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Would Be No Match for Him and Champions Aren’t Much—4Just Possible That Fred Be Able to Get a New “Rep” ready begun to puzzle the pugilistic world. Jess Willard was so overwhelming that it seems impossible any other fighter can have a chance to beat him. The only possibility for a match seems to be in the suggestion that Jack the Giant Killer may find it harder to beat a small man than to beat a big one. One round has been quite enough for any of the ring giants when tossed in against Dempsey. He knocked out Fulton and Morris in one round each, and prac- ly knocked out Willard in the same time, for Willard was down seven for a count in the first round, and seven seconds had been counted over after the last knockdown before timekeeper Barbour managed to let Teferee know that time was up. Even then Willard never could have up for the second round had not the trouble with the bell given him ly two minutes in his corner instead of a minute's rest, which was long to let his seconds revive him and get him to his feet again. Morris, feet five; Fulton, six feet six, and Willard, six feet seven, are the three men seen in a ring in the past¢@—————_—__—________ ty years, Dempsey is the hardest world, and ts so remar! the biggest heavyweights that | Dlons, ean hit them wherever he wants The way in which he knockea | Dempsey Has Knocked Out ‘Witard proved he can knock Ut | Best of Heavyweights. maan he can hit. Willard was in Glass condition, in spite of all} Of the American heavyweights early all have already been knocked ted contrary circula ‘by Dempsey in his rush to the nan is a knockout of the gigantic Willard. iter in| Probably he is about on a par with y fast| other Knglish heavyweight cham- and that puts him in the joke CE LE A ee thi A ta aa @ puneh ees ck ee eeclt | in other e k the Giant fter taking | Killer flattened him’ for a ten-sec- nocked out | 04 count with just four rapidly de- t, proved that. livered blows. As for Billy ‘thrown from his | 2's out of the running, He was t Afler the third | Dave met Dempsey for six rounds at ig | the rig Athietic Fund show i: Madison Squgre Garden July 16 last jen) and on the afternoon of the it flatly drew out and refused to go on with Dempsey for even three Pounds, alleging that h sure a wan Detzo to ey would knock him out that and tee @ perfectly useful |rormatien Wf n Mioko eal tome that liter t in be jafternoon: “Mr. Edgre fae fs low can hit. o in halt in thmenyLP jow hard t {Capgriabt, 1919, by Al Munro Eilas,) American League Pitehing. Pitcher, Chub, wh Nelson, New York 3 P.0.| Pitober, Club, in knock me mi je ute time he. ”“ A tew later aia ken Dempaey | ore. ix 6 in Phil la, and lasted by tinual cli ing. t showed no great anxiety Dem, nda Ro his onesfound record that itoey 18 ie ma r has already announced that ae ls to a the color lip Even{ Mf he didn’t there are no really black fighters now. Johnson is and an outlaw Langford is fat hnd a hasbee Dempsey knocked ,out big Bili Tat when he out loom in the trainin, yarters, at Toledg, and as for Harry is, big as ho {Rh he couldn't even beat Sam Langford until quite re- cently. RASS HNSOM ESSN AA OOO eZee Onsveneic ee mo amsex it looks as if Ful- y's next op- tee and in England or France. iton put himself out of the run- nm in America by being €O0C- ee ecemenoewemickreetesrcnce ne sha [ah forage zeal espe i Ho Set LEEH SEEMS ES EANE Rs eee BEE on NBSENBONE LESSEE ISS. SESEEB—cen™ : BREE Ae ss ESRESSRI SET 4 . feesion” was raed an a fine piece re gee jational League Botting Hl i rains associated Fane ed ere” He ‘aa | With @ good teft hand, If Fulton had (3 # H through four years of war, most | Pos#essed_ brains he might have 2m) wa through four years of war, most | reached Willard before Dempsey did, ae ti has been gisht even have beaten Willard and doubtedly made him beyon: is twenty-five and a halt years ve m on the trail of a million dollars himself now instead of in Bu hunting up a new reputation, Fulton is a good enough heavy- bi iad to beat any big fellow he likely to meet in France or England. I wouldn't be surprised to hear that th has knocked out a few of the best | epecZente-cec: watSore™ He} tyle to make a hit ov: there. If he knocked out Car ler, or even Beckett, he'd quickly find backing and a purse oltered for a | Rev, fight with Dempsey th England, and with Fulton @ big drawing card and no one in particular to give Jack a fight here, Dempsey might go over to flatten Ferocious Fred again. It looks like the only chance in the near | futur | As for tho possibility that some new man May pop up to give Demp- sey a run for bt title, it isn’t done | fen ler Was, or mpsey is a top-notch , how ‘a fighter, when he knocked | CP@™pion, as good as any we've had. Her in 1918, Hiven his | It Will take at least a couple of years ¥: Peppard circumstances, | °f Sehting to develop any new boxer fi him, Beside this, 2 & point where it would even be > tier hada bad fall while fly.|Worth while to take a chance with ae astae aun, and to mata |? While he's champion he may r Jim Jeffries had years ago, when he had to retire tor lack of somebody to fight. ¢ —— of C. Victory Carnival Te- Morrow Bogland, © on when Bullivan | 80me of the best runners in the coun- Y im the entire purse |tT¥ are entered in the Conneljan Mile, | ted three rounds. Of later |the feature event of the Victory Athletic champions, Jack Scales was |Carnival of Long Island Chapter, Knights |{ out in a pened by Eid of Columbus, to be held to-morrow at ny itasiepmpas after pe o ree 08 Ek ia Beads out lour- gueceepwengsersusaunateverscce estes rad SRIETEASASBARSSLESESSRE N=. SISELE, 7 Carpentier ha inst the fast. D ve against the fast- and most tremendous hitter ever mn in action? Not @ chance in the mori, Ro mat- ket = wees wea enwi He" wD oremee cmecets: Dearest? BASE! iS BSE! Oulmet’s Ex-Caddy i ff J BROOKLINE, Mass., Bdaie |*: BOE + ” 2 BAS RE! record is obscure. that he is twenty-five five feet ten inches tall, American League Clab Batting, 190 > rar) carts Hal rey Port AS si SONS DEMPSE National /‘Leagee Pit: Y LOOKS INVINCIBLE RIGHT NOW BASEBALL AVERAGES Of American and National Le@gues Bas--cee! BRE ee*8-.SESBENSA.. it j ie BSc on! SIRE LLB Ie IBSLIISIISE Be ESIEASEM Ho i hewer AERO ws ROO DANR ESS ee AO mON: een t8=2 Aearevee: oemesecieee@e: ec: Bota mncconmtenssaeecota~, t ay: FA 4 4 % 8 hb Batting. ro, 4| matched by his manager, Billy Gib. 3! Thursday and had @ talk with Gibson! If the painful case of sunburn which Champion Benny Leonard con- up jn bed at his home, gets better within the next ten days, he will be }eon, to meet Irish Patsey Cline of this city in an open air show to be staged by Bobby Gunniss, the fight promoter of Philadelphia, at the Philadelphia National League Beseball Park on Avg. 41, Gunniss came here on in regard to letting Leonar: box at his show. “Gtb" promfised to let him have Leonard providing Benny is/ well enough in ten days to start) training for the bout. H anili *t of the world, who got the decision Wales, fiyweigh wer Pal Moore, is future fighting at the Cr they stage four-round decision ager, Al Lippe, hits just accepted terms for Cowler tw ey Basta Calilsenia at Cowler will start for the Coast as promisiog Harlem bantamscight, two eight round boute to be staged at the Armory A, A, of Jemey City on Tuneday nish, In wie other eight rounder, Harlem Eddie Keliy takes on ‘*Babo” Sullivan of thie city, Johnny Dundee made such @ bit tn Boston by bis ctory over Benny Valgar thet he bas bees signed there again by Hoy Green of the Feoway SO eval" box Joe Tipu of Pausdeighin on 5 jive rounds to & decision. Tipiit: orally Rovchieg Cul George Chaney of Walumory tn Badiling Veviosky te getting into condition for hie beut with Clay Turner, the Lodian light heavy. weight, at Philadelphis Jack O'Brien's gymnasium ladelphia, O'Brien boxes witn Levigahy every Gay and’ is showing him meny blows ao ‘Durer, indian ie working out Gomera fy TUG Stata *}tween Tuesday and Thursday to gi Copyright, 1918, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World). ‘ Keron IAL CHALLENGE , eur —— Bally’s Races Make Lucullite Puzzle to Form Students, But Help Clear Loftus YONKERS SELECTIONS. Sun Briar, Rated as He Was, Horse Which Butler’s Colt| #ubbuv. ‘a ; T ° ed E il T D a ian RACE—Royal Duck, Feodor, alia asy TWO ays poURTH RACE—Purchase, Be Frank, Previous. Balustrade, FIFTH RACE—Miiler Entry, Game Cock, Tetley, By Vincent Treanor aire RACE—Furlough, Bucklarde, HILE the investigation of Jonnany Loftus’s ride on Sun Briar Thursday, when the Kilmer horse finished lengths behind Lucullite and Old Rosebud, is being continued by thé Empire City racing offigials, form students and handicap-| Tim O'Sullivan trains Masda for pers are wondering just how to clas- ete are ee ye jee. sify Lucullite, whose form reversal |ing ability. Yesterday we tried to got Johnny into trouble. Events be-|tell Tim tha, Masda had an ex- fore and after the Sun Briar race cellent chance to win the High have made their job tough. When|. weno, aarggaP Dut he disagreed they attempt to regulate their dope -with us entirely. a * said Tim. “Don't on the Hildreth star, using a line tung in the mui through Bally, which beat him easily | ® hing in the erty Mak mo ding on Tuesday last, or when they try to PE Layee. by ae figure, Bally on a line through Lucul- lite the result becomes a badly mixed Up puagle. And each day since Bally beat Lucullite the task becomes more complicated. On Tuesday, be it remembered, Lu- cullite with 130 pounds up was a 2 to 7 favorite over Bally, which had 113 pounds on his back.¢ Bally beat him very cleverly, evidently improving @ lot over his previous race at Aque- duct when, at @ difference of fourteen pounds in his favor, he finished third to Lucullite and Sunny Slope, eight nothing of a criminal nature attached to Johnny's ride, but, as one official put it, “he rode a bad race, has done much better and can do better.” The mud at Yonkers certainly plays havoc with handicap figures and other dope. It seems that mud there ig the real, genuine, sticky, sliding stuff, entirely different from the going when heavy at the Long Island tracks. Falry Wand, after three disap- polntments, finally came home the first time this season in the Clare- mont. She was so wild acting in the pacdock that even her trainer, Jim Evans, had little confidence in her ability to run as he knows she can rut. She just took the track at the rat turm and was never caught, lengths back. The performaace| oe of the Hildreth horse, behind JIMMY Bally has since been excused on DE FOREST TO GET two counts, one of which was that he LEWIS INTO CONDITION. wi kicked at the post by Mary) Ted-Kia Maud, the other being that after the! weight eae Hebi hs ety fdas ye race he coughed up a clot of muvyus tom, the present title holder, at the which probably impaired his breath- Armory A.A. of Jersey City,on July ing, Be that as it may, but how ta (2% Will leave for Long Branch to-mor. one to account for Bally's race yes. |" ‘0 finish big training. terday when two mares, Fairy Wand) 5, Dut himself in the care of mm: ° and Rove d'Or, neither of which has| re tyne rorest: the famous trainer, “prepped” Jack Dem, shown anything this year, both beat pasile with Jeas Willard ede K1a oot him, Butler’s Bally, the hor: whleb | loner Op Forest | the eatest condi. ‘ beat the great Lucullite? Possibly it! Forest witt also bo th Lowitene al ol ie it. was yesterday's mud which gaye ee ie ne aecided that the gooa Bally the slows, or possibly he wasn't |old country air will do him a lot of the Bally which trimmed Hildreth’s | £004."0 the first of next week he will good pne; and aguin, |Sio'Kimeel? tor Rss Benen’ possibly there | conditioned himaeit for ali Mie hee tee t lites ny ich | Dou! are two Lucullites—the one which| ita Aud Riwieieibh pasta 'os.see Bally beat so easily Tuesday, and the|with Bddie Ryan yesterday, “It Secny other the one which just galloped! ey ame, ong Thureday afternoon at orner the ali his important away from both Old Rosebug and Bun | Lewis "offered, to waren’ ioe battle Briar to win, pulled up, on Thursday. | mount that he would win the caboy fight. Britton took him up, As neith much money on hand ii was ‘ugrecd they would post it the next day, SUMMARY OF TOURNEY FoR JERSEY STATE GOLF TITLE. b vivision ysrol, beat Haren: icin! cy t 1M Baht Be tae ag ine ured ew t Mil I Os wrt Bally and Lucullite in victory and in defeat were as different as night and day. HOW WAS” LOFTUS TO KNOW . DIFFERENT? This, however, is getting away from Johnny Loftus'’s case, but it was necessary to digress a minute or so Loftus’ Johnny, so he orders, and he Had Luecullite run the 4: Bally sw er D “Wig A, RY 1 no Mary Maud in the race to kick him at the post. Besides, little Fator, | bet Nox Woh, Engleinand. who rode Lucullite to defeat behind toll, piano, Peat ch, Bally, evidently had becom mitten ww: (Seqpaa enough in the time intervening by filtro, 3m hy Lg it oA. ; Anyhow, Loftus % a te os 2 to ad tet ed a lage PSX, : 8 worn 4 to’ olay! Heday ent Consberey. “Sa THEN (Fimt Round). rune cle, Tow him a better ride. and Trainer McDaniels, who saddled Sun Briar and gave his jockey the riding orders, could not be expected to remember all these thimgs. They set out to beat the horse which Bally had beaten, which looked easy, but found he was a different animal, Those too who bet on Sun Briar-were wagering on the same deductions, and they had to pay up. Lucullite simply didn’t come back to Sun Briar and | pial y he backed ‘up to Bally two days before, and just |for that it seems that Loftu “on the carpet,” and the public, excepting| ,°% lof course some who bet on Lucullite ‘Tharsdi is out of pocket, ‘Ther 10 toring, whet dl will be made of the Loftus thet ad} jast winter,” WALD FOUR OL INGOLF FINALS Score Is 80 to 84 in First Round to Decide Jersey Championship, By William Abbott. F trom gia, Genyoeden ot tte DBAL, N. J., July 19.—Max Mara- ton of Baltusrol run up a lead of four holes on Eddie Wildga clubmate, at the end of the first round in the 96 hole final to-day for the Jersey State golf title on the Deal links, Wild, a mew hand at tournament competition, gave his opponent fre- quent tig through sheer ner- vousness, trait was apparent on the greens, where Wild added ex- tra strokes to his card. Marston, @ veteran of many battles, took things easy and only allowed his opponent to capture two holes in the entire match, Marston's score was 80 and Wild $4, Approaching the seventeenth, the gal- lery following the match had to spriat when a colud burst broke without warning. At the first hole Marston gained the lead when Wild, visibly unsteady, - missed a short putt for a rejulation four. At the 395-yard second Marston laid a remarkable midiron to within six feet of the pin and got a 3 to ‘wild's 5. Marston increased his advantage on the fourth, where Wild hit Into a brook and took 6 for the hole. Wild reduced the lead at the fifth, which was a nightmare hole for Marston, who made two errers com- ing through the fairway and then walloped clear over the green into a brook. Max conceded the hole. The match was nip and tuck at the eleventh, Here Marston shot a dandy mashie niblick stone and had a 3 to Wild's 5. The fourteenth went to Wild when his clubmate messed up a short down pill putt. Marston, after playing a fine seo- ond shot, captured the sixteenth when Wild's second try on the green went wrong. ¥. A sudden rain storm broke when the match reached the seventeenth, Wild pulled a midiron attempt into the rough. The mistake cost him the hole, as Marston was home in 4, Both young stars missed the eigh« teenth green on their tee shots. Mar- ston needed two wallops to escape from @ sand trap to the left of the green, but ran down a good sized putt for a half in 48 as Wild failed to hole a ten- foot putt. ‘The cards: Special lareton—In—4 3 5 3 Wid—in—4 6535 pll.b SE bd my YOUNG SWEETSER WINS BOTH OF HIS MATCHES WITH EASE AT ARDSLEY. As a result of the first and second match rounds in the Westchester County Golf Association championship tournament over the Apawamls links, M. K. Waters of Ardsley will meet Gaines Gwathmey of the home club, and G. L. Conley of Siwanoy will clash with Jess Sweetser of Ardsley in the semi-final round. Upsets occurred in the second round when John G. Anderson. former Ws chester champion, and T. V. Be hum of Wykagyl were eliminated, In the morning Anderson easily de- Graves, feated Harmon 8. Apawamis, by later again: golfer wa hree putts on faking no less five consecutive #1 Gwathm ho aturally home the hy golfers, p and 2 to play. Ber: am in the morning oned of H.'te Phillips by § up and 6 to: play. Conley, never in the noon, opposed to ve up the ghost un- til the home green was played, ‘The youngest player In the tour- nament, Sweetser, won both his matches by decisive margins, de- Teating A. W. Brand of Ardsley in the first round and later winning from C. V, Benton of Hudson River, o™play. T up and 6 toplay, WAR HEROES, VOTE JUDGES. Jersey Veteran to Be Named om Election Boards, TRENTON, N. J. July 19.—An- nouncing that he had taken steps to insure the appointment of Great War veterans to the various New Jersey County Boards of Flection, Goy. Run= = ’ yon said to-day that eventually the poll- ing places of New Jersey will be in charge of 8,000 former soldiers “the Veterans’ Preferment act, passed twink the “Governor va ct v branch of the public (ethe State and its counties #0 far ns te service ~* beat him, the tactics Loftus was i beat Purralle tus tment, employment and promo- structed to use in the early running IGT ORM PON Stal pivis.| tion are concerned except Civil Bervice eT aight. Pr Kments,. departmental deputies of his race might have won for him, Mi appointm . but Lucullite had no clot of mucus in oojsialt, | Gnd persons “holding confidential posi his nostrils Thursday and there was tions. RACING IT, VERN MONDAY. $2,000 SPRIGHTFUL STAKES HILLSIDE HANDICAP And 4 Other Exciting Contests, RST RACE AT 2.30 P. M. jal Race Train leaves Grand Oey grab feriminal’ Hartem ye, at 1.20 Regular trains to Mt. Vernon a*yo. 195.2.38 8, a ‘ana stop ton and Subway, or West Farms Bubw: transferring to Jerome Je irom Woodlawn 8 Grand Bt Ladies, $1.65,