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/SPORTS." - o3 SPORTS.® ity Briton, Figured to Reach Challenge Round in Wim- bledon Tennis Tourney. By the Associated Pres: By the Associnted Pres ‘WIMBLEDON, June 21.— Zenzo Shi- midsu, the Ja ene star, won with ease in the second round of the Brit. iish temnis tourney today from Count de Bounies, France, 6—0, 6—2, 6— C. Norton, South African plny- defeated J. C. Masterman, Eng- , . 6—d, 10—12, 6—2, Molla Bjurstedt Mallory, Amer- fean champlon, won by defauit from Mins 1. G. Jownson, England. ICIMBT 0N - nd juniors by thinks it should, to what entries will be made in} unouncement (s forthcom- 5" regatta, it seems likely cnior and junior boats wilf the margin the coaths - Dempsey began roving around, tak- ing on a bout whenever the oppor- tunity offered, while between times he returned to odd farming jobs or * 2 Wi g 2 . THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 19T . ° . . ° T k 2 o E Norfolk Joins Dempsey’s Training Camp and Will Be Used to Bolster Up Jack's . HELP THE TITLEHOLDER |c...... w o OF A FAMILY OF EIGHT . FOR REGATTA BERTHS: Carpentier Never Fails to Admit Kingscote < 2 —_— Men in Uniform to His V 1 _n_v_n—c_—m'n_n_ : | : v ight i istened, wi twenty-si e . A weight, who has been clamoring for a match with Jack Dempsey, i‘::l‘,’s’";’;f . ;;‘:;‘;‘:‘s"a“ o .i."‘:c‘s;‘r:;x ]‘::; :‘;:"as:]:"efl 1;; | today joined the heavyweight champion’s staff of sparring partners, | - MANHASSET, N_ Y, June 21.—For- 3 Bt ! or crews to represent the Potomac Boat Ciub at the People'’s re- mer soldlera of tfe world war ap- : ; tta at Philadelphia, July 4, will be held Thursday evening at 6 : el s £ th el . fistic ring for a livelihood. As a fighter he had the idea, and a good one, gatta at Talaccipiin, Juy:s, w Uy CNCOIE Norfolk is regarded as one of the leading light-heavyweights of the coun- | 5jogan, “Your uniform is your pass,” | that by assuming the Christian name of Jack some of the glamour, if not try, having fought all the best men in his division. Jack Kearns, manager | which during the conflict was adopt- 2 T O junior races, but probably only two will make the trip, and possibly oue, g : veig! X e t 2 ) lyn’s famous Nonpareil, possessed as the middleweight title holder, might depending on the result of the trials empsey's staff of sparring partners as a valuable asset. Norfolk is ag-[ment throughout the country. The |revert to him. gressive, a clever boxer, and Kearns thinks he can develop Dempsey’s {man attired in his old-time fighting trance in the tta ma t have family of eight. Three of his brothers SRCE; I LH0 a 2 may nol Bavel to the camp of Georges Carpentier. nd three sisters are alive, but the the same personnel. as shifts are cer- | And Manager Descamps kas been GREB AND GIBBONS MAY |“PASSES" ALL SOLDIFRS, CHAMPION SIXTH CHILD |¢oicE 10 MEET TILDEN POTOMACS WILL RACE > O B M A i 1d TLANTIC CITY, N. J., June 21—Kid Norfolk, negro light-heavy- b ot TLLTAMIHARRISON DEMFSEY; the name by which the wor Training Quarters: IME trials and final selection of the mer: who will make up the crew and probably will work with him for the balance of the training grind. e e Rl e the big fellow when he had grown to man’s estate. and had chosen the s o'clock. Three eights are in training for the senior, intermediate and 2 > L the wonderful boxing science, which the original Jack Dempsey, Brook- of the heavyweight champion, considers the acquisition of Norfolk to[ed for them in many places of amuse- i The boats w h win through to en- The champion is the sixth child of a duds never fails to gain admittance pungest of the eight, who was named tain if the trials show that breaking the Williams flew gamely back at the champion. a number of knockdown, however, 1 be brought y : < prompted. to inquire whether the |} las Gbout L Sears xgo, When < zowythal treaking ]y cy on edge in| Yesterday the champion increased( morican ex. ruce, died abou BO. . His first ter ‘nd Tnnn 91 .| UD of one of the boats will make two | 4 ¢ A can_expediticnary forces have | Dempsey A 7| worked as a miner. His first eastern| n n hat 1l . l'ut«;‘&tgr‘:m“;:fif“'tjl‘:x‘\:w:i‘nnuge e Eitod dalnnEs e | been Gemonitized OF ot e do: | Hirabn and Celia Dempse it S thejs | experience in’ the fighting arens was 3iaj. A R. F. Kingscote, who, for the | crews sironger. i:yli.;: the seior singles % $ G 2 0. A ® clared enough men i ldren , Mz Tlin New York city, where he met An- | past fourteen years has been i j. 5 sendinge = y =hi, and Mike Gibbons, the | crowds which witness the daily Work- | fotrea army corps have catied to | cidren, moted from Manassa (o Monte |t Anderson, Wiid Burt Kenney and |uenc figure in the tennis world, Jnstead of sending cach boat oVer| Ty is believed by several who have, | phantom, also are slated to|outs at Dempsey's outdoor camp are| f9r™y 2" SEMY coTPS Mave alled toross, Col. where they lived for nine | yEC o 0GCH Nson, a negro, in ten-round, | considered here today as the probable | (¢ course in a tme trial, Coach|watched the crows in action that the. Then the Dempsey household This was in 1916, | opponent of William T. Tild i of | Hecox plans to let the three start a|juniors can beat the intermediatcs - b for the anal no_decision bouts. During the following year Dempsey knocked out A. Norton and Charley Miller, each in one round. Later he won from Willie Meehan. Car! Morris, Bob McAllister and Gunboat Smith in four-round bouts in California, and was knocked out in one round by Jim In the camp getting larger each day. Woman spec- tators are numerous and they applaud the champion as he goes through his paces. O'Hare Proves Big Help, Eddie O'Hare, the New York middle- weight, is making an impressive the last two weeks. Georges_started out by presenting each of his former fighting com- panions an autographed photograph, but the demand soon exceeded the supply, and now they must be con- tent with the ever-ready smile, a showing in his workouts with the title | handshake and a “Hello, budd k and that the seniors can whip the juniors by only a small margin. That being the case, if the seniors make £ood enough time in winning to war- ably will be the best on the Polflmac!fl;"l a b«‘lelp;'h;);] Nlhf;:;ld have a flir ZEs 7 is 1o |chance at Philadeiphiz, the seniors ot 'the | choice to make the trin. This would. ifted to Salt Lake City, Utah, and that is the place which they, including the champion, ciaim as their home. Inherits Fighting Blood. Born of rugged parents—Dempsey claims that he has Irigh, Scotch and In- dian blood in his veins and insists that rhiladelphia, in the of the British turf tennis tournament in prograss here. He played a mag- nificent game in defeating F. B. M. Fisher of New Zealand yestetday, 6—2. 6—1, . Other important matches decided yesterday were: one another and have several watches catch each boat as it crosses the finish line. This race prob- race against Ghee May Be Dropped. a possibility that Battling « may be dropped from the cham- pion's staff because of his inclination 10 keep away from Dempsey instead of farc'ng the champion to extend himself. Ghee, who was knocked down ; s elven . Flynn, the “Pueblo Fireman.” differenc e nd had two teeth knocked | Waclesut from the Stanaooist ot Tony Dispiays efenstve, Tactics. the fighting qualitics for which all three [ PR the G D e eraed this | Francis T. Hunter, United States, | bimios e eomediate and janior cighte |leave out the intermediates unless time he boxed Demp- | wop Kot from the standpoint of speed | 1n five rounds of sparring yester- |of these races are famous have been bred | by knocking defeated Jack Hillyard, C—3, {10 cause anything other than a elose |Some of them do well enough to dis- 1 to ke out of ranme | L KOS e O e an hia|daY. two With the French light. }in the bone and blood and have come 10| round and followed up with 6—0. i cording g one member of the |Place men in the senior boat. The Battler lost all of his{ oSt €XRCLY (ke Sarpentier and his | Wfcnt, Marcel Denls, and three with |him in generous portions from his an- | (890 4 outs, among his victims be-| A. Diemer Doole, Holland, defeated High School oarsmen have - ambition” to mix_it, retreating three | MOVES are much after the fashion of| the negro heavyweight, Joe Jeanette, | tecedents. . ing Fred-Fulton, Battling Levinsky, | A. B. Graves, California, 6—4, 4—§, Hecox suid, fe did ot Know | oat, the one ordered last’ 8teps for every step he took forwara. | Uy French ehampion. - Carpentier exhibited the defensive| Most of Dempsey's early life was|pi "Eivnn, Arthur Pelky and Terry | 6—7. 6—4, 6—3. 10 oot n he crews until | Spring having arrived. Some of the - appears to be the anager Kearns was scheduled to|tactics he has been developing in[spent in the open on a farm, but later| genar, §. M. Jacobs, India’s Davis cup cap- high school boys are working ouc this summer and probably will get the usé tain, defeated {of the boat before the opening of nk there are chanc il any, changes in the senior b leave today for New York for a con- ference with Tex Rickard, promoter he alternated by working in the mines Dempsey's banner vear was 1919, except in harvest time, when he found it % private workouts. when, after scoring five knock-outs Many of the experts asked Manager ner in camp who A. W. Gore, England, 2. ives Demp: out. Larry mi furiously with the O‘lx the championship contest at Jersey | Descamps to let Georges show | more remunerative to devote his strength | or one round each, in Pennsylvania| Randolph Lycett, England. defeated | that the junior or inte | school. If this is done. as is antici- champion. de the fact that he|City July 2, in an effort to clear up|something, and they were 8o in-|to reaping wheat and other crops in the|gnq Connecticut, he won the title by (T ‘% ‘izunt. champion of Singapore, | be shifted somewhat. Th. ed, the Blue and White should have tak lacing each day he performs.|the referee question, over which a|sistent that the wily little French-|grain belt. In this Dempsey kept | gopping the big Kansan, Jess Wil-|8—8, 6—2, 6—4. 100, will have some new ‘la crew mnext spring of sufficient terday Demps nearly scored a|controversy has developed. Kearns is|man consented. Carpentier called on|himself in fine ph: condition, the|jard, at Toledo, Ohio, on Independence| Alonso, Spaln, defeated Askham,|though, unless it me strength to gain s ping victories clean knockout over the blonde spar- |oPposed to the plans of the New Jer-| Denis first and he went at such speed | hard labor developing the wonderful | gay. Eg-ud, 6—v, 6—3, 6—3. pectations and beats t in nearly all scholustic regattas. 1 sey boxing commission to select a ref- | that the little fellow appeared slow. eree regardless of the wishes of the|He hurt Denis badly when on one principals. Kearns thinks that|occasion his right crashed into the Dempsey, as champion, should have a | lightweight's jaw. He shouted “Oh!" choice in’the selection. and caught Denis In his arms to save him from a fall. Carpentier_has been taking lessons in defense from Jeanette, who was noted for his_ability at this part of the game. With Jeanette he went even faster than he had with Denis. He evaded Joe's punches for one round, then they fought at close quarters. Georges took a number of body punches with a smile and worked an uppercut well. muscles which proved to be such a use- ful ring partner. The champion caught Larry flush on the jaw with a right hook, knocking him 'to a sitting posi- tion, and only the ropes stopped him from falling out of the ring. Despite factor in his winning the world vight title. ke his challenger, Carpentier, Dempsey .had very little early training for a_career in the fighting arena, while the French champion was a close stu- dent of the glove game and an actual competitor when he entered his “teens.” ‘According to Dempsey's own Story. his frst fistic encounter was in an improvised ring at Montrose, Calif.. when he' was about nineteen years | old. His opponent was a young black- | smith named Woods, whom he knock- ed out in the third round. This in- itial contest netted the now cham- pion $25. His next fight aizo resulted Eats Uncertain; No Palace Cars for Jack in Old Days (This is the second of a daily, series of sketchen of ring battles of Jack D ways definitely scheduled, traveled on brakes and beams, rather [won the decision over Eddie Coulon \than in cushioned compartment cars on his journeys from one |0f New Orleans in a ffteen-round sti i . bout here last night. Ryan weighed fistic engagement to another. His travels took him to New York in the | 122 pounds and Eouion. 115 late months of 1916. ; POUGHKEEPSIE REGATTA GEORGES' BOXERS LOSE SHOULD BE A THRILLER A o Tempeey AM Gesryes| Oarpentier.) Ryan Outpoints Coulon. | plen 885, 00 B hock-out. Andy Mal EMPSEY, in 1915 and 1916, when next week’s meals were not al- |, NEW ORLEANS, La. June 21—{joy, who had previously walloped o! Tommy Ryan of McKeesport, Pa.|,f ‘Dempsey’'s older brothers, being the victim. Starts Roving at Twenty. When he was twenty years old While in New York Dempsey met his first opponents of any class, box- ing with Andre Anderson, Wild Burt Kenney and John Lester Johnson in ten-round, no-decision bouts, all_go- ing the limit. Dempsey was credited With beating Anderson and Kennedy, ; but the veteran negro Johnson Journee No Match for Weinest and knew 4 bit too much for this “dia- - e rough” from Colorado, Italian Joe Gans Beaten .[v:m'.::nsgmsed two of Jack's ribs s BY WALTER CAMP. by Ratner. showed: Ting Eamencee by Donmoey EW YORK, June 21.—The Poughkeepsie regatta tomorrow is going NEW YORK, June 2l1.—Georges rl:’e l;g';’: negro for the remainder of to produce the greatest race the Huds?n has seen, even if it is to Carpentier's sparring partners, Paul | Dempsey and his manager now talk be over only a three-mile course. Never has a boat race pos- . Journee of France and Italian Joe 1&’}sc":‘:slfl‘;"g‘ffig:s_°fF;:,'°:f:"A’;t“")2?"; sessed so many elements of interest, and the result grows more and more Gans of Brooklyn, were so severely |in New York city, with Anderson,|a puzzle. punished in real bouts at Ebbets[;he Wwesterner received $16. For box-| There has been evidence that the|will shoot up the stroke. edged . Field, Brooklyn, last night that the & p{f;fl:g‘; hfiev:;-sn xdlvenbosn by| vavy crew has heen able to slow | The critics are getting ready to let i B referee stopped both contests. (Lester_Johnson for $500. but reoeiusy |down their beat quite successfully | Syracuse and benn down easy. but tire ing the same f d 3 ® Journee lost in the fifth of a Afteen {only $100. In those davs there was| Without losing speed. This would go | 0bih COfChee, Tom vl AnG riFlt ' ; I K ¥ round match to Charley Weinert,| 10 "Jack Kearns present to haggle |far toward making the Midshipmen | ),yors ‘cannot forget times when - Newark heavyweight, and Gans lost | O the boxer, and he decided that|favorites for the event were it hot|gither penn or Syracuse, although not {7 to Augie Ratner of New York in the|New York was not the gold-filled [that it is an old boating truism that| g, orives finished first. tenth of a twelve-round match. oity that western stories had led him|what a crew has once learned it)™pil i, (WICSE ) 5n o optimistic Journee was game, but slow of |tO believe. The young fighter re-|never shakes off entirely. As s00n| sy opolic ‘supporters or those who movement and was knocked down by |turned to the west and to obscurity|as It is in a real race. rowing men | ., ,eir taith to the Blue and White the fast and clever Newark heavy-|for & few months. assert, it reverts to first principles. | T Columbia can help hearing 3 N weight three times in the fourth i That is the thing that makes many | °f Coumbla can help hearing in ~ round and three in the fifth. Journee hesitate to place full oconfidence i) veil” vell, yell'—that so often have = Jreighed 198 pounds and Welnert, FRENCHMAN ADVANCES Columbia, would be & strong favorite ?;Zv;end‘s:n";:haca crew first across - 4 . 3 J 1 ans was all in at the end of th were it not that the’ Blue an te - pinih round and ook a'count ot aing AS CLEVER BANTAM | e reached top form o early. Thers n the tenth, when th 3 in- are many who believe al im- i 2 o " terfercd. Gans weighed 135 and | The second and third years of|possible to hold a crew at its jop! _ Blind Pig for Bowlers. () N [ ] [ St Georges Carpentlers ring career |notch. That condition comes ohly| Thirty couples will bowl nightly on - started him off like a future ban-|Once !ndH!h9""’ come race day, not|the Recreation drives in a blind pig ig » tamweight champlon of the world.|bsfore. However, Coach Rice IS & tournament to be held by the man- i In 1908. he fought six battles, win-|for this race all year, so he is fully |38ement of the establishment June ning two by knockouts. one on a|trusted by the Columbia cohorts. 28-30. Prize drawing will y ’ foul, one on points, while each of| California, like the Navy, has been | July 1 TNk Wil be made (e other. two Teanited T & draw. ° | moaiifornia; like the Navy, has been |july 1. Entry fee will be 32 for eacn "Descamps gradually became more | Joggened rather than improved their|CouPle. and entries should be filed with y Negro, Who Evaded Arrest in|difing in choosing opponents for the | chances because with the race once |J. C. Howard, second floor of Recreation fifteen-year-old boxer. Salmon, the|under way, if the pace 18 hot. they | Heal United S s Englishman, whom he defeated by a ey “Health Center, 918 G street. 9 nite tates, Scores Over knockout the first time in elghteen . & rounds and again on a foul n thir- Moran in Paris. teen rounds was among the best of e o 9 t! o t ts. - (This In the sixteenth of a daily| mrand. one of the shiftisst of the 5 meries of thumbnail sketches of pre- FPQ‘;‘CYI bantams.{ l\h’i(lbe held dllh!l lg Y vious fights for the heavywelght|?2 draw, once for six rounds an C t l" I b again at twenty rounds.. - u champlonxhip of the world. The following year promised to be an e p ) i even more successful. In ome of the . ness “discount” in findin th ome time after he defeated Jef-(earliest bouts he knocked out in one = l k h USINESS concerns I('krJuhn\‘l‘Jlr‘\"f—W:ll:eh{(lfiCled 0“: ;Lound “'e}lnck. W;ID hhadgnearly held - l e t em ! Of tll'e o t’ ward g out e harges of violating Mann_ac im even in one of the 1907 contests. i I ot e ranmt et | B gn I oo of e 1o e may be divided way of selling tires. truth. neyed to Paris. ) bouts won on points, including _tri- | When the exchequer shriveled a bit | umpns over Chariie Ledoux and Paul They are DIFFERENT | roughly into two classes. PRt he accepted a challenge from Frank [Til, both famous bantams, comprised GO. ) htahea.d d P Moran of Pittsburgh, and they faced|the record for the year until Car- 1ng rig an R;smg above all the $575 The mekro warrior scored s vic: | Who. stopped him in. six founas: One goes on the idea making th uali inty “ : . The negro scorel - | who sto) m_in six rounds. i 3 tory on points in twenty rounds. | “This 3% Jfhe first time that the ‘7fiey areGOOD e g ot% e 5 g € par quaiily uncertain of “dis- i Moran was game and stubbornly|Lens yout! aken the count. - o 2 b stod 5P to Jonnson's assaults, which | feat ar the hands of a more Sxperi- that the public doesn’t fire at a nef price. count” appeal comes the had!_nov. '{‘f s‘:eamJo% the chs.rnmon'; enced b?xer dl%not dlseou{age elthfir 3 Th > ther . " earlier attacks. Johuson possessed | Carpentier or Descamps, for. on the think much. : ear, harp lic opi 5 "4 ail of his old-time skill, however, Whoter Ge:lrgen'ddevelnpmem. had been B E ‘ H - N U I B s ? . OPPOSing the confu cl >ar, s pub opin- here was not a single down | phenomenal and none recognized that - 3 3 ?rmuyg;lng !Jhay.l(n:m'a;:ked of 2’&1 fact better than the shrewd little man behev“thatpubhcgo"d % f P 0on 1in favor Of u. S. ishing blo 0] on's superior sl ‘who as piloted the boxer to s —_— < L * P g L I e e T i D T CIGARETTES sense makes the right sion of “so much off Ryval Cords. Moran In subjection. Moran's haltta%k ple) for i5¢ . o s . l.ist.” B lis 0 24 lacked the power to dispose of his ad- : ecause Tacken Bogash Stops Bartfield. e L s 1R decision nine times out t prices More dealers by 36% poIhe crowd was as cosmopolitan 88| BRIDGEPORT, Conn. June 21— : of ten. don’t mean anything ¥ Paris itsell. There were barons and|youis Bogash of Bridgeport scored than a year ago. In Ma ukes a uf rg)‘»m‘n- ot Tany | & technical knock-out over Soldier | B/NIB/NEY/ANE NS YN SANS YAS S 28 3N til th l Y 0. Y o- Sporting men of Many| Bartfleld of Brooklyn in the third <> @ < @ @ o un e real worth of 1921 alone an i s garb with which Europe honora its | of a scheduled fifteen-round bout last | FNZ/ARVRRVR RVR RVR RVR RVR RVR RV/R /R Concem NO. 1 llkes the tire itself . v ai increase in boxers, were part of the throng. /N /AN e oreon s prou ot s visters: | 2> to keep away from facts. €S Proven. galesof U.S. Royal Cords g or it was the first time a cham- Hon ‘ax ‘o1d ‘s he had even defended Concern No.2i 1 Because ‘““discounts” of more than 25% over 3 Bonvire diwln Coll < FISANKIONS mean still less when list ‘ e thirty-six years old, loran's senior by almost a decade. ' 5 0 arsnap to place all thefactsm = ss when May 1920. ‘The referee of the fig] was Georges . Carpentir sible before people. price has no relation to Car-owners know . —_— i value. : . qu_ -I-RAIN []N GRIDIRUN HITE, fresh, starched, 1645 tae ” 6 * more than they let on. o - immaculate! TOLMAN- vl Now it is evident the They are letting the e IZED necklinen gives a watch these conflicting blic ek Mt o Ty : thods : in Public hasn’tbeen back- tuation run L District High sc‘:r"lkr'”t Ball man collar dressiness. me working out its o ers to Get Workouts at =1 i its course. m";{ vy . With it he has the com- the tire industry. eade Encampmen { ST 3 ort of pliabili And turning Foot ball players of District high P ty and the . L * d to U'S° 7 schools attending the 3d Army Corps * citizens’ training camp, to be held at Camp Meade during August, ought to bave the jump on other team as- pirants when they report for practice next September. They will have the benefit of two weeks of real gridiron drilling under the direction of com- petent coaches, while learning the rudiments of military science, for the ‘War Department intends to pay spe- cial attention to the development of athletes during the camp term. ‘Twenty-seven members of Central's squad have applied for admission to the camp, and a number of Business ‘boys will take advantage of the op- portunity. Eastern and Tech are in- terested in the project and expect to be well represented, while Western probably will have some of its grid- droners in training. The general con- ditioning, in addition to the prepara- gory foot ball work . they will re- ceive, will go far toward fitting the boys for the annual championship The purpose of the camp, briefly #oid, is to initiate the upbuilding of an organ! reserve, ready for sery- ice In the defense of the nation should an emergency develop. The camp is open to young men between the ages of sixteen and thirty-five. Attendance + entails no expense and the nearness of Camp Meade would permit Wash- ington boys to visit their.homes dur- #ng iha weeleond furloughs, AR OO U OO O O R R X 3 peace of mind of slow wilt in warm weather, here and at the seashore where the air is moist. The Tolman Laundry F. W. MACKENZIE, Manager Cor. 6th and C Sts. N.W. Acclimate your necklinen to all seasons and all places. TOLMANIZE! Collar-ring Franklin 71. 3 % (XXX RO R R R X XXX R R n months ago the makers of U. S. Royal Cord Tires put themselves on record against the unsound- United States Tires nited States @ Rubber Company. Tire Branch, 1303 H. Street N. W. ; Royal Cerds as the par . quality tire at a met price, The most significant thing that is happen- ing in tires today. oAs people say everywhere UnitedG States Tires