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Outsider Beats Hot Favorite in Feature and King Albert Wins at False Price. By Vincent Tieanee: ‘The result of the Bay View Handi- tap, the opening day feature at Aque- @uct, shows how far wrong owners and trainers can be at times in their Judgment of their own and other peo- ple's horses, In the overnight entries the Xalapa ‘arm and Lexington Stables, run in the interest of one man, Edward Simms, seemed to have the affair sewed up with four entries, Lucky Hour, Bon Homme, John Paul Jones and Southern Cross, Before post time the combined stables evidently decided that it would be a te of speed to start Southern Cross and Lucky Hour, so the issue was left to Bon Homme and John Paul Jones. Tom Healey added R, T. Wi! son's Sedgefield and the fleld went to post with Bon Homme and John Paul Jones odds-on choices. , Captain Alcock, a mudder at best. was made sceond choice and Hephals- tos, who had forced Thunderclap to a drive on his last start, was almost a drug on the market at 5 to 1. On the face of it the race seemed a certainty for the entry, even if it were run in ‘China. But horse racing is a funny sport, full of uncertainties, which are sup- posed to make It attractive. When it came to running Irish Brigadier, a 30 to 1 shot, the outsider, neglected by Ris owner and trainer, and for that Teason by every one else, just tow- roped them all. Sedgefleld, the added starter, also given little consideration, as a 10 to 1 shot, was second, and Bon Homme, coupled with John Pau! Jones as the choice, was third. John Paul Jones was last. Another example of the lack of knowledge of owners and trainers, in some instances, was furntshed In the following race. King Albert the ‘farm horse," was at the false price of 6 to 1, with Quesada the best thing of the race. King Albert had beaten Quesada Jast time out with supreme ease, but because he was 6 to 1, instead of 11 to 5, as he should have been, the ma- fority of racegoers decided he must have suffered some kind of an injury affecting his speed, and that Quesada had suddenly acquired something that he didn't have with him when he met Kimg Albert ut Belmont Park last ‘Wednesday. The confidence of owners and train- BASKETBALL GAMES OCT. 1 Original Celtics of New York, world's Professional basketball champions, will Dry the lid off the 1922-23 season at Madison Square Garden, Sunday eve ning, Oct. 1, with the strong Trenton N. J., clud as un opponent in the cur- fain-raiser. Continuing from then en, the Celtics will play in the Garden every Sunday night, although Mn cided to substitute dancing basketball sunday afternoons. instead of The Celtics are now in training at Valley Cottage, N. ¥., where Capt. Johnnie Beckman's crackerjack combin- tion is rapidly rounding into champlon- ship form un the watchful eye uf Trainer Ben Simon. a A. A. U. MEETS PLANNED FOR NEW YORK STADIUM Plans for the conducting of track and field athletics in the new Yankee base- ball park were included in the annual report of President Frederick W. Rublen submitted at the meeting of the Metropolitan Association of the Ama- teur Athletic Unfon at the Hotel Me- ‘Alpin last night. According to Rubion, he has had sev- eral conferences with Col. T, L, Huston and Col. Jucob Ruppert, Yankee owners, and work has already started on tne project. A 400-yard track, twenty feet Wide and a 120-yard straightaway, will be available when the structure 1s ‘com- pleted. es NO CROWD, NO BOUTS AT THE VELODROME T: créwd was so small at the New Yorlr Velodrome last night to see Clonie ‘Tait, the Canadian lightweight, and Pa! Moran of New Orleans in action, that th> bouts were postponed. ‘The boxing fans who did brave the shivery evening protested mildly at first but finally lined up and got their money back. eee HOPPE TWICE VICTOR, Willle Hoppe opened his season of billiard play yesterday at the Hoppe- Peterson Club on Broadway by beat- ing Charles Peterson in an afternoon exhibition to 125, and trimming the amateur star, Jullan Rice, 300 to 61, In the evening. Hoppe made a high run Of 115 und averaged 37 4-8 against Pet- ereon, latter averaged 17 | Against Rice, the former champion had @ high run of 97 and averaged 42 6-7. | Felco had a high rum of 27 and aver- aged 8 5-7. ee GOLF STARS MATCHED. NEWPORT. Sept. 19.—Two for- Us mer amateur go! ampions, Jesse Guil- ford, titleholder in 1921, and Francts Outmet, champion in 1914 and 1920, ure to meet here in & special thirty-six-hole mateh on Ocean Links, T. Suffern Tail- private course, Saturday and Sun- ays playing eighteen holes each day, Two Races at Aqueduct Show How Little Trainers Know About Their Horses EVENING WORLD'S OWN SPORT HISTORY. What Happens Every Day ORIGINAL CELTICS OPEN |HARDING FROWNS ON era is, as a rule, reflected in the oral market, Evidently Jim McEvoy, trainer of King Albert, didn’t think much of the gelding’s chances, and "Slim" Moore, trainer of Quesada, thought a lot of his colt, In this case, as in the Irish Brigadier race, the public was misled either inten- tionally or unintentionally, Or, as we are sorry to even suggest, owners and trainers know little more than the public does about theif horses. In the connection with the latter statement, the story told on Trainer Marty Murphy when he enlisted for the recent war {s iNuminating. The army authorities asked Marty what he knew about horses. “Everything,” announced —_ the trainer, ‘excepting when they should be ¢ to 1 and when they should be 20 to 1."" Eddie Taplin rode a powerful finish in getting Hellgate home in the two- year-old six-furiong event. He was last turning into the stretch and at the finish he was a good neck in front. All of which goes to s¥ow that rood horses always have a chance at Aqueduct no matter where they are when they reach the home turn, The Aqueduct officials have adopted the policy of other associations in order to make more room for boxes and have relegated the press stand to the topmost section of the structure, Covering races for a newspaper !s a tough job under any condition, but when it {s considered that in addition to chasing news all over the course throughout an afternoon, a long climt to the lookout station makes it a test of physical endurance. The ‘6 tracks employ official start- ers, timers and judges, but there are no paid callers to make charts through which the public gets the most important of its racing news. Calling the horses at Aqueduct from the present location of the press stand, with any degree of accuracy, ts exceedingly difficult The two-year- old races out of the chute are hardly visible until the front runners reach the bend. And the rafters interfere with the vision in the other events. Old-time track builders placed the press stands down in front and as near the finish line as possible. There is no reason to believe that they didn’t know their business. The comfort of their patrons is a necessary and commendable consid- eration of all associations, but if there were no newspaper men to tell said public about the sport's doings there might not be so many sald patrons to consider. Looks as it the track of- fictals want to break all of us down. 7 POP BOTTLE THROWERS WASHINGTON, Sept. 19.—President Harding frowns with other fans on the spectator who hurled the pop bottle at Lawson Witt, the New York Yankee outflelder, in the St, Louis game on Saturday, Col. Til L. Huston, Vice President and half owner of the Yankees, dropped in at the White House yesterday to talk abouts the Soldier Bonus Bill, but instead the conversation drifted to the great American sport, which the Pres{- dent follows closely. Col. Huston sald the President did not indicate his intentions about the bonus. “In fact, we talked about baseball principally," sald the Colonel, who is Commander-in-Chief of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. ‘The President knows more about baseball than I do about legislation, The President is against ‘pop’ bottle throwing and he hopes to be at the World's Series.”* President Harding wanted to see one of the championship games last year but was unable to leave Washington. = GREENLEAF LEADS, Ralph Greenleaf, world's pocket bil- liards champion, defeated James M. ture In the first two blocks of a 500- point match played at the Recreation Billiard Academy, Brooklyn, yesterday. In the afternoon match Greenleaf won by 126 points to 103 and in the evening he was victorious by 131 to 60. The champion 1s now leading by 257 to 163, ‘The match will be concluded this after- noon and evening, Ryder Beats Hague, Charley Ryder recelved the decision over Billy Hague after a fast tweive- round bout that featured the weekly boxing card at Cisco Field, Staten Island, last night. The two men boxed at top speed and when the final bel! rang seemed to be exhausted from their efforts. The judges’ decision awarding the bout to Ryder was not a popular one, Jimmy Reese of Brooklyn and Joe Meinhart from the same Borough put up a fast eight-round bout in the seml- final, Reese was awarded the verdict, —~ FUTURITY TROT TO BRANDYWINE COLUMBUS, ©., Sept. 19 (Associated Press).—The hitherto undefeated Thomp- son Dillon and Jane Revere, each c Ited as the winner of four races this summer, both met defeat yesterday in the Horse Review Futurity for two- year-old troters, feature of the Grand Cireult racing here. Brandywine, owned by H. J. Schles- inger of Milwaukee, Wis, driven by Edman, won the first and third heats, dropping the second to Thompson Dil- lon, In which heat he reduced his record @ quarter of @ second to 2.06%. Breaks in the first and second heats cost him is chance for victory, THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19. Coach Neville Building Up a Fine Eleven as Nucleus for Future Teams. By Burris Jenkins. Not since back in the 90's when the fullback wore side whisk- ers and our Dads smoked Sweet Cup- orals on the side lines and sang “Hot Time in the Old Town To-night” as they smushed each others’ high top hats,» has the College of the City of New York had a real football team. And not for fifteen years have they had any at all. But this year football ts coming back to City College. The faculty has agreed it is best for the college. And to-day out at the Stadium forty- eight smooth shaven young athletes In way brand new Jerseys and moleskins are starting in with tervor and en- thusiasm to epare themselves for Oct. 7, when eleven men picked from their number will take up the tattered bunner which their !ustri- ous forbears left lying in the dust of a forgotten gridiron many years ago. That first game is with St. Stephens College on the home gridiron, How to build a team out of prac- tically nothing on which to begin. That's the problem which faces head coach Joseph Neville, all-American half on “Cupid"’ Black's Yale team of '17—and {t's some mean problem. too, if you ask coach Nevilis, But if anybody can solve It, say the City College students, that man is their newly chosen head coach, You've seen these clothing adver- tisements of husky football players? Throwing off a blanket to rush into the game und win in the last five minutes of ol ? They look too handsome to be 1, don't they? Well, Coach Neville might have stepped right out of one of tl se ads. Bu! handsome or not this head coach has got the energy of dynamo and under his dark hair carries a wealth of football knowledge which he puts over to the young recruits with quietly good-natured smile and tn smooth, concise language. “Spirit! Team spirit! College spirit! Fight spirit! That's what I've got to get into these fellows first of all,’ said Coach Neville between workouts. ‘They've got to learn thet in football a man never quits; that there is something unexplainable about footballi—maybe the :aeer sportsmanship of just playing the gzame to the end—that makes a man fight, winning or losing, till the last white Jine is past. “Now out of this material here— which 1s pretty good all right—we've got to find the men who have got this football spirit even more than those who have had some experience “?m ‘not only planning for this year, but for the years to come ‘herefore, this year our system will be to build up a strong defensive team. We don't want any big scores piled up against us this year, if we can help it. We want to hold these seasoned teams around here down as low as we can to show them what a tea lees than a year old can do. After a couple of years we will plan for big scores ourselves.” The City College freshmen had a team least year Many of those men were out on the field for the varsity this year, and their one year’s expert- ence counts. There's Lew Oshins, Captain of last w r'a freshman team, which was #0 coached by the assistant this year, Lionel MeKenale, that they held the unbeaten N. Y. U. freshmen to scoreless te. Oshins is a lightning - Syst little back, swarthy skinned and CITY COLLEGE SQUAD IN THE FIRST SCRIMMAGE OF THE SEASON. haired, and does some punting. ——— He weighs 150 pounds. Then with two ends from the freshman team. Wiliam Ross, tall, 175 pounds, and Morton Brauer, 170, afoo~ with Ber- nard Miller, a O-pound gard of last year, all the other material ts without the least colleg otball experienc: But thero are some promising can-| Adams pxpress didates. A clean-cut, blond young-| Air Reduction ster, Michael Garvey, twenty-two, a] Ajax Rubber 150-pound backfield prospect, has] Ailiéd Chem been punting the pi; in well up over] Allis Chaimers Atty yards ever since spring practice, | Am Beet Sugar And Jack Clancy, another rangy} 4" Bosch youth of 170 pounds, showed up as a] 4™ Brake Shoe promising prospect in spring prac-| \" C8" 9.-: tice. Also Irving Ashworth of sume| \" Cf Founy type, who never played football but] oP Te Tain pe looked so good that Neville is watch-} \\, tee 4 ing him for a back position Am Tce pf... — Am Int Corp... As for weight on the line, City] Ain Linseed Oil. College will not go beggi for] Am Linaeed Olt pt pounds this year. Five men weigh-| Am Locomotive. ing over 200 are working with the! Am Iadlator squad—George Shapiro, 220; Saul; AM Radiator pt. . Brodsky, 207; Bernard Miller, 200; | 41m Safely Nason. Irving Sauber, 210, and Saul Vogel,| 4™ Shin & Com. 245, Am t& ite pe Se P Am | Foundry COLUMBIA FOOTBALL Am Bugne ‘ MEN HOLD SCRIMMAGE} *") ) & om For thirty minutes late yesterday |." afternoon, Buck O'Neil supervised the] 4). first serimmage of the year for the] aww Columbia football squad, The varsity} aj, team with Tlihonen and Johnson, endsi] ain Writ Pap pe Seo and Streich, tackles: her and] Ain zine i Brodil, guards; Blaine, centre; Burtt.| Ai, zine pt quarterback; Capt. Koppisch and Geh-| Qniconda o rig, halfbacks, and Roderick, fullback,| 4). sein! Ga. took the ball on its own 20-yard |ine} Qo.) tiny Goods.. and in the face of strong opposition] \;, ; from the second team’s rush line ad-} Qi oiicon pt vanced to the 38-yard line, There Rod-| 1) const Line erick took It over for the first touch-| 41) ppuit 7 down of the season. Atl Guit & WI. The first team had the ball through- in Nichole out the practice and were able to cross] jv yy, from the chalk line once more. It fell (O]j.4:4 Locomott Roderick's lot to acore the other tally. | paitimoro & Ohio too Van Brocklin' later substituted for} jai & Ohio pf Gehrig. Rarnsdall A The morning session was devoted to] pony Steel tackling the dummy while the early in part of the afternoon workout the men] juih Stool pf 7% went through the usual punting drill iyn Rap Tr Van Brocklin and Gehrig did the Ing. Maurice Reilly, substitute end ast n year, made his appearance but wM not | turie Superior be able to come out for the team Nut Pke . because of an operation he underwent| oa On during the summer at his Gal Packing Cicero, I. George Pease, al!-sc te] cat Petro quarterback Inst season from Callahan Mining. Training of Brooklyn, reported in a}eanadian Pac... sult and will stay with ¢ squad until] ¢ ther the Freshman squad comes cut ¢ ther pf 1P&O Fordham Eleven Invited to Prac- P& Opt tice at Seashore » De Pasco.. The Fordham football squad, thr ndier Motors. its head coach, Frank Gargan, has t oe ne invited to p&t In one of its prac sessions this week at the Brighton § re Baths, Goal posts have t ‘ ahaa k yx the surf, and for more a we Pata gridiron candidates for 3 unt : { Phoumatie Th versity elevens in the F e &St Pan! working out on the Pte Gargan was tn charge of th York University foothall susd ! the Violet held its first workout of 19¥1 at Brighton. At the time the f star quarterback was ent! the arrangements. s the n wearers were able to immediately after the Sonennnainen MONTREAL STOPS ASHER, DETROIT, Mieh., Sept Montreal, Providence vantanwei ‘ knocked out Babe Asher, A. © Ef m- | ¢ pion, in eight rounds last nig aa scheduled ten-round fglit ¢ sete an Am haneAm Sgr JOHNNY LEONARD WINS, Gane Sugar ALLENTOWN, — S¢ 19 1 Chem Leonard, the crack local juni Beers Mining Weight, beat Bobby Willian anot i & Hudson good local boxing product re das L & Western night in a fast ten-round bout me Mines CURTIN STOPS RIDLEY ocean's edge dr Bugur pt Irish ¢ Ridley attl nig t land A, A. of Jersey City in t round of a schedule twe ' . Curtin dropped Ridley for U Rubbe pine in the sixth, High. 81 19% 6 BAY oT OST 45% 41% 81% 81% 18) at WT KRY, KRU We 4 { nm re 15% Low, Last. SI 50 15, 54 1922, and Flown A new typ nautical Engineering Corporation, Service in the Pulitzer Trophy race at Designed by Grover Loentng, in-@ ventor of the Loening air yacht, the machine welghs 2,700 pounds ready for Might. An outstanding feature ts the heavy continuous spars of the main wing structure, which entend through the fuselage and serve as chassis members The engine, which is mounted at the nose, is a 600 horse power, twelve cylinder Packard, capable of develop- But It Boasts R FORT WORTH, Texas, Sept. 19 Sunday, and also that there is such a For the first time since Pioneer was founded, the weekly day of rest has was too much aecupled with the boom to pay the slightest heed to enforce- ment measures. It took its name from a gusher that came in six months ago. Then there wasn't a single house one the stretch of mesquite dotted with prairie ypen. High, Low. Laat Open Low. Last Goldwyn Pictures. * » ih 7 Studebaker pf.... 110% 154 115% ieneral Axphalt . 64 84 Bubmarine Boat.. 7 7 OT General Vieetrie 170% 170% Spicer Mfg.... rited A th General Motor % lite 144 [Skelly O81 0 Geoarieh ate Mie dng] Tenn Cop & Chem 1044 o% % Goodrich pt a BS chy Texas Co. aT at 4™ iranby Mining 1 1 a} MW Texas Guif Sulp, 8 badd ibs) t Northern pf.. 94 Oy 08% 4 [Texas Pacitic 30% 0% 0% Gult Btate Bteel, SO", BT sD Texas Coal & Ol MH 24 ba Hartman Corp Rig MG ky | Tidewater Ot 164% 134% 134% Touaton Ol i KO 804 | Tebacco Prod ... Indiahoma Refin, 4% 1%, | Tobacco Prod A nt Comb Bng wy [T StL a WB nter Cons Corp.. 11g | Transcont Oli... Int Cons Corp pt 4 [Union Bk P.... Int Harverters .. 110) 1190 [Union on Int Mer Mar pf.. fi% | Union Pacitic.... Intor Nickel 17% | United Drug tat pf Inter Pap BhYy | Unt Retail Storow: Invinelble Ou wmy{US CrP ucts: U ® Express " U 8 Food Prod. * Bros Tea UB Ind Alcohol ayner N US Realty Kan Clty 80 U 8 Rubber Kansas & Guif UB Rubber Int pf pringfield. U 8 Bmelters..... v Lackawanna § Utah Copper of racing monoplane, said to be the hii Size ever built, has just been completed at the plant of the Loening Aero- for entry by the United States Army Air Plane to Fly 200 Miles an Hour Built for Pulitzer Cup Race Ship Designed b lamiee Corporation Will Be Entered by Army. st powered for ita Detroit ing 630. It ts the same type, with improvements, an that of the Verville plane in which Capt. C. C. Mosley, fn 1 , won the Pulitzer Trophy race at Mitchel Field, Mineola, L. 1 His average speed for the 132 miles was 178 an hour. Mr. Loening believes his monoplane le capable of 200 miles an hour or better. Woman Cleans Up Pioneer, Texas, ed Liquor to Last Mushroom Oil Town at Last Finds Out There Is Law and Such a Day as Sunday. (Copyright).—Pioneer, a wild town of the West Texas oil flelds, has just discovered there is such a day as thing as law and order—and {it was a woman who taught the six-months-old community Its lesson, : dog holes. But with olf in sight the 1 . , : t i aaware sold aver ihe here una] KAMbIer, the bootlegger, the dance hall the dancing pavilions were closed, For] Proprietor and habitue were not long t ajority of the resorts, it absent None was interfered with, as ree erat mat vime'the front door ever| th oll men had none of thelr own had been closed and some of the man- eee folk or thelr children with ae te ae italia “°¥"| In Pioneer there developed a dle- Cen emits attention | ‘ator. He regdiated everything. H Prone te tt aw. Keerybody | tmanded the saloons sell real red from officers of the law. E hides Cade E CELE a. & benevolent czar and there were fewer stabbings and shootings than are customary for this sort of con- munity. His mandates were heeded and he carried on supreme. Kdith Zutler arrived last week looked over the place, Then she acto’ She called on the Prohibition en forcement officials and they sent her men and deputized her to clean up. She made a good job of it. The saloons and gambling houses were shut down, and many of the boot- loggers who had failed to take a gen- tlo hint were arrested and sent to thie Jail at Abilene. As a result of Mra, Zutler’s efforts the town has been cleaned up and the oil men say they will bring thel: familles in. One thing the settlers of Pioneer point to with pride is that the quality of the town’s liquor was maintained up to the very last possible moment teh Mae Ee LIBERTY BONDS f Liberty 348 opened 101.30, up 0.02; 2d 4%s 100.10, up 0.02; 34 100.50, up 0,04; 4th 100.52, up 0.06. Victory 4%s 100.72, off 0.04; called 100.30. CURB heavy. City Serv. Bkrs. Shares 21, off 3-8; Int. P. 211-8, off 1-8; Timken Bearing 27 5-8, off 3-8; Schulte, 481-2; Mutual, 10 8-4; Radio, 4 g-8; 8. O. Ind,, 116 1-8, off 1-8; Guilt Oll, New, 641-2, up 11-4; Br Am Tob Cor, 19, up 8-8. She Opened Laclede Gas Utah Becuritles .. FOREIGN EXCHANGE. lee Rubber Vanadium Stee Opened firm, Sterling, demand, Lehigh Valley Va Caro Chem pf 0 " ” Liggett & Myers Vivaudou, Ine. 4.41 6-8; cables, 4.47 7-8, up Is Lima Locomotive Wabash RR French frane, demand, .0757 3-4; Loew's Ine Wabash Rit of A cables, .0758 1-8, up .0008 1-4. Lire Weber & Hel Wells Farko demand, .0417; cables, .0417 1-2, up ? Wost Maryland 0001; Belgian franc, demand, .0715; ae Weatisgnosse Ale cubles, .0715 up 0002 1-2. Marks, een Wacionutnee: 0006 3-4, k drachma, demand, Ing) dat ips White ‘ol 0820; cables, 0325. Swiss franc, de- vron Ci ir vedna Biel mand, .1862; cables, .1864, off .0001 Ry prior witeon G8 Guilders, demand, .3368; cables, .3866, Svenaea off .0004, Pesetas, demand, .1513: Wisconsin cables, .1515, up .00 Sweden kro- Worthington Pump ner, demand, .2641; cables, 2645, up Worth Pump pf i 0008." Norway, demand, .1716; cables, bh Aare -1720, up .0008, Denmark, demand, des, eivdand) 2071; cables, off .0013, Minn & Bt Louin 1 cs MoKaATWH iL MoK&T pewi Ww Mo Pacific pe .. is Mont Pi is North Nor Itsa (4 al \ & Went... 120 Amer 4 Pacific \ a Ketin el : ins @ Bleo.. 80% gi on WI F fa eas, Z-pocket model wat ah 4-pocke poet : ar 4 Ey fu Coremt 1 in, fin 4 Ber of NJ f ie ih ta Toh pf, MW NT $14 18 44 1 15% A 313% (Air Line pe 1% CML ' Am nL di) ot ay 4 % 14% arts Warn 4 4% AIM ATW boker . 127% 128 128% 19 Tom Wye It’s much more enjoy- vle to drive or walk or work when you are warm and unhampered by bulky clothing. ATom Wye KnitJacket ves you the warmth ithout the weight. Neatly id good-looking tailored, trim, Two styles in beauti- 1 Scotch heathers, Atmen’swearandsport- g goods stores. Look for the Tom Wye label Robert Reis & Co, Distributors NEW Yea CFPY