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~~ ——- “A ered ‘Oddly Contested Race at Yon- kers Appeared Run to Order © for the Winner. ‘ VERY once in a while there Is { ® race run at the track which, t to put It mildly, is not on the and up, and just as often there is race which looks raw that in real- ig #0 honestly contested as to be @ainful to those who had expected a Alfferent result. Such waa the fourth jevent at Yonkers yesterday, dign!- ed by the namo of the Claremont ‘Purse. - {, Long before post time a variety of ea about the chances of three of four starters wore in circulation, it was @ hard job for the specu- tors to decide which was the bunk nd which the realegoods. The firat @tory gave one the impression that fFunning the race was only a waste eet time’ War Cry would win sure, to far off by himself as to make it fo content The oral market re- Bected this opinion, for War Cry wax A \fbacked nearly off the boards by the mart guys.” Other whisperings m the paddock as much as said: at War Cey stu nouns nothing. ‘B's all understood, Go bet as much ‘as you like on Scotch Verdict.” ' Y EANWHILE there was little fl attention pald to the logical 1 favorite, Tetley. He soared in ‘price among tho layers, going back Hrom # to 5 to 13 to 6. The reason ‘given for this was that he was a “stiff,” which means to racing folk that he wouldn't be trying, Sud- denly, when it waa taken for granted fe Tetley was a sure enough “dead "action began to show for him. ‘he Wiseacres were completely puz- ‘ged. The War Cry backers, who ‘Were dead willing to be in with the fIshoo in,” were up in the alr, the rters of Scotch Verdict figured = had been fooled by their “info” ut him, and the favorite players idn't know what to think. Only the oe could clear up what looked @ neem cheating cheaters situation. ‘ Fr INALLY the fleld wns sent off to i) 4 good break. Out’ shot Scotch i Verdict ike a quarter horse yaround the far turn and down the @ackstrotch. War Cry was second ‘2 pursult and Tetley a lumbering Mbird. Shenandoah might just as (well been home in His stall. On to- ard the far turn they went, Scotch ferdict still in front by an apparent margin, but with Weiner on ‘otley maki: many laudable at- ‘empts to catch up from third place. | Bvery time Weiner seemed to have @ fair chance of getting racing room the found War Cry in his way, The Spprentice tried to jam his way @hrough on the rail and was shut off. ‘Then he tried the overland, with no More success. The War Cry backers am the stands were wondering why horse didn’t come on and do me racing himself, instead of pay- so much attention to Tetley. nally Weiner evidently decided to Wake no further efforte until he ed the atretch. He waited and Mi get Bail again, but he found that far Cry was still in a position to his progress difficult, }) As he rounded the home turn War (Cry was on the inside of him and ‘ ing wide, Tetley had to go with ‘and thus a gap of clear sailing ide epough for @ regiment was left Beotch Verdict to gallop the reat the way. Welmer and Tetley got of War in the run down the igbtaway, but then the race was tieally over. It looked as if Tet- YY was beaten, aided and abetted by (War Cry. | The race left a bad impression on erybody who watched it closely. The ‘ar Cry “sure thing crowd felt ‘badly uagr and the Bootch Verdict lerowd swelied up with innumerable Didn't I tell you's?” Possibly as hon- jestly run as Gny race ever was, those Dearing the stories connected with 1 in advance could hardly be tlamed for ‘Delieving it was staged for the benefit of Scoton Verdict. | Of late we have noticed races wherein Jockeys appear to ride with yee intention of winning, but just with the idea of “ taking care” of some ‘thing else in the rack. In other words, ithey ride two horses. Lord Herbert, tfor instance, on Monday was beaten dexroue factice siaijer to those by pWhleh Tetley suffered. (JOCKEY ROBINSON tant adding ''] any to his reputation as a rider these days. He can get away ‘from the post in more tangiea than ‘any boy now before the public on the toca tracks. A recapitulation of his ‘mounts will show, too, that it is ‘always on a favorite that his bad toni riding stands out. Yesterday he yruined all Dernier Sou’s chances at barrier. He has done the eame ith Dewy Eve three times, with ‘Head Over Heels, Omer K. and with aliguea, without going further back the dope. At Umea Robinson can ieot bis mounts away on their toes, but {8s a rule it 1s when they are far from sbeing favorites. It may be all Just incidences, but just the same race ‘moers are beginning to talk about hese occurrences. u UDDY ENBOR was greeted wit! much applause when he returned to the scales after winning with 'Phunderstorm. He certainly did pur fap a great finish in pulling victory fout of the fire, yet if he hadn't woo ps mer, ‘we never had any the would have been subjected to much censure. He should have won Uncle Cy Young, Nap Lajoie, Chief Zimmer, Jim McAleer and Other Former Cleveiatid) Stars Gathered in Forest City—Cy Says They Had No Scandal to Mar the Sport in His Day. By Hugh S. Fullerton. URING the World’s Series games eland there was a won~ derful reunion of the G, A. R. of baseball, At one time, looking around the stands, one could see Uncle Cy Young, Nap Lajoie, Chief Zimmer, Jimmy McAleer and balf a doxen others who have in preceding generations fought to bring to Cleve- jand the honors which Tris Speaker finally won. There was more senti- ment, more real rejoicing and happi- ness among them than ope usually finds, They had come back from ali parts of th country to joln in mak- ing Speaker's triumph greater. One night 1 acci They had £00 over the old days, Colt Tipp Is known ax'the daddy of | Wally Pip New York Wally arrived on earth Bul Pipp was | one of the G. A. R. of baseball, an ex-player who slung o Wick in his day and who for years made trips with the Cleveland (eam und lived with the players, Twenty-five years ago he and Cy Young were the first basemen of the ankees, but long before —and they had foregathered to Paik over the olf battles and the old boys. Sometimes when a name was mentioned their eyes were a bit dim, but mostly it was of the joyous times that they talked. HANDLED THEIR OWN SCANDAL "Cy." 1 ngked, when the subject came back to the scandal of the White Sox, “did anything tke that ever happén in your time?" 'N said the big Tusearoran far- ndal in my time, I remember the nearest we ever came to It. We picked up & pretty good ball player who might have been a great one, but he Kot to running around with the wrong bunch of outsiders, He got a bit too friendly with some aporta who didn’t look good to us and we got a little suspicious, We never suspected him of trying to throw any ball gamen or of doing any of that rort of work, but there was some talk and we firurey | he might give the team a bad repu- ation.” “What did you do, inform the man- ager?” “No, Didn't have to tell the Man- ager, he wan one of the gang We juat threw him out of th house and emptied his locker after him, I figure that ball pla scan old game clean always If the that way with any player who show nigns of mixing up In crooked work We didn't inquire, Owners in tho: along all right.” Bi!) Pipp, by the way, has other | foreve » besides the handsome lad who has improved so much as a first base- man since he came to the Yankens, | }\" | There are six of the a baseball or football player. Father h Ben, who ia with the Paulists in t Wally. That family has a record which | nrobably is unexcelted tn the history of the United Staten military or- mntzation. Of the six hoya, five en- e service-—one in the tnfantry, navy, Wally in aviation, an- @ther boy im the eumibulanse servies tered th. one the THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY REAL BATTLE BETWEEN NORTH AND SOUTH ON FOOTBALL CAR Focenove |THREE BIG BOS . Coprright, 1999, by the Prose Publishing Co. (The Mew York Mvenieg Worte, ‘Bi’ ROPER. PRINCETON G. A. R. of Baseball lad Great Reunion ene Ire LIVE WIRES By Neal R. O’ Hara. Cuprrteh’, HEH, be The Proms Pubttehing On (The New et Brentng Wort) iclous, This baby Carpentier can't feed Levinsky a sleeping powder right off of his knuckles without the wise There was nothing under the six- but five bones—four fingers and rld’s Series and Father Ben was a © boys in five differe service and a kid at hom ket Into any that was open was not enough to suit the Pipp family. e guys are too #1 Houston was} herd hollering fak ounce pillow that Bat went to sleep o a thamb, When Levinshy hit Dreamland he hit it on the level. There was no fluke abont that K. 0. But you can’t convince some guys. A lat of Tem won't belleve Broadway rw in a twin-six. It's all wrong. ived a call from his old Cround fifty-seven years old and Pipp| to something They had known each other! above 59th unless you show ‘em Pipp wanted Houston to take him! into the engineers. Now Carp was never gullty of fixing anything above mle mpats. lence In engine record Ia 100 per cent. French, with no discounts for forolgn exchange. guy tha! owns eicnty-aix shirts like Carp’s could knoe'c out Levineky Just ou read the play-by-play story of thelr Jersey y request of the Typographical Union: Me had long ex- ring work in cox Why you old stiff,” said Houst Go home and buy; City, nny We reprint i “you're too old, “Me old?” Bill retorted, “Why dern Bat enters the ring in a bathrobe that had you I'm younger than you are, 10,000 of 'em. It looked like one he had borrowed from Uncle Levinsky. ing gown of pomme de terre de solsette and sits The advantage is Carp's by a heliotrope n better days, About Carp enters in a dr End of the first reel. and almost broke his long friendship with Hous. | ne he was not perr fo across and do He argued, Now comes the tricky work. The band toots the Marselllaine ard they all stand up. Then it whame The Star Spangled Banner and they Bat left his crutches at home, so standing up for stand up some more, two selections was toc dressing gown and the patriotic hymna simply set two bad rounds. INDIANS NO INDIAN GIVERS. nd Indians showed thelr! jm tally stumbled ended (h upon @ wonderful ttle scone and Was permitted to alt In, and Bill Pipp were having dinner to~ gether in Col. Pipp % slipped away from the crowd to talk They could have omitted the anthems and the sartortal eff not be the beat ball clu tr try In thetr present shape, but jare one of the flnest Agere ever gathered the series ended Jenced scrimmage work ts ¢ Cy Young} Corp's right mitt the serap was fixed Is a felony. everybody knows that even hix moving pictures aren't framed, nd the flowers without altering the Carp wouldn't do auch thing a that. OOTOBER 20, 1920. By Thornton Fisher |Harvard Mettle to Be on ‘ ace Bob ro say _|Chicago Now Building 8 fy ; Machine to Meet Tigers |»: ihe reee On Gridiron Next Year ce eo cients ict ule. defensive strength, Holy Cross with The gamo will be played at the]. veteran team aud a month'sadpalip Stadium at Cambridge Saturday. It yed to Cambridge will be a great North and South bat | ue, for never before has the Innd of cotton sent such a form gation of stars to tackle one of the | ¥8* hushed a Big Three. Saturday" xo far to prove th two teams, whether Harvard fs up| line. w' 4b Ly —— Tested Saturday by =~: Centre College Warriors —_— Little Danville, Ky., Eleven, With |‘e ee ee eee Only 200 Students, Made alos tne sounersom ace tne toast [their 1919 record would indicate. Big Name for Itself on Grid Male. Wevue te oneaie iron Last Year. team will have nine of the regulars who helped to steamroller Middie By Will am Abbott. ‘West elevens iast year, Alvitr 'Na« ENTRD COLLIOGE was one of| st MoMillan, quarterback, Age the big sensations of the 1919/CAPtain, while on a visit to_New football season, With only 200| York last spring lold the writer 3% atudents the Little institution at Dan-|team would beat Harvardeu. villa Ky. won all its games, scoring | thought the scoring strenguh (9S AM 482 points to ite opponente’ 18, Two| eam would defeat Harvard,-@8he7 Centre players, Weaver, centre; Mc- | °!aily as the Crimson woufa be pith= Millan, quarterback, were All-Ameri. | Ut the nimble work of Eddie Caqey. can aelections a wonderful tribute for | MOMillan wasn’t bragging and éid@s college that only a few in the Kast | UAderrate Harvard, He was pluply really knew had a football team,| Confident of the ability of ‘Gente Centre won the Southern champion. | '? Sccomplish a dificult feat ship and because of ite remarkable | Making full allowance for “ame showings the little Kentucky schoo! | S°Utherners® scoring powers we'll: eay y 92 it will be a difficult matter for Cent was placed on Harvard's 1920 sohed- |i overcome Harvard's treméenadte this acason full numb able agero- | thous conte strugle should |"nidleations of ‘exceptional defebaivn mettie of the | trengtn this ear, Copeclally iF the ch partioularly hw gave & Crimson root Jhard game Sat 4 been mm or be rudely shocked tem. * Centre played a wondbrtul Westerners Anxious to Show, Well in Big Intersectional Series, By Wal er Camp. B ‘sxc the scenes there te @ special reason for the great ac- tivity displayed this fall on the fontball fleld at the University of Chi- cago and the very definite planning that is manifestly being done for the future. Chicago has booked two games with the Princeton team, one to take place in 1921 and one In 1922, This te fn definite mark of intersectional foot- ball, and the two contests w will be # testing out of Middle West tactics against Eastern tactics, and while no one has any tdea or thought of whether the two teams will be leaders in thelr respective sections on those dates, a comparison is ine | evitable. nach Bezdek ts determined to ake as good a record with his LJ eam as in 1919 They had a E art up at Eaglesmere an jown further advanced than any other tcoam so far as “ Sutherland, the old Pitt man who and divided the money spportioned | the kidx who} team long enough bookkeeper, not with the Fistic News tom Fotox and Gossi heavyweight ampion of the A. E. F. and gne of the Armory Club, Lhe most promising big fellows NOW| Stimy tums, marsers ot Leone eo n, all were cared for. layer technically contributed to others who! nd cola v bat| 1 Race—Lat's Love, had helped the team. with the wrancles Kace—Yellow Mint. Krewer, Race—Great busy fighting niekel-grabhing the Yankees Inst spring when t their rlehte” the club owners to pay them be money which had been awarded to persons they titled to share in the bonus they re- celved for finishing third. with the behavior sHoney Cell, Yeoman- ette, Summit, signed up for two fights #0 far, firat go will bo with Sergt, Roy Smit! | onne bass, will cam to-night for ten rounds at the Camden Sport-| bout at the Baywune A A, ing Club of Camden, N. J. on Friday | centully tutored for the sera wich Howard t night, and his second with Paul Samp- non, the rugged Swede heavywelght, for ten rounds at the Olympia A. A. of| | Paterson, N. J., on next Monday night. TRAINING GALLOPS, We otenite| At Yonkers Oct, 19—Track heavy, recelptn of the Chicago Club, divided tt and departed, most of them with aying the elab house man for washing thelr uniforma during ‘The MeMahon Boy, well-known boxing pro- motere of thie city, who were granted a llcenae Contrast tt with the | by the State Athletic Commissioners to conduct Cubs and White Sox for a few more tri J Mule 12 in 82 2-8 Senfinuisoe, dee tm 8 Vi an one mile in 148 Bet atand why #0 many persons In base. ball wanted the Indiana to wns the nickel-eravhing of the Yankeos Inst spring which broke up the team for weeks and which canner much of the friction between Huge ‘Pwo Afteen-roond erenta will feature pening of the uptown chub, red oft agninat Johnny Hayes, Fiktlo Pietcter, the hard: sive Hari boxer Hitting ret aide led, holds the honor of gaining the Meet deeiaian un- der the new lew, are billed for the Eroworks tm | the other fiteen rounder decent pitias a6 tn 319 98 | gaok "Kia"? Wolfe of Cleveland, who te one dantameeishta te thie country, having arcured nowsnaper dacialons over all of the auteme In thie country, now unde the management of rank Uasley the former manager of Wolfe, over Wilfe w Baaloy nat Pete Hemman, Lynch ar any other star bantam, Miller Higgins, by the way done an manage The brunt of the bl k failure to win the pennant after they hn wt at thelr morey he denorves tt or who t anxiow to maten | Hartom Tiidie Kelly the game and smerennive unforetvabte has been matched to meet hanMing players was 6 It Is certain that th What did the owners say about | 4 didn’t Interfere much with the Kelly fine been ube playing end of the game—and we got | Init Young Montreal Over Noy Moore. Stallings, wi from the American by B TonNAON VeArS ARO, MAY KHOR. Tho man 1 we | art fa Widest Nolen, the ageressing Browktrn weiter tm whipping Marard Providexes won an of Referee Powers and two Judges ‘el over Roy Moore of St, Paul tn the main of ton rounds at tho injured his ahd Spratley at Lome Branch, N. J, i Mivey Barns, wee forced to eancal theme fights for Nelson, The latter to don the mitts again in @ few weeks. ne gota it TM throw away the dope and selec ip American League champs of 1921 right] minvion work In Chicago, might have | 0¥. fi heen the bext had he not joined the jelergy. The kid of the family, now| sixteen, threatens to be greater than | ward Gty boys, every one Yanks as the ng the milling and the New Ing. (Oporrtatt, 1900, The Bet) Bysdicate Ine.) the harder Pete Wartig, the Guraite Dane, whe te till today ty his menagu, Leo Fiynn, to meet Kid | Toe on Coater, the New | Atteen-roond bout, to & decision, et a show to ‘Thomas | be stagat at New Orleans on MMday night, Hart-| port who has stood eff Champion Jack Ir in fates, wan booker! their exhibition billiard match at the | tay i 0 tag farorte with the fight fans of that in heute, wil bh Strand Hullard a Coffey Severe Heating, Greenleat W: Ralph Greentoat ©, last night Goorge Ward of Elizabeth stopped Jimmy ¢ Mohawk Indta 146 to 133. in| in throes rounds. day af-) evening Greentald | had an easy Umno Greenleaf will bowin a ee iad acca nan stopped th Hic rowed decision, baat De ee) Olt meio The Ort. 2H, when Joe Leonard, the azaronaive Brook: ® featherwelaht, meets Young Johnie tn the star bout of fifteen rounds w ale bee an boxing in this country, will be kept] offer to tox Seonard sgsinet Jackie Sanders tn | Charlestown, ¥, C., tn two weeks. Danny Louch, the hand-ditting roung Tein Americas widdleweght “being potest te Tom | O'Rourke, ami Jobnny Iowart, the sever Bay. 4 twvlre-ronnd bight, and hie reernt susan In the ring show that he le ft for the hamlet kind af onteal, Howard ake tn greet adage, as nin recent woe tory over Jack Blocmtiell tends to ehow, Resides boxing Johnny Harre to-night, Pht} Del mont te signed for another bout, On Saturday BUat, at the frst weekend ahow to be by the Commonwealth Sporting Club, Delmont will mort “*Hapey” inith, the Yorkviliten, tn retum engagement. Knockout PRtl baving whipped Smith in Bayonne several months ago. Peniine the result of there two bouts, Rob hae matches with Gene Delmont, Jobnny Drummie and Tommy Noble tn prospeet, Ror Moore, the promining ttle Western ban- 000 for Hgbting Young Montreal of Providence, H. 1, a& the Mechanice Pavilion in Boston last night, hee jast been Laanweighit, who received Maned wp to meet KO. Kramer, the Rents fighter, ‘They will clash for tox rout, at Wor. center, Mam, on Oct 20 This will be their second battle, Moore having reestved the decalon is their previous ecmp. Bobby Aftchasis, the faat-riatng Sweeter trator iis Tommy Commenwesith Sporting Club last foe anciher beat with Noble, George Chaney of Raltimon, who he a lone | lie of knorkouta to his cowtit, will take on Tionny Leonard tn a twalve-round Yout to & de-| Johnny Rowe, the fast lghimoight of it. sialon at the Coliowm A, © Lie night of Oct, 2 Charile Welnerh the Newark Adonis, has ta. quarters a Eagle ilork, Kew ware training tn anticipation Oranae | of Georges Carpentier soneptt fy $e aplendid phyvion! oondition to-day, and fe | ures thet he moeds but tw a2” throes weeds tm | wham to tump ap proper Leia Boge the crack lightwalghs af Sela And also defeated many ether good welterweights je thany adinirare when he fighte Maity Crom at the Garten on Wriay might a frienite agening tithough Centre's opponents. ddn't monaure up t ary rngar | Reports have com from Danville this ia banding Lafayette, had the an- | teportis tave cole (nt at formar sintance of Seidel, and an they be- | Werk telling about brillant folwarg ' pasaing combinations tha ie] Ban behind closed gates the middle |ONSNInE combindtions tint due Of September, it lvoked av if thes |} Si entrar, ine ions would be ready to spring something | Hut it didn't work ogainst the Navy x it | o be expected that places, but the who were out | tart will nat Le well pr # for them ar tanner ae Veli inae Ie take Tepteaintae ran, te for quarter, |tive of Dixie, Fiv ne from Ken- a brothe 3 Anderson, 4 tucky, four from Texas, inclading Drowne, while « both promising © however, lacks pun and it Is a pretty would look like Clark and Kane for | Row! will seat 70,000 for the Ha the two ehda, Hubbard and ‘Tolbert | Yale gar for tackles, Woods and Brown for | vard alre the guards and Havemeyor for the |capacity, So great ts the dem pivotal position; in tho backfield, |tickets that there tm little like Capt. Horween, Humphrey, Hamil- | of a public sale at New Haven i ton, be watched with particular interest by ull football fans and authorities, It | the quarterback position still in ati doubt, but probably Johnson. , \ Rain’’ Checks though the rush Ine of fouth: socnan tee ranh tne of total inos| Mor Fight Fans quite a bulwark. nese sume work begin so early, nor haw it ¢ fo general aa this seusop. The gates | fro closed almost everywhe preparations for xt ure in progress, T {t Is that probably o the teams with close wor |upon formations and shifts. In fr Wo are gettin F: a in football which promises with ita| Kayo Waan't, out in any senes. He slang to compete with any other | as Nery much awake—awake to the sport, We hear of the “dead play, originating out on the Lynch ae beom accredited to Stagg; the * gamce—a term which ‘descrtbe: hiding of the ball in tts passage trom the quarter to the backfle: number of others of equally ‘graphic deacription | (Coorright, 1020, Consotidated Prom Amoctation,) | Wroth. The the open golf champion, ect « ion on & foul over Tilly Herma: record for the course of the Bellevue held by Walter Hagen of Detroit, was! out over J made last month, Par for the course | eroe sto} the bout in the is 12, ° wiih Harry Vardon aaa partner agninat | Walter Hagen and Bill & Bellevue pro, In the mateh, 18 holes tn the morning and 19 tn the the American, winning b: holes in the afternoon follows: Out i) Paul, of Haltimore 00 | in a twvlve-rotind battle at the Kureka 4. ©, of | | Walttmore an the night of Nor, 4, Rowe bas tuted foe Joe Walch of Phfladelobia, who called | fight Lew Tendlor and many good Kelly a traleing bard to get 1m | ani hie manager loom fog him to gf the bat of dane for the battle, Vardon 149, Hagen 165 and Hint: wintle in MO. At the ond of tho morning round Kay and Vardon led by 6 up and In the af Amerionn patr by tae same 72 and the afternoon tn 69 Vardon'a frat eig! but In U the offer of $25,000 if | nade ty 3 Prank Binnk, of the Newark Sporie- men's Cinb, te mest Charile ne Nov, 93. Wetnert him one stroke leas for the eighteen holes, morning and afternoon marks were 17 | and 79. for ® bout of sunk, ‘To Play Indoor Polo at Ho the National Horse Show at Madison! Square Garden, from > net will be etrung to keep the ball from fying. into the boxes and Keats, While the Horse Show entrics will not clone ers to MeMillan orted to be very efetive, It | the Southerners are strongly equ Colgate began with five vacant an quar Leonard and |Capt.’ MeMillan, and ono each Mr t types, are | Arkansas and Georgia. Phynteal! The team. }tho team will be much smaller sthaa Harvard. ‘ the Yale @otet «that the Yale rd next month and that #1 dy had anplied for halt the The strongest line-up for Harvard,| H. F. Woodcock ‘ong ohe too,/department announe jratwicks Fitts and Owen, with | Speaking of heavy men, ft looks as| 1 the time. Wisconsin has a tack! amed Scott that tips the acalea at At Harlem Club ne gota through | scholast ubles, will make} Feature bouts at the Commonwaalih Sporting Club came to such suddeh and Up at Min. | unsatisfa ory endings last night 8 may use |t on was used f the backfield | History repeats © Harry Willa kberg the way So mely, take him out nt ‘eclared patr xt Tuesday nite rs on presentation of last réight’s and play him at end, but pull him| ¢oxet stubs, Abe Goldsteln andé back to do the kicking, Garrells, Puryear will be the headliners, ¢ Tt wi remenibered, did som ts en unos s : generous action qn the ost of Mich wid Be part of a fight club, ' Never before did secret practica bout between Panama JoefGans . and | Mister Kayo W. pt such a soun | further secrecy | plé of Panama's thumps that he tMbug o atrange part of |te beat way out was to “retires un- ent, of all acetal though such action aight tea ave | ayo, 10 nate only, at on ithe Hor In *\the fourth round, nonchal i ev~ ing along similar lines, relying . retore $i Ing beeswax while the referec, Mores {, | Smith, tolled off the fatal count Dug & new nomenciature | lmtic do Tl fact that he WOULD have been out in 5 moment or two had he not taken the ms a Iife-waver. In the second he stopped the action of the plas for « full migute while he ar- he finer points of fouling with the | bein’ fouled." bloated K. 0. , and al you're being Mayed,” advined Smit ns, champing on the bit, stood. off Ne the debate waxed” exepedtt ended it. In thé third round Kayo—terrifying tn name @nly dropped with every move Gans made at » “Shimmy Shift,” TED RAY’S NEW MARK 69 Pun thee In the fourth Kayo took a few @> Lie }back while on the topes and then sa FOR BELLEVUE COURSE. | him down, boenwnx cud and alt ais - liatened to the music of M. Sinlthe basa count of ton. SYRACUSE, N. ¥., Oct. 20.-—-Ted Ray,| Marty Cross was awarded the! dec ROW | the Intter bad been warned re that he wan omploying Fler Six tactics Country Club when he made the 1%|. Danny Lar Kot a. referon's dels holes in 69% The previous mark, 71./9ver Hadle Mirman in als rounds ard Tory Peters scored a technical. gnoci nny Duffy when the ref save Du Tray beat the record tn his foursome + Atle, hich w Vardon and Ray swamped | 12 up, | » for the 18 Ray's record performar (YONKERS AND MT. VERNOS) '10-MORROW | $3,500 Autumn Stakes Winsome Handicap The Basswood Purs end 8 Other Hrililant FIRST RACE AT 2.20 ee ee ees . Ce ee ee ee Ray covered the 38 holes tn 141; Fo n they di ted the Ore. | Ray did the morning elghtean hoter tn. on holen were made in 77, @ afternoon he went round tn Hagen in the morning took 78. It took | in. the afternoon on r, Me Re (raina te Mec Vveraon of 11864 hate twistie’s V0" 'S 3h PM. "Avtalcionsl ireics fate! Ail trains atop at Tabenten ached vin Lexington” aed Aye dunway, se Wat yt’ Matt Ay. trunsterrted "te Ay Mubway, or yia eth aatd ‘LY te Jerome Av, by trolley from Weedless Band, $3.30. Ladt [neliding Wer test ote _> | thow This Year, Indoor polo will be a new feature at ov. 16 to 19, A - — for MMiMiarde met Moma gf” bb ee ate ale re