Evening Star Newspaper, September 10, 1926, Page 37

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SPORTS. = JACK PROMISE BOUT A SLUGGING MATCH Champion Declares He Is G to-Toe Fight and That the Better Puncher Will Emerge With th BY JACK DEMPSEY. TLANTIC CITY. Scptember 10.—Ii Gene Tunney has any idea that | ours is going to be a boxing match, with a lot of fanc: and some trick motions, he’s going to be a sadly disappointed youth. It's going to be a fight. I know ouly one way of procee gong bangs, and that is to step out an and posing and tmaking motions—that's not my idea. I never was tossed out of any ri bout in my career. and I'm not going its money: to sec plenty of terrific acti utmost to secure a knockout victory. vet, and I'm not going to begin now. T don't care what kind of a fight | Tunney thinks he's going to tight. 1 know that the fight we will ght will be light. I've been in the ring a lot of times with fel- lows who figured they'd just step around and strut their clevernes: But I've nev bean in the ring with a single one who got away with that notion. * 1t they are meet: JACK DEMPSEY ing me they've ¢ £ot to fight. That's what they were paid to do: that's what I was paid to do. And that is what we did. T won my title fighting for it. When T lose I'm going* down fighting for it, T don't want to lose it while I'm on my feet. When I'm beaten T want to Le beaten beyond the possibility of | any alibis and without anybody’s com- | plaint about “bum decision “an unfair referce.” Sars He'll Make Gene Step. Tunncy thinks he can whip me. | Terhaps he can. But if he's to be the | next heavyweight champion of the world he's got to fight to the last ounce of energy within him to attain any such goal. T may not be the het- ter than when T meet Tunney, but 11l make that boy step as he never step- | ned before in all his fighting lifetime to prove that he’s of championship oaliber. He may win: anything is possible In these days. But if victory goes to him it will happen only after he has demonstrated that he's a harder’| puncher than T am and that he can | take it hetter. If Tunney can take all that [ hand out and then have enough left to beat me to the ground— well, he deserves to win Most of my efforts in these training days-—the central effort. the bis idea— | have been to dGevelon my punch to the | greatest and most crus g power I've | over had—and. at the same time. to get back all the oldtime aeccuracy.) T've heard that experts, basing thefr conelusion on early work,. have slower than in my none of them, keen to sing my swan the point of sayng T let go h be ®ong, have gone t I'm not hitting hard when in these day: To Force a Punching Battle. T've never seen Tunney in action— and, therefore, T don't know how fast he is. But T have a funny little no tlon that on fight nicht he isn't going to outstep me. Mavbe he has more cleverness—but 1’1 offset that with aggressiveness. Xo that reduces the whole thing 1o “who bas the better punch?” On fight nisht T'm geing ont t make our meeting a fight: I'm goirf to force a punching battle. Tt be toe to toe if T have my way about it and T guess T will. And then we will elug it out in mid-ring-—and may the better puncher win. (Covyrieht, 19261 W | Famous Battles for Heavyweight Title No. 11 Ry the Associated Press. | Johnson dgfeated Tommy | < hefore the police stopped the dney, New South Wale 5, 1908, The constabular: the 1ing in the fourteenth vound. The affair was to have con-| tinued 1o 20 rounds, but as far as it went it was decisive enough to have the title go to the hig negro boxer. Burns was badly battered, and a cracked 1lip prevented h miling | when Bill Squires, champion of Aus. tralia. challenged the winner. Bill in his challenging speech omitted any ference to a two-minute fight he had ) Burns the previous year here was @ somewhat heated and ~xtended argument lefore the show began over ceriain elastic handages | covering Burns' elbows. The referee Jecidrd that Burns could not hit with for I ing them | own wotion, re. covering and was | hand from the | vaded moved the elbow rewarded with a big rowd. Cash on the counter was the finan- | lal order of the day. and the gladia Wrs were paid off in the ring. | ®0 interested was the populace in | the affray that a number of the cus. | tomers siept in the open. waiting for | the day of the fight to dawn. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT. /| By the Associated Press NEW YORK.—Joe Dundee, xmm.| 1aore. knocked out Eddie Burnbrook, Camp Holabird. Md. (3). Jimmy Jones, Youngstown, Ohio, and Jack Hood. welterweight champion of England. | fought a draw (10). Harry Persson, | <wadish heavyweight champion. beat | arter. Cuba (10 John Fatrick | : York, defeated Jack Vince Dundee, | Raltimore. won from Charlic Satko, | New York (4 A P s ~ SWIMMER IS DROWNED. | BUDAPEST. September 10 (P).—| Franz llled, holde# of many Hungari- | an swimming records. failed to come to the surface after a faney dive at/| a swimming and diving me: 3 day. His body was recove hours after he made the d bellef is that llied suffered attack. i | heart Upward of 480.000 caddi loved on golf links in ar the eny- ted Your OLD FELT MADE NEW Again Cleanine. Blockine _and Remodeling by Experts Vienna Hat Co. 435 11th Street 'LEONARD TO COVER fessional Montrose, rounds, and was rewarded for his vic- t ¥ in all sorts of women, from the little blue-eved bleached waitress to the blue blondes of femininity. But he doesn’t last with them. He smiles his way in and smiles it right out again. S TO MAKE oing to Force a Real Toe- e Heavy Title. stepping | ding about the business when the nd knock—or get knocked. Stalling | ng for not providing action in any | to be. T figure the crowd pays out | on—to sec two men striving to the | I've never disappointed any crowd FIGHT FOR THE STAR NEW YORK, September 10.— Benny Leonard, undefeated light- welght boxing champion of the world, left today for Atlantic ‘itr to inspect Jack Dempsey's condi- tion and report it for The Star. After a five-day stay Leonard will camp at | | i | | visit Gene Tunmey’s Stroudsburg. 2 Before leaving Leonard said, “I appreciate the honor involved by Gene Tunney's asking me to act as his second in the fight, and T regret that it will be. impossible for me to do so, now that I have taken the assignment to The Star’s sports staff to cover the fizht. I want to be In a position, of course, to give fair and jmpartial treatment to both sides. “T shall try to discover in ad- vance, by preliminary examinati observation and reasoning, w -m of the two men. barring accident or fluke, will win. I plan to put on the gloves with them, d learn | at first hand just how they box, feint, react to feinting, ete. T shall make a prediction several days be- fore the fight, and also report the fight itself.” DEMPSEY'S FIRST FIGHT. Jack Dempsey fought his first pro- fight at_the age of 19 at Colo. He knocked out a voung blacksmith in three husky |and REFEREE TO BE NAMED ON NIGHT OF BIG FIGHT By th¢ Associated Press. PHILADELPHIA, Pa', Septem- ber 10.—The name of the referee of the Dempsey-Tunney fight is to be ;rlhl;held until the night of the ight. “The man who will referee will self until the night of the figh! Frank Wiener, chairman of the State Athletic Commission, says. “In fact, he will not be known un- til after the prelimi bouts have started.” Wiener denied repofts that he might himself be the third man in the ring, saying he wouldn’t take the job for $100,000. DEMPSEY IS READY | TO SWAT SPARRERS ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.. September 10 (#).—His three-day vacation over. Jack Dempsey, sunburned and thor- oughly rested, intends to set a brist- Jing pace for his sparring mates from now on. He promises to work within | the next ten days as he never has worked before. Weighing around 197, he desires to bring the poundage to about 191. He has new flashy green trunks and a sweater to match for his business togs. While the titleholder has been loaf- ing around his bungalow, his sparring partners have heen nursing their hruises for the punching they know is coming to them. Sharley. Ander- son. 212-pound negro from Chicago. big Bill Tate, veteran negro shock absorber, #re none too happy ‘over what is ahead. Dempsey is giving consideration to the selection of the referee and the two judges for his fight with Tunney. Frank Werner, chairman of the Pennsylvania State Athletic Commis- sion, has assured Dempsey that care will be exercised in the selections. Dempsey submitted the names of six licensed referees acceptable to him. “It is understood the list comprises Frank MeCracken, a sportswriter from Philadelphia: Pop = O'Brien, Arthur Nolan, Tommy Reilly and two licensed referees from Pittsburgh. On Dempsey's last day of rest he smeared himself with pickling brine and went up on the roof of his cot- tage for a sun bath, also he went fishing and caught a two-pounder. YOUNGEST IN MAJORS. Br the Associated Press. Melville Ott. who on the bench of the New York Giants and gets pearls of base ball wisdom from his elders, Is among the youngest players in the major leagu He was 17 | THE FIGHT GAME FROM THE INSIDE CHAPTER LVIII. BY JACK EMPSEY the great lover. Fc to speak. There isn't a quest and will be to the end of his He loved like he lived a Women were beautiful mechanical dolls in his mind, so far as'1 could dis- cover. Not that he didn't respect the: with them, any of them. But his love don’t last. He can't ory. He can't concentrate on any {is affairs of the heart, his great_ fri He's the most amazing individual vet with all the bruised hearts left in his trail T don’t suppose there is one | that doesn’t like him yet and would have him back tomorrow if possi! I can't help thinking that in all this army of loves, this array of the beautiful’ and talent, the stupidiand the =illy, there stands but one tre- mendous love of his life. I say this in all respect for any woman who has ever shared his love or is to share it in the future. Over them all, big, little, famous or infamous, there {s but one woman—his first wife, beauti- ful Maxine Demps - Jt's the old, old story. He might have written the old song — “Off with the old love, on with the new, easier to say than Sometimes 1 wondery if there is some Spanish blood in his veins. Even before he became champlon, he thelr idol. They fell for him in droves. It might have been his flashing_ teeth, his deep black or hls raven hair. EARNS. It might have T been his limousine build of body. Devil take me if I know. I do know that I was run ragged splitting him and his loves out. He always had two or three of them in love with him at once, and with all he didn’t have to change the size of his hat band. He simply took life as it came. He waded into loves as he did larrups and he enjoyed the excitement of it all. As 1 said before, he has personality. He was the he-man type of fellow that they've fallen for since Jerry with the braided grogans fashioned a stone hatchet to bring in_his lady love a jungle beat or two. He had a sense of humor to begin with, and he could laugh himself out of desperate situa- tions of the heart if he decided things had become desperate. He has a pecu- liar and unusually pleas . soft and kid-glovey, iike as compared to his shaggy contour. His was a won- derful line of chatter. You know he could gab his wa: through the drawing rooms of royal England and make them lke it. never knew a fellow who so well bawnced In front of maddeningly beautiful women. If he found himself going on the ropes mentally or so- cially. nobody in the room knew it. He'd pull that smile of his and—well, damn me. they'd let him lead them | around instead of them putting the RADIATORS, FENDERS BODIES MADK _AND REPAJRED He has personality. « i women like him first, love him a little on better acquaintance and wind up falling head and heels in love with him, i vears old on March Z KEARNS. come to these chapters on tiptoes, so ion in my mind that Jack Dempsey is days the world's greatest ladies’ man. nd fought, a torrent in human form. Indeed, he did. He was sure fire I can't quite explain it, but m. pin his love down to any given terri- one woman for any length of time. endships with the opposite sex, take in that respect that I've ever known, le. brass ring in his nose. Jack Demp- sey would have been an amazing fel- britches age. 1 can see the dames on those old-fashioned balconies right now, screaming him on as he fought off a whole courtyard of them with his fists, sword or no sword. Not Generally Know I'm telling you of a side of Dempsey that isn't generally known. I'm not putting any medals on him that he doesn’t deserve. The world loves a great lover, and he is one in the pres- ent. He chatted his way into their hearts. Ile was forever doing some: thing to enkindle their regard for him. Bovish and unstudied, he made them like him whether they wanted to or not. TIl bet right now that Jack Dempsey could walk into a club of man-haters and win them all over. They’d have him on the middle of the floor playing peas-porridge-hot in 15 minutes.” The fellow is compelling with. them. He was and is the best judge of what a woman's whim is or is going to be that T ever met. He's got the shelks looking like cigar-store Indians—what's left of them. He had his way of sliding into their way of thinking, and the first thing vou knew Bessie, Bridget or Bertha would be saying, “That’s right, Jack. You certainly are right.” See what T mean? Turned them right around in the boat without rocking it. I never knew a fellow like him. He would have been a success as a snake charmer or a lion tamer, for I1_do believe that he can make anyvthing that lives jump through a blazing hoop. I'll say this for him—women never interferred with his training. He romped and plaved with them when it was recess. Work to be done, and he was a recluse, the easlest. man to handle, as I've said a dozen times in | my story, that ever T handled or ex. | peet to handle. (Copyright 1928 low in the big feathered hat and silky 'HOLD By the Associated Press. The crushing manner of the na- tional champion’s straight-set defeat of the French,ace and - Wimbledon BILL TILDEN. title holder, Jean Borotra, was the feature of the opening day's play in the challenge round for the Davis Cup at the Germantown Cricket Club. It overshadowed even the decisive triumph of Willlam M. Johnston over Rene La Coste in the other match of the day d France's widely heralded threat, as a result of this twin disaster, all but BILL“JOHNS’I'(L\"A faded from the 1926 competition for orld's team championship. hin the space of a_few weeks Tilden has disposed of three of his greatest rivals in convincing fas Tlis defeat of Borotra bl 228 First St.NW The company that guarantees crankshaft and crankshaft bear- ing unconditionally for the life WITISTATT U R & £ WKS. | Phelps Auto Exchange 1625 14th St. N.W. ' MOTOR (0. Conveniently Located on Fourteenth Street 1333-37 14th St. Main 5788 3912 14th St. 1914-16 Pa. Ave. 233 Pa. Ave. S. “Man’s Shop”’—14th & G Sts. 414 9th St. i [T e | triumph. With only one more victory needed | \ 6—3, following triumphs over John- ston and Vincent Richards, has heightened the prospect that he will retain his crown in the national sin- gles tournament next week at Forest Hills, New York. Johnston beat La Coste 6--0, 6—4, 0—6, 6—0. Although he wilted badly in the third set he had the grit and punch in his strokes to pull out a to clinch America’s hold on the Davis Cup for the seventh successive vear, Richards and the American captain, Richard N. Willlams, faced the oppor- tunity to settle the issue today in the doubles match with Henri Cochet and Jacques Brugnon. These Americans beat the French palr in the national doubles last week. The match was scheduled for 3:30 p.m. i Regardless of the outcome of to. day's match, the series will be played out tomorrow with the final two sin- | by relaxation, which is Gene Tunney's TUNNEY IS RELAXING T0 RESTORE ENERGY By the Ascociated Press. STROUDSBURG. Pa., September | 10.—Restoration of nervous energy euphemism for loafing. is preparing the chailenger for a week end of hard work. He expects to box tomorrow and Sunday Today he was satisfied with plans | to walk and run between nine and ten miles, enjoy a motor ride along moun- tain roads and gulf a while. He has declined u.1 in-Wation to go to Dela- ware Water wap to be presented to the State convention of the American Legion. He shied from the amount of handshaking involved. A suggestion that a man, woman or: | child has driven 100 or more miles to see him thus_far brought him froin his quarters to shake hands. While visitors have been telling | Tunney that “they knew him when' the soup has been getting cold. Now George Ransberry, chef, weighing 300 pounds and able to enforce his threats if need be, has ruled that the dinner hour must be just that. The chef is independently wealthy and | | cooks only for love of the game. Tou Fink, the trainer. and Billy Gibson. Tunney's manager, will be two of the three handlers in Tunney gles matches, bringing Johnston into action agamst Borotra and Tilden against La Coste. corner for the championship bout. !The third has not been selected. BY WALTER ULFILLING the pred pion, Karl F. Kellerman, jr., of Columbia i Congressional Country Club by two Roesch’s score of 162 for the double round of the Congressional course was a brilliant effort, made in the teeth of a flerce southwest wind that played havoc with the cards of ma of the other contestants, The tourney marked the fourth time in a row Kel lerman has been rumner-up in the champlonship. Torseh and Kellerman, tied at 51 at the conclusion of the morning round, with & margin sufficlent to stamp either of them as the probable tour ! ey winner, battled throughout the | afternoon chapter right down to the | Tast hole before Roesch was certain jof victory. Kellerman, usually bri liant, was erratic and sometimes medioere, suddenly turning at the end of the last nine. when Roesch ha piled up a six-stroke lead, and anne ing three 3s in a row, to reduce the margin of the Washington lad to two shots. Roesch played a brilliant shot over | trees at the ninth to maintain a twe- stroke margin at the twenty-seventh. picked up two more at t eleventh, where Kellerman pushed his tee shot to the rough, Was bunkered and took three putts, and added still another stroke at the twelfth. | " The coming champion dropped a { shot at the short lhil’(?(‘l:fllh where he took three putts, but picked up two at the fourteenth, where Kellerman a “Hahn Special™ Tan ported calf, soft Brogue. again dre too intimate with *Col or ack im- toe You OME years ago “Rah Rah describe a college man and his wardrobe. men’s shoes of those days deserved Rah” styles. They surely were freakish. Glance ate Shoes for Fall. elation of how young men'’s dress has taste—w in originality. $5 to $14 Zippy new Fall half hose to wear with them. o 63c¢ to $3 overwel tension 7th and K FRANK ROESCH, WITH | WINS JUNIOR GOLF EVENT ictions of cason when he administered to George J. Voi his first defeat of the vear, Frank K golfer from the Washington nexed the junior championship of the a Shoes for iow heel. 162, R. McCALLUM. future brilliancy made earlier in the J. Voigt, the District cham- Roesch, 19-year-old s0lf and Country Club, yesterday an- District of Columbia, nosing out n the 36-hole medal-play event at the shots. k \ bunker. Going to the short sixteenth | Roesch had a margin of six shots. He dropped one at this short hole, and | but for the break that usually favors winner might have l\'lrt\ml wiped out his margin at the seven- teonth. _ For here Roesch hooked his | tee shot to the rough, half hit his s ond and put his third in a bunke while Kellerman's second shot lay | practically dead. | " Roesch got the ball clean in the ! bunker, and it sailed far above the| green, striking the flag and dropped | down within holing distance. He sank the putt and transformed a | probable 7 into a good 3, while| Kellerman was holing a 3. | The Columbia lad drove the| ecighteenth green in a desperate ef- | fort to catch Roesch, and nearly holed a 2. ‘John (*. Shovey of Argyle. one of the pre-tournament favorites, picked up at the thirteenth hole of the morning round, where he took an § after heing bunkered three frames. Scores of those who finished foilow: k K. Roesch. Washington Golf and R * S Cotumbla, 81-83— ordlinger, Dam, H5-HI—I188. P Comgrossional. 10805— 112.92—204. 108-98—206. 118-95—213. ¥rat Country nrl | | 1% Town and Country, 0°Connell, Columbin, | R Somards, Mano ! John Tierney, Columbis legiate“ ng Men * was coined to Young to be called “Rah over our Collerzil A rev- improved in good hile still leading shape to round into the “pink” during the ni to beat any man who will, following his defeat, lay claim to an alibi for his setback. punch. SPORTS. mpsey Asserts There Will Be No Fancy Stepping In His Battle With Tunney IU. S. NETMEN MAY CLINCH ON TROPHY TODAY HILADELPHIA; September 10.—Sharing once more with little Bill Johnston the task of making the Davis Cup safe for America, big Bill Tilden, gaunt wizard of the courts, has utilized ‘this role to | dispel any lingering doubts of his return to the form that has kept him at the tennis pinnacle for six straight years. GENE CONTENDS WALLOP OF CHAMP IS OVERRATED Challenger Asserts Dempsey Never Has Proved Him- ‘self to Be a Terrific Hitter and That He Has No Fear of Jack’s Clouting Power. BY GENE TU EY. TROUDSBURG. Pa., September 10.—T surely hope Jack Dewngp lay-off of three days did him a world of good. T hope it « heavyweight champion to recuperate from his streteh of strenuon training, which has embraced ahout a year and put Jack r t 10 days. | Id I don’t want the sports writers to pull out the old moth-cat shell of a once great fighter,” in telling of Dempsey's downfal how long Dempsey shape—just as good as at any time since he fought \ has been training and how strennously. He is in goor llard. His recupera tive powers have diminished to some extent. it scems likely, but probably punching just as hard and as fast as he ever did I hope so, anyway. No kidding, 1|1 do—iwo really do. 1 have no fear of his| boiled He has never shown himself | South A to be a terriffic hitter thus far, s v | should I, with a record of never hav- | ing been floored, about his | clouting? 1 know stand up under a punch like the one that| dropped Horizontal Freddle Fulton. 1 | ~ know I can take the blows that floored the poorly conditioned Luis ¢ Firpo. I know 1 can take the bel of a. man who, after dropping big, Jess Willard seven times in one | round, couldn't | knock him out. 1 know I can stand | up better t did Bill Brennan, he i o can dish and a . I8 it any wonder ti down every time Dempsey « loft upper-cut to the hody a punch as the without being seriously damazed” Believe me. my stomach will be good shape and Dempsey isn't goinz to hurt me there, and as for hea . well, if Jack can snap my iece back on my shock-absorhing nch neck hard enouzh to hurt m. it will be the first time any ene ha ever done it. He can't do it, T tell vou. but I ea hurt him. He has been hurt in ev fight In which he has engaged ar he'll be hurt badly by me. I won be any battered Willard, bringing ponderous upper-cut from the flan and almost knocking Jack into i1 il nickel seats; I won't he any fra who licked Demp-| cuppentier: T won't he any pund dsex for 10 rounds| gy "prannan; 1 won't be any ine and _then col-| an; A A :‘\‘I‘T“?‘ln‘;;":ki‘xz‘;iNll'um: as Dempsey, as good a hiti ok o |as Dempsey. vounger than Demps R EihE Soat nd cooler than Dempsey at's of the Dempsey | I !l lick kim for all his t man fell hit hin GENE TUNNEY | rienced Luis Firpo. well as did Tommy fear the potency wallop? s i el Returning to the Firpo contest, the South_American went into the ring | SHOOT OPEN TO ALL. with Dempsey expecting to be beaten. | poRT EUSTIS, Va.. S He told Damon Runyon and others. a | oRT FUSTIS, Va.. September few days before the bout, that he was who can sho not ready for Dempsey. Still, he all but stopped the titlehoider. As for being dropped himself. why | houldn’t he have heen? 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