The evening world. Newspaper, June 10, 1921, Page 26

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i. oes a Both Jack and Georges Have Tender Left Eyebrows, but This Is Only Mark of Battle Carried by the Frenchman. By Robert Edgren. soft” left eyebrow of Jack's, which is slow at healing because it has D*« at Atlantic City the Dempsey camp is worrying over tha: been cut several times in training bouts befowe this. Jamaica Kid | ripped that eyebrow first at Toledo three weeks before Dempsey met Wil-| lard. A glancing left swing did the trick. It healed well enough to stand the training work after a few days | of rest, but Dunpsey’s sparring partners were cautioned against mussing up that eyebrow thereafter, They could hit Jack on the chin or the nose and he had no com-| Plaint, but he didn’t want a half ees cut over his eye when he got| fato the ring with Willard. One of Willard’s jabs might open it and, while no real damage would * ‘be done. Dempsey would appear to be influence the referee in giving a dec! “Wwelve rounds. in bad shape, and a little blood might | jsion if the bout went the scheduled SMM CTR SA THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1921. C REAT DIFF DIFFERENCE IN TRAINING METHODS .O F THE TWO FGHTERS: ’N EVERYTHING! - Coprrient. 1971. by the Pree Publishing Co, Ger ovr OF WAM= YOURE HE oc iein’ TRAFFIC = QUESTIONAIRE FOR. PROMOTERS WHO. TRY TO PROMOTE FIGHTS IN NEW VERSE 6 Base Gar Gace FIELOS Hakeem ANSWER BeroRe CRTAINING A LICENSE MULE SUZANNE LENGLEN, NOTED FRENCH TENNIS STAR TOVSIT OS. | AND BY CRACKY WERE GOIN a yal there's no decision in the,@— @omiing Carpentier, match, Dempsey egsn't care to look like @ loser through having a cut over his left = pe Another thing, a severe cut nag 3 the eyebrow, bleeding at times, fs likely to interfere with the sight of @ fighter’s left eye, which Is the @y¢ nearest the enemy and naturally Most active in seeing blows in time to block, avoid or counter. ‘That why Jack has been punch- fmg the light and the heavy bags since last Sunday, has increased his yoad work and general training and * cut out boxing. Carpentier Also Has a Tender Left Eyebrow. It might be some consolation to Dempsey to know that Carpentier @lso has a left eyebrow that isn’t as tough as sole leather, Looking close- upper edge of the left eyebrow. mg when Frank fought Carpen- tier in France some years ago, beside me at Carpentier’s place and watched the Frenchman boxing with tered price of $2,800 to $5,000, at whicn Jeannette. 7S aoks as if no boxing glove had ever Janded on him,” I said. oe only scar hé has didn't come a boxing glove,” said Engel. Sat you take a good look at his left » eyebrow. I saw him get that in the Oght swith Papke. Then they fought,” Engel went on, Pe Carpentier was forced to do 160 ds, the middleweight limit, and, | Hi was naturally about six or eight s heavier in fine condition, he to half kill himself to do it. I know myself that he didn’t have a bite to eat or a drop of water or any- thing else for seventeen hours before | he got into the ring, and he was baked and steamed and dried out to} the limit, barely making the welght | that. ‘He was so weak that for ten} roubds Papke*slaughtered him, and it looked as if Georges didn't have a chance in the world. He could hard- ly put his hands up from the start. Then. in the tenth, Carpentier began to @ome back and Tapke was arm weary from hitting him. For six rounds Georges beat Papke all over the ring. It was the greatest rally I saw. In the seventeenth both of them started right hands at the same time and their heads came together with a . The top of ke's head caught Georges on the left eyebrow eut him clear across, from his Mose to his cheekbone. wfhe eyebrow dropped down over his eye like a flap, blinding him. He wet right on figh ing, but the crowd thought his eye Carpentier lost that fight an accident. He «wasn't and he didn’t want to stop. no quit in him.” - Carpentier Admits He was Very Weak in Papke Fight. Jy at the Frenchman you may notice! the Suburban, Almost everyone who * that he doesn’t carry a scar of his} made up that crowd was present for )>. trade, in spite of many fights, except| the specific purpose of hearing the —and here you have to look very) bidding on the good geiding—they elosely—a thin white line along the| knew Sam Hildreth would be anxious George Engel, manager of Frank}pbarn if his condition, warranted a raise tood | the bids ascended from above the en- Racing Patrons Anxious To See More Selling Events Sam Hildreth’s Repurchase of Regal Lodge Example of Interest in Such Races. F the different racing secretaries on the Metropolitan circuit want to please thelr patrons they will card more of the old-fashioned selling races than they have been doing. Yesterday Regal Lodge, upon his return to the scales after winning the fifth, a selling race, found a bigger crowd awaiting him than Audacious diQ after winning to have him back in the Rancocas of any sort. and were gratified whon figure he returned to Hildreth who lost him at Jamaica because the Judges conducting the auction falle to heap the Rancocas agent's protect- ing bid. IN 3 ROUNDS { GYESS (0 BETTER. KEEP RUNNING IN WHY ARE /6,759 PERSONS DRIVEN THROUGH ONE POOR WHEN THERE ARE OTHER. ENTRANCES SCARCELY BEING YSED ® 1S IT NECESSARY TO TAKE A GUYS CouGH ANO SEND HIM HOME WITH HIS CLOTHES TORN OFF, HIS BASH F, We 4 (SA MAN ENTITLED TO A SEAT HEAR THE RING PACKED IM THE BLEACHERS?) By Thornton Fisher ‘ABSCESS MAY COST TILDEN HIS TITLE. LONDON, June 10—William T. Tilden 2d, champion of everything worth vhile in lawn tennis, ts saf- fering /rom an abscess on his neck and vill be unable to play in the toursament now in progress for the Kent County championship, Herbert L, Bourke expressed the ORIVING VERY SLOWLY ROUND THE VILLAGE STREETS THESE b DAYS ophion yesterday from Gleme eagles that if Tilden was not well emugh to play at Rockhampton next week his chances in the elallenge round for the alk England championship at Wim. Wedon will be jeopardized. Bathing Suits MEN’S Pave, worsted, Athletic type. i |] 880, Romany $2.85 METROPOLITAN GOLF CHAMPION SHIP 1S ON AT GARDEN city GOLE CLUB Callfornia style, Dure wor. Other n Demon Driver Tennis Racket. Regularly $12.. + Heavy ook Case with ball ry $1.25 is Balls. NAVY CREW TO SHARE CALIFORNIA CAMI Commander D. L. Howard of tt United States Naval Academy 1 Regularly $2.5 All makes of Columbia Crew to Be Favorites | in Title shea Bpecial to The Prening World ) POUGHKEEPSIE, June 10.—It ts} virtually assured that there will be a} Pacific Coast crew in the intercol- legiate regatta at Poughkeepsie next | Seu Go oven the Maclecbake ooures year, This chering news was brought | r as well, and they will as soon as some | Here to-day by E. O. Leeder, coach of | of the other associations card races |the Washington crews, who said un- | for them. Hvery horse entered in to- Jequivocally that if his cight shoutd | y's race is destined for breeding | service-they, wil supply the cavalry [20te4t California next year, as It) remounts, for the country. They are |failed to do this spring by a margin} the first examples of the type the |of just tnree feet, it would come East | Government badly needs to be seen covers her case. The question will bring about a ruling within the next few days, and it seems safe to predict that Beverly Belle will be considered entitled to all maiden allowances. The Army holds the limelight at Belmont to-day. Several officers de- tailed to the Rentount Division of the service will be seen riding either their own or horses owned by brother of- ficers over the mile route in the fifth race. Not only are these horses welt trathed to run over the flat, but they to te together in competition hereabouts. | 9, ray Perey SRO URUE SR Tym, Earl Sande's efforts to reduce so} Phe Syracuse University crews | Acca atl A Raft | Which arrived last night and had their pas he wouldahe eble-to ride CAaKret, test spin onabeswatemnenr sundown overweight proved too trying hnd he| #T@ anything but a formidable look- | pesame il yesterday: aid’ es terced | ing lot. ‘The varity crew appears to to cancel hisfengagements for the af- | be one of the weakest Jim Ten ok ternoon, He will be back to-day, it has turned out in years, but the fresh- was reported. men are up to standard. The junior varsity is" just about on a par with | the varsity, eo that while it may be premature, rowing observers believe tha tthe Salt City squad will be for- FAST TRIALS SHOWN Regal Lodge ran as thougn he wero worth fully the sum Hildreth paid for him, evan though he is a cripple. His performance afforded joy to those who has ‘supported him, and hts sale little Jess, ‘The scene at the judges’ stand brought a reminder of the old days) when the Drake-Gates and the Hil- | dreth-Taylor-Sloan confederacies were finish of every selling race and de-; rived their great sensations from the! | spectacul bidding that invariably! followed. «The pablic likes selling races—the care little whether some $5,000 horse care nothing about claiming races— and because*they pay the freight, It seems little enough to give them al least some of what they attend racing for—enjoyment. Now that the Belmont Park stewards have disqualifiea Beverly Belle from he> winuing purse of June 1, they're trying to decide whether she js eligible to start in another maiden race. They have assumed since the disqualification that Dick Deadeye, who finished in sécond po- s.tion, i8 no longer a maiden, for they have ordered him penalized as a winner, but they are not quite pre- pared to admit that Beverly Belle is again a maiden, There cannot be two winners in any race—the law of the Jand would quickly decide that the filly 48 entitled to all maiden al- lowances, but the law of the turf can- not, because there is no rule that quite Here Carpentier hopped over the ropes and leaped down to the ground | When we met a little later, Engel said: “Remember your fight with Papke? How long was it you didn't eat or drink before that fight, Georges?” Carpentier bis shoulders. “Oh, very long. Days, I was s0 weak in the ring I had not strength Of my little finger now." And Georges waggled the finger feebly to illustrate his point ‘There is a great difference in looks between Dempsey and Carpentier. The Frenchman is unscarred, and it must be remembered that he fought many of the best little men in England while he was growing up, and, what- ever English heavyweights may be, it is well known that the smaller men over there have skill and fighting abil- it Dampecy, on the other hand, ts un- mistakably @ fighter. He has good fars, bu: the front of his fighting top has bumped into many a hard wallop. His nose is dented, his lips thick- ened and there are scars of battle along his eyebrows. But this difference comes largely through the difference in their train- ing, @ difference I have noticed In all of my daily visits to the camps. When Dempsey boxes he always tears in, en- ing his sparring partners to hit jim as hard and as often as they can. ieis't part of to maul them laughed and shrugged jwithout letting them maul him. In his actual ring fights Dempsey never receives any inju for he attacks so furiously that his opponents have always been too busy on the defense |to have time to do much hitting. | In training, Carpentier uses all his Kill to find openings and hit withour ng hit. If he Is as elusive in a fight as be is in practice bouts, even Dempsey is going to have trouble finding him. Not that Carpentier runs away. He doesn't. His footwork is very much like Benny Leonard's, ax Benny showed it last Monday night in the fight with Kansas, He moves straight Jn and straight back, only a few inches or a foot or two, in quick steps, balanced well on his ‘toes and so lightly that his feet make no sound and seem hardly to touch the floor, He is always just near enough to deliver a blow if he sees an opening, and far enough away to duck out of danger. Carpentier's training camp boxing is meroly light, pleasant exercise. If he does any rough work it is in pri- vate. It can't be very rough at that His training staff Is not like Demp sey's, and unlike Dempsey he {sn't rending around the country to dig up fellows who can maul and stand mauling. (Copyrisht, 102) Robert, Edgren. in Uo ¢ Canedas Great Britain ‘ane Roath atacrica, ae ALL TO-DAY, 3.30 P.M. POLO abst Grounds Yatkess va Cleveland,—aart, active; the days when hundreds made’ haste to the winning ming after the| | route in 2.05 going to the mile in 1.38 is entered below his value .f he loges,|#t Jamaica in 2.18, but they love to see him win—they | (rials tunate if it is able to get anything but a look-in at the freshman race, None of the three other freshman crews that will row 1g at all promis- ing, and Syracuse may just have the FOR BELMONT STAKE, The features of the most recent training gallops at the local tracks) (fit that will take that race. were the ,works of the candidates for) Ten Eyck was visibly impressed by Belmont Handicap, one of|the University of California chew as it swung past the boathouse In which the principal distance races on thé|/he was busy getting his sifella fitted. American turf. The Rancocas Stabdle|He stopped work long enough to |glance over the Native Sons and pro- representative Grey Lax worked a mile) nounced judgment then and and a quarter at Belmont in 2.06 frac-|"They are a formidable tionally 1.14°1+5, 1.39 2-5 and 2.06. | Sporting Blood went over the sume looking | paently well coached. ‘They will cer- tainly ‘bear watching,” he added. “ Incidentally he thinks a lot of the fat. Leonardo II. galloped the distance | Columbia squad, and while he would ably in his mind that Columbia re as follows: California would be in the fight at the AT JAMAICA. Balen Columbia has scorer that Is Leonardo IL, 1.22 1-6, 1.49, 2.18. much smoother than the Coast oars- $o It Goes, 1.01 2-5, men, 1n_his opinion, and they Parader, .60, 1.17. Leading Star, .60 2-3, 1.18. Big Noise and Princess Pandora, 1.03. Moody, .48. Irish Brigadier, .36. Silence, .53. Winneconnle, 50 2-5, 1.05, Clarice C, and Goodheart, .36 3-5. Black Knight, 49 2-5, 1.02 3-3, Domingo, .50 2-5, 1.17,8-6, 1.43 3-6, \ AT BELMONT. iH . Grey Lag, 1.14 1-5, 1.39 4-5, 2.06, ) N Sporting Blood, .48, 1.18 2-3, 1.98. | |i) ow, 2.06) i + Broomspun and Dartmoor, 1,16 1-5 i Tryster, 1.18. i Exodus, 48 4-5. | Prudery, 1.18. | | Penitent, Frigate, 1.21. ms Crocus, 1.22. | Paul Jones, 1.41 3-3, Reprisal, 1.17. Snare, 1.17, 1.46 Rose Brigade, .50. | Kinnoul, 1.20. Upset and Broomster, i FF she goes with a Jno, P, Grier, 1.19, 1.42, 1,56. DAY, Gem, .4 all our hy quality, suits will . It’s your op act quickly, last long. ae “A Racing Paradise” BEAUTIFULLY REMODELED BELMONT PARK and get your pik of tl Keita edi nog 8 mle nae $55.25 shit Gantt eet id 8 “ “ ‘ors Douglaston stoop ond 8 Other GINNING A’ i : Hitt 15 ia ‘newetved ‘tor ‘Ladiec. ‘opytight, Lloyd ingly also be read. Uitte & Paul MIKE & 145-147 Canal Street, New York On the Extengion of Manhattan Bridge Plaza NUX VOMICA, Ossining—Carp and Dempsey represent different schools of fighters, Carp appears only in seven-reelers and Dempsey goes in for serials, HOBOKEN ADMIRER—The referee will give the verdict. The Coroner’s decision A.W. tickets, T A DUMB BELL, Harlem—A $5 seat will enable you to see the fight in the Sunday papers. INQUIRER, FIGHT FAN, Syracuse—The band at the arena will be equipped to 921, by The atts Publishing C EDISON, ORANGE, N. ANSWER YOUR QUESTIONS. ° LIVE WIRES By Neal R. O’Hara. will be faa O'L, Governor's \atand—The fighters get 60 per cent. and Rickard 40, Dempsey gets 60 per cent. of the fighters’ share and Ca: pentier 40. Only thing 50-50 about the fight is the pri PHILADELPHIA—DEMPSEY'S FAVORITE EXER- CISES ARE CHOPPING WOOD AND SPLITTING A GATE 60-40. c oo. play everything, including the “Marecilisise” at half-mast. R. F. D,, Mamaroneck: are ane thing Descamps charges at Carp's training quarters are photographers, He charges them over the fence, have weight, so that the two are 19) § his mind on even terms, or there; there, | abouts, Quarters are being made ready for bunch, big, smooth rowing and ap-|the Pennsylvania, Nevy and Cornell oarsmen, all of whom’ are: expected here on: Sunday or Monday. work 1s under the direction of Col a Columbia graduate ‘The best of all the |not say 90 yet, the thought was prob- | and representative of the Board of | and | Stewards. Collis, Col. Coll on tim “SMART CLOTHES” Men! Our Semi-Annual Sale Spring — SUITS —-r Summer | at 15% off Starting TO- lune 10th, premply at 8.30 A. M, and tailored, all wool reduced 15° bang! (a rtunity—but you'll have to t these prices the sale can’t 4 —be on hand e suits—every Regular “s suits, now $38.25 PAUL Tnetiding ‘bas insurmountable difficulties to | overcome in the way of making the ‘houses fit for use, byt they will all (The New York Evening World). 0,0f two ringside J—THIS COLUMN’ CANNOT Annapolis yesterday sent a tel Reg, $7.20 per $6.45 gram to Charles Halsted Mapq | # GOREN + «+++ sere vere ses Chairman of the Intercotlegia || Fishing | Rowing Association Board | Stewards, accepting the invitatiq || Tackle ‘ of the University of Catiforn| |] B47 and Weakfish consist crew to share its training quar | gg ters at Poughkeepsie. | The Naval crew will leave Anni | apolis for Poughkeepsie within a few days. {00-yard double puniving 9681 4 Oxto Team Sail - Cambridge July 6. June 10.—The Oxtord- | Cambridge’ athletic team which will) sail for New York July 6 on the | teamer Olympic o compete with @ combined team of Yale and ae yne | athletes at the Harvard Stadium Ju 43 will be made up Oxford — Quarter and half-mile Rudd (Captain); half-mile and ng, Milligan; broad jump, In- hammer ' throw, Nokes; eights, Reeve; hurdles, ‘Trowbridge; high jump, Dickinson; three-mile run, McInnes; general reserve, Ford, ——— LONDON, U. GS-British Meet at Traver Island. PRINCETON, N. J. June 10.—Th) track meet of the er neeon, 6 aerpett Oxford-Cambridge teams heb at Travers, island ‘track of ene Ne York Athletic Club on Thursday, Jw ie acceraine e op ene unoement mae ‘* Gol di re to-day by Dr. . Kenned, Chairman of the Princeton ‘Track ned: | Escressing Ideas ittee. for a Meadow Brook Rai wi. BRYN MAWR, Pa. June 10.—the Meadow Brook Ramblers of New srk won the second Wootten Cup yeger- Gay by taking the-final match of the polo ‘tournament for the trophy rom the Bryn Mawr team by @ scam of] 0 6. ‘The | is has had seem- early one’s 34.00 « 29.75 8 25.50 Clearance Sale Complete Stock of Long’s Quality Straws All This Season’s Models "= 85 FORMERLY PRICED UP TO $10.00 —LONG’S HAT STORES— MOCCAIN It is difficult to expressrds prop- erly to tell the many u of these wonderful M FOOTWEAR R Men, Women, iildreh PRACTIPEDIS 6 W. Broadway, 221 Gawich St. (Near Vesey St.) NYork rane BE) KD, Feathorwclghts,” der, See Box Office Phone Fink 10000, ——————————————— SPEND YOUR VATION ON MADISON $0. ue ROOF Tunptng Track, Handball wh, enna, ‘All Bering Powel Condi $50 Expert instructors. PHILA. JACK 0° "BRM Manager Phone Mad. Sq. 15408, 6138, Phone Books 110, Seo Red | DEMPSY «. CARPENIER VOR ATS D's GSI tN hie MADISON SQUARARDEN, Mail Orders Filled on Ipt of Draft, BROOK! Faiton and ft PRoNx ery thing for Billlared Mowlis The Hruhea aikdendor Oo” BOWLING & TARD ACADEMY HUM rT esswarnm ist Be

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