The evening world. Newspaper, June 6, 1921, Page 12

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| | . of fighting action came to him natu- 12 CARPENTIER H FRENCHMAN MAY SPRING BG SURPRISE IN BOUT FOR HEAVYWEIGHT TILE La Savate Exercises Helped Georges Develop Fast Foot- work—Jim Jeffries and Tommy Ryan Figure Foreign Boxer Has Good Chance to Win Crown, but Billy Papke, Frank Kiaus and Bombardier Wells; Who Have Battled Contender, Can See Nothing but a Victory for American Pugilist. vy M French boy with plastered hair and large white teeth that show up well with bis smile, who won't feel at home at all meeting a roygh guy like Jack Dempsey in a ring. But dou't waste too much sympathy on. Carpentier. ‘This Md bas had more fighting experience than Dempsey ever dreamed of. Dempsey 1s the novice {n this embroglio. He's going to be in luck {f the Frenchman doesn pull something new on him and at least come near slapping lim for a goal, Georges looks like a movie hero,@—————__________.____ and be does his hair up in a net while he’s putting on his dress shirt, but be wos born to fight and has been at it ever since. He started when wbout ten years od, Descamps, his present manager, beginning to teach him acrobatics, savate, fencing and boxing. Georges was a good pupil, When he was twelve he won the savate champlon- ship of Northern France in what compares to the featherweight class in boxing. He beat about twenty full grown men. A year later he won tho vational championsh!p in savate, beat~ ing sixteen contenders ‘This savate is the old French style of fighting, and jt makes London prise ring slugging look like a Quaker prayer meeting. It's done with fight- ing gloves on tite hands and ordinary boxing shoes onthe feet, and is a combination of hitting-and kicking, bet mostly kicking. The kicks are delivered anywhere from the ankle to the ears. ‘There are more different kicks than 4 Missouri mule ever invented, and any kick that isn't parried or avoided is likely to fracture some part of the recipient's anatomy. Descamps says Carpentier was one of the loveliest and most scientific kickers he ever sw. Georges could tand @ one-two kick so neatly that the victim mever knew for a week afterward whether he'd been kicked | or struck by lightning. ALL-ROUND ATHLETE. savate, champion, Georges had | a aon start when he began boxing, at thirteen. The savate exercises gave him wonderful footwork and | jdement in avolding punches and de- | ter In 1912)—Dempsey ‘should win livering counters. They developed him | With a K. O. in four or five rounds, from the waist down, while the boxing |Carpentier will be too bury dodging developed him above the wajst, so the champlon's shifty wallops to set that to-day he is one of the most |hlmself for a dangerous punch, He! symmetrically put up men that ever|has Improved his defense since 1! wore a glove. He has no weak points. | fought him, but isn’t rugged enough | Tn the French Army, games Georges | to take Jack's body punches, | was a champion at spwinting and high | Bugene Corri (the famous English | jumping. He could tumble, perform | referee)—I have not seen Dempsey, on @ bar or trapeze, box, kick or|but my American friends say he has fence with any one, and he was @|n clinker of a punch and {s strong crack football player. and fast, brainy and clean living. I Carpentier's footwork has # catlike |ehan't be surprised whoever wink” quality that was developed by savate.| Bombardier Welle (rs 5 died the Japanese art of jiu- (English cham- He st pen ina |Dlon twice knocked out by Georges)— jitsu while In the army, Every k: T think the winner wilt’ te te eos who gets in tho first effective punch, U favor De: within seven rounds, 1° “Nou'd win Willle Ritchie—Carpentier will give Dempsey a hard fight, but nine times out of ten you win when y, gut of ten you pick the (Copyright, 1621, try Robert Bigren.) ~~. Leo Lucke Sure To Win Eastern Bowling Title Eight days’ more play and the 1921 astern Individual bowling cham- Pionship will end. Leo Lucke, Grand Central Bowling Academy's repre- sentative, is the champion of the season. Wp to date Lucke has won nineteen out of the twenty-four gaines rolled. He has two more series | to roll. To-night he mgets Pump at | the Grand Central Alleys, Brooklyn, | where he {6 practically unbeatable, | and on Tuesday evening he bowis| Robert Edgren. ANY people in this@ountry picture Georges Carpentier as a nice est heavyweight in inany years, but even though it's only an outalde chance—all the chance any man can expect im inceting a champlon—he has & possible chance to win, It may not look that way after the fight, lt Dempsey manages to get over one of his crushers in an early round But, on the other hand, if Carpentier hits Dempsey the way ho has been hitting other big fellows, the world Is Boing to wonder why it overlooked a be Here are a few opinions from men who ought to know something about @ fight Jam Dempsty this fight. Joffries—I know how good but there are two men in| No man ever came to the | top like Carpentier without having | the goods. It's foolish to say that he hasn't a chance to beat Jack, and [! think Jack knows It and is preparing for a hard fight Billy Papke-~Nothing to It. Demp- sey will win as soon as he lands a hard one, and he'll hit the Fren¢hman when he gets ready. 1 hit Carpentier whenever 1 wanted to, and I wasn't any Dempsey. | Tommy Ryan—After this fight, peo- ble who think Dempsey's a cinch are | going to wonder how they were so blind, The Frenchman has more cx, berlence, is a better boxer, has a bet. ter head, can hit just as hard, is| faster, and has all the stuff of ‘the best old-timers. I saw Dempsey lick | Willard. He can beat these big guys, | but he's going to get a trimming thls time that will surprise the whole world. | Tom Sharkey—Nothing (o it but Dempsey. He's got a good old Irish name and he fights like I used to. He'll put the Frenchie out in a punch Bill Brennan—Dempsey for me. | They don't make ‘em tough enough in Europe for that baby. Krank Klaus (who fought Carpen- we. iy, Sut he was always a clot at t ‘When he began boxing, at thirteen, Carpentier started a career hardly less sensational than’ Dempsey’s. He knocked out English char&pions in every class as he grew up, and it is well known that the English cham- pions in the smaller classes are first class fighting men. As Georges grew bigger, he knocked ‘em out quicker. "The English heavyweights, Wells and Beckett, lasted less than a minute each, Georges fought a lot of good Amer!- cans who went to France for easy pleking, and knocked several of them out. He was beaten by Papke, Klaus and Jeanette, and he learned so much in these fights that he improved like a streak after each one. When he lost to Papke and Klaus he was only a boy of eighteen, and they were American champions, outweighing him several pounds, and were grown men with muoh ring experience: The following year Carpentier fought | ten battles, won two decisions and | ianded eight knockouts. At this time | he was growing fast and didn't have | near the strength he has developed since, From thirteen to twenty-seven, his present age, Carpentier has done 3 nothing but fight. He had four years | Pump at the Fordham Arcade alleys, of war, and although the was in the| Bronx. Should he lose both series thick of the terrific fighting at Ver- | he will still have enough games to his dun, where he was twice deoorated | credit to insure him tho title, for heroic exploits, he came out with! Next to Lucke is Glenn Riddell, unshaken nerves and the same mild | who represents the Metropolitan al- expression and pleasing smile he) leys, Manhattan. nnn has won six- | wears whether cracking some one on | teen out of twenty-four games, Fol- | the chin or machine-gunning a Ger- | lowing Riddell Peters, who rep- | man battery from the air. |resents Schumacher’s Broadway al- | Dempsey ’s Eye Cut Open On Account of Injury Jack geet ‘rushed a@ross the | much | madman, THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JUNE 6, 1921. AS MORE RING EXPERIENC E THA DEMPSEY! LEONARD-KANSAS CHAMPIONSHIP TO-NIGHT:- Copyright, 1921, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening Word). HIDDEN UNDER. A BUSHEL By a Sparring Partner tect hie ears, It was his mouth that yesterday, pempeey4 vicious rans, ; Swipes brought the blood trickling from Won't Box for the Next | Buskes lips. Jack's punches rated on : that headgear, so ofven that the con- Few Days | trivance was forever shifting, covering Sen, Burke's eyes and leaving him open to —- |.complete extermination. When Burl ay |found that his vision waa obstructed ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, Ju | Would beat a hnnty ‘retreat, pluc 7 gc ree er | frantically af 0 ending gear in an After clouting three of his sparring) efor to shift it so that he at least could partners if a manner that made on-| get a ur ek at the nteelsnated | ane lookers think fle was under the 1s montis, whlig’op the run, tor there ve pSSi! hat pitted) ne hatting in Dempsey. le KOK ve pee ie vee to teunds of three minutes’ duration, the against him, mpsey @gme Lo’ sixth and last with Willams beinm cut the tn two in order to allow poor Larry to George was a sudden hi ‘ when In two Jn order 29 allow peor f head of Larry Wiiliams, one of his "Gr Course there was nothing of re- sparring partners, bumped against venge in Dempsey’s smashing chase of Williams, He was not incensed because | of the accident that, caused the camp handlers to almost faint. Jack O'Brien remarked that he was Nt \ very much Impreased with the seriou ‘Teddy Hayes, Dempsey's tra Dempsey’s preperation of f ing and stopped } for these trlaf bouts, "He govs about it Just as if he was about to enter the bout in order to sponge the eye, the ring for a real fighi fa Jack. “It | o- Dempsey's surprise, who nly goes to show that’ he is in deadly | 10 = DAEOREY 2 SUP earnest about this fight. Well, he bis | his tender left eyebrow and reopened a cut that the champion had received from Jamaica Kid at Toledc didn’t take the cut seriously. Afier to be. There is no questioning the‘ab!!. looking the cut over, it was thought ty of Carpentier, 1 watched the French. man for several days, and he as advisable to have it stitched. A. Qungeroue right hand, He uses It with local doctor was called In and the job ® sort of one-two combination—that ts, | left \t. ar was soon performed. Jack O'Brien! uw sruh to coneiny Dy sient —en me that no man insisted that the champion should do, ham a right to hold him cheaply. | V'r no boxing for a few days. Kearns {ny "tho m he ie meeting. Tthing Jack agreed with bim, saying the sparring in i ‘condition. partners will have a brief period of rest Every man who faced Dempsey got ao unmerciful clouting, Marty | Burke, Jack Renault and Williams! being the sufferers. Dempsey was a | He drove his helpmates | before him in a terrific onslaught. Yesterday he had been charitable, bit to-day be must have pictured | each of them ‘as Mons. Georges. Renault, a big Canadian heavy- weight, second on the slaughter list, got the worst hitting. He was prac- | tically out on his feet three times in two rounds, He tried to fight Demp- sey off, and once in the second round he fell into the arms of Teddy Hayes, who Was ucting as referee and time- keeper, and would have gone to the floor jad not Hayes propped him up. As it was, he was xo atiffened from the effects of the punches that he could not lift his arma for several seconds. Dempsry bunnyhugged him for « while to let the big chap come to. This respite was short ever, for an soon as I Renault could at | another attack oe * Fiow Newton Mair, 21-Year-| Old Shackamaxon Star, | Surprised Many With De- cisive Victory for, Jersey State Title. Newton Mair galloped off with the Jersey State golf title like @ race horse that’s been trained in secret. Jerry Travers and Bill Reekie, the former Sthte champion, had played and been beaten by the youngster out at his home course at Shackamaxon, and they knew what fine shots he had in his bag. But the big gallery | that tramped over the Canoe Brook } ks Saturday watching the 36-hole between young Matr and J. EB. ved, how- empsey saw that wast block he began that left the star Bpartun whirly-gigging in weird fash jaw ton. A right-hand. crack as final time was ca ault again and Dempsey cracked the big fellow a hen slapped hin on the n the ed stil re. ou and t approval Dempsey's left was terror to-4 was hooking in murderous fashi it and it was one of these hooks to the body that almost brought Renault down. "Dempsey repeatedly changed the style of his left delly One time ft would be a lopg, sweeping hook, again he would rip it up in w terrify: 1 mer cut, but the best punch of all left hook inside from a position, It was damaging ana e partners scurried to avoid It if Burke again wore his headgear to pro- fina Hale were like a pack of innocents. Hale the previous day defeated Trav- ers and Reekie, and the crowd | couldn't figure how Hale could lose to au twenty-one-year-old unknown. But Mair showed ‘em, His driving Bympathy extended to Carpentier | leys, Brooklyn; Lindsey, of the Berg- | Leelom te Get Credit for Mile Re- because he looks so young and inno-| man Bros.’ alleys; Falcaro, of the Iny Record, cent to go up against a tough bird| Bronx Park Casino drives; Rediling, | LPHIA, June 6 Uke our Jack ts all w&sted. Under | of the Pastime; one- his smile Carpentier has as steady a, man; Senato TH LAD! “The new mile relay, Saturday Heine, of the Dyck-| world's record for t the | of University; fighting heart and as keen a fighting | Jarrett, of the White Elephant; Pump, |e*hished at Franklin Wield Sa brain as ever drove a winning punch | of the Fordham Ar Bret accenn ce A eatasehaate herr sbrough a sure opening the Lenox; D or of the St | Unyvers: o on A student, oush a Sure PEON | Rie abby Recta or une Heit | wilt beycheditea tothe Amepiean gin i LeRNAncade, REA Gani bt thet Ail four men are members of Ben Carpentier, for all his varied fight- { tS) Franklin Post No. 405 of the Legion, img, basn't 8 scar execpt. where aj o™t Academy. [ins Ehorontional anemia, eeast when 5 r |the {ateruational one-mile relay. when German machine gun bullet grazed | | they ellpped 12-5 acconda trem the pre his instep. Ears, nose, brows, lips are | S87**"* oueees Depart fer) vious record of 3.1% made in 191s" by stil] as mature made them, That's a| _ gure sign that he knows his trade. CAMBRIDGE, Mass,, June 6.-~The Among the greatest fighters I re- |Harveard varsity, junior and freshman member, off-hand, who were un-|crews, with elght substitutes, left yea- marked after years of hard fighting |terday for Ned Top, Conn, to finish tt Kaufman, Lockwood, Meredith, niso of the and of asylvanta University English Beat tri om the Soccer were Torry McGovern, Frank Erne, | traini 0 = Weld. Bo Fitzsimmons, Tommy Ryan, Kid |Thames on June see NTE FMC OM the) engtand defeated Ireland by the acore McKoy, Kid Lavigne, Joe Gana, Kid | The substitutes, four freshmen and|of 2 goals to 1 In the replay of the in- Wiliams, Johnny Coulon, Stanley |four varsity oarsmen, will add an ad-| ternational match at New York Oval Ketohel, ‘Tommy West, Johnny Kil. |{itional race to the programme by Fr fore crowd of 3,000 enthusiasts yes- bane, Packy McFarland and Willie | rel They knew their trade, like Jing against a similar Yale comb on, terday afternoon, with the resu’t that England will be matohed against Scot- was very long, although uncertain, His irons were ngly played with the crispness that is best seen in professionals’ work, and his putts always ran up to the cup, The New Jersey champion has the shots and the necessary nerve to make fem. In the opening round against Haie| the Shackamaxon youth, after gain. | ing an early lead, lost two holes and saw the matoh squared at the fifth, but instead of becoming unsteady he | confidently set out and captured the | next five holes. Hale never recov- ered from this flash, Mair, now twenty-one, learned his gaine while a caddie at the nine-hole Hydewvod oourse at Plainfield. He was invited to join Shackamaxon a year ago and soon won the club championship, The Joreey State chumplonship last week was Mair’s {first t nament away from home. Encouraged by his victory LL TO-DAY, ¥ * land in the fina! next Sunday on thi Yankese ve Bt boys Ade” | game “i er. BAS Carpentier is going tp box the great- aroun: ground. If Mair had his wish he wonlt i best of the training t tracks At Jamaica. Nohant, .50, 1.16 3-5, 1 Lady Gertrude, 1.17. Orleans Girl, .49 1.05 Stamp, .49. Humanitarium, .52, 1.06. Pierr! Que Roul and Sodona, 1,05 1-8. Velentia and Radiola, Paria, 1.521 Moody and Arrarat, « Chateau-Thierry, @ | Kallala, .36. Princess Pandora and Lady Delhi Night Raider, 492-6, 1.15 3-5, 14 Vian, .53 Staunch, .51 8-6, 1.17 3-5. Runniol, .49, 1.02. Mataie, .54, Dunsandel, 1.18 3-5 Blue Bells, .38, Black Thong, Little Patsy, .40. Fort Churchill, .49, 1.02 Romany, 1 Rummel, Rustler, Beckna, .50 3-6 ‘Transient, .38 1-5. Carline 48 3-5. Sea Mimic, .50 2-6. ound Robin, .53. Clarice 188 26 Colle, Eternal, 1.61, Wellfinder, Juno, menelta, .49 2-3. Prank Waters, .49 3-6, 1.15 3 This Young Champion Will Seek More Golf Honors in “‘Met.’’ Meet 322227" eee ee Cc. MAIR... win aay sional, 52 2-5, Nimble 87 8-5, > 1.208-5., BAL 4-8 “- ckamaxon youth expects to be u|swing golf clubs all the time. | post entry for the metropolitan meet,|mow he is undecided whether to re- starting Wednesday at Garden City,.!main an amateur or turn profes. 1.21 Foot TRAINING TRIALS. Following are the most recent and and Cc. and Catherine Marrone, | March and Good Heart, .37 3-4. Balance and Car- Just a TITLE FOR ABILITY TO TAKE IT KANSAS 15 & SECOND EDITION OF BarriinG NELSON: / POOR RICHIE MITCHELL WAS THE STEPPING STONE , FOR ROCKT KANSAS CHANCE AT THE KNOCKED BENNY COWN FOR AN 8 “Count IN THE (SE RO. My STREET SHOES KANSAS KNOCKED MITCHELL KICKING IN LESS THAN @ ROUND- By Thornton Fisher KANSAS I$ MOST DANGEROUS BOXER ~ LEONARD HAS ME Buffalo Lightweight, Who Boxes Champion To-Night, 1 Is Rugged, Awkward, Gamé and a Good Hitter. By Alex. Sullivan. ENNY LEONARD, world's light- weight champion for the past four years, will meet to-night, in a twelve-round no-decision bout at Harrison, N. J, a lad, who on paper looks to be the most dangerous | Opponent that he has met in al! the | time he has been at the head of his division, Rooky Kansas, a veteran Buffalo lightweight, who has been doing his best work during the past | year, is the fighter who ts expected to make Benny extend himself further | than he has been extended previously, even by Richie Mitchel!, who, it will | be remembered, floored Benny for the count. Leonard, however, stopped | Mitchell in the sixth round. | Leonard is such a wonderful hitter, | there is no telling what he will do to | Kansas. Some say they don’t think , Benny has ever been really extended, | that he never tries to let himself out Hed th limit of his ability, contenting | Bimself with being just a step whead ,of his opponent all the time, 2 IT Took, BENIN LEONARD 6 WS, TOFNISH = HITCHELL-— AND RICE VL OONT THe For Made-Over Audacious ser: ie ie wie ee BY Mistake Crediting Jockey for Winning Suburban With Transformed Sprinter. NOTHER Suburban Handicap A has come and gone, Auda- cious, @ horse which, until last at least, occupied a place only the fringe of the stake class, Jumped to a ranking among the great thoroughbreds which have preceded him, in winning it. As the pet of the stable of the Schwartz Brothers since he was u two-year-old, Audactous's claim to turf fame was very slight. He won several good races among his own kind, near-stake horses, but never could he be accorded a position among the really great. The Schwartzes, with theaidof their sev- | eral trainers, resorted to every known means of turf doings to win a niche {in racing’s hall of fame for them- | selves and the horse, but they always |fell short of any extraordinary ac- jcomplishment, At the end of their | ambitions, late last fall, they decided ‘to sell the horse for what looked like | = good price to Mrs. Viaux, who, since | the sudden death of her husband, year on | | | By Vincent Treanor. adopted the name of the foreign stable, Audacious was turned over to trainer Sandy McNaughton and this spring has been converted into a pos- that those who trained him before didn't know their business, or does it make a wizard of Sandy McNaugh- ton? : “Audacious has started six times |thts season, He has won three races and been beaten three times. In his first two starts he finished behind two stablemates of Mad Hatter, which cannot be consideged in the same breath with that good runner, Krew- er, for instance, beat him four Jengths at Jamaica in a five and a balf furlong dash. Audacious ran | ¢wide" all the way in this race. In his next appearance the Suburhan |winner, with 116 pounds on his back, was tow-roped by the faint-hearted Dominque in a six furlong sprint. vidently he was being conditioned ientifically for future events by his astute trainer, for next time out he won very handily from Dream of the Valley. No great accomplishment, to be sure, but It showed that Audacious was jmproving. He next came out in the Metropolitan Handicap, and in this running prove he was a good horse by running second to Mad Hat- ‘ter, this race Audacious never ti Mad Hatter went and won allo to the front early without being let down. On performance, at a ten-pound difference in weight, the two couldn't be dragged together on any handicapping system, it would seem, ‘There were no Mad Hatters for Au- dacious to beat in his next outing, and in the Mineola he was made a second cheice to the speedy Bternal. What he did to Eternal and to time records is fresh in all turf followers’ minds. He ran the fastest competi- tive mile at Belmont Park, his 1.36 3-5 supplanling the mark of the illus- trious Man O' War an unusual performance, but it didn’t eo lish the fact that McNaughton had mado a route traveller out of the \heretofore regarded sprinter. In Saturday's Suburban the train- ing wisdom of McNaughton became painfully apparent to his rival train- ers, Audacious not only suddenly de- veloped into a distance horse but he administgred a crushing defeat to the best in training, including Mad Hat- |ter, the good horse who was never let down to beat him Metropolitan. As the say \ goes, tened the Rancocag star. | Uncanny Training Methods "Of McNaughton Responsible t's ss! ss wits {ie it was in him to give the horse a | has a similar ability, but we wouldn't Kansas stopped Richie Mitcheil ip licker time than did the New Yorke: and he wasn't knocked down eithe: tn his accomplishment of the feat. Kansas K. O.'d Richie in a round Jackson. At times he made Willie ‘look foolish—something | to the front, | Then take Willie's battles with “that's horse racing,” but at the same | Dundee—he always manages to hold time it is mystifying. Is it a tribute! pi, t it | his own or be just a trifle better than to the horse himeelf or to his trainer, /the Italian etar. On the other hant McNaughton? fe Dundee, in the many fights he had McNaughton, jubilant, over the winning-of eo time-honored| {y\.", teonard, had a fair division of a stake as the Suburban, dodges the praise, He attributes the victory tol enrguen these Renta gre eee ShO ide Elven Audacious by Clarence 8 .eteat chance with the lightweight “Didn't he ride a perfect race?” he | “MYmPlen. . y fans don't think Benny is the asks, The boy may have done so, but}, o0 it) wus threo wears pris ‘They say he has shown noticeable evidence of going back in the Charlle White, Joe Welling and Richie Mitchell fights. But one thing a fight fan mustn't forget—Benny has been a consistent winner—ne may look a little bad at times, but he always finishes in front, which after all, {s the main thing. Thero comes a time for every fighter to get whipped. They are all invincible until some one else comes along and topples them off thetr throne. In Kansas Benny ts mecting a rugged, awkward, hard-hitting and game fighter. His work is cut out for him. Both Behny and Kansas are in fine trim for to-night’s encounter, and tt should prove a bout brimful of ac ion. perfect ride in the Suburban, why wasn't jt in him to put up the same exhibition {n the Metropolitan? How- ever, that 1s an old story now. Kum- mer’e ride in the Suburban did seem perfect, but we think the running of the race itself made Kummer’s ex- hibition possible. We don’t think he is entitled to the credit of taking back off the pace at the far turn. He! simply couldn't help it. His horse was outrun then and Kummer had to accept the position he found himself| in when Sande rushed Mad Hatter up! past him and Dr. Clark and Sennings! Park crowded around Audacious. Luckily for Kummer and his mount, Dr. Clark and Sennings Park faltered from their carly running efforte and at the stretch turn Kummer found them removed from contention. He then had only Mad Hatter to beat, and the latter, after covering much the tage tn order to get to the front ee e race a Sreeaaen ee meek Rose No less than four sets of games were in front of Audacious, which the rac-| "ec St Macombs Dam Park yesterday ing huck of the contest, foreed into afternoon. The clubs holding the meets restraint when the others were run- | WeTe the Morningside A. C., the Pastime ning their heads off to get to the cor-|A- ©. the Glencoe A. ©. and the Boy eted clear sailing in front. Scouts of America. Is is our opinion that too much! Wiliam Toporcer, a brother of the praise 1a ghowered on jockeys who! St. Louis Cardinals’ second baseman, one day win a race luckily under| headed the list of Morningside athletes what seomes like faultless handling wih Ces a a points, ang toss off another next day through | Wan, te | runnin iH th a leap of in handed tactics, “Kammer a8) ana finished second in the rvucing broad ‘There are few riders of the present| “There were a number of conoistea day whe exhibit rare judgment of/ performers in the Glencoe A. oF eature was the three-mile run ‘an athlete allowed handicaps ing spell midway im a gruelling) handicap wins second, twenty yards: be- struggle. at times does it, and the burum scaram “Buddy” Ensor —_+>---— Four Sets of Games at Macombs 4 inches hind Silverstein. Troop No. 636 scored Boy Scouts meet, piling up 16 points to 8 for Troop No. 564 which was si Troop No. 524 was a close third with seven points. John Bascomb won three firsts In as many starts in the Pastime meet. Bas- comb won the 20-yard dash, one-mile run and running hop, step and jump. SS victory in the credit the same ability to Clarence Kummer. If any credit is forthcom- ing to anybody outside of the horse for the Suburban victory it ia due Sandy McNaughton, the trainer, whose methods of training Audactous from a near-stake printer up to a Suburban winner are almost un-| Behr Turns bles Tex jcanny. Rivals, | Lucky indeed for Arthur Johnson,! Allen H. Behr turned the tables om who rode Exterminator, that the Kil-| Alfred D. Hammett in the third round mer gelding was kicked at the post|of the Brooklyn championship lawn ten by Mad Hatter or he would have! nis singles on the courts of the Terrace had a hard tlme explaining to the |Kings County Club, Flatbush, yesterdas Sage. of Binghamton the bad per-|'t was the third meeting of these two formance of his mount. Extermine. |piayers this season, Hammett winnias tor ran a mest. di in the semi-final round at Harlem and Re es Su ePR CIDE Thee at Amackassin. Behr's blocking spoiled Kicking by Mad Haiter could alibi. |vofieved with speed and precision and je champion geMiing never did get | won by a score of 10—%, §—I, to running at any stage of a ae veAnother battle that was filled with which seetned made to order for him |spectacular stroking was that in whicn and for which he was such. # big |Cvell Donaldson, one of the most’ brik Public favorite. Some would have it | artaoh, ‘Me Younfinn Blavers. defeated that Jockey Johnson made no effort | od Carl Jolliffe in straight set: This was really | in the previous! rec on him at ell and attribute hia dis--| > graceful showing to the rider's Inck of ambition. He never turned the| horse loose say these harsh critics, —— ee Oharlotte Boyle Seeks New Wor 150-Yardn Record. A new world’s record for swimming} 150 yards is the goal of Miss Charlotte Boyle, holder of the American mark for the distance. ‘The national champion will attempt to hang up new figures in the special handicap race which will be one of the features of the water car- nival to be held in he peel ee the Brigh- ton Beach Baths jurday afternoon. Miss Boyle {fs the American record holder for 150 yards. : | ‘The record Minx le will endeavor | to surpass is held Hilda James of | Liverpool, who 1 her mari 1 minute 634-6 seconds last fall, Royle set new American record of 1 minute 543-8 seconds only a month been swim- of late and rt’ do not hes! “A Race Course of Beauty and Incomparable Gran- deur.” BELMONTPARK TOMORROW $4,000 BOUQUET STAKES And 3 Other Brilliant Contests BEGINNING AT 2.16 P.M SPECIAL RAGE TRAING na Station, 334 St, and Tth 12.1" and at intorvala aes Special Cam Rese € ved tor i © also reached by trolleys, di Staad, Includi ran, standy Aislaingg mock Ladies 83.85. neluding Ta, another world's ~ in the Brighton THUM WLIMG & BILLIARD ACADEMY, LAL Broadway, Comer Sit Re

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