The evening world. Newspaper, May 30, 1918, Page 6

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| oer — PERE EY AOL ELAINE” SS rece am Bs THOSE WHO PLAY THE_ MARKET WOULD LIKE TO SEE IT EQUIPPED WITH A NON-REFILLABLE BOTTOM. Sport Competitions of Every Variety Everywhere To-Day. Ooorright, 1019. by The Pres Pubtidhing On. (The New Yort lovening World.) “DAY will be a great day in sports. President Wilson's ad- vice to keep up athictics as wwua! will have its result in scores of eoliege and club athietic mecte in Mfferent States, There will be yacht racing, motor boat racing, track and field meets, long distance running races, golf for the Red Cross and golf for fun or prises, tennis matches, baedball and all sorts of eummer sporting events. In fact, it won't be very different from former Decora- Uon Days, in spite of the war. That should be # great race at Sheepshead, with so many noted au- tomodile racers and so many former champions on the track. All the champlons of recent years will drive racing cars. If the weather remains clear the grounds should be well crowded. And It is tikely that several world’s records will be smashed to smithereens. en Soe HB Giants flopped out of their “safe lead,” didn't they? ~ Probably the shift in their winning streak was to have been ex- pected, for many reasons. First, it ts diMoult for a club ot a team or a crew to fight hard when tn the lead. And secondly, it may be possible the Giants took pity on the rest of the bunch and dropped pack into line again to make the finishing drive more exciting. FULTON offers to box “for the Red Cross or any other de- serving war fund,” and box for nothing. Perhape Fred has seen that a bout in which the people expect to see a tame exhibition instead of a contest dosen't draw a good gate. So he of- fore to fight any contender fof noth- iow to help the fund along. Fulton may be brought on to take part In one of the Army Athletic Fund shows, ae HE commission will probably run some shows in New Jersey, which 1s @ alvilized community and doesn't try to pretend that there is anything shocking and unlawful tn boxing bouts, which now have the backing ef the United States War Department. You see, it's this wey. Having no political axe to grind, the New Jersey Mcials recognize the fact that the United States Government has a reat need for boxing and for skilled boxers for use in ite army and in its army training camps, and they have passed a boxing law and now have « number of clubs ready to open and few already running. They are not going to let boxing die out for lack of exercise. No one State, by legislating against boxing, is going to have the slight- est chance to kill the eport, Boxing was 4 recognized and honorable com- petitive aport over 2,000 years ago. Boxing championships were held at Olympia in Greeoe every four years. They must have developed some great boxers in those old days, The ancient statues depict remarkably developed boxers, A curious dif- ference between ancient and modern boxing is shown in the work of Phidias and Praxiteles. Boxers are shown with their right hand and right foot advanced, They discovered thousands of years ago that this was the best natural defensive attitude, as it protects the heart from a direct blow. Boxing died in Greece only after the Roman conquest, The Romans prohibited boxing and track and fel made the 2D sports Greeks good fighters. Forgotten for centuries, boxing was gradually picked up again in Eng- Jand, where 200 years or #0 ago it be- came as much & recognized sport as horse racing. see OXING has flourished for several hundred years. Siwmese have held annual box- « championship matches for cent» ries, and have developed a remark- able school of boxing, their art tn- cluding blows of the fist, all the tricks of boxing a# we koow it and many kicks and kicking tricks, ‘The Siam- ese champion is an all-around fight- ing man. If he doesn’t niok you with During the past century boxing ‘has e tremendous strides as a clean in Siam The Knuckles he gets there with the Chevrolet, De Palma, Old- field, Resta, Mulford and Hearne in 100-Mile Hark- ness Handicap for $30,000 in Prizes. By Bruce Copeland. HE HARKNESS HANDICAP, scheduled to be run this afternoon on the Sheepshead Bay Speedway, has been postponed until Saturday afternoon, June 1. Promoter William H. Wellman vi ited the great track early today and found that heavy rains during the night had so turned the immense oval into a quagmire that it would be impossible to hold the automobile meet this afternoon, He then quickly ordered the races to be held off until 4 o'clock Satur- day afternoon. The promoter an- nounced that all those buying tickets in advance have the privilege of re- deeming them or holding the tickets for the new date, ‘Those familiar with the aroma of pe- trol are unanimous that a motor is en- dowed with just as many chromatic possibilities as the melodious wires of P, Anno, tho jazz pugilist. In racing ciroles, every time a spark plug reg- isters a blue note the chauffeur lifts the hood and mutters a few unprint- able discords himself, Forgetting all he ever knew about the relative values of tone he looks sheepishly toward the negrest merry mechaniclan and whispers, “Sound your carbureter.” If there is too much water in the gasoline the engine will emit something Ike the cough of a If there happens to the rusty Jewsharp, be a nut loose somewhere in wear ¢ the perfect ukelole difference between a cream puft and a pimple, ‘There is © paseel of garages out wndér the noisy end of the Bheeps- head Buy Speedway from which ex- ude ati the sharps and flata peculiar to motor tuning. If you don't see @ racing «driver somewhere on the track it's « cinch he's playing a few tinkering exercises on harmonica, while his stands hard by with a Jot of grease on his overalls and nothing on face but skin a little more grease, In spite of all their faults, most auto racers nave a full set of edu- \eated ears, While rolling over the creosote timber at the modest mo- mentum of 112 miles per bour, they can tell whether their respect his accomplice and Tigling Irtand: France. Nustratia, hauste are tuned for the money, en- Fatata anh the United Bates. gine trouble or the turtle flip, If Boxing willbe a favorite sport long | Were 18 a lack of petrolic harmony in after the men who killed it Ape their differentials, they will volplane rarily—in New York bave been for. | Pack to the tuning station und add gotten, ia ea | Sometimes in their wrath the Benny Leonard Hack im Town, | Pacers will strip their vehicles of Renny Leonard, who helped raise $45,- 000 for the Camp Activities Fund on| obi lol ome , Aptivities Fund on ot Mobiloil and sometimes castor o the Pacific Coast this morning, Tillly Gibson said tha! the champion was met at many at ons ai the by, delegatio | everything but their Bee Veo Dees and then subject them to a shower bath this doesn't Improve the ton tl they will begin to tinker with several things whien made the original tinker whe complimented him on his work for ©uss like « pirate on dry land, the boys in uniiorm, t \ gasoline | his | theca ttt CCN ALEN ANAC NS OTN eC COTE Sextette of Champions In Carbureter Concert At Sheepshead Saturday = nuwtt imeem. MVOKY wWoter is GuPposed to sound pia, Bolo Grounds, THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MAY BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK Copyright, 1918, by The P For Holiday Juvenile and Toboggan Run gt Belmont To-Day; Coe’s Horse Most Impressive Winner of Season so Far. By Vincent Treanor. HE Toboggan Handicap, a six furlong dash down the straight- away, and the, $7,500 Juvenile at five furlongs for two-year-oldg, are the features extraordinary of the holiday programme at Belmont Park this af- ternoon. Both these racos have hia- torio values, second to few turf events, and the winners usually come from the most select sets of thorough- breds. The Juvenile, for instance, was run first at Jerome Park back in 1874 and has been contested contin- ually ever since with the exception of 1911 and 1912, when race track gates were closed because of anti-betting ‘ons Publishing Co. Stakes of Historic Value Polymelian New Sensation a different tone before the race be- islation. gins. When they line up for the] To-day's Juventie has a field of thir- starter will know that the chauffeurs have been playing hookey from their tuning rehearsals. Oh, yes, they can tune a motor. No auto racer ever chased a record out of tu All they can do to kill time is tune. Barney Oldfield, leader’ of the fa- | mous Cigar Band, did not put in an Appearance yesterday at the track, 90 his baleful bass was conspicuous for its perfect silence, and therefore was exempt for several reasons which we do not know, But perhaps Barney felt as if he wan the butt of a prace | tical Joke he tried to play on Well- man, Pickens & Company on the pre- vious afternoon, | Barney, who alway has been fa- surprises, a mous for his eleventh-hour which includes tuning up without fresh cigar, pulled one on that pa ular afternoon which may have had the same effect as a boomerang, or something like that. In order to toss | @ hungry moth into Bill Wellman's hopes, Barney equipped his right arm with a full set of bandages and a dis- | bev- new to race-goers, but there are @ few which have been seon recently with the colors up. These are: The Wanderer, the $10,000 yearling, which won at Jamaica; Elfin Queen, which jeame home in front of a field of maidens Monday, and Lord Brighton, a Jamaica winner, Outside of Rout- ledge, which finished second in bis only start, the rest will make their racing debuts to-day ‘The Toboggan has a rare lot of sprinters engaged, including Motor Cop, Old Koenig, Roamer, Suntiash, Keltian and Lucullite, All told the field numbers ten and a cracking good race should result, up the rest of the programme for the holiday, The most impressive victory scored by any horse this season was that of the imported Polymelian in the last race yesterday over a field of nine- connecting simg of the same teen starters, yorite in the be! ora ting in th big plays on se with such a form fitting kimono onjeral others, including Commander his right dorsal fin, Barney sauntered fico headquarters’ at No. 14 Kash Twenty-eighth Street in high hopes o giving the big guns paralysis of the Ross's Wigstone, he never left the re~ sult in doubt, Breaking on his toes from fourteenth pgsition at the post he immediately went to the front and bankroll. He figured that if he,could | nothing r got near enough to create the impression that his arm|make him extend himself, In the was exempt from lighting a fresh | final sixteenth be was ten Yengths in cigar, the meet would have to be| front with Jockey Fairbrother trying postponed aw long aa he wanted to Yiinly to pull him up, while those be keep the promoters in suspense hind were being urged and ridden Quite fortunately, the whole outht}out to the Hmit. Polymelian’s time wae down at the speedway, and after | Without any exertion, apparently, altting around chewing the dustcloth | Was 1101-0; exceptionally good and with the stenog all afternoon, Harney | Close to Jack Atkins’s track record of 1081-5 made in 1907. The track adjourned to a couple of blocks west- ward and went into his favorite pit was of the drying out kind yeste M suble and therefore not at its be fuffering from engine trouble of He i ened by We it laryax who has spent a fortune in’ racing — with little or no return, It appears Red Fetterman, the Pittsburgh now that he has a good horse at last, Flesh, must be a poor motor tuner,fone which will repay him for man because #0 far he has been unable to ointments of the past, Poly- tune his carbureter above 104 miles|motian is a four-year-old by Poly per hour, This will prove quite dis-}melus, a noted English sire, out of hatrous when all the big tuners lino] Pasquita, He has no stake engage- uy for the final pitch this afternoon sat Belmont Park, b n five because all the others can shake a s at Aqueduct « Brooklyn meloMona 112 or better out of thelr | handicap, the Queens County handi- cylinders: cap, the Carter handicap and the = Brookdale handicap, It may take @ Good fields make | SOME OF TO-DAY’S SPORT FEATURES (The New York Evening World, Race-Goers; to the racing firmament on Green Gold in the $2,000 Hollie selling stake. Pho boy simply @ouldn’t handle the colt, which is naturally speedy, and he bore out after rounding the home turn. Bert explained later that Green Gold is getting cunning and won't do his best uniesa he feels like it. Some owners and trainers get odnning too, but we hope this isn’t the case with ) COUNTRY Rune Tovar. Toran PAT MiDONALD AULA TRY “To THROW Tue 6% POUND WeicHT a MUS HOW THE SPORT WORLD Reilly or his trainer, the estimable Jim McAvoy. Jim knows that good riding is an essential feature in any race and Bert should know it, too, Let the boy learn his trade in the morning and don't spoil Green Gold's racing manners. Lieut. Raymond Belmont's Jyntee is a speedy trick, She won the third race with quite @ bit to spare, and tho further she went the better she seemed to like it. “Bud” May's Keen Jane came home by herself in the opening two-year- old acramble in 59 seconds. Colin and Pidone, the record holders for the distance, ran the race in only a per | ond better. CELEBRATES MEMORIAL DAY TRACK ATHLETICS. Sheridan Memorial Games at Celtic GOLF. Exhibition foursome at Baltusrol, Park, 2 P. M.; Home Guard Games at|Red Cross match at Van Cortlandt New Brunswick, N. J. at 2.30 P. Mi/and usual holiday. tournamenta at Brooklyn Playground championships | the various clubs of the metropolitan at MoCarren Park. at 2 P. M.; Inter- | district, Settlement games at Brooklyn Ath- AUTOMOBILE RACING. letic Field, at 10.30 A. M.; triangular Harkness Handicap and five other meet between Fivids Nos. i and 2 and|races at Sheepshead Game Mills, at Mineola, L. 1, at 10.30| Speedway. ageee a AM. DOG SHOW. Annual exhibition of Lone Istand RACING. Ma Kennel Club at Gravesend racetrack. The Juvenile and Toboxean Handi- re ROWING, cap and four other races. Annual regatta on Harlem River. LAWN TENNIS. BASEBALL. Inyitation tourney at Pelham Coun- try Club: Metropolitan handicap tour- ey at West Side Tennis Club: ex- ae at Sleepy Hojlow Country Jub. : Philadelphia vs. Yankees. at Polo Grounds, two games, beginning at 1.30 P. M.; Boston vs. Brooklyn, at Ebbets beginning at 1.30 Field, two, wames, . Mt Holy Cross at Fordham. Fistic News | and Gossip | By John Pollock J) Memorial Day wi by @ observed the fight promoters in several of the jelties where the sport is legalized by | the holding of afternoon and evening boxing shows, ‘The most important |show will be staged at Cleveland, where Matt Hinkel, the boxing pro- moter of that city, will hold three ten- round bouts between topnotchers at the Cleveland Baseball Park in the evening. The men who will figure in these scraps are Lew Tendler of Phila-| delphia and Vincent Pokorni of Cleve-| | land, Joe Lynch of thia city and Jack "Kid"? Wolfe of Cleveland, and Benny Valger, the French featherweight, and Alvin Miller, the good little fighter of Lorain, O. Rafiing Levinsky, the clever Hebrew beavy- weight, will not be able to meat Clay Turner, the renaational Indian light hearywaignt, in their ten. rennd bout at the Town Hall A, ©, of Scranton. Pa, todar as he injured hie hand in his recent pout with Jim Coffey at the benefit show for the Red Cross Fund at Madison Square Garden, The club will qutmtitute some good ‘heavy’ to «0 against Turner, Frankie Brown, the local hantamweiaht, was matched to-day by hie manager, Al Ldnoe, to meet Kid Conter, the New Orleana fighter, for twenty rounds in New Orleans on Jupe 10, Livoe fa wo confident that Brown will get the verdict over Coster that he bas already sled him up to tox Pete Herman for the bantamweight title at Dominick ‘Tortarich’s big open-air club there three weeks later, the firet time. during the many For voare that he has been In the boxing ine. Jeff Smith, the Bayonne middle wolght, has been compelled to call off two bouts on account of an infury to his hand. He recelved the intury while box- with hin sparring partner, Smith felt iy over the acctdent as @ prevented him from boxing at the Red Croas Fund shows in the Garden Inst Friday night and at the Armory A. A. of Jersey City on Sat: urday night. hard-hitting mid- and Joo has recently been the who Tommy Robson diewormne of Ragan of Boston. orse to beat hin nless he [drafted into the army, have been aecured Just to show tho shivering gallery] real Kood horse bee ae hing Unless be | dretied sate we er tue armory A. &: ot that he has a muateal ear, Ralph De | 8°% . Boston to meet tn the #tar bout of twelve Palma rolled around the Wack at the} ay pyiawoll, trainer of Com.| rounds at the next show of the club on hourly velocity of 14 miles, which is ee ae anio watched Poly. | fuosday plaht, Knean oxo th caaelve SOME speed, according to the laws En win fron a ThOne ROW rand | Rermiaelen in this 0 before of gravitation, least alatance ad stand box, and looked astonished aa | been" anne snes lea sua Sniniia the rule of three. Many figure that he saw Wi one doing his to be | weight ohamplon, joined the Ralph will just about leave the track | Ne #tW Mt Mie tore the race was [cad ts likely to be sont across th on Raturday with thes bacon itl suid to be a wonder, He may be, but |to do battle. Al. Lippe, manager of there's many a ailp between a if he is, Volymelian is a champion, — | smith, the Bayonne middiewetaht ‘and atate and a dry throat also ctvillan boxing at Camp oor Shuttinger, one of the good jockoys | Dix. N. J. to-day ann that he will Ralph Mulford was out tuning with | piding on the New York tracks aim the title for Smith ax Jeff has de- his blushing Packard, but couldn't! pimself left at the post in the Mineola | feated Jimmy Clabby, Eddte MeGoorty, make the right mixture to produce |jandicap on Snap and there. |the late Lea Darcy, Joe Borrell, Jack Me more than a measly century, Mulford later just tra his fleld. rron and others. tinkered and tuned, but to no avall. | shy t often caught napping He rpent most of the time In the pits | a urrier A largo number of colored avorting men telling the gang that too much air - it New wy are up In arma over the makes @ carburetor too fresh. nic Kegan nearly won two races | rule passed by the New Jersey state aoe yesterday with Whimsy and Dorcas, | Boxing Commlasion preventing white men If Louis Chevrolet is anywhere | In fact will ta 4 lot to convince | fr hipety ai Ae : a8 Sen ae around w another speeder pulls, MAny mi ak y bir sy a aa ne tua. y jaca PO 2g? pape of tune he proceeds to give in- |Win and that Sands of Pleasure go c i i ee i Ree he a L ti |the best of a close decision, The chart |Heavywelkht, will make @ visit to Tren Beanie Bays hy fnerat rity J. wh the commission meets knows more Yut motor musie than akers in the stand called | ton, N Y poe ooes aout secondatory: re] Whimey the winner, hue’ the judges (to-morrow for the purgene of aaking the on the bases, Chev shuffies around | decided othe rwine In the Nor an race sion to rescind the rule, with a face about as long a9 a com.| the finish wasn't close, but Dorcas Pa missioned officer's t aittat a civie| seemed to have the rac in hand) The Penne vo A. A. of Ponna Gro Panquet, circulating the report that |unti! Lyke began closing on Flitter. |N. d., will bold tte first boxing show to: be no chance to win. ‘They all, gold. It was a ding-dong affalr for |day. The club was one of the first to} are wager to accept hia advice, but| half a dozen strides and then Flitter~ icenne by the ¢ waive all claim to his dope. gold went on about his business to In the main ¢ ——_ win comfortably, Frank Regan bad khters will . < \the poor man's luck. elxht rounds, thoy being Youns Joe Borrell een TRON: Zamtrne vd Th feast: and Jack Brusso. Herman Taylor, match: DUG me Adee ‘Bert Reilly introduced a pew jcckoy maker of the National A, A of Phila. THE OLD GUARD. Yes, those are the remnants of Grant's mighty Iegtons— The heroes immortal, who fought, bled and died Bo we could have peace and that righteousness holy Could spread her white wings o’er the land and the tide Yon thin, weary line with each head bowed and hoary Is all that remains of those once valiant corps, Whose hearts knew no fear in the tumult of dattle— In the death-dealing din of the worst of our wars. To-day, e’en though two-score and ten years have withered Their hands and made heavy thew once nimble feet, They are standing in line again ‘waiting the order To fall in together and march down the street. | Just see how they straighten and step proudly forward In step with the drummer's sharp, rhythmic swell; How quickly their cars catch the swing of the musio— The old battle tunes that they all know @o well, And though their dear ranks are a shade of past glories, Those battle-scarred heroes, in quickening breath, Forget their own heartaches while chanting the praises Of comrades who fell in the struggle with death, Yes, those are the men who unflinchingly offered Thetr tives, so in future all nations might say: “American lives are the seed of true freedom ;” And this is the spirit we honor to-day. Our memory twits us on Decoration Day every year for having broken up the patriotic exercises in the little old red schoolhouse on the hill, Right in the midst of a most eloquent declamation we were supposed to say, “Cheers for the living and tears for the dead!" But something went wrong, and we cried, “Tears for the living and cheers for the dead!" Thus ended our ora- torical aspirations. We used to lie awake all night before Decoration Day in anticipation of seeing the parade and followigg the thin ranks to the cemetery, where we would strew the d. and buttercups which we had gathered and potted that afternoon, over “the little green tents.” But nowadays, most of us are too busy picking flowers for ourselves, or words to that effect. N i how bittor were the battles above and below the Mason-Dixon | line, the soldiers who are still with us feel kind of cocky over having wiute men for their enemies. MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS | NATIONAL LEAGUE. AMERICAN LEAGUE. CLUBS W. L. Pe, | CLUBS W. L. CLUBS W. L. Pe. | CLUBS Ww, N. Y...28 48 76) Phile 15 18 Boston.24 13 .649 | Chicago. 15 16 Chicago.22 11 Boston.16 20) N, ¥,,-21 18 .688/| Phila ..14 20 Cincin 20 17 641) Bhlyn .18 22 Cleve .20 17 541) Wash 15 22 Pitte 15 10 484) St. 1.12 2h St, L...17 16 .581! Detroit.10 19 GAMES YESTERDAY. Philadelphia, 5) New York, 2. Brookiyn, 6; Boston, 2 (first game), Bosto } Brook!) © (second game), Chicago-Cincinnat! (wet gro! Pittsburgh-St, Louls (rain), Fe. 455 44 B71 364 GAMES YESTERDAY, \ (first game), New York, 7} Phila, New York, 12; Phila Cleveland, 7) Detroit, 1 Boston, 4; Wash'ton, 2 (first x Boston, 3; Wash., 0 (second game), GAMES TO.DAY. Philadelphia at New York (two games). Washington at Boston (nm. Chicago at Clevel GAMES TO-DAY. New York at Philadelphia (am.-p.m,) Boston at Brooklyn (two games), Cin anati at Chicago (a.m.-p.m.) Bt, Louls at Pittsburgh (a.m.-pom,) Both games at Polo Grounds and Bbbets Field | will be played im the aftervon, HOW THE OTHER CLUBS MADE OUT, AMERICAN LEAGUE. RHE, fut game) RUE er | At Cleveland trot 010000-4 000000 2000020" Tatterice—-Barper and Alummith; Maye and | Cleveland L2o0h01-e Game calied ‘on account of” rain [ee BatterieeJawes and Slavage; Couey and Washingt Hatieriee—volinewn and Aivomiia, Jonge ad oor, ~.900900000-9 g 2) O'Neil | Play In the tennis singles tournament: for women at the Pelham Country Club was halted to put the doubles under way. and when play was stopped for the day four were in the semi-final round, The survivors in the upper half are Mise Caroma Winn and Miss Margaret Grove and Marie Wagner. left are Miss Molla Bjurstedt and MMe. Johan Hogge and Mra. George L. man and her daughter Marion. isjurstedt and Mra, Rogge scored two victories. the singles will be played. Mise Byam stedt will meet Miss Wagner and Mrs, Wood will face Mrs. Edward Raymond, When the star players of the National Golf Association lock to New York from all parts & M BUYING ON THE CURB WOULD BE SAFE IF SOMEBODY COULD PUT A CURB ON THE BUYING. A country benerit for the army and navy at National Musical show in Grand Cen- Palace, there probably will be as much golf (s musical conversation in the atmos. tral phere. The plano men will have thebe Rolf tournament coincident with the Big wind-up of the convention on Mot and Tuesday, June 10 and 14, on links of the Scarsdale Golf Club, at Hartsdale, N. ¥. The first contest for the Ford: Trophy Cup, presented by Supreme Court Jus. Uce John Ford to encourage the hi type of marksmansaip, will be held. to- ay at Rosedale, L. 1, under the pa ot the Long island Gun and Rite Club, Major Michael F. Healy, Was at the club house yesterday, fe ported that many enures had been fee among t being expert sh are Well known th: thi big Cross will take. p w de ev 1 ived, Two cup-tie finals are scheduled for is af follows: Ireland vs. America at nox Oval, #1, M-; Clan MacDutt, wm erborough R. at Lenox Oval 2.30 M.; New York and Pennsylvania, nich B. ll 1s the Presi- nt, will promote activities of ery description f en of the it branch of Un naval out- New sey, at Ciark’s Fi ewark. ‘The, Shenecossett Links at New Len- don, Conn., will open for the first time this sense to-day, Kegulars who are returning this son will find meay r © “, a ae course since last sum- m Josides a number of new trage a bunkers there will be a few new holes, Many important exhibition matches for the Ked Cross will be played over the course this summer after Juno 15. Travers and Evans are scheduled to meet Ouirhet and Ander- one match, while Mise Alexa will pair with Perry Adair ¥ Elaine Rosenthal and t ‘The seventeenth annual show of the ‘ Long Isiand Kennel Club takes place § afternoon at the Gravesend race ‘K, Where a full list of fifty-seven ndard bres will be on exhibition. 4 entry Ust of over 500 of the it | dogs in the East 1 received for t lifferent classes, so the show ¢an easily be put down a8 one of the best of uhe season, A United States Naval Overseas Transportation rvice Athletic Asso- ng wart “Lieut. G has had N ed now Is ng 0. American soccer football has accept- ities A Message On Motor Truck Lubrication To keep your trucks on the ad day in and day out, see to it that they are properly lubricated, ry bet Joseph Dixon Crucible Company BELMONT PARK TOMORROW ‘fs SEARINGTOWN HANDICAP } THE QUEENS HANDICAP 2 MILE STEEPLECHASE and 3 other Good Races WINNING AYE ih ed. by Trolleys: War iat x x at LUBRICANTS at gut out friction in moving parts by us fil ar ter, {RACING dozen teams were In the draw, Homer 8. Green and Mies In the lower half those To-day the semi-finals o8 of the Piano Trade for the big patriouc June 1 to 11, inek »#0 Listed to contest shooters whose names ughout the country, rnoon at L for nox Oval, while the benefit of the Red at Clark's Athlete y's soccer eched~ the Newark. Was organized recently at a id at No. 45 Broadway, the r# of the above-named naval The U, SN. 0. T. 8. A. A, of association a base ome ume past f leagu ans for @ e us departments of the allenge of th n Army, ¢ r of crack Han and British elevens, issued on Tuesday through Training Camp Ac- A tour by ‘the rincipal eltles r ill be ar- {game may be because of the ling war funds hlehem game in all roba~ for « Sunday at champion team pixon: Automobile ing metal surfaces w that stops the grinding eeps truck oF car FUnaing , ‘unning longer Ask your dealer for th Dixon Lubricating Chart Jersey City, N. J. Established 1827 aa | SPORTING. Ary AUTIFUL

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