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CAPT. BUELL TO STAR ‘WHITE AND MARKS IN FEATURE BOUT ATGARDENTO NIGHT Bobby Michaels Tackles | Andy Thomas in the 12- Round Semi-Final. ARVARD 10 USE BEST MEN AGAINST PRAYING COLONELS Southerners Arrive in Boston for To-Morrow’s Big Footbali Game in Crimson Stadium Ten Hours Late. BOSTON, Oct. 20. HE Ha¥vard football cleven will only have the lightest sort of practice today fr to-morrow’s Wig game against Centre, which team handed By John Pollock. eda? Five bouts, consisting of forty st year. them a defeat last y ; mene rounds of fighting, will be staged at tone but, would Coburn. The praying Colonels are ipl Naby Clark was back tn his old place | Madison Square Garden to-night. In they arrived ten hours tte. but he also bas played no football at] the feature bout Chariey White of On-Tocentre for ro a He recelved - will Iimber up to-Way, They ty Me Tene Wegury. yesterday’ which may | Chicago will hook up with Sid Murks 4 typ the Crimson a] sligh any rtet fident they will give the Crimson a) in ugh to keep him out of the ga the I'ghtweight champion of Canada tough battle. In this case Kernan will start ahead of | eo. twely ’ ¢ Capt. Buell will mike bis first start] Hradford, having done well aguinst aR ahohdd Ma AM nema pt. | Bowdoin. Kernan as yet, however, is] meets Willle Pfeiffer and 3a/! Duane against the Kentuckfans. Twice he] nowhere near as effective an offensive ¢ meets Georgie Daly In six-rovnd con- has acted as substitute quarterback | centre as Clark tests, while Tucker wil! outher mers. hrke | Aside from the places under discus- Andy meet against the Souther mors. | Gente atin the team sestorday wan na it prop-| Artie Plerco in the frat 9 of four oe ayers for tive Crimson to-| ably will start to-morrow with Fitts, left | rounds, backfield players end: Dunker, left tackle; Grew, left morrow. ward; Hubbard, right guard; Eastman, The Centre boys are clean-shaven tig; tack! oy Mant end: Huell, | Attorney Gen. Allen of Masanchusetts has this time. For the pag two years.| quarterback: Gehrke, right back, end|'#t notified the Boxing Commission of that owing to a superstition «tf their great | Owen, fullbs State that the money which the commis star, Bo McMillin, they neglected to} Fisher has only two real cripplew sion held up from Jock Malone and Johnny shave ‘our days before ti game, but} now. Codman, the fourth centre, anu| Karr of Cleveiang when they were ordered Young Braden, one of the lightest of t! Capt. Ryberts has given this idea the from the ring by the referee fp their bout air this Year running bucks, and nelther would Inst week must be paid to the fighte ir this . likely to play against Centre if ft. Malone will recetve $2,(C0 and Karr a h thie bead brite eg “Set ] . George Owen hax done no punting fo ] euarantee of $1,450, nornet a e . two weeks, but will get at it again Mon- sds bore the conyers stent their stme with the] Gy sald, Norfolk the colored heavyweight, and the colored batt er of Berlin, H_ have ‘Just been matched up by the hmaker of the Arena A C of Boston 1 in the feature bout of ten rounds at thar cick an Oct. 80. Norfolk ovght to have no troubie In outpainting Anderson, men who wl enter eins egte with the Colonels. There is no question about the team's having made reab strides this week, both 18 physical condition and speed. The defense continued good, and even with con \nued shifts cp the fine and behind {t, \he attack heid up better Derry Parmeter kept Kunhardt work- ing at guard again yceterday, This player is going to make a real fight tum {n somewhere on the team before the Crimson plays at New Haven. Centre College's football team faces a N Tornmy Loughran, the 01 M1 a= ht of Phuindelphia, "who 'hms “fous i chance to do something to-morrow | Gene Tunney, Harry Greb and ‘other ned tase Stone We ee daeoh oe which no team has becn able to ac- | battiers, will ‘make hie fir appearance ine practice yesterc\ay the vars complish — beat Harvard two consecu- | Poulin Boston on Nov. 10. He has been through its work with the eame sort of compllsh — beat Harvard two consecu-| matched by Fight Promoter McCurdy to vim it will be whowing three weeks] Y°0 TOMS On ill Aeeliseton arclmmeltn ten Gat the Bridgeport middie- toe he game with| Yale, Pennsylvania and Princeton are | weight, for ten rounds at Mechaniey” Bulld- | eae the eve of the only teams to beat Harvard twice | & '" besten on Nov. 10. \eadtagad e one e e - i There are only two questionable | of More running, but none of the three] | Floyd Johnson, the crack heavyweight of 9 . ahs Not > eld two years | California, who ‘recently stopped Bob’ Mar. places In the ne-up for to-morrow. Not) in guccesslon, each of these sertes alter- | tify the heavyweight champion of the A. 'E HAEI"Iate to-day will It be fine “nating between the two fields. Fo tn a bout at Madinon Square “Garden, whether Clark or Kernan will phy} ""Sartmouth, winner of the firet game |e Ji ‘3 up to meet Clem John centre, or Chapin or Coburn be in the /in the Stadium in 1903, got only a te] go.’ ht, In iv ten-round backfield with Gehrke and Owen. ‘Thy Maal yeant Casilla; which Gon ty aiccaunals joston on, Hes gee tte Une-up yesterday’! 1907, 28 to 16, was routed, 17-0 in 1908; | "FF Wills in a bout and show: ‘ Dartmouth's 22-0 victory of 1907 was} ‘Tom McArdle, r uable to do his usual part in a) followed by a 6-0 beating. Carlisle won, | reanized laren Fairmont A. 6. hast bey football game. Chapin was in Coburn's | 8-15, in 1911, and then, after thre: | {fanted & Henge by the Hoxiig Commission place last week, Coburn saving done no} yqars’ absence, was trimmed, 29-7, Ir siege hows in the building at orth hard playing since he was tnken out! 1945. Cornell's 1916 attempt to duplt- and Pack Avenue which was formerly of the Holy Cross game. Chapin's run-| cate its 10-0 victory of 1915 saw Harvard] \rdle intends to put on his opening. show ning has been unusually goou, and he ts] win, 23-0, and Tufts and Brown, which | '® Monday evening, Out. 30. (| coveloping into a keen defersive back in the Stadium, 7-3 and 2. won , Tes Matchmaker Jeas McMahon, He probably would make for more] apectiv:ly, in 1916, wore beaten, 84-0 and| ng Frankie Gelaro battle tare teetotty, backfield speed against Centro than} 7-0, in 1919. jptivelve-round go at the Commonwea iporting C! hn D har Just ‘Goked up Frankie Jerome, the good, battie of Harlem, to fight Terry Martin of gssins ih lence, R. 1,, In the same club on Oct. 28 Jim Tracey, the Australian heavyweight, who was knocked ou by Luls Firpo, the South American heavyweight champion, ‘at Lohse oath recently, will figure In two more fights in thay country... itt" be Sat” Montevideo "on Nowe Seed ths second at Santiago, Chill, on Nov. 18. Each bout will be for twenty rounus, the game Denver light . ntly won u decision over Joe Welling of Chicago on a foul, at, De has been slgad to fleht Hurry “Kid Brown, the Philadelphia fighter, in an e gh ind bout at the National A. C. of Phil delphia "on | Saturday wveniie, Nov. 4 ‘ommy Lynch of New Yo On"Leonaid for eight round,” uente to-morrow night, N.Y.U.and Fordham Renew Their Athletic Relations oe som then gave his men a Jong black- board talk, in which he reviewed the JOU/BOOw playo Wie Cer Los mu «ons he has recently contrived for his own eleven. Frank Gargon's brother, loward, and Bill Kelleher, both past Sordham football stars, assisted Frank jargon and Tom Moriarty, line coach, vesterday. 5 MORE HARD LUCK FOR THE C. c. N.Y. TEAM. Another sewere b.ow to the C. C. N eleven came yesterday when Ross, Jimmy Hanton, welght, who rec Play First Foothall Game Since 1904 on Nov. 7—Sat- u.day’s Gridiron Contests. By Burris Jenkins. THLETIC relations between New York University and Fordhan fave been resumed, according to an announcement yesterday by Al- fred Nixon, graduate manager of N. from South America, where he went for the irpo. He ts due to arrive here on Pancho Villa, the flyweight the United Bta lywelght champion o: 4, Is train.ng hard for three ¥ Y. U. The first football game be-|.he opposite end to Brauer, whore | vl which bes manager has him signed ov ‘or ‘The first of these bout Will be wit! tween the two Gotham institutions} inkle was sprained Wedyesday, was] Danny dwards, the colored battler of th: since 1904, when a disagreement dur- ing « gridiron contest caused the two colleges to sever relations, has been vest, for ten rounds at the Arena A C+) Boston on next Monday night. ‘his bout pught to attract a big crowd of fight fans. Babe sept out of practice with m bad knee. Aulin, tackle, is also out with boils jarvey, a substitute halfback, was put the crack arranged for Election Day, Nov. 7, at]in Ross's place at left end tor yester-| who was fret brought here ‘sy Champion Ohio Field. lay’s Mght scrimmage. He caught | Jack Dempsey, will take on Wille ey the Brooklyn fighter, in the main event of twelve round at the ort Sporting Chub on Monday night, Mort Seligman will mee Jimmy Cancro in the semi-final of eight vounds. Athletic contests other than footbal’ have been carried on in recent years in a desultory way, but is expectec from now on the meetings in all sportr will be resumed since an official un derstanding has now been reached. Fordham defeated N. Y. U. 21-0 tn the last intercollegiate meet in 1904 and nlen 'n 191K Ina combat hetween 8. A. T. C. elevens, besting the Vio- jet 7-0, ‘The late, guise » as won b, Frankie Frisch, now infielder of the Giants, then on the Fordham eleven who made the lone touchdown. A triangular cross country engage- ment between Fordham and N. Y. U on Nov. 18, with Rutgers filling the irfo, has ulready been scheduled. FCOTBALL GAMES IN NEW YORK TO-MORROW, New York fans will have plenty o! football to-morrow, when Fordham mects an ancient rival, Georgetown at the Polo Grounds, and N. Y. U. takes on Columbia at South Field, Rumors that Colymbia will have an rosy time defeating N, ¥. U. have Drought torth the .ollowing statemen Yvom Coach Thorp of N. Y. U.: ‘Comparing the strength of the N U. and Columbia teams on a basir «mes won and lost so far gives no wo forward passes and made the only wo touchdowns, Coach Neville 's 1ot’ expecting to meet as stiff opposi on in the Drexel game on Saturday at Lewisohn Stadium as in the pre- jous convests, ‘The newly organized boxing club In Jeracy city, the Victory A. ©, will stage a show ine night of Oct. 20 at which Rocky Smith of Battle Creek, Mich., will hook up with Tommy Marto, the New York fighter, tn the feaiure boul of twelve rounds, >_> SHIO STATE ELEVEN READY FOR WOLVERINES As the Boxing Commission has decided on the elght fighters who they think should neet elimination contest to decide he middieweight title, Frank Bagley says oe Is ready to match up Augie Ratner, wh # one of the elght, to taky on any of the wther seven. ey SYRACUSE IS ALL SET FOR PITTSBURGH GAME COLUMBUS, ©., Oct. 20.—After put- ting his men through a grilling practice session yesterday in preparation for the game with Michigan Saturday, Coach Jack Wilce announced that the entire Ohio State squad would rest immediate ly after a light workout to-morrow un- til they meet the Wolverines, ANN ARBOR, Mich., Oct. 20.—The Wolverines “are ready for anything the Buckeyes offer'* was the only statement Coach Yost would make as he and the team received perhaps the greatest send-off of his twenty-one years as the Maize and Blue leader as the team started for Columbus. Hundreds of fans accompanied the team, —=_—_ 5T. JOSEPH’S ELEVEN WHIPS BROOKLYN PREP Prep of Phfladelphta, SYRACUSE, Oct. 20.—With workouts yesterday consisting of only signal dril and dummy scrimmage, Chick"? Meehan ended his week of preparation for the Pittsburgh game. The line-up of Syra- cuse Is practically certain except for th: quarterback berth, Simmons, the regular signal caller has been nursing a lame shoulder dur- ing the past week and, although he tx reported as ready to play, Meehan may start Frugone as pilot of the team. Anderson, McBride and Zimmerma will make up the remainder of the back: field, In the line, McRae and Jappe wil St. Joseph's lat idea of their relative powers. Co-}catholle school football champions of | be at the ends, Waldorf and Starobin at mola, in my opinion, has not had 4] fastern Pennsylvanta, trounced Brook-|the tackles, Heers and Van Blarcon at 4 yet to test her strength, |lyn Prep yesterday afternoon at Com-] guard and Capt. Culver at centre, end have faced two first-class] mercial Field, 13 to 0, In its first visit] The advance sale of reserved-seat teams. hat is why we have been} to New York in the four years that the} tickets Indicates that the crowd will be beaten. I think the Columbla team | Bancots Reve, | hd the [Soe teny one of the largest that ever witnessed a ) Foaatienate and recorded {ts tenth victory alnce the | Syracuse-Pittsburgh football game, hes Para Labyae| peraala aes local eleven defeated St. Joseph's last | f Spade tee yor sede . The series now stands two all. ar + fight than Columbia supporters} "°°" ok i Brooklym Man Victor tm Checker a KETONEN WINS MAT TITLE. = iy a LIGHT PRACTICE FOR N. Y. U.| LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Oct. 20.—Watno| BOSTON, Oct. 1a Long of To- ELEVEN. Ketonen of Massachusetts defeated|!edo and Louls Ginsberg of Brooklyn will meet to-day to decide which ts tc play Alfred Jordan, former Bnglisn champion, in the final round Saturday of the Afth American checker tourna- ment here. Long yesterday defeated Joseph Duffy of Chicago. Jordan de- feated V. C. Townsend of Waltham, winning one game, while three were drawn, Charles Rentrop of Little Rock last night in a wrestling match in which {t was claimed that the middleweight championship of the world was at stake. Rentrop surrendered a recently won belt sald to be emblematic of the title, The championship long has been disputed and there are numerous claimants, oe Practice was light yesterday at N. Y. with dummy tackling and a Y'ttle ‘signal drill, still in secret. In yesterday's scrimmage for the Columbia squad, the regular line-up ppeared against the scrubs and scored \.vo touchdowns, ene by Roderick, the her by Koppisch. MeCreary substi- MORAN AGA TO LEAD ROWS, PE are ‘uted for Koppiseh part of the game, | te ee by Patrick 3. |Demmy Defeats Church at Billiards. voral new plays were | practised |soran will manage the Cincinnati! D. Denny and J. Maturo were the hare expected to be used In Sat- Notional League baseball team again] winners yesterday In the Eastern pocket ova pame, next year, This was announced follow-| billiards chargpionship tournament now FORDHAM HAS WORKOUT FOR |ing @ meeting of the directors of the}in progress in the 14th Strevt Billiard GEORGETOWN. club at which It was voted to re-engage| Academy, Denny defeated A, Church the veteran leader, His salary, it was understood, Is to be the same as that received in 1922, Moran will winter at his home bere, : - ) ( L in the afternoon match by a score of 125 to 117 and Maturo won tne evening game from G. Clark by @ score of 126 te uk Lhe last hard workout before meet- jeorgetown was held by the Ford- team yesterday untll dark. Gar- a TIT TTI SEE NING WORLD, F O START GAME AGAINST CENTER TO-MORROW FOOTBALL DOINGS Coryrieht, 1922 (New York Evening World), by Prean Publishing Co. “Your, FAVORITE HUH F WELL 50 WERE THe YANKS Covumeia VS. NYU. Maevianns CHances » WITH PRINCETON G Z X MusT WIPE our HAT LAST Wears DEFEAT ya our “WT CRUTCHES OG AN'ALL -SHouLD Bool of WNILLIAMS FoR A Goat. tM ONLY ONE OF NElGHeor’s se mess uP SD. HARVARDS SLATE AGAIN. —=— Conan =e By Bud Counihan SKIS TRPTI US. A OFF FOR PRESENT AHA Rickard Receives Cavle That Carpentier’s Conqueror Is Going to Meet Beckett. @ By Ed Van Eve~y. Tt may be tough news for the fisht fans over here, but the chances are we will never get an eyeful of Bat- tline Siki do'ng his stuff As exclusively announced In The Evening World of yesterday, T Rickard fina'ly heard from Maurt Hellers, the manager of the Socking Senegalese. The long wa'ted cable- zram came yesterday afternoon and tt brought bid news indeed, It brought word to Rickard t Battling Sikt lind @ecided to meet Joe Beckett, heavyweight champion of Merrie Eng- land, on Dec. 7 ai the National Sport- ing Club of London, and that for the present the American invasion is all off. ‘ with me is bind. ing,” sald Rickard after he had re- covered from the shock. “Hellera _ stipulated his own terms for the ap- pearance of Sik! in a bout at Mhrdi- xon Square Ga den with any light heavyweight of my choosing for @ date Inte in November, These terms were accepted on my port by cable and our agresment ts legally binding. “1 could prevent the match between S'ki and Beckett if T should care to carry the thing into a legal actor abrovd, but L question whether cn) trouble would be worth the effort. In any event Siki will never fight in this country unless he fights for me and the chences are quite possible that I will not want him after the fight with Reckett."” As the buciness is lisble to turn out Siki may hna ciat he has been very badly advised in postponing his Amer. ican appearance until he has tackled Reckett. Not thot the English cham, pion is prrticularly tormidable, bu’ the bout may tend to show how poor D) iki's contract Some BoDY WAS OFF SIDE AND LAUGH TRAT ONE OFF. DUNCAN AND MITCHELL, FAMOUS BRITISH ‘PROS,’ SAIL HOME TO-MORROW Thierut’s One-Horse Stable Wins Sixth Straight Race NI H and Sahak their heads f ven No Telling How Good a Colt|tiinking, it horses. do think, tha’ Is Prince James, Who Wins | either of them was going to beat h' With Amazing Ease. George Duncan and Abe Mitch- ell, famous British golf stars, who won four times as many matches as they lost during their extensive tour of this country, for Homé to*morrow. They prevailed in forty matches, lost ten and tied two. Mitchell’s average of play for 102 rounds was 72.7 and Duncan's 73. mount Blue and Gold. The latter filly, owned by John B. Maaden, rat practically unbacked, and thus a fu ture good thing was spoiled. By Vincent Treanor. Peake Sead peuiern open N PRINCE JAMFS, Charles H Sir Galahad, on which Sande won after tieing with Leo Diegel, Dun- I mnt the fifth race, is eight years old. He can being tied for fourth place. hterot, the Wall Street broker.) 145 been winning regularly up it Duncan captured the Western has about the best one-horse/Cunada, but he was deemed too ol” New York open, being five |‘%table the American turf has ever] hv most revulars to win on a metre strokes below Walter Hagen, sec- | -nown, This four-year-old son of| politan track. The horse is owned ond man. Mitchell stood fourth. K f by Gerald Dempsey, the wetl-know easter Attn ine eke. [eine samen: quite @ racer hunarifiin |e! cont rer wer. pemipsey tr his day, has won six straight races this season and there ts no telling what he may not do before the sport ‘vinds up in the East in Maryland He ts eligible for some lonz distance races at Pimlico, and {t wouldn't be surprising to see him win tiem an¢ wind up with a clean slate of turf vic- tories. United States open. engaged to marry the widow of Pierce Butler. This young man, a son of ‘he owner of the Empire track, was killed in war after the armistice. VAN VLECK LEADS PIPING ROCK CLUB QUALIFYING FIELD Eddie Van Vleck §r., ex-Yale ath letic star, led the fleld in the qualify Harry Haggerty, the well-known New Yorker, has a betting system which has been uncannily successfu all season. Harry adds all the start ers in each race, after the manner of “my mother told me to take thir ing round of the Piping Rock Clun| At Yonkers yesterday the col! wor] one,"* until he comes to seventeen invitation tourney with a score of 76 }the Fearnaught Handicap frum as|Then he unbelts. Yesterday Prinec John Stearns and Howard Maxwell | wood a horse as Exodus with cmazing | Times and Ruddy were Hagerty’ each had 78, and that tally until Var} case, after pulling back and conced- | ‘17,"" and both won for him, He has Vieck's arrival looked like the best of the day. Van Vleck’s triumph was dur to long range sharp shooting and to efficient and finished play around the greens. THE SUMMARIES: had as many as four of them ge ov in a single day. His dope got him Sally's Aliey at 20 to 1 in the Futur ity. ng a good lead to the Greentrer Stable gelding at the first and some- times most Important: turn. He just galloped after that down the hack- stretch until Taplin couldn't restrain him any longer. He ‘walked’ past Fxodus before the far turn was reached, as he did past h's clussy op ronents, Including Mad Hatter. in the George D. Widener came over from Philadelphia to see Last Straw race and before the handsome daughter of H Ultimus went to the post he an- Gardiner Whit \queduct Handicap, where he made # | nounced that win or lose it would be Richard wean new track record of 2.11 for a milc|her last race. Last Straw will be on: M. Barnes, Pip and@five-sixteenths. He races as {f| of the good bunch of mares that hav: Tigger Mt iioe sprinting and travelling a ronte were| been bought to mate with Tromp hy Rockaway Hi anally agreeable to him La Mort, who is now the premie: Ward, Garden Cit Prince James began racing this sea- | stallion at Erdenheim, the historic Pr einald Lewis, Greenwich; son at Aqueduct when he ran thire| stud where Leamington stood fe F St. Frelinghuysen, Piping fork. 41 to Flying Cloud and Olympus and] many years at Chestnut Hill in the ' Burton, Mockaway Hun “4 sa y in the Ronee WF, Bacon’ Highland’ eo cad since then hasn't known wha! defeat} suburbs of Philadelphia. It was at M. Stevenson, ip'ng Rock . is. Owner Thierot gets a lot of pleas Erdenheim that Iroquois, winner of OTHER SCORES ure out of Prince James's sucersses | the English Derby in the colors of Fr, ©, Havemeyer, Piping Rock, 4 He comes to the track every time he| Vierre Lorillard, was born. 2) ma Curie, Fipies Boek, runs and each victory to him is as Morse, Valley, 44.) 43-87; Pore y s Pyne'bd, Meadow. Brook, 43, 44-81: Ww. |. [important as a Derby, My Reverie had all her speed in the Hicks, Nassau, 44, 44-88, 1. L.. Heard r.. Rosetree Purse, running Ten Lac 5, ; Charles ‘any 4 Hoan eis teeth SMH ivinon chee: | Everything was all set at Empire|into the ground and having enough Malley. "48." 49 80), Donald, “Mcisilar. | yesterday for another Butler victory ||left to stand off the determined chal North Hempatead, 98.415 85) dell fe": | Stella Maris was the color bearer and] lenge of Last Straw in the last fur lonton,. 40, 48-80; Herbert L. Pratt, Mining |the topnotch rider, Sande, was th |iong. Dolores and Last Straw wer i 43, 4780; HEN. be Church, Nassau. | pitot, ‘The musicians had the Wearin'| off a little poorly, and the former Piping Rock, 47, 44-1 of the Green on their racks and were ve It up when she was asked to £0 | cottints, FARA, anna Ht Eh TT Vready to send the stirring strains| to the leadors on the tum Nelson. Meadow Brook 4001 through the bracing air, But Stella -—_ Ale ty L, YRe r Maris was found wanting in the] Overtake outlooked his field in the porn, "Piping RO George H | Pinch, Sande did his part, and from] opener and ran accordingly. The bie Roosevelt, Huntington, 40, Harvey) where we locked on appeatsd to bene-| xelding by Hurron would make @ : Na 490: vens.| ft by some team work from his} jumper if given a chance. Nassau, 44, 4-72; 8. 7. Hori Nassau, 41.| jockey side kick Fator in the run to 48—03, J.B. Davis, Piping Rock, 40, 17-09: the stretch. Stella ran off in front} withdrawals reduced the Ralnbow a R OF Pee ant 48, 4b—0a- ti, [28 If At were no contest, and right} giakes to four starters, and with Beene Bes Nocanty, a5: 4 behind him was Fator on Blue and O4 Fox, North Hempstead, ‘49, '45—04; ', Amor Patriae and William Tell both Gold, Fator ran up to Sande and the ’ s cheapened a Me rth; Brookville, 44, 50-04; BR nond out of it the event .was cheap a Bogert, Growell Hag | Butler filly just before the stretch|trige, At that it was a pretty fair don id. xe my F | was reached as if to see if Stella Was} porge race, with the final honors go- Broa iQ nD, A hen ite Whe ‘oconalon one then Ing to the favorite Ruddy, which Mc- , Nassau, erbert L.| dropped back a length. At the time {me in taking to the front S Giterry Valley,” 48, _81—W: Atee lost no time in taking Dene Nassau, 48, 94100; narick [the Fest of the fleld was some three ‘Though the others were hurd presses Garden. Sfiy. "bh, 8100, EW. Carsebeer, [lengths back, and indeed Sunde | ney ould never overtake the Gerry Py, 88 3B. 'D. “Gerard. | seemed : Stella : Chorry Valley, 62, 48—101; ©. it. Amin’ | eemed well on his way. Stella Moris} co, who won with his ears pricked Garden City. 45, 88103: Harcia Goodwin, | ot round the home bend all right, Oana pontest between tt It was other three, and Fullon beat re Lore by the narrowest of margins in a hard drive in which little Bell showed to advantage. ——_—>_—— City, M4, 51-109; T, R. Pell, Pip! Garden soit, “log: Oliver Rodgers, Mead Brook, 56, 68—113; Btewart Cutler, I Club, Buffalo, 50, 6—113. but when straightened out for the run home she began to weaken. Rock Bottom, the Belmont colt, was loom- ing up and so was Sakah, Fator, however, was within striking distance, e-Pitt Referee. Pa., Oct. 20.—P. R. Pick Syrac PITTSBURGH, Carpenter of Worcester, Mass., has been {2h finally when Sande pulled his Belmont Shades Collett chosen as referee of tho Syracuse-Piti] WMP and the Butler filly went to} peRTH AMBOY, Oct. football game at Syracuse on Saturday,| Pieces under its persuasion, Fator] mont of Philadelphta vis, graduate manager, mude the |eut He went past Stella Maris ett of this efty: here bet ) easily uuu wtood both Bucs Bottow 4,0vu people laos wigite a fighter S'ki really is. Unless Silt stop. Beckett or makes an exception- sly good showing the conqueror of Georges Carpentier will be ruined as ‘n American ring attraction The bout with Beckett ts lisble to yrove that Siki's victory over Carpen- fer was only a fluke and asx his af- airs now stand Rickard has him tied up so far as getting the money on COLORED CHAMPION BEATS GORDON MUNCE IN CANADIAN TOURNEY TORONTO. Oct, 20.—The fea- ture of last night's programme in the invitation International Ama- teur Boxing Tournament was the | his side of the pond is concerned. If defeat of Gordon Munce, three | Beckett manrges to stick the limit times metropolitan champion, by | vith Siki It w'l! show the Senegalese Larry Gains of Toronto. the col- ored Ontario heavyweight cham- pion, in a three-round bout. Gains fought a clever battle, boxing for the first two rounds, getting a slight margin in each and then epping into Munce in the third, having the better of the in-fight- ing. Tommy Coyne of Toronto out- pointed Dan Embinder in the 135- pound class, while Carter of New York won from Ed Spittal of Ot- tawa in an extra round at 147 pounds, and Covert of New York won in the first round, when he opened a deep cut over the eye of Campbell of Hamilton, Phil Bricks of New York won from Roy Pollard, Toronto, in the 126- pound class.” 1p as not much of an opponent for yur American heavies and light Neavyweigh' He would have been issured at least one good purse by iving up to his contract with Rick- ‘rd, and he is fighting Beckett for ess than half what he was to get for lls match with Kid Norfolk. JOSS KEEFS HIS PLACE AT TACKLE FOR YALE NEW HAVEN, Oct. 20.—When the Yale varsity lined up for the scrimmage yesterday, Johnnie Joss, who was tried out at left tackle on the varsity Wednes- lay, was again In the same position, though Miller, wha played there until he was Injured two weeks ago, was in cor lition to go in to right tackle tn Dill soing in In the last few minute ROCKY SMITH BEATEN crimmage. Diller, who comes frona Texas, played right tackle the greater BY PHIL KAPLAN J vari of jast year. Joss, who Ie looked upon now as likely ndidate for vars.ty tackle, hac Knockout Phil Kaplan of Jersey Clty] most of his training as an end. He te de ted Rocky Smith of Battle Creek.Jone of the tallest men on the squad, Mich., in the wind-up of ten rounos at} ting 4 inches aiove 6 feet. He fa the Rink Sporting Club of Brooklyn} twenty years old and weighs 200 pounds, last night The bout was slow and un-|though because of his height he looke interesting In spots. Kaplan landed the|simost thin. He comes from Indian- lenner blows and this earned the de- cision for him. The weights were Smith, 149 pounds; Kaplan, 147. apolis, was ot Taft School and last year played end on the freshman team. 3 The varsity made four touchdowns in fay Willie Harmon made Short work of | practice. Willie Fentour {tn the opening bout. _ scheduled for ten rounds. Harmon ROS: sc PES K *ropped his opponent for a count of eons SCOPE SOnts i nine in the first round, and when Fen 4 sitll herrea ms ni; M {| show here last night Al Cross of Syras tour arose, Harmon shot over a righ| a # use knocked out Billy Logan in. six to the jow which sent the beaten man sounds, Young Ross of New York won lown for keeps. The contest ended jus Wille Milt Mier) care eae two minutes and fifteen seconds ter ion of Beranton beat Goorgie Weim it started, Hilly Levine got the decision over Larry Goldberg in the other ten-round out. ALIBI AL, NEW COMIC BY VIC. MAKES BOW IN EVENING WORLD MONDAY fp Alibi 71, a n-w go! will make his first app-arance on <_< —— FRESHMEN SCRIMMAGE WITH TIGER VARSITY PRINCETON, N. J., Oct. 20.—The Princeton freshman eleven got Its first hence of the season amainst the virst charactor, on University Field, When] The Evening World sport page | rged othe «Tiger regulars put over two touchdowns, the next Monday and w'll occupy tho rlings remaining on the defensive] same space every Mondey th ‘oughout the workout after. Alibi A it cana Practice began with Cleaves and Van fF Aun Alina new gelfi gas) Gerbix punting and Raker and Smith] toon by “Vic.'" Al will tell read, dravkicking. slowing this, dummy] ery what happened during the: pratiice was hetl with the varsity silt Walking through plays for nearly an| 9ame. If he dosen't tell you what hour. + the| id happen he will tell you what Long open field runs featured the scrimmage seasion with the freahmen,| should have happened. Every both varsity scores coming after sensa-| golfer will want to ses what A! bi Uonal gains VETERAN OFFICIALS FOR PENN STATE-SYRACUSF. Al has to cay. And every gol'or will want to obtain ths series, Copies will be printed on hacd paper and ray be secured by sending 5 conts in ctamps for each ‘Three veteran foothall ofclais and] eepy to the Snorting Editor of one younger member of the officiating] The Even'ng World. group will have charge of the came be- Watch for Alibi Al in Monday's tween Hugo Bezdek's Penn State eleven vi and Chick Meehan's Syracuse machine | _ P@Pe Bhd at the Polo Grounds on Saturday, Oct |= —————— 28. The quartet, as approved by the T Oo = N f G H T It Central Board on Officials, {s as fo'lows ea Ania Gane Referee, Charles J, McCarty Jr.. Ger-| MADISON SQUARE “TSISE We 44) ” mantown; umpire, W. G. Crowell, GARDEN ANDY THOMAS 5 Swarthmore; field judge, EB. C. Taggart, ve. BOBBY MICHAEL? Rochester; linesman, M. J. ‘Thompson, ny, Georgetown. Taggart is the only mem- Painaeal ber who has not figured prominently in Buerything fer, Mutiny Hlandes "Ca Die suinef of vthu yours eo W. sed Be user Vv : ! pin ( |