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BILLIARDS. |
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striker is to follow his gaining stroke, as may have been agreed upon.
4. If the striker miss both balls, he loses one point; if by the same stroke he pocket his own ball, he loses three points.
5. If the striker carambole, he wins two points.
6. If the striker hole his adversary's ball, he wins two points.
7- When the striker holes the red ball, he wins three points.
8. If the striker hole his adversary's and the red ball by the same stroke, he wins five points.—Two for the white, and three for the red ball.
9. If the striker carambole and at the same time pocket his adversary's ball, he wins four points.— Two for the carom, and two for holing the white ball.
10. If the striker should carambole and hole the red ball, he wins five points.—Two for the carom, and three for pocketing the red ball.
11. If the striker carambole, and bv the same stroke hole both his adversary's and the red ball, he wins seven points.—Two for the carambole, two for the white, and three for the red hazard.
12. Forcing either of the balls over the table, as in the winning and losing game, reckons nothing.
13. If the striker force his ball over the table, and at the same time should make a carambole or hole either of the other balls, he gains nothing by the stroke.
14. When the striker forces either his adversary's or the red ball over the table, and by the same stroke holes his own, he loses nothing.
15. If the striker make a foul stroke, and at the same time should hole his own ball, he loses two or three points, according to which ball he struck first. |
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