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\ THE EVENING WORLD, FLOOEY Pann & GOIN’ TO RIDE WA LITTLE Goat! —_>— Charley White Tells of Battle in This City Between Jack Demp- sey and Jack Fogarty of Phila- delphia for the Middleweight Championship of World and Entire Gate Receipts. NO. 30-JACK DEMPSEY Copyriaht, 1911, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World.) ACK DEMPSEY returned to San Francisco and fought a grudge fight with Jack Keenan of Phila- @elphta. Keenan was one of Carr's seconds when that fighter was bea' by Dempsey. After that battle F wan made derogatory remarks about ch ome one carrled to retorted in kind, and the Dusybodies repeated jt to Keenan, So when the two men met one day In a sporting place in Frisco Keenan up- braided Jack for &is remarks. One word led+to another and final men decided to settle the figh tists, A ge was secured the two contestants and t er wmembers of the party started for Gold- en Gate Park. On the way Dempsey pai! to Keenan: ‘Jack, I don't want eto fight you. We are be pEast and friends lek each are and don’t want nan said that y could be his rina fight @f Hpectators, and Demprey was to knock Keenan out in two rounds in order to prove tip, Victor @nd vanquished ro: ck to Frisco together, but Keenan was badly beaten ‘UD. Dempsey's next fight was with Earl Manning of Los Angeles. It was held in San Francisco at Turn Hall on Aug. 29, 1885. Dempsey had all tho better of the argument, and in the fifth round Capt. Benedict of the police force jumped into the ring and stopped the fight. He was so thoroughly hissed and abused by the crowd that he consented to let the fight go o the men would use larger gloves, They consented to do this, and the fighting began again. In the seventh round Dempsey had Man- ning so badly beaten up that the police | If interfered again, so the referee gave the decision to Dempsey. The following hy Jack defeated Tom Norton at mento in four rounds Having cleaned up all the Caltfornta fighters, Dempsey now turned his eyes toward Portland, Soon after his arrival there he was matched to fight the fa- mous Dave Campbell for $2,000 a side. Campbell was ono of the finest athletes fn the West, standing over six feet. Ho was the chief of Portland's fire depart- ment and a great favorite among the Portinand fans. When Dempsey arrived tn Portland he was laughed to acorn by the local sports, Campbell t above him in stature and bull Portland sports rushed to get thetr money down on Campbell, Dempsey was not without his supporters, how- ever, The crowd of r who accompanied him had seen him dis- pose of all comers without regard to etze, and they had sufficient faith to un- strap thelr wads and take advanntage of | he big odds. Scene of Battle Kept Secret. This wi to be bare knuckle fight and could not be held in Port rranged to pull off th c as kept secret for fear of tr yle with the authorities, and man qyere the schemes and subterfuges re- forted to by the fans to learn of the | Place and date. On the morning of the acheduled day tghters, their attendants, tho officials and such sporting men as were in the secret, boarded two steamboats at the Portland docka and etarted up the Columbia River, The two steamboats continued up Co- lumbia River until a suitable spot was found in Lewis County on the Wash- {ington ‘Territory side. The ring was erected and preparations made for the fight. On entering the arena Campbell walked over to where Dempsey wa) ting in his corner and offered to be that he would win the bout, Campbell | [R had plenty of wealthy frienda and w well supplied with money, but Jack had Uttle or no coin and had to refuse the bet. dn the fret and second round Demp- | th tH lers Charley igh ! | | ht to bel ¢ THE FAN & a pup tw One was the Racq | Ry was the New York Athletic Club. The me m0 for a match between | zarty, When the side and » receipt meant a tidy little s | weight championship of America and y surprised the Portiandites by per cent. of the qurse and entire to the winner, Whe date Kill in ducking, dodging, sidestepping | j.) and general legwork, and in the third | 81'e D, ARS8, round Jack put a quick and unexpected |) nati o end to the battle by knocking vere | bell out with @ right-hand blow to the ‘The fight took place r lon Highth street. Al Smith was the referea, There were two timers, one from the Racquet Club and LL LARS sce: adherents were! tig other from the New York Athletic dazed by the result and slowly made| @j1, Dempsey weighed 143 pounds thele way back to the steamboats.| qi4 js Ler | while Dempsey, as soon as the battle | “tor & chief recond was a former. | Was over, Jumped out of the ring and] op, om Cleary of Frisco, while jran all the way to the boat to keep | tela MeasnOae GY KEHOE himself warm, as the morning Was| hampers and F idwards, Roth of bah fel Fogarty’s se 6 former light | a the fight fan: | weight ong under the old lan- ring to weler | don r ad fought each ofher | for t There was an immense | crowd present, and in it were many the foremost men of York ¢! note representatives of society epartment boys brought| polities, law and fina’ Among them out hose carts and hook and ladder| were William R, Travis, Larry Jerome trucks and festooned them with flow-| and David Withers. ers and banners, while an open bar- | Suthe loaded with flowers and drawn | Dempsey Scarcely Scratched, by four white horses was brought| After twenty-seven roupda of the down to the dock, followed by an im-| hardest kind of fighting, Dempsey | mense throng with horns, bella and] kno Fogarty out, the defeated | flags to welcome the supposed victor. | Man's seconds throwing the sponge » i Into the ring while he was lying tn- Dempsey’s Victory Celebrated. the floor, Fogarty as », While Dempa was | When the boats docked and the sad cages Load | news was spread around so amazed was the crowd at the unexpected re- sult that the barouche with the \ the fight Dempsey, fol- »'s suggestion, played for s eyes. In this he waa favored | white horses was entirely forg aha arhell ce. Fogarty, on the and left standing on the doc! How- her hand, devoted all his attentions ever, they did not go unused, for a Dempsey's short ribs. In the twen- | crowd of prnia sports who had) tern round Fogarty was almost diin up ey and had}, ed by the loss up a@ tidy sum in bets appro- vehicle and, putting Demp- | rode In state up to the prin- and mouth, upon ad played @ regular during the fight, that he was 1, where they celebrated 1 in, In this round Dempsey ory in fitting # a terrible right hand wallop to It has been the history of the fighting | Iogarty's Jaw, the blow landing with | boxer ng | such force’ that tt broke the Phitadel- | y . phia man's jaw. Ho dropped to the }to fine oi | Moor, alr mit his bulldog tenac- | Wnt | | Browne's Chop House IHS man who “knows” doesn’t. say: “Til take a little whiskey.” He says: “T'll take a little Carstairs Rye.” There is a vast difference, It took years of time, a vast amount of money and energy and patience, to bring: Car- stairs Rye to the state of perfection which makes it to-day the finest whiskey in America, Carstairs Rye js absolutely pure, It is aged in wood, It is fully matured, It is uniform, mellow, smooth, palatable. It has been used continuously for 122 years, generation after generation, by tho best judges of whiskey in America. Ask for Carstairs Rye the next time you order whiskey. i STEWART DISTILLING CO, A consolidation of Carstairs, DcCall & Co. and Carstairs Bros, New York Philadelphia Baltimore Pete McCoy. MeCoy, wholngreed that the dectet delonged t x ‘ nous, ete, accor, St-con,, nholagre, tat, the econ vamest te! Pound the World [11 ocicestrenctten ct| YOUNG FITZSIMONS AND rest welterweights that ever drew | feht of any of the outsiders to capture the on @ glove and was a fighter from his|t t the dectston should have been d M classic, seria 7 A WCE uaty ct neon Lk aie an eridian Rule} is. erin red here yemer- men and had bested the most of them, So when McCoy challenged Dempsey, | turne ers of these clubs raised &| the‘latter was not slow to take tt up. 1) of Ar-| famous The fight was held at Jersey City an|to fight any two men In America four were added this | quite worked up over this bout and | same ‘night. the house was packed to the doors. |cested by Jiminy FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1911, (He'll Go to the Game if He Has to Swim There.) ® @ as YAAS! an’ THEM KELLERMAN THINGS DON'T Go HERE* AND THERE AINT GOIN’ TA BE NO MoRE Rowmne ! OVE | hough many of the spectators DAVE DILLON FIGHT DRAW day from Lexington. ‘he R. F. Car- E men candidate is @aid to have deen| Young Fitsstmmone, the rugged west ven for Derby. greatly improved by the Tive Grasa| aide lightweight, and Dave Dation, of Sta ct New Jersey, fought « slashing round bout at the Long Acre A. which terminated in a draw, Hetween the time that Dempsey re- from the Coast and the fight with Fogarty, Jack Iseued a challenge 1886. The local fans Were |}round@ each in the same ring on the ‘This challenge was ac- Murray of Provt- LOUISVILLE, Ky., May 12.—The fact that Molesworth will not mide Gov. |for the winner. So Gus Tuttle, Who | ‘there were two referees, Mike Cleary |dence, then considered the lightweignt| Gray, the favorite in the Kentucky | was Jack's manager, t learap (li and Jimmy Ryan, stich of whom was|ooampion, and ‘Tom Henry of England. | Derby, to-morrow haa @ot tmpaired cage Me harge to come back to New Yor tO | eupposed to offset any bins on the part|It was held in a hall up in Eighth Ne Y 4 Oo yore fi ‘e face Hea ete a Dy GUE Re TAN LACT ehe GINEE MGC BEE tw G olaubs [atfect,. Dentbeey, (kde 4004 Oi CREF, (oma e omnia Ws eitaas nats ere three ‘rounds ‘Ditien ad M signed a down in ~iphia | {ug good fight and made Dempsey ex-| beating hoth men In four rounda each, (betting indications, = The oMdal odde the detter of the fighting, bet for a finish fight with y with| tend himself all the way. At the end| ‘The next Chapter will also deal with | to-day are placed at 2 to 1 Meridian tenth round Fitzsimmons Groppe@ Di. 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