Transcript
Page 1: GRANT WINS AUTO COP Many Persons Desert Grand- Parking …chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1910-10... · crowd enjoys ide fun new-york daily tribune.sunday, october 2, 1910

CROWD ENJOYS IDE FUN

NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1910.

WATCHING TTTK BIG AUTOMOBILE RACE FROM THE GRANDSTAND.'MRP

°H P-

BBLMOKT. MOTHER OF THE DONOR OF THE VANDERBILTMRS. PHILIP BOTER. TATNE VTHITKET AND M p̂ FATNE "HUNia. QUP, AND JI'DGE ELBERT H. GARY.

Mr. and ?Ir». «~larmc» H. Mackay. Mr.and Mrs. Payn» Whitney. Harry PaynstWhitney. Mi.** nie^n.-ra Sears. Miss Con-stance Warren. tlio was r_X> Colonel JohnJacob Astor and hN son Vincent Astor;

Mrs. French and>rMJt. Mrs. O. H. P.Belmont. Mr. and Mrs. August Belmont.Jr.. Mr. and Un Frederick C. Bourne, th«

Miss»s Bourne. Mr. and Mrs. Charls*Steel*. Miss Nancy and Miss Kathryn*

Steele. Alfred '• Vand-rbilt. Marlon Gail-lard. Paul J. Rafney. Magistrate "Ker-nochan. Mr arv' Mra. J. B. Maxwell. Col-onel Parde». Mr. and Mr« Joseph P. Grac»,

Rene I.a Montaarne. Monson Morri3. Mr.and Mrs. Roy C SBSSSS Mr. and Sir*.Edward Frith f'i Vlvler. Mrs. Tames B.Eustls. Mr Stanley F. Shoemaker. Mrs.

E. A. Fowler. Paul Morton, Mr and Mra,

J. Hopkins Smith. Jr.. Mrs. E. R. Thomas.Theodore P. Shont.i. Mrs. Henry Co*. MISSRosalie Coe. Miss Inez M.icdonald, Mr. andMrs. J. S*arle Barclay. W. K. VarrlerWH.Jr.. and ETbritise T. Gerry.

Among tho*9 wn In tfie zrand»ta_Bl

w»re:

SOCIETY AT CUP RACE

Many Persons Desert Grand-stand for New Parking Space.Society tiirl nr>t turn out in the esaeetsdl

number?, at !e;:st not In th«» grandstand,

yesterday for th9MSI Vanderfcilt Cup raceever run en f.or-.p Islan-l. This was lan}y due to th» f.ict Xhit ir3ny forsook th«

main Inclosure for tarkirfjc places along*

th# .our**. where a n~S vtew. d!Storing

from that of ot'ntr • ears, could be had ofthe strw^sle.

At the lerry word food was ru«hedover to ie waiting ones in a $15,000imp "• \u25a0 car, whence, presently, a braceof r :• .s of champagne

—strange break-

fa?*- :od, perhaps, but common enoughyesterday— went back to those who hadplven aid in dire extremity.

The grandstand was not overrun, butthis did not mean that the race hadlest its popularity. Many have learnedthat the places to see a Vand»rbi

• Cup

race are out along the course and nearthe dangerous turns, and these placeswere favored over the more expensivestand Almost one thousand cars ofthe Long Island Automobile Club wereparked near Masaapequa.

"Say. old chap." said on* h»ir to mill-ions. "!*•« sot two starving sisters anda famished mother in my car ov-rthere. Could you spare that leg of

chicken you were goinjf to throw away?'

•Why. sure." came the answer. "Help

yourself"

night about not having enough to eat.

are things that every cup race proves

anew. The happy medium. It wouMseem, is never attained. Thus In the

midst of plenty there was woful want

yesterday. The temptation of the hun-gry automobllist. looking helplessly

about for a place at which to buy some-thing to eat. literally to be* from thosewhp were casting aside their superfluous

supplies proved irresistible In some

cases, and the response, a* a rule, was

generous.

CrnUnurd from flr«t r 'I"

MISS ROSALIE COB.

but who had much trouble thereafter;

David Bru<-e-BroT\ n. the amateur, whokept running at about the same «?ven

pace; Leland A. Mitchell, who had his

big Simplex car in the thick of the light

most of the way. and Jack Fleming, whogot a lot of speed out of his smooth run-ning Pope-Hartford. Robert Burmanalso drove w«*ll for eight laps, and then SIRS. H. B. EUBTIS.

These brushes aroused the crowd to a

high state of excitement.Because of the wire fence? around the

Motor Parkway the course was fairly

well policed, but on the country roads,

which made up more than half the cir-cuit, the drivers were in constant fearof committing manslaughter. Many per-sons seemed to reck not of their livesand encroached upon the course in a way

that no doubt led up to many of theaccidents that marred the race.

nrtalls of the Vanderhtlt Cup rare will befound on tenth and eleventh page*.

With po many machines or. the course,

the race was spectacular to a degree.

There was hardly a moment when one

or more car? were not shooting by. and

at times two would come racing along,

with the driver? usins; their greatest skillto take the lead. Fleming and Mitchellraced hood and hood for almost a fullcircuit. Fleming finally drawing away.

ran into all kinds of trouble. Whistling

Wind, the Aztec Indian, took the fancy

of the crowd at the start, but while hedashed by the stand from time to timelie was never prominent, on account of

tire and other troubh s-.

Mo-Ving Vans Tla.gtie Attics

Side Lights and Incidents That IlluminedVanderbilt Cvip Race.

While the average time made in yester-day's Vanderbilt race was the record aver-age time for this fixture and for America,

It is not the fastest average hourly timeever made in road race.- The record —asmade In th« Florio cup race at Bologna,Italy. September fi. 190S— a distance of 552.2

miles. The average time made by Naz-zarro in a Fiat car in that race was 71.3miles an hour. In the. Grand Prix race atDieppe, France, on July fi, IMB, Lauten-schlager, driving a Mercedes, made an av-erage of 63.24 miles an hour over a distanceof 478.1 miles.

The farmer." and householder- of NassauCounty reaped a harvest last Friday nlcht.After leavins Mtineola there were literally

hundreds of men with lanterns who swung

them in the faces of the car occupants and

advised them that they could have parkingspaces at rates varying from Jl 10 J.'i. Oneof them was asked how and why he variedIlls rates. "Well," he said. "Ilooks at theircar. Then Ilook? at thorn. And if1 thinkthey won't kick 1 rharge 15, but if Ithinkthey will kick Icharge $1."

One of t!;e men in the press stand hadnever seen a Vanderbilt rare before, and he

was loudly enthusiastic. When one of theCHdsmobiles went by on one of the laps begot quite excited and railed to tjip officialsthat the chain of that car was mixed upIn the wheels and would overturn the carif they didn't watch out. He was told thatthe car was shaft driven and no' to botherthe officials.

After it was over and lie bad removeds.;fn>it>nt <lirt from his face to show whatmanner of man he was, some one asked htmhow h<> lik«-d it. "Well." said. he. #'I wouldnot have missed it for $l,ot¥) and Iwouldnot do it a sain for 15,009."

Mr. Pardington should have consideredthe matter when he appointed October 1

as the date of the big race.Fred Wagner, the veteran starter of

automobile races, is never happy unless he

is busy. He has his hands usually pretty

fall keeping the riders in order before andduring the running of a big race like the

context yesterday. But he discovered a

leaking water pipe in the middle of thepit section yesterday, when the big race

was about half over. He promptly requi-

sitioned some tire, tape from one of th«pits and set to work diligently to mendthe. leak, which he did very acceptably.

Amonc the thousands who attended th«

Vanderbilt race was a man from Coloradowho had seen a good many of the worthwhile thine? in the world H» was anxiousto see the Vanderbilt. Accordingly he wastaken. He was left in an automobile which

was parked Ina space facing on the park-

way. He could not see very much, but he

was vastly interested in what he could pee,

and the weird ride, down through the night

fascinated him greatly. -

October 1 Is mortals day. and when the

interminable string of cars came up theHoffman Boulevard approaching the

Queensboro Bridge it met a seemingly

endless parade of moving vans staffedwith household good*, which hung out atdangerous angles, and threatened to side-swipe Pome of the occupants from theclosely packed cars.

But this was the smallest of the trouble.The. vans got into all sorts of inconsid-erate places, mired across the road andslued into sand hollows.

Thore waa one unforeseen complication

of thf bomecoming from the Vanderbilt('up race yesterday for those who camein motor cars.

The utter Inadequacy of the food sup-

plies of one party, supposed to be pro-

vided against starvation in the best pos-

Fible manner, and the overabundance ofothers, usually those that worried all

Long Island fields, of the sort favored

by the builders of the Motor Parktvav.

run to Ftubble at this time of year, with

a deposit of dust— also flne-under the

etubble. It isn't easy stuff to wallt

over In any circumstances; in a hobble

skirt the experience comes to resemble

war. as denned by General William T.

Sherman.

Ten Thousand Cars Carry Manyto Vanderbilt Cup Race.

Tn some crowds Individualityi3lostBut it -was rampant yesterday among

the thousands that lined the VanderbiltCup course as the ears swept by. Every

one peemed to have his or h*r own way

of looking at the race. There were as

many thousand ways of enjoying thespectacle as th^re tver* spectators, andthey all had their say about it, too. a

wild desire to tell every one in eight

what impression the race made.PolnU of view had to vary, of couro*

One could not feel the same way about

the race If one had been waiting aroundin the chill night for that endless dark-ness to be lighted by a streak or two

of rosy glow In the east as ifone hadcome down comfortably from New York

an hour or two before It was time forthe first car to shoot away. The man

who stood up in a Long Island Railroadtrain from Brooklyn to tne grandstand

had a set of emotions, highly developed

ones, entirely different from those ofthe ones who had motored over from(Jarden City in the cold, gray dawn.

Some aspects of the race were gloomy

at dawn, but these thawed out a lot

with the rising sun. There were plenty

a t T> o'clock who could not have given

a reason f<>r being there that would

have satisfied even themselves. At 10

the same disgruntled ones, blood leap-

ing warmly through tinglingveins, were

\u25a0wearing that they would not miss the

show for twice what it cost in money.

time, sleep and general wear on thenervous system. And so it went.

Lrfing Island in the early morning

lan't the ideal place for a hobble skirtAny one who has ever navigated the

peculiar brand of fields around the

Bandstand can understand that state-

ment without further explanation. But

hobble skirts there were, the fair wear-

en <>f the *ame not having realized thenecessity they would be under of tramp-

Ing a mile or so from the place where

Providence and those in control of theparking spaces' forced them to leave

their cars to their seats in the grand-

stand.

CUBAN OFFICIAL RESIGNS.Havana. O<"t. 1—Lopez Leiva. Secretary

of Government, lias tendered his resigna-tion, to become effective within a month.He probably will be appointed inspectorgeneral of the new Territorial Bank.

IN CLASSIFIED SERVICE

Th'i raric a remarkable dc• onsi ra.-t!'-n that made the crowd gas;> withe.r* breath and cheer with the next. InI*es than a minute Grant and his me-!chanie had >-anked ofT the fiat tire, sub- ,ftitutrd a oew on» and with the rattlec«f a dozen gaming guns was off again

,V:r.T.-n the road in close pur.-uit of his[ i-peedir-g rival.i Hardly was Grant out of sight than>Joe Dawson. who had set the pace in

•«^£e middle part of th<* race after work--.ir.g his way to the front by skilful driv-

ing, caire '.-.ocming along to make athree-cornered fight. When the greenI'.az waved for him the crowd did nothave to be toi.d that a splendid finish

•\u25a0 as in prosr^ft and that the end wasnot more th-jn eleven minutes away.l^rrirg accidents

Other cars kept shooting by as thedrivers completed \u25a0' earlier laps and the

Humphreys' Seventy-SevenBreaks up Grip and

"The Earlier Stage™

;:livery <>nc knows they havetaken Cold, after they begin to

. Coup;}i an-1 Sneeze.There i- an earlier J-ia^o of

la--iTiide and weakness; -i "Sev-<"i:iy--e\en" is taken at this "firstfeeling"' it will break up the Cold.

"seveniy-seven v breaks up stub-born Colds that hang on.

A small vial of pleafar.t pellets,fiti. the veit pocket. At Drug

The Impact-

d? terrific, and the liverccupants of ;h° touring car were~"tossed high in th" air. All nscape i

c^sth. howcATr. but Millar was caught.

in th" wreckage and instantly killed.Chevrolet owed his life to the stanch-Ti^j-tof liis sieerintr wheel, upon whichh» k^pt a firm hold To the «-nd. He was

. pulled out "f th° debris -wiili "thiner rr.cre serious than a prained shoulder

\u25a0 trd \u25a0\u25a0 general f-haking up. He wastaken to the Nassau Hospital.

These who were fortunate enough toVr la the grandstand will never forget

ihc thrilling finish that marked ihe end

of the <r«at race. After the wreck ofCOeiTolel'i c<tr and the loss of much*arable lime 1 > Ralph Mulford. whohad forced th*> early pace in bis big

whit* Lbzler. which had the appear-STjee of a wraith as it flashed throughthe gray dawn on the early laps, on ac-rount of continued tire trouble, the

ytiruggl* narrowed down at about the-eighteenth lap to Pawsen. in his Mar-;mr.-n: Grant, in his Alco. and Aitken. in

lri« National car. At no tlm*> during thelast six lap* were ihe three men more

-than two or thr^e minutes apart. First« v*-nnd th^-n another was in the ad SOfar as those who were keeping careful

could tell, and the race lookedijs open as when the cars stood coughing

snd panting behind the .-• • ting line.-virh the drivers waiting for the slap

!"rotn :h<- starter which sent them scoot-.. ring -iff ca Ihefr perilous journey.

Grant Favorite with Crowd.Crant appeared to be the favorite with

the crowd, as everybody lov^p a winnertr.d his brilliant victory a year ago wasHill fre'h in the minds «>f many. Hets£ >a^in? his two rivals by a slight\u25a0margin ;is he came dashing down to the*t2r;d on Ws twenty-first lap, but evenas Fled Wagner waved the green flag

•tr. -".arn him that the last lap had comeend the end of his mad flight was insight he brought up with a jerk in frontof a repair pit with a fiat tire.

A groan went up from his followers„as. «?ven as ie car came to a stop.j_AJtken shot up with the crackling

*.r.hir of a perfectly running motor andci;-appcared down the roud hind acloud of_dust.

jjtlso

'on his last lap, as

th* frantic waving ,of the*"green "flagtoWL

Th" kinire; of Louis Chevrolet's me-

trar.ic. Charles Miller, came as the cli-max of a mxi attempt of Chevrolet tor^rain a lead lost throjgh frequent mag-

*neto arA tire trouble. The daring

FY^nch driver, earlier in the metI.ad rr*^l<"d off rour.d after round at 7.'»'2miles an hour, hurdifd a bad rut in thetarksmtrh -with full power on. and.lending in thrc wheels only, found the-car zig:apginc from tid? to Bide, unre-'

tpcriPnr :o its stcfring grar.

V.'itfa a of horror from the hun-;tdred'_ assembled at the spot, the car«pli;r.re<j "to th» fenc» and swept itaway 'ike to much parcx; '\u25a0-<\u25a0•\u25a0 ploughed

"\u25a0•. and sides-? iped a ras&engcr lad<»ntouring cm. parked on the side of therrad.

Mrs Stone, •who was in the grandstand,'<--;an U. c \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0<•• restless as car after car

rushed by with no sign of the Columbia.The report came to the press stand thatS»r»n«- had been killed, and none had the-murage to break the news to his bride.. Fhe almost collapsed when told he was

• ladiy Injured, and said: "Ibegged Harold,t" change his mind and not drive, buth* laughed and said there -as no

c career."

upright position until it reached the

centre of the bridge, which is thirty feet

abov* the level of the ground, and then

itburled Its nose In the stout steel rail-

}n?:s. As each post was reached the steel:

-vas snapped off like a rcod and the car

-'kept en.\u25a0"

For psftMpjß*l>' fe«t the car skirted

the fd.ee of the bridpe floor, then madeI-c final plunjre into the tvooden fence east*ci the bridge proper. Going through this,

1t turned ft complete somersault andburied itself at the foot of the rmbank-m<-nt.

Karon was rsoighi under the body ofthe ma^hin^ and his life was instantly

crushed out. \M|«SI the heavy car was

lifted from him he was limp and un-

conscious and died a few minutes later.". Stone, who was only partly held by the

car. had both bis leas fractured, received\u2666\u25a0internal injurirp and concussion of the..brain. He was rushed to the Nassau;-Hosrital.

How death did not overtake twenty-men and boys perched on this bridge a

moment before is remarkable, but it wasnoticeable that thereafter the spot whereBacon met his death was clear of allpr*><"tator!!.

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Glove Department

Every carer of KidGloves

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New importations for street and evening uear.

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Then perforce the race was stopped

and those who were not lucky enough to

own cars or own friends that did made

their wav to the tracks of the Long

Island Railroad and waited for the

wheezing, puffing engine to struggle

BlonfC with a load that it could not

handle. Going to the course was badenough, but coming back was a night-

mare, the more realistic as most every-

body Cored off between jerks and stops.

The Yanderbilt Cup race is over, the

struggle for the Grand Prize 13 to come,

and even the speed maniacs are hoping

that the cost may not he so groat.

Spectator Hurls a Bottle.

Louis A. Disbrow and John Aitken.

vho finished second and third, respec-

tively, in the big race, had hard luck

stories to tell which no doubt had dis-

tinct bearing on the outcome, and which,

perhaps robbed them of the victory they

might have won. Neither man was dis-

posed to detract one whit from the credit

due Harry Grant, but both felt that the

luck of the race was against them.

John Aitken had something more than

a' grievance, as some man near th«

grandstand who had a better aim than

peiise of fairness hurled an empty beer

bottle at the car as It flew by. The mis-

sile rtruck Aitken's mechanic on the

head, and stunned him so that he. was

limp in the car for almost a full lap

This necessitated flow driving, and

Aitken lost many precious minutes'out* Disbrow plowed up for a stretch

and almost withdrew from the race be-

cause he thought he had struck and

perhaps killed an onlooker. He was so

wrought up for a time that he lost all

merest in the struggle, but suddenly

realised that he had a duty to perform

and sent his car spinning along once

more at top speed.

So far as driving was concerned, there

was little to choose among the first

three to finish. Allthree showed remark-

able skill in handling their cars, that

reared and plunged and jumped about

at times as ifabout to flyoff the course.

Ml three were daring without being

reckless: all three were careful without

being timid.Louis Chevrolet appeared to have the

nice at bis mercy when the unfortunateaccident which resulted In the death of

bl, mechanic forced him out of the

struggle. His driving at times waswonderful, and to him belongs th.- credit

for covering the fastest lap. He rushedover the circuit in something under 10

minutes, or at & rate of 75% »>"<* an

hour. AH four wheels were off the

ground as he literally shot over some of

the bridges, but this is true- also of other

driver*.KlaphMulford drove a remarkably oven

race for Beven laps. He covered each in

11 minutes flat, in round numbers, but

his chances of winning were ruined by

..mutant tire trouble. He forced the

pace up to the thirteenth lap. when he

Hopped in front of hi* repair kit andchanged all four tire.- After that it

vas change most of the time, and th*

ttmm lost could net be regained, al-though he finished well up In th* race,

iOther drivers *ho «how«*d to advan-tage -ere Har Harroua, IB -»us in

tot |*ad at the end el the ninth Up.

Second honors, however, went to Daw-ton, as he finished a full minute in frontof Aitken. on elapsed time. The racewas won. but the race was not over, is

was t'e case in other rears, when the

leading cars finished. Those who hadonly two or three la' to complete frereallowed to go thundering on. Suddenly.

however, the crowd, which had beenkept Inbounds all too long Inits way of

thinking, broke loose, and Foon touring

cars, runabouts and. in fact, everything

that had four wheels and a bit of gaso-

lene was shooting up and down thecourse.

The seconds ticked off. each one seem-

ing like a full minute to th" anxiouswatchers. Once more the bugle sound-ed, once more the cry vent up, "Carcoming!" and once more necks were

craned and watches consulted as Daw-;-> 11 cane hurtling down the course.The driver knew full well that every

second was precious, and withoutthought of risk the car jumped the lastbridge and swung around the last turn

at top speed. Victory was in his grasp,

and yet victory was lost, as he was forty-

odd second? too late to overtake Grant

and his wonderful Alco.

How Grant Raced to Fame.Grant, who had thrown his usual care

to the wind for that, last desperate lap.

soon came slamming and bumping hi?•way down through the last straight withail i-tops out and the exhaust spitting

fire and smoke. Over the line he flew,

end the crowd cheered even as it waitedwith even crater suspend for the fastcoming Marmon.

winner of the Wheatly Hills trophy

and the \u25a0winner of the Ma=sapequa Cup

flashed to victory, but all this hardly

aroused more than passing Interest, asthe thoughts of fvery man and womanwere centred on the groat struggle forthe chief trophy- -the Vanderbilt Cup.

Suddenly the bugle announcing the

aiproach of a machine sounded and theoft repeated cry of "Car coming!" rang

out. In a moment the crowd was on

its feet as if realizing that the end was

al hand. Down the long straight camea black projectile, and John Aitken. inhis National car. lushed across the finishline. He had started before his twochief rivals, and the question arose ifthe other two would reach the finish in

time to rob him of the coveted prize,

They did.

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GRANT WINS AUTO COP

MRS. ARTHUR S'~OTT BURDEN

it

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