The evening world. Newspaper, October 18, 1920, Page 16

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ive i FOLLOWERS OF Eyer BOSTON COLLEGE + YALE TEAM. } ARE SHOCKED BY DEFEAT "Twas Confidently Expected That Under Tad Jones’s Leadership Team Would Even Scores for Last Year’s Defeat by Boston! College, but Eli Not Only Loses Ground, but It Now Looks as Though Aldrich, Their Best Player, is Lost for Season. By William Abbott. GAINST Boston College, Yale Played football that would be duck Princeton and Hi al outlook for the bie games next will be biuer than the college ta. result of the Boston College was pretty much of a shock to| EA cohorts, who. confidently expected the coaching iF Bulldog to show his teeth. Bos- College last year beat Yale 5 to ® and incidentally crippled Thorne Murphy. With Jones again on the Job It was hoped Yale would trounce | those crimson jerseys from Boston, But the Yale surprine was mostly a Iot of glaring errors. ‘There was inforior end work, ragged Asckling, but, what was far worse, it) fumbling Yale team. | one of Boston College's three | whe was carned, the other | wo came ftom Yale fumbles. Ac- | handling of the ball in the of modern football. The Hiue @idn’t seem to know this in Sat- iy game. There was fumbling backfield in the execution of Kicks were poorly bandied. In period Kelly let a punt got that was promptly converted & touchdown for the visitors, wore always clone to the pigskin. ‘was @ rare thing for Yale to re- A tumble. ‘weakest spota on the Eli team fends. Shevlin and Dilworth, @tarted, were easily outplayod opponents. The Blue wing- ‘were not only alow, but tackled to paw at their man te dive for him. Sheviin ffectively bored out of plays wes carly withdrawn, po 8 Bpectacie le men w the sensational play of Walker, a forward last mather piace and proved the best Yale end of the camo. big and rugred, and when tackies a runner he stays line, tackle New Haven to tackle, gave evidence of possensing tremendous strength, although it was easily deceived by deceptive shift formations. Kempton started at coal showing in 1919. Kempt 190 well covered by the Boston ends to get loose on long runs, Hie Judg- ment of was open to criticism. Once “Fido” called for a lateral pass, when deep in his own territory, that wont wrong, It was the same piny in the same place that resulted in Princeton's victory last year. Murphy replaced Kempton and drove the team well, eapeciaily in the last few min- utes, when Yale jammed over her jm md touchdown. ly, Webb and Aldrich were the backs. Aldrich is one of the spec lest and most dangerous runners the East. Before the Yale game inst yeur Till Roper, the Princeton coach. told the writer he feared Aldrich more than any one on the Yale squad, and Aldrich wna only a substitute. The Tigers were thankful this blue-jer- weyed catapult was not used against them. Aldrich runa with his knees high, the type of runner that's particularly hard to bring down. In one of the frst plays against Boston College Aldrich got loone for a twenty-five yard «ain, He also does the punting for the team, He was an even matoh for Fitzpatriok, the long distance Bon- tan toe performer. Aldrich § alan hurled the pigekin with the accuracy of a baneball catcher throwing down to second bage. Yale's offense will be neriously weakened without the ser- views of Aldrich. Frank Kelly, who Captained at Rutgers before going to Yale, in a first clans halffack and one especially capable of receiving forward passes. Webb. the fullback in a fine defenstve hack and conatder- able of a line smasher, There are ®& number of other good backs that Jonen can call on, In fact, there’n no lack of materia! at New Haven, The whole problem tn as nino atenernanni— anmeeoieaenaiisia. TH [' DID HE AnnaMbaLE ) CORTE ONE - wav \t nEARUY Mane J late Wy) - You TRY & Basepar. BAT” DT HAQ-HAR~ 60 AnEAD- WE wor vooucy + RAL E WEEKLN FRIENDLY FOURSOME Paary (The New ¥. “Wore OD [ You MAKE {| our Traory, / \ (rae TO-> (MoH, Here.) ATER. A tare SESSION THE NIGHT BEFORE the application of football knowleder, forward passing, deceptive shifts, as well as thorough grounding in the fundamentals. The frequent appear- ance of Larry Rankart at the Yale How! han started a rumor that Inst year’s Colwate coach haa been In- trusted with Yale's offense thin sea- non I thin is really the onse tt LIVE WIRES By Neal R. O’ Hara. Geeretett, 1000, ty The Prem Publishing On (The New Tort Brentar World) For « three-year-old, Man 0’ War may not falk as well as your favo re ite baby, but he’s got twice as many legs. If this horsie cam run 2.08-and- | urday instilled in tho hearts of the a-spiit second at his age now, what will he be doing when he’s old enough to be an amateur athlete! Up in Canada Man 0’ War couldn't have ran |Prowess of the team, but did not EVENING WORLD'S OWN SPORT HISTORY PRINCETON, N. J. Oct. 18.—The [impressive 34 to 0 Victory which the | Princeton footbal) eleven registered | against Washington and Lee on Sat- student body a firmer belief in tho better If the prize had been a bag of oats instead of a $5,000 bunch of | “4% Soy Kreat amount of rejoicing bric-a-brac, . Man O' War could race nautical miles and still beat ‘em to the tape, earth except a dum-dum bullet, and * miles against the other nagw taxicab Man O' War can beat anything on a dum-dum bullet rarely travels on would be an unprecedented thing for|carth. He sure shakes a moan horseshoe, Yale to @o outside for coaching talent. Boston College wad keyed up for the game Snturday and didn't over- jook a trick to bring about a victory. ‘The visitors clearly outplaved the | 900d losers left like that. When Man 0’ War trots out on the track, he the. mame | favorite by $100 to ore buck. That shows you how little you can get for a Fits, tut Yale waa never when Capt. Callahan left the gume tn the first period. And when Aldrich was carted off the team lost {ts maineprineg. Jackgon, the crack Jocal who ts to fight Kddie in the main go of fr- rounds to a decision at Madi- Square Garden on the night of fs to receive a muarantee of ith an option of accepting of the groas receipts, leas State tax of 5 per cent Fits-| was also offered the same but Dan Morgan, his man- Promoter Rickard that he ing to accept 26 per cent. of receipts for his battler, of both fighters have aE " | j posted their forfeits of $2,500 as a @earantes that the men will weurh ma ™ it fs yy " ® t I et fr il r [ i r rE bs Ez ik i nfl i i ' e Hi HT st i! sours & match with (he New Orleans boy, Another new boxing lub will throw open ite doors fe Jerey Chey on Thurmtay night. This clud te the View A. C.. which will Rold ite bouts at Grand View Hall. Fur the ovening show the club hae eenend Johnny Drummie of Jervey City to moet Georgie Brown of tile olty tn the mar bout’ of twelve Founda, Jack Deemer, world's teerrweight champion, erideutly doce not intend to be caught aut of *Oape Io case bie manager, Jack Kearns secures » bout for him, ae be \s (raining every day ai the UB Leaning ehip Granite at the foot of OTth treet and the North Wi Marty Ware is helping Jack to got Into condition. Pete Herman te soother champion who wit) soo start in to pick wp emma more ey mon: by engaging in no decmon contate. The litte bantasmweight homing oki mow in eta which js the Motor Rauare A.C. ¥nd soxominodates 12,000 permne, will apm ite doom an Nov. 6 Wit & ton rowed tert between Kitatle Mitchel) Of Miweckow and Mey (Prral of Homewtond, Dy Matcbenater Motiarvey te now trying to wien up Gene Tunney with Micky Banoo of Picadas for die ercond show, Pronk Bagiey haw accepted tor Drow Wikdie Mirman, the former snmteer bastam weight, hee decided to foto the prufenicon! ranks Mirman defeatet inany of the #tar amateur ant for that resem te tof the opinion thet he oan outpoint cary of the lade at tiie welght now be: tog prafmionally, Mirman hes place! under the management of Hoe Pater af the frank Johnny Howard and Danny Leneh, both of May onne and midiiewelghia, will meet at the Hayonne A. A bent Wednesday night Im bout that te scheduled 10 go Yweire rounds bat which many believe will end tn & few rounda ie og the popular dacision be showed remarkable form seaiust the veteran Howard, who could do notbtug more than outpotn him by & made. Panama Jor Game wil) defend MMe colons mid. Aierrwigin chasmsonebiky belt againat KO, Law Witiams in one of the two feture fier round bowla at the Cammonweith Spreting Chm w-morrow plght. le the other feature fit tero-round bout Marty Crom and Tile Kid Herman will fore och other, The two ase: Denny Lew ve, Hettle Mirman and Tony Peters ve. Jobniy Duffy, Nad News Kher and Abe Goldgtatn ware scheduint to box, but the When this baby’s due to race, betting lan’t illegal. It’ that would bet against Mannie would dollar nowa ya. . Ini lann than a yoar Riddie's ae good as Ziogfeld’s ponten usually whipped cream on his oats and a Swis bianket. GRRAT ASCOT RACK. WBHLL, It has grabbed off more than $100,000. Tha: WITH THIS NIMBLE mponsible. A guy vote for Bryan, and there aren't many n do. A horse Iike that sure desery valet to chase the wrinkles out of his . MAN 0’ WAR MAY GO TO PNGLAND NEXT TO RUN IN THE NAG AMONG THOSE PRESENT, THIS ASCOT THING WON*T BE A TIE, YOU CAN LAY A SECOND MORTGAGE ON THAT. After he trims the British |) That won't be a bally tie, eithe , Man O' War will race the King's Naves. in Size of Yonkers, With Its Own Par- ticular Following, Winds Up Season Oct. 30. By Vincent Treanor. E are in the homestretch of the racing season. It will wind up at Yonkers, Saturday, Get flock to the track in amazing num- bers. One would think the fag end of the season would find most of the regulars “track sore,” Ibut such is not the case. Up at James Butler's track at Yonkers the final meeting of the year began. A casual visitor might well mistake it for the opening out- break. All the regulars whone faces have been seen daily since opening day at Belmont were on hand, in ad- dition to a brand new flock of race goors, who had ewelled the crowd to the track's capacity proportions. This in alwaya true of racing at Mr. But- ler’s course, It has a clientele particu- | larly ite own, and it is refreshing to seo tho pleasure ft finds In “the racing at hc Yonkers bids welcome to the e, #0 do throngs from Hast hester County centres, Some of them in fact do not | see much of the horses elsewhere, and to them these remaining twelve | daye of promising equine battles are @ | continuous holiday: | The coming week at Empire should |furnish sport as good as any o Jelsewhere on the metropolitan circuit. ‘ro.day’s feature events are all that jone might wish for, To-morrow the |Himbussy Handicap for olde and up at a mile and seventy yards, and the Clare lato mile and a sixteenth the stel- jlar attractions. On Thuraday inter- ost will centre on the Autumn Day'y Stakes. This ts an event with $2,000 added for twe old maidor five and 4 half furlongs. There are ra Among the Juventies “mae three-ye ont Handicap 30, and yet the crowds continue to! Racing in ‘‘Homestretch,’’ But There’s No Falling Off Daily Crowds > EMPIRE CITY SELECTIONS, First Race-Gueland, The Roe, a. nd Race-—Capt, Alcock, La Rablee, Sweet Music. Third Race—Sea Mint, Pickwtok, Pontypridd, Fourth Race—Ten-Leo, Gray Lag. Wifth Race-—Lord Herbert, War Piume, The Wit Sixth Race—Segurola, Master Jack. Conine, Pivia, v.T good field is likely to be brought to- gether, Saturday will, as usual, be the dig. day of the week. On the programme there will be the Pelham Bay Handi- cap, with $3,500 added, worth winning. for three-year-olds @ mile and a furlong. ‘The Quick-Step Han- dicap will be for two-year-olds at five a half furlongs, and there will also be the Cornwall Purse for three- and up at “wbout alx fur- 4a welling stake at one mile 1a quarter, Pight New Records M Athletic Lens Hight new league recoria were made yesterday in the wecond annual outdoor track and fleld champlonahip meet of the Bronx Athletic League, which was held at Macomb’s Dam Park. Vincent Lal the St. Anselm's A. C. eprinter, scored victories In Doth the furlong and quarter-mile eventa, In which he hung up new league records, In the 220-yard dash he just managed to nip M. Smith, |Mohawk A. C., at the (ape. His time was 211-6 seconds, shaving one-fifth of @ second off the mark made last year by Al Smith, Mohawk A. C was hard proased Lally again in the quarter-mile test, but emerged torious by leas than @ yard, in 62 4-6 seconds, eclipsing the old mark made last year by Jerry Tighe, by one second Other marke wore recorded in the 100- yard dash, when Al Smith was clocked In 10 14 seconds, an improvement of one-fifth of a second on the previous merk; the &§0-yard run, In which Charlos Beagan clipped a ascond off the when he ran old mark, the runr it in 2.08 2 the hop. step 1 the Javelin ‘attacks were mile walk and on the part of the coaching staff. Roper had been expecting a real test, | but after the touchdown following a |fumble in the first minutes of play the strongth of the Southerners waned rapidly and never again did they begin to show the power which in the first two plays seemed to be theirs, The casting tournament of the Mid- land Beach Fishing Club held yester- day at Grant City, Staten Island, was ‘a well attended and on the wholw sue: cessful event. Kupresentatives of va- Hous fishing clubs along the coast were present, including the new champion, Harold G. Lentz of the Anglers’ Club of Oovan City, nual tournament the Ocean City hing Club held last August eclipsed linghausen's record of 454, feet, by sending the lead more than siven feet further, PARIS, Oct. ‘The Fenreh Box | Federation, at a meeting held last n decided to ask tho International Be Union to sanction the reault of the « pentler-Levinaky fight by granting Car Dentler the title of lht: heavyweight champion of the world. The union has heretofore considered this title vacant, MORGANTOWN, W. Va, Oct. 1$.-— ‘West Virginia te going to be in tip-top physical condition for Yale next Satur 4a the team came out of the easy ree Washington game Saturday with only & few bruises, | By loning to the soccer eleven resenting Tebo Yacht Basin lyn in the first round of the | tle competition of the United Sta Football Association at New York Ov | Yesterday, the New York Football C wuffered the first serious reverse of tly season and was eliminated permanert- ily at any rate until next fall, from the | National Challenge Trophy classic, The YaCRt repairers, who were on their mot~ tle throughou the closest of marging, the scorg being 1 to 0 when the whistle blew for the last time, ing cht, ing are BUENOS AYRES, year-old colt Oct, 18,—-<3aulols, ned by Daniel » Y ay wo Grant Na mal prize, the classic event of the Club racing avanon, — Gaulols distance .500 metres, in 2 ninutes 272-5 seconds, The purse was | worth 80,000 pesos. | WHITE PLAINS, N, ¥., Oct. 18.—Dy a score of 9 to 6 West Point's polo team defeated Squadron A on |the Gedney Farm polo yoster day and thereby won the cup of the | Westchester Palo Tournament, which jatarted last Sunday, There is only one |more game, scheduled for Tuesday next, |between Squadron A and Westoheater Freebooters 18 PARIS, Oct Maurice Delivart, 9 French athlete, broke the world's record for the 500-metre run Saturda ing the distance In 1 minute 53-5 aec- onda, The race was run at St. Cloud, the auspions of the Sporting fon of France before a large | uni Federat crow Frank Kramer scored another triumpn at the Velotrome in Newark yestortay | afternoon when he defeated Arthur Spencer and Pete Moeskopa tn mile three-cornered mateh which took four heats to devide. It was ond of the hardest races Kramer has ever had to ride, ‘The fourth and deciding heat was put on right after the third one, while he ni winded. Tt wan y to do this on account of the latenens of the hour and this was tho Inet event & one: = . Carleton Till occers were mucceastul the Brooklyn in holding the team of Footbal! Club to a tle in t State League gamo at Rid, ball Park yeaterday | Clan MacDuft tory by 5 goals t the Vikinga in thi League match at Harlem Oval ynster- 6 State New York day. McDonald and Dilton shot a val piece in the fret half. Dillon tallied fice more in the second, and MeDon- ald also added another Orand apids, w » had a walk Seniral Langue, 1 ihe longa In Witting, Josh D who managed ‘2 » way by Nook» wno at the an- | THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1920. VICTORY SAD BLOW TO MIGHTY BLUE ELEVEN * E WEEK-END By Thornton Fisher ork Evening World) HEY, HERG, WHY DONT ‘You * Hae YOURL. LOth 6. CHANGED 1S ONG \. OOWN HEAR. . OUR GANG } ALL THEN 00 1S” FOLLOW Him AROUND (Suen FOR ( pe roo \ HOU —_— AFTER DRIVING > BALLS INTO THE waren You BEGIN TO ApPREss THEM IN CERTAIN TERMS ANC TURN JUST IM tee SEE A LADY ro § a AO REY aS Wt Ae Be SN set Younes a ( caGar KID, SON = WHEN 1> YOUR BRTH- Nea ~ & nt 77 use FOUND Gamblers and Showdown | Suspicious Spots. By Hugh 8S. Fullerton NGANIZHD baseball faces a O fight for life this week Byron Bancroft Johnson, President of the American League and member of the Natfonal Commission, hints that the disclosures when the Chicago Grand Jury resumes the in- vestigation of crookedneas in baseball | Tuesday will bring a bigger sensation than the confessions of the White Sox players did At the sanfe time @ Grand Jury in Los Angeles has opened an tn- vestigation of charges that the Const League pennant race of 1919 was fixed, jand a District Attorney in Cincinnati j'# at work on # seandal which may | bring a bigger sensation than any yet exposed Johnson's yelled insinuations and Ms statement that the National League club owners and those own- ers of his own league who oppose his policies would do better to wait un- ul they see against whom indict- ments are returned is the first start toward lifting the ld which has so far concealed certain dark places In organized baseball, Almost every one in the game knows to whom he alludes and waits with eagerness for him to back up his vetied threats of exposures. WHY HASN'T JOHNSON TOLD WHAT HE KNOWS? Johnson undowbtedly hints at the connection of certain men high in the souncils of the National League with the gamblers who are charged with putting over the fixing of the Chi- cago White Sox. The whieper has fone around the entire baseball world that if the top crook of the combine is exposed certain high ofMfctals will be compromised with him and a con- nection between the officials of base- ball and the gamblers established. No one has produced even an lota of evidence to substantiate this ac cusation. If Mr. Johnaon knew or knows of such a connection, why dd he not tell i to the Grand Jury which summoned him to testify? He in to be reonlled before that body and given an opportunity to produce auch proof !f he possessen It ‘The veiled charges and the attitude of President Johnson in striving to block the reorgantzation of baeeball have added to the bitterness of feel- ing between the National League club owners and the Johnson faction of the American Laague. To-day, In Chicugo, the National Leaguers with their allies will go Into season to jtake the first steps toward cleaning the game. President Jack Hoydler of the National left yesterday for Chi cago and delelared that every olub owner In hie olroult would be prewe { log wat ls know \ phan reforming the | eum : ORGANIZED BASEBALL FARES. HORE SCANDALOUS CHARGE Grand Juries in Three Cities Follow the Trails of Players and Is Expected This Week—Minor Leagues Setting Majors Good Example by Cleaning Up All | the owners of the Washington, Phil- |adelphia, Cleveland, St Louts | Detroit clubs will support his action |1n declining to enter into the confer- fence, but it is rumored that two of | the club owners are Hable to bolt the combine and unite forces with Com- iskey, Frazee and the Ruppert-Hus- |ton partnership. On the other hand |some of the Johneon faction claim jthat the New York Yankee owners | will not join their-old allies, but, while not supporting Johnson, will not oppose him. Johnson, it is «aid, won ‘them back to his @ide of the fence by aiding in the financing of the new park in New York. He may have won Col, Rup- pert, Int the chances of Capt. Til Huston supporting anything John- son favors are small | REORGANIZATION MAY WAIT ON GRAND JURY FINDINGS. President Heydler remarked yester- day when told of Mr. Johnson's atate- ment that tt would pe better to wait until the Grand Jury returned in- dictments before starting to reangan- ine, “It the Grand Jury ta in session it ts all the more important that every man ip baseball who oan ald {t be there, where he can be called. All our owners will be there and wil ald the jury in any possible way.” Jus what further evidence wil be brought before the Grand Jury in Chicago no one seems to know. The jury has subpoenaed several of the biggest gamblers in the country, and some of them ahow no anxiety to aid I was informed yesterday that the mysterious Bill Burns has been lo- cated and chat interesting disclosures may follow, but knowing Hill very well, I doubt whether he would tell anything about the case, The report that Abe Attell was in Montreal and determined to remain there waa con- tradtoted. He t# reported to have been seen on 4th Street, near Broad- way, Saturday night, although I could not find him at the place where hoe was said to be. Tt need not be a surprine if the big- gest sensation of the week bobs up in Cincinnat! instead of Chicago. There has doen a quiet investigation going on there ever since the ‘White Sox confessiona jarred the country, and not on the World's Series gam either, ‘The Cincinnati oficialy are digging for proof of some things that are reported to have happened during the season just closed, and the |names of a0 prominent both, Bast and Wost are mentioned So far as T have bern ablo to loarn, | these rumors started beforo the White | Sox soandal broke. T have not been aple to find any evidence of guilt, although Cincinnati ts busing with | rumors CO4ST LEAGUE LEADS IN CLEAN | UP MOVEMENT, “ | The Const Loses ta herr J the coc tne nS EA 2S tA RRR JPN oF Pe, . > Hagen- Barnes Again Defeat Vardon- Ray ‘Walter Hagen and Jim Barnes again defeated Tod Ray and Harry Varden, the famous English “pros,” on the links of the Puirview Country Club at Eime j ford, near White Plains, by 3 and 2 in |@ thirty-sim-hole battle, Barnes came lin for his innings yesterday, after hay- | ing played second fiddie to Hagen more It seems that A than fot this year [there were three extra | dangling Vefore the ey in addition to ments which before getting the services of such golf mastese, Long Jim, by dint of some rilliant performances, took two of the three plums. His 72 was low for the afternoon round, winning $25 for and this score atso stood as the’ for the day, a feat that im more. Ted Ray won the morn ing. purse of $25 with his 73. had @ rather inconsistent A ‘ing a fine round In 74 In 5 90 tor irview cour: ‘W. H. Follett yesterday won the hampionship of Staten Tal over the course m1 the, For Hilla Gan eacs when he defeated 8. V. D. Bowers by & up and 6 holes to play in a thirty-six-hole mateh. ———— Midwet Smith WwW Referees Award, . WATERBURY, Conn., Oct. 18.—0f4- get Smith, New York's sensational tan- tamweight, received the referee's dew |etaion over Paddy Owens of Boston ie twelve of the fastest rounds ever wit- nessed at the Phoenix A.C. Smith was the aggressor all the way and received a great ovation at the final gon, Montgomery and O'Hara Box Draw. MONTREAL, Oct. 18.—-At the Mont- royal arena Saturday night Jim Mont~ ery, the Irish boxer, and Exide "Hara of New York fought ten of the fastest rounds ever here. Both boys stood toe to toe and slugged for the entire distance. They were rex matchd to box In three weeks at the EI same clad. = = atid game. They are ousting players whe aavociate with gamblers without waiting for crookedness to be proved and the action of the Lon Angeles Geand Jury in slummoning the of- clals of the Vernon and Los Angeles clubs and a siumber of players in- dicates that they are determined te go through with the prosecution of crooked players. Further, the Coast League owners will come to the meeting of the National Aasociation of Minor Leagues in Kansas City with a de mand that the minor leagues oo- operate in keeping the game clean. Ih this last season two players ex- pelled from the Coast League were picked up by the Little Rock team, which attempted to play then against other Southern association clubs, al- most disrupting the Southern, ‘The Coast League and the majority of the other minor league owners will seek co-operation among the minor leagues to prevent crooked players from mov- ing trom club to club. ‘The minor leagues are in a bad position because of the threatened war between the major club owners. They want reform and they want an entire teorganization of baseball ernment, but they also desire to avoid any entangling ances with any major league faction. [It ts probable that the minors will postpone action in regard to joining the National owners in their plan of reorganisa- tion. Most of them are for the league— with reservations SOME THINGS OETECTIVES DIDN'T FIND OUT, Those detectives that Comiskey and Ban ‘ohnson now nay they had out seeking evidence of the guilt of the White Sox must have been wonders, I had a story slipsrd to me recently which shows that had they been on the job, the detectives could have had all the proof they needed Also, the story shows plainly what A narrow escape the American public had from being made the victim of an even greater swindle On the Inst Eastern trip of the White Sox some of the gambiers who engineered Inst theft began In both New Iphin the gamblers were’ with some the players, ‘They were insisting that the White Sox throw another World's Series, ‘The players were scared, They knew that certain persons were on their trail and persistently seeking prot of thelr guilt, ‘They were afraid to attempt to throw another series, and afraid to refuse for fear the gamblers would expose them. Manager Gleason left the team tn Philadelphia one evening. Four of the conmpirators locked themselves into a stateroom with a bottle of whiskey and drank all the way to New York, One of the gamblers met two of them outside the station on their arrival, Yet the detectiven could not that anything was wrong. (Ooceright, 1020, tor Ht. § Putierion,) learn “TOMORROW The Embassy Handicap The Clarement The Park Hill Purse Other Kxoellent Contests, RACE AT 2.30 P.M 3 leave Grand Harlem Division tratna fis Alma reac hb S fame Ay Dway to rome Av th AY. “Eto thenee by tralia; Station Grand ste: In Lexinaton Bubway, or Wert Pri Mott Av. traneferring to Ay. or vin Ath nnd erome AV. Su ¥ from Woor BA00. Ladion, @1.05, ding War Tax, a" 19 Subway to fieidt e » treet ice ke.

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