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ac 2 PP Oe Pe £ Dundee Believes He's Entitled to Chance to Win the Light- weight Championship. | at that lightweieht champion- ship and I'm going to make Benny Leonard give it to me. 1 have fought him seven times without decision and 1 think I always held ty own with him." Yea, x0 Guessed it, Johnny Dundee was the spokesman, “Do you know,” Dundee esked, “that I've never had an opportunity to win the lightweight championship during all the years I've been fighting, and I've met them all? 1 tackled Ritchie and everybody said { beat him, but it was a no-decision affair. I inet Welsh too but it was one of those “no @ecision” affairs. “It's about ume that Benny de- fended his title and gave me a chance to win it. I've earned the right. I am getting old and ali in,” this facetiously, “and he shouldn't be afraid.” i “Are you another Tendler who wants Leonard to do 133 pounds for you?” we asked. “Well,” said Johnny, straightening) Up, “I'd like to get him at weight, but if vhere j# any bitch on that subject I won't let that stand In the way of the match, I'll even fight him at eatchweights for the title.” ‘Where could @ championship Aight} between you and Leonard be staged?) “We could fight twenty rounds for ®@ decision and within a couple of) hours of New York, at that. I know piace, I've talked to Billy G.oson | about it and he said he would seo He wants the promoters to get in touch with him before giving me @ decided answe: HNNY confessed that he has be- come unusually ambitious ever since bis recent bout with Young Kloby up New England way, “Why,” THINK ['m entitled to a chance he said, “that was the toughest guy and the hardest hitter ever met, and he weighed about 147 1 beat him badly. You know that, only worse, and the hacuer hit him the r he became. You know my right hand peppered him with that unmercifully. After that fight I came to the con- clusion that 1 am ag right as 1 ever ‘was in my life. I feel if I ever was im championship form, this is the time, and that's why I am going after Benny Leonard and his lightweight championship.” NYBODY who has an idea that Johnny Kilbane is going to) quit the ring even if he is) elected to the office of Councilman in| Cleveland on next Blection Day, is all | wrong. Johnny himself is authority for the statement that he has no such intentions and will have three or four From this it may be inferred that Kilbane docsn't think anybody will ever win his title by the knock~ out method. Johnny naturally is busy electioncering right now, and) will be up to Nov, 4, but after that he says he will put on the gloves aguin, L LIPPE is complaining because Mike O'Dowd won't give Jeff Smith a chance at the middle- weight championship. “The boxing game,” he says, “is getting to be a joke, and the sooner some steps are taken to provide a commission to supervise bouts throughout the coun- (ry the better it will be for all con- “een T en IT was manager of Abe At- teli,” continued Lippe, “we never se- Jected our opponents. The promoters named them and Attell fought them, Is there a champion to-day or has there ever been one who fought the same number of decision bouts as did Attell? The great little featherweight fough( as many two bouts to a de. cision in one week. He never asked what welght his opponents were. If they didn't go over 135 pounds he didn't seem to care, What a boom it would be for the boxing game if we hod a few Attells now, Smith is another fighter of the same type, He wil box any middleweight in the world. If he ever gets a chance at the championship and wins it, I defy the maa to ‘come forward and say that Siith refuses to fight him.” HEY can’t last forever." Some fighters, however, won't be- Neve the old saying until they find themselves humiliated by defeat. ‘The latest is Jem Driscoll, one of the must popular boxers who ever came to this country to beat our best. The other night at London Jem, probably “needing the money,” tried a come- Dock siuint tong after he had retired with enough ring glory for any man to be proud of, and what happened? He was beaten in sixteen rounds by Charley Ledoux, the Frenchman, who in Driscoil’s heydey wouldn't’ have put a glove on Jom. It was simply a case of age against youth, Driscoll is thirty, and Ledoux is twenty. ep, but for all that the little hman had the fight won by a wide margin up to the fourteenth round. Then, however, Drisco!! began to jose his defense and the French- man landed. A few blows were enough. Jem blew up and the bell in the fifteenth found him on the verge ot being knocked out. As he staggered his corner in response to the gong for the sixteenth round his sec- onds threw up the towel, thus at Igeat raving the one time marvel of @everness trom being counted out, Yale Quarterback Situation DIAGRAM OF WHAT THIS 1S ALU ABOUT” ae ian et TO HAVE “pear iT ) ovT, POP! } M ELIXER OF LIF 4 BFEN DISCOVERED. BY TRANSPLANTING THE INTERSTITIAL GLAND FROM ONE BODY TO ANOTHER THe OLD BECOME YOUNG AGAIN WHoops! \ e IS SAID THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH! aul operations AND OLD PoP” ANSON MeN SIGN UP WITH CHICAGO AGAIN Looked Gloomy Until Kempto Clever Halfback, Who Is Now Running El Machine, Is No Novice at the Position, as He Was the Little General for His Yale Freshman Team. By William Abbott. ALF is fortunate in having & pinch player the calibre of Herb Kempton, who has just been shifted to quarterback, La L'V@ Roche, whose poor generalship and running back of punts were chiefly ¢ Bulldog’s defeat w Willard looked in that Dempsey responsible for thi fight. Well, 1 had Kloby looking like last Saturday by Boston College, has 1 been canned from the varsity, With son of old Mike Murphy and @ promising candidate for quarterback, in the hospital, the situation at New Haven looked dis- couraging until Coach Sharpe hit on the scheme of moving Kempton from body punch? y| Thorne Murph; halfback to quarter. eleven. Yale freshman team and started the gon in the same position. He is a ekilful runner off tackles, and Sharpe decided to cash in on his | offensive strength by moving Kemp- ton to one of the halfbacks. ‘The change was considered advisable be- La Roohe displayed early promise of developing into @ rattling | present Kempton is no novice running an He was quarterback on his}, Ent good quarter, committed many In last week’ despite the fact that ing adversary by the choice of pla: works januned of the numerous and cropped up during the battle. Yale from With Kempton at according N murked quarter mivre pep into speedy runner, was brought up frou ihe scrub squad and put in Kemp- tear, ow improveu ingpires his Hav plays. en, nt, tons place at halfback, Dartmouth's Mountain play elovens that ules. bot tests this N boy tussle sh season, ave the me #0 bas ‘The men and gets Lay, a big, with game, however, he rors, He returned unts poorly, giving Yale only an pen chance’ on exchange of kicks French, Blue booter, outdisianced hin kick- any yards, La Roche badly the New Haven bunch never took advantage opportunities — that helm the to reports shown new Cornell Saturday at the Polo Grounds will be the first time in five years the Green played Dartmouth teams, while compelled to many games away from New Hampshire home, have always attained @ high standard, The Green finally b powerful h Harvard and Princeton plucked Dartmouth from their sched~ Dartmouth hag won all its con- beating Spring- the in here. their n Was Shifted EVENING WORLD'S Mrs. R. Percy Thompson, secretary of the Women's Metropolitan Golf Asso clation, announced jast night that the Arcola Country Club will stage an spon tournament for the fair golfers on Fri day. The competition will be an eighteen-hole sweepstakes handicap, yen to all metropolitan players. Amoug th declared Uh Ol con B bery, Kate ‘laintield ce. B. Du Bols of Raritan Vailey, and possibly Miss Kosamund Sherwood, who led the field in the recent one-ds tournament at the Upper Montclair Country Clul Mra. A. Elliott Ranney and Lyle W. Mahan are in the title round of the Weat Side Tennis Club mixed doubles cham- plonahip. d to th Cnal at the expense of ‘6. Franklin Mal- lory (Miss Molla Bjuratedt) and Juilan 8" Myrick after a lose match that pro- vid periods of sparkling tennis. ‘he score was 7—5, 6-3. Hoth women played to form and, If anything, were Cal upon for greater effort than the whom they frequently outmanoeuvres 4 to-day for the National how In Madison Square Garden, 17. A sum equ receipts from all ho ha inten fee Loui olfer; Mine Mr Horee which opens on Nov, to the entire gross Army this year, and Indications point togrowing Interest-in this annual fix= ture. More than 1,100 horses were en- tered inst your, and adyance nomin tions point to an even higher number this searon, Benny Geiser, leading batsman of tl Shipyards’ League as « member of the Downey Yard team of Staten Island, ‘an signed yesterday to piay for the Yan. kees, according to announcement from offices. Geiser batted 431 in gue. He ts twenty-three years ¢ plays the outfeld generally, but filled in at pitching and in- Freadie Welsh, former lightweight champion of the world, was discharged by Magistrate Robert C. Ten Eyck in the West Side Court yesterday when Harry Pollok failed to appear to pr: a charge of mayhem. Welsh was ar- Feated ‘on ‘Oct. 14 after an altercation with Pollok, ¢uring which It * charged that Welsh had bitten off part of the latter's ear. NEW BRUNSWICK, N, J., Oct, 22.— Rudge Garrett, all-America guard tn < Own SPORT HISTORY )| Showing Extraordinary Pep|| sources will be given to the Salvation | a bad Idea for every other association [Credited to the rider who gets home fore he entered the service, has tren Pelected captain. of the Teutsera football team in-place of Frank Kelly, who loft Rutgers and entered Yale Inst week. Charley Rrickley is on the job now mbridge, instructing Harvard ‘« how. to perform with their toes, Soon they'll be sending out re- ports from Cambridec that @ Crimson frop kicker Is shooting the ball over the bars a mile away. —>———_ M’BAIN UMPIRED RECORD NUMBER OF A. E. F. GAMES. Richard L. McBa'n, former sem|-pro- fensional ball player up New England way, came home yesterday from France pe Massachusetts AgEle8| With the reputation of being one umpire Does sad a Ree ‘\who managed to stand the gaff from Dartmouth eleven which will be|some 100,000 doughboy fans in the picked to oppose Cornell will average] A, EB, F, McBain, who went oversens 170 pounds. Included in this}for the Knights of Columbus, umpired r on will be men in preparatory sck in ‘the various 8 teams of the| good measure, which is a record for Nation’s Artny and Navy forces, sold'er games in France. Jackson panel, quarterbass, oi Secretary McBain started the season Gantelh, RAs al Med May 8 with the Diamond Division ~ hs cg on May 5 w ol a sere Manet R2| th) at Mondort-le-Baina, in the Grand early as those preparatory school|Duchy of Luxembourg. He officiated days he was looked upon as a future] with the try-outs until the divis onal all-American quartersaok > Daring team was formed and went on tour all ‘his first and only season of college 1 | through Germany. Many other umpires {football prior to this year, Cann . apes attracted much attention by his had likewise started out, but proverbl- leralship and remarkable broken field ally speaking, “many were calle yu who ha running. keot Boston, brothers in the Yale-Princeton ing almost a certa Roper has made a Mike Callahan, During spectators every minute of the service games in some twenty-five brether Captain, the war Cannell | piloted the champlonship team of the First Naval District, and with Eddie Casey of Harvard as running mate. thrilled for themselves and college and through no less than 125 baseball games and several double-headers thrown in for few were chosen.” Me’! be one of the few chosen, mained alone because howls of khaki-clad fans made all the others “haul tal to the rear.” After MeBain had got through Ger- many he was picked to umpire the oM- cial divisional series at Pershing Sta- and then re- in proved to the jibes and Copyright, 1 by the Press Publiehing Co. WE MAN READ SOON THAT “Jack MSQUUIFFE KNOCKED OUT BENNY LEONARD In 4 ROUNDS LAST MIGHT IN JERSEN CITY (The New York Evening World.) TAKke THE POOR HICK OUT, Horses and Jockeys Too As Yonkers Nears Wind-Up Offer of Prize to Leading Jockey Has Stirred Riders to Best Efforts. RACING SELECTIONS. és YONKERS. ‘irst Race — naa ae Swirl, May Alley, Second Race—Thunderbird, Shen- andoah, Bright Gold. in in By Vincent Treanor. Third Race— Whimsy, Alvord, LTHOUGH favorites have been] Poilu, : none too successful during the a, Race — Pickwick, Ultima Yonkers meeting, the racing at sy Rbbied Mr. Butlet’s track from the stand-| pith Rece— Paddy, Hindocstan, Point of competition has been more Sixth Race—War Machine, Gex, spirited than at any time since the| Bettie Bluft, Vv. T. o., close at Aqueduct, Horses seem to have acquired an oxtraordinary amount of “pep,” as if they were in- terested in closing the season with a LAUREL, First Race — Bally Connell, Le Dinosure, Musket. Second Race—New Haven, Smith- b field, Mel hi ang, and the jockeys too are putting teresa! in t “A Rice . Rae, skill and horsomanship into their! epi Race Rapid Day, Dr ja rides, the like of which has not been; — Fourth Race—Kinnoul, Constancy, | te seen in a long time. The offer of a} lft entry, roun fold stop-watch by the association to] pdyi'th Race—Sunbriar, Billy Kelly, | ta the leading jockey of the meeting, on @ point basis, may be responsible for this and if this be true it wouldn't be Race —Out the Way, The Decision, Sinn Feiner, - enth Race—Frogtown, Tie Pin, si Little Cottage. ton tg do the same thing, changing the - prize to a trophy or a purse. The riders certainly have been stirred up at Yonkers and as a result finishes are hard fought in nearly every race, If a ’boy cany land in front, he tries to be second, third or even fourth, for there 18 one point those now tn training he is making room for the new crop, some of which are by the good horse Pebbles, Old Rosebud won in something like his old-time style when he galloped home in the Sir Archy Highweight Handicap. He came from behind the ce of Bill McCloy and drew out to win with something to spare, This score made it a dovble for Frank Weir, for he won the opening event with his Jack Atkins filly, Sister Helene, upsetting such tips as Sand Bed, Foreclosure, Bright Gold and Game Chick. att new are behind the third horse. At present Kummer and Butwell are having a head-and-head = struggle, , Kummer leading his old rival by two points after the last race yesterday. Kum- mer earned five points by getting Peerless One home, while Butwell added six to his score with his sec- onds on Ira Wilson and Woodtrap. But for the reappearance of “Buddy” wi mK cu Bright Gold didn’t run her race in the opening two-year-old scramble. To begin with she was a bit unruly at the post and the starter’s assistants swinging her round and round by the head didn’t meet > improve her post man- Enaor, Jimmy would have had the|hners, “Hutwell also beat her over mount on Hannibal, which would|the head to make her mind, When|™ have put him In the lead. So far the meeting has been a big success, Big crowds have turned out dally, not being kept away even by the few rainy days of last week. As we sald before, while favorites have not won as often as they might have done, well-played borses have come down in front often enough to keep the regulars in good humor, while in many cases false choices haven't run to expectations, she got off she was all tangled up and never did get a real good racing posi- tion until well into the stretch and then It was too late, box, al boxin Jere: this Jack Mount is a wonderfully im- proved selling plater. When Jerry Carroll had him he was about the worst of no-accounts and couldn't even beat a fat man running, He has won three races in a row now and unless he goes back very sud- denly is worthy of consideration in almost any selling company, What do you think of old Pa Daly winning another race with Peerless One, the second the four-year-old gelding has won within three days. R. T. Wilson’s Hannibal is a real nice horse just now, Not because of stretch and then put the Daly horse under a most vigorous drive, which aroused Peerless One to his best der weak handling the gelding might have stopped at the eighth pole. is still painted up in iodine. Huck hod a wager on Questionnaire last week at 1 to 3, and when the horse broke down, Buck went with him, Smelling salts and something tunit Mr. Butler is going to get rid of the ordinary lot of horses which have been carrying his colors from time to time this season. Included in the lot which will go at aution at the Yonkers track at noon to-morrow ts Bally, the Grand Stand Commissioner, —_—_ pity ie Lynch-Burman Go. | and PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 22.-—For the first time in years the National A, C, dium, when the Le Mans nine copped which once beat Luculllte and only recently made a show of the Realiza- of this elty 1s all sold out almost a permitted at Bridgeport ton, Pittsfield, Mass. Mass., Poughkeepsie, Newburgh, Syr- acuse, Binghamton, Buffalo, Albany, Elmira, Providene Mass., ter and should be kept bi Joe McNulty, the fight promoter of Perth Am ing shows in the future amd which will segom- Johny On sccount of Frank Moran, the hearywetaht, dewartiug more time in which to get into condi round bout between Moran and Geonte Ashe of Vhiladelpbia which was billed to be foubt at Duguewae Ganten in lies deer: yortponed until Oct Promoter Burdick and MacKay of the Sodrte- bouts bat "hey Clay Turns Charley Weinert, and Johnny Murray will take on Vawey Jobson of Trenton, N, J. wight of Ort, 81, Irish Patwey Cli matched to fight vering A, ©, of Detroit, Matchmaker Barbour is anxious to get Cline to ls perfectly willing to accept the conte the chances are thaa Cline will meet one of the two te be has booked four eight-round bouts for thet occasion which ought to pack every goat in the armory, The Crows-Retner and Qoogan- Whit bouts will most likely attract the bigger portion of the ‘crowd, as all four fighter axe good draw. ing cards, Pal Moore, the Memphis bantamweight, Jersey City boxing fapa will have an oppor Benny Valger pion, and deermine whether most logical coutender to take the measure of stronger were needed to resuscitate) Johne mory A. A, bel forth last winter, His ponent will be none other than Red Cap Wilso A bard bitting Mghtweight, ¥bo baile from Syra. HE BEvVeNING WUKLD, whuvwnouvaY, OCTOBER 22, 1919, BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW .YORK IEF SMITH WINS Fistic News and Gossip By John Pollock Detroit, and with boxing legalised the State of Michigan and also Conn, Bos- New Bedford, R. L, Lawrence, Pittsburgh, Akron, O., Canton, Columbus, O., Baltimore, Lancas. other places; the fighters of N. J, has just signed @ tease on a bailding hat town where he expects to hold his box- '¢ over 5.000 persane, For hia opening @hor row night, Joe has arranged three elght J bouts, Kid Potty meets Joe Dillon, Jor tackles Bat Stanzo and “Zulu Kid" faces Howard, . H for his first contest in over a year, the ten- Pittsburgh to-morrow nisht, 0, Clu of Newark, N. J., hare made another tm the date for thelr next boxing show ve Fore, Regiment Armory in that sity, ‘The date ie Nov, 4 (election night), While no been arranged aa yet, it is almost « thing that Willie Jackson will meet Tommy , the Indian, will take on tari ‘Mlle Jackson, who scored his fifth vietory in sion on Monday night by ontpointing Johnny the Jersey City lightweight, In @ six: at the Olympic A, A, of Philadelobia day with his where he ie echeduled to Johnny Dundee ‘in « ten-round boat on the the local fighter, may be ther Joe Welling oF Ritchie the Milwaukee battler, at the Wol Mich,, on Nov, 19 ell, das Patses’ manager, Billy Newman, of 66 though Dave Drisco!l lost money on his fit ng show at the Fourth Regiment Armory in y City on Monday night, he expecta to got back, and considerably more, on Oct, 31 a oy, en ft Like luis victory of last Saturday, yes. | his race yesterday, for he beat noth- | pooked for two fights, On Ovt, 81 he will olasb torday’s was popular, and mmer| ing, but because of his easy style of with Pauwey Johneon of Trenton, N, J., for oigh gave Peerless One the same kind of |golng to the front and galloping all| unde at tho Arena A, C, of Jersey City, and ov @ million dollar ride. Kummer|the way in the good time of 1.45 4-5:|Nov, & be will journey to Detroit, Mich, where couldn't have ridden with more skill | His 125 pounds {mpost didn't seem tO] pe will take ou Jabes White, the Albany (N, and earnestness if the race had oeen | bother him at all. Dantamwelght, at the big show Detwoea bantam: a Brooklyn Handicap. He lay behind . weighta which will be staged by Billy MeCarney the pace of Bar One until well into the Buck, “the Mayor of 14th|a the Auditorium there ty to-morrow night to witness in action the French featherweight char or not be f# the Lian ht crown thereby aunesing the feather. the world, Benny will be the attraction ity A. 0, of Jerey Yocated at Grand View Hall, Ogden Avenue Franklin Street, the place where the Ar os tion winner, Over There. Turf and | wee dvance for re | me pase! The possibility of the two Callahan |the Bennant, He was a0 good tho army Kiesta are both. ready to wink while | mee a teh for a EDL There] wviiie yan, the aame welterweight of New z sent him down to Té-sur-tille, where the 5 ready | ; isn't a ticket to be had for the Joe 4 ‘dered i laying opposite each other |sent him down, to a-nuruite, where the Parable, Short Change, Teacher's Pet, |rynch-Joe Burman bout, which takes| Brusett N- #, who was omsldcred © promis me ta becom. | {same The prisoners picked McBain Track Star and others which will be | Men) Ot glen Dbk WRN MMOS ling vmelter”” o fom poem ago bat mo Ree not now, Coach |Mut "tor a “regular umpire, and he had offered are all promising. Spur will |Place Here Saturday night. | This te a |iough in eome time, wil get beck into the game Kular centre of |yery little trouble, After Stockade No, 3 be ret ined by Mr. Butler, for senti- | {re Yordered ‘on th regent. parte Bey. again on Ost, 28, He will go agains Joe who ts younger and|took the army prisoners’ pennant. the mental reasons, as long as the good jofa; clubs are also bidding for a bout Hebien of Berth Amber. K. 2. pounds lighter than |"Casey™ umpire took count of his work old horse lives. Mr, Butler will have petween Pal Moore and Lynch, the Nat CE i EE Mike, the Yale centre and and found he had 125 Kames and some about a dozen two-year-olds in train= tional already having offered. $2,800 i double-b is credit, ing next spring, and in Glaposing of spiace the ‘ bs , cue, readi right ‘or: teft hand u to Morningstar's ‘generally formance. Ko) Yamada, the Japanese, gained vivtory over the v son in the fourth t with ap nant tinued his un Wike ssoete 04 nue ete th of the tourn: was as varied as By Thornton Fisher DECISIVELY OVER FRANK CARBONE International Middleweight Star Gives Remarkable Exhibition of Boxing at Bayonne Club. After seeing Jeff Smith in action one doesn't wonder that all the star middieweights are now sidestepping matches with him, as at the Bayonne A.\ A. last night he gave one of the best exhibitions of the manly art seon in these parts in many a day. Smith has everything—and last night he hit the rugged Italian with everything, but the latter, who is one of the most rugged and game boxers in the bust« ness, withstood the terrific bombard« ment of punches without Minching, It was not the fact that he adminia. tered an artistic beating to Carbone that impressed the spectators, but it was the manner in which he did tt, Jeff is a two-handed fighter, which is an unsusal accomplishment for @ boxer nowadays. He was full of ao~ tion every second he was in the ring, delivering many telling punches, His footwork was a revelation, Carbone received dozens of wallope straight on the chin, and be frequent- ly smiled back. Smith has seldom been seen at local clubs in recent years. He has Been abroad and has beaten the champion of every foreign country, including a knockout in five rounds over the late Les Darcy and a twenty-round draw with Georges Carpentier, although not one of the thirty-three papers in Paris gave him worse than a draw, Jeff sure looked every inch a cham« pion last night. In the semi-final of st: Frankie Jerome, a promising Bronx bantam, defeated Frankie Arra all the way. Welker Cochran’s Playing Feature of 18.2 Tourney —_———— There should be plenty of boxing all|Michigan Lad’s Game Against over the country this winter, as new boxing clubs are being organised in nearly every city where the sport is allowed to be carried on. Already two clubs are in Jersey City, four at New- ark, N, J., three in Philadelphia, fout Morningstar More Than Hoppe’s Against Yamada. Brilliant Playing ELKER Cochran redeemed himself by a performance that parallelled with that of Willie Hoppe by winning the fifth game of the American National 18.2 balk ine billiard championship tour- fhament. The young Michigan master the cue outplayed Ora Morning- star with surprising ease, the fina! tally of their encounter on the table the Grand Ballroom of the Hote! Astor being 400 to 128. Cochran's uency of stroke, his management of the ivory spheres at miiiantly varied caroms, found its alge in ab average that duplicated of Hoppe for the opening con- It was 444-9. Seven of Cooh- innings produced double Gmures, best efforts in this respect were Morningstar found the orbs re bellious to his manipulation and his most remunerative inning produced @ run of 56 while his other good run ‘3 two-handed wielding of the i hooting with either the eat of the big’ clusters. ran played the b: ushion caroms. His wu: masse was good and at one layed four consecutive masses in contrast y respe o Geor, ch oO} ries. Except for the earlier in: is eompetition sank to amateur- gcution. The final score was 400 te, winne:’s average being 13 ‘and his runs 60, 60 and 41. in the 0 jon. The son of the old Wizard finished his ateing average of 20 and high runs his first impressive cluste: and 36. ton'a Dest piece or cu ulation added 186 to his strin; efea ne crow ame, the nev= His billiards bits roRress Aelnning the night sunshiny nursing, empestuous cushion’ shots, until BILLIARD, STANDING. One tne whole, Hoppe did not mpressively as on the opening the series. The thing he did be: hi lity to overcome 4d}. of HI ave! was and his hich 115 (unfinished) and 72, Yamad run was 49, ‘There were many Japanese outplayed Koji Yamada 400 to 1: ni spectators as Yamada led off citer Winning the bank. He made a brave beginning. It waa not until his thir turn at the table that Hoppe really into action to check his opponent. inning netted Hoppe 133 of as led billiards as he has ever compiled in @ championship contest. ———___. De Wins Over Britt. PATERSON, N. J., Oct. 22.—Billy De Foe of Providence beat Frankie “Young” Britt in an eight-round bout at the Lyceum A. C. last night, Brit went to the floor tn the fourth roum from a right hook to the ear and tool the count of four, A cut was open under his right eye in the sixth from which the blood streamed, De Foo tried hard to land a knockout in the last two rounds, but Britt, although tired, fought back gamely. Match: maker Levigne signed De Foe up aft the bout to box Tommy Toohey h in three week: eae “|{ LAST 3 DAYS EMPIRE CITY RACES (TONKERS & MT. VERNON) TO-MORROW (TLURS.) $2,500 Autumn Days $1,000 Black Maria 4 Other Spirited Contests, rite acces & peclal Ha leaves’ Grand sre Per Harlem Hy sion, at rh \ 5, jeunes Wey ns Sat. All yo reactied via La Grand Stand, HERG burr-will ru le 50y 10-%6.00 Display and Demonstratie ° 4 ball dog get tired, but “cae SHE i ion This Week at “Chain Shirt Shops’ jtores Everywhere Whe'esale Distributor: Jobe $, fampeon & Son, 2 East 23rd St., N.Y, sometimes, and per pair 5! oe.