1
Captain G. BbOTKUXGER. ord«r» to Portsaseoth te- \u25a0. ked. to nu'.-y yar". Xew-Tork. GMHBgflftsi W, SV CAPERTON. commls3icn«a. •r-.t Corr.rr.ai!c!pr F U CHAPIN. detached genera: boa:.!: to Bure.iu of Navigation. Navy Department. r"?t*n C E. LAN L'K AM. detached th« Wyoming; to ths PuTalo. Er.slsn C. r. T'CFF. onjers Is th» Buffalo revcjtol: f> tr.o WTItaUUsT Fa" TsSßirTni W. W. EAUKT. r»rlred. to navy ra-'. F rtamouth; terrpcrary a'i:ty *3 as-M*tar.t s*n«raj »: trckeeper. Captain STEPHEN X HACKNEY. Bth TflfmatTfV te Sat Inrantrj. Company M . csptsin AiiTl-V f PRESCOTT. 21»t Ir.fiatiy. «• tth {y.'.ir.iv.. GbSSgSMS K. . Captain RHTNOLTS J. BT.T.T. 9th Infantry. »•» at ila.U'c:i Barra.-ks. to Fort Thomas, to Cnnsjany D. rOHN T y.\SCE. 9th Cavalry, detailed profsssnr tt SsttttSO aclencsi »nd tacttca, •. diversity of Call- XAVT. Th" r.ar.rho M Tafo was Srst run !n Msf, and yertfrtoT was Its seventh renewal. Of the nine ov< I::'.:::;. n,.rr.::ijiio::s Ai.ibtrjack ar.d Zeal. wore , 1, ka\~.r)£ feven to face the eiartcr. ;\u25a0- I ... aptpafl a f'.icht favorite over Broadcloth, at b to :., bet e*ent back to s to L 8. B. Prowr.'s j-oungßier eettlr.g the bulk of the play. Cairngorm \u25a0of Hearts Desire had .i following:, but Pasadena vas> BtOs lar.cied 2:; sr>it» of his last (rood race, bo- cause l.c was obliged to aauidor 6take weight. Pnt*T*Tg end Vo'aday were the outsiders. Xc a good start lost no time in trsklr.g JJedp-^ln right to the front, but Heart"* Deslr* «nd the whole flrlfi was right on his heels, and they raced in close ardor down the first bill to the dip. ?.>arlat: the Is;-'. furlong pole It looked to te any one's race. Bedouin was in the middle of the track tvith Phaw bfjrirr.lr.ir to urge- Dim on under a hand j.-> while Pasadena ar.d Cairnponn x\«ro on the j MttfAl and Broadcloth and lie. iris De?ir« on the Inside of :;:i. all Bva r^^tirally beads apart. Jiroadrioth er.d Heart's Dm were the Brat to fhow .ens of distress and drop back, beaten. A «:iteerth from home Lvi. 1 ' en Calrn«orm <ir^w Us vh'.p in an effort to ke.-i> up to Pasadena end T>3ouin, who were gradually diaTrlug away. BicjMup to the BaMi these two fought it out in cetpfrate etrlfe. and l>doulr.'s victory was only 1 y the narrowest mart-'-n. was third. 3a winning, Bedouir. ju^tlficu his success in tha Matron Stakes o:i the cptr.ir.g Jay of the meeting. A celling tieei'lecruiso over the short courso <•:' «.l>out mo miles furnished snm antertsinmant Icr lovers of cross country ra< i:rp. Conover «« em«-d \n outclass hi.- Held to such an extent that be viis r-:. odds-on tuvoiif and he won. but his : \u25a0»..- a email <v.*- a;.d he had t" be riddeu t :t 10 f.:i'A off the iJ'/t^nnined challenge of ';\u25a0;•! Bay. erho fenoed cleanly *:..i ia:i a creditable \u25a0mots. Ooaover was otcely handled by Mi Hants, i:.d :t ca;i'-d lor skill sod dsvaraess to g'-l him 3:orr;v in ?ro:.i. In srlnnlng lif i-.rtii to equal tii» tzack record ot i-.l. dum by Mr. '".iamblefs HtvcnrfaSi la IgjS. Jim sii k ?inn ESophona emre the early pa<\u25a0•'milViers. and tlfe formei p:irn>'d third motley, i: phone ma.ie a bad Ifrwilng st the third .iurr.p from home, kaackllng over behind. t.Tid lost in-j^h sro-jnd Hut for the accident ).•-< rouM hard;..- i..- less than third. K«rsey. i"-- efi( \u25a0tod I Bey fell, but thiir joik«>i bUury. Bos< ben v. as gradnated frnm t5-.» td:::J. \u25a0:\u25a0 ii:t.-s in the first racr-. in s Deld that eras one ..f thi ; «f the season. B<r.::e<=rf-:.t took the i!.:;.-i to a dri\i:ig finis:;, wjtii I>Arkit-. anile Critical, the fi- \orn«-. was a dose tliirj. Hanger, a c'r ?tr.'it gelrtißg. by Albert—Hoodoo, and, hence a full Brother t.. the (great Mesmerist and the ' ;/«• :y Jlatapor.. mad- jiis nrst a; j.earance In this race. Jif showed the speed of his nnstrtoas rflativ<>!=. Vut r... it--' 1 •')'. -:-ti v-.m suc-ninjc li^'liv a.l throush I . r Uajuwemest cmi tie looked i<>r : \u25a0 .--t;»i! CSiisten Moqtad books .in <visy -winner In i!.e sell- at <;r.f mil*-. >-ai.s. always well np took tbe !• ad ut tbe head of ill.- stretch, but tired from hlr early eSetts, sad Andrew Mack R;it him a I ' \u25a0 Ke:r.oto made '\u25a0;> much f: on t!,p t'j!::?. r.jt tired at t)-.f end. where •c U* laQj ra \u25a0 tbe s;in:.?.jst. in ti.*- laht !..• . .i. hg&Slcaa si OOS m;;« and ix quarter. onij three horses wesi to the post. Eugenia Burch being a rite Phr- and Mabel Richardson ran lapped th« entire distance, and at the end Mabel Kfenardsoa earned th« verdict in a hard drive by a Bbort tterk. Carbuncle mn on* of his best races, Kd sru lapped aa Bagecia Burch at the end. BCnUBIEg Jli:-' F.A :: V |.. 3 jur-o: 1 .! sji4 o-.er; «'i fur- . B«t«inir. J ' -i rf \u25a0 ** J tf-Uer. f-t. PI tO7.O'K«U «-.". a<. - R'ea . . ... iM.Lsim . T. 2 \u25a0 H •; -. lU7.V. D«.vl» .IS 6 * \u25a0'*\u25a0•• \u25a0\u25a0':\u25a0 R \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 i^<.. i laT.HUdabrand ... li» h ' ....... ..JO7.H i o bras >> 8 B.Bftllycastl* .Hit^hrv.-k> ..IM.Btmm . '-•• 8 -r;..'.r. lOT.Goodchlld . .. KM 40 »\u25a0 i 883 :. Ball \u25a0.-ttvm.r;- .. 115.X Walsh .... 100 40 '•'•Ar:.:u <Aver>i IW.Uei'.ffm r. 8-S J4.Ffcaaei <v.*tt, US TTiwiilsilj 40 IS : .'..:• ; Johrsoß CitmrgKOi-.tm.VF. H«-nn?s»r-. •*» 20 32'Ru<ia;->flt (T'rakf. li". -r>.»rhns 0-5 jj H.fUT-.Eilr.t 'Ahem JiCFrasch 100 40 H.ljaii Conaor* iConn'.'«i...ll«.i;anr:ua l<Mi 40 Wrnmt J. a. Drain •\u25a0;• b. g. i:os«ber. by T\*n nrnim '\u25a0 «taf .\u25a0 ; -art fair; snaj easily by 1 i !«•:.»\u25a0 Time. 3- \u25a0 •Coupled In »h» betting. \u25a0WJliaiD UACE—SeUir.e «cha»». 8-year-c2d» and I mm, ttmut 2 miles. l.cotinovfr <Harrif. .141. Mr. Harris.... 4-* 1-S 2-Gcid Bar <£toteidwr}-) lSS.Hosaa *< in a.Jlm SUefc lOotu Hl.Kopari 16 6 4. 'Woden .so.:!.) lZ».Coua»Uy 40 12 »• Snuff (Steve:*) 132.Deb!:nK 40 0 «.fc.ophon» (Ootton) 341.1 O'Britg » - ..Sre.-.ppr Hal (?ion»> 135. Mr. .'•\u25a0\u25a0.o:l* r, 2 h. Numeral fl>jrii!ardi 141 !loita*ri ii h . I. K-y (Biume. :43: 43. E H*i4n.'.'.'. . ii n J'j. Benefit orUenar) US.Beecrta »> h llPatanßey <Le»:f) Uo.lJonot.ue 411 10 \u25a0nßOHtwCßßrtaa M. Harris's eh. «. <.ioj.ni)v»r. by Fs:- c-iner Maeeie Ward. Kiart *<*>«: won ri3<l».a cut br 'A l«i«ih. nsaa, 8:10 ' m THJRD HACK— li: ;.:\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0? colts «ml seW.ns* 2 Mam eld- C furlongs, J->lir>*e Course. ' 1 Beillserent (lie!!) 112.O«nnon 6 65 2.l>Arkl* <i'a«-et) I* Une « 2 lea] Madden 1 UJS.W. Da-.-ls 2 4 5 4. Rnwhourna (Mz-.ufi> 112. V.'c;iaerly 11 S « 5 C hunger (Pvymi lUU.Phaw 7-2 ;s 6. Bn:::ant (F**xt*mm&...H2.H. caDsliaa... »i 3 WJine?— U V. llfir* b. c. I>lilg*rrr.t. by Don <!« Oro— Ft. liri^tct. E:art fa!i : »••.« drain* l.jr a r*a4. Tim* 1:10. VDUKXH nAPK-THE RAKCIIO WIT. PASO STAKKS; ii-yfui-dh'.f; « furious*, E<-lij.»e \u25a0 an*. l.B^ioulti (Jm»t*' IW.Sbssr 8 ft T. 2 Pnsafl<T.a (Mrl.silgnUa). ..VßJ. Martin 3 a.<.alrr.|sorrn (Pas»tJ lU».l,yne 5 2 4.Broa'lrl,t>i rßrown) 122.f» - NV!i .... 8-2 a_if» f.Voladay (TJioma-i 115.n»y1fpni V 3 f!.U.-art> I/ef!r« .Iniryea). .lW.Jlili<brana ... 4 B-S 7.8-jtti!n« dCKUnais) I«*. Gannon «0 20 XVtaatr E. IT. Jisntl's h g Hcdouln I r Mfd<ll»r— T.lzxi* M"rjtros«. tl*rt gosa; vn driving* by a head Tin*-. i:<r.*\. TIFTH RACE— S^ljing; 8-year- oM, ar ,a fiV er; 1 mile J.G!.«rn (flcfeaot) !<7. HM+\,Ta.u<l ...11-.'i * 1 i*. Andrew Alack t;*»4To:!K.. lol. Travels 7-2 7-5 S.ciiis (Ulute, UX.R'-item ... 7 5* .K*7Bots CKyle) MT.O'NeU US 6 .'. n Miflfhij man (SaCIVSa).... J'7.Sch!]!ir.e •.;•• « S.Uxbtful COHt» :<>4.H. (!~liran .. . I<«< 4'i ?.<"eunmaM (Card irKS.Wonrierly ... li 6 S.Br:art.«rrj>e <Uichar«i) :•:. v. . Davis ... 1.". r. 9 AV< (UnwV E'.iMe) .1"3.. T. Martin. .. 1^ f. saSSSLiJh S F ~ fc<tu«'« Ch. f. l»»»n. Kr.:ght of T). 1~"? btHZt : won ta * l! >' b >' 3 leagths B "" w IUCE ~ ]Ul " :i:tpi t-yeai^olos ana ovrr; li l.MfciM! Rirhard*n <Row«l . 100 A. TT Book#T T 5 I•• 2 Evsti.ia Bur.-h (Curt'st ..ll<J.«»ioni ;,- V , }T 8 < art.uacls rwilsoin KS.Travsra •< ii Three Head and Head Finishes Small Croud at Morris Park. In a furious drive Hedouin won the Rancho del I%mo at Morris I 'ark yesterday from Pasadena. n-icnef c ; the Nursery Handicap on Saturday. tr>-.9 ra c was th6 feature of a rather ord'nary £»y's rac;i g. but it served alone to lend enough tone to the tpori to satisfy the somewhat meagre crowd l"i attendance. As much of th« race as co'-ld be seen, la Its tunning, down the Eclipse CY>arse, was of a kind to bring the onlookers to their fVet. Five horses came down thror.gh the J«t fur.or.B head and hoad like a troop of cavalry, and X MBS only In the last hundred yards that pMaadß arid Pasadena drew sttghtly away and fought cut the Issue to the end. Tha track was e!<-.w a:.i Jumpy. LONG CEASE FOE FOX IN VAIN. Heotpatsatl. I^nir Isiar..?. Tv» 11 (Special' —Mr*. R»gi:'M Brooaa and Mrs. A.lolf Ladenburg car- r; \u25a0>\u25a0] tU the honors of the haaa of the Meadow Crook fox hint to-day. A Ibtsbi ft.-«ld turned out and rode for ei?rliteen miles only to lose tho quarry tn a long deep hosi where the pack could not **- li>i£i> h:;a Wnerj the huntsman's horn finally drew th* Acgn from the scent their remained la the saddl» j. y Collier, the master of fox hounds; Mr. and Vrs Reginald Srooks. Mrs. Adolph Ladenberg. George i". Kustis. William C. Eustls. Thomas Hitchcock, jr.. VT. Scott Cameron ar.d th<» hunta- nit:u . Robert CoaUttVilh and Samuel 'vViHets. On Thorsday there will op .i drag hunt, startln/r at the Jericho toiisate. The next fox hunt will be. Saturday morning. Mr. Collier has Increased; th«» Meai'ow" BrooS pa *k by some hounds ha 3 has Just Imported from Ireland, and others will ho pur- chased ff>or>- "Meteor" French Coffee Percolator PMsseils Stiver Fla*> Copper ar Nlckd. Hade la 51 styles sad lirer ranging la price from $5 to $25 There ere cheap fanaW ion*ofthe " Hete-yr" —b* Hire sou get the genuine. T! J is no need ofusi nz ceppal coffees. Nothing can equal the delicious flavor or the nutritive and gently stimulating qualifies of the genuine cot Tee bean. If your eoflss makes havoc with your nerves Bud digestion itbecause you boil away tae piodand develop the bad to its highest latency. The " Meteor" French Coffee Percolator Is mechanically ad tpie<i to <?et the strength and aroma of the coffee wi:hout its nerve- destroying qualities. la tending for illustrated booklet "P "* &/>e MERIDEN CO. him lU«ilSB»»r f». , KtcmMf, Stivers 218 Fifth Avenue Navdlson S^ua\s» $ j Excellent I Practice I | IS TO SCAN THE t\ Real Estate Advts. : * \u25a0 I that appear in She Tnbunm \ + every dav.^Manv a bargain < Tl 4* appears there to-day, bu I 1 gone to-morrow. West fall Whs from McJtmhom in King* County Tourney. Two stirring tennis matches, one in singles and one n doubles, provided good sport yesterday In the autumn championship tournament on the <o;irts of the Kings County Tennis Cub. Samuel A \\". stfaH won the singles match in three straight set.*, defeating Joseph T. McMahon, the former champion of the, Crescent Athletic Club. 5-<\ «-3. ,; i. This contest decided the second place in the Round Robin singles, won by Henry Mollen- haner. who came through without meeting 1 do- feat Westfail began at one* to earn the points by his clever piai*» Bhot.-. and McMahon failed to gel ins strokes in working order in the first set. Th«-n the Crescent Athletic Club player plucldly made a fine attempt to force the :••\u25a0'>" at the net i, nt the set ended 6—3. On the third set McMah >n hit the ball hard and sharply, but was out ma- mfuvrtd in placing, Westfall t. iking tho set an match at 6—4, Frederick O. Anderson and Samuel A. TVestfall won tha first competition in the champ: doubles from J. W. Anderson and A. U. WiMiston, fi-1. S-6. The final set was tilled with splendid lol»binfr. usf<l as an op»»nin< for an attack it the net. Games touched at deuce at 5-all. Then Anderson and Westfall forced th* score ta •—% and were within a Stroke Of victory at 4i^—JO when their opponents again balanced the score at 6-;t!t by cleverly worked out passes. Anderson and Westfail fairly camped at the net In the- next two games, a:id by smashing and short cross court Shots took the -set and match at 8—«. MEN'S DOUBLES AT HOT SPRINGS. YlotspriiiK*. Vu.. Oct. 11.—Play in a men's doubles tennis tournament began here. James B. Taller pah-ed with Alfred L. Karris, of Brooklyn, win be in the finals to-morrow. The scores were: First round. Taller and Morris defeated Fred C In- man and Hush Intnan. 6—7. •"—" •— Walter Wat- son and Mr. Pldenberg, of NVw-Yorfl. defeated George ii. ingais and Daniel Bacon. «—4. Second round Tailer and Norris defeated Julea H DeStbour, of New- York, and Edward A. Mit- chell, of Washington. I—*, «-0. 6-1. Dr. Carl N". Brandt and Mr. Gilbert defeat ed Watson and Sldenberg. 6—3. « \u25a0* LAWN TENNIS. PITTSBURG WINS FROM CLEVELAND. Cleveland, Oct. 11.—In a game characterised by hard hitting the Plttsburg National team defeats the Clevemnd Americana. Piitsburg bunched seven of their nine hits In the seventh and eighth, with three of Cleveland's errors, and scared wen run«. BransfteU was put out of the game for kicklr.^. The ore: n k f ri';.»t"irir \u0084(»ftnf»rtO^4AT :> 1 ,;..,;.,. I it i> t> n 0 r. ii 9 1 13 4 Batteries- twill and Ptietß*; Bernha-*!. Rhcai-'s «nl BenlM Attendance, Ltfß ST. LOUIS AMERICANS WIN A GAME. sr Leads, Oct. 11 - Aftrr Isstas to •.be National team » i "trr-i-iv 1n tls** o; -rira: saats of th** infpr'^a^cU'" s^ri°9 \\-t- si Lnnts Inwiicn I^agaa t»arn >r.n 10 ffaj !a a, I . m :\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 played run. TTw Americans C<>n I i I n A A'•"' 'l Xatlooata ° " °° ° - i "" -. in * Dsttinriw Htttt i". L Kshoe; 0 --\u25a0 U a- \u25a0 'iraJy. At- tendance, S ""•• TRIPP STRONG GUARD FOR YALE. [r.T tel::c,rap.i TO THE TUIBr.VE.] New-Haven, Conn., Oct. 11 —In spite of the trop- | lea] temperature to-day the 'Varsity had two long ' aril imrd halves with the strongest scrubs that could be. brought out. Uoss, Mlnkey, Raffertv. W. ! Olasa ami Murphy. The coacbers kept both tennis ; .\u25a0• it without let up. In the first half the scrubs kicked off to Sh^viin, who urod the new receiving | formation for a good gain. The scrimmage raged back and forth across the center chalk, mark, neither side being able to push the other, the ; 'Varsity attack proving weak again. Trlpp played the best guard game seen her» this year to-day. tearing up the scrubs for repeated gates, while ex-Captain Fortes, of Wasleyan, proved himself i nt scrub right tackle to be a sore man for the , 'Varsity in another year. He blocked and tackled against the best efforts of the 'Varsity to stop | him. A n»-w < didate for halfback turned out to-day in Rogers, who/ ran well as a mate to j Morse. Stewart, last year's Andover captain, went to 'Varsity right end to-day, and Keale the fresh- man coach, to scrub end. The second half saw more furious playing »TH!irs. after the 1 rubs bad worried the 'varsity to their own goal line in a safety for th» second team. To-morrow fale meets the strong Springfield . Training School that has already won by large \u25a0cores from miner teams. Tale will probably not play Rockwell much, if at all, to-morrow and will | ni.ike experiments at end and halfback. The pro- i visional line-up follows: Dates, left end; Bloomer left tseklt: Kir.ney, left guard: Rorabaek Centre; Tripp. right iu«r>!: Hogan. i r:^)t tn<k].; »isr<> nncl Btewart rleht en.l; Hutehlnson. i nuarterbi ll.>n*^ami Itixni" \u25a0 *- halfback; r.ogers anJ Steven*, rtsht tairbsjck; Bhavna, fuilb^aiit. PRINCETON HAS EASY DAY'S WORK. ir.r TBUKCMtAPH TO THE tribt'.ne] Princeton, N. J.. Oet 11.—As a hard game is x- pected with Lafayette to-morrow, the Princeton 'varsity had only a short practice to-day. All the ; preliminaries except quick BMrts v.-ere dispensed j with because of the excessive heat. Then for about ; a qunrt. \u25a0:• of an hour the scrub and "varsity had a | bard scrimmageL No change 1 were made in the \u25a0 'varsity line-up except at left halfback, where ; Slmonds, the speedy freshman, was substituted for King: In «piio of the heal the wn played hard it;:.! fas-, with , ••!•> fumbling. The first team; rushed tht> ball after the kick-off from their Si-yard Una t'> tv.o scrubs* 1-yard line. Here the second team men took a brace and held I ..•\u25a0 "varsity for ! downs. The r. st .f t!i.> practice was taken up with exchanging punts. McCormlck continues to punt well getting hie kicks high. Miter, the 'varsity I end iiia some very pretty tackling to-day on punts, Dillon. who has hem laid up for a long while with ; n (\u25a0: ken shoulder bone, was again out to-day In tit.',i t .', but did not tako part in the scrimmage. The ; ]'.: e-up to-morrow will probably be: Left •;.•! '"rawfori: left tar.<!». Ocrey: teft gtiani. . PutctMT; «.•• ntn-. Raff arty; tight suarJ. Short, right j Btamard: ri<!=: en.i. MUler; . ;artrrbark. Burke- OX Ki:?«*r; l»ft ha:tt>a k. Kin* or 3tin..n<!»; riglit half- i t.i :. FouQm (caslata): fullfca-.-lc. rrniefc. \u2666 MORE COACHES FOR ANNAPOLIS. : .!tr IH\PH Ti-> THE TRIBI'.NE. 1 Annapolis, Bid., Oct. 11.—The athletic authorities of th« Naval Academy are arranging to have s»v- e:al more young oißcers. crack players on former Naval Academy I am*, ordered hero. Paul J. DashlelL bead coach, >•* being assisted nt present t by Olcott, Of Tale, and Lieutenants Tardy, li.->ok- waiter and McCarty. The others exp< \u25a0\u25a0'• '. shortly are Lieutenant Byron a. Long, one of the best j ends: and quarters the. Navy ever had; Roper Will- ' Ui!:.s tackle Of the 1900 :ird IM te.Tr.B. :in'l Pa?;-, d Midshipman Halsey. tulback for the two sea prevtotu to thi>. CREW CAPTAIN END AT HARVARD. [r.T TBLEOXAPa 1" THE TKIIU \u25a0 v ! Cambridge, Mass., Oct. 11.—Ottrer Fllley, captain of the next year's Harvard crew, was put Into t.>- day's practice k-hw ai righi end en the second eleven, and the game he put up was a revelation to the coaches. Fllley is tiiii. broad shouldered and sinewy, end played his position with a fierceness that more than made up for his lack ol experience. He prepared for Harvard t; Rugby, England, and while there w;ts •\u25a0:<•\u25a0 vt the star members of the Rugby football ti m Although ili« i second eleven ).• ; j thu 'vui-iiy working twenty : : 1 i : : -. 1 1 » - .— for one touchdown, the wort of "Steve" Noyes at Quarter on tin- "varsity was th* besl se*n on Soldiers' Ft. Id tht* year. <>n !;ik.' ki.ks h" ma.:<- gains of from ten to forty yards every time, FULTZ MAKES CHANGES AT N. Y. U. Miss Pauline Mackay Puts Her Out in Golf Championship. a £r.T TELEGRAPH TO THE TKIBINE.] Pbiladelphia. Oct. 11.— The woman golf champion of Great Britain. Miss Charlotte Dad, was beaten to-day in the first match play round for the women's amateur championship of the United States Golf Association by Miss Pauline Mackay. Oakley Country Club. It was the match of the day at the links of th»» Merion Cricket Club, and a great gallery followed the competitors over the course. Those who have, watched the play of Miss Dod carefully since her arrival in this coun- try have declared all along that she was not In the same class with Miss Rhona Adalr. and they predicted that she would not win the Amertcan title No one, however, expected to see her put out in the first round. In the toss for choice Miss Mackay won the honor. She pulled her drive near the fence, and was short of the bunker on her second, while Miss Dod. who went straight down the centre of the course, got In the bunker on her second. Miss Ma.ck.iy winning the hole in 5 to 6. Th© Boston girl also won the next hole, but the second and third went to Miss Dod through her steady, careful work, and honors were. even. In playing, the fifth hole Miss Mackay topped her brsssie. shot, while Miss Dod used an iron and got Into the bunker, but h?r recovery was an excellent display of ski.], as she played the ball from the bunker and laid it dead to the holes, which she won in 5 to t>. After halving th* sixth in the bogie of 5. Miss Mackay won the seventh with a fault- less if she continued her perfect play, and by winning the- next two holes in bogie, led by 2 up at the turn, having gone out in 47 to Mis=s Dad's 49. Three full shots put Miss Malay's ball on the tenth green, and she. won the hole in 5 to 6, making her 3 up. and It was rather dark for the British champion, who apparently could not get her usual distance or direction. After having the eleventh hole, a topped drl\" cost Miss Mackay the twelfth hole. She lost the thirteenth when Mi^s Dod ran down a twenty foot putt for a 4, after the Boston girl had made a grand recovery out of the road. Miss Dod was then only 1 down. She won the fourteenth hole When Mi« Ma okay's third shot found the brook, making the match all square. Miss Dod f>pi>ed her drive from tha fifteenth tie, and this mistake cost her the hole. leaving her again 1 down. They both played round the bunker to tho long sixteenth, ami a half In 6 resulted. The end cans* on the seventeenth sreen. when Miss Mackay's drive landed within two yards of the lioii.. A sclaffed 'Irlve by Miss Dod barely Jumped the brook, and she fallowed this by failing to set up on her second. Miss Mackay got down in 3 and won the match by 2 up and 1 to play. Their cards were; Miss Maekay— Out \u25a0 .1 .1 « « .1 4 0 4 «T In 5 i, c I 7 .i rf :: —43—00 Miss Dod— Out « 4 6 \u25a0 B 5—50 In 6 6 5 4 •"• •'• 6 4 -43-02 Mrs. Edward F. Snnford. Essex County Country Club, played a beautiful uphill game and finally d»f*ated Miss Harriet Curtis. Essex Count: GoU Club, by 1 ..,» at the nineteenth hole. Miss Louisa Vanderhoff. tri^ Ardsley girl, whom the New- Yorkers have picked to win- the championship. w<-tit out in 42 and won her match at the twelfth hole, from MUs Maud* K. Wetmore, Newport, ' y V up and ft to play. The summary follows: First lOVBd—IBM L«nls« A W>!is, BnwiWlW auutrj i- .'.. teut M:«* Stan I!. a •'• m WoßkseMß. 2 ui>; Mi^s Paulino lla l::«y. <^al;ley Onuntrv nub. beat Miss Char- lotte I od. 2 up anl 1 to play; Miss U!za:eth S. Port«-r. Brookiln* i'»ir.try i"lub. b«-at M:ss Manice Ferry. Ards- lev, I up to - :f> play; Miss F. N. Ayers. Riverside, bt-at Ml»» M. C I'utton. Bro< ktins Covatry Cl'.i v -, 3up an.l 1 t^> pla\ ; Kiss Liij!s» Vanderhof?. Ar.ls>y. beat M:ss Mn; : \u25a0 !: W'ttmon, N>'\i...rt. 7 up anl 6 tn play: M' •» .1 Anna I'arpvnt*:-. Westward H>. beat Mrs. B. Toulraln*. Merlon Cricket, *< SS an! 7 to p!ay: Mr.i. B F. Sanfori. '.\u25a0\u25a0•^x Cur.'.y <"" t .untry Ittb, beat M!s» Harriet i*virti-. K»»ex (\u25a0•:--. ; \u25a0.;; Cl ih, 1 up In 19 holes; Mrs. Caleb r r.,x, Roattßldmi Valley, beat Mies K. Milne. Albany. 4 up »r.; :> ta ylay: )Oss E N. Uockwood, Lexlnnt^n. heat MBS L> BiddM. Rlvertf>n. 5 nj> and 4 •> pUy; Miss Mar- Kai»t Curtis, Mh»e\ County Golf Club. t»-at Miss Ruth liailgcltv. Ksscx County Country i_!ub. » up and 6 to play. Af!»s K. C. Harley. Fall River, t»at Mrs. R. H. liurKv.-. M*rtoo Otckat Club. 1 op; Xlisa Fanny C Os- Kot^i. Hr<«fcl;n«. Country Ctatk. beat M.!-< A P. McN««ly, Merlon Cricket llub. by default: Misa tieurgfarina Bishop, BmoUawn Cwracnr C!ub. b«»t Mi*aH. f. EUhcp. Brook- lawn Country .Club, i up and > to : las . Mrs. i* W. BatchcMcr. Wsaton. brat Mls» E. W torn*. <".-\k'.ey cour.- Iv i ".;'\u25a0 -J nr: Miss Mabel HlSffta*. Mltfl-->th!an r^untrr <"i\iV'. b«M anas A. Phi] SprlnsrieM. . up «n-1 \ to r\e\ Hiss Ftaaesa C OilatbaSj Mer.oa, b»a: Miss P. McNeclv, Merlon, by default. Columbia Prepares for Hard Game To-day Fears Goals from Field. Columbia and Swarthmore meet this afternoon ' at football at American League Park. The visiting " team recently held Pennsylvania to 6 to 4. and beat ' th* 1 stron? eleven of Lehigh by more than 20 point?. Crowell, the Swarthmore quarterback, has amazing skill at dropping goals from the field. In the game with Pennsylvania he kicked a goal from the 4J- yard mark. All yesterday's practice was devoted by Morloy to practising schemes of defence de- signed to offset th« pet plays of Swarthmore this afternoon. Morley paid particular attention to coaching the lino men In blocking attempted goals from the field. Mi-tzr-nthin was put on the scrub, and tried to drop th» ball between the posts from the 2i-yard mark. Bo successful was the "varsity one In breaking through that not one? was he ' aMe to kick a goal. Strangtand ana Dtiell both had a rest yesterday, and O'Loughlin merely ran through signal practice, as he has a slight attack of "charley horse." Eldredge, a new man. did well at right guard on the scrub. The 'varsity scored , once on a scrub of eighteen men, while the scrub could not gain appreciably. The probable lirv->-up for this afternoon's game as announced by Morley is: Columbia. Position!" Swarthm<v». P°f=t - Left end Perkins Thi.rn \u0084 .Left tack |, Gee Ecbevema Left guard Jackson Flnnecan C»ntre M.irkl" | Stangl Right iru;ir<l Maxwell ; 77 h'""Ih '""I' v Right tackle MUlraan Mulr - IMjfht end Can- 1 Ifetseathia Qnartcttaek Crnweli ; l'u« 11 Left halfback Bower ; T'>wriscri.l Right halfback Lamb Fisher . . rollback Sinclair BEATEN INFIRST ROUND. DO NOT FORGET Vfboss Biwighxy yoot* hocso on apartment to* tho -and wlntor that TELEPHONE SERVICE fJUa aa Important ptooo la tho OQulptnont of a weil'ordcrod homom Foe rates, T-"rmmtimmtl9mm4 _ 8010 Cort. MEW YORK TELEPHOttE GO. IB Dear Si real PROGRAMME OF SPORTS TO-DAY. RACING—At Morris Park. 2p. m. : Worth and St Louis. HARNESS RACING Grand Circuit at Cincinnati. GOLF— Woß«rt'i national tournament at Merlon Cricket Club; tournament at Hot Sprlrgs. n'rTVniATJi v«. Bwattaawsei at American J-e.i?ue Park, 3:30 p m.; Harvard t». Bates, at Oam- »>rHn«; Pennsylvania vs. G«-ttysburs. at Philadelphia; Princeton vs. Lafayette, at Princeton; Yale vs. Sprin»- nel<l Younjr Men"* Christian Association, a » KSw- Haven; Annapolis vn. Baltlmnre Medlrai College; Ml<*»itirs.n v«. Physicians and Surgeons; "Wealsyaa vs. £tomu. at Pr9vld«nca. Betoa Uall, at Manhattan. Jolting Knocked Bottom Out of Toolbox and Made Repairs Impossible. Why Ferand Ga.briri had to abandon the Van- derbtlt Cup race on th* seventh lap. after loading easily In the Orst three, %vas plained yesterday, when It was learned that the jolting of the courso knocked th'> bottom out of the toolbox, .scattering the tools along the course. When at the, middle of the seventh lap the pumping chain broke and the mechanic reached around for the tools, Ms hand encountered the sides of an empty, bottomless box. Accftrdins to Gabriel's mechanic, the loss of the tools, which ho blame* on the Long Island roads, was alone responsible tar Gabriel's failure to con- tinue and win the race. It was not, «s generally reported the day of the rare, the breaking of one of th<> «-nt:iiie crunks. The toolbox, according to Gabriel and Ida me- chanic, contained a. fairly complete set of extra parts, but when near Hlcksvllle, on the seventh lap. the pumping chain snapped, tho mechanic dls- covered that the tools, the pump, the Inlet valves. the five Inner tubes- everything had vanished, and no substitutes of any descrtptton were at hand. None the l«^. . the pumping chain was spliced after ;' fashion with a piece of bent wire. Although th>» lit: 90-horsepower Do Dietrich had run a lap on three cylinders, the engine became so overheated that the gasolene naturally exploded bpfore it \u2666\u25a0!»- tered tlie cylinders, the washers and cylinder threads were burned so that water penetrated the valves, and the engine stepped of its own accord. Qabrlel says thai be is particularly chagrined about h!s defeat, because it was due, not to a serious defect in ills machine, but simply to tlie loss of his tools from the jolting on the American roads Officials nt tlie De Dietrich garage yesterday confirmed the story which was published exclu- sively In Monday's Tribune that on the eve of the race a stranger had Bred into the De Dietrich barn, at Jericho. While it was believed that th** stranger had no sinister designs on the car. it was Significantly added that a single effective phot tire! into the carburetter of the machine would have prevented] Its taking part in the race,. Among the spectators nt the Vanderbilt Cup race were "Barney" OWfleid. Carl Klsher mid Earl Ktser. who have been smashing "auto" records along the circuit this season. CMdneM said yesterday that he* spent most of his time while watching the race in one of the controls, and that he had learned a great deal by it. lie will take part in next year's race, he said, and will drive a car weighing less than I.HX) pound?. WHAT MADE OAB3IEL QUIT RACE. "Dave" Fulta tool I football at N^w- Y"iit Untreratty \u25a0- I before the after- noon whs over th( i urked differ- ence in it.v .- ,ie \u25a0\u25a0: plaj Fulta made radical changes In the attack of the backfleld. !!>• ><mv ahead of the runner <mi the buck plays, and drew back on all '•:\u25a0..! iins t.. lead Interference. On tl ':> x ha<| ads break up lhe Interferen c, and the rush line hair to take the backs tried ;::> end run they were thrown fot a luss. FLORIDA AUTO RACES IN NOVEMBER. W. J. Morgan. In behalf of the Florida East Coast Au«omobi!e Association, has announced that if a sufnHent number of cars and drivers can got together, speed trials will be held on the Or- inond-Daytona beach the week beginning Novem- ber 6, the best time of the year, Mr. Morgan says, tor auto racing there. NEW CUP FOR YALE FRESHMAN CREWS. >,«>w-Haven. Conn., Oct. 11.— silver cup, valued at Jl5O. as been offered by George St. John Shef- field as a rifrmar.ent trophy to be contested Cor earn year by crown representing tha freshman clauses in the academic and scientific departments In Vale. The fall regatta on L«ke Whitney will be hold next w«k Saturday. More freshmen have reported for the fall practice than ever before In the history of Yah- rowing. First in Interclass Race on Lake Cayuga by a Foot. [BT TELXr.HAFH TO THE TRIBrNE.] Ithaca, H. V., Oct. The senior class elsht of Cornell won the annual lnterelass race on Cayuga Lakft this afternoon, beating the sophomore crew In the last few strokes of tha mile course a foot. Court n<"y described the race es "the most exciting- contest ever h'ld on Lake Cayuga." The sophomore V.oat jumped to the front on the start. Tho lake «as a rr.a?s of white caps, and good form proved difficult, but the Benior eight kept up a smooth e»asy stroke of twenty-oight. ai.d spurted mapnifl- rentlv when the three-quarter murk was reached. Tho Julor shell was ™« nnd n half len»phs behind the second boat. The time of the winners was 6:53. The senior equ.id rowed as follows: Bow, Wheeler; 2. Chandler; 3, Newberry; 4. Earnhart; 6 Kifher; b. Miller;7, Bush; stroke, Adams; cox- swain, Buchanan. SENIOR OARSMEN BEST AT ITHACA TAKES THREE MONEYS. \ . Tom Airworthy Distances Two Other Starters in McDowell Stake. Lexington, Ky, Oct. :i.— Toia Axworthy, a pro- hlriitivA favorite captured tho $»."«o McDowell Stake for four-year-old trotter's i: tbe flr.". | .-at of the throe-heat race a:.<! by distancing tbe c^h*r two horspe took first, second and thirl money, a. feat never before eecomplibhed In a btake race, on the -\u25a0 Xiigtou rare. The tr^ -k w.is heavy. Tom Axworthy draw the poX hut the nrnr.ru h? eonld get to the (eaoe, on accou::'. of the mud i>UiiUle«. two-, two sulky width.". The twttiriff was: Tom Axworthy, l to 5, u:.d Lady Pauline C. and Oak Wflttttm. « to 1 sack. The Lotsr-s got away In a bunch after the second scor- !is »rttn Ten Axworthy KliKhtiyin !):•• lead. His two rivals broke at tbe start at lost about ten l«-r:ifths in reaching tli« lir.-t quarter. Tom Ax- worthy continually Increased tbe distance between himself and thf others and had a length to spare at the wire before the distance :i«k raiiKhr them. Thf 2:16 trotting racr-, unfinished yesterday, was the first rac-n called. Mainland and Mlllard Baun- dara had each won two hens yesterday. MilKtrd Baund< rs won the h*-;it a;id raeo with a length to \u25a0pare In l:1S\. Th>- iwb class i'"-'''''*? was won by King lJir<-<-t, the faVorite, in three beats. fter he had given tho IlrPt beat to Ash Ro6e. TIIO {.-Of cla"s trotting was unfinished on nrnmt of dark- ness. Hsonjero. the favont'-. failed to take a heal. The results: UNFINISHED 2:10 TROTTING - rTTtSE, $1,000 (TOIUZE in V I YE). MlUard Par.ders. b \u25a0>, by Anteei (MarrlSeti) S 1 1 t 1 Mainland, br. h. (Hudson) . 15 2 10 Bell C. br. m (lily -. 2 2 3 B 8 Miss i;ir.n<-y. b. m. (Cares) 7 3 4 3 2 l^fo Silver, b. h. (C I»>ml8> _... 3 4 B 4 6 Altonet:«, L'k. in. i ßradford 4 7 •; 0 4 Or<-u« «J!rl. b. in. (Baste) c. ii dl«> Cologne D.. br. m. -[)»«n).. S M dIJ. Time— 2:12. 2:11 "4. 2:1-J 1 4. 2:^»i. the Mcrx>v\-i:i,i* 4-TEAR-OUD TOOTTTNQ VAUTB tS.OUrt (TIUteE IN FIVE). Tom A»wnr»y. ro. jr. by Axworthy (6anders) 1 Lady I'auiina «', i. m. (Van Alstelo) <11s Oali fnOMOta. t>. m. »i \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0!;-\u25a0 > ..d!» T.nj-i— 2:l4. PACING— 2:0? CLAP3— »1,30« fTMItEE} IN nvßi. Kin* ireet bile. h.. by Direct (Gcers^ 11 111 Atli Hf.se. »,. h. <enow> 1 6 B « Plnch'-n; Vi'.k's, b. U>te§) 82 2U Dr. Madari. c!i. K. (HudSOB) 2 4 4 3 M'.r.r.ut. L r. lErwtnj » ft 8 4 I'er.onrtte. b. in (Vail) 4 3 6 7 pry Monopole, br. li (Curry) 3 7 9 8 Bed THi. b. !i. da ErwlaJ r, h 7 » M'!i*<-*<l. b. m (Keyee; 10 In 8 .'. OWrr. »' g. rßaurh) ..7 !< 10 10 Bui. Orell. eh. X McMaaosi « dr Tin.... 2:l*. 2:11 *. 2:12 ! 4. 2:12. TI:OTTIN-rj- 2:f« i'I.AK- -PCRSB JI.SOO (TWO IN TBRBB. rJNFIKISII] Robert Me. hr. m.. by Mcßoberts iJfllM « 2 1 Marlon W|llc«s. b. to., by Hawthorns \\!!k«3 (Mo- U0n.11,3) ' 9 l 4 John Taylor, gr. ir. by p'i ,ute"('U'll3onj 1 B r. IJsonien,. I. a . (Howar ' . 3 4 2 Ids. HU'i.w.-.,<J, b. in. (fliliw Si .'» 3 3 Jw.lgre Gr»-n. » rDe ftyder) 3 X C Jim Perry, rr. R. fFrank*... 4 <l 7 N'r.ton A. . J). \: . i Andnr»o.i) 7. 7 ft lAna, b. m. (furryi 7 9 9 Time. I r:';. 2:l4'i. 2:13»;. MORRIS PARK ENTRIES FOR TO-DAY. FIRST Highwelghl han.iicar: .11 atesi last t'.x r::£ 1 half furlotir* of Wltbars Mil*. Marr.!- Worth IMlOastaliaa . ...... I<^4 Ksr^i Water isj Qieoecbo 103 COUI : r .I<-M»jp 126- Crown Prtaoe ......... ..101 Major !'• Inam lIH l>iimon 100 MRitir.ni^s 114|plr Britlai 100 Jake li: Orttiodos ;.;> •\u25a0 - \u25a0 107 Andrew Hack :». V.«trs;d» 107 Bulwark M Candida 1- Aiiff'n Allen H i 1<"« Adi' » »._ .... B0 .'. k ;:a!Mn 1 3 ECOOKD RACE— TiI lee i«ai' oles sad ever; n->n-w!r.ner« \u25a0' J: '"\u25a0<' in IMS or "4; the Wither* v:>. Al«n-a-I">a:e 11" Trpip SO lamas V 107 Thlstte Ilesthsr M .. v: Uocaeaued i>«> t 1 .-»: i v; 1 .. ir. THIRD BAC3B the CHAMPAONB: two-yeaaMitds, ! .ai9 of IKC;last soy!! furl ««s •\u25a0<\u25a0 tbe wsti-.-m |] •\u25a0 *«t»e 122 TrafflOoa 119 Oiseaa IS] Burnt UXQm .., i"9 FOURTH RjUaS— THE NXW lIorH.TT.T.H:; M . . . t»-. rcar-olda aao <.<\u25a0'•, iha \u25a0 y.:e Jf«w v •- 114 Proceeds KM •Da ll<*z\- ... I** •<;.irrilr.:i i"i T' •> Southern t \u25a0•-. Andrew Ma-k 101 vi \u25a0'. 11: ,:..-.. 1 up; *J!.i;::.j:i entry FTFTH RACE s-!!'rtr- Inn J»| aHls r.^n-winnera rf I1.2OO; :a.-t s--v*n Cur! r-e» of tas Wlthen Mile r>H ra:;ta 1"S It. L,. .Tohnstm m I** £ Frs nilipo •< . Halt ai . ; I'.'J <"^!iv.r:ffs 94 A* ;•:•• 103 M:*-> r\:....'.'~.'.'.'.'.'.'. M lloaseedor 1"> SuSeranoa >-7 WUd Irishman 100 Ui.,^.... n Sumatra .... i<7 BIXTH j:.\'T \u25a0.-\u25a0•!iii;r: thrae •<\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:•> nr over: n-.!:» ajid a. Jl- •\u25a0..\u25a0?.-:.. ..•- iha :.;!! Prtoea Chins i<fl Thlatla Heather !><; rrnnisas l<«. Midshipman '.»:. Vapta ...:•* A«ce!! »1 Aliaa 101 Dr. Lode* 88 euirj z T vrT'r,Vln H - T Tr! «tll Phan.iy, Jed Ortilo. Saf«- Mi r F«.^« Di V. Ile - Jaka Banders, Captain Seroth. Peggy *»\u25a0 i-.ffe M.. Lieutenant Rice and Cbhaeset also ran. lit l J^ Cc^' *}*TlnllcT Inllc> ~~ Bth-l Ecru *««. 11l illolgesen). Arn.rl' J u-u, -,J-«, J -«, 1 eboe - lw (Mclntyre). Bto 2. second; JSP/" I?? (Horrman), 100 to 1. third Time, 1:44* .-. Kian. Maraschino, Id<. 80.8 0. Aver.eer. B.rulce. \u25a0 r^;'-"' **•\u25a0 wmcasj. La ehspcrcne and Alilo Vlr ulso ThJr~ r *°,* l slx •-"«*>— Riff Ben. 123 (Prior). Bto 2. nl« « JOlJ 01 " 1 i& S. ln tDoralr.lck>. 13 to 5. second; Nan- r.lo Hoi ? c '. *?. {Si }l >- •to 1. third. TUne, 1:1S»- Don Domo Kate Z'.tt. Oteo. Seven Oaks and Monls also ran. Fourth r*ce ibli f^longs)- '\itter. 110 (Nico!). 4 to C, won. sincerity Belle. 00 (Lannoti), 11 la 2. .econd; CapU tano. 80 (Jenkins), 12 to 1. third. Time. 1:1& Lord I'ivtii, Matador ai.d Broadway Girl also ran. ,v. h race lone mils and a half>—Major Manslr. 117 UN,col>. 13 to 10. won; Tr.» Way. 108 iMladert. 15 to 1, r.'',"'.' nd; » >-* "ni-al. rjenldns), 12 to 1. third. Tima. r+Slt flare' Ijltt:e ElkJn. Chief. l»u Woods. Charlie Miller and Ml« Jlriton also ra:i. Sixth race (c.i» mile)—: tod Anderson. 11l (Morr'soni, 5 to 1. area; King of the Valley. 11l (Shea). 6 to 1. second; Harkrlnif ic. 119 (Hoffler). 19 to 1. third. Time. 1:43 i^atlrf Trepan. Ebony. Bard of Avon. Ml Relna. Holland Jl. and L.is:arJo also tan. RESJLTB AT ST. LOUIS. Bt Urals, Oct. First ra<-«> (five and on<v-ftj»!f f<ir- longs) Wakeful. 100 (McLaugnUn), 7 to 1, won; Dorothy Dodd. 10. r « (D. Austin), ti to 1. second; Bell 8.. LOS . i:: . ..." 4 to 1. third. Time. 1:69 I^ady Sellers. Ti-iumrhtrrss, Hessie May, Bannock Pells, fconora, Katia Trews Kay Sharp and Eternally also ran. Second race (Six and on<-half fur!on«t> Mlnflora 103 (Emblem), $ to 1. won; <;ii»n< 4..>n,4 ..>n, 10S (Monroe), 20 t-> 1. 8.-coad: Algonquin, 107 (Pagan), 7 to 1. third. Tim« I:Z^\. Evening Star, La Cache. St. Elnlfrede^ LaTlst, Orpheum ar.J Atlas a!»o ran. TV.ird race (five and one-half furlongs) -Vestry 103 (Dugan), B to 10, won; Bob Curl. 100 UMckson) 8 to 1 »econd; Jaico Wan.. 106 (Roach). SO 1. 1. third. Tlnn 1 :<.<>\ Ethers Pride. Flora Levy, Msxeaionesa, lonian. K«t>eatbe, \u25a0: Jetta and Mark Wa^ielph a!«o ran r ..itii race .handicap; ore ar.j one-Flxt.-enth miles)— Thrt lv^Rfnt. 107 iD-JKan>, ft to 2 •nor: footlights Fa\-or- Ite, li»* lOtekaon), :i to .'.. second; Imcv Crawford, log (Uur.rcO, 12 1 . 1. third. Tims 1:47%. Orient and Canyon also ran. Ki:th ra.a (poa ml!» and armtty yards)— Frank nice, UM (ifriansjMUO. 7 to 1. won: Bountiful. 91 (8. Dlckaon) ;»i t.i 1. seeoad; Sanct!Fsin:i». 167 gan) 10 to ItliirO. Time. i:«7S. Flyer, Daweon. Shortcake. Hucena, Bsrea. Hickory Corners. Kowcta «::.1 Blsoks also r.m Msta ra-* \u25a0« x and one-half furlongs)—Ouden, PS rThnmer), 12 to 1, won: Cr.rr.e. 103 \u25a0 Mcljin»hl!nO, « to 1. «v...nd; Worthlr.Ktcn. l n 7 ran), » to 1 third. Tim«, I-— whiskers. Howiinir Derrish. •..-:ra I! inter. Miss Manners. Triple Silver, K!nf'» Charm, Avoid and In- BQltbrtft a!fo ran. Loss of Six Good Men May Spoil Clean Eecord of Dual Meet Victories. Candidates for the gymnastic tew! at New-Tork University have now been at work for nearly a week, but few-pr good men bare bean on the floor than for years before. This is partly because Belcher, Peck. Stevenson, Caballero. Emerson and Prochas'ka are I*' through graduation, the rir.-t three being intercollegiate point winners. The uni- versity's recotd of never having bcrrt defeated in a dual "gym" meet sterns likely to be spoiled. Five of last year's team are already hard nt work. however, and. with about ten substitutes and n«w men out. Captain De Zafra is fairly hopeful. He is the only man that ha.« won points in cham- pionships ami will be the mainstay of the team on the parallel bars. With his two years' experience G Bartelir.ez should do well on the horizontal and parallel bars. G. P. Meade. another of the old men Should carry off the club swinging event in th« 'meets this year. Tumbling should be one of the strongest divisions of the programme, as Hard! Ketchum and Williamson have had two seasons' practice. Ketchum 19 the only man who hi* , ",Tm£ted in collegiate meets on the flying rVnr, The f <V"f rock, the Intercollegiate chain- I ion on th* sfdehorse. will be felt, as O'Brien and SSgV?? Ire the only men out for this, and they h MeV^im'p'ro^ly'^held with Princeton and hi T'ni^riltv of Pennsylvania, and exhibitions will L pi veil in several of the preparatory schools hi thla etii. •GYM" TEAM PROSPECTS AT N. Y. U. Again there was a lull, when John K. Madden took a band with a bid of $50,600. Mathew Corbett raised it to 10.930, and t!ic great horse was knocked down to him at that figure. There was soi i:;- t< re.^t b!i,i\vn as to whether ho rei>reser.ted any one else, but be announced decidedly that be bad b ugh! the horse himself, it is not uiiiikeiy.how- ever, that Meddler will eventually stand In the breeding establishment of James ': Keene, Yankee, a Futtulty winner and a son of Hanover, and closely allied*to the family of Hamburg and Domino, sas sold for SU.&O& After sooa early bid- dlng by John t; Madden and C. UcMeekin, it set- tled down to a duel between Sydney Paget and W. ' i Jenks, and the latter was the purchaser. J.u;- r It was announced that !ie bought the hoi for John EX Madden Mr Madden '("•ii^in Yankee as a yearling for ».'\u25a0"•• i:^i \.n v..-.. the Futurity Ji» nil name sad colors, although the latf> William «'. Whitney had a pan Interest ! - i him at that time. The other two stallions \u25ba• Id for pric< t-. Harry Payne Whitney buying Ballyhoo Bey ai:>l James li. iia>;i;i:i. Kllmarnock. Tha brood mares wen in active demand in most c.i--t-s. ni"i some brougl . \u25a0 nal prices. Morn- \u25a0\u25a0 . the great stake nllyof i !\u25a0 -.^ rears ago, by - 4. .::.ii a sister i" Prevli ..-. erai taught t'>" Harry Payne Whil ley for tIS.OOO She U In rail t.. Hamburg, James it. Keene w.i^ th<-- contending bid- der, but it w.is plain that Mr. Whitney ;!M'i deter- mined to f ' her iit any price and Mr. Keene stopped at $14,000, Immi Uately afterward Mr. Keena paid f.i.-" tot the si. Sir trn mare, Ondulee, also in f.>:ii to Hamburg- Sydney Paget wanted b< r. and bid up to HXfiOO. Jar:., sii X \u0084 and Harry Payne Whitney had \u25a0 duel a er Martha 11, t>.« dam of Artful, \u25a0Mrs F!iii;r!iy winner and victor Id the Great Filly Stakes. Bhe was anally led out of toe ring "\u25a0> a bid «f Mr. Whiti: y <,t :•\u25a0•\u25a0\u25a0. The dam <.f Goldsmith, Klldeer, will also »; i to Pio.ikil.ilr. as Mr. Whitney added her to v.im collection of choicely bn d mares on a bid -if |" ;.-•. i:. R rhomas, wt.,> intend! to start a stud with the mighty Hermis at Ita bead, w.i.-< a buyer of s(jtn.- <f the chol eet mares He bourn! Leonoi t i«>rinfc'. tho champton two-year-old of 1901, for ja.roo. aft'-r some keen competition; Marquise, .i beauti- fully bred young mare, for $4,000; Poetess, by The Bard, for $4,000, and several others for smaller bums. Peg Womngton, the dam of David Garrlek, was bought t.y her old owner, T. C. McDowell for J-'.- r ."". and Frederick Johnson purchased Mi.-**Ham- burg, the Brut foal ever dropped to the mighty Hamburg, for IX3OO Renown, aßt Bimon mare, and n i n!f sister tv Hamburg, sold :•\u25a0* a yearling for $17.00% was In little, demand. H. K. Knapp got her for $2,700. Th« details of ihe s.iie follow: Meddler, b. fa . 14 years, by St. Catlea— Bosrbody; Uattl ••\u25a0 rhett $."I.ofio Ballyhoo Bay, tr b.. s years, by Kingston Bally- I Harry PaytM WbltiMy 2,.".<X) liiiidft- b. h . r. year*, by Hanover- Correction; W. ir. .r^.Tk" 21 r.oo Kllmarnock, br. !i . : .searsi. by sir Dixoa—Hiss 'f.i; J B. Hagsln 3.0^0 KIM-er. \ m . 1I \ »\u25a0;!--.. I•. 1 MfMn--!xni I-Tnlcr; Harry PayiM Whitney T.r<«> Lalv Asnca, eh. in , IT yean.; by St. niaise— Quits; \V. 1^ powers t.500 Imp. l»i,iv M!n. br. m.. 7 yeari by Latins- -I^ady Minting; w. L. F.nvers &200 La I'oik.i. br m.. II yean by Llsaak -Ruperta; W. II Jenka 000 Ixi Bjrlphl .\u25a0•. i m 22 years, by iviiowcraft-- Sylph: E. 1.. Norton.... sno LeUnre. eh. m., it >-ars. tar Meddler— Bella: w. v .»,s. ' 1.000, L.'i: la Larlas, h in.. :. years, by Dr. Mcltrldc ' Hoyden: E. 1.. Thomaa .. 9.800 Lizzlt.- Montr M, b in , 14 •. cars, by lnjke of Hoatrosa UmxH vk-. : Sydney PmgM .... 1.500 lyulso N.. eh vi .. 11 years, by Luke Blackburn - Loulm T; J. p. iieDooald . 3.000 Msilsma Reel, eh. n»., 17 yean by Fellowcrsft— Manila Grey; s P. iiarian 800 Sl.'iiinle UlmjHr. dr. tn . 10 yean by lilinyar MMint*Orey; AY. AMor Chanl . S.IOO Marquise b tt . 11 years, by Ulser—Monta Rota: 1". it. Thomai . 4.<:»> M.'iTtha 11. b. m., to yean, by I>ii:i* Dlnmont— Loots* T.; Harry Paya« r .v .-i. ».0(X) Mary '.. b. m. 10 years, by Billet- Vega; TV. 1.. Powers coo Maths, eh. m, IB year?, by Mortimer—Trill; HnrO' Payne Whitney 7.!W0 Mmv, rli m . 18 years, by Onotiiaßa— t'na- Elliott ••. Cowden 1.100 MUa Buttermilk, br. m., 5 y*ara, by Handspring Biilrndour; Daniel r>ryf-r \u25a0"'•° Ml-s Miriam, b. m.. 9 years, by Ironuolse— Tul!.i- homa; J. 8. McDonald v; 2 OiO ll!?s Hamtmrs. b. m.. 14 years, by Hainßfliav- The Task ; Frederick Johnson 3.300 Mcrnuigelde, b. m., •> r «ars. by Meddler— side; Harry Payne Whitney 13.000 Imi). Oadolec b. in.. 8 yturs, by St. Blraon— j:imr< R. Keene 14.000 Orthia eh. in., 7 >•• ars, by Ormonde Mul E. R. Thomat 1.800 Pec Wofflncjton, b. in. Is* years, by I»intrfellow BalUt; I. C. McDowell £.500 Poeten <h. m., ]<i year?, by Tho Bard Ella Lakelard; K. P.. Thomas 4.000 Rolim dOr <ii. m.. 'M y«s.rs. by Rayon <ror-- T>iliy 1!. ; Elliott '* Cowdsn 1,000 Rero«"n br. m.. 4 year*, by St. Simon—LaJy Heel; }[ X..' Knapn 2.700 r.<i><nt- ti I, - yean, by Hamburg Yorkvlll* Belle; rsaaerlck Johnson MOO Harry Payne Whitney Buys Morn- ingnde for '$15,000. The dispersal sal« of the entire stud of the late. William C. "Whitney was continued last night in Madison Square Garden. Four stallions were sold and th»? rest of the brood mares, and the. prices realized were so uniformly good that the- sale can wfll bo ranked as one of the gieatest ever held in this country. If anything the bidding tvns more spirited than on Monday night, and so k<en was the competition for Medler and some of the Illus- trious matrons, that the auctioneer had little mote to do than repeat the bids as they came from one eldo of the ring or the other. There was another big crowd on hand, not so lart;e by half, perhaps, as on the opening night, but still so large that one could well marvel at the remarkable interest shown for the breeding indus- try, which to-day is at its highwater mark In this country. It was a select gathering and one highly representative of the most prominent horsemen and breeders In the country. Among those who took an active part in the bidding were James R. Kerne. Harry Payne Whitney, S. S. Brown, Elliott C. Cow den. John E. Madden, E. It. Thomas, Syd- ney Paget, acting for James B. Ilaggin; John S. McDonald, acting- for William K. Vanderbllt; Fred- erick Johnson, W. L. Powers, H. R. Knapp, T. C. McDowell, K. L. Norton and W. H. Jenks. Meddler, the greatest son of St. Gatied, was sold to Mathew Corbett for $51,000 after some spirited bidding by James R. Keen.:, Sydney Paget, Fred- erick Johnson and John K. Madden. He was tho bargain of the sale beyond question, and the only wonder li that Harry Pay no Whitney did not take an active part In the bidding and buy him for his own stud. Meddler to-day is the unquestioned champion of his kind. An unbeaten racehorsa and bred in the purple, he stands to-day as the* largest winning ptro of th* world for 1904, hendiris; the stallion list with Fomethlng over $200,000 to his credit. He is the sire of Colonial Girl, win- ner of the World's Fair Handicap; Stalwart the champion three-year Old of the year: Ta::. the blpg^st individual two-year old winner «f the year; Bedouin, winner of the Matron and Raneho del 1.5--> stafe \u25a0 at the present Morris Park meet- in?; Mercury, a:i'l many ot^er?. It V.H3 S:3O o'clock when he was l<-d Into the rtnc, mid Sydney Paget began by bidding C 0.00% He was the same man wlio only a lew years uro boosht him In for the late William C. Whitney fo r $\u25a0»'•. '"•'. ai Morris Park. James R. Keene quickly raised ih« bid to tS,OOO , and Paget said $30,000. There was a moment's lull before Mr. K'^nc quiet- ly lii UO.OOO In a round of applause. Paget bid SOJB&K a:.d dropped <>ut of the competition, but there were Others to take it op, Frederick Johnson, James R. Keene and Mathew Corbett carrying It to $nO.OOOI KNOCKED DOWX AT $',1,000. MEDDLER FOR M. CORBETT. RESULTS AT WORTH. \u25a0' ; V " n: '\u25a0 ?,oV 9 \u25a0': :. see—c; IWeuifftu a:d i>«, STaffioSrSiTi Gold Seal The FamouJ Banquet and Dinner Wine. Mm Win St., Orfcua, «. V. f Siii Hiker. NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. WEDNESDAY. OCTOMrft 12. ijiO4 READY FOR SWARTHMORE. MISS DOD .LOSES MATCH. ARMY AND NAVY NEWS. BEDOIIX WINS STAKE. PASADEXA FIGHTS HARD. BASEBALL. "- IritOM THE TKJBrNS BIREAr.I Washington. October 11 NEXT EAR'S MAN (i. -The BllUtarx and naval office: s are busily engaged on thai detail* of the joint army and navy manoeuvres which will take place and summer. The exercises will be held in Chesapeake Bay and will engage the shipa of the North Atlantic fleet and probably those of th» South Atlantic and European Iron 3. They \u25a0will follow the season of target practice at Penaacola. according to the present plan. The military fate* Will b* confined largely to the artillery stationed In what is kwen as the artillery district of th« Chesapeake, and inc-luies the coast artillery com- mands from th« post* near W ington and Balti- more. Invitations will be Issued !•} th» artillery troops of th- militia or^uiiiiiitior.ii. ir.cludinje ihfTT of Nev.-York. The- prpgrammt will include n. search problem for the ornerit of th* naval vessels, and this will be followed by wo plans of attack, so as to give the vowed -'^d he forts a variety of work. It is likely that the land forces will be rcmimanded by BriK idier General F. D. Grunt, and the force afloat by Kear . Imirai A. S. Uarker. unless by that tim>- that officer la succeeded by Rear Admiral R D Evans, a3 .-orr* of the naval officers now expect, it is possible that on» of the problems will be a.:. imaginary naval attack on the national capital, the object of the invading naval force being to land Its sailors and marines at sons* point along the bay or the Potomac River, which in time of "war wiuia give the enemy an advantage. The de- tails o( the problem are now being worked out. The plans, of course, will bf> loft to the opposing commander?, and certain portions of th« projects will not be eommunierit.d to officers interested until after the mythical hostilities have begun. It remains to be decided whether «r not ther* chall be additional man«iMivr*s on the extensive ale of the Manassas exercises. The officer* of the General Staff, who are considering tao sub- ject, are not of united view on the subject. Sons* of th»m belle M the \u25a0nmtßi for the army and militia should be divided lr.tr. Male operations. co that the militia commands may get tha most tafl- mate acquaintance with the work. A3K3 MORE HOUSE RENT FOR OFFICEBS^- Brigadier General F. S. Dodge, paymaster general of the army. In Mi annual report, recommawda legislation to the end that a soldiers deposit book shall not be sold, pledged, assigned or trans- ferred, except after a discharge, and whan acoam- patiied by the soldier's final statement, and that such disposition shall «c made a military. jßfJsßce. for which the soldier may be retained In the e*l*te» for trial. lie recommends that the possessloa of a soldier 1 s deposit book by any person as security for a loan to the soldier. in the period of his ser- vice, shall work a forfeiture of the deposit. Th* paymaster general says: Much complaint has been mads by company ooni- manders of the practice of money lenders, sag* daily to San Kranctsco, who, it Is believed, not only loan enlisted rr. 'i money on the security of their deposit book?, but He in wait for them when discharged, and practically confiscate or extort a large percentage of what Is due t.iem from th« government. The evil is a crying one. and dearly akin to that which exists in any large seaport. where seamen are stripped of their hard earning* by boarding house runner 3 and touts. If the de- posit book can be made utterly without value tax case of such us**, it willbe of benefit to the ser»le« as well as to the soldier. An Increase in the. allowance for commutation tar Quarters of officers 13 recommended. "A major general's commutation allowance of 172,** says th» paymaster general, "would not pay the rent of a. modern flat in any large city, and a conveniently located and suitable bouse would be entirely out of the question. Ther« !<« no possibility that an offl- cer of any grade, with a family, can rent a suitable house in such places as New-York, Washington. Chicago .:-.:d San Francisco for the amount of hi* cemmntatton." Legislation is recommended Increasing tho al- lowance to expert riflemen, sharpshooters and marksmen at the rate, respectively, of J3. IS and $1 a m.c.th for each year they qualify. OEDEK9 IS3l"Kl>.— The following eritfn hsrro been lss-.ied: ARMY. October '\u25a0"• Trie N*wp>->rt. from San Juan for FaJar<S<v - A-.ir.ra. the Marietta ami MM Caat'ae. from J! ißtevtdee r*T ISiifaoa Ayr?s. Oetobcr n— T.-.* Michisan. from Erie for Buffalo. Tl^«> riMttHWVCK <"<->mm!ssioned to-day at nary ysrl. Ne« •Torfc. Oetobaf ">— T!-.- Ke!»n», at Hong Kens;. Ootnh*.- I*-— Th* Cu'.poa, at San Juan: the Newport, a? th« f'r . .klvn. the Atlanta, the Manet- i a-i tha Caattae, M IMntiWi lbs Baltimore, a: BAILED KOTXaiSSCTB OF XAVAT, VESSEL? fal- lowing movements of vessels have beer, reported •* the Navy Department: ARRIVED. v SPORTS and Recreation America's Best csurifiiE Special Dry— Brut Rl^ Exquisite in bouquet P* 1^ and flavor, it impasses the French product «nd costs only one-half. Why pay import duty for the mere take of foreign labels? GOLD SEAL, Is In erldtne* at •very <a*hionable function ar.d is ar.M •>».-.. _hh r . Jjp^

NEW-YORK Jjp^ Recreation SPORTS and FOR DOD · Crook fox hint to-day. A Ibtsbi ft.-«ld turned out and rode for ei?rliteen miles only to lose tho quarry tn a long deep hosi where

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Page 1: NEW-YORK Jjp^ Recreation SPORTS and FOR DOD · Crook fox hint to-day. A Ibtsbi ft.-«ld turned out and rode for ei?rliteen miles only to lose tho quarry tn a long deep hosi where

Captain G. BbOTKUXGER. ord«r» to Portsaseoth te-\u25a0. ked. to nu'.-y yar". Xew-Tork.

GMHBgflftsi W, SV CAPERTON. commls3icn«a.•r-.t Corr.rr.ai!c!pr F U CHAPIN. detached genera:

boa:.!: to Bure.iu of Navigation. Navy Department.

r"?t*nC E. LANL'KAM. detached th« Wyoming; to thsPuTalo.

Er.slsn C. r. T'CFF. onjers Is th» Buffalo revcjtol: f>tr.o WTItaUUsT

Fa" TsSßirTni W. W. EAUKT. r»rlred. to navy ra-'.F rtamouth; terrpcrary a'i:ty *3 as-M*tar.t s*n«raj

»: trckeeper.

Captain STEPHEN X HACKNEY. Bth TflfmatTfV te SatInrantrj. Company M .

csptsin AiiTl-V f PRESCOTT. 21»t Ir.fiatiy. «• tth{y.'.ir.iv..GbSSgSMS K. . •

Captain RHTNOLTS J. BT.T.T. 9th Infantry. »•» atila.U'c:i Barra.-ks. to Fort Thomas, to Cnnsjany D.

rOHN T y.\SCE. 9th Cavalry, detailed profsssnrtt SsttttSO aclencsi »nd tacttca, •.diversity of Call-

XAVT.

Th" r.ar.rho M Tafo was Srst run !n Msf, andyertfrtoT was Its seventh renewal. Of the nineov<I::'.:::;. n,.rr.::ijiio::s Ai.ibtrjack ar.d Zeal. wore, 1, ka\~.r)£ feven to face the eiartcr.

;\u25a0- I... aptpafl a f'.icht favorite over Broadcloth,

at b to :., bet e*ent back to s to L 8. B. Prowr.'sj-oungßier eettlr.g the bulk of the play. Cairngorm

\u25a0of Hearts Desire had .ifollowing:, but Pasadenavas> BtOs lar.cied 2:; sr>it» of his last (rood race, bo-cause l.c was obliged to aauidor 6take weight.Pnt*T*Tg end Vo'aday were the outsiders.

Xc a good start lost no time in trsklr.gJJedp-^ln right to the front, but Heart"* Deslr*«nd the whole flrlfiwas right on his heels, and they

raced in close ardor down the first bill to the dip.

?.>arlat: the Is;-'. furlong pole It looked to te any

one's race. Bedouin was in the middle of the tracktvith Phaw bfjrirr.lr.irto urge- Dim on under a handj.-> while Pasadena ar.d Cairnponn x\«ro on the j

MttfAland Broadcloth and lie.iris De?ir« on theInside of :;:i. all Bva r^^tirally beads apart.Jiroadrioth er.d Heart's Dm were the Brat to

fhow .ens of distress and drop back, beaten. A«:iteerth from home Lvi.1' en Calrn«orm <ir^w Usvh'.p in an effort to ke.-i> up to Pasadena endT>3ouin, who were gradually diaTrlug away.BicjMup to the BaMi these two fought it out incetpfrate etrlfe. and l>doulr.'s victory was only1y the narrowest mart-'-n. was third.3a winning, Bedouir. ju^tlficu his success in thaMatron Stakes o:i the cptr.ir.g Jay of the meeting.

A celling tieei'lecruiso over the short courso <•:'«.l>out mo miles furnished snm antertsinmantIcr lovers of cross country ra< i:rp. Conover «« em«-d\n outclass hi.- Held to such an extent that beviis r-:. odds-on tuvoiif and he won. but his: \u25a0»..- a email <v.*- a;.d he had t" be riddeut :t 10 f.:i'A off the iJ'/t^nnined challenge of ';\u25a0;•!

Bay. erho fenoed cleanly *:..i ia:i a creditable\u25a0mots. Ooaover was otcely handled by Mi Hants,i:.d :t ca;i'-d lor skill sod dsvaraess to g'-l him3:orr;v in ?ro:.i. In srlnnlng lif i-.rtii to equal tii»tzack record ot i-.l. dum by Mr. '".iamblefsHtvcnrfaSi la IgjS. Jim sii k ?inn ESophona emrethe early pa< \u25a0•'milViers. and tlfe formei p:irn>'dthird motley, i:phone ma.ie a bad Ifrwilng st thethird .iurr.p from home, kaackllng over behind.t.Tid lost in-j^h sro-jnd Hut for the accident ).•-<rouM hard;..- i..- less than third. K«rsey. i"-- efi(\u25a0tod I Bey fell, but thiir joik«>i •bUury.

Bos< ben v.as gradnated frnm t5-.» td:::J. \u25a0:\u25a0 ii:t.-s inthe first racr-. in s Deld that eras one ..f thi ;«f the season. B<r.::e<=rf-:.t took the i!.:;.-i to adri\i:ig finis:;, wjtii I>Arkit-. anile Critical, the fi-\orn«-. was a dose tliirj. Hanger, a c'r ?tr.'itgelrtißg. by Albert—Hoodoo, and, hence a fullBrother t.. the (great Mesmerist and the ';/«• :yJlatapor.. mad- jiis nrst a; j.earance In this race.Jif showed the speed of his nnstrtoas rflativ<>!=.Vut r... it--'1 •')'. -:-ti v-.m suc-ninjc li^'liv a.l throushI . r Uajuwemest cmi tie looked i<>r: \u25a0 .--t;»i!

CSiisten Moqtad books .in <visy -winner In i!.e sell-• at <;r.f mil*-. >-ai.s. always well np tooktbe !•ad ut tbe head of ill.- stretch, but tired fromhlr early eSetts, sad Andrew Mack R;it him aI

'\u25a0 Ke:r.oto made '\u25a0;> much

f:on t!,p t'j!::?. r.jt tired at t)-.f end. where•c U* laQj ra \u25a0 tbe s;in:.?.jst. in ti.*- laht !..• • . .i.

hg&Slcaa si OOS m;;« and ix quarter. onij threehorses wesi to the post. Eugenia Burch being a

rite Phr- and Mabel Richardson ranlapped th« entire distance, and at the end MabelKfenardsoa earned th« verdict in a hard drive bya Bbort tterk. Carbuncle mn on* of his best races,Kd sru lapped aa Bagecia Burch at the end.

BCnUBIEgJli:-' F.A :: V |.. 3 jur-o:1.! sji4 o-.er; «'i fur-. B«t«inir.J ' -i rf

• \u25a0 ** J tf-Uer. f-t. PItO7.O'K«U «-.". a<.- R'ea .. ... iM.Lsim . T. 2

\u25a0 H •;-. lU7.V. D«.vl» .IS 6*\u25a0'*\u25a0•• \u25a0\u25a0':\u25a0 R \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 i^<..i laT.HUdabrand ... li» h' ....... ..JO7.H io bras >> 8B.Bftllycastl* .Hit^hrv.-k> ..IM.Btmm . '-•• 8

-r;..'.r. lOT.Goodchlld . .. KM 40»\u25a0 i883 :. Ball \u25a0.-ttvm.r;- .. 115.X Walsh .... 100 40'•'•Ar:.:u <Aver>i IW.Uei'.ffm r. 8-S

J4.Ffcaaei <v.*tt, US TTiwiilsilj 40 IS:.'..:• ; Johrsoß CitmrgKOi-.tm.VF. H«-nn?s»r-. •*» 2032'Ru<ia;->flt (T'rakf. li".-r>.»rhns 0-5 jjH.fUT-.Eilr.t 'Ahem JiCFrasch 100 40H.ljaiiConaor* iConn'.'«i...ll«.i;anr:ua l<Mi 40

Wrnmt J. a. Drain •\u25a0;• b. g. i:os«ber. by T\*n nrnim'\u25a0 «taf .\u25a0;-art fair; snaj easily by 1 i!«•:.»\u25a0 Time.3- \u25a0 •Coupled In »h» betting.

\u25a0WJliaiD UACE—SeUir.e «cha»». 8-year-c2d» and Imm, ttmut 2 miles.l.cotinovfr <Harrif. .141.Mr. Harris.... 4-* 1-S2-Gcid Bar <£toteidwr}-) lSS.Hosaa *< ina.Jlm SUefc lOotu Hl.Kopari 16 64.'Woden .so.:!.) lZ».Coua»Uy 40 12»• Snuff (Steve:*) 132.Deb!:nK 40 0«.fc.ophon» (Ootton) 341.1 O'Britg »

-..Sre.-.ppr Hal (?ion»> 135. Mr. .'•\u25a0\u25a0.o:l* r, 2h.Numeral fl>jrii!ardi 141 !loita*ri ii h.I. K-y (Biume. :43: 43.E H*i4n.'.'.'.. ii n

J'j.Benefit orUenar) US.Beecrta »> hllPatanßey <Le»:f) Uo.lJonot.ue 411 10\u25a0nßOHtwCßßrtaa M. Harris's eh. «. <.ioj.ni)v»r. by Fs:-c-iner

—Maeeie Ward. Kiart *<*>«: won ri3<l».a cut br 'A

l«i«ih. nsaa, 8:10' m

THJRD HACK—li:;.:\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0? colts «ml seW.ns* 2 Mam eld- Cfurlongs, J->lir>*e Course.'

1 Beillserent (lie!!) 112.O«nnon 6 652.l>Arkl* <i'a«-et) I*Une « 2lea] Madden 1 UJS.W. Da-.-ls 2 4 54.Rnwhourna (Mz-.ufi> 112. V.'c;iaerly 11 S « 5C hunger (Pvymi lUU.Phaw 7-2 ;s6.Bn:::ant (F**xt*mm&...H2.H.caDsliaa... »i 3WJine?— U V. llfir*b. c. I>lilg*rrr.t.by Don <!« Oro—Ft. liri^tct. E:art fa!i:»••.« drain* l.jr a r*a4. Tim*

1:10.VDUKXH nAPK-THE RAKCIIO WIT. PASO STAKKS;

ii-yfui-dh'.f;« furious*, E<-lij.»e \u25a0 an*.l.B^ioulti (Jm»t*' IW.Sbssr 8 ft T.2 Pnsafl<T.a (Mrl.silgnUa)...VßJ. Martin :« 3a.<.alrr.|sorrn (Pas»tJ lU».l,yne 5 24.Broa'lrl,t>i rßrown) 122.f»

-NV!i .... 8-2 a_if»

f.Voladay (TJioma-i 115.n»y1fpni V 3f!.U.-art> I/ef!r« .Iniryea). .lW.Jlili<brana ... 4 B-S7.8-jtti!n« dCKUnais) I«*.Gannon «0 20XVtaatr

—E. IT. Jisntl's h g Hcdouln Ir Mfd<ll»r—

T.lzxi* M"rjtros«. tl*rt gosa; vn driving* by a headTin*-. i:<r.*\.TIFTH RACE—S^ljing; 8-year- oM, ar,a fiVer; 1 mileJ.G!.«rn (flcfeaot) !<7. HM+\,Ta.u<l ...11-.'i

*

1i*.Andrew Alack t;*»4To:!K..lol.Travels 7-2 7-5S.ciiis (Ulute, UX.R'-item ... 7 5*•

.K*7Bots CKyle) MT.O'NeU US 6 .'.n Miflfhijman (SaCIVSa).... J'7.Sch!]!ir.e •.;•• «S.Uxbtful COHt» :<>4.H. (!~liran ... I<«< 4'i?.<"eunmaM (Card irKS.Wonrierly ... li 6S.Br:art.«rrj>e <Uichar«i) :•:. v.. Davis . . . 1.". r.9 AV< (UnwVE'.iMe) .1"3..T. Martin.. . 1^ f.

saSSSLiJh S F~

fc<tu«'« Ch. f. l»»»n. Kr.:ght ofT). 1~"? btHZt :won ta*l!>' b>' 3 leagthsB""

wIUCE~]Ul":i:tpi t-yeai^olos ana ovrr; li

l.MfciM!Rirhard*n <Row«l .100 A. TT Book#T T5 I••2 Evsti.ia Bur.-h (Curt'st ..ll<J.«»ioni ;,-V, }T8 < art.uacls rwilsoin KS.Travsra •< ii

Three Head and Head FinishesSmall Croud at Morris Park.

In a furious drive Hedouin won the Rancho delI%mo at Morris I'ark yesterday from Pasadena.n-icnef c; the Nursery Handicap on Saturday.

tr>-.9 ra c was th6feature of a rather ord'nary£»y's rac;i g. but it served alone to lend enough

tone to the tpori to satisfy the somewhat meagre

crowd l"i attendance. As much of th« race asco'-ld be seen, la Its tunning, down the EclipseCY>arse, was of a kind to bring the onlookers to

their fVet. Five horses came down thror.gh the

J«t fur.or.B head and hoad like a troop of cavalry,

and X MBS only In the last hundred yards thatpMaadß arid Pasadena drew sttghtly away andfought cut the Issue to the end. Tha track wase!<-.w a:.i Jumpy.

LONG CEASE FOE FOX IN VAIN.Heotpatsatl. I^nir Isiar..?. Tv» 11 (Special' —Mr*.

R»gi:'M Brooaa and Mrs. A.lolf Ladenburg car-r; \u25a0>\u25a0] tU the honors of the haaa of the MeadowCrook fox hint to-day. A Ibtsbi ft.-«ld turned outand rode for ei?rliteen miles only to lose tho quarry

tn a long deep hosi where the pack could not **-li>i£i> h:;a

Wnerj the huntsman's horn finally drew th*Acgn from the scent their remained la the saddl»j. y Collier, the master of fox hounds; Mr. andVrs Reginald Srooks. Mrs. Adolph Ladenberg.George i". Kustis. William C. Eustls. ThomasHitchcock, jr.. VT. Scott Cameron ar.d th<» hunta-nit:u. Robert CoaUttVilh and Samuel 'vViHets.

On Thorsday there will op .idrag hunt, startln/rat the Jericho toiisate. The next fox hunt will be.Saturday morning. Mr. Collier has Increased; th«»Meai'ow"BrooS pa *k by some hounds ha3has JustImported from Ireland, and others will ho pur-chased ff>or>-

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or the nutritive and gently stimulatingqualifies of the genuine cotTee bean. Ifyour eoflss makes havoc with your nervesBud digestion iti« because you boil awaytae piodand develop thebad to itshighestlatency.

The"

Meteor" French Coffee PercolatorIs mechanically ad tpie<i to <?et the strengthand aroma of the coffee wi:hout its nerve-destroying qualities.

la tending for illustrated booklet "P"*

&/>e MERIDEN CO.himlU«ilSB»»r f». ,KtcmMf,

Stivers218 Fifth Avenue Navdlson S^ua\s»

$ jExcellent

I Practice I| IS TO SCAN THE

t\ Real Estate Advts. :*\u25a0

Ithat appear inShe Tnbunm \+ every dav.^Manv a bargain <Tl4* appears there to-day, bu •

I1 gone to-morrow.

West fall Whs from McJtmhom inKing* County Tourney.

Two stirring tennis matches, one in singles

and one n doubles, provided good sport yesterday

In the autumn championship tournament on the<o;irts of the Kings County Tennis Cub. SamuelA \\".stfaH won the singles match in three straightset.*, defeating Joseph T. McMahon, the formerchampion of the, Crescent Athletic Club. 5-<\ «-3.,; i. This contest decided the second place inthe Round Robin singles, won by Henry Mollen-haner. who came through without meeting1 do-feat Westfail began at one* to earn the points by

his clever piai*» Bhot.-. and McMahon failed togel ins strokes in working order in the first set.

Th«-n the Crescent Athletic Club player plucldlymade a fine attempt to force the :••\u25a0'>" at the neti,nt the set ended 6—3. On the third set McMah >nhit the ball hard and sharply, but was out ma-mfuvrtd in placing, Westfall t.iking tho set anmatch at 6—4,

Frederick O. Anderson and Samuel A. TVestfallwon tha first competition in the champ:doubles from J. W. Anderson and A. U. WiMiston,fi-1. S-6. The final set was tilled with splendidlol»binfr. usf<l as an op»»nin< for an attack itthe net. Games touched at deuce at 5-all. ThenAnderson and Westfall forced th* score ta •—%and were within a Stroke Of victory at 4i^—JO whentheir opponents again balanced the score at 6-;t!tby cleverly worked out passes. Anderson andWestfail fairly camped at the net In the- next twogames, a:id by smashing and short cross courtShots took the -set and match at 8—«.

MEN'S DOUBLES AT HOT SPRINGS.YlotspriiiK*.Vu.. Oct. 11.—Play ina men's doubles

tennis tournament began here. James B. Tallerpah-ed with Alfred L.Karris, of Brooklyn, win be

in the finals to-morrow. The scores were: Firstround. Taller and Morris defeated Fred C In-man and Hush Intnan. 6—7. •"—"— •—

Walter Wat-

son and Mr. Pldenberg, of NVw-Yorfl. defeatedGeorge ii. ingais and Daniel Bacon. «—4.

—Second round Tailer and Norris defeated Julea

H DeStbour, of New-York, and Edward A. Mit-chell, of Washington. I—*,«-0. 6-1. Dr. Carl N".Brandt and Mr. Gilbert defeat ed Watson andSldenberg. 6—3. « \u25a0*

LAWN TENNIS.

PITTSBURG WINS FROM CLEVELAND.Cleveland, Oct. 11.—In a game characterised by

hard hitting the Plttsburg National team defeatsthe Clevemnd Americana. Piitsburg bunched sevenof their nine hits In the seventh and eighth, withthree of Cleveland's errors, and scared wen run«.BransfteU was put out of the game for kicklr.^.The • ore:

n k fri';.»t"irir \u0084(»ftnf»rtO^4AT :> 1,;..,;.,. I it i> t> n 0 r. ii 9 1

—13 4

Batteries- twill and Ptietß*; Bernha-*!. Rhcai-'s «nlBenlM Attendance, Ltfß

ST. LOUIS AMERICANS WIN A GAME.sr Leads, Oct. 11

-Aftrr Isstas to •.be National team»i"trr-i-iv 1n tls** o; -rira: saats of th** infpr'^a^cU'"s^ri°9\\-t- si Lnnts Inwiicn I^agaa t»arn >r.n 10 ffaj !a a,I. m :\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 played run. TTw

Americans C<>n IiIn A A-» '•"' 'lXatlooata

° " ° ° ° -i " " -. in *

Dsttinriw Htttt i".L Kshoe; 0 --\u25a0 U a- \u25a0 'iraJy. At-tendance, S ""••

TRIPP STRONG GUARD FOR YALE.[r.T tel::c,rap.i TO THE TUIBr.VE.]

New-Haven, Conn., Oct. 11 —In spite of the trop- |lea] temperature to-day the 'Varsity had two long

'

aril imrd halves with the strongest scrubs thatcould be. brought out. Uoss, Mlnkey, Raffertv. W. !Olasa ami Murphy. The coacbers kept both tennis ;.\u25a0• it without let up. In the first half the scrubskicked off to Sh^viin, who urod the new receiving |

formation for a good gain. The scrimmage ragedback and forth across the center chalk, mark,

neither side being able to push the other, the ;'Varsity attack proving weak again. Trlpp played

the best guard game seen her» this year to-day.

tearing up the scrubs for repeated gates, whileex-Captain Fortes, of Wasleyan, proved himself i

nt scrub right tackle to be a sore man for the ,'Varsity in another year. He blocked and tackledagainst the best efforts of the 'Varsity to stop |him. A n»-w < didate for halfback turned outto-day in Rogers, who/ ran well as a mate to jMorse. Stewart, last year's Andover captain, wentto 'Varsity right end to-day, and Keale the fresh-man coach, to scrub end. The second half sawmore furious playing »TH!irs. after the 1 rubs badworried the 'varsity to their own goal line in asafety for th» second team.

To-morrow fale meets the strong Springfield .Training School that has already won by large

\u25a0cores from miner teams. Tale will probably notplay Rockwell much, if at all, to-morrow and will|ni.ike experiments at end and halfback. The pro- ivisional line-up follows:

Dates, left end; Bloomer left tseklt: Kir.ney, leftguard: Rorabaek Centre; Tripp. right iu«r>!: Hogan. ir:^)t tn<k].; »isr<> nncl Btewart rleht en.l; Hutehlnson. i

nuarterbi ll.>n*^ami Itixni" \u25a0*- halfback; r.ogers anJ •

Steven*, rtsht tairbsjck; Bhavna, fuilb^aiit.

PRINCETON HAS EASY DAY'S WORK.ir.r TBUKCMtAPH TO THE tribt'.ne]

Princeton, N. J.. Oet 11.—As a hard game is x-

pected with Lafayette to-morrow, the Princeton'varsity had only a short practice to-day. All the ;

preliminaries except quick BMrts v.-ere dispensed jwith because of the excessive heat. Then for about ;a qunrt.\u25a0:• of an hour the scrub and "varsity had a |bard scrimmageL No change 1 were made in the \u25a0

'varsity line-up except at left halfback, where ;Slmonds, the speedy freshman, was substituted forKing: In «piio of the heal the wn played hardit;:.! fas-, with ,••!•> fumbling. The first team;rushed tht> ball after the kick-off from their Si-yardUna t'> tv.o scrubs* 1-yard line. Here the secondteam men took a brace and held I..•\u25a0 "varsity for !downs. The r. st .f t!i.> practice was taken up with •

exchanging punts. McCormlck continues to puntwell getting hie kicks high. Miter, the 'varsity I

end iiia some very pretty tackling to-day on punts,

Dillon. who has hem laid up for a long while with ;n (\u25a0: ken shoulder bone, was again out to-day Intit.',i t .', but did not tako part in the scrimmage. The ;

]'.: e-up to-morrow will probably be:Left •;.•! '"rawfori: left tar.<!». Ocrey: teft gtiani. .

PutctMT; «.•• ntn-. Raffarty; tight suarJ. Short, right jBtamard: ri<!=: en.i. MUler; . ;artrrbark. Burke-

OX Ki:?«*r; l»ft ha:tt>a k. Kin* or 3tin..n<!»; riglit half- it.i :. FouQm (caslata): fullfca-.-lc. rrniefc.—

\u2666

MORE COACHES FOR ANNAPOLIS.:.!tr IH\PH Ti-> THE TRIBI'.NE. 1

Annapolis, Bid., Oct. 11.—The athletic authoritiesof th« Naval Academy are arranging to have s»v-e:al more young oißcers. crack players on formerNaval Academy Iam*, ordered hero. Paul J.DashlelL bead coach, >•* being assisted nt present tby Olcott, Of Tale, and Lieutenants Tardy, li.->ok-waiter and McCarty. The others exp< \u25a0\u25a0'• '. shortlyare Lieutenant Byron a. Long, one of the best jends: and quarters the. Navy ever had; Roper Will-

'Ui!:.s tackle Of the 1900 :ird IMte.Tr.B. :in'l Pa?;-, dMidshipman Halsey. tulback for the two seaprevtotu to thi>.

CREW CAPTAIN END AT HARVARD.[r.T TBLEOXAPa 1" THE TKIIU \u25a0 v!

Cambridge, Mass., Oct. 11.—Ottrer Fllley, captain

of the next year's Harvard crew, was put Into t.>-

day's practice k-hw ai righi end en the secondeleven, and the game he put up was a revelation tothe coaches. Fllley is tiiii. broad shouldered andsinewy, end played his position with a fiercenessthat more than made up for his lack ol experience.He prepared for Harvard t; Rugby, England, andwhile there w;ts •\u25a0:<•\u25a0 vt the star members of theRugby football ti m Although ili«isecond eleven).• ; j thu 'vui-iiy working twenty ::1i::-.11»

-.— for onetouchdown, the wort of "Steve" Noyes at Quarteron tin- "varsity was th* besl se*n on Soldiers' Ft. Idtht* year. <>n !;ik.' ki.ks h" ma.:<- gains of fromten to forty yards every time,

FULTZ MAKES CHANGES AT N. Y. U.

Miss Pauline Mackay Puts Her Outin Golf Championship.

a£r.T TELEGRAPH TO THE TKIBINE.]

Pbiladelphia. Oct. 11.— The woman golf championof Great Britain. Miss Charlotte Dad, was beatento-day in the first match play round for thewomen's amateur championship of the UnitedStates Golf Association by Miss Pauline Mackay.Oakley Country Club. It was the match of theday at the links of th»» Merion Cricket Club, and agreat gallery followed the competitors over thecourse. Those who have, watched the play ofMiss Dod carefully since her arrival in this coun-try have declared all along that she was not Inthe same class with Miss Rhona Adalr. and theypredicted that she would not win the Amertcantitle

No one, however, expected to see her put outin the first round. In the toss for choice MissMackay won the honor. She pulled her drive nearthe fence, and was short of the bunker on hersecond, while Miss Dod. who went straight downthe centre of the course, got In the bunker on hersecond. Miss Ma.ck.iy winning the hole in 5 to 6.Th© Boston girl also won the next hole, but thesecond and third went to Miss Dod through hersteady, careful work, and honors were. even.

Inplaying, the fifth hole Miss Mackay topped herbrsssie. shot, while Miss Dod used an iron and gotInto the bunker, but h?r recovery was an excellentdisplay of ski.], as she played the ball from thebunker and laid it dead to the holes, which shewon in 5 to t>. After halving th* sixth in the bogieof 5. Miss Mackay won the seventh with a fault-less if she continued her perfect play, and bywinning the- next two holes in bogie, led by 2 upat the turn, having gone out in 47 to Mis=s Dad's49.

Three full shots put Miss Malay's ball on thetenth green, and she. won the hole in5 to 6, makingher 3 up. and It was rather dark for the Britishchampion, who apparently could not get her usualdistance or direction. After having the eleventhhole, a topped drl\" cost Miss Mackay the twelfthhole. She lost the thirteenth when Mi^s Dod randown a twenty foot putt for a 4, after theBoston girlhad made a grand recovery out of theroad. Miss Dod was then only 1 down. She wonthe fourteenth hole When Mi« Maokay's third shotfound the brook, making the match all square.

Miss Dod f>pi>ed her drive from tha fifteenth tie,and this mistake cost her the hole. leaving heragain 1down. They both played round the bunkerto tho long sixteenth, ami a half In 6 resulted.The end cans* on the seventeenth sreen. when MissMackay's drive landed within two yards of thelioii.. A sclaffed 'Irlve by Miss Dod barely Jumpedthe brook, and she fallowed this by failing to setup on her second. Miss Mackay got down in 3 andwon the match by 2 up and 1 to play. Their cardswere;

Miss Maekay—Out \u25a0 .1 .1 « « .1 4 0 4

—«T

In 5 i, c I7 .i rf :: —43—00MissDod—

Out• « 4 6 !» \u25a0 B

•5—50

In 6 6 5 4 •"• •'• 6 4 -43-02Mrs. Edward F. Snnford. Essex County Country

Club, played a beautiful uphill game and finallyd»f*ated Miss Harriet Curtis. Essex Count: GoUClub, by 1 ..,» at the nineteenth hole. Miss LouisaVanderhoff. tri^ Ardsley girl, whom the New-Yorkers have picked to win- the championship.w<-tit out in 42 and won her match at the twelfthhole, from MUs Maud* K. Wetmore, Newport,

'y

V up and ft to play.The summary follows:First lOVBd—IBM L«nls« A W>!is, BnwiWlW auutrj

i-.'.. teut M:«* Stan I!. a•'• m WoßkseMß. 2 ui>; Mi^sPaulino lla l::«y. <^al;ley Onuntrv nub. beat Miss Char-lotte Iod. 2 up anl 1 to play; Miss U!za:eth S. Port«-r.Brookiln* i'»ir.try i"lub. b«-at M:ss Manice Ferry. Ards-lev, Iup to

-:f> play; Miss F. N. Ayers. Riverside, bt-at

Ml»» M. C I'utton. Bro< ktins Covatry Cl'.iv-, 3up an.l 1t^> pla\ ; Kiss Liij!s» Vanderhof?. Ar.ls>y. beat M:ssMn;:\u25a0 !: W'ttmon, N>'\i...rt. 7 up anl 6 tn play: M' •».1 Anna I'arpvnt*:-. Westward H>. beat Mrs. B. Toulraln*.Merlon Cricket, *< SS an! 7 to p!ay: Mr.i. B F. Sanfori.'.\u25a0\u25a0•^x Cur.'.y <""t.untry Ittb, beat M!s» Harriet i*virti-.K»»ex (\u25a0•:--. ;\u25a0.;; Cl ih, 1 up In 19 holes; Mrs. Caleb rr.,x, Roattßldmi Valley, beat Mies K. Milne. Albany. 4up »r.; :> ta ylay: )Oss E N. Uockwood, Lexlnnt^n. heatMBS L> BiddM. Rlvertf>n. 5 nj> and 4 •> pUy; Miss Mar-Kai»t Curtis, Mh»e\ County Golf Club. t»-at Miss Ruthliailgcltv. Ksscx County Country i_!ub. » up and 6 toplay. Af!»s K. C. Harley. Fall River, t»at Mrs. R. H.liurKv.-. M*rtoo Otckat Club. 1 op; Xlisa Fanny C Os-Kot^i. Hr<«fcl;n«. Country Ctatk. beat M.!-< A P. McN««ly,Merlon Cricket llub. by default: Misa tieurgfarina Bishop,BmoUawn Cwracnr C!ub. b«»t Mi*aH. f. EUhcp. Brook-lawn Country .Club, i up and > to :las . Mrs. i* W.BatchcMcr. Wsaton. brat Mls» E. W torn*. <".-\k'.ey cour.-Iv i".;'\u25a0 -J nr: Miss Mabel HlSffta*. Mltfl-->th!an r^untrr<"i\iV'. b«M anas A. Phi] SprlnsrieM. . up «n-1 \ tor\e\ Hiss Ftaaesa C OilatbaSj Mer.oa, b»a: Miss P.McNeclv, Merlon, by default.

Columbia Prepares for Hard GameTo-day—Fears Goals from Field.Columbia and Swarthmore meet this afternoon

'

at football at American League Park. The visiting"

team recently held Pennsylvania to 6 to 4. and beat'

th*1 stron? eleven of Lehigh by more than 20 point?.Crowell, the Swarthmore quarterback, has amazing

skill at dropping goals from the field. In the gamewith Pennsylvania he kicked a goal from the 4J-yard mark. All yesterday's practice was devotedby Morloy to practising schemes of defence de-signed to offset th« pet plays of Swarthmore thisafternoon. Morley paid particular attention tocoaching the lino men In blocking attempted goalsfrom the field. Mi-tzr-nthin was put on the scrub,and tried to drop th» ball between the posts fromthe 2i-yard mark. Bo successful was the "varsityone In breaking through that not one? was he

'aMe to kick a goal. Strangtand ana Dtiell bothhad a rest yesterday, and O'Loughlin merely ranthrough signal practice, as he has a slight attackof "charley horse." Eldredge, a new man. did wellat right guard on the scrub. The 'varsity scored ,once on a scrub of eighteen men, while the scrubcould not gain appreciably.

The probable lirv->-up for this afternoon's gameas announced by Morley is:

Columbia. Position!" Swarthm<v».P°f=t-

Left end PerkinsThi.rn\u0084 .Left tack |, Gee

Ecbevema Left guard JacksonFlnnecan C»ntre M.irkl"|Stangl Right iru;ir<l Maxwell ;77h'""Ih '""I'v Right tackle MUlraanMulr - IMjfht end Can- 1Ifetseathia Qnartcttaek Crnweli ;l'u« 11 Left halfback Bower ;T'>wriscri.l Right halfback LambFisher .. rollback Sinclair

BEATEN INFIRST ROUND.

DONOTFORGETVfboss Biwighxy yoot*hocso onapartment to*tho -and wlntor that

TELEPHONESERVICEfJUa aa Important ptooola tho OQulptnont of aweil'ordcrodhomomFoe rates, T-"rmmtimmtl9mm4 _

8010 Cort.MEW YORK TELEPHOttE GO.

IB Dear Sireal

PROGRAMME OF SPORTS TO-DAY.RACING—At Morris Park. 2p. m.: Worth and St Louis.HARNESS RACING Grand Circuit at Cincinnati.

GOLF—Woß«rt'i national tournament at Merlon CricketClub; tournament at Hot Sprlrgs.

n'rTVniATJi v«. Bwattaawsei at AmericanJ-e.i?ue Park, 3:30 p m.;Harvard t». Bates, at Oam-»>rHn«; Pennsylvania vs. G«-ttysburs. at Philadelphia;Princeton vs. Lafayette, at Princeton; Yale vs. Sprin»-nel<l Younjr Men"* Christian Association, a» KSw-Haven; Annapolis vn. Baltlmnre Medlrai College;Ml<*»itirs.n v«. Physicians and Surgeons; "Wealsyaa vs.£tomu. at Pr9vld«nca. Betoa Uall, at Manhattan.

Jolting Knocked Bottom Out of Toolbox and

Made Repairs Impossible.Why Ferand Ga.briri had to abandon the Van-

derbtlt Cup race on th* seventh lap. after loadingeasily In the Orst three, %vas plained yesterday,

when It was learned that the jolting of the coursoknocked th'> bottom out of the toolbox, .scattering

the tools along the course. When at the, middle ofthe seventh lap the pumping chain broke and themechanic reached around for the tools, Ms handencountered the sides of an empty, bottomless box.Accftrdins to Gabriel's mechanic, the loss of thetools, which ho blame* on the Long Island roads,

was alone responsible tar Gabriel's failure to con-tinue and win the race. It was not, «s generallyreported the day of the rare, the breaking of oneof th<> «-nt:iiie crunks.

The toolbox, according to Gabriel and Ida me-chanic, contained a. fairly complete set of extraparts, but when near Hlcksvllle, on the seventhlap. the pumping chain snapped, tho mechanic dls-covered that the tools, the pump, the Inlet valves.the five Inner tubes- everything had vanished, andno substitutes of any descrtptton were at hand.None the l«^.. the pumping chain was spliced after;' fashion with a piece of bent wire. Although th>»lit: 90-horsepower Do Dietrich had run a lap onthree cylinders, the engine became so overheatedthat the gasolene naturally exploded bpfore it \u2666\u25a0!»-tered tlie cylinders, the washers and cylinderthreads were burned so that water penetrated thevalves, and the engine stepped of its own accord.

Qabrlel says thai be is particularly chagrinedabout h!s defeat, because it was due, not to aserious defect in ills machine, but simply to tlie lossof his tools from the jolting on the Americanroads

Officials nt tlie De Dietrich garage yesterdayconfirmed the story which was published exclu-sively In Monday's Tribune that on the eve of therace a stranger had Bred into the De Dietrichbarn, at Jericho. While it was believed that th**stranger had no sinister designs on the car. it wasSignificantly added that a single effective phottire! into the carburetter of the machine wouldhave prevented] Its taking part in the race,.

Among the spectators nt the Vanderbilt Cup racewere "Barney" OWfleid. Carl Klsher mid Earl Ktser.who have been smashing "auto" records along thecircuit this season. CMdneM said yesterday that he*spent most of his time while watching the race inone of the controls, and that he had learned agreat deal by it. lie will take part in next year'srace, he said, and will drive a car weighing lessthan I.HX) pound?.

WHAT MADE OAB3IEL QUIT RACE.

"Dave" Fulta tool I football at N^w-Y"iit Untreratty \u25a0- Ibefore the after-noon whs over th( i urked differ-ence in it.v .- ,ie \u25a0\u25a0: plaj Fulta made radicalchanges In the attack of the backfleld. !!>• ><mv

ahead of the runner <mi thebuck plays, and drew back on all '•:\u25a0..!iins t.. lead Interference. On tl ':>x ha<|

ads break up lhe Interferen c, and the rushline hair to take thebacks tried ;::> end run they were thrown fot a luss.

FLORIDA AUTO RACES IN NOVEMBER.W. J. Morgan. In behalf of the Florida East Coast

Au«omobi!e Association, has announced that if asufnHent number of cars and drivers can n» gottogether, speed trials will be held on the Or-inond-Daytona beach the week beginning Novem-ber 6, the best time of the year, Mr. Morgan says,

tor auto racing there.

NEW CUP FOR YALE FRESHMAN CREWS.>,«>w-Haven. Conn., Oct. 11.— silver cup, valued

at Jl5O. as been offered by George St. John Shef-field as a rifrmar.ent trophy to be contested Corearn year by crown representing tha freshmanclauses in the academic and scientific departmentsIn Vale. The fall regatta on L«ke Whitney willbe hold next w«k Saturday. More freshmen havereported for the fall practice than ever before Inthe history of Yah- rowing.

First in Interclass Race on Lake Cayuga bya Foot.

[BT TELXr.HAFH TO THE TRIBrNE.]Ithaca, H. V., Oct. The senior class elsht of

Cornell won the annual lnterelass race on CayugaLakft this afternoon, beating the sophomore crewIn the last few strokes of tha mile course a foot.Court n<"y described the race es "the most exciting-contest ever h'ld on Lake Cayuga." The sophomoreV.oat jumped to the front on the start. Tho lake«as a rr.a?s of white caps, and good form proveddifficult, but the Benior eight kept up a smoothe»asy stroke of twenty-oight. ai.d spurted mapnifl-rentlv when the three-quarter murk was reached.Tho Julor shell was ™« nnd n half len»phs behindthe second boat. The time of the winners was6:53. The senior equ.id rowed as follows: Bow,Wheeler; 2. Chandler; 3, Newberry; 4. Earnhart;6 Kifher; b. Miller;7, Bush; stroke, Adams; cox-swain, Buchanan.

SENIOR OARSMEN BEST AT ITHACA

TAKES THREE MONEYS.\ .

Tom Airworthy Distances Two OtherStarters in McDowell Stake.

Lexington, Ky, Oct. :i.—Toia Axworthy, a pro-hlriitivA favorite captured tho $»."«o McDowellStake for four-year-old trotter's i: tbe flr.". | .-at ofthe throe-heat race a:.<! by distancing tbe c^h*rtwo horspe took first, second and thirl money, a.feat never before eecomplibhed In a btake race, onthe -\u25a0 Xiigtou rare.

The tr^ -k w.is heavy. Tom Axworthy draw thepoX hut the nrnr.ru h? eonld get to the (eaoe, onaccou::'. of the mud i>UiiUle«. two-, two sulky width.".The twttiriff was: Tom Axworthy,lto 5, u:.d LadyPauline C. and Oak Wflttttm. « to 1 sack. TheLotsr-s got away In a bunch after the second scor-!is »rttn Ten Axworthy KliKhtiyin !):•• lead. Histwo rivals broke at tbe start at lost about tenl«-r:ifths in reaching tli« lir.-t quarter. Tom Ax-worthy continually Increased tbe distance betweenhimself and thf others and had a length to spareat the wire before the distance :i«k raiiKhr them.

Thf 2:16 trotting racr-, unfinished yesterday, wasthe first rac-n called. Mainland and Mlllard Baun-dara had each won two hens yesterday. MilKtrdBaund< rs won the h*-;it a;id raeo with a length to\u25a0pare In l:1S\. Th>- iwb class i'"-'''''*? was won byKing lJir<-<-t, the faVorite, in three beats. fter hehad given tho IlrPt beat to Ash Ro6e. TIIO {.-Ofcla"s trotting was unfinished on nrnmt of dark-ness. Hsonjero. the favont'-. failed to take a heal.The results:UNFINISHED 2:10 TROTTING- rTTtSE, $1,000 (TOIUZE

in VIYE).MlUardPar.ders. b \u25a0>, by Anteei (MarrlSeti) S 1 1 t 1Mainland, br. h. (Hudson) . 15 2 10Bell C. br. m (lily-. 2 2 3 B 8Miss i;ir.n<-y. b. m. (Cares) 7 3 4 3 2l^foSilver, b. h. (C I»>ml8> _... 3 4 B 4 6Altonet:«, L'k. in. ißradford 4 7 •; 0 4Or<-u« «J!rl. b. in. (Baste) c. ii dl«>Cologne D.. br. m. -[)»«n).. S M dIJ.

Time— 2:12. 2:11"4. 2:1-J 14. 2:^»i.the Mcrx>v\-i:i,i* 4-TEAR-OUD TOOTTTNQ

—VAUTB

tS.OUrt (TIUteE IN FIVE).Tom A»wnr»y. ro. jr. by Axworthy (6anders) „ 1Lady I'auiina «', i. m. (Van Alstelo) <11sOali fnOMOta. t>. m. »i \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0!;-\u25a0 > ..d!»

T.nj-i—2:l4.PACING— 2:0? CLAP3— »1,30« fTMItEE}INnvßi.Kin* ireet bile. h.. by Direct (Gcers^ 11 111AtliHf.se. »,. h. <enow> 1 6 B «Plnch'-n; Vi'.k's, b. U>te§) 8 2 2UDr. Madari. c!i. K. (HudSOB) 2 4 4 3M'.r.r.ut. L r. lErwtnj » ft 8 4I'er.onrtte. b. in (Vail) 4 3 6 7pry Monopole, br. li (Curry) 3 7 9 8Bed THi. b. !i. da ErwlaJ r, h 7 »M'!i*<-*<l.b. m (Keyee; 10 In 8 .'.OWrr. »' g. rßaurh) ..7 !< 10 10Bui. Orell. eh. X McMaaosi « dr

Tin.... 2:l*. 2:11 *. 2:12 !4. 2:12.TI:OTTIN-rj-2:f« i'I.AK- -PCRSB JI.SOO (TWO IN

TBRBB. rJNFIKISII]Robert Me. hr. m.. by Mcßoberts iJfllM « 2 1Marlon W|llc«s. b. to., by Hawthorns \\!!k«3 (Mo-

U0n.11,3)'

9 l 4John Taylor, gr. ir. by p'i ,ute"('U'll3onj 1 B r.IJsonien,. I. a. (Howar ' . 3 4 2Ids. HU'i.w.-.,<J, b. in. (fliliwSi .'» 3 3Jw.lgre Gr»-n. i» » rDe ftyder) 3 X CJim Perry, rr. R. fFrank*... w» 4 <l 7N'r.ton A.. J). \:.iAndnr»o.i) 7. •

7 ftlAna, b. m. (furryi 7 9 9

Time. Ir:';. 2:l4'i. 2:13»;.

MORRIS PARK ENTRIES FOR TO-DAY.FIRST Highwelghl han.iicar: .11 atesi last t'.x

r::£ 1half furlotir* of Wltbars Mil*.Marr.!- Worth IMlOastaliaa . ...... I<^4Ksr^i Water isj Qieoecbo 103COUI : r .I<-M»jp 126- Crown Prtaoe ......... ..101Major !'• Inam lIH l>iimon 100MRitir.ni^s 114|plr Britlai 100Jake li:Orttiodos ;.;>

•\u25a0

-\u25a0 •

107 Andrew Hack :».V.«trs;d» 107 Bulwark MCandida 1- Aiiff'n Allen Hi 1<"« Adi' » »._ .... B0.'. k ;:a!Mn 1 3ECOOKD RACE—TiIlee i«ai' oles sad ever; n->n-w!r.ner«

\u25a0' J: '"\u25a0<' in IMS or "4; the Wither* v:>.Al«n-a-I">a:e 11" Trpip SOlamas V 107 Thlstte Ilesthsr M.. v:Uocaeaued i>«> t 1 .-»:iv;

1 . . ir.THIRD BAC3B the CHAMPAONB: two-yeaaMitds,

!.ai9 of IKC;last soy!! furl««s •\u25a0<\u25a0 tbe wsti-.-m |] •\u25a0

*«t»e 122 TrafflOoa 119Oiseaa

—IS]Burnt UXQm .., i"9

FOURTH RjUaS—THE NXW lIorH.TT.T.H:; M . . .t»-. rcar-olda aao <.<\u25a0'•, iha

\u25a0 y.:eJf«w v •- 114 Proceeds KM•Da ll<*z\- ... I**•<;.irrilr.:i i"iT'•> Southern t \u25a0•-. Andrew Ma-k 101vi\u25a0'. 11: ,:..-.. 1 up;

*J!.i;::.j:i entryFTFTH RACE s-!!'rtr- Inn J»| aHls r.^n-winnera rfI1.2OO; :a.-t s--v*n Cur! r-e» of tas Wlthen Miler>H ra:;ta 1"S It. L,. .Tohnstm mI**£ U» Frs nilipo •<.Halt ai . ; • I'.'J <"^!iv.r:ffs 94A* • ;•:•• 103 M:*-> r\:....'.'~.'.'.'.'.'.'. Mlloaseedor 1"> SuSeranoa >-7WUd Irishman 100 Ui.,^.... nSumatra .... i<7BIXTH j:.\'T \u25a0.-\u25a0•!iii;r: thrae •<\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:•> nr• over: n-.!:»

ajid a. Jl- •\u25a0..\u25a0?.-:.. ..•- iha :.;!!Prtoea Chins i<fl Thlatla Heather !><;rrnnisas

—l<«.Midshipman '.»:.

Vapta ...:•* A«ce!! • »1Aliaa 101 Dr. Lode* 88

euirj zTvrT'r,VlnH-

TTr!«tll Phan.iy, Jed Ortilo. Saf«-

Mir F«.^«DiV.Ile-

Jaka Banders, Captain Seroth. Peggy*»\u25a0 • i-.ffe M.. Lieutenant Rice and Cbhaeset also ran.lit l J^Cc^' *}*TlnllcTInllc>~~Bth-l Ecru*««. 11l illolgesen).

Arn.rl'J u-u, -,J-«,J -«,1 eboe-

lw (Mclntyre). Bto 2. second;JSP/" I?? (Horrman), 100 to 1. third Time, 1:44*.-. Kian. Maraschino, Id<.80.80. Aver.eer. B.rulce.\u25a0r^;'-"' **•\u25a0 wmcasj. La ehspcrcne and Alilo Vlr ulso

ThJr~r*°,*lslx •-"«*>—Riff Ben. 123 (Prior). Bto 2.nl« « JOlJ 01"1i& S. ln tDoralr.lck>. 13 to 5. second; Nan-r.lo Hoi? c '. *?. {Si }l>- •to 1. third. TUne, 1:1S»- DonDomo Kate Z'.tt. Oteo. Seven Oaks and Monls also ran.Fourth r*ce ibli f^longs)- '\itter. 110 (Nico!). 4 to C,won. sincerity Belle. 00 (Lannoti), 11 la 2. .econd; CapUtano. 80 (Jenkins), 12 to 1. third. Time. 1:1& LordI'ivtii, Matador ai.d Broadway Girl also ran.,v.

h race lone mils and a half>—Major Manslr. 117UN,col>. 13 to 10. won; Tr.» Way. 108 iMladert. 15 to 1,r.'',"'.' nd;

»>-* "ni-al. rjenldns), 12 to 1. third. Tima.

r+Slt flare' Ijltt:e ElkJn. Chief. l»u Woods.Charlie Miller and Ml« Jlriton also ra:i.

Sixth race (c.i» mile)—:tod Anderson. 11l (Morr'soni, 5to 1. area; King of the Valley. 11l (Shea). 6 to 1. second;Harkrlnif ic. 119 (Hoffler). 19 to 1. third. Time. 1:43

i^atlrf Trepan. Ebony. Bard of Avon. MlRelna. HollandJl. and L.is:arJo also tan.

RESJLTB AT ST. LOUIS.Bt Urals, Oct. First ra<-«> (five and on<v-ftj»!f f<ir-longs)

—Wakeful. 100 (McLaugnUn), 7 to 1, won; Dorothy

Dodd. 10.r« (D. Austin), ti to 1. second; Bell 8.. LOS . i::. ..."4 to 1. third. Time. 1:69 I^ady Sellers. Ti-iumrhtrrss,Hessie May, Bannock Pells, fconora, Katia Trews KaySharp and Eternally also ran.

Second race (Six and on<-half fur!on«t> Mlnflora 103(Emblem), $ to 1. won; <;ii»n<4..>n,4..>n, 10S (Monroe), 20 t->1. 8.-coad: Algonquin, 107 (Pagan), 7 to 1. third. Tim«I:Z^\. Evening Star, La Cache. St. Elnlfrede^ LaTlst,Orpheum ar.J Atlas a!»o ran.

TV.ird race (five and one-half furlongs) -Vestry 103(Dugan), B to 10, won; Bob Curl. 100 UMckson) 8 to 1»econd; Jaico Wan.. 106 (Roach). SO 1. 1. third. Tlnn1:<.<>\ Ethers Pride. Flora Levy, Msxeaionesa, lonian.K«t>eatbe, \u25a0: Jetta and Mark Wa^ielph a!«o ranr ..itii race .handicap; ore ar.j one-Flxt.-enth miles)—Thrt lv^Rfnt. 107 iD-JKan>, ft to 2 •nor: footlights Fa\-or-Ite, li»* lOtekaon), :ito .'.. second; Imcv Crawford, log(Uur.rcO, 12 1. 1. third. Tims 1:47%. Orient andCanyon also ran.

Ki:th ra.a (poa ml!» and armtty yards)— Frank nice,UM (ifriansjMUO. 7 to 1. won: Bountiful. 91 (8. Dlckaon);»i t.i 1. seeoad; Sanct!Fsin:i». 167 gan) 10 to ItliirO.Time. i:«7S. Flyer, Daweon. Shortcake. Hucena, Bsrea.Hickory Corners. Kowcta «::.1 Blsoks also r.m

Msta ra-* \u25a0« x and one-half furlongs)—Ouden, PSrThnmer), 12 to 1, won: Cr.rr.e. 103 \u25a0 Mcljin»hl!nO, « to1. «v...nd; Worthlr.Ktcn. ln7 ran), » to 1 third. Tim«,I-— whiskers. Howiinir Derrish. •..-:ra I! inter. MissManners. Triple Silver, K!nf'» Charm, Avoid and In-BQltbrtft a!fo ran.

Loss of Six Good Men May Spoil Clean

Eecord of Dual Meet Victories.

Candidates for the gymnastic tew! at New-TorkUniversity have now been at work for nearly aweek, but few-pr good men bare bean on the floor

than for years before. This is partly becauseBelcher, Peck. Stevenson, Caballero. Emerson and

Prochas'ka are I*'through graduation, the rir.-t

three being intercollegiate point winners. The uni-versity's recotd of never having bcrrt defeated in adual "gym"meet sterns likely to be spoiled.

Five of last year's team are already hard nt

work. however, and. with about ten substitutes and

n«w men out. Captain De Zafra is fairly hopeful.

He is the only man that ha.« won points in cham-pionships ami willbe the mainstay of the team onthe parallel bars. With his two years' experience

G Bartelir.ez should do well on the horizontal andparallel bars. G. P. Meade. another of the old

men Should carry off the club swinging event in

th« 'meets this year. Tumbling should be one of

the strongest divisions of the programme, as

Hard! Ketchum and Williamson have had two

seasons' practice. Ketchum 19 the only man whohi*,",Tm£ted in collegiate meets on the flyingrVnr, The f<V"f rock, the Intercollegiate chain-Iion on th* sfdehorse. will be felt, as O'Brien andSSgV?? Ire the only men out for this, and they

hMeV^im'p'ro^ly'^held with Princeton andhi T'ni^riltv of Pennsylvania, and exhibitionswillLpiveil in several of the preparatory schools

hi thla etii.

•GYM" TEAM PROSPECTS AT N. Y. U.

Again there was a lull, when John K. Maddentook a band with a bid of $50,600. Mathew Corbettraised it to 10.930, and t!ic great horse was knockeddown to him at that figure. There was soi i:;-

t< re.^t b!i,i\vn as to whether ho rei>reser.ted any oneelse, but be announced decidedly that be badb ugh! the horse himself, it is not uiiiikeiy.how-ever, that Meddler will eventually stand In thebreeding establishment of James ': Keene,

Yankee, a Futtulty winner and a son of Hanover,and closely allied*to the family of Hamburg andDomino, sas sold for SU.&O& After sooa early bid-dlng by John t; Madden and C. UcMeekin, it set-tled down to a duel between Sydney Paget and W.'i Jenks, and the latter was the purchaser. J.u;- rIt was announced that !ie bought the hoi forJohn EX Madden Mr Madden '("•ii^inYankee asa yearling for ».'\u25a0"•• i:^i \.n v..-.. the Futurity Ji»nil name sad colors, although the latf> William «'.Whitney had a pan Interest !

-ihim at that time.

The other two stallions \u25ba• Id for pric< t-. HarryPayne Whitney buying Ballyhoo Bey ai:>l Jamesli. iia>;i;i:i. Kllmarnock.

Tha brood mares wen in active demand in mostc.i--t-s. ni"isome brougl • • . \u25a0 nal prices. Morn-\u25a0\u25a0 . the great stake nllyof i !\u25a0 -.^ rears ago, by-

4. .::.iia sister i"Prevli ..-. erai taught t'>"Harry Payne Whil ley for tIS.OOO She U In rail t..Hamburg, James it. Keene w.i^ th<-- contending bid-der, but it w.is plain that Mr. Whitney ;!M'ideter-mined to f

'her iit any price and Mr. Keenestopped at $14,000, Immi Uately afterward Mr.

Keena paid f.i.-" tot the si. Sir trn mare, Ondulee,also in f.>:ii to Hamburg- Sydney Paget wantedb<r. and bid up to HXfiOO.

Jar:., sii X \u0084 and Harry Payne Whitney had\u25a0 duel a er Martha 11, t>.« dam of Artful,

\u25a0Mrs F!iii;r!iy winner and victor Id the GreatFilly Stakes. Bhe was anally led out of toe ring"\u25a0> a bid «f Mr. Whiti: y <,t :•\u25a0•\u25a0\u25a0. The dam <.fGoldsmith, Klldeer, will also »; i to Pio.ikil.ilr. asMr. Whitney added her to v.im collection of choicelybn d mares on a bid -if |" ;.-•.

i:. R rhomas, wt.,> intend! to start a stud withthe mighty Hermis at Ita bead, w.i.-< a buyer ofs(jtn.- <f the chol eet mares He bourn! Leonoi ti«>rinfc'. tho champton two-year-old of 1901, for ja.roo.aft'-r some keen competition; Marquise, .ibeauti-fully bred young mare, for $4,000; Poetess, by TheBard, for $4,000, and several others for smallerbums.

Peg Womngton, the dam of David Garrlek, wasbought t.y her old owner, T. C. McDowell forJ-'.-r."". and Frederick Johnson purchased Mi.-**Ham-burg, the Brut foal ever dropped to the mightyHamburg, for IX3OO Renown, aßt Bimon mare,and n in!f sister tv Hamburg, sold :•\u25a0* a yearlingfor $17.00% was In little, demand. H. K. Knappgot her for $2,700.

Th« details of ihe s.iie follow:Meddler, b. fa . 14 years, by St. Catlea— Bosrbody;

Uattl ••\u25a0 rhett $."I.ofioBallyhoo Bay, tr b.. s years, by Kingston Bally-I Harry PaytM WbltiMy 2,.".<X)

liiiidft- b. h. r. year*, by Hanover- Correction;W. ir. .r^.Tk" 21 r.oo

Kllmarnock, br. !i. :.searsi. by sir Dixoa—Hiss'f.i; J B. Hagsln 3.0^0KIM-er. \ m. 1I \ »\u25a0;!--.. I•. 1MfMn--!xniI-Tnlcr;

Harry PayiM Whitney T.r<«>Lalv Asnca, eh. in, IT yean.; by St. niaise—Quits; \V. 1^ powers t.500Imp. l»i,iv M!n. br. m.. 7 yeari by Latins- -I^adyMinting; w. L. F.nvers &200La I'oik.i. br m.. II yean by Llsaak -Ruperta;W. II Jenka 000

Ixi Bjrlphl.\u25a0•. i m 22 years, by iviiowcraft--Sylph: E. 1.. Norton.... sno

LeUnre. eh. m., it >-ars. tar Meddler—Bella: w. v .»,s.

'1.000,

L.'i: la Larlas, h in.. :. years, by Dr. Mcltrldc— '

Hoyden: E. 1.. Thomaa .. 9.800Lizzlt.- Montr M, b in, 14 •. cars, by lnjke of

Hoatrosa UmxH vk-.: Sydney PmgM .... 1.500lyulso N.. eh vi.. 11 years, by Luke Blackburn-

Loulm T; J. p. iieDooald . 3.000Msilsma Reel, eh. n»., 17 yean by Fellowcrsft—

Manila Grey; s P. iiarian 800Sl.'iiinle UlmjHr. dr. tn. 10 yean by lilinyar

—MMint*Orey; AY. AMor Chanl . S.IOOMarquise b tt . 11 years, by Ulser—Monta Rota:1". it. Thomai . 4.<:»>

M.'iTtha 11. b. m., to yean, by I>ii:i*Dlnmont—Loots* T.; Harry Paya« r.v .-i. • ».0(X)

Mary '.. b. m. 10 years, by Billet- Vega; TV. 1..Powers coo

Maths, eh. m, IB year?, by Mortimer—Trill;HnrO' Payne Whitney 7.!W0

Mmv, rli m. 18 years, by Onotiiaßa— t'na- Elliott••. Cowden 1.100MUa Buttermilk, br. m., 5 y*ara, by Handspring

Biilrndour; Daniel r>ryf-r • \u25a0"'•°Ml-s Miriam, b. m.. 9 years, by Ironuolse— Tul!.i-

homa; J. 8. McDonald v; 2 OiOll!?s Hamtmrs. b. m.. 14 years, by Hainßfliav- The

Task;Frederick Johnson 3.300Mcrnuigelde, b. m., •> r«ars. by Meddler—

side; Harry Payne Whitney 13.000Imi). Oadolec b. in.. 8 yturs, by St. Blraon—

j:imr< R. Keene 14.000Orthia eh. in., 7 >•• ars, by Ormonde

—Mul E.

R. Thomat 1.800Pec Wofflncjton, b. in. Is* years, by I»intrfellow

—BalUt; I. C. McDowell £.500

Poeten <h. m., ]<i year?, by Tho Bard—

EllaLakelard; K. P.. Thomas 4.000

Rolim dOr <ii. m.. 'M y«s.rs. by Rayon <ror--T>iliy 1!. ; Elliott '* Cowdsn 1,000

Rero«"n br. m.. 4 year*, by St. Simon—LaJy Heel;}[ X..' Knapn 2.700

r.<i><nt- ti I,- yean, by Hamburg

—Yorkvlll*

Belle; rsaaerlck Johnson MOO

Harry Payne Whitney Buys Morn-ingnde for '$15,000.

The dispersal sal« of the entire stud of the late.William C. "Whitney was continued last night inMadison Square Garden. Four stallions were soldand th»? rest of the brood mares, and the. pricesrealized were so uniformly good that the- sale canwfllbo ranked as one of the gieatest ever held inthis country. If anything the bidding tvns morespirited than on Monday night, and so k<en wasthe competition for Medler and some of the Illus-trious matrons, that the auctioneer had little moteto do than repeat the bids as they came from oneeldo of the ring or the other.

There was another big crowd on hand, not solart;e by half, perhaps, as on the opening night,but still so large that one could well marvel at theremarkable interest shown for the breeding indus-try, which to-day is at its highwater mark In thiscountry. It was a select gathering and one highlyrepresentative of the most prominent horsemenand breeders In the country. Among those whotook an active part in the bidding were James R.Kerne. Harry Payne Whitney, S. S. Brown, ElliottC. Cow den. John E. Madden, E. It. Thomas, Syd-ney Paget, acting for James B. Ilaggin; John S.McDonald, acting- for William K. Vanderbllt; Fred-erick Johnson, W. L. Powers, H. R. Knapp, T. C.McDowell, K. L. Norton and W. H. Jenks.

Meddler, the greatest son of St. Gatied, was soldto Mathew Corbett for $51,000 after some spiritedbidding by James R. Keen.:, Sydney Paget, Fred-erick Johnson and John K. Madden. He was thobargain of the sale beyond question, and the onlywonder li that Harry Payno Whitney did not

take an active part In the bidding and buy him forhis own stud. Meddler to-day is the unquestionedchampion of his kind. An unbeaten racehorsaand bred in the purple, he stands to-day as the*largest winning ptro of th* world for 1904, hendiris;the stallion list with Fomethlng over $200,000 tohis credit. He is the sire of Colonial Girl, win-ner of the World's Fair Handicap; Stalwart thechampion three-year Old of the year: Ta::. theblpg^st individual two-year old winner «f theyear; Bedouin, winner of the Matron and Ranehodel 1.5--> stafe \u25a0 at the present Morris Park meet-in?; Mercury, a:i'l many ot^er?.It V.H3 S:3O o'clock when he was l<-d Into the rtnc,

mid Sydney Paget began by bidding C0.00% Hewas the same man wlio only a lew years uroboosht him In for the late William C. Whitney for$\u25a0»'•. '"•'. ai Morris Park. James R. Keene quicklyraised ih« bid to tS,OOO, and Paget said $30,000.There was a moment's lull before Mr. K'^nc quiet-ly liiUO.OOO In a round of applause. Paget bidSOJB&K a:.d dropped <>ut of the competition, butthere were Others to take it op, Frederick Johnson,James R. Keene and Mathew Corbett carrying Itto $nO.OOOI

KNOCKED DOWX AT $',1,000.

MEDDLER FOR M. CORBETT.

RESULTS AT WORTH.

\u25a0' ; V"n: '\u25a0 ?,oV •9 \u25a0': :. see—c; IWeuifftu a:d i>«, STaffioSrSiTi

Gold SealThe FamouJ Banquet and Dinner Wine.

Mm Win St., Orfcua, «. V.f Siii Hiker.

NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. WEDNESDAY. OCTOMrft 12. ijiO4

READY FOR SWARTHMORE. MISS DOD .LOSES MATCH. ARMY AND NAVY NEWS.

BEDOIIX WINS STAKE.

PASADEXA FIGHTS HARD.

BASEBALL.

"- IritOM THE TKJBrNS BIREAr.IWashington. October 11

NEXT EAR'S MAN(i. -The BllUtarxand naval office:s are busily engaged on thai detail*of the jointarmy and navy manoeuvres which willtake place and summer. The exercises willbe heldin Chesapeake Bay and will engage the shipa ofthe North Atlantic fleet and probably those of th»South Atlantic and European Iron3. They \u25a0willfollow the season of target practice at Penaacola.according to the present plan. The military fate*Will b* confined largely to the artillery stationedIn what is kwen as the artillery district of th«Chesapeake, and inc-luies the coast artillery com-mands from th« post* near W ington and Balti-more. Invitations will be Issued !•} th» artillerytroops of th- militia or^uiiiiiitior.ii. ir.cludinje ihfTTof Nev.-York.

The- prpgrammt will include n. search problemfor the ornerit of th* naval vessels, and this willbe followed by wo plans of attack, so as to givethe vowed -'^d he forts a variety of work. It islikely that the land forces will be rcmimanded byBriKidier General F. D. Grunt, and the force afloatby Kear .Imirai A. S. Uarker. unless by thattim>- that officer la succeeded by Rear AdmiralR D Evans, a3 .-orr* of the naval officers nowexpect, it is possible that on» of the problems willbe a.:. imaginary naval attack on the nationalcapital, the object of the invading naval force beingto land Its sailors and marines at sons* point alongthe bay or the Potomac River, which in time of

"war wiuia give the enemy an advantage. The de-tails o( the problem are now being worked out.The plans, of course, will bf> loft to the opposingcommander?, and certain portions of th« projectswill not be eommunierit.d to officers interesteduntil after the mythical hostilities have begun.It remains to be decided whether «r not ther*

chall be additional man«iMivr*s on the extensiveale of the Manassas exercises. The officer* of

the General Staff, who are considering tao sub-ject, are not of united view on the subject. Sons*of th»m belleM the \u25a0nmtßi for the army andmilitia should be divided lr.tr. Male operations. cothat the militia commands may get tha most tafl-mate acquaintance with the work.

A3K3 MORE HOUSE RENT FOR OFFICEBS^-Brigadier General F. S. Dodge, paymaster generalof the army. In Mi annual report, recommawdalegislation to the end that a soldiers deposit bookshall not be sold, pledged, assigned or trans-ferred, except after a discharge, and whan acoam-patiied by the soldier's final statement, and thatsuch disposition shall «c made a military. jßfJsßce.for which the soldier may be retained In the e*l*te»for trial. lie recommends that the possessloa of

a soldier1s deposit book by any person as security

for a loan to the soldier. in the period of his ser-vice, shall work a forfeiture of the deposit. Th*paymaster general says:

Much complaint has been mads by company ooni-manders of the practice of money lenders, sag*daily to San Kranctsco, who, it Is believed, notonly loan enlisted rr. 'imoney on the security oftheir deposit book?, but He in wait for them whendischarged, and practically confiscate or extort alarge percentage of what Is due t.iem from th«government. The evil is a crying one. and dearlyakin to that which exists in any large seaport.where seamen are stripped of their hard earning*by boarding house runner 3and touts. Ifthe de-posit book can be made utterly without value taxcase of such us**, it willbe of benefit to the ser»le«as well as to the soldier.

An Increase in the. allowance for commutation tarQuarters of officers 13 recommended. "A majorgeneral's commutation allowance of 172,** says th»paymaster general, "would not pay the rent of a.modern flat in any large city, and a convenientlylocated and suitable bouse would be entirely out ofthe question. Ther« !<« no possibility that an offl-cer of any grade, with a family, can rent a suitablehouse in such places as New-York, Washington.Chicago .:-.:d San Francisco for the amount of hi*cemmntatton."

—Legislation is recommended Increasing tho al-

lowance to expert riflemen, sharpshooters andmarksmen at the rate, respectively, of J3. IS and $1a m.c.th for each year they qualify.

OEDEK9 IS3l"Kl>.— The following eritfn hsrrobeen lss-.ied:

ARMY.

October '\u25a0"•—

Trie N*wp>->rt. from San Juan for FaJar<S<v•-

A-.ir.ra. the Marietta ami MM Caat'ae. fromJ! ißtevtdee r*TISiifaoa Ayr?s.

Oetobcr n—T.-.* Michisan. from Erie for Buffalo.Tl^«> riMttHWVCK <"<->mm!ssioned to-day at nary ysrl.

Ne« •Torfc.

Oetobaf ">—T!-.- Ke!»n», at Hong Kens;.

Ootnh*.- I*-—Th* Cu'.poa, at San Juan: the Newport, a?

th« f'r. .klvn. the Atlanta, the Manet-ia-i tha Caattae, M IMntiWilbs Baltimore, a:

BAILED

KOTXaiSSCTB OF XAVAT,VESSEL? fal-lowing movements of vessels have beer, reported •*the Navy Department:

ARRIVED.

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P*1^ and flavor, it impassesthe French product

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Jjp^