The evening world. Newspaper, September 3, 1920, Page 14

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me *+ rte “) eet ve Pas - iS the Race Track, but That of Carefree Couldn’t Consistent- | ly Be Overlooked. | BELMONT SELECTIONS. First Race—Rustier, Wise, Dove, King’s Belle. Becond Face Sweet Music, ood wink, 0, i Third Race—Frederick the Great, Payour, Tan il. Fourth Race—Fuir Gain, maid, Donnacona. . Fitth Race — Hoosoh, Doubt Thoman, Sena Day. " Bith “Race—Knobbic, Kirkleving- ton, Black Knight. Vv. B. first day's racing of the Fall season at Belmont Park yesterday should ‘de marred by the disqualification of a winner. Disquaiifications are more or ® less unpopular under any conditions very trying on those* who are) inancially affected by the rulings of | the stewards’ stand. Good sports, ever, have come to look at them part of the game, for, after all, where you are hurt by them to-day you may be benefited by them to- morrow. It's. fifty-fifty thing all told. Ig the stewards weren't in the stand fo pasa on such racing incidents, the Jockeys might run wild with their mounts and the public would have no protection. Yesterday's disqualification of Care- free in the second race might have ~ been overlooked. We have seen of- fenses much worse wherein the finish of @ race was unchanged. Stull, viewed trom an unbiased: point, the stewards | goukdn’t afford to overlook the inter- | ference of St. Michael by Carefree and He plain effect on the running of the [' ‘WAS indeed unfortunate that the former. time of its inception back in) 1905 have been marked by the swerving of horses, more particularly the two-year-olds, It has grown to be expected and jockeys are not al- ways résponiible for it. Yesterday, for instance, rene, et bore over und impeded st. Mithae! three differ- t tinles and we don't belleve that | Ensor could prevent it. Most horses love the rail, Il gives them moral support as fy were, and when in front ang clear they naturally look to the nearest rail, ny human might, as a guide to their destination It gives them moral support. Of 01 there are exceptions to this vu Bome horses will come down Belmont straightaway in the middie of the tfack an a straight Mne, but the majority won't. T. MICHAEL wi coming down straight, but he was on the out- side of Carefree when he moved ». The Sohwarts colt, who had the Weerly wpeed of the mace, and as if looking for help, swerved over toward the outer rail. Kelsay on St. Michael @uaturally had to check his mount, and to escape a bumping “took hold’ at Bt, Michael. He let Ensor and Carefree go along in front of him feel- @ ing that he had an “arm full” lett. en ready again he tried to shoot @St. Michac: it Carefree, and for the second time the Schwartz colt leaned toward the course Kelsay was) taking. Keisay had to do as before Ones the ag! ar St. Miohnel, mos game thing happened a Wthird time. Finally Kelsay. or per- | haps it was St. Michael himself, gave it up and let Carefree go on to win, Kelsay made a complaint naturally, Ritter down the chute from the for those who had watohed the race knew one was due the public, They couldn't help but notice that St. @Michacl had almost stopped racing t three different stages of the Jour ney. He might have come won by several length madn't veered over act ‘ret time. | Bekros i "THE Schwartz brothers, very pop-| ular among racegoers, naturally Were diagruntied over the rul- OR, and we are tuld that they thren +ned nuver to run another hors Relmont Park They, being read portsinen, probably will change th Inds to-day. We hope a0, for | Boolors are popular. > ry Jin { TRAINING GALLOopsS. AT BELMONT PARK. Milenald, six furlongs, im 1.11 2-5, Sh tS, bandit Mallet, five furionss in 24 te 1-6, handily; May Carry, five furlongs te -B, 8098, 1.034-5, handily; War Pronant, furlongs tn .52 2-5, handily; Ses Quees, mile LAT, 144, handily; deck Stuart, three J. three | Banermer Woman Fatis to Swim the Channel, LONDON, Sept. 3—For Mie second @ woinad has attempted to swim Engileh Channel and failed. © Mra, ur Hamilton, duugtter of the late Charles and Lady Fairlee Cuning- from #t. Margare: pad 7, hut at $10 o'clock | rd Cape G Rear Calais, as “ Heotive. Yortsrday, morning she. was forced to abandon the attempt near the i ton was the first woman trial since Annette Kelle Hingiish woman, intends to mun! the J in the | peamiine fo: at dreesing | _. | BEST SPORT THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, SEPTEM ING PAG IN NEW YORK We LITTLE RED-HEADEO UOHNSTON BeAr WE EX-cHAMP WALLIAMS ON THE THEORY “pur EM WHERE THEY AINE = AND HE O1D+ WW HIS ANETY TO REACH RICHARDS SHOTS “LONG BILL FREQUENTLY SKIDOED IKTO JHE GAWLERY - ’ TMNT OVER THE NETS AT FOREST HILLS by the Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evenin LIVE WIRES - | By Neal R. O’ Hara. THe STRING Y TILOEN TIES HIMSELF (HM A GORDIAN KNOT World.) AHO TILQEN” ON WHOM THE ENE S OF THE TENNIS WORLD are FOCUSED a ’ Copreteht, 1990, toy The Prem Publishing On (The New York Mvening World.) ANOTHER NINE Garry Herrmani ims it'll take folks “that th Ba Garry’ Bt. Loul« wina the int at that. Hi his second crack at the Folks that 2a, rk barre! ec betn waiting so long fo! theory is pure gold the series will run eight or nine weeks when Garry is ‘out for =he money are -GAME SERIES. nine games to accommodate ail the incinnat! to win pernanta, If gue. But you can see Garry's view- In either lea, feen ‘close to pork for forty years, but. this is only Ht it ta! crazy. Garry wants to Garry wants to die the » club, but green 1s his favorite color. $30,000, ie poor Carnegie did that and left samo way. ‘The Reds muy be Garry's Green with sill reads embroidered in It. care wha" Garry doe! it's 60 at the end geason 90 long Garry, won't Te and that's a baak book. him eveh for *he season, Over in Philly tt looks like a city ball club. ‘They are only loses the first for 4a eheerecloth surrot of tho gate receipts wi Will e.g! National Committee, Award of tickets in the He figures of lacks, numbyrs will be turned down and the unfortunae winners will the pusteboards. Applications from the Matteawan Inatitute will be onored No person may apply for more tha~ elght tickets or jess a thirt 5 ‘ va the Ava win the cheese championship they will challenge Joe Beckett | 0 Monday's ten-round out here be- tol BidsySelx “holes for the championship of the Island of Yap. ‘The A's | It stand rends Phillies win they will challenge t © Philadelphia subway 700 ie ed. And. the sores Tt was learned from a reliable source to-day that the big open air boxing show to be staged by the International Sporting Club at EXihers Field in Brooklyn on the afternoon of Columbus (Oct, 12) at which Battling Levidsky, the American light heavyweight champion, will hook up with Georges Carpentier, the French heavyweight champion, will havo | three other international contests fought on the same card. My inform- ‘ant tells me that three other top- notch American fighters will co against three foreign fighters so as to make the show a thoroughly inter- national one, yhow tvald at Madieon the night of Sent, S. Manag Jared to-day that it would be hn ther rr at short mace of Uime and nm tor th ra) taindnedt tnt ar th vam he nel the eon oe Tianie sith his Ht how | Robiny Michaels, the Jersey City featherwetiht, me ftecond entertainmeit oi | who Is fighting tm good form right now, was i | bout with Jonny Murray, the promising : misizeh ot the Healy ot | HATE featheewelght, by the seer eed Atwintie Cheb of Tinton, (O84 Abie Cie bet: enh ert am athe Wetton. Moye fight. res |" #uAranter of 41,000, which 8 too much moos declared a draw Wel Srow @ $14,000 gate, hax complete conte for hie next open-air show om next Mor ner wi, Johnny ty wight; Augie Wola rounis to ® decidon; Jabnny Lame ‘Goodin, 10 ronda; Danay Poworn ond Yo Matchiaker Lew Raymond af the Common saith Muarting Chib, V8Sth Bereet and Madi fom Avenue, Harlem, declares that be already ee arranged aeverl important matches to take | pene at hile club in the near future, but hy | witiibolding the announcement in comediance with \ tive wiahen of the State Boxing Comminion, ite mond mays ie cht) will be exchmlvely devoted to sports, The club gyi ts already completed, Ve fo with great please that we deny the re: pert pifeed that Johnny Summer defeated! | Louie Boesch, the crack Tridawport lehtwelaht, in a bone at Biridewort recently, ‘The truth | Pogadh revetved the decision over Stmamers (1 that ont, Hewrih ke fownetit UneoLy mgt flahin w far hia your, goiting the devisiog’ uveaty-thers | enon. ‘The fitteen-round that between Pete Hartley and Poul Vuxits which wu ont at New Orlearn and was won te Satter, dtree a uate of $10,084, which few ble howe for theme men, Hartley received | §.608.20, which war 25 par cent. of the gram | recelpte, Hartley hae boon signed tun for two more | tattle, In the fird go he will take ow K. 0, j Mam, the Cincinnati lightweight, for ten races | at Cincinnatt of Seo. Y. and 'n the ancond em bis apponent vill be Jotnny Noy. the Western fighter. ‘They will bave It out in « battle at Dew Moines, 16,, on the night of Sout, 14 Bobby Micbasis, Jersey 01 ne Mulligan vw, Young Hitetie, Rven with J. to post five reels of unredeemed ruinchecks the Reds’ percentage is at the end of. the of the series—the money end. And ve any libraries when he die#—he'll leave juat one boo that nine games will just about put P. Morgan. to determine the world’s worst ser! ging, to play seven gamea, and the team that championship, ‘The pennant will consist of eighteen pounds of cheese. ine for tho Inst Wengto auch charities as the telephone company and the Republican Philadelphia weries wil) be by lot. ‘The players’ share four gues only, The club's receipts Holders v a forfeit, he A's for a recount#Phe series’ will during the rush hour, That will In- | ourht to be worth five cents, | & few weeks ago be broke the knodkout run of Pullly Delmont, who not only failed to flop nim but was kept ae busy as the well-known one-armed eer all durtog the flgbtiog. Smit following \s openly predicting that Michaels 1s due " showing Up Tuesday night at the Bayonne At the Auditorium Sport Club, Perth Amboy, next Wednesday, two ten-round bouts and (wo alx- round bouts featuring local boys will be staged. In one ten round bout Frankie Fleming, the Staten Toland middleweight, will be featured with Harry Avpleaste of New Brunswick, N. J, while in the other ten Kid Toney the Perth Amboy bantam- ‘weight, will hook up with Freddy Seidel of Newark. Im the #x-round bouts Joe Delayo of Piatnfleld, N. J. meets Eddie Harris of England, and Joe Collett! of Perth Amboy faces Joo Stewart of Newark, Jobn Jennings, matchmaker of the Armory A. A. Of Jersey Hy, will stage bls next entertainment on Labor Day oight and Was arranged a pair of fatherweight bouts ax the feature, Sammy Slegrr, tho little east sider, who has been ® consistent v ‘Will hook up with Johnny Yarns, the kaock- Wat of derey Clty, while in the otber event nny Kane, Yorkvilie's contender for the crown, Will mingle with Tommy tim of Patervon, for the Mh b to give him, “They will gladly give als & quarantes of $780, | Bild\c O'Hare, the former stnatour middieweialt | hampion, who defeated Frank Carbohe in» battle im Canada this week, has just been matehed to | het Young Denny, the New Orleans middlowy They will fight a fifteen-round bout to & decison | at Now Orleans on Sept. 10, who onte Kia weights, are tn great shape for their twelve-round Hout, whieh will be fought under the auxploes of the National A. C. In the big armory at Baltimore to- olgbt. An both men Dave already fought # few wif Dattlen the fact that they are to flght for = decison tm this go will make them fwht ait the harder Denny is the fighter | ot & decivion over Martin Burke at New omth aaa Frankie Mason, the Oywelght flghter of Fort Wayne, Tnd., hes made quite a reeord tn the ring rh the thme that be bas been fighting. He has mn part in 442 fights, whieh Includes 3.087 of fighting. ee the bitch top Dantamwetght of the ade good in Wis firm start tn MUl- work, ls at present staying ty the Jock File wide, who welaht, hex temumed tratning af to months, due to & dinocated was the flr one {o work out in owly Incorporated Commonwealth Sporting Club, Went Hoboken A will stage the fol LOTS OF MONEY BET |had been slightly over $7,000. jortolk and Jamaica Kid, the colored heavy: | THAT MISKE GOES. LIMIT ON MONDAY Champion Dempsey Only 10| to 8 Favorite to Win De- cision on Points, BENTON HARBOR, Mich., Sept. —There is a lot of betting already tween Heavyweight Champion Jack | Dempsey and Billy Miske. Of course Jack is the favorite, but only at about odds of 10 to 8 that he wins on points’ if the bout goes the limit. There is| a tremehdous amount of money being | bet at evens that Miske goep the} Umit, Champion and challenger alike cast aside all brakes and gave their spar- ring partners a merry whirl in yester- day's last hard wegkout. Both boxers! waded through six rounds of real ac- tion with the big ten-ounce “pillows, the training gloves. ~ «| In this respect, as on every day thus far, Dempsey got the better workout, | Miske feels the lack of capable spar- ring partners, He is wofully in need of some one at his Eastman Springs camp to make him extend himself. Some one to compel him to. step around at a lively clip. He his no one to do the forcing and Is compelled | to set all the pace himself, ‘This (9) far from being a good arrangement. | Miske ix very much perturbed over | the report that has been circulate that he is still suffering from the ef-| fects of an operation. “T had w tonsils cut out about six months ago,’ said Miske, “and at the same time [ had a slight curvature of the spine, which demande mplete rest, My back was put in some kind of a brace and I was conspelled to loll around a hospital for a few days, That is all | that was the matter with me and you} ean say for me that I have not only | fully recovered but I never was in better shape in my life.” Flovd Fitssimmons, the promoter, announced to-day that the advance sale had reached the timpressive total of $50,000, He said that to-day's sale am sure that we will have a gate of $150/- 000," said Fitzsimmons. “There is every indication of it The work of raising the ring eigh- teen inches was completed yesterday \and the iron stakes for the wire fence \that will be strung around outside of | jthe arena itself to keep the crowds |{rom rushing the place and climbing jinto the arena without the formality of leaving nome iron men in the box office were driven into place, The wire will be strung to-day, “Every- |thing will be in readiness not later than Saturday evening,” said Fitz- simmons, “We will put the padlocks on the place before sundown on Sat- urday.” $< NEW INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Standing of the Clubs, Pu. Toronto, butte ron, War et THE TWOLRING eIRCUS WHE THE TILOEN= - By Thornton Fisher — ANDO STILL THE ELIMINATION GOES ON GENTLEMAN TRYING THE WONDER. IS THAT S@ MUCH POWER. CAN 6 OUP IN SUCH A SMALL oe AS BILL JOHNRTN From Their Club “Ought to Be Able to Fatten Its Percentage on Braves. By Charles Somerville. jELL, Mac and Johnny, Larry’ and Beauty, Fordham Fran- swah, Kid Kell, Burnsy, Pep, Lee and Tow-Head Spencer, Rube and Phi and Jesse and Artie, Earl ayid Snyder and Gonzy and the bunch--| (REETINGB. Of course, we'll admit we had hoped you were going through the West with a mop instead of @ rake th allowed seven games to slip througii. But we tender you Our assuurances | that fo? what happened in Stogietown we feel that you are more to be pitts- burghed than censured. (There he goes, officer. Don't hesitate—use your gun!) And anyway, by winning yesterday's kilkenny you return to Us topside—eight out of seven contests among the foreigners. So that while We admit that in the last week we have several times had | |to shoot aromatic spirits of ammonia | into the drooping heart of our pen-| nant and World championship hopes, yet now the old heart has resumed its normal throbbing and We figure that in the coming brawls with tie Braves of Ponziville you are due to nick up your percentage consid able, And then, after Labor Day, in the long stretch coming on the home grounds We fondly expect you to turn Myers’s Pitching| Sets Back Yanks | In Boston Game BOSTON, Sept. 3. LAUDE WILLIAMS, Eddie Ci- eotte and Dick Kerr of the) White Sox couldn't stop the Red | Sox, and Bob Shawkey, premier) piteher of the New York Yankees, | ‘lo failed, 6 to 2 The R. 8 nave gone crazy with the coming of| ool weather, They can't do a thing out Ine out long bits, run bases like streaks and field ike fends, and back of it all @ lot of pitching mater:al that @ month ago was consigned to the Junk heap has suddenly whirled | into form and every man on the staff is pitching his head off, If Ed Bar- row’s grin expands any more his ears, will disappear. Crazy is the word. “A louse team turned into @ lve one” is the terse way Ping Bodie put it. lmer Myers, who couldn't pitch a litte bit for the Indians, won his fifth straight. Usu- | ally he lasts two innings before the! Yanks’ withering blast. They collect- | ed five hits, one, a home run swash to centre by Ward, being an honest- to-goodness clout. The other Yank | run was directly traceable to an error | | + y Scott. | Shawkey pitched a fair game, as far | as hits went, yielding only five, but he gave three bases on balls. Besides, the Sox hits were usually long ones or unusually long ones—triples and! doubles, and so on, An error by| Robert gave the Sox their first tally, | and another by Pratt helped in the| Making of a later one, ortit, eitting Bimveit th iduted nt of bouts for IM regular weekly boxing gaeire- round bewt with "Haney + whton | 80% Walter Mobr of Brooklyn va, fades piare at the Bayoune A. A. Tuesday nignt Sonny Mable ye, Jonas knoerows « hae an ferme Michacis's Mas, Wet bas nached nine aches. An iieve Gomes fe to rere danger of Being bioden Wy Smith uly il Reading, 1; Jersey Clty, cas, £410 tmnt ; eed vt apeecion, $48 tustasn, “seased), ‘Aken, 7 hufteto, 4 q Metta, 9 Rochesier, Games Te-De. Ne games, sebrdulcl tae +f Bost Dos, Bi vr, MM. ei ae She Bi ion Bande os \ Jack Quinn will try to stop the Sox to-day, und Sam Jones will probaniy be bis ponent, sam shut out the Waite Sox (he oiher day, Giants Are Back Again Western Trip away all comers bruised, busted and broken, There is no doubt that while you | Giant gents began the seagon looking | like selling platers, the thoroughbred stuff Js there for a great, game finish, ‘The town turned on you for a bit, but it’s all with you again. SHOOT! Every time the White Sox think of Boston they iurn Red. You know all about Babe Ruth as the Caruso of the Big Crack, and have by this time seen him trying to back Douglas Fairbanks, Charlie Chaplin and Francis X, Bushman off the movic boards, but the worst is yet to come. for the Babe has now essayed to bud as a novelist. Signed another contract | the other day (I guess that’s what 's really the matter with his wrist) wherein the Babe will figure as the author of a story for kids. Perceive @ thrilling snapshot of the Babe tn the act of pulling his hero out of a bad hole. I knew a@ gent once who confided to me that during an attack of cocktail and hootch brainstorm he figured that he figured that his life depended on his life depended on his being able to accurately count @ plateful of ants. Huh! The job was a cinch com- pared to the proposition put up to baseball writers to pregict the teams at are going to cop "the banner .n the two big leagues. , Not me—t don't not try. Let Hughey do it, Giants Capture Last Game of Pirate Series, PITTSBURGH, Sept. 3.—That los- ing streak of the Giants which began on Monday after three straight vic- torts over the World's Champion Reds came to an end when Jesse Barnes pitched the New York team to a § to 1 victory over the Pirates in the final game of the series. The Giants pounded Bari Hamilton freely, while Barnes had n» (rouble In keeping the Pirates away trom the plate after the frst inning, Aiding Barnes tn his victory were the elongated George Kelly, Lee King and the reilable George Burns, Kelly helped himself to a double and & single, and carried two runs over the plate, while Burns's contribution was a double and a@ single, His single svored two runs in the sixth In- aing and guve the Giants a com- fortable lead, The Pirates scored their only run In the opening inning. Carson Bigbee beat out a slow grounder to Bancroft and wap forced at second by Barbare. Har- bare stole second, but In sliding into the bage hurt his leg and forced to retire from the fray, Bill McKeechnie took his place and scored on Fred Nicholson's clean hit to centre feld. Hurnew steadied after this and it was not antl e ninth inning that another Pittsburgh player reached third * base, Bill Southworth smashed. a long drive between clght and centre Meld in the sixth Inning, but King caught him at third on @ finw throw to Mriach., Schmidt tripled with two out in the nine but h game ended when Caton Midd to King made three hits, | Johnston and _—— R. Norris Williams and Vince Richards Eliminated by the Two Bills in Fourth Round of National Championship at Forest Hills. By William Abbott. HERE may be a whole fiock of boy wonders scrambling over the horizon, but Bill Johnston and Bill Tilden still remain the class in American tennis, Tennis ig a strenuous game. It's been a long time since any one over thirty years of age has held the national titie# While many youth prodigies ere comihg fast it-will be at Iédast a year or two before they surpass either Tilden or Johnston, Any one entertaing fears that ejther one of the two Bills would be elim- inated in the national championship should have sat in for the fourth round yesterday at Forest Hille. The two toughest opponents that either Johnston or Tilden will meet on the path to the finals were encountered im the eventful fourth round in R. Norris Williams, twice nations champion, and Vincent Richards, the most promising of the juvenile de- tachment. Johnston, playing beaytiful tennis, trimmed Williams in straicht sets. ‘Tilden, 6n a combination of Richards's accuracy in placing shots and his own wildness,, dropped one set, but en. tirely outclassed “his youthful oppo: hent toward the end of the match winning three sets to one Johnston, steady and resourceful, can gear up bis game as the situation demands. The little Californian Holds | Williams in high esteem and the de- | fending champion was all business throughout his match with the tail Boston star, From first to last Johnston dominated the court, his change of pace and remarkable ability to make "gets" keeping Williams} mostly on the defense. | At one time in the final set it seemed that Williams might turn the tide of battle. In games he led 5—2, but’ at this stage Johnston became very aggressive und ran @t the set, his command of strokes holding the big gallery spellbound, A point analy- sie of'the match shows that Williams was guilty of many errors, Johnston was 0 clever and accurate with his placing that Williams had to make moat of his returns while on the run. and, what's more, Williams is sup- posed to excel at « deep-cowt game. The match yesterday was fought al- most entirely trom the base line, with the little Californian wielding the whip hand. There was just one slight defect in Johnston's game—hig service, Little Bid throughout the session exper!- enced trouble getting the first ball in. The second was generally “soft,” which allowed Williams to. peel off numerous slashing drives down the side lines. “With this single short- coming Johnston was near the top of his game. His showing against Will- ams simply meant that the crafty Californian was just playing ‘possum,| the day before, when Niles took a| set from him at 10—8 | The Tilden-Richards encounter pro- duced a great deal of brilliant tennis. ‘There were flashes and rallies that repeatedly drew applause, Roth stars covered lots of territory, but in the end {t was Tilden's tremendous speed that decided the issue. Tilden won the first set, 6—%. He continuously rushed to the net, and his manipula~ tion of ground strokes was a pro- nounced improvement over his 1919 showing. This form of attack forced Richards to deep court. Dashing out nt court to make side line returns. the hoy wonder would frequently leave his court wide open and: Tilden registered many points by gently tap- pnig the bell over the net, far out of reach of Richards, To the huge delight of the great crowd Richards turned the tables on Tilden in the next set by copying the Philadelphian’s methods. During this period \t was usually Tilden who had to sprint around the court after the ball. Once the English champion dashed clear to the grandstand for a return | As if peeved at this rebuke from his | seventeen-year-old oppo! » ‘Tilden put on more speed in the third set and Jaimply smothered Richards, whe ought gamely @ the rallies to pass STANDING OF Other team GAMES TO-DAY, Boston at Now Ys \ Phitade rookiyn. Cincinnati at St, Louis, Chicago at Pitteburgn, i} Tilden Remove Most Dangerous Rivals in Tennis Tourney* / Tilden, who in action appeared olf logs gnd arms/ Richards toole only two games in the third set and fared worse jn the final set. Unusual steadiness and strategy enabled Washburn to win «from Charles Garland, fourth man on the Davis Cup team. Each one of the three sets went to 7—6, “Peck” Grif- fin, the stocky Californian who pers forms best In doubles, continued his good work in the singles champion+ ship by defeating A. J. Lowrey im stralght sets. Wallace Johnson of Philadelphia, mastér of the chop stroke, finally put out Roland Roberts, the latest racquet star from the Golden Gate, after hectic battle that went the full five sets, f es AMERICAN GOLFERS PICKED FOR MATCH WITH CANADIANS TO-MORROW. The ten American amateur gpiterd who will represent the United States in the international matches with Can- ada to-morrow on the ‘links of tho ngineers’ Country Club, RostyHy’L. 1. were selected last night. ‘ The programme for to-merrow'# matches calls for foursomes “in the morning and twosomes in the -after- noon. Herron will meet C. B. Gfler of tlie Royal, Montreal, In the afternoon, and Oulmet's opponent will bé G, H. Turpin, Evans will meet W. J. Thomp- son, and Capt. Fownes will take on Norman Scott, a recent addition to the Dominions team. The order of each team willbe us' follows: UNITED STATES, CANADA, 8. D, Herron, oF "y i G. Hf Turpin. ol W. J. Thompao MoClu winit ee Max Ho Marsten, Dawald Kirkby Vrita 3 GW. White. Seymour Tons, nh GL Andersow. FG. Hoblitadl, WL. Pownes Norman Scott. Favorites Come Throwth at Ekwanok, MANCHESTER, Vt, Sept. 3.—Ih the first and second rounds of mateh play for the Equinox Cup at the Bkwan County Club the | favorites stam through with good margins W. WR ten of Schenectady, playing ‘ab dogs of J. J by 3 ap and an even bole rate, disposed Hunter of North Adams ® to play. In the afternoon Patten let out a little and was but 1 ovéf Yours when he eliminated George J. Murphy of Wallaston \at the fourteenth, * ees License Committee to Meet Ometal. Te-Day. ALBANY, Sept. 3.--Lawrence P. Me- Gatre, Chairman of the License Com- mitteo of the State Boxing Commis- sion, has called a meeting of hts’ mittee for to-@™y at the Yale lub, New York City. vr Representatives of the Attorney General, State Comptrotler and Stato Treasurer will be present, gnd It te ex- * pected that the licensing’ regulations will be adopted. ‘The State officials who will attend the meeting are: Bd- ward G. Griffin, Deputy Attorne; eral; Edward F, Kearney, uty Comptroller,. and James F. ‘Hamtlten, Deputy State ‘Treasurer. s Tie-ups— are not always unpleasant. Just slip a Par-amount Cravat into your collar—there is a tie-up with real joy in it. Wd + Prices right — quality right. Right up to the minute. And speaking of tie-ups, here's one that’s absolutely binding: Satisfaction guaranteed or money back. Cordially, PAR-AMOUNT ‘SHIRT _SHOPs THE CLUBS 160 Nassau Street, Tribune Building 986 Third Avenue at C9th Street 2208 Third Ave. at 125th Sty Harlem i rd Avenue at 86th Street NATIONAL LEAGUE, 2885 Third Ave, at 149th St, Bronx Clube. WoL. PC.) Clubs, w. . | 201 West 126th St, at Seventh Avenue Clacinnatt .,.69 63 566 '1628 Broadway at 50th Street Brookiyn ....70 65 560 163 East 42d St. Third Avenu New York,..,68 67 O44 Pittsburgh ...64 68 520 GAMES Y! New York, AUTUMN MEETING AT BEAUTIFUL AMERICAN LEAGUE, W.L.PO, | Clube, Ww. PC, 7748 816 | Boston ......61 64 488 Washington...52 67.437 Detroit a7 Phitadetphin..<2 83 GAMES YESTERDAY. Boston, 6; New York, 2 ‘ Phitadelphia, 2; Oetreit, 0, Other teams aot scheduled. GAMES TO-DAY. Mew York at_ Boston, H Detroit at Cleveland, Bt, Louis at Chicago, Washington at Philadel me Nelson to Defend T BROCKTON, Mass, Sept. 5.—Brook- lyn Battling Nelson, welterweight champion of this city and vicinity, will defend his title here Libor Day . foon in the Buseball Park in a twely Found dectaion with Mickey Donova The winner of this battle will In all probability be matched with the world’s Monday. BELMONT PARK TOMORROW'S FEATURES $17,500 LAWREN.E REALIZATION $3,500 \URSERY STAKES A 2-MILE STEEPLECH \SB, FAR ROCKAWAY HANDICAP and Two Other Brilliant Contests FIRST RACE AT 2.15 &. M, SPROIAL RACK TRAINS Leave Penna. Rtation, 34¢ 8%, and Teh tush Ave. By Grand Paddock, Laon: #1008, tnainaiin ing for Biltherds ee Ty pois Leer ige:

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