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ai Coming East to Get Car-| pentier’s Yes or No to Match | With Jack Dempsey. yee Carpentier going to duck oe of the much talked of match With Jack Dempsey? We have ight as much for some tlie but "t be certain, We will know, however, in a short time. Jack _ Kearns, manager of Dempsey, is on | the Frenchman's trail, and it's going to be a case of sign up, or go home ind shut up. Georges winds up his theatrical contract here at Atlantic City July 5 and has planned to sail for home on July 10, but before he goes he and his manager, Descamps, ure going to Msten to a word or two f Kearns on the subject of a! ma with the champion, From Denver, Col., we get the following on} » the subject: \ Denver, Col., June 28, 1920. VINCENT TREANOR, Evening World, New York, N, ¥.: \ Failing to receive an anewer frbin Georges Carpentier in regards fo signing articles, Jack Kearna, manager of Champion Jack Soe THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30, 1920.1" BEST SPORTING PAGE IN NEW YORK AMERICAN BEATS JAP IN ENGLAND TO-DAY 1920, by ’ (The New York Evening World). Copyrixht, Press Publishing Co. BRITISH TENNIS eustom FOR. THE CHAMPION To SIT THE SERIES our UNTIL HEE wears HE CONTENDER. eZal Dempsey, is now speeding east- Ward to meet Carpentier and his is prepared to sign icles | and post forfeita and in- hat the Frenchman does before hopping the liner home. If Carpentier v&ime to erica to ight Dempsey, let im So at oned. We are ready, wai igo ingist that artich be ed. unpsey ig a fighting cham- pion. The pubjic asks that the Cantinental champion be his first opponent. We giadly accept, but must show some action or we » will be forced to accept an offer to méet some American at once. Dempsey is now in fighting trim and won't lie jdie any longer. IT accepted Carpentier’s chal- pope. two wecks ago and gave week to reply, Since then I en't had @ line from either the nch champion or Manager mps. For @ man who came to America expressly to fight psey I cannot understand It. ly intention is to meet Des- ips in New York, have a per- | interview and definitely ar- for the bout. I will am not later than July 7, h will give us plenty of time ‘business before Carpentier It’s action Dem| wants now. JACK KEARNS, Plain enough and to the point. It te up to Carpentier. RITISH @nnis champions do not play through. They are only " alled upon to defend their title im asingle round. The champ Is much | Iike ancient kings who, perehed on | their thrones, had their subjects prought to them for execution, ‘Throughout the current British tennis | tournament Gerald Patterson has sat p ting in the stands, his only con- “being the observation of pros- ¢ opponents, While all other en- create had to battle their way up tirough hard-fought rounds. What % ec be more comforting than this? American tennig classic Is the All-Comers' championship. ‘The defending champion enjoys no ) advantage. He must start with the ) field and work himself up to the ‘or be separated from his crow: more exacting on the defend ‘Atle holder this system is fairer | sayy or ‘more sportamaniike than having 4 ampion rest while others must play rough for the privilege of meeting ein the challenge round. Jimmy saelioverty Sais to} ‘Stage Meet Between Cham- pion and Bartley Madden, By John Pollock. Jack Dempsey, the world’s heavy- “weight chumplon, may engage in an ‘ eight-round battle at one of the base- | dail parks in Philadelphia on the Might of July 10. Jimmy Dougherty ot iperville, Pa., who is a great of Dempsey's, is reported to) have secured a lease on one of the ‘parks for the contest and if he can} ‘induce Jack Kearns, manager of Betapsey, to allow the champion to Hox on that date he will try and sign ‘ Madden, the local heavy- weight, for his opponent. Dougherty is new waiting wo hear from Kearns fegurds to the match. Borunee, the Conner witerwngte of Kugiaed, who wae knocked out in ee Pounds ly Ted “Kid Lewis in London sev Dempsey is Wanted For Bout July: 10 In Philly Ball Park. ORE TERSON THE Bncus ae =5 HAMPION WAS DEFLATED her AT. FORESE HLS WAST. auoust To BE THE, DISH. Olympic Team’s prore © INTERNAT Staff of Coaches LIVE PVA lte rhe wel womtrly tie By Neal pic team, the selection of a coach is becoming of paramount interest. Of a field of candidates, or eligibles, con- sisting of Robertson of Penn, Moak- ley of Cornell, Fitapatrick of Prince- ton, Donavoy of Harvard, Maloney of Stanford and Farrell of Illinois, the veteran Cornell and Princeton cdaches are growing in favor. All of the pros- pects who have committed themselves have discouraged the idea of one coach, favoring, instead, the appoint- ment ‘of a head couch and a staff of ecialists to handle individual divi- sions of the team. Lawson Robertaon, —_ considered earlier as having the best chance for the position, favors this plan, and it is understood that ‘he would rather go over as an assistant coach on active work than busy himself with a lot of executive work that will be necessary to take care of 300 athletes. Desiring an old head at the gam the committee ts sald to be in favor of either Moakley, the Cornell v eran, or Fitzpatrick. Princeton coach 1s now in England with the | 66 Latest Training Gallops of Horses At Local Tracks ‘At Belmont Purk, June 29—track fast. Dry Moon,1-2, in .65; Rankin, 1-2, ip 55; Red Red Rose, 1-2, in 49; Lad's Love, 1-2, in 49; Armistice, 11- 1.54; Snare, 6-8, in 1.12; Piety in oo a Edwin Ney have reserved the movie rights. Wilson’s Best Two-Year-Old and Brigadier General Show They’re Race Horses— : Exterminator Breaks Record. long THE YALE FIND IT HARD TO GET ALONG ° Expert names Jimmy Wilde in Louise, 6- 5 Waik ‘vp, 1- 2611-5; Lady Frappe, 1-2, in .51 1-5; Ultragance, 1-2, in a! attle, 3-4, in oe low Brook, 1-2, in.61 B ergs: a 1, in .48, 1.01, 1.14, 1.28, ., ieerd ue, “t-4, In 128 he's taking 80 long in the cellar. Jamaica Bellet in 51; Celiva, 1-2, . in .60 3-5; Honey Cell, 1-2, in 61 3-5 Wood Violet, 1-2, in .52 3-5; marisk, Rowe aa ye WmTHEY'S TRamee THEY SEND WINNERS TO THE POST. By Vincent Treanor. Dicoririeectiemetetiietiencpscmemmnsrrn™ © good colts.” ‘That was the] AQUEDUCT’S SELECTIONS. TAA Es London critic that's peeved be: JAPS SEEM DOF gale pyave cewand The A's are hanging around 275 i ing i ville in baseball as little men who are most important in sport. fails to mention Little Joe in rolling the bones, Cadet Poe | {t Thundered, Too, At the Polo Grounds, But Mostly When Ruth and His Slugging Gang Landed on the Ball. By Charles Somerville. HERE was a time yesterday when we prayed for rain, That was at the third inning—to be precise. Get that? Precise, The Bostonese had sailed for Shore for four runs in the very first inning, A rotten crash, It looked about as good for US as a man with heart disease. We had scrapped back all right, But only could count one run in each of our two Innings. ‘Then there came a howl of thunder. ‘The gang hugged their rain checks and cheered. Lightning flashed. Cheered the Iightnin; ‘That how hard they were hit with a desire to have the game called off and save the Yanks a defeat. Next afterward the rain fell, Fell so hard it bounced back. But a guy of the name of Moriarity, who was sitting in as the Supreme Court Justice Umpire, yes- terday wouldn't quit the contest 6ven if his associate’s name was Chill. We were thumbs down for Ump Mortarity at that time, Not knowing what was coming off. Yet I'm beginning to trust the Yanks not to take a licking unless the reason for so doing would be something that might floor Presi- dent Wilson. Some reason that would have to be, perhaps? Yes, I think so. The rain of the sky didn’t save us. Something much superior in the baseball line did. A fin of hits. And to make the game a perfect Yankee Hits Spring Up After Rain and Red Sox Perish in 9th Inning Rally spectacle these hits did not come un- til the ninth, And better than that. Read this ‘The big ham and inning—the first— started with Shore walking Hooper, Vitt singling and Menoskey putting WIRES R. O’Hara Goveright, 109%, by The Prem Publishing Ce, (The New York Rrexing World.) Frazee made one big mistake when he traded Babe Ruth. He should Babe should make a wonderful stage attraction, He fs always sure of « of Supreme Court decisions. "VARSITY CREW PROVES THAT SOME GUYS STILL ON WATER, * 8 boxing, Jeig Ray in running and Maran- But he It'll take more than minor Injuries to keep Ty Cobb out of major league ball. Connie Mack is laying the foundation for a team, which explains why cause Americans take athletic cempeti- Hons too seriously means they take ‘gm too often, be good at putting the shot—they have in spite of the fact that they're Tiger team, and ft has been pointed general verdict after the run- First Race--Hope Princess, The New York cops ought to out that he could remain there and ning of the sixth raco at] Mammb!, Polly Ann. plenty of target practice. Ket somo valuable work done before | Aqueduct yesterday afternoon. It t Second Race—No selections. in s 8 6 the arrival of the team. terri r. Wil- Third Race—Gladiator, Dom- $tromboll, ‘elephone calls are stfi a nickel apiece, The committee probably will name | o,°¢4 10 Dinmesdale, the BR. T. Wit iquc, Lunetta, fj Lady Brighton, 1, 1n’.49, 1.15, | harder to get. the coach und staff at a meeting here | 22 champion two-year-old, and Fourth Race-Vexatious, Or- -5; Passing Showers, 3-8, In| July 6, Brigadier General, owned by the hh abs Ao ‘hind Thunderstorm, 1, in monda, Lunetta. Fifth Race—In Cheap, Advocate, Aliinio. Sixth Race—Thunderstorm, Na- tura] Bridge, Kashmir, ven GIANTS WIN ANOTHER AS BATTERS CELEBRATE ON PHILLY PITCHER: Quincy Stable. They came down the stretch fighting it out like only two excoptional thoroughbreds do, stride for stride from the sixteenth pole and Resolute ts @ 2 to 1 favorite in the| 0th under tho whip. The Wilson international yacht races which begin | Colt, which was the odds-on choice, July 15 next. James W. Ball & Co, | looked beaten up to this point but he report that they have placed several | responded to hard urging and at the small commissions at these odds, and | cond was a head to the good. A strong | that midway down the stretch Wild- there was @ strong disposition on the| wind which blew directly up the air had little left for the rest of the part.of the Shamrock backers to accept stretch against tho horses made fast | Jurne When rybody becomes time impossible, so that the 1.011-5/ sick and tired of playing Wildair he'll ‘red 4 Schumm sn Brooklyn also quoted | which Dimmesdale hung up was cred-| Probably come home ‘alone. So far by i pene e 08 acke! of a Manhatt mlaarnbrat ‘owner he re-| itable, considering the adverse condi- Rapes cost his backers @ fortune in ported that he had $1,000 to bet again: tions, J $1,200 that Shamrock would capture one| | Brigadier General had the foot of of the races of the serlos, his rival in the early running and at the bend, Dimmesdale didn't seem to be in the picture at all, He however moved up with a gumeness and de- termination characteriatic of most Olambalas, but it didn’t seem that he could catch the General. Hoe was on the rail and the Quincy colt on the outalde, Slowly but surely he closed Man, 1-2, in .49; Hackaway, 1-2 .50; Slip-a-Long, 1-2, in .60. His Choice, 1-2, in 5 Dancer, 3-4, in 1.18; Joan , in 1.07; Faison D'Or, 3-4, in 1.16 Barton, 3-4, in 1.16; Irish Dancer, RESOLUTE PICKED TO WIN INTERNATIONAL CUP RACES. PHILADELPHIA, June View, 1-2, in 49 1.06; Lunnetta, 1-2, vastra, 1-2, in 49 3-4, in 1 2-65; Dark Horse, 1,05 2-5; Billy Kelly, in 5-8 King Thrush, 5-8, in 1.0 3 arvan, 1-2, in .48; Kashimir, Rosa R., 1-2, in .49; Rose, 5-8, In 1.03. ‘At Jamaica, June 29—t Blue Wrack, 1-2, <ummer to shoot the colt along. Kummer did but b ot him after an extremely fast horse in Naturalist, » up yesterday in their series with t Phillies, hitting the ball hard and wi ning, 7 to 1, as Phil Douglas was ! vincible jn the pinches. have won seven of their last elg games, the morale stored, the pitchers ar and they declare the: the top of the Be going bett re going up c Tm winning the Luke Blackburn Handicap Exterminator clipped 1-5 of | Forever, 1- @ second off the track ‘record of /3-8, in .88 3-5 ‘Nimble Foot, 3-8, ‘in 1441-5. This was made by/Corn Tas- |, Cillala, 8-8, in .88 8-5; Plur- sell with 109 pounds, Sept, 16, 1918. .88; Paddy Dear, 3-4, The Portuguese, 1, in 1.48; in .49 3-5, 1. 1, in 1.49 8 2'8 Reds and Cardinals, Rixe: held, the Giants scoreless t! the fiten. the centre, i him on rus, 3-8, 1.26 '8-5; Franklin, }-1-8, a wall and Dour! with an infl Clarence Buxton, brother of “Hap- py,” the rider, and trainer for J. A. the last few strides the General did, and like a bulldog, Dimmesdale flew in 48 4- in 48 4- 3. Sailor, 1, Universal, 1 Heckett haw regained some of the jimetige the lost ‘The second race brought out five and the bases r ‘The running of the sixth race incl- : Youneed, 5-8, in Thi Bloom, the fast, hor n sup uncbes in & twelve-round bout, to & de Marie wasn't equal to the occasion. Giante’ fin cision, at the Casino A, ©. of Lown, Mam, to- morrow niktit, Bloam ought to have wo trouble tm outpoluting Neon, as he is too fast for hin, dent of t and Brigadier General were fighting it out, he crept up on the outside of both practically unnoticed and for a second or two threatened to run over Figinny, favorite in event, the opening all but broke down In the run- Jack Joyner has reecived news trom | 4-5: Ailterlo, the other side that Troy Town, win- ner of this year's Grand National Handicap, broke his leg shortly after- ward in France and had to he TOMORROW $1500 UNION STAKES 2MILE STEEPLECHASE in. .50; Squaw Man, 1-2, In 50 Oride, 3-8, in 37; Ivory, L ‘in Sir Grafton, 3-4, in CH ten dayw ago, that hia phywictan said after! en Tom became worried. on. Xuray examination tbet. be refractunsd bie hand, which had formerly beet broken iu & con, int, Vor the next boxing As the race proved the stunt didn’t hurt Dimmesdaie. WIA Wrecks 050, thervby losing ie title to Lewis bit ied Bet auvtler chance to rvain it, The meo Phen matcbed to fight, a twenty -round Gat Ht the Nitlowal Aoorting Cha) of London Metis ect of Oouiine, Chorley Harves, man Jot Lewis, asm that all derat for the | before ue wailed from | 5 a ‘caeh every fatier be EAE ibe he wae over Im Praney, was mats) bby Mie mrden r. to moet | ‘Tho Luke Blackburn Handteap won evening, by Exterminator was run to order for Matchinaker Jobu Jennings has signed vp two} the Kilmer horse. Naturalist chased «ith ‘Tommy Noble of Ki the main | by Wildair ran thelr heads off co.n-| Bil Hogan has made all arrange- fo Johnny Matl of Jersey City move Abe Attell ing to the stretch, and as a result! ments for a trip to England and Ire- Goldateln of thie olty were leg weary but willing when Ex-| land, Bill has several commissions destroyed. THE REGRET HANDICAP of Jomey Olty on ‘Tuowlay | FINST RACK AT —— terminator ranged alongtide of and\to buy some horses at the Dublin ‘The oper basing she of the armory A fe }went past both, Right at thr ul! Horse’ Show, which is an annual $75.00 in Jemey City om Monday night drow wich & bis | Wildair was sandwiched in between August fixture there, : . mn crowd that the wmted to $5,010. | exterminator and Naturalist, and jabba a Ha Immediate Delivery | Te cou not. be. Kearwed what tho fighter 8 | had go little racing room that '} a sce he. cary AME A | Jeeta for ie efforts, Wut they wore well Femaid’ meg was compelled to stop riding it) New International League. |fimatning suite, best sWorted auality. Tucludita Wat for their trouble, Gene Tunney’ quick knockowt gut, Jimmy Rowe substituted Kum Standing of WS to ME ie te Autos ie tee Wane sided Be) mee fo on Wildaty but got tr " Sweaters, #750 to 822 All Cotors. ub, | no better results with th inappoint it ween xn nim, 90 Bowe Big League Srorting Goods Co. 123 Nasaau Street. Om Le 30,—The New York Giants made the big clean- The Giants of the team is re- heap and make tangs interesting and uncomfortable for the} en Snyder doubled off a8 pu Burns eiagied to lett, scoring snyder, ver lightweight of} dentaily uncovered another smart) rice had @ strange look, Before post 1 anaes i sacrificed and Sickin: led ti Drokyo, ani Brodin’ Hating Neon, theltworyear-old. in Machiavelli, which | time It appeared like a cut and dried the run Reta Gon arent i at Rie aN ane welterweight of the same borout willl qnished third, While Dimmesdale| affair for Marte Antoinette, but in the eighth and was the AND 3 OTHER EXCELLENT CONTESTS beers thing tor Billiards and Bowling. 1 piilons Strong Pacific Const Olympte Squad, IOS ANGELES, June 30,—Forty- three track and field athletes were G|chosen to-day by the Pacific Coast Games Committee here to compete in the final try-outs at Boston on July 17 for places on the team which will re resent the United States at the Olympic es at Antwerp, Belgium, he n- ‘The team will include John K, Nor- n-|ton, Olympte Club, San Francisco, who in the Western try-outs at Pasadena, Cal., last Saturday ran the 4%0-yard les In 541-5 seconds, bettering by fifths of a second the world’s rec- erjord established by W. H. Meanix at to| Cambridge, Mass., July’ 16, 1916. Other members "of thé team are Charles W. Paddock, Univeraity of Southern California, who in the Wes jern try-out ran the 100 yards in 94 seconds; Charlea F. 11 |8an_ Francisco, §,000 metres In’ 16 minutes 6 4-6 ‘veond for a new American record; i | Irving, University of idaho, and Larsen and Alma Richards, hit both, be} ng {the Ogden (Utah) Athletic Association, over the wise stuff by way of a sae} rifice, Ward to Pipp. Again Shore shunted them poorly, passing Schang, and there were no room# vacant in the hotel. This was the occasion that McInnis took to come out of a slump, Gee! He certainly came out with a leap! Like the old Jack-in-the-box they handed you in your cradle when you were about five. All it was is that ho flopped it into the left field bleachers for a homer, And three gents gyrated across forninst him, The lightning, as I have specified, did not occur until the third inning. But it kind of looked if we were suruck already: By, as one might say, McInnis. First name, Stuffy. Ernie Shore was declared by Miller Huggina--the Majah—no longer the right pebble on the beach. Slim Thormahlen was directed to deliver. Thormy was in top form. The Bean- towners began apulogizing to him every time they lifted their bats, The while the Yanks began to in~ dicate that anybody who thought thoy might bo dead had a rowdy corpse to handle, Funny I have not mentioned Ruth yet. Well, he tripled in the first and scored Cap'n Peck who had drawn o walk. Pratt—Dell is tap- bing them out these afiternoons— doubled in tho sccond and Thormy put Del on record on the scoreboard when he pounded out a grounder that Vitt couldn't control. Blanked in the third the Yanks made another assault on the four runs’ lead, when in the fourth ‘Thor- my, upsetting the pitcher's non-hit- ting dope, doubled and scored Del who was ahead of him, with a single. After which the ganic halted as to scoring until the grand finale, It was ail to the Caruse. Lut there was one play in the eighth that no fan. could escape, By Aaron Ward. Gosh- darn! but it's hard to make a choice between this boy und Frankie Frisch. Frisch, McInnis steamed a liner right over the third bag. The Ward kid mado fa flying dive for it, And got it! And from a seat on the turf threw to first © and stung McInnis, How a guy 1s ever going to get by with so flaccid an arm I will never be able to under-\ stand. In thelr ninth they put over a fifth run, And—the big act. ; Again Del Pratt asserted himself. He put out a clean single. “Truck” Hannah skidded the ball into left for the same resuit and sent Del to third, ‘The Majah assigned O'Doul to hop the bags for Truck. Furthermore, he is-. sued orders for Gleich to shake the = stick in place of Thormy. Gleich mado, ».~ good his opportunity with 4 crack to right, but as O'Doul was midway be+ tween the bags on his rush to second Gleich’s wallop took an erratic bounce and struck O'Doul on the leg. The Umps sent Pratt who crossed the plate, back to third and culled O'Doul out at second, Gleich recording a hit. The Umps scoring by a perfectly good ruling, And then came a new brand of. thunder, Not from the sky. From us: Why not? When your gang comes behind the race and snaps the ye, Cap'n Peck placed a neat single, This time that Del Pratt crossed the plate it counted, Aaron Ward caine up—a little fellow with a Babe Ruth ewing—and doubled and Gleich *, rumbled over with the best thing im baseball—the tying run. Thunder? Shucks. The sky was am overhead understudy to the demon- stration of the fans, All the way mashuggar. (Spelling not orthodox.) Out the Boston maest ro whipped Jones, Herb Pennock was put in for plug. Hopeful Herb had stopped the Yankees in his former time in the spotlight. He had also had the high sign on Wailile Pipp on that particular occasion. And Wallie was yesterday's first man to face tam. Walle slashed the ball at Vitt and the second basernan alive to the fact that the winning run threaten. ed got #0 excited about it he ballooned the bulb to Walters. That very good catcher made a goshalmighty try to grab it but his chances were as good a Palm Beach sult in a snow etorm, Mr. Peckinpaugh was mean~ while being wildly welcomed with the winning run. A great game, A erent te team, amie GEE, 30,000 KIDS IN MEET. Thirty thousand schoolboy athletes are expected to participate in tho annual Independence Duy celebration to be held Monday, under the auspices of the Mayor's Committes, of whlch William J. Lee ts chairman. No entry fee will be charged and admission to the games will be free. Forty-one id seven baths will be utilized ames. of his bounder, Sicking by bie quick defat by Geanges Carpeaticr, and: sheap ofes, none of which “could go A 2 the play y c= nat the judges by the scantlest of} cheap none of which “could £0! Como, 1-3, in Arnold, 8-4, in 1.20] maining filled.” Young walked, for he is receiving many offem for toute in Kogland, | P! t fle” ‘They all came dc th i) ‘ ' °. Frisc ront, It was a great battle, | 4 mile. ey all came down the} 4° i “9-4, in 118 2-5; [Ing Douglas acroxs the plate. Frisch For that fearon tho tga deride! to rman on | Heads In tog Mtretch staggering, with Retrieve |:o: Wer ein uF Hned out to Williams. in, then te, having gait enough left to win, The double off the wall knocked Johnny Murs, the promising ttle lai! the top of both of them, ning.’ His trainer Jim Evans thought R A Cc | N G ‘; |} featherweight, will not be sbio t ‘again for a {}t was only a question of his “stand- For Suits at lout A month, He injured hia left hat | Tom Healey, trainer of Dimmesdale, ling up.” Well he didn't, Sibola won badly in hie twelve-ronnd bout with Andy Coaney| waa supremely confident of victory, the race after a driving finish with that were ie of re, at the Aruory A of tenes | nth the colt reargd up in the pad-| Huntress, a one-time handicap mare. ; “in. 60, 1,17 $50 & $60 main bouts of twelve rounds each. wt} dock and threw himself, as ot Tickilah, 1, in 49 3-6; 1.15 4-5, 1.46 pj fone" Johnny “Karna ot "Jersey City) will Hoon” "P| Olambalas have been known to do. 3-4, in 49 3-5, 1.1 — oe Broadway and Slat St. Broadway and 9%h St. ‘Summer Suits of the box In the seventh, the ‘and at the sixteenth polo| Coburn, is running in great juck these i eee miata RE and Pep Youn he has done more fighting than Howard, was haif a length back. Then ensued} 44ys. He took down another purse in .50; eading Star, in wot; | Douglas and Burna, — = — " = the battle of riders and horses. ‘Tur-| With Lady Lillian in the Canaree| 1-2 in iin a0 3 : In the sixth King hit a double to Cay Torey, theta Tet aryweeht, ana] the atte of Fiders and horses. Tut: | SOU Ati yes. mut tow the fliy to[ Caroline 8, 1-2, In 40 3- right gicking “walked. king » took Sale Ends Saturda Marry Greb of ‘Vittabursh, who put up sucha great | DOT Due CT ee inch, it seomed, n Hildreth, who bid her up from| Whack, 3-4, in } : OER aE AL ed prt apr eeoey y ® bettle at Buttalo qureral months ago, will be} {udiciously, inch by 500 to $4,800. She $400 1-2, In .52; Poultney, 1, in 1.49; Chas- | sacrifice er to Paulette. Douglas —————t a eomaeannneneneniies Dimmesdale moved up until he $4,500. cost as a 1.44 8-5; Tennons Ron, 1,| drove to’ Rawlings, King was cut off ‘ Satahed todns to clash in & tev-round bout at | DIMMERS Teme neck, Htice, on| Yearling, In this raco ‘Tom Healey |seeu, 11% iBlaatio ns Pon, lat the plate and ran down, Itawlings i en open ait wow at Buffalo on July 7, 4 oxght his whip inte] Scratched Dry Moon, feeling that his }!n 1-44 a . " to Wheat to Miller to Paulette, who ° i, tho latter, (yen brought hy ° . 7 we | 8-5, 1.44 8. came in and covered the plate; Sick- - Joo Rockett, the Engi hearywetght, © net} action and from there homo it was ay colt couldn't beat Frizlet. The latter} °F ad oe. Fippet, x, fhe took ‘third and Douglas, went to Da coming to this country for fizbts, after all biel bruising baile. It came down to a then became . hot favorite, but fin-| uibberty peer in 6, 2.47, [ing took “third and Dowels, talk about wanting to box some of the Yankee + ‘oul 1u| ished disgracefully far bac! 51| Burns on first and the bases wi battle Since he knocked out Hombantier Wells, question ef which w Wid oraek : terfly, 1, in 1.45 2-6; I Bancroft was safe at first on Ready-for-Service For Suits that were $74, "$80, $90 of Pure Virgin Wool Materials i in Light Colors and Blue Serge Come to the Arnheim Store Nearest You 30 East 42d St. 19 East 41et St. i. w= om 4sm0esa 416480