The evening world. Newspaper, June 30, 1921, Page 18

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CAR oe DEMPSEY, 190 NOW, MAY ~ WORRY OFF FEW POUNDS — So Much Feeling Against Him That Champion Will hill Battle, Says Be Fighting Up- Edgren. By Robert Edgren. ACK DEMPSEY went through his morning he jogged out along the Club, his favorite run, keeping Dempsey has carefully avoided sandy from the beach because he has an idea fere with fast footwork. Especially d iug has been for speed. In the afternoon he did a little gaged in packing a few of his person camp and start for Jersey City to-morm home in his training quarters, with n. reals and see that everything was a last light workout yesterday. In the road toward the Atlantic City Golf on the smooth gravel at the side. and dusty roads and bas kept away that running in soft going will inter uring this past week all of his train- light boxing and afterward was en- al belongings getting ready to break ‘ow morning. Jack has felt so much at ice old ladies to cook all his training | NH right, that he will put off leaving until the last moment, anxious as he 4s to be near the scene of the big bout. | There was some discussion around th up to Jersey.City in a car or travel by train train with « private drawing room for the champion, because a long auto- | mobile ride might be tiring, “Algo,” Jack remarked, “s flivver driver might batt into us spoil a perfectly good million dolla fight.” Dempaey's last twenty. me® and during the} going movements hours before our to the arena will be shrouded in mystery. He is to be kept ny from | all prying eyes and annoying | questioners Carpentier to Cross River on Private Boat. Carpentier plans to leave his quar ters at Mannasact Seturday forenoun drive to New York in a clered cab, hidden from sight as much a» he ean be without stifling in the midsummer heat. He will cross the river to New Jersey on a private boat, jump ints another car and drive quickly to @ private room already engaged for his occupancy until he leaves for the ring. Being within casy reach of Jersey City, Carpentier preferred to spend his last evening before the tittle In the same room he has occupied for the past month, with his good dog Flip under the bed to guard him while he sleeps. Flip was with Georges at the front during two years of the war ané when Georges is asleep he will not allow even Descamps or Wl- gon to come into his room. Both men have come through to the breathing spell just before th battle without injury of any kind and in perfect condition. In spite of the hot weather of the past week, Carpentier says he has held the fight- ing weight he boped for, now scaling at 172 pounds, which \s the top ring weight of his career, Dempsey 1s under 190, and as he is under no less a nerve strain than at Toledo he is likely to lose four or five pounds be- fore 3 o'clock Saturday afternoon. At Toledo he lost ten pounds in the week before the fight. Dempsey always shows a nervous streak before a fight It isn't that he worries in the least about results but that he is so full of bottled up energy and Is 80 anxious to get into the ring and be gin that he can't rest, During the ast few weeks Dempsey has been ‘aunted by a remembrance of the booing from the gallery at his fight with Brennan, Dempsey Can’t Understand Why the Fans Boo Him. “Why do they do that to me?" he asks. ‘I've always done my best, and I've made good, I'm more an American than nine men out of ten, because my people were among the earliest settlers in Virginia, and I even have Indian blood in’ my veins. I'm the first American cham- pion in many years to stand up and defend the title against a foreigner. Well, I know © lot of my friends are with me, and I'm not going to worry about the rest.” But he does worry, and his nerves haven't been helped by the knocking and slander directed axainst him and the petty attempts of scores of graft- ers to nnoy and hinder him by every trick and device that could be used to separate a few dollars from his bankroll. Carpentier is in a much more for- tunate position. Here only a short time, he hasn't laid himself open to the sort of thing that is making Dempsey miserable, And incidentally, @s a war veteran with a fine record, he has thousands of friends every- where, and meets nothing but praise and applause whenever he appears in public. Tho psychology of this situ ation Is clear. In spite of physical advantages and prestige, Dempsey will feel that he is fighting an uphill battle from the moment he arrives at the arena, With any one but Demp-| sey this might be a serious disadyan- | tage But it seems abuse has only made him grimmer than usual, more determined to win ‘The self-styled “reformers” bad their names in the newspapers for a couple of days, but this is tl sole satisfaction. They didn't suce: have 4 im getting an injunction, and ney | won't be able to interfere with the pleasure of bundreds of thousands who are interested in the fig These gentlemen might learn a little about} Sportsmanship by associating with a few boxer It was pretty rotten @portsmanship to try to interfere at} the last moment, when hundreds of| thousands of dollars have been in-} vested and when thousands of people | have spent their money travelling | from all parts of the world to sit aty the ringside. It was @ purely selfish) Proposition in the interests of the Rarrow-minded few and against the rights of the majority, and fortunate- ly the courts saw through it and turned it down flat There are still tickets on sale and wi! be up to the moment of the fight. | The $5 seats will be sold in Jorwey | City Saturday. While the great arena may not be jammed to the gates, ind | there may be vacant seats here and | there, the seat sale has gone very well, and in spite of huge taxes and e camp as to whether Jack would go Manager Kearns favored tho THE E VENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1921, ~ JACK DEMPSEY----THAT’S ALL! .- Copyright, 1921, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York 3S JUST 2 YEARS AGO -ON HIS WAY TO THE PEAK-NOTHING TO LOSE-HE SENT THE LUMBERING GIANT WILLARD TO THE FLOOR- the fact that his expenses in New Jersey have gone some 200 per cent beyond a leulations Rickard will come out with a profit, Again he hag shown his far-si ed judgment has put over an event So tremendous that no other promoter would have dared to attempt it, Rickard shows the strain more than any of the prin Is in the match, than th ters or their managers, He has about twenty pounds and looks is if he had gone through a yughy campaign. crowd at the gates of the arena Saturday afternoon will go far be yond the 91,613 that can be seated, for thousands will gather to sve the ex citement and perhaps catch a glimp: of the fiehters as they arrive, Across from the arena is a big factory build- ing and thousands could see the fight from the roof, But Rickard has made 1 contract with the owners and no one will be allowed there except a po- lice gua The roof ia lightly con- structed, and if a crowd gathered it might lead to a catastrophe as serious as the one at a Stanford-California football game when a sky- light collapsed it forty were killed. Aside from the factory and a power house no other buildings over- look the arena, Garden Only Safe Place to Buy Fight Tickets. Among the million foolish rumors circulated during the past few weeks was one that Rickard had tickets In he hands of apeculators, to share in the profits. Met Tex Tuesday and he was in great spirits. “Say, Bob," he chuckled, “here's the biggest Joke in the world ets, in spite of all T could to vent it, and now they're trying to turn them in. They can’t sell them because people are afraid of counte! felts. They're stuck. I flatly refu to take back a ticket that has oni been gold.” And Rickard laughed harder than he has In months. The only safe way to buy tickets is to get them directly from the o} the regular of- ‘The four alleged fice at the Garden fices in other cities. counterfeiters arrested a few days ago were turned loose under $1,500 bail, and since that time more coun- eite have appeared in circulation. police have seized one bunch of | tes and tickets, but th may be some other gang at work, Deople who have bought from speculators | will have an uneasy time. The coun- | terfeits, while very cleverly printed, Speculators got 6ome of | THE CROWD WAS WITH Jack Yn Fistic News and Gossip | By John Pollock | Ee ANVIL CHORUS Mat HAS BEEN YELLING ve leap OFF BEFORE THE FIGHT Three ten round bouts and one six} |ronnd 0, ewch to a decision, will be| |stased by the lybbets-McKeever 1x hibition Association at Wbbets Field Brooklyn to-night, The fighters who will battle in the three ten rounders are Leach Cross and Jimmy Duffy of New York, Marty Cross vs. Paddy Murphy of Brooklyn and Earl Baird ys. Dutch Brandt of Brooklyn Mickey Russell ys, Johnny Levine in the six rounder. Chamyion Jack Brittoa, who fights C.em in pion Johnny Wileon, the middleweight tite hoklet, In a ten-round bout at an open-air Jahow to be held at Fast Chicago, fu, on [July 22, is to receive @ guarantes of 315,00) | with an option of accepting one-third of tie roms receipts, Wilson is to alo receive a big uarantee, it being ak that bo gets $20,000, Patwey Scanlon, the fast litthe featherwraght Evening World.) — PENTIER FINISHES TRAINING WEIGHING 172 POUNDS By Thornton Fisher THIS THE JACK WILL CARRY A RESPONSI BuiTy INTO THE RING - HE WILL HAVE MORE CARPENTIER TO TITLE, puz CONTENDING FOR (tT ] of Pittatara, baw arrived in town and is getting into condition at Billy Grew's gymnasium for | tents at the Iocal clube which lin mauager is booking up for bim, CARPENTIER WRITES HE’LL REST FROM NOW UNTIL DEMPSEY FIGHT Frenchman Says He Wound Up Training Siege With a 45-Minute Work- Out at Top Speed. By Georges Carpentier. ANHASSET, June 30.—I have finished my training. 1 will rest M frora now on until the fight. Yesterday afternoon I had a forty-tive- eaGay 406 TOA, GAIK|, ahene cbs) Will Wattle minute workout, going through my different stunts at top speed. I ‘arl Morris, the veteran hearyweight of Okla. boxed with four different sparring partners one round each and then after homa, in « ten-round bout at an opeir sbor Gus Wilson had given me an extra massage I called things off until Satur- | Two fifteen round boutn will be fought at the Ridgewood Give Seorting Club af Brooklyn oa | Saturday night. Sam Mawgberg will go against Johnny Martin and Bobby North will exchango walloge with Al M Champion Jack Hritton, wo had to ask for & postponement of hia twelve round bout with Mickey Walker of Elisabeth, N. J., from Monday night until July 18, at the Newark open air clab owing to ilinews, will engage in two weeks of training at Freddie Walsh's farm at Sumenit, |N. 2, beginning on Monday \ ‘The twelrecound go between Willie Jackson, the local lighuweight, and Pete diartley, the Dur able Dane, will be fought at the open-air bax- tng show to be staged by Eddie MoMakon at Dyck- man Oval on the night of July 18, Rattling Levinnky, the Hedwww heavyweight, left can be identified, and orders have gone out for the arrest of any one! presentin™ them: The s) cial trains from the West beginning to come in, The first Jelegation arrived with the Griffin rrive Friday with a large party of Snglish sportsmen ing to be the greatest gathering of| men interested In sport that any pro- tal from California, filled with | cifie Coast fight fa Bugene rri, famous Wnglish referee, will) In all, this Is go- | to be held in that city on Batuntay afternoon, Loviuahy le to recive « guwantes of 42.400, wun @4Y afternoon, In the morning I did my road work and will, of course, keep | A option of accepting 30 per cont, of the m= | My muscles supple, but as far as boxing is concerned I am through until coipte. the bell rings in Jersey City. Eddie O'Hare of this olty, who has been boxi * enetle lo uars tis Nees epee Ly xing Francois Descamps left for Jersey City yesterday, inspected the ring to-day by his manager, leo Flynn, to mee Pau; 224 the dressing room, We are greatly pleased with the arrangements Tex peat. + eon eo, = Orel so a Rickard has made. My dressing room is cool and sheltered and I will be Moniral, Caneds, om the sieht of July @ O'Hare as comfortable as I have ever been for any fight. ix moots, 1 will leave Manhasset about 10 o’clock Saturday morning and go in my car with Francois Descamps and Pierre Mallet to New York and thence to Jersey City. We expeet to arrive about noon and will go directly to the ‘The exers who will meat in the opening show of the Dyokman Oval Sporting Club pom thetr for- fessional event ever draw from all tho | feits to-day, ‘Tan card fa: Johnny Murray va. world. | earl Raird. Billy De Mos ma Charley Pilkington, | 20USe of a friend of mine, where I will remain until it is time to go to thi (Copsrisdt, 1021, by Robert Raeren, tn UT. 8, | Abe Goldsicin me. Prankio Jerome and Sammy! arena, Uinada, Great Meitan and Sate America.) "Selzer va Mickey Brown, Confers Dartmouth Wins Intercollegiate Golf Tourney Yale Is Beaten by One Stroke Margin in Tourney at Greenwich. Dartmouth defeated Yale by a ene stroke margin for the team cham- plonship of the Intercollegiate Golf Association, at the Greenwich Coun: try Club, yesterday. The contest was close throughout, remaining in doubt till the last man had holed out on the home green. The Dartmouth team re- turned an aggregate for the four men of 1,278 for the 72 holes, while the Blues made it in 1,274. Until the last round had been well , under way it looked as if the com- bination from Drake University | would carry off the honors, but one | of the players frum Des Moines weak- ened toward the finish, With the |fourtm man on the Drake team, J. 0. | Swick, to be heard fram, it was eeen | that the team from the West needed 78 to win. He brought in an 8, | however, so that his side got a total e ‘Carpentier’s Manager With Rickard Descamps Learns How to Get to Big Arena for Satur- day’s Fight. to have Rome tumble down about him, came up with an idea right off the Mls iiaane ¢ ; bons and souvenirs which have been sent me in the past month I would| & 7" rin, Georges 1 Man- asset Bay On & fast bout, ‘\ yacht, a| ebsily weigh as much as Dempsey. My secretary says we have about thirty tug boat Or a canoe if he desires. He I deeply regret that an accident to my friend Capt. Thierry Mallet will | o¢ 1,280, which brought a three-hand- prevent him seeing the fight. He was badly sunburned on Saturday on the cq tie for third place with Cambridge, lower limbs and has been forced to remain in a reclining position under a, England, and Princeton, Harvard, physician's care ever since, He will not be able to walk for two weeks. Columbia, Cornell and Williams fin- Journee carries him about our house as though he were a baby. I ecan| ished as named assure you that I will miss my friend and Interpreter on Saturday, Coincident with the team event was I veceived forty-five telegrams yesterday from different American Legton | the thinty-alx hole Susie round tor posts wishing me good luck and success. The total received from these sy Bimpeon Dear AP, Leah Princeton Cap- | taine spreadesglc f posts ts about 500, If I were to wear sewn in my trunks all the little rib-| Ui", *preadoseied his feld with rounds strokes better than A. P. Boyd of Dart- mouth, his closest rival. Dean played the kind of golf of which a Hutchison upat be proud. Espec- iy pounds of such “porte bonheur, inily in the early hours was the man Won't have to worry over getting there ‘i syne That will be the least of his troubles, (Copyright, 1921, by the United Feature Srndicate.) from Atlanta a tower of strength when Wisse orn Rico arablanra ih ,|L hope, said Rickard to Mallet. to he reeled off the frst eleven holes in are more problems than one | Descanips. e word infleld laughed, Gea par AeUree Ae jt wae. hie 7 to think about when such matters as | all three of ‘em ring is Juat to our Wiking." rattled Det- DooghWoys to See Moran and Mar-| for the round waa only @ stroke worse heavyweight championships of the| “And there is another thing that ta|camps to, Matlot. to Iuckard tin Battle. : bothering 4 hat about the que Tex said that the ring will be twenty In the afternoon Dean, despite the | world are at st wid thoee who are] Roehm mes |W! bout the quer] | Tex said that the ring Wil He Wiibe| Four hundred doughboys will be] act that his ball found traps at the under the impression that all needed | We are bound to be in this mat-|that, Originally the word was Jat the Boxing Drome, 167th Street | first, fourth, Afth and sixth holes, man- to be done is th © of articles, | Mh but once we are our dressing | that the ring was to be an eighte and Westchester Avenue, to-morrow | ged to reach the turn in 37, There- | one is sinning of articles. | yoom, ‘the one. of nelection, we | affair night to look after the comforts of | Stef he played without @ allp, getting r| Putting up forfeits and entertaining | woul not "w to have Monsieur | phat was an error,” said Tex the crowd that will travel to thel fistian Gith the lender wae ©. Ht new Men are Preferred LO Lhe | ee Auction Just beewuse Gectten pag [PRE Will be teen ine Thomas, perhaps | Bronx to see Bob Martin, A. KB. F,| Prowse of Cambridge, and in the after- energetic and much wide-awake Des- | decided on it re Mist Not de any {questioned this bit of footage yesterday | heavywelght champion, and Frank | hoon the visitor seemed to strike his mips, nanager of the aspirimg| TUMling of Lompers,” quoth Descamps {and had a carpenter tabe the distance! Moran in thelr acheduled fifteen- | S4me for the flrat time. He hud a 74, : | to Mullet to Rickard hetween the posts. It was found that | i ; tee | good enough to place him “among the ronges Carpentier | at," remarked Mister Rickard to ene eee ee ty aetuatly {Found battle to a decision, ‘The men ‘Altogether, five of the six | Descampa rushed into Tex Rick-|Monsledr Mallet" tc: Monaleur Dese tect duaure ‘the ropes, would|will be drawn from the old 27th|Cambridge golfera qualified for the Lg ; ot wind | giuybm. ia a detail that 1 will attend to he the d right to the posts. and 77th Division and will be in com- jens DIO RaYID cof Yai 1 f ard’s office yesterda ut of wink Personally nine tend order to prevent. possible a ie Dae si cease Sweetsero fe, winner o and carting along with him as dnter- [198 to details tor—wet, go> to Vither participant, it will be |mand of Sergt. Major Alfred Breen | ne’ individual title @ year ago, re- : lit Rive my ante but it whites ssary to string the ropes in from tof the hegular Army, turned rounds of 78 and 75 for 163, preter Licut ree Mallet of the |g. x! \the posix, This would make it a] With ulations governing |which placed him in a tle for third Yeneh Army. ‘The object of his trip| “How about the police protection | real, old. ‘seventeen-foot ring, Des- [the hand the crowd the fans |place with Robert McKee. the Drake ; ‘ \ Nahe ear Re IR RERCOO EOD a ne ae y eee ohia overs tha| 4 reaching the seats star, who. only. last’ week won the Was ta find out how the French cham wh Taiven the ring, with [phone by a friend last night and he call for, and the show |‘Trana-Miasiasippl tit lL. Walker Sion wan aoiia iG GORA kee anak - AAMplol of the Morides [again repeated that the ring was cn ducted just were the jr. of Columbia, holder of the asao- cea T Deachmae ty. che Inticlay hike, [tttely patiatactory. to him. And hay- |nume “held in France dur- |clation title two years ago, is Test- Suturda “Detail” muttered Rickard With a {ing repeated the thing over and over Jing t hie procerds of ing in fourth place with 154 to his “We want to remain in the cool of|filck at hie sega ashes. And taen [again it, must be the carnival will ko to the’ ex-Ser~ | credit our Manhasset establishment” anid fis, Wilk abvue the” ring wnwih.| Te te not so in that dear Pari en's Employment Bureau” | pe Descamps to Mallet to Rickard, “and| them, Had comer ton tthaeuid engine (However Much concern hus been liminary bouts, mi the following or-| Indians to May N. V. A. Nine, teed quick transportation woe," | HEAYOD tt Deseainps haa. re a inany onal inate iit Wentwelght chant leutieetion of full blooded Ind’an. base- laying hi words Vike the (ley fr chard to Muilet to ies: | Prune te is Jimmy Kelly my_ Good Fie yt when they erase cata wien te Aianwivolay % i ‘apple ' | : man . = F bite. Wing . " o ne r x. the seven: that we Want to remain on ¢ Dh. we have had the riug measured ‘A i ; 1 nockout. ng phen | you augigest auc pranalt g amie hhat youl will miske itm uit pad Ping, and him chances of hold ; out Jake Seiiffer —_—_—s ickard, neve ntered, e! ding so that po onaieur Dempsey \ing Dempsey off” through brill of Butfalo in thirt di ‘ | dilckard. and he t noon ; hg, Dempsey » alc y seconds of fighting ALL, TO-DAY, 3.30 P.M. POL, fe been bad be been Swill not bump his head tov hard. The footwork would be greatly reduc in the first round here last night. Vitter ve Boston, Ady. oO "| ) ‘ ¢ \ a “eat Soler Oe ere Peat - : “ OPPOSE- HLS AT STAKE ANO A FOREIGN STEEL, SEMI-PRO PITCHER, STRIKES OUT 23 BATSMEN. PITTSBURGH, June 30,—Will- jam Steel, pitching for a semi- professional team in this city, turned in a sensational game yesterday, when he struck out twenty-three opposing batsmen. He allowed his opponents but five hits and issued one base on balls, The team Steel twirled for won the contest by 10 to 2. Steel fooled the batters by using a good change of pace. He relied mostly on an outcurve and fast ‘ball and appeared to have ex- cellent control, cccneicaiiasiiceataosss Block Move te Delay Baseball Trials. CHICAGO, June 30.—A motion by the defense in the baseball trials that the indictments charging a conspiracy for the Chicago White Sox players to throw the 1919 World's Series be quashed as ilegal under the Illinois law was over- ruled by Judge Hugo Friend yesterday. Judge Friend made the ruling with exception in order to prevent a post- ponement of the case until the next term of the court, and he can reverse it when the case is resumed next Tuesday. Following this ruling the court ad- Journey until Tuesday, when both sides will present briefs on the question of quashing the Indictment. ee Maryland Tracks to Pay $720,000 in Taxes, BALTIMORE, June 30,—The Bowle, Havre de Grace and Pimlico tracks contributed $337,000 in taxes to the State of Maryland during the spring season of racing, On this basis the revenue from the mile track this year will be $720,000, For seaside or mountain top— The best of everything men and boys wear. Norfolk suits White “flannel” trousers White buckskin oxfords Silk shirts Soft collar shirts Soft *Shire collars Flexible straws Silk socks Silk gloves Athletic underwear Bathing suits Thermos and Ferrostat bottles Everything for golf Everything for tennis Straw hats! Prices all scaled down! Luggage—all the traps for tripping. Plenty blue serges among the men’s Summer suits now selling at revised prices. *Registered Trademark. RoGErRS PEET COMPANY | Broadway s Broadway it 13th St. “Four at 34th St, Convenient Broadway Corners’ Fifth Ave, jet Warren at 41st St. ELIZABETHRYAN INFINAL WITH aindiesicne California Girl Earns Right to’ Play Frenchwoman for Tennis Tit LONDON, June 30. One of the Digest questions in tennis circles here to-day is whether Miss Ell beth Ryan of California will be able to defeat the French champion, Mile, Lenglen, for the women’s all-comers’ championship at Wimbledon, It ts well known that Miss Ryan seldom plays her best against the French. woman, who has beaten her easily on Several occasions. But if Miss Ryan Plays t » same kind of game against her that she played yesterday when she earned the right to meet Mile. Lenglen by defeating Mrs. Satter~ thwaite by a score of 6—1, 6—0, the contest should prove very interesting, It may be a closer match on the turf, as was the case two years agu when Miss Ryan made a fine match against the French girl at Wimble- don. If the American girl can forget the big name of her opponent and be her natural self, she will make a great fight in the challen, round, which probably will be played on Saturday, Miss Ryan will play Mlle. Lenglen to-morrow. There was some uncer- tainty about the date of this match and it was reported yesterday it might be held Saturday. ee ‘Tony Marto Scores Quick K. 0. Tony Marto, the west site weltes weight, knocked out Young Walla ne} the second round of a acnedulee fittoad round battle at the 9th Coast Artille y last night A left hook to Wallace’ Jew ended hostilities, RACING AQUEDUCT TOMORROW The Hindoo Handicap Regret Handicap — AND 4 OTHER 8 FLRST RA AT 2.15 P. BPRCIAL. RACE TRAINS jeave Penn. Station, 33d St. and 7th AY. 180 from Flatbush Av., Brooklyn, ep Cay at intervals up to 1.45 pecial car reserved for | GRAND | STAND, 83.85. LADLES, Tax, $3.85. Includin, D YOUR VACATION ON EXERCISE & KEEP COoL—) Tennis, Ali Outdoor Spore. World's Larzest Swimming Pool Grmnasiume, Summer C Flesh Reducing-Body Building Boxing-Physical Conditioning MEMBERSHIP, 1 Year, $125. sees nereiet ice ete aces PHILA’ JACK ‘O'BRIEN. Mir. in THE POOL .:., FOR Lapi AND GENTLEMEN, NOW OPEN Postponed to Friday Evening, July 1. Leach Cross vs. Jimmy Duffy—10 Rounds Marty Cross Vs. Paddy Murphy—| Earl Baird Ve. Dutch Brandtecio Roos Mickey Russet! Va Johany Levine—@ Ai PRICKS 81, 82, 83. EBBETS FIELD Box Office Tei. Flatbush 10,000, DEMPSEY.---CARPENTIER Auto Morage in bulidina —coverin block.” Pour eaite on tive atnvete One Thee fram mala entraio Remyvations made mee NT_ AUTO STORAGE demey City, DEMPSEY-CARPENTIER FIGH, Blow-by-blow reproduction of eat champlonskip b Pwo Ww it eo Bearvwelehts. wil mt contenant Special Wire From Ringside Doors Opn 1 P.M. Musle, 69th Regiment Armory—July 2 Tioketa on sale DEMPSEY CARPENTIER B'way & 38th MaktiN Ringside Seats All Locations All Prices at Reasonable Rates JACOB'S Ticket Office Phone 4189 TO-MORROW NIGHT BOXING-DRi ME \ We7th St, Wi vt, A utrdass ot . K leavyweigit Se Roundy, Alvoos temehttd Bouta, "ieket ‘Sua? See ain, MILLE. LENGLEN’

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