at her feet to relieve all pressure on the spine. She learns that all bending of the body should come from the hips and not from the waist. There must be no visible effort when, rising. She is taught to draw one foot well under the chair. By resting tho weight of her body upon the heel of the foot that is drawn back, she maintains the body in an erect position. With tho Btralghtenlng of the knee, the pupil finds that she can rise with grace and dignity. It is distinctly bad form to rise with the help of the arms of the chair. In stooping, the well-bred girl simply bends her knees, and does not bring the entire figure Into play. She holds the body "In the harmonious pose when, as cending or descending stairs. When these points have been thorough ly mastered, the young girl Is ready to add the finishing touches In modes and manners. The Fly's Xooh Hoar. Chicago Inter Ocean. Congressman Cannon the other day added another Illinois story to his already long string. He said that .during a hot Summer day he sought rest in a hammock: beneath the scant ehade of an old tree that stood at the corner of a down-state hotel. "I -had no sooner stretched myself in the hammock," said Mr. Cannon, "than, these files attacked me, seemingly by the million. It was intolerable, and in no pleasant frame of mind I looked up the proprietor. " "What do you mean,' I demanded, by stretching your hammock In that fly haunted field of torture you call a lawn? " 'I know the flies are bad out thare now he answered, 'but Mr. Cannon, you ought to use the hammock during the hammock hours, and you'd have no trouble from the flies " 'What are hammock hours?" T in quired. "From 12 noon to 2 P. Ml dally he replied. 'During those hours flies will not attack you in the hammock.' "I was much interested in the man's Socratic skill in evading: the issue, and, wishing to draw him out, I askedr " 'Why are there no flies around Uit hammock between 12 and 2?' " 'Oh he rejoined, 'at that time they'ra all in the dining-room "