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- oan Somes TET oy FENCE RET FERNRREE ETPOCPE COP NIA NN sen orp ppen ROE ARI as 18) ™ EMPSEY’S NERVE TENSION IS NOT A BAD SIGN, SAYS EDGREN "THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 192T THE WISER THEY ARE, Etc. By Thornton Fisher ABOUT FISH HAMPION ALWAYS SHOWS ~ TRACE OF NERVOUSNESS RIGHT UP TO THE BELL ines Lime “ . Yack Now Weighs 196 Pounds and | ._ NoHeavier Than He Was Three Before the Fight at i= Weeks Toledo. i é By Robert Edgren. ATLANTIC CITY, June 16. ACK DEMPSEY is still heavy—196 pounds to-day—but he is no heavier than at Toledo three weeks before the Willard fight. There he weighed for the newspaper men, in tights and shoes, and niess he had lead insoles or something, his weight was 202 pounds, or bout 198 stripped. At Toledo the weight went off too fast, especially “uring the week before the fight, when he dropped about ten pounds, Demp- sey was extremely nervous for a couple of days before the fight, and this x Probably caused by dropping too much weight by hard work in the intense heat. He'll have no such heat to affect his final two weeks of training at Atlantic City, where there’s always some air stirring and usually & breeze from the sea. Nerve tension before a fight or any other important athletic event isn’t a bad sign. It’s more the mark of the thoroughbred. A phlegmatic, un- cxeitable athlete never breaks records, The man who ts a bundle of nerves before a contest and who has these nerves under control when he steps out to do his stunt, whatever it is, is the man who can leap out of the common- Place in action. This is Dempsey. He shows a trace@—————————————__________ ot nervousness right up to within a . few minutes of the bell. He is on toa Ts is Ti Gee, head edge when he enters the ring. He is/**y’s natural fighting method is to H pale. Then, as he sits in his corner weaken his man with body blows, He reaches for the pit \- z his color comes back with @ rush. He|ach, as Fitzsimmons Eee to, War ats is very grim and determined, allent, chief reliance still seoma to be a blow } motionless, He doesn’t even scuffie| ©” the ribs over the heart. This isn’t his feet or move his hands and he an immediate knockout blow or a doesn’t look around over the crowd. dangerous blow, but it weakens his Dempsey Never Starts + man quickly, 90 that a following left Fight With a Rush. hand hook for the chin is likely to drop him and keep him down, It was His attention is fixed on the man he is going to meet, and his mind @ right over the heart and a following left delivered with a shift that dropped Willard for the first knock- filled with the thought of what he is to do in the first clash. You would expect a rushing, aggressive fighter down at Toledo, During the last two days Dempsey lke Dempsey to tear out of his cor- ner, McGovern style, and start slam- has been in secret training. Carpen- tler is going to have nothing on him ming with a rush. But that’s the thing he never does. in the mystery line. The camp admits two of bis most {mportant that Jack is “doing eomething” behind closed doors, and doesn't deny that he is changing from his usual plan of let- fights, with Fulton and Willard. In the Fulton fight he stepped slowly from his corner, three or four steps, ting the fight shape itself according to the way his opponent moves, and is ‘and stood waiting for Fulton to cross the ring apd come to him, perfecting a new method that Carpen- tler won't know anything about, and that will offsat Carpentier’a trick of playing for an opening and putting everything into a drive intended for a Fulton came, carefully, and, as yy didn’t move, Fulton jabbed him swiftly and grasped at Demp- ‘8 arms to hold them down to his ies, Dempsey wrenched himself Uoprrimmt, 1971, by the Prem Publishing Co. (The New York Fvening World.) LOPEARED BoY OUGHT” TO COME (MIN THE MONEY THIS RACE “MIS OLD HAN WAS BOOBY 6. AND WIS OLO LADY WAS BEEFKWEE BELL ME CLEANED UP AT N'ORLEAWNS LOST WINTER AND SHowWRO WELL COME ON YOU LopEAR! HOLY PICKEREL- LOOK BT THAT RANK OUTSIDER LOPEARED BOY LEADS AT THE Carpentier Camp Hears Dempsey Quit Training In an Attack of Nerves camp doesn’t think he'll accomplish the latter task? Descamps eits on a chair and listens when the eubjest is discussed. Then he jerks his speckled gray head back, doubles up his fist and lands it on his chin, ‘July 24," he says, “Dempsey. You see. Wait. Carpentier had stood on the porch only @ minute before, being intro- duced to a party of ladies and gentle- men from New York, who had waited in an automobile outside the locked gate for forty minutes before being granted the privilege of meeting the French pugilist. An unusual priv lege it was, too, accorded very reluc- tantly by Descamps. Carpentier, his pale face covered by a thin tan, sm! ingly bowed and shook hands, per- mitted his strong arms to be felt and then disappeared within doors, under the pretense of answering the phone. That was the last the visiting party saw of him. The writer could easily visualize Dempsey under the same That’s Why Descamps Has Double-Barred the Doors at Manhasset. By Vincent Treanor. NE day at Atlantic City last week Jack Dampscy literally jumped the fence surrounding his training quarters and lit out for a spot far away from the noise and excitement of it all. He couldn't stand it any longer. Meeting hun- dreds of people, answering fool ques- tions and trying to get into condition at the same time had got on his nerves. That is the story in @ nut shell which has reached the Carpen- tier camp at Manhasset, fhe THERE GOES LOPEARED Boy TO THe POST: Look-AINT HEA THE CLass- MicET— MELOUGHLIM 1S UP— (vs HPNE PLAYED WIN SHE WAS & Lael atid LOPEARED BOY Can BEAT ANYTHING WITH //6 LBS. UP - THATS His SPECIAL DISH- 1S MEARS AGO LOPEAR BOYS GRAMD-SIRE WOM THE KENTUCKY ‘ BEAUTY- OH, HE’s GOT” & APE- Yseet Y' SEa- ANNBODY WOT KNOWS, HORSE FLESH NEVES Would Sour SUE- Sq TOt SHOT WITHOUT & CHANCE ONY & Boos WOULD HAVE Now DUNDEE AND HANLON TO CLASH TO-NIGHT AT PIONEER CLUB Roberts, Staten Island Heavy- weight, and Schillinger in Semi-Final Contest. By John Pollock. Johnny Dundee, the clever light- weight of this city, will meet Jimmy Hanlon, the promising pugilist from Denver, in the main event of fifteen rounds at the show of the Pioneer Sporting Club to-night. In addition to the star bout Al Roberts, the Staten Island heavyweight will swap punches with Bill Schillinger of Phil- adelphia in the semi-finak of twelve PickED’ER- Vsea REFEREE FOR BIG BOUT TO BE PICKED TO-MORROW, WRITES CARPENTIER Frenchman Also Declares He Never Predicted! He’d Knock Out Dempsey in Three or Four Rounds. By Georges Carpentier. MANIAS or four rounds. This is absolute fabrication. My oly word on the subjec| is: “Wait until the afternoon of July second. We received a telegram at the camp yesterday that the referee for my s fight with Dempsey will be chosen by the New Jersey Boxing Commission | for the to-morrow. I shall be glad when this point is settled, but I am not worry- fret t ing as much about it as some people think. Until the choice is announced | 1 prefer not to comment on the men who have been proposed. As long a: a just man who knows his business is selected I shall be satisfied. aT, N. Y., June 15.—I read with disgust in the papers yes- | terday statements that I had said I expected to whip Jack Dempsey in three AND FISHERMEN By William E. Simmons. HIGH WATER. Fair weather, diminishing west winds, 1s the prediction for to \day. A party consisting of Nic. Smita, G. Millar, Dave Seaman, Otto Fries: G. Bauer, Charlie Schmidt and Gus Frotcher fished at Fire Island Sunday, on the Olympta, Capt. Markley, and) caught thirty-eight fluke, according: |to the Captain the biggest cateh of | fluke so far this season, George Mil- lar and Dave Seaman tied for the pool, each landing a four-pounder, { Henry J. England, Henry J. Eng- land jr. and Jim Featherstone went jout from Canarsie to the Cholera | Banks Sunday on the Satilla, Capt. | James McAvoy, and made a big catch lof ling and whiting, together with @ ltew hake. It was the first fishing trip of the Satilla, which was formerly @ |submarine chaser. She carried about fifty passengers and everybody had @ good time. News that bluefish are In Great South Bay is encouraging as a prom- ise of sport all along the coast. They have not beey plentiful hereabout for several years, tnough I have known them so numerous in the lower bay that the angler for weaktish could not keep hooks on his line. The bluefish, like fashionable New Yorkers, spends the winterat Palm Beach, It is to | found in Lake Worth all winter Van Campen Hoeilner, a well-knowm fishing writer, says: The bluefish | {,Yery, rapacious, often killing long after his stomach has been filled, purely for the lust of slaughter. ‘Taken from the beach, he puts up & . hard battle, leaping repeatedly and fighting every inch of 1 would rather the beach than vents the surf. teh and a de He js a pleasure light to eat. > Japanese Ball Team Heats Amerie enns tn Game Abroad. TOKIO, June w.—Basedall, which has become Japan's national sport amd fs being played by youths of all ages, | was the occasion of a manifestation merican friendship here Jas' Alumni panese Mt, When Japane versity of Californi honor of th n which has of thd, a dinne| n baseball ying a scries o} ries, whiel am represent in a victory » Which won th s 6 to &, th ving resulted In a’ division nl Wa jin 13 te gi rd wo ha one-punch knockout, Joose, and in just 14 3-6 seconds Ful- training rounds. Srveral other good bouts Descamps decided yesterday morning that I am to have what he calls conditions, running down the flow- Dempsey has an advantage at his training camp. He doesn't need to >. ton was lying flat on his back—out. At Toledo Dempsey came out to work in the open-air arena unless he meet Willard, stepped, drew Willard’s wants to, He has the bjg hangar for an airy, roomy gymnasium, and he first jab, pulled back, advanced, turned pside and walked away, advanced, can lock it against all spectators. turned back. It looked as if Willard would have to go after him. Wil- Jard who had expected a headlong Tush, thought Dempsey was overawed ‘by his own huge bulk and reputation. fe followed as Dempsey turned away, and a few seconds later Willard was en his haunches, looking up with a dazed and silly smile at the man who had put him down. ey Doesn’t Rush, in Training Bouts. mpsey doesn’t rush, even in his ining bouts with Renault and ‘ke. He starts deliberately But en he js once in range he stays ht there, swaying and shifting, fol- ing the other fellow’s steps, stick- close where he can shoot in lefts end rights to body and head. Mcst Leach Croas thinks tt doesn't make any difference how good Carpentier is, I met Leachle to-day. He is training for a series of fights that he hopes will take him up near the championship. Cross has been a very close student of fighting. Whenever he sees a boxer he may meet some time, he goes home and writes his im- pressions of the Dest way to fight him. “Dempsey isn’t a big Terry Mo- Govern, He's a big Benny Leonard. Box? Say, he keeps moving like this all the time, doesn't he?” Here Leach crouched and shifted his feet around and swayed his head while his hands waved swiftly. “That's boxing, Isn't it? Dempscy has his own style. He's a master boxer as well as the hardest hitter I ever saw, and as game a man as ever fought. I don't think a man living has a chance to beat him or to the limit with him.” (Copyright, 1921, by Canada, Great’ Brita Robert deren, in U. 8, in and South Amertos,) By Youn California Crew Handled gest of Coaches‘: Long Island, and that is why extraor- dinary precautions are being taken overcomes the French heavyweight challenger. Dempsey's alleged attack of nerves is understood. As Manager is unpleasant for him to bar folk who come out to the camp to get a glimpse at Georges, but from now ‘until July 2, there is but one purpose for the seclusion of Georges, That is to get into condition to whip Demp- sey. Nothing else must interfere and, to listen to Descamps’s snarling sput- terings through an interpreter, noth- ing will, there, to aid this charity and that y|are received by the bushels full, but all are turned down with little con- sideration. Just now it is easier to ace President within sight of Carpen 5 After July 2d? Ah, yes. will do anything. He will help raise funds for any worthy charity. He will meet everybody, He stand on his head to please, but first he must meet and beat Jack Demp- just now that nothing of the kind Descamps explained to tie writer, it} Invitations 4o go here and) Harding than to get Georges! to will ered path to meet the visitors and inviting all hands indoors to hear his Victrola. ‘They have different ideas at Manhasset. Irving 'T. Bush of the Bush Ter- minal, one of America’s greatest cit!- zens, was in the party, but neither Descamps nor Carpentier appreciated [the fact. Mr. Rush has in his pos- session a Spanish silver coin, one of \thirty-four in existence which were |taken by Lord Nelson in naval battle jwith the Spaniards a couple of cen- turies ago. At the time the English Government preserved the coins in- stead of melting them and had the head of the English sovereign stamped on the neck of the Spanish sovereign which adorns the plece, Mr. Bush says that's how the saying ‘in the neck” originated. The piece is sup- posed to be lucky. Mr, Bush says he jhas enjoyed great luck ever since it came into his possession. He got it from an American in Naples, who long since contracted the hobby of collecting the coins, which are about |the same size as our silver dollar. ‘The thirty-four collected to date have been distributed among kings, queens and princes. Mr. Bush knew that Carpentier had one, for when he was presented with his he received a list of members of what his Naples friend between evenly matched fighters are also scheduled. Champton Joe Lynch, who fights Pete Herman tn & fiftem-round bout for the bantamwelght cham- plonship title at a show'to be staged by the In-" ternational Sporting Club at Ebbets Wield, Brook- | lyn, July 28, has also been matebed by his man- acer, Eddie Mead, to meet Joo Burman of Chicago for ten rounds at ® show to be staged in the open alr at Fast Chicago, on June 28, Lew Diamond 1s no longer the manager of Frank Carbone, the Italian middiewelzkt, Diamond booked up Cartone to meet Happy Littleton, the crack New Orleans middlewelght, and after the context Carbone never caine near Diamond and the latter Jet im go. Diamond kept Carbone bury fighting while be bad him. Jack Sharkey was aimed up for another oom- test to-day, He will take on fate Asher of St Jouls for ten rounds in the semi-final to the bout between Joo Lynch and Joe Burman at the East hicaxo open alr show on June Sharkey te to receive $5,000 for boxing Joe Hurman at the Boxing Drome in the Bronx on June 21, ‘Terry Mitchel! and Johnny Doban end Bushy Graham and Freddie Reese, all of Brooklyn, will clash in a double windup of twelve rounds at the Broadway Exhibition Association of Brooklyn on next Monday night. ‘The firm preliminary bout to precede the world’s heavyweight ckamplonship fight between Jack Demp- | “encore deux jours de repos”—two more days of leisure. This is a chang in our programme and means I will not put on a glove until to-morrow. 1 any one knows his business, it is my manager, Francois, so I am satisfied to enjoy some more holidays. Yesterday afternoon I hau great fun watching my sparring partner box among themselves. fat cook, as he and Joe Gans banged away at each other in the hot sun. Once or twice I had to yell at Joe, “Don’t hurt my cook,” for my appetite is good these days, and it would be a tragedy if Marcot was disabled. Old Sam McVey walked all the way from town yesterday, but there wa: no work for him. Rube Goldberg boxed with his protege, Journee. He i a youngster, but I like his looks, I want to thank all the thousands of well wishers from whom I hay received letters these past few weeks. various American Legion posts. (Copyrieht, 1921 MERICAN POLO TEAM HAS FINAL PRACTICE TO-DAY by United Feature Syndicate) ANOTHER NEW RECORD FOR THE GOLF BOOKS. A DETROIT, Mich., Jane 1§.—"Bill” RANELAGH, England, June 15.—| Trovinger, professional, at the Polo enthusiasts are eagerly looking| Bloomfield Hills Golf Club here between the which forward to the match American and British fours, established a new course record on aesday with a 66. Trovinger shot I felt in great spirits and we all joshed Marcot, my I have scores of telegrams from e | ft! cat or Write for Booklet K 8 8 n Dalton , for men, t Methou, women. LAST DAY of Spring Mceting ut Beautifat BELMONT PARK TOMORROW Thurs.) ey. Jealled “tho lucky-in-the-neck club," 87 snd Georges Carpentier at Jersey City om the | ce ola seven birdies in the last nine hole: Xn maybe the whole training | cad gine uciky incthe-neck Clute wftemoon of uy 2 was inched w-dey. 120/18 to take place at Hurlingham on} seven birdie in tie last nine holes. | $5,000 COACHING CLUB a = = ss these: i Viynn has matched Midst Finith to meet Dick! Saturday. Experts are of the opinion| 7 a 1 ler th AMERICAN OAKS ‘Wallis, Only a Volunteer, Sets| Californian by adoption rather than a No one can lose in anything who! Willfin ef Texas for ten rounds Smith reer! that the teams are evenly matched,| Vest Previous mars, set thres years I 9 9 Wan STEEPLECHASE 4 > B by birth, Wallis is a product of Bos-|was a hard one, for he had to begin! possesses one of the colns," says Mr. 00% : | and are expecting to see a very close | _°82 BY Mike Brady of Oakland Hills, | °° aaa Saye Br ANTDICAP a New Standard at Pough- |ton and it was while @ schoolboy|at the beginning. However, he stuck | Bush as Chamelce tonsa” Tiiace tue, seresd to an | 220, S70 expecting to seen very: clove | edhe eseainte : jthere that he first learned to row. jat it and in 1919 had the satisfaction | Sure cnough, Georges had one. His fend his ute in » 00 derision bout in New Jem i have its last practice game here to-|was undertaken a fortnight ago. by and 3 Consolation Events ' keepsie Course, His first tutor, strange as it may)of coaching a crew that defeated! eyes lit up when Mr. Bush showed It sy. the chances aro that Kimpano and Andy Chaney) day, in preparation for the Interna-} Walter 8. Buckmaster, the iunslish four BEGINNING AT 2.15 P. seom, was Dick Glendon, conch of/ Stanford and was beaten only SIX’ to him. “Oui,” he laughingly said, ag of Baltimore will mee tn twelre-round bout st/ tional Cup event, the English team} has shown great improvement. | With |the Navy crew. From Clendon he|foet by the University of Washing-| ho pressed jt in his hand, ball perk there tho early pert of gest month. (having had their final training game {OMe exception, the personnel will be the i (Special to The Work.) 4 learned the Suaderen ais of how to/ton, The following year, Stanford) Some one suggested that Georges \idst Smith ang Charley Ledoux, tee Preoh) yesterday, defeating another strong Line ees tented N. iret ire POUGHKEEPSIF, June 15.—Ben|swing a sweep. Then a little later/again fell before Wallis's crew anu We intartie eine Grith i 12 Niatiolon, will Probably ameot im the” ether 2 rosa ener It gg ompkinson will play No; i Malpr 1 Wallis, coach ot the University of]he found himself under the tnstruc- again Washington had the Detter of Ue lntocthe Ping With Binion TUly | caaay, - Bee eaanpee CIR tin, Riau) OC lf anatan ite IKeM ere at he “kid” ‘ong | tion | ol mm en Eyck, Syracuse/ the big race of th our by a margin 0-No,"" je. i Herman, the former ban: e Americans, due to the alleged poor 7 ' fai Grand Stand, ineludin, dock California crew, |s the “kid” among) coach, and the dean among elt Agni es i RISA rads We eho fecha Geena Otarue is falieed. eMb: Ri res Renwinn ae Tie forwards, “are conaid-| , Barrette Whe, thud tke cap ete A, Tih Howe, Sion e One the oldtimers who are coaching the | coaches here, how that Charles E.| But this year it was a different And again he landed a qunch om rund go with dim ilssins, the Bogllsh champion, |€Fed by observers to have resulted in) Diva" ae" No.3 in tt Tncliding Pax college oarsmen ners for the bis -| Courtney has passed to the Great Be-|story. The Callforgians were on the nis own chin A te" Natoval Sporting Clu of London on Tues | mare cece ‘eith Loule sioaaard.p replace ‘the c Shear S gatta next Wednesday, But in addi-|¥on¢ winning end of a six-foot margin piel si 4. he will take tho first steamer he can secure} ing No.1 and ‘Thomas Hitchcock Jr,| Who was 1 ing ————____—_—_—_—_ oo fot he imerely a “kid.” Watts}, His training under such past mas-|and took the Coast chimplonehip, Wi Cuney the wrestling promoter J "iim to america, He figuta Joe Lynch for | juying, No us given encouragement | War. at Nx ndehous ere) being merely i |ters as Glendon and Ten Hyck, both | beating Washington for the first tim: At friend and admirer of Car- {0 yantamwelsht ile on July 2 Herman saicd| to the Ameri¢an camp. | wilt’ tae : 1 is a representative of a new type of |o¢ whom have been in their present| tr thittern sence And now the Cat. who Wis present, then ex-| ie tamamweht Tir Ot . Watson Webb is hitting the ball! of the English | plase Fe “cavalry ' college-rowing couch that is being de-| berths since Wallis waa a lad in! jfornians are here deyrmined to show | Piained the confidence Georges has in . = AplRAOIAY. ae BED wlarad | Sonnlateat | orn verey the Taritiah fone tt irae leaned § C veloped in the Far West and may|knickerbockers, stood him in wonders! the Bast what a crew from the shores | ™™self Pall Pranchint latny he tas been uapoaiy mee BL? Be Sedtioned at fo pinversy the Pricieh Fauc at Arse lacked ‘ J t i the nat distant future be | {ul stead when he entered Yalo and| of the Pacitic a0; “T took him for a ride in my car muded by te Boxing Commisston. He mye hls! Devereux Milburn will play buck. rictice they have devcloped well. in eck: Hanioal Tate Tete some time in the not ¢ ho had no difficulty in making a|° Walls 1s modest to the point of|fecently, and he was driving, Sud~ manager notified the Queenstaro Club be was ii) Since coaching of the English’ team! polo tact wor’ Sports. | Wworld's Largea found in the colleges here in the #0-| piace in his freshman eight under! helne bashful, He never talks about |denly a! black cat darted across the and ale the Boring Hoard, that» doctor swimming Poo! and ‘Grinnastuins lied effete E old John Kennedy, It was an easy|the part he has played in makin id. “That's lucky," I said, birt could be mnt to confirm bis reported Alina. Flesh Redeclog Body Belling Be\exact step from the freshman boat to the] California. a power In the rowing | Georges waved his hand deprecat~| wee Woo Willie Spencer who held Jack Sharkey Pn et pe t ; Boxing—Physical Conditioning 0 “ter of age, Wallis is just thirty-two / Varsity for this rowing-wise lad and| world, and if his eight should be the Jingly, us if he took no stock in the | i 4 draw Iam week, boxes Jackie Dougias twelre FO le aia isl RRR Arg a ol My Fei - ‘i he was in the varsity shell right tol winner in the big race the credit will | Superstition, | rounds before the Hike Club of Stamford to-night. q ¥ eh i PHILA JACK O'BRIEN, M eee eno there js. no the end of his colloge days, It may all be placed on the shoulders of the} "Ewin, Jack, T win sure," he! wWiite was the guest of honor at © bangust ten- {0} cant é' p U srl ae HE Aba bal ee ne oot nace |be Of Interest that when he rowed| boys, Wallis will accept none of it/Snapped. That remark, said Curley, | gered wo him by Jonnny Victor last night, My tet i Bee hued Pron Mace THO, Meh ty be his father Purther |us a varsity man Wallis was prone] for himself. oming from a fighter completely off Shai Steen 7 mar a aad Vanes Fe ee eee eee ee vonaiane |t@ Pad bis weight. Actually he tipped| But aside from building up rowing | suard, and while not on the subject) Jeckte Norman Wins But Loses. VWke t em | Mao ae ig mang |the geales at 143 but the oMeiall in the Unt sof the fight, struck him ag strangely | = i naInigrer feats ere wth = ean een tang A hen wi | Weights always showed him to bel is also en; significant. As Curley told it, it is} Jackte Norman, the clever PRE LOR nari FW Se eibloy teainat thom ta the ‘big | UP, close to 100 | tion of rowing as a sport by the high |@M easy matter for a fighter to get off weight of the Montauk A. Cc. of Py oy BOXING-DROME j j 167 TH ST. race ouiy eine days away After he was graduated from Yale,| schools in and around San Francisco, |the stereotyped stuff about confidence | Brooklyn, was given a draw in his They are DIFFERENT. : PUNUINE, Th, Mh wesiteater ax Wallas ia a most interesting young | Wallis's rowing days were over, but) ‘The Board of Education of eran |i his ability to beat an opponent, pout against Frankie Edwards in the | are Dil TUESDAY EVE TNE 2 mont interesting YOURE lonly for a time, His firat Job took|ciseg and Mayor Rolph have adopted | Dut every now and thon hel drop a| Pout SEWN UNAS LS e : E Fal oA Ss 1, : rowing, He is more|him to Honduras. There his health }a plan for schoolboy rowing sub-|Temark suddenly and unthinkingly,) main © : = | 2% t . * Five Star 10-Round Bouts * me towing, Ho ip more ltailed and he travelled north into| mitted by Wallle ano’ next ye Jand that’s the one to digest. Woodhaven Sporting Club show last Derg priee for he injected himself | Arizona and ey ly reached Sag) likely that most, if not. ail ea night, The judges disagreed on the ‘ Pe tad fin Ae At tice, 1547 rondway. Room 201, Califor. | Lane Thére he staye ‘ . c vemilot and Reteree Wi “ we ~ ‘elephone Bryant 814. nf situation at Califor. |Hiancisco, ‘Thére he stayed. nh highs . 8 Khan, French Sprinter, Never to! Verdict and Referee Williamson, for | , - Y because he hated to eee po- ne day, by chance, he saw the| metropolis will have crew 7 e pore f Li ", R Awan some unknown reason, called the bout ally good oarsmen rowing poorly | California crews » nd their) bay cities the Alameda Himh School ace Again, , L ; Tat Al 4 3 “| | than because he wanted to ¢ in rm made hin go to the| pasa crew organized throuch Wallis’ | DPARIS, June 14,—All Khan, France’s| even. Norman had at least eight of | : . | Crew. But the latier has been the and offer a word or tWo Cf| efforts and Oaland and Herkeley ex-| best sprinter and the only Frenchman the twelve rounds, Harry Muleahy Ee result of the former quite logically | advice. -That little five minute chat| pect to get in the-running next sea-|to reach the finals in the 100-metre won from Jackie Harris in the second | ¥ } 2 ¥ | end naturally . wit crew anortly developed into | son, Jevent in the Antwerp Olympic Games, round. | To begin at the beginning, Wallis an arrangement whereby Wallis was Wallis fs more than a rewing coach = Se = a Yale man who won his varsity against Harvard and became @ the Coast college o: has Just recovered from a long Illness. to give what time he could to coach {t would seem; he is a real apostle of | ffe Has been ordered by his doctor never men His road rowing. to race again, * BASEBALL TO-DAY, 3.30 P, M. POLO Grounds, Yankees ve. Ghicago.—Advt, ' CIGARETTE _———— BOWLING & BILLIARD ACADEM _| THUM 1341 Broadway, Commer dist’ @ * \ .