The evening world. Newspaper, July 3, 1917, Page 6

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National Government is Taking Up Boxing as the Best Train- ing for a Soldie Publishing Or. a World.) 9) Dove at Ee A 'AR is proving the utter foolish- ness of the professional “re- former.” Recently a “reform” was urged Against the exisience of boxing in| | New York State. Probably the people | Who inspired and pushed it through | &fe sorry, by this time, and more or | Yess ashamed. For the National Gov- | @rmment is taking up boxing as the) | best training for a soldier, Every sol- | ier in the American Army will have) | © practise the use of the boxing Bloves. No soldier who doesn’t know how to box can hold his own in mod- | ern hand to hand fighting. Boxing has become the most important feat- @re of bayonet practice. It teaches @ man how to avoid injury, and now ‘to inflict it. It teaches soldiers (and ether people) seit control, an erect | earriage, lightness of foot, quickne! of hand and quick decision in any emergency, There is no other sport that can approach boxing in efficiency im all these things, in the Canadian @nd the Britisn Armies soldiers are Ordered to box, just as they are «r- as PA st ae ibis tes THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK aren @ered to drill. Boxing is a universal et compulsory part of military! ning. | By those who carried on the iate attack that succeeded in repealing the | Frawley jaw, boxers were regarded as @ ruManly set of men whose profes- | gee should be without legal protec- | Yet that very profession is about | to be honored by the United Btates | Government, us it een | honored by the French, Canadian, Pagiisn and Australian Governments. is boxers who will, after Nov. 1 be restrained from exhibiting th eu in New York State, will hi be ] of them, acting as instructors, will | will have proper autho : ibe en they are handling. dich } j a | sitions as instructors of | in various departments of the| States Army. Probably some | made commissioned officers, so that | There will be boxing in New State, under Government direc te ‘There is in every State jin_the country, | In Canada, 80 Col. Greer informed | & couple of weeks ago, the hold- | professional ring battles, be-| skilled professionals fighting | for was considered a splendid | thing for the soldiers in camp, The iment built one arena seating | men, so that large numbers of Hers could look on and study *he HM methods of different men, and | fealey the Contests, both in the ‘reg- championships and | bonal matches. idl cole i ie fame thing will no doubt he Veeen in New York State, for no petty | [prejudice will he allowed to interfere ‘ e proper training of o iOl~ Term i of our gol xing, after years of maladminia tration and of persecution by the soft! panded and soft headed “reformers,” BS about to be recognized for what it #—& sport that makes MEN a \ will be boxin, ES ND there in football the reformers have be } ening to American college rages legislation gainet football * go there wa For years ) threat the great! In some few been directed Half a dozen years! a widespread attempt abolish ane © prohibit the play of football, The sole excuse for this was that potball was “rough.” Some players yere killed, Some broke bones and Wwisted a joint or two. It was, is and Iways will be a real game for men, jot a game for mollycoddies. In every Iport it is possi to have fatal gecldents. And fatal accidents come | hore frequently to those who haven't aken part in sport, A record of the ‘ecidents in sport is interesting. But! low much more interesting would bi pf it were possible to compile ity a seord of the instances in which the; Hves and limbs of men have been aved because of their experience and ‘aining in the rough sports of foot- | all and boxing! I know of scores | * these. So does every one interested sport. I know a man who was in a automobile struck by a train, with jree others, This ma: pcause, as he was flying through the rf when hurled from the car, he in inctively pulled himself into a ball ce a football player thrown under | mass of tacklers, I have had a milar experience myself, when car- ed over a forty-foot drop on a ountainside by a small landslid The men who play through school college years on a football e@ better men for it all their lives. To-day see what football has done r our college men, The faculties of | Urious colleges, recovering om the hysteria that led MM off all sporting schedules imme ately after the declaration of war )th Germany, are talking renew fg football. Many colleges will soon Wve football squads in training. But ‘ey will be squads of new men. The gulars are practically all in khaki ‘en now, At Dartmouth the entire juad has enlisted in various branches military service. The same can be jd of the football squads at Yale, arvard, Cornell, Pennsylvania, Col- | te, Princeton and other well known Vititutions, At West Point and An polis football and other sports will turally languish this year, because “> men being trained for army and vy will be graduated more quickly yan usual, and all their time will be ) eded for training in military and val affairs. ABPBALL has been criticized, and only the strength of the professional leagu has dis raged the “reformers” who wished ik the national game. A num- of men have been killed while baseball, Thousands play it, ‘over the country, and as there is of accident wherever there is i {and ~ ‘ 8, 1917." IN THE SPORT SPOTLIGHT Copyright, 1917, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) To OuGH Ee ‘OR ROOKLYK f —,. Bottled Up “Good Thing’’ by Frank Weir Trotted Out Old Rosebud Trainer Starts Jack Hare Jr. and He Romps Home. By Vincent Treanor. RAINER Frank Weir ts having his Innings in the East. He won the Queens County Han- dicap with Old Rosebud on Saturday, and yesterday he put over another good thing in Jack Hare jr. This two-yeur-old won like a real yood one with the three time winner and favorite, Thistle, only third. Jockey Knapp, who rode the Weir good thing, was very careful to win not {oo far off, Evidently he had instructions not to show the colt up. Jack Hare jr. followed the favorite Little Devil to the five-eighth, then drew away, to win very handily, Little Devil tailed off in the final eighth and finished outside the money, Thistle, or perhaps his rider, J. Williams, seemed well content with third money. There was nothing of the hustling, bustling finish that has been charac teristic of Thistle’s recent race’ Either his Jockey was tired or the colt was tired, The more kindly view of the race ts that Thistle tired badly in the last eighth, The Schwartz Brothers are said to have backed ‘Thistle with confidence. If they did, they only dropped so of their pre vious winnings on certain members of their own stables, Jack Hare jr. 1s) a good colt and very probably will | beat better fields than he met yes- | terday, Jockey Troise, perhaps the best of | the lightweight apprentices, will be out of the saddle for some time to come. Celtabel, his mount in the third went to the post very fractious and tossed the youngste! out of the saddle, Besides this Cel- tabel stepped on the boy and broke his left anm, The rushed back to the paddock and al race, new boy, Watts, was engaged, Mean- | game, He recently annousced his retirement as a| after making p dis-|m | | escape death | mounted and walked around till the | bie while every jockey in the ra track auto was|* Daddy's Choice can lose as gracefully 4s he can win, but never are his form reversals questioned, Races like the sixth at Aq yesterday should be prohibited, of twenty horses are altogether too big, and as races they develop into ‘The association has been lucky that many fatalities have wild scrambles. not attended their runnings, Johnny Whalen started what was regarded a real good thing in Federal Girl ip the sixth race. could run and run fast, but it was her first race in a long while. fore the season is over. ¥ “He said she She per- formed very well at that, but Shut- tinger didn't seem to persevere Viewpoint headed his mount. eral Girl will win a maiden race be- duct ds Albert B. and Henry A. Ashforth of Apawamis Capture Chief Honors in Father and Son Gotl Tourney at Sleepy Hollcw «} Country Club. After+months of indec fit is prac- tleally certain now that St. Louls wi tb the track and field and all-arou championships of the Amateur Athi Union on Aug. 31, pt. Land 3. More evidence reached jew York to-day that the St. Louis committee is meeting SCAUSE of a thirty-stroke al- with success in its eleventh hour at lowance, Albert B, Ashforth of mpt to raise the guarantee fund of 00, and it is expected that the whole sum will be subscribed before the pres. ent week ends, Apawamis and his son Henry A. took first honors in the third annual Father and Son golf tournament at the Sleepy Hollow Country... Club, Their card of 100—80—70 represented the lowest net score, five strokes petter than the one returned by Col. H. H, and his son H. G, Treadwell of Jimmy Clark of Em-Manuel House, Presivent of the Long Island and Inte sectional Athletics Leagues, is planning course of training at a p with the purpose of non-commissioned offeer . , ey, Cha’ he Wile eee Cee be Frank Presbrey, Chairman of thi al efforts w sible for the committee, gave to the Ashforth com- Ty) big turnout at tional League bination a big allowance in the belief d-|meet at the City College Stadium on that a younger son was (the father’s partner. As it turned out, Henry Ashforth, a lad of sixteen, who roing to be Sunday, the biggest athletic meet New York has had in years. plays quite a game, was the helpmate. Mr, Ashforth wanted to have their names left out, more especially ap he is a member of the committee, Pr COLLEGES TAXING UP OTBALL AGAIN -WITH Ne@w SQUADS. /n AND LET Me Steup “~ RECORD BROKEN East Orange Athlete Hangs Up New Mark by Holding Seventeen Tennis Balls in One Mitt. By Arthur (‘‘Bugs’’) Baer. Copyright, 1917, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) WO seasons ago tennis bugs were thrilled to the bone by the news [ that an otherwise normal Long Island gent had held fourteen tennis | balls in one hand without once coming up for air. It was a pro- digious feat and would have thrilled even a citizen to the bone. After measuring the track and taking the temperature of the nearest buffet, the officials of the A. A. U. were forced to accept the record as authentic, The Spartan athlete tore off the record-busting stunt in the face of a heavy summer zephyr. Only too often do champion chess and pinochle players refuse to compete unless they have a favoring wind at their backs. Al-| though reluctant, as usual, to admit that black is brunette, the A. A. U. wet blanket tossers conceded the record. The phenomenal athlete was whined and not dined all over the tennis ball clutching league. Envious competitors were compelled to admit that they couldn't overbid his whole: clutching rates. The record looked as permanent as the Rock of Gibraltar, but not quite so useful. But yesterday New York received word over the international cable from East Orange that Bill Johnstone had smacked that record right on the beak by mitting seventeen authentic tennis balls in one set of lunch hooks, What makes the stunt all the more remarkable is that Johnstone's.food talons aren't extraordinarily mammoth as East Orange grub grabbers go, Jim Savage hails from East Orange and Jim used to stop the Orange local by patting the locomotive in the face with one of his mitts, The train used to settle back on its haunches and Jim would clatter aboard, and ay they would rattle, up hill and ¢own dell, Mostly up hill, | Bryon- Writers t ZIMMERMAN SINGLE HANDED Giants’ Third Baseman Does Fearful Execution With Bat and Fields Brilliantly. keeping his truce with the um- pires, flared up so powerfully the deciding struggle from the tamed Boston Braves. The Giants’ third ‘ker had field day. He scored half the six runs his side made and | keeper made time. Heinle on the defensive was like @. Gibraltar, He scooped up everything that came his way, ana once raced |clear over to the stands to pull down a fly. To round out the afternoon's | programme, Zim staged a dandy dou- ble play with Herzog and Holke thal | Killed off a threatening Boston rally. Tho former Cub firebrand felt #6 well satisfied with himself that he mildly confided to Umpire Rigler, | when going to bat for the last time in the seventh, that it “must be tough calling strikes in such hot weather.” The entire Giant team took the cue from Zimmerman, and gave the Boston outfielders plenty of exercise. Pitcher Allen, who started the game for Boston, had as much o topp: ne New York bombardment as he would have had trying to move the Brush Stadium. Allen used to twirl for the Dodgers, and the Giants had his number, Bill Rariden bad a pleasant afters ‘Two hits and a puir of passes the hard-working catcher 1,000 per cent. at the bat. The old-time Brave also put up a magnificent game behind the plat Baseball is considerably more than just merely mechanical work. Holke did @ quick panto- mime to escape one of Allen's drops and the ball hit his bat. The vig first baseman went through the motions of being struck on the shoe and painfully ambled to first. And Umpire Rigler let him get away with tt, too, 4 Benny Kauff continues to be the unluckiest swatter on the Glant team, Tho ex-Fed, has an unfortunate habit of driving straight at the opposing fielders or having some one mako @ miraculous catch of his hot wallops, Shore of Boston is one pitcher who is ready made for the Yankees. Bill Donovan's tribe have driven this bird from the box in every game he ever ced them, Shore lasted half a game against the Yankees yesterday. They're going to again rattle the skeleton in the McGraw-Tener- case next Friday. This meeting. is at the request of the Baseball Writers, whose veracity has been questioned, Since the Giants’ return Iast Thursday Manager McGraw ha discreetly kept in the background, far back from the playing field, at the Polo Grounds. The Gtants are drawing better than ‘The Pioneer Sporting Club is the only t t mute middleweight, ana DNOY. was will but Darwin P, acenteastls, club in Manhattan staging a boxins) vi) fi agretpabeig hed mip Gig Maia eisai ba a iy Johnstone's record must stand as legal because he made it on a show (o-night. In the star event Tete [at the Brown AL A. of Far Rockaway om Frida . ae strange field, with strange referees and a strange audience looking Hartley, the crack Danish lightweight, | 08" lee Payee Bok fought fos eererel wets! Fifty-two couples started, considera: on. Don't think that we mean to infer by this that everything in East who not only Is clever but can hit, will , bly less than a year ago, but that of Orange is strange. i meet Young Gradwell, the rugged New- course was explained because many of | ark lghtweixht. In the ten-round semi-| | John Welsmantel today completed his cant of the boys are in war service, The final Frankie Conifrey, the Fighting | 07") (or lap Peyy timed oly et way te fact that it was by all odds the warm: Furthermore, the sterling athlete is strictly amateurish and doesn't Fireman, and Joe Mooney, the west tle} two ten-nund tmain attraction pow M est day of the summer thus far told on}make his ving by clutching seventeen tennis balls In one hand. More boy, who boxed a draw with Billy De-}hminares iil ruses atti met dak cliftess some of the grizzled sires, but they all proof of his amateurish standing ts furnished by his home club. He never fue of St. Paul last week, will clash, of Mrookiyn in the feature bout, wh Young #U to their guns, has commercialized his tennis ball grappling talent in order to sec free ptees Charlie Mitchel of the Seatt'e A. C, of Bushwick! Col. Treadwell, who 1s rapidly ap-| seats at any the numerous lectures on Delft Blue chinaware which are At the Harlan Sporting Club of Hammele| tection ii! go ¢ Charlie Kid Goodman of | proaching tho three score and ten notch, held in the Orange school house. Neither has he ever tried to bust sae Mo. | Williemature in the other co: was keen as F. F. Laimbeer jr, the| through a police cordon at a big fire by mentioning that he v the cham- Allister, the vlever California lig vyweight twelve-year-old lad who had the dis-|plon tennis ball scooper of the works. His record was made on foot and of who won ieaves for hame to Join his regiment! peecwie Ruma, the scuaat chy {tinction of being the youngest player in| Course does not invalidate the equestrian tennis ball clutching record, il meat Joe Homi, the clever beasyweig' om righier, ant Lute Brault have tee waned ip to| Lhe tournament. : sa f Beattie, Wash, vos moe MIs the star bout of tem rounds at the Brown] Although no gross certificate was of- At present, the A. A. U. birds are busy measuring the distance be Harry Pollok writes as follows: 1 4. of Var Rockaway on the evening of July 13.! gered, it was known that the scraten| tween Johnson's ears, inoculating the track with A. A. U. etatisties an figned Irian Patay Cline wp to & Yone 16) Baiting A teams would try thelr hardest to turn|looking up Bill's past in the Bertillon records. But thero isn't the eontract and am going to ‘yoint baa for th | ahiy te me Jamestown, N.Y. will pob-!in the best card. thu | slightest doubt that Johnstone's record will go rattling down in the bright world’s lightweight championship, For ® BIDE | the weet side welterwe Brooklawn VAOFAR, it last " archives of history a# one mighty, hornswoggling clutch and one that 4 toy Cline ia the most promising | Pioneer 38. Con the nig a eae ees ity won ve, | Would have busted up any free lunch counter in America the ring today, He has done every: | bored Jack Britton end. mae ser ate ta wal ving the distinction of Sane ieee at ot bin, nd Were walteraeight divini with gst sucens | Giteating iaroia ML Hilton, placed. an | ————___—_————— eich) : 46 to their ft, and that’ included a do, lo 4 8 couple bad start, t r taking 7 for the first in Summit, N. J, and will then be ready to! to @ truckman in tle Bronx sestontay, Johnuten Praag ake on all the topnoichom in the lightweight | it seems, dn pia car when a truck bumped Para # Maghree hg Mi ene eaemnauiaitn emma’ scans Ce ee us eon (oe ea it furhter, | Ammon thes Member’ Of the New. York National League, American League. met to the championship es pomil j ho was with Jounston, jumvel out of the car] Newapaper Golf Club at Van Ce and’ |] Chaps. 1, F.C,\Clube. Ww. Le F.C. W.L. PAC. Clubs. W, 0. Pc, | than you cam say it Jolnston bit = aeneee RW MacLoushil ened New Yor! 22 .639/Cinelnnatl 00 4a ‘MT Cloveiand.35 35.500 Ed Patterwon fuat can't Keep out of the boxing | A polleeman took the belligevate to cone ey | 93—26—86 und 9 tively. Phila,..,.37 26 ,687|Brooklyn..29 33.468 seed 24 .631|Wash'ton, 25 39 400 td died ooh elke Rens — Di. Leuls,.26 31 .637|Boston....24 36 .400 || New York 85 29 .547/M. Louie..26 42 389 Weer whea Chick Simler and Al Reich deserted | fohneton and the battling truckman withdrew |, THO annual West amateur golf Chicago,,.89 34 .634| Pitts’gh...21 43 Dower, . 2339871 He ts tack tn the Gusimene aa will Mi championship next an. hewn ate tounces that he hae three heavyweights under hist | morning on the, link the Midlot iH new Jockey arrived, Celtabel, still) i Dob tives | een Country i 0 , and w | management, Jim © p Dever d Andre Vf h on t Saturday aft in a crazy mood, promptly threw} anders, ie #¥s ay ened Hogg AQUEDUCT ENTRIES. finish on Baturday after. RESULTS OF GAMES YESTERDAY. New York, 6; Boston, 1. New York, 4; Boston, 4 (Called Darkness), Brooklyn, 7; Philadelphia, 3. Washington, 6; Philadelphia, 0, Watts out of the saddle at the bar-| two matches—with Cleve Hawking at Pittafield | [from the We ie oCrae Lyrae “ipl bag et fir sipsttiy rier, He was finally mounted and | Juy 14, and Fred Fulion at Kecine July 20, ATUEDt N.Y. July &—the en- {OF te Midi Samaaees ht . m0 Han 4 8 haatege, figured in the running thereafter, round bout to « decini Horton to-night h Rees cararent test for the orien Bey. Farm - STR pemnae, - a th um train last FIRST RACK Poe three the tournament &, de th Philadelphia at Bost Sam Hildreth put a good thing over spl Dr tek dk the Reankioa pj want: eolling: als ¢ > anh Schmidt won the ca Cincinnad at Chicago. Goevetand at 1. Louis, in Fragonard in the third ra The | Seon Leonard ‘wes unable to ocoompliah’ tn eer. | Mareen Is. 9 | —— | St. Louis at Pittsbargh, Chicago at Detrolt. Hastings colt won aw he pleased after |Be"acpte, In the winltinal lenny Vaiger, | 108: Pottranna : running Ballast, the favorite, and |) preach chaugon, meee Joe on af thel ee e at ——————_—___—_———— - — BUTANE, tothe ground. ‘maith ¥. ras | Arn : Tennis Notes a good race and looked like an easy 4 oe LATONIA ENTRIES wee winner in the final alxteenth, but] ayy tirst open air boxing show of the gnen J A bung badly when the real pinch came. | jyjeelnnie will be held at Shibe Dare oe ' >| Frederick C. Bagge and Ralph 1 arcuate M1; Alde wht i niiadelitla, Wi None | wart. Mydroplane 108. 1 : . a Atletica, to-mornar Baggs won the metropolitan patriotic ATK ly 3--The en-|%9. 114 Daddy's Choice is a wonderful colt seine Ath M 108; Yankee Notiuns ay), 1 P teinie ubles” on the courts LATONTA, Ky. July bgoed 1 Weat lear; tack fas ee ble to run any the | male etiraction for the will Me Suen, 113 popBhisd ns lawn é ; rts} tries for to-morrow's races &Po a8) low sed He seems able to run any way the | ub ee slik tetbaes ction Dl ag oe of the Bronxville Athletic Asso: aoe betting indicates, His owner, Emil) fi Haw of this eit sh psi 1 4% | Matton, They scored in the final round, RACE 0 maidens; two. i nee Hy R n eitechane Nahilipu ne teats . RACK -$800, yume: made Hers, a & genius at placing Rorees. | (isgs cuaney ; Manny WE! | whieh a year ago represented the met itt tive and a bail furugs ence 16 FORT ERIE ENTRIES, = $ pranoda, oF ropolitan chumplonship, and which was] 1’ tiling Louder, Ji fenetscue,, — + rr receive & 6 ‘on by orge M, Church and Dean a OO Pe 112; Nib FORT BRIE, N. J str@n uc or play going on, spongy wan Ry 10¥i9:) Banca 112; Quito, ination ‘ Sst The en eh Lg D mare onnee’ot Lainey |@ 2 ee eats Mathey, ‘The Baggs brothers in straight | AY Nias, Woo 1)3: ulin Mi Kirwtion tries for to-morrow's' races are as fol Grdeath in baseball than inany othe cts d@feated A, Dudley Britton and]; lone r 1 in any other | ¥ ¥ sport, But the people who harp on| 4 mateh between big fellows wa Jumea I. Robertson jr., the score being OND TWACE-—Ciaiming: 8800: there SF. | gsrtilde and peur ire say this year, Baseball will rank | web The heey J uy for tees ae | Arman, Ni; Join Jr, 108; Rext to boxing aa an army training | bos emith « Bearcat) M Playing with splendidly exocuted | Ain, ee en | pastime Perhaps, such a | same emt easter! Reiter of owes " drives through feos Bait a Mar Baby Eplendid game for haitae On come tegriher ih 0 dz-round Awan vound robin tournament Mrs, Bernard a A al oom) pvaroas' ta’ ike ane 6. Miron ens to-day won the first prize r | added; one tition, it will even rank ahead of box-| Academy of b Grimper timp), | » courts of the Hamiltor * settrat $800; hand ing. ‘There will be regimental cham- | sig on mie Courts OF the Bhan nee | cover, we furlouge,—-4suy pe. There will he rom! sida aa snnis Club, One Hundred and | threesea pera: te eearra, 108; | Pipiguse, 108: ira plonshty pany championships, { h Street and Convent | Smee Ghportin a rit Ror. th land in all thousands of games playe Judging br of ‘ RUDD ete Aanin aces wee Wind Reset SA stern ¥ turlouge’ Le in the training camps and at. the|twebe-round & ‘ » Ming Iadith Adele Tags was wf pra! Ae remy taelD. te; le) rant, front, Raseball will be one of the| Chip, the former mikdiewrig : Avond ‘and Miss Anne F, Haintiton ree war OR ee | Wiech King Tuwen Teava oa R sports depended upon to keep 1 tions are that one of the Inrges Be third: Os ea aker 100; Imp | MIRA RACE noldiers amused, interested and care. | ever slime’ « boxing contest at) Aileen. 0 tun H, Henderson was the star ein, 10, Cuidgel, 1165 | yearolde and upward less of the hazards of battle. " Ds *Preetilla, U8; | performer in continuation of th Vins Hedge, UD; PIC Je, 228. |r humcday Nighior, ti At Vimy Ridge the Canadians | sirenom oe; 100; Wawa: | Pet rlotic the courts of retin ott S Fenn.) 106! rota played the final game in their bat , Weather ran. | University Lawn ‘Tennis ¢ A rE casgtll yume AVENTIL RACK — Selling 10; three tallon championships on the battle yesterd y Ain Selves B | Spillo 108; How Teeolda and upward; one mi 4 sixtoent ground two days after driving the mle h : 4 Mate the Cornet sO fant orale eee bac, eRe Frat, tor tan Minune: Tits, tarrulinnner 100 Germans out. Our boys will be doing expected that the gate reewpte will figui AVL LO-DAY, 2 games: firat mame Pesky ‘ Cun eee toe :. 300; three ApBY feather ; i fh TPeAN: B gamoni fires « Inthe second round, The score SEVENTH RACE —Ciajmius $900; three y Direatice allowance dlauned, Weether’ clear, the same thing one of these fine Aggie about $15,000 » Grands. Adainice Emagen cad bot oie NTH ACH Claiming, Rowath,=-Peurod, | track taste last year despite war conditions, On the road the leaders were a big card. Yesterday there were 8,000 at the game, which is exceptionally blg for a Monday crowd. Honus Wagner, the Pirate veteran, haa been appotnte! manager of the ‘\tteburgh baseball club to succeed James Callahan, In a meeting withythe Pittshureh officials Wagner consemed to take charge of the team after he Rad been relieved of the s duties _ SWIMMING A) KCIENTIFICALLY TAUGIEE. | Prepare for emergency. CHAMPIONSHIP MOTORCYCLE RACES Speedway Park, Sheepshead Bay, N. Y, M. JULY 4th at 1.30 P. i A Admins nd SPORTING RACIN AQUEDUCT JULY 4TH $3,500 CARTER HANDICAP $3,000 CLOVER STAKES 2 MILE STEEPLECHASE And 3 Other Thrilling Contests 0 MM. PIMST KAOK AX SPECLA leave Venn, 8 lyn. ak Special All Hk dake, Care poM AND STAND PO-N LGM Hartley ys, You Sporting C1 z Gradwell, Ady Han mols Statio, MoAllinter.* Be Ore MBlely Tel, O- BL Branuass v6, J 5266 Bush. 'P ack Caos ade walloped out three hits. Two of these ” ‘| were doubles and the Bronx inn- them at the proper; EINIE ZIMMERMAN, while still = at the bat that he practically won _ os ae 1 te on 8 209 i} | BEATS BRAVES |

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