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‘That He Fears Outcome Of Fight With Frenchman npion Says He Feels He|7 A Stein's fe tMhe? wnndaone on “Take Care of Himself in Any Pinch. ATLANTIC CITY, June 2. all the rumors that have| pentier th my hA nds and to get in there and feel the fira t pass, going or coming. “Iit's\ @ wonderful sensation. I can hardly \escride it to you. The fight Itreit nce you start. 1 love to fight, weet music to my eare when ‘e that old gong and send t feel any different wth Car- n L_have with any other nan, 1 guase it will be Georges who ‘been current in boxing circles | fegarding Jack Dempsey's ofimind.and about his worrying [the coming bout with Carpentier, ghammptor twoked like a mighty “worried” man when he was ed at training camp yesterday. fe better part of two houra, had been sent on feels funny.’ And then it numbers vec, (NBT id unfed jazz dise. out to my the feeling if any one cf mpsey sat back and re- (Uhe career that brought {Old old arma nahip. His boyish tales ere wet to mud’ too, for right at his Tete was a wond erful phonograph that o him by an adinire “Mocaxo, Jack Koxticu- ing concern in Ch tated ‘with bt oN hand as he fed y, looking in the beat of con: ‘@, pieture of physied) perfec- >gat in his big feather chair and | money, pig tite tn and joked. When asked if/ you had to buy it; Blick: isn't ae ike ;? Who, me? send this m_ \chin Salitggnia va 1h move away from here.” eatd, a Sack) “Costs a tot of wand “carved lint wt, the hand- eX retive whe i r vaused the Guards Jack's interests, jy"aused, the have a combined» attack fieart fallure to-day Mikes Produced and he me,” he rattled on. “Carpen- ‘Ws ilike any other man that I've Tinever worry about the outcome. that I can always take care of i in-any pinch, so why worry? And bosht What's the use of try- find out what the other fellow B and planning to beat him to it? f, he'll be very apt to cross the em you and you'll get one on the fm the first round. (0d crack on the jaw will make ‘forget a!1 about prepared plans, so ver make them. I’never saw Witl- up his hands and made no plans 1 ‘to any thing. I feinted him ‘thes, saw the portholes and let Nothing else will go in a fight. ‘that I'm meeting a goed mun i » I always give the other the benefit of the doubt. 1 tell that this or that fellow ts a Kood @nd that 1 will have to be just better, that's all I've always red that scheme. fem all be good until they're over. That's my motto and it Mor planning for a fight beforehand | loarning to speak French, added Juck. f automatic pis ampion Ww Iftchen, target practice, ‘The booming of the two guns brow Tht | snoozing sparring rtner ers lem, from their downy couch in a great herd, Could the camp unter attack? ‘They found Mile mn Jack blazing away at an old lard can and Dempscy proved to be t better hot. Jack called a halt and picking up brown jug walked off Into the grass and placed it nt about 200 yards. Then he walked back to nt and re- marked that the best day the brown ux had ever seen had arrived. Then e popped away and at the third shot his true e¢. rent a leaden pellet crashing through the vessel and it was shattered. “Eye is better than ever,” mused Dempacy as he looked about for more wame. “Demprey had a good tnugh over the fib that had gone out of his camp about at least enough French to bother Georges on July 2, “Not me. ‘Poo busy for French just now, and, bent sald the ch . m- with @ full tusked grin, “a sock ne chin ts the same in any lan: I'll parley voos with my tist Dempsey dolled up in his olive green ut back a iramporea! oes the Dempacy camp, and \esan and tri'n- to be a Kood o nt to tell you something, ey came up out of ‘an in KB and arms never have &| of the sights of the spray town. E ig chatr, fe thrill or a single it oI until somebody pops sing room acoreand yell |gamy and was sound asleep when the Bult, a suit that Ms too, and gtalked the “boardwalk most of the afternoon. Jack had hundreds at his heels in a Jit- and |ty, andin the end he had to duck off the pine parade ground ahd hide hinnself vay In his $10,000 Umousine, now one wt] He drove like a De Palma for hin ck ‘dinner bell clanged. There's one call to ‘time that Jack does not mexiect or dilly-dally with. Rocky Kansas May Prove FEAL UD out of It. “Golly, its ul. Naw, you're not afraid or F ilke that. Your limbs tremble the ague but it 1s not fear, fay, Loaw then holding Sian O° W: ay, 1 oa em holding Man O' War no Paddock one day at’ Belmont whe broke a lot of records. pwas a crizy loon trying to get away 7 . That's me when the all the camp. let the in the door and Goldberg of Panama es Frenchman Through Two Fast Rounds. Ay SORES CARPENTTER had the best workout he has had since Phe han begun training at Man- hus clever sparring partner af- ly and said, “Fine; that's sd; it was the bost I have had.” chman spent a largé part of ning doing road work, and be- to @heck his blows a0 as not to his clever opponent, but on one oce sion his fPinton-like right caught Gold ‘verg on the tler’s shoulder. Begging his pardon |™many times, Georges held htm until he could recuperate. Goldberg recovered quickly they were at it faster than ever, for the big bout yesterday | fe engaged Jack Goldberg of | for two as fast rounds as any i} would wisn wo see. When the! rounds were over Carpentier! Kearns being amay for the confer- ence with Fickard in regard to the referce question made it a holiday for The sparring partners took thelr tired tin ears to couch and day roll right from under them. An a matter of fact, they were In- wardly praying that ‘Kearns will be delayed far beyond his time on that referee question. They « astonishing sensation wh: sey stops hitting. parpentier Has Best Workout i Since He Star'ed Training and he was out mgain. He attempted t jaw and he fell to Carpen A vig crowd witnessed the workout and Georges was loudly applauded for every one of his many brill nt moves. th Carpent Attend Harrison Bout. Georges Carpentier ,.na Jack Dempsey may ait {n boxes with Gov. Edward 1. Fiwards of New Jersey and Mayor Frank Hague of Jersey City, respe tively, at the Benny Leonard-Rocky | Kansas bout for the Mghtwelght cham- wing with Goldberg he took en |plonship of the world in the Harrison afr two ou nas ek tax worked fast and Carpentier time displayed the remarkable for some unknown reason |coli and Dave Mackay, who are partners im bolding the contest. fm leawh since beginning . Around the ring he danced, & fash, working his punches fly and if rapid euccesslon, went hi swift right, ATEST TRAINING TRIALS. Peliowing are the bost and most ont of training tri At Jamaica, June 1. inyo!, .51, 1.16. |) Bwirs Maid. .53. ules Gurson, 51. f Minyrack, .49, 1.16 4-5. (| Roundiaman, .53 2-6 k Knight, .49 3-5, 1.03 2-5, » Clark, 1.46. ans Girl, .50, 1.031 Hitle Patsey, .39 3-5, ft, 51 2-5, 1.16 3-5, rk Hill, 1.19, uppy Buxton, .49 3-5, 1.04 3-5. ‘inneconne, .51. y Kelly, .50, 1.16, 1.30, Noise, .50 2-5. Orleans, .37 1-5. ke Thing, 1.19 1-5, 1.4495. Churchill, 1.18 rmencita, 54 it Raider, . 49 2-5, : At Aqueduct. Magic Silence, 1.16 terminator, 1.14, 1.40, 1 unt, 1141-5, 1.41 i Ball Park next Monday night. Invita- tions to all four of these celebrities have been forwarded by promoters Dave Dris- ce aso Mise Ederie Afte ming Title. Miss Gertrude BAerle, who recently broke w record in winning the 200- yard high school swimming champlon- slip, is in quest of another title. Sac ts after the Metropolitan juntor crown at 100 yards, This event will be heid Sat- urday afternoon, June 11, in the pool at the Brighton Beach Baths, in con function with the "me fancy dive jchamplonship and a complete prograuime of water events, dicap race, worked a fast trial at this distance In the Brighton pool yesterday No thme was announced, but It tsb Neved she approaches? record of | minute 54 3-5 seconds (Copyright, 1921, by tn DEMPSEY HAS PUT A 15-FOOT FENCE AROUND HIS TRAINING) 1 it is an nek Dempe B Rathor aM Dempsey May up a Rood purse other Swim- halt a minute. was dangerous at that time, Leonard has given practically all dangerous rivals at least one chance to win the title. Charlie White gave him a hard fight, knocked him out uf the ring and came within an ace of whipping him, but Benny rallied an4 knocked White out ‘Miss Charlotte Boyte, who will start) Charles a secorml chanae, but pernaps from serateh in a special 150-yard han | enone er Amenican | but LIVE WIRES By Neal R. O'Hara. Press Publishing Co. ‘The New Yor! It took Carp a week to get acclimated to daylight saving. THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDA SEY DECLARES HE'S JACK TAKES From RENaOLT, UCEAN YACHT RACE FOR KING’S CUP POSTPONED. With no more ‘entrion received for the transatlantic yacht race for the wap offered by King Albert of Bel- islum, the mace yesterday was declared pustponed. It wan to have been started onl Jaly 4, Another date, protably tn tha spring next year, will he set. Ufcertain basines conditions crane the owners of the bir meing yachto fo heat'tate about taking a month pr ui jre away! from thelr interests for the epn- teat. They Undaunted and the little k jteh Stest:», owned by Prof, Clayton of An- napoils were the only entries mad 4, Most Dangerous Rival Leonard Ever Tackled Benny Musi Be in Perfect Condition Monday to Suc- cessfully Cope With the Powerfully Built Buffalo Sensation. By Robert 'Edgren. . QUARTERS, BUT THE PUBLIC WILL FURNISH THE GATE. Tf Carp is feeding light wines to his sparring partners, that ain't treat: ing 'em very rough. . It it rains on July 2 there won't be a double-header the following | Monday. . NY LEONARD may be in for a real champiqaship fight when he meéts Rocky; Kansas of Bul- falo at Harrison neyt Monday. Many of the lightweight cham- pion’s ring battles have been rather casy, tmt this wasm't Benny's fault. it was beacause he couldn't find opponents who could fight him on anything near aven terms. He husnt dodged many of them, Dut bas taken matches as they came, whenever Billy Gibson, his manager, could find a promoter willing to put Leaman never has deen a side-stepper. He fought only two or three nights after winning the ‘le from Bweddy Welsh and knocked out several opponents in the ensuing few weeks. When Ileo Johnson, the clever negro lightweight champion, chal- lenged him, Leonard took the match immediately and knockéd Leo and his pretensions into obscurity in about There's no doubt Leo He hasn't jiven ‘sno great public demand for it, He fought Wille Ritchie and ‘near being beaten, in San Francisca, gave Willie @ return battie and came es beat him in eight rounds, the bout be- ing stopped withip a few seconds of the last round, when Ritchie was s‘ll on his feet, but nelploss. This Rocky Kansas lad is likely to be more dangerous to Leonard than any of the others, He is a sawed-off middleweight in build. squat, heavliy bullt, broad shouldered, longarmed, heavy fisted, with a big man’s hody and thick ribs that effectually armor plate his vital body points. He has a thick neck and a_olg head, with heavy jaw. To date Kan- sas hos been almost immune to punches. Nothing seems to jar nim, Confident that he can’t be hurt, ac wades, grinningly into punishment, and swings hard blows that will be @s dangerous to Leonard as to the other lightweights Kansag has met in the last few months. His best performances were the beating of Willie Jackson a few months ago, and his .quick knocking our ot Richie Mitchell. Leonard will need to be in good condition to beat Kansas. Even the champion's flashing speed and clever, hard hitting will do him little good unless he is in shape to keep up the pace until something drops, Leonard has been training harder than for other tights, GEORGES OUT TO WIN. I have been watching Carpentier’s training work. There is no doubt that he is in splendid condition now, and that he will be in shape to give! Dempsey a fight. Manager Descan, has shown good sense in program ming the training of his champion, keeping crowds away, avoiding ex- citement, laying out his work so that| Associated Press), June 2.—J. B. it will not have to be done regularly | Joel's Humorist, heavily backed in| | prices ranging from 12 to 1 to 6 to 1, won the historic Derby yesterday for exhibition purposes. “To show Georges before the fight is nothing,” exclaimed Descamps, | when I questioned him about his plans, “I care little for criticism be-| fore Carpentier meets Dempsey, That criticism will be forgotten if he wins. The important thing Is to train him| 80 that he will be able to win. “We shall sacrifice everything else | to that. The work day by day shall be planned to bring him to his best mn duly 2 He will work when he necds work, but if I think he needs. rest he shall rest, He could easily ready in two weeks, I shall take no risk of having him ovettrained, He has worked ever since the match was made. No, he never has been in better health or condition than he is to-day \ he was here before he was Now be ts perfect, ‘Nerves? He has no nerves. But kvening World) [T shall not let crowds visit him, be cause having many people around a tmining camp lw very tiring. “Victor Breyer will be here from rance with several hundred French |sportsmen who will come to ace the snort, Some of Georges's best friends are coming. Two or three of these will make company for him at the camp, so that he will have friends around, Otherwise the training will be done largely in private, or only with responsible members of the press to look on, 'To give a show now is nothing--to win fairly from Dempsey July 3 will be the Night Before for some guys, but the Morning After | !s everything.” for Dempsey and Carp. . One of the disadvantages of being an alien is that no matter how good | DESCAMPS 18 JUSTIFIED, Descamps has the right idea. Car- a football Carp is for Dempsey, he won't be eligible for our All-American Pentier ts @ contender going up team. . Jim Corbett’s denia) that he favors Dempsey sent the betting odds ack to par. . Carpentier knows just enough Hnglish to hate an tnoome tax blank | he can be given only an | against one of the greatest of all | heavyweight champions. He is smaller man by about twelve or fit teen pounds, Balancing condition. ‘outside chance" to win. account of the coal strike. third, and Alien Bree! fourth an Americ prominent and finished ‘a also rans, The time was 2 minutes 45. seconds the first time, drove down to’ the course jn semi-state. In the past they have driven only to the Ascot meet- In ‘Graig an Bran was second choice al 4 to 1, and ran « brilliant race. ran third to Craig an Eran and Lemo:. | ora in the two thousand Guineas, su that the same horses were placed ‘in both | classics defeated Holy a score of 7 to 3, this game being the visitors’ second defeat of the season | | All Yale's runs were made off Tunn., | Contradicts Report |Dempsey Now Limbers Up His Mighty Wallops in Training Bouts |. On Sparring Partners Protected With New Special Head Harness ) an. ciTm™. ¥, JUNE 2, NOT WORRIED A OUT OUTCOME OF FIGHT DEMPSEY IN THE EXHIBITION RING aT ATLANTIC S40 K, PEENOUEY Box ‘RAS wuen ! training advantage to bring him to top form for the fight, and time champions, from Sullivan down, trained away from crowds so th they could concentrate every thought on preparing for a hard contest. 1 doubt that any athlete can train as well with a crowd looking on ag in private, Il the old CONGRATULATIONS, The elimination of all American contenders ‘in the British golf cham; | pionships is an example cf the dif, ficulty of playing any game in: top form under strange conditions. Eng- lish golfers coming to this country have had the same difficulty in show ige their home form. ‘The crowds (rangers following the game, the differences in climate and ground, these things count. However, tt Englishmen played better golf. Con-| gratulations to them. ‘They beat some mighty, good men, which shows that England still has a little class to spare. Gar Wood of Detroit is now busy building his speed boat, Miss Americ. II, to carry double the” power of Miss America that went to England and won the Harmsworth ‘Trophy and International Championship. — Miss America ran a little berter than eighty miles an hour. What Chris Smith's new hull, with four motors, will do, may startle the racing world again. (Copyright. 1921, by Robert Edgrea.) poche Ss ts Humoriat Wins the Derby in Colors of J.B. Joel EPSOM DOWNS, Epghind (by the before a huge crowd which found its way to the course In spite of the; re- striction against special trains on Audacious Runs Fastest Competitive Mile in American Titrf idistory isi rence Sens ee Another Record Broken at Belmont When Fair Mac Is Disqualified. intended to amuse the patrons of the major tracks, secms the handing over | fronted with the gaff, promptiy let of it to The Jockey Club officials, who | with a splash. Mackey furnished t ‘are at least sufficiently familiar with | really exciting incident of the trip. the rules to enforce them, for Messts.| He brought up two big hake at one and Page proved | §®me, and in trying to‘ get them that as stewards they e best f- | aboard fell backward into the bottom vorite players that have been seen in| of out the line of punishment they started yes terday, Brady will be ruled off and his imprisonment is owned by a modest fortune who is not associated with the hunt set; mead are the property of a gontieman who i8 @ playmate of the three stew- | WO records went by the board at Belmont, yesterday—Auda- cious clipped one-fifth seo American mile competition, and Messrs. Frank Bryan and Harry acting as stew: Fair Reddest and Or- | ards during steeplechase, clipped away much of the public holds for their divisian of the sport by the ruling they handed after disqualifying Fair Mac. ‘The amount of two-handed herding that Reddest and Ormead, the George pain inflicted more of poio jous and Eternal quall- | tied handsomely Suburban | Handicap, which will pe run on Sat- | ont track is so much | better and faster than it has ever been before it is possible they to go the full d a quarter, de like for that extended route. Audacious made a new American mile record counts for comparatively little. will be able | the mile and | cepted dis- | steeplechasing. repeated and so flagrant that after "air Mac had finally galloped home an easy first, almost to a man the oc- cupants of the stands and lawns arked to one another: well the entry didn’t win, they'd have disqualified sure. R ifled out of second and hird positions, as their conduct w ranted, they were awarded fir: second moneys, while possibly for having forced outside the bea ground and then neglecting to return and complete the course. pectators were } Mac had not taken the full course ail He was doing it | ‘ack in America, | heaper horses run so wel] over. it must be Man O° War would prob- ably run a mile at Belmont in 1.33 or DANBY “Tt's just as Ensor ts having a little more He has finished second to He was given en days for disobedience yesterday. If his temperament continues to dis- | ( _O I I AR ay itsel i last | 8 it would seem that Buddy | woula be weitak OF With a Wien fod | FOR YOUNG MEN Starter Cassidy again. on at the mite informed th cooking or wash'n Humorist won in a hard drive by cran, while three ph Watson's Lemonora finished A. K, Macember's The Bohem n bred horse, was nev ng the King George and Queen Mary, for Twenty-three horses went to the y.0. the scene at the @nish was brilliant xtreme. Humorist had a etrong following a Yale Defeats Holy Cross, T Runs to % NEW HAVEN, Conn., June 2.—-Yaie oss yesterday by agreed that he should have been «lis- A 4 stor'a Craig | (ualified, @ neck from Viscount Astor's Craig) were not set back too is one of those lengths back | mysteries that only wise steeplech stewards know, . the favorite, | Husily enga Ten three-ye! named d covering up their ow mile at Belmont 1 wets eee A RAGING PARADISE” worse by suspe | indefinite nding Fair Mac's y and referring his case to he steeplochase association ed that he had gone the fuil promises to be equal tn every oth Grey Lag and Le to fight out the {se Sporting Blood not who saw the running that Lrady had been lucky to ren apparently the purpose of the Br riders to unseat him if It had been rumored early race was to be “one of those things’ and it was borne out by the recult, | track is lightning fast 's was first run far back In and it hag ever tures of the racing season. won last year In 4.45 t- san American record beat it yesterday. everything but absolved from learned that that Fair Mac was not he, was bothered that waSregarded as justification for the Brooke pair the tce, Mac was forced out of *uG | was late the stewards akes Offer for Groh Heinie final turn, of the Cincinnati Club on and In the first inning two errors oy O'Connor and # hit by Sloane wetted two runs, Len Dugan of Hol Cros seored in the first. when Jones over Kernan's head on O'Con § ground land > | boing TO-DAY, 3.30 P.M. POLO fabktes ve bt pulamnmavt, sre arent eerie ad no bearing on their action, tional nor were the offender: ummons @ steeple ini that warns the ait LK Aan Sta S| saco’s Chib) denied rt if they go back of tak Me make could do ja deal for Groh providing he oniy possible chance for the| salvation @f the sport, 60 far as it is combination, | ABOUT FISH AND FISHERMEN | By William E. Simmons. | HIGH WATER. Governor's Bandy Hook. Island, "Hatt Gate, AM aM AL at Pat . Sh OS Rh kg err standard time, ie hour for dage Wight saving.) bestia Fatr weather is promised for te day. Weakfish have appeared in Jamaica Bay, but they are not yet taking the hook. A large numberof spearing are also in the bay. They are unusually early, and may be taken as an indie cation of a good fishing season, The Harvest went from Flatlands Sunday with a party of twelve and had good luck at the Mussel Beda, Sea flounders, black fish and seabasa were caught. Capt. Zuna got the biggest fish, a five-pound black, while First Mate “Mort” was a close seo- ond with @ four and @ half-pound fluke, | The Sons of Rest went out on the ‘Alma Paulson, Capt. James J. Kearna, Memorial Day, fished at West Neck, Huntington Bay, and made a good haul of flounders. A school of porpoises came up and frolicked around the boat, reaping out of the water. Capt Kearns says he has never known the porpoises to appear so early. | Join P. Jordan, Jr. of the Anglers |Club, Ocean City, N. J. writes: “Just a few lines about the catoh over the holidays, Mr, Friday, of \Philadelphia, caught three .oroakers ‘and one king; F. Howell, two king, four croakers; Bill Forest, three croakers, three kings; Myer Luta seven croakers, one king; KE. Horn, one croaker, five kings;, Ed Thorn- ton, one croaker, one king. Mr. Hankinson, the most enthusiastic fisherm caught a large gum boot, the biggest catch of the day, With the help of Dr. Simon, of New York, {he succeeded in landing it | “Our casting team was out on Sun- ‘day afternoon, and all the new mat ia! looked good. Harold Lentz, the | world champion, and Charles Eling- hausen fought nip and tuck for first honors, both doing over 450." Several members of the United Anglers League went out from Sheepshead Bay yesterday morning Jon the motor boat Marion, Capt. Powell, and ‘had a jolly time and good fishing. The party included Frank P. Hilton, Robert Fridenberg, Julius Rosenberg, “The Professor,” John W. McDonald, A. Mackey, AF. Oldenburg and the writer. The catch included bjackfish, sea flounders, hake, 1 ng gnd whiting. Julius ltosen- berg was High book and A. F. Oiden- burg a close second. Frank Hilton, who has a penchant for blackfish, for a long time seemed doomed to bo skunked, but eventually saved his the same time two whkting and a big fluke. The fluke was not hooked. It was merely trying to make a meal of one of the whiting and, when con- the boat, broke his rod into, two pieces and his line at the same time, thus losing the fish. of | A SMALL china somewhere. | ; Cluett Peabody & Co,IncTroy,NY AT BEAUTIF! REMODELLED BELMONT PARK TOMORROW THE GARDEN CITY HANDICAP And 5 Diversified Overnight Events Mh VIRST RACE AT 2.30 P.M. fix- SPBCIAL RACK TRAINS Man O' War |B Leave Penn Station, 38d St. and Tm stood | i latbush Ave. Brook: pus | iy and” at_intervais up to Special Cars Reserved for Course 4iso Teached by Trot Grand Stand, Including Paddoek Club House, #3.85, Si. of P tadies Inciuding Tax, at SEATS for DEMPSEY vs. CARPENTIER L BENNY ) Hatt, Fynapide ze EONARD)| All Locations vs | Seats on Sale Now | TICKET OFFICE oy | B'WAY& 38THST. > 41K FITZ, weakening his winning BOWLING & BILL, m8 | THUM oor Sissenes, Cane SAP ‘